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New Karabakh Leader In No Rush To Form Cabinet

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  • New Karabakh Leader In No Rush To Form Cabinet

    NEW KARABAKH LEADER IN NO RUSH TO FORM CABINET
    By Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    July 27 2007

    Bako Sahakian, Nagorno-Karabakh's president-elect, declined to shed
    light Friday on the composition of his cabinet, saying he has not
    yet started forming it.

    "No discussions are being held on the next government at the moment,"
    he told RFE/RL by phone. "We are getting ready for the September 7
    inauguration ceremony."

    Sahakian swept to a landslide victory in the July 19 presidential
    election, capitalizing on the backing of the unrecognized
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic's outgoing President Arkady Ghukasian
    and four main political parties. Two of those parties have been in
    opposition to Ghukasian.

    The broad-based support prompted suggestions that the new Karabakh
    leader could share power with his diverse political allies. But he
    has so far been tight-lipped about the likely make-up of his cabinet.

    "Right now we are reviewing the work which we did during the election
    campaign," said Sahakian. "We received about 3,000 letters. Two
    working groups are looking into those letters."

    Sahakian, who headed Karabakh's main security agency until recently,
    said during the election campaign that, if elected, he will ensure
    continuity in policies pursued by Ghukasian. He said on Friday that
    one of his first tasks will be to tackle "new forms of bureaucratic red
    tape" and pay particular attention to impoverished rural communities.

    According to Karlen Avetisian, the NKR's permanent representative to
    Yerevan, Sahakian will not change the Karabakh Armenians' position
    on the conflict with Azerbaijan.

    The authorities in Stepanakert are increasingly frustrated with their
    lack of direct involvement in the ongoing Armenian-Azerbaijani peace
    talks. Ghukasian, in power since 1997, has also voiced misgivings
    about international mediators' existing peace proposals.

    Commenting on Ghukasian's decade-long track record, Avetisian singled
    out his role in what he described as Karabakh's successful "transition
    from semi-military to civilian rule." "This has been a difficult and
    dangerous process," Avetisian told a news conference.

    "If it hadn't happened, we could have met the fate of Chechnya."
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