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Karabakh Insists On Greater Say In Peace Talks

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  • Karabakh Insists On Greater Say In Peace Talks

    KARABAKH INSISTS ON GREATER SAY IN PEACE TALKS
    By Karine Kalantarian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    June 7 2007

    Nagorno-Karabakh's leader has called for his unrecognized republic's
    participation in the current peace talks with neighboring Azerbaijan,
    warning that it may press Armenia to pull out of the process otherwise.

    Arkady Ghukasian, who is due to step down as president next month,
    said he had raised the issue of Nagorno-Karabakh's becoming a party
    to the negotiations also during his Thursday meeting with visiting
    international mediators.

    In an RFE/RL interview he said that the cochairmen of the Minsk Group
    of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)
    tasked with brokering a settlement in the Karabakh conflict had asked
    the Karabakh side "to help Armenia act in a more constructive manner
    during the negotiations."

    "I don't exclude that Karabakh will raise a question [to Armenia]
    to quit negotiations as it proceeds from today's situation and
    Azerbaijan's position," Ghukasian told RFE/RL after an unprecedented
    two-hour-long meeting with the French, Russian and U.S. cochairmen
    of the Minsk Group.

    He reiterated that "it is pointless to negotiate anything without a
    specified status of Nagorno-Karabakh" and called the Armenia-Azerbaijan
    format of talks "destructive and unrealistic".

    Ghukasian downplayed the optimism of international mediators voiced
    in recent days ahead of this weekend's meeting between the presidents
    of Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    But he added: "I think a negotiator should always be optimistic. If
    a negotiator is not optimistic, a positive development is hard to
    achieve. But I didn't get the impression that the mediators expected
    the upcoming meeting to be crucial."

    The presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan, Robert Kocharian and Ilham
    Aliev, are understood to meet on the sidelines of the informal summit
    of the Commonwealth of Independent States in Saint-Petersburg on
    June 9.

    The OSCE Minks Group cochairmen Matthew Bryza of the United States,
    Bernard Fassier of France and Yuri Merzlyakov of Russia have been in
    active talks with both sides in preparation for the summit. They also
    met with Armenia's President Robert Kocharian and Foreign Minister
    Vartan Oskanian in Yerevan on Thursday.

    In a press conference in Yerevan tonight US Deputy Assistant
    Secretary of State Matthew Bryza said they had "very open, honest and
    constructive discussions" in Yerevan and "talked about expressions
    of optimism or pessimism."

    "When I talk about optimism it reflects my personality. I am an
    optimistic person, that's why I am a diplomat," Bryza said. "I
    don't mean by any means that we anticipate some huge breakthrough in
    Saint Petersburg on Saturday. But during this period I have seen a
    qualitative change in the quality of the discussions."

    The U.S. negotiator said that the Minsk Group has seen discussions that
    are "serious, respectful and in which the differences are narrowing
    between the sides."

    "But the differences are still there," he added. "They require serious
    work, plenty more work. And that's why we are here, because we are
    serious about helping to resolve those remaining differences."

    Against the backdrop of the continuing consultations, a group of a few
    dozen hardliners represented by veterans of the Karabakh war protested
    near the OSCE office in Yerevan on Thursday pronouncing against any
    peace plan that would involve a return of lands currently held by
    Armenian troops. They put their protest in writing and addressed it
    to the international peace brokers.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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