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BAKU: Serbia Delaying Arms Sales To Armenia

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  • BAKU: Serbia Delaying Arms Sales To Armenia

    SERBIA DELAYING ARMS SALES TO ARMENIA

    AssA-Irada, Azerbaijan
    March 6, 2007 Tuesday

    Armenias planned arms purchases from Serbia a deal that Azeri officials
    labeled as the neighboring countrys illegitimate armament defying
    international law - have been delayed since mid-January but the first
    consignment of weaponry is to be delivered by Friday, reports say. The
    deliveries have been put off due to the complex licensing procedures
    for the exports of arms, eastbusiness.org website reported. Under
    a deal signed with Yerevan last year, Serbias Zastava plant was
    to supply the first consignment of ammunition worth $1.7 million to
    Armenia by January 10, but the order was not fulfilled due to problems
    with documentation.

    But after all the arrangements were completed, Serbs pledged to
    deliver the arms by February 15. After the consignment is delivered,
    Serbian gun-makers and Armenia plan to continue cooperation. Reports
    say they plan to ink another arms supply contract worth $900,000.

    However, certain issues concerning the deal are yet to agreed,
    as none of Serbias ministries in charge have endorsed the needed
    papers so far. According to unofficial sources, the problem concerns
    Serbias national interests, in particular, the future status of the
    Kosovo and Metohia regions, as Serbs beware that selling weapons to
    the conflict zone could turn out costly. The issue remains open, as
    Serbian ministries of foreign affairs, defense and interior are in
    no rush to authorize the second arms deal. The agreement on Serbian
    arms deliveries was reached last summer, causing a wave of uproar due
    to the Serbian governments position on the issue. Serbian Foreign
    Minister Vuk Draskovic criticized the move, and warned that the
    arms sales would violate the OSCEs embargo and a UN Security Council
    resolution, which bans the sales of weapons to Azerbaijan and Armenia
    due to the lingering conflict over Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh. Russia,
    which has long been Serbias ally, also came out against the deal,
    on apparent concerns that it was losing a share of its weaponry
    sales market. Moscow stated that the weapons could be used against
    Russians or Russia as a whole. But the developments took a different
    turn late in December when Serbian President Boris Tadic said he
    agrees to Russian arms sales to Armenia. Azerbaijani officials earlier
    announced plans to raise the issue of Armenias illegitimate armament
    at the spring session of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly and the OSCE.
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