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Karabakh Leader Demands 'Final Say' In Peace Talks

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  • Karabakh Leader Demands 'Final Say' In Peace Talks

    KARABAKH LEADER DEMANDS 'FINAL SAY' IN PEACE TALKS
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    May 9 2007

    Nagorno-Karabakh's outgoing President Arkady Ghukasian warned on
    Wednesday that his self-proclaimed republic must have a "final
    say" in any internationally backed settlement of the conflict with
    Azerbaijan as he presided over a military parade in Stepanakert
    alongside President Robert Kocharian.

    The parade, broadcast live by Karabakh and Armenian state televisions,
    involved hundreds of troops and dozens of tanks, armored vehicles,
    and artillery systems. It was dedicated to the 15th anniversary of
    the capture of the nearby town of Shusha, a key Armenian military
    victory during the 1991-1994 war with Azerbaijan.

    Kocharian's presence at the biggest show of Karabakh's military might
    in years underscored the event's significance for the Armenian side.

    The anniversary was also officially marked in Armenia, with the
    Karabakh-born Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian inaugurating a square
    in Yerevan named after Shusha. Sarkisian had played a major role in
    the May 1992 battle which enabled Karabakh Armenian forces to open
    a vital land corridor with Armenia proper. In a decree signed on the
    occasion, Kocharian awarded medals to some 1,760 participants of the
    military operation.

    "The liberation of Shusha strengthened our resolve to win and our
    belief in the future, and spurred the birth of our military force:
    the Defense Army of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic," Ghukasian told
    troops lined up in Stepanakert's main square. He praised them as a
    "reliable guarantor" of the security of Karabakh's predominantly
    Armenian population.

    "We are the masters our fate, we have the right to a final say
    in the determination of our future. This is the unbending will of
    our people. This is what stipulates the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic's
    Constitution," Ghukasian said, in an apparent reference to the ongoing
    Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations that seem to have made substantial
    progress of late.

    French, Russian and U.S. diplomats spearheading the peace process
    hope that Armenia and Azerbaijan will cut a framework peace deal
    before the end of this year. A senior Azerbaijani official confirmed
    on Tuesday that the conflicting parties are close to doing that.

    Ghukasian and other Karabakh Armenian leaders have repeatedly expressed
    their frustration with the NKR's exclusion from the ongoing peace
    talks. They have also voiced serious misgivings about the mediators'
    existing peace plan that calls for a gradual settlement of the conflict
    culminating in a referendum of self-determination in Karabakh.
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