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Karabakh Peace 'As Close As Never Before'

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  • Karabakh Peace 'As Close As Never Before'

    KARABAKH PEACE 'AS CLOSE AS NEVER BEFORE'
    By Aza Babayan in Moscow

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    May 8 2007

    Armenia and Azerbaijan are as close to resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflicting as never before, a senior Azerbaijani official said
    on Tuesday.

    "I would say that never before have we been so close to a settlement,"
    Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov said, speaking at the Carnegie
    Center in Moscow. "Having said that, there is a danger that we may
    move away from peace at any moment," he cautioned without elaborating.

    The remarks echoed optimistic statements made by international
    mediators in recent months. In a speech at high-level meeting of
    the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe in Vienna
    last month, Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian similarly said that
    the conflicting parties are as close to settling the bitter dispute
    as ever. President Robert Kocharian and other Armenian leaders have
    sounded less upbeat on that score, however.

    The American, French, and Russian mediators co-chairing the OSCE
    Minsk Group hope that Kocharian and his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham
    Aliev will meet again and cut a framework peace deal shortly after
    Armenia's May 12 parliamentary elections. Kocharian has said the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani summit is tentatively scheduled for June 10.

    In Azimov's words, Oskanian and Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar
    Mammadyarov will hold separate talks with the Minsk Group co-chairs
    in Strasbourg later this week. A spokesman for the Armenian Foreign
    Ministry confirmed the information, according to the Regnum news
    agency.

    The parties, meanwhile, continue to make differing interpretations
    of some key points of a peace accord put forward by. In particular,
    Azimov stood by Aliev's claims that the proposed deal envisages an
    Armenian pullout from all seven Azerbaijani districts surrounding
    Karabakh, including the Lachin corridor. He also said that Baku is
    ready to grant the disputed region "anything but independence."

    The Armenian side, for its part, maintains that as part of the
    would-be accord, the Karabakh Armenians would be able to formalize
    their secession from Azerbaijan in a referendum of self-determination
    to be held years after the Armenian troop withdrawal. It also insists
    that Karabakh have a "common border" with Armenia proper.
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