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Genocide Resolution Would Solve Nothing

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  • Genocide Resolution Would Solve Nothing

    GENOCIDE RESOLUTION WOULD SOLVE NOTHING

    International Herald Tribune
    The Associated Press
    Oct 26 2007
    France

    US mediator: Azerbaijan, Armenia could sign framework agreement on
    Nagorno-Karabakh

    BAKU, Azerbaijan: Azerbaijan and Armenia could sign a framework
    agreement next year resolving the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh territory,
    a co-chairman of the group mediating the conflict said Friday. "There
    is a possibility that prior to presidential elections in Armenia, which
    will take place in the spring of next year, some kind of framework
    agreement on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict could be signed by the
    heads of Azerbaijan and Armenia," said Matthew J. Bryza, deputy
    assistant U.S. secretary of state and co-chairman of the so-called
    Minsk Group set up to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. Bryza
    said Armenian President Robert Kocharian had told the Minsk Group
    chairmen during their meeting Thursday in Yerevan that signing such a
    "gentlemanly agreement" prior to the country's presidential ballot was
    possible. "I asked the president myself this question, and in reply he
    said that such a possibility exists," Bryza told journalists. "But,
    of course, this will not be the end of the negotiation process,"
    the diplomat stressed, adding that he hoped a new Armenian president
    would uphold any such agreement. The Minsk Group diplomats, including
    representatives from Russia and France, are in the two Caucuses
    countries as part the negotiation process.

    After meeting with officials in Baku they planned to return to
    Armenia and then back again to Azerbaijan, French mediator Bernard
    Fassier said. The mountainous Nagorno-Karabakh territory is part of
    Azerbaijan, but has been controlled - along with some surrounding
    areas - by local and Armenian forces since 1994, when a cease-fire
    ended a six-year separatist war. Some 30,000 people were killed,
    and about 1 million driven from their homes in the conflict. Ethnic
    Armenians now account for virtually the entire population of the
    territory. Nagorno-Karabakh held presidential elections in July,
    which Azerbaijan has rejected as illegitimate.
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