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Karabakh Mediators Hold More Talks In Yerevan, Baku

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  • Karabakh Mediators Hold More Talks In Yerevan, Baku

    KARABAKH MEDIATORS HOLD MORE TALKS IN YEREVAN, BAKU
    By Ruben Meloyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 29 2007

    International mediators continued to shuttle between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan at the weekend in hopes of brokering what a senior
    U.S. diplomat described as a "gentlemen's agreement" on the main
    principles of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict's settlement. The American,
    French and Russian co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group arrived in
    Yerevan and held fresh talks with President Robert Kocharian and
    Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian on Saturday before heading back to
    Baku. They already visited the two capitals earlier last week. Speaking
    to RFE/RL, the group's U.S. co-chair, Deputy Assistant Secretary of
    State Matthew Bryza, said the mediators remain in the conflict zone
    to try to "build on some positive momentum." He said they will convey
    to Armenian leaders an "important message" from Baku but refused
    to disclose it. Bryza again insisted that Armenia and Azerbaijan
    may still cut a framework peace deal before their presidential
    elections due next year. "We can't exclude the possibility that
    we will reach a gentlemen's agreement," he said. "But that would
    be an oral statement. We are not talking about a written agreement
    in the immediate future." Kocharian said earlier this month that no
    Armenian-Azerbaijani agreements are likely to be reached before the
    2008 elections. As always, his office did not release any details of
    his talks with the mediating troika. "I can't say there is anything
    new at this point," Vladimir Karapetian, the Armenian Foreign
    Ministry spokesman, told RFE/RL. "The process is continuing and we
    expect that it will be possible to bring our positions closer to each
    other." Official Azerbaijani sources said nothing about the mediators'
    weekend talks with President Ilham Aliev and Foreign Minister Elmar
    Mammadyarov. Mammadyarov was quoted by Azerbaijani media as saying
    on Monday that the parties still disagree on some of the principles
    of a Karabakh settlement proposed by the Minsk Group.

    "The co-chairs believe that they will succeed in finding common ground
    between the parties," he said. Baku and Yerevan are understood to
    have already accepted the main points of the Minsk Group's existing
    peace plan. It calls for a gradual resolution of the conflict would
    enable Karabakh's predominantly Armenian population to decide the
    disputed region's status in a referendum years after the liberation
    of surrounding Azerbaijani territories.

    Diplomatic sources privy to the negotiating process say the parties
    still disagree on practical modalities of the proposed referendum as
    well as the timetable for Armenian withdrawal from those territories.

    "We are so very close on just a few remaining technical issues,"
    Bryza told RFE/RL in a separate interview last Wednesday. "It would
    be a shame if we didn't reach some sort of a gentlemen's agreement
    on this framework that's on the table."
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