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  • "The Seven Districts Need To Be Liberated First"

    "THE SEVEN DISTRICTS NEED TO BE LIBERATED FIRST"

    Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
    Oct 29 2014

    29 October 2014 - 2:12pm

    By Vestnik Kavkaza

    Ilham Aliyev and Serzh Sargsyan agreed to continue peaceful dialogue to
    settle the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The agreement was reached at the
    Paris meeting organized by Francois Hollande. After bilateral talks
    of the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders with the French president,
    the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group had a meeting with the Personal
    Representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office Andrzej Kasprzyk,
    then a closed-door meeting.

    Professor Alla Yazkova, the head of the Mediterranean and Black Sea
    Center of the RAS Institute of Europe, the head of the Council of
    Mediterranean and Black Sea Research, commented on the results of
    the talks in an interview with Vestnik Kavkaza.

    "The Nagorno-Karabakh settlement is a complicated problem associated
    with a whole set of foreign factors, notably powerful international
    factors. The sides have absolutely different positions. In Paris, they
    agreed that there would be no attempts to solve the problem by force.

    This is important because the problem reached quite harsh declarations
    that could provoke a solution by force; in particular, Baku said that
    Armenians were living on Azerbaijani lands, while Yerevan said that
    Karabakh was primordially an Armenian territory," says Yazkova.

    In her words, the territory was populated by Armenians and
    Azerbaijanis, it is so interlaced that solving the problem is very
    complicated.

    Yazkova feels suspicious that a new generation with a view on the
    Karabakh problem formed by mass media and school education has grown
    in the last 20 years. The expert considers it hard to find common
    grounds even at a public level, all such attempts have failed.

    She noted: "The South Caucasus is a very complicated territory in
    general, there are basic routes for delivery of energy resources to
    Europe. Armenia is isolated. It cannot export its products through
    Georgia (but after Georgia signed the EU Association Agreement the
    situation became intricate, customs duties were raised) or through
    Iran. But Tehran will never support the positions of Armenia at
    the expense of Azerbaijan, because 2/3 of ethnic Azerbaijanis live
    in Iran."

    Yazkova pointed out that 2015 will coincide with the 100th anniversary
    of the Armenian genocide. Azerbaijan, according to her, will certainly
    try to prevent Armenia from strengthening its positions in the world.

    The Armenian diaspora, including communities in Russia and the U.S.,
    may complicate the situation further, the analyst proposes.

    The decision of the sides to solve the problem peacefully is the
    most real result, the expert says. According to Yazkova, a dialogue
    on liberation of the Azerbaijani districts occupied by Armenia, the
    so-called "safety belt", is the most important development: "There are
    seven districts. Azerbaijan agreed on different variants at different
    stages, including [a variant] to not liberate all districts at a time,
    just five of the districts. But today, that is where the danger comes
    from, there is exchange of gunfire, there are victims. The districts
    are becoming the stumbling block to security in the region."

    http://vestnikkavkaza.net/articles/politics/61551.html

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