Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Kazakhstan's OSCE Chairmanship Shaded

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Kazakhstan's OSCE Chairmanship Shaded

    KAZAKHSTAN'S OSCE CHAIRMANSHIP SHADED

    Panorama.am
    16:08 21/05/2010

    Comments

    A number of resolutions were passed Wednesday and Thursday at the
    37th Session of the Council of Foreign Ministers of the Organization
    of the Islamic Conference(OIC), some of them including anti-Armenian
    colorings. Particularly, one of the resolutions labels Armenia as
    aggressor, according to Azerbaijan.

    We find it necessary to state (especially Baku had better understand
    this) that 'aggressor' is a legal term, a notion in the modern
    international law which supposes illegal use of force by one state, in
    contravention of the UN Charter, against another state's territorial
    integrity and political independence. Aggression always assumes
    initiative.

    Can any of the OIC member states mention a date when Armenia
    implemented aggression against another state? Of course, they can't.

    Had such a thing occurred, the UN Security Council would have raised
    the issue and would have adopted a corresponding resolution to be
    followed by corresponding actions. Such a thing has never occurred. UN
    Security Council has adopted 4 resolutions on Nagorno-Karabakh and
    in all 4 it called on Azerbaijan and Nagorno-Karabakh to take certain
    actions.

    That is to say, any document endorsed by the OIC does not practically
    cost a penny. We can understand that Azerbaijani authorities and
    official propaganda will use it for solving domestic conflicts (first
    of all, in the context of the upcoming parliamentary elections). A
    question arises here: why do the OIC member states, including a
    number of influential states with internationally serious mission,
    give in to Azerbaijan's blackmailing?

    In non-official talks representatives of the Islamic states explain
    that their passive stance over Turkey's and Azerbaijan's similar
    projects is conditioned by the factor of the Islamic solidarity.

    Note that this is not the first time and it does not come to be new at
    all, as the Turkish-Azerbaijani tandem is trying to use "the factor of
    the Islamic solidarity" for its own interests. But if previously the
    "factor" could not have an impact on Nagorno-Karabakh settlement,
    today the situation has changed, namely, by the simple fact that
    Kazakhstan is chairing the OSCE currently.

    It's not a secret that the Minsk Group, conducting a mediating mission
    over the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, has been established in the frames
    of the OSCE and it is this very organization that actually makes
    decisions on the conflict.

    Since January, 2010, for the first time a post-Soviet state,
    Kazakhstan, has been trusted the OSCE chairmanship. Prior to this,
    as Kazakhstan's chairmanship was being considered, official Ankara
    assured through diplomatic and non-formal ways that it will adopt
    a balanced and neutral position over all the disputed issues,
    including Nagorno-Karabakh. The Armenian side took these affirmations
    as a responsible stance (otherwise, only with Armenia being against
    would be enough for non-approval of Kazakhstan chairmanship). Kazakh
    President Nursultan Nazarbayev promised to contribute to the settlement
    of the conflicts during Kazakhstan chairmanship, followed by FM Kanat
    Saudabayev's regional visit, contacts with the sides and mediators.

    However, after promising impartial, balanced and neutral stance,
    Kazakhstan not only neglected the circumstance of being an OSCE chair,
    but also its membership to the Collective Security Treaty Organization
    (CSTO) and being Armenia's ally within the CSTO framework, and again
    yielded to Azerbaijan's lie, veiled with "Islamic solidarity."

    One could wonder whether Kazakhstan is intent to reaffirm its neutral
    disposition and willingness to contribute to the Karabakh settlement.

    And if yes, how? We tried to find the answers to these questions
    at Kazakhstan's Embassy in Armenia. Our interlocutor-diplomat first
    assured that he has no information on the voting and then expressed
    doubt that "Kazakhstan might have remained abstinent." You should
    agree that the answers cannot serve as confirmation of neutrality and
    the efficiency of Kazakhstan's OSCE chairmanship could henceforth be
    considered shady.

    By the way, recently neighbor Iran had also offered mediation over
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Iran is also OIC member and it also avoids opposing
    the "Islamic solidarity."

    It's beyond discussion that both Kazakhstan and Iran and the other
    Islamic states like Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, could oppose, of course.
Working...
X