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Armenia: Time for a change on Karabakh?

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  • Armenia: Time for a change on Karabakh?

    EurasiaNet, NY
    May 2 2008


    ARMENIA: TIME FOR A CHANGE ON KARABAKH?
    Gayane Abrahamyan 5/02/08


    Amid calls from President Serzh Sarkisian for a more "pro-active"
    policy, Armenia's parliament has adopted a statement that some
    observers say toughens the country's position on the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict.

    The statement, adopted on April 29, calls for Armenian President Serzh
    Sarkisian and Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian to create policies
    that will enable Yerevan to assume the initiative in "settling the
    Nagorno-Karabakh problem," and to provide the legal basis for Armenia
    to act as the official guarantor of the breakaway region's
    security. Negotiations with Azerbaijan on Karabakh's status are termed
    the only acceptable way to resolve the territorial conflict.

    In recent months, the two countries have experienced a rise in
    rhetorical jostling over everything from the format of negotiations to
    alleged cease-fire violations and Azerbaijan's $2 billion military
    build-up. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. At the
    same time, several instances of intensive fighting along the contact
    line separating Armenian and Azerbaijani forces have occurred in
    recent weeks. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Within the context of rising tension, the parliamentary statement
    appeared designed to send Baku a signal that Yerevan won't be bullied,
    and it won't remain inactive in the face of expanding lobbying efforts
    by Azerbaijan. During a speech to parliament, the statement's author,
    Parliamentary Speaker Tigran Torosian, declared that "[t]he Armenian
    side has for a long time overlooked the fact that full and truthful
    information about the origin and development of the conflict must be
    presented to the international community."

    "It seems to Azerbaijan that it can solve the Nagorno-Karabakh problem
    by means of war," continued Torosian. "Azerbaijan even began to
    blackmail different international organizations, as well as against
    the Minsk Group co-chairmen [who oversee negotiations] and,
    unfortunately, we have to admit that it has had its certain
    influence."

    Foreign Minister Nalbandian will hold his first meeting with
    Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov in Strasbourg on May
    6. The encounter has been billed merely as a get-acquainted session,
    although Nalbandian has told Armenian media that he hopes that the
    meeting could lead to a resumption of talks between the two countries.

    For now, Azerbaijan has dismissed the Nagorno-Karabakh statement as
    nothing new. "We call on Armenia to be constructive," Azerbaijani
    foreign ministry spokesperson Khazar Ibrahim was quoted as saying by
    the APA news agency. "Such types of statements have not influenced the
    negotiation process positively."

    In recent months, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and other top
    Azeri official have tweaked Armenian leaders and experts with a series
    of provocative statements, such as advancing a claim that Yerevan is
    "an old Azerbaijani town" that needs to be returned to Azerbaijan. On
    occasion, the claim has extended to all of the Republic of Armenia.

    "We react to [the claim] ironically, but it may have serious
    consequences," commented independent analyst Levon
    Melik-Shahnazarian. He termed Armenia's April 29 statement on Karabakh
    "the first step" towards responding to these allegations.

    One influential political force in Yerevan criticized the statement
    for not going far enough. MPs belonging to the Heritage Party, the
    only opposition force in parliament, voted against adopting the
    statement. Party leader Raffi Hovannisian, who supports recognition of
    Karabakh's independence, called the document "toothless" and
    "unprincipled." His preference is for government recognition of
    Karabakh's independence.


    Editor's Note: Gayane Abrahamyan is a writer for the ArmeniaNow.com
    weekly in Yerevan.
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