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Azeri Official Talks Of "New Page" In N.-Karabakh Process

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  • Azeri Official Talks Of "New Page" In N.-Karabakh Process

    AZERI OFFICIAL TALKS OF "NEW PAGE" IN N.-KARABAKH PROCESS

    Interfax
    Nov 25 2008
    Russia

    A declaration on the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process issued at a
    Russian-brokered Azeri-Armenian summit "has undoubtedly opened a new
    page in the negotiation," said Fuad Akhundov, a senior member of the
    Azeri president's staff.

    The declaration, signed at the meeting by the Azeri, Armenian and
    Russian presidents, Ilham Aliyev, Serzh Sargsyan and Dmitry Medvedev,
    "has not solved all the problems, nor could it have done, but it
    has undoubtedly opened a new page in the negotiation process and has
    laid an important basis for moving ahead in the settlement of this
    conflict," Akhundov, head of the public and political section of the
    president's office, told Interfax.

    One important point is that the declaration is the first document to
    have been signed by the presidents of the three countries since the
    1994 ceasefire, Akhundov said.

    Another is that the signatories reaffirm they are loyal to fundamental
    principles and standards of international law, he said.

    A third important point stressed by Akhundov is that economic relations
    between Azerbaijan and Armenia are impossible before the conflict
    is settled.

    "Before that, an opinion was expressed that the resumption by
    Azerbaijan of trade and economic cooperation with Armenia would be able
    to speed up the peace process. It is the position of Baku that takes
    the upper hand in the declaration, the position that the settlement
    of the conflict is an a priori objective and that only after that may
    economic and transportation links and trade be established between
    Azerbaijan and Armenia," Akhundov said.

    Azerbaijan, Akhundov said, does not reject the self-determination
    principle but follows the alleged international legal principle that
    the right to self-determination may only be exercised if it does not
    endanger the territorial integrity of a state.
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