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Aliyev: Armenia too dependent on Russia in territory dispute talks

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  • Aliyev: Armenia too dependent on Russia in territory dispute talks

    Azerbaijani president: Armenia too dependent on Russia in territory dispute talks
    by AIDA SULTANOVA; Associated Press Writer

    Associated Press Worldstream
    December 17, 2004 Friday

    BAKU, Azerbaijan -- Russia is taking too active a role in the
    negotiations over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh enclave, whose
    unresolved status remains a source of tension for Azerbaijan and
    Armenia, Azerbaijan's president said Friday.

    Ilham Aliev was reacting to comments by Russian parliament speaker
    Boris Gryzlov, who said that Armenia was Russia's outpost in the
    Caucasus region. Gryzlov made the statement Wednesday at a meeting
    between Armenian legislators and their Russian counterparts.

    "We are confused: We have always considered Armenia a state, but now
    it turns out that it is an outpost," Aliev told journalists Friday.

    "So whom should we negotiate with now - the outpost or the master of
    the outpost?" he said.

    Azerbaijan and Armenia have been locked in a bitter dispute over
    Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan's
    territory. Ethnic Armenian forces drove Azerbaijani troops out of
    Nagorno-Karabakh in the 1990s. Since a 1994 cease-fire, the sides
    have been separated by a demilitarized buffer zone, but occasional
    shooting breaks out and each side accuses the other of mounting
    small incursions.

    "I believe that if these negotiations are conducted in a constructive
    way, and the Armenian side does not go back on earlier agreed-upon
    positions ... we can come to certain agreements," Aliev said.

    Baku wants Armenian forces to withdraw from Nagorno-Karabakh before
    a peace treaty can be signed.

    Aliev also said Friday that Azerbaijan is ready to fully reopen its
    railway connection with neighboring Georgia only after it receives
    guarantees that the cargo is not redirected to Armenia.

    Azerbaijan closed its railway link with Georgia for five days in
    November, barring about 1,500 train cars carrying oil and other
    cargo, on the grounds that some of the cargo had ended up in Armenia.
    Baku then reopened the connection partially - allowing in some trains,
    mostly those carrying oil - after Azerbaijan and Georgia agreed that
    no cargo would be redirected to Armenia.

    But Aliev said Friday that "smuggling and falsifications" were still
    taking place.

    "If it persists, the border will remain closed," Aliev said. "We
    understand that it causes harm to us and to a certain extent to
    Georgia, but we have no other choice."
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