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  • RFE: NK: No Breakthrough Reported In Talks

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    Jan 12 2005

    Nagorno-Karabakh: No Breakthrough Reported In Talks Between
    Armenians, Azerbaijanis

    By Jean-Christophe Peuch


    Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian met yesterday in Prague
    with his Azerbaijani counterpart to discuss the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict. Officially, the discussions achieved no breakthroughs, but
    both men agreed to meet again in the near future. In an interview
    with RFE/RL's Armenian Service, Oskanian said a lot remains to be
    done before both sides can agree on the basic principles of a peace
    settlement.


    Prague, 12 January 2005 (RFE/RL) -- The foreign ministers of Armenia
    and Azerbaijan met for three hours in Prague in a bid to move the
    Nagorno-Karabakh peace process forward.

    The discussions took place behind closed doors. Both ministers also
    met separately with representatives of the Minsk Group of nations --
    France, Russia, and the United States -- mandated by the Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) to mediate in the
    conflict. OSCE Ambassador Andrzej Kasprzyk also attended the
    talks.The main result achieved this week in Prague is that both
    ministers agreed to meet again in the coming weeks.

    The Karabakh conflict dates back to 1988, when the predominantly
    Armenian enclave seceded from Soviet Azerbaijan. The move triggered a
    six-year war that claimed thousands of lives and drove an estimated
    800,000 Azerbaijanis from their homes.

    Both sides signed a cease-fire agreement in 1994 but remain
    technically at war.

    As a prerequisite to any peace deal, Azerbaijan demands that Armenian
    troops withdraw from the adjacent territories they have been
    occupying since 1993, thus paving the way for the return of displaced
    populations. Only once this is achieved, Baku says, can the status of
    Karabakh be discussed.

    Addressing reporters on the sidelines of yesterday's Prague meeting,
    Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov reiterated that his
    country will not compromise on the issue: "Our main objective is to
    achieve a result. Such a result must be that Armenian forces withdraw
    from the occupied territories and that refugees return home. This is
    our fundamental approach. What we are discussing here is how to
    possibly achieve that result."

    Yesterday's meeting was the fifth held by Mammadyarov and Oskanian in
    the Czech capital in the framework of what is known as the "Prague
    process."

    As in previous cases, neither envoy divulged details of the
    discussions.

    Azerbaijan's pro-government "525-ci Qazet" newspaper said today that
    the main result achieved this week in Prague is that both ministers
    agreed to meet again in the coming weeks.

    More optimistically, Azerbaijan's "Zerkalo" (Mirror), a
    Russian-language daily, reports both sides agreed on the fundamental
    principles of a peace settlement and are now ready to examine
    "concrete issues and details."

    But in an interview with RFE/RL's Armenian Service yesterday,
    Oskanian said the basic principles of a peace agreement remain to be
    worked out: "I wish I could say that there is a full agreement on the
    principles. But we are still not there. There is a general framework
    of issues [to be discussed] but, as this [last] meeting showed, they
    need to be further consolidated."

    Citing recent remarks attributed to Yuri Merzlyakov, Russia's envoy
    to the Minsk Group, Azerbaijani and Armenian media have been
    speculating that Armenia might soon drop its demands for a so-called
    "package" solution to the conflict -- that is, stop insisting that
    the liberation of Azerbaijani territories and the political status of
    Karabakh be negotiated simultaneously.

    Oskanian flatly denied those claims yesterday. However, he said the
    peace process has become so intricate that, in his view, there is no
    longer a clear distinction between Armenia's "package" and
    Azerbaijan's "step-by-step" approach: "The 'Prague process' is fairly
    difficult and complex, and it will remain such at further meetings.
    On the whole, I consider the overall mood and atmosphere [of the
    talks] as positive. It is still too early to disclose any details.
    But once we achieve concrete results on specific issues, we will
    release them gradually."

    The Baku-based Turan news agency yesterday quoted Azerbaijani Foreign
    Ministry spokesman Metin Mirza as saying the Minsk Group had
    discussed with both envoys the possibility of sending a fact-finding
    mission to Karabakh and Azerbaijan's Armenian-held territories.

    In the meantime, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
    will discuss a draft resolution on the Karabakh conflict later this
    month (25 January).

    In it, the Strasbourg-based assembly urges country members Armenia
    and Azerbaijan to foster political reconciliation. It also calls on
    Yerevan to comply with past UN resolutions calling for the liberation
    of all occupied territories of Azerbaijan and reaffirms the right of
    displaced populations to return to their homes "safely and with
    dignity."
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