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Vladimir Kazimirov: Haydar Aliev Did Not Need The Positive Results O

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  • Vladimir Kazimirov: Haydar Aliev Did Not Need The Positive Results O

    VLADIMIR KAZIMIROV: HAYDAR ALIEV DID NOT NEED THE POSITIVE RESULTS OF BISHKEK

    ArmInfo
    2009-05-19 15:51:00

    ArmInfo. Oftentimes journalists say that the cease fire agreement was
    reached in Bishkek May 5 1994. It is a mistake: the document signed
    by the heads of the parliamentary structures of Azerbaijan, Armenia
    and Nagorno-Karabakh was a protocol urging to stop fire May 9 night
    1994, Vladimir Kazimirov, the vice chairman of the Association of
    Russian Diplomats, the head of the Russian intermediary mission,
    the plenipotentiary representative of the President of Russia
    for Nagorno-Karabakh from Apr 1992 till Sept 1996, said during a
    press-conference in Stepanakert May 19 2009.

    ArmInfo's corespondent quotes him as saying that Bishkek was just an
    auxiliary link to the meeting of the CIS Council of Heads of States
    in Moscow Apr 15 1994, which adopted strong urge to stop the combat
    actions.

    "It was exactly for supporting the statement of the CIS presidents
    that the speakers of the parliaments met in Bishkek. It was a useful
    effort. But it was just an auxiliary action," Kazimirov said.

    However, President of Azerbaijan Haydar Aliev did not need the positive
    results of Bishkek as he was then solving quite different problems:
    he was signing with NATO an agreement for joining the Partnership for
    Peace program. The cease fire agreement was signed in unprecedentedly
    hard conditions. Baku wanted to sign the agreement with Yerevan,
    while the latter refused to sign it without Stepanakert. To try to
    reconcile them meant to lose time and chance. So, the mediators had
    no other way-out but to ignore the whims of the parties and to sign
    the document in any acceptable form.

    "In the office of Haydar Aliev in Baku we drafted the text of the
    agreement for signing by the defense minister of Azerbaijan and the
    commander of the Defense Army of Nagorno-Karabakh. We made three copies
    for each of the parties. Azeri DM Mamedrafi Mamedov signed its copy in
    Baku May 9 1994 in the presence of the Russian mediator. His Armenian
    counterpart Serzh Sargsyan (presently President of Armenia) signed
    his copy in Yerevan May 10, the commander of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    army Samvel Babayan - May 11. Those copies were brought together into
    a cease fire agreement in Moscow. As mediator Russia has confirmed
    the identity of the texts and declared them effective May 12,"
    Kazimirov said.

    "The main thing was to stop the bloodshed. That's why we decided to
    sacrifice certain legal formalities like unity of time and place of
    signing, one original copy with three signatures, juicy seal and nice
    folder," Kazimirov said.
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