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BAKU: Kazakhstan's Chairmanship To OSCE Not To Affect Nagorno-Karaba

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  • BAKU: Kazakhstan's Chairmanship To OSCE Not To Affect Nagorno-Karaba

    AZAKHSTAN'S CHAIRMANSHIP TO OSCE NOT TO AFFECT NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT SETTLEMENT

    Trend News Agency
    May 28 2009
    Azerbaijan

    Kazakhstan's chairmanship to the OSCE in 2010 will unlikely
    significantly affect the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement,
    experts consider.

    "Kazakhstan will not be actively involved in the solution of conflicts,
    since firstly it does not want to assume great responsibility;
    and secondly - currently the Caucasus region is not a priority for
    Kazakhstan," said Kazakh expert Dosim Satpayev.

    It is planned that in 2010 Kazakhstan will assume chairmanship to
    the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) - the
    world's largest regional security organizations. The co-chairs of the
    OSCE Minsk Group - Russia, France, and the U.S. - have been holding
    the peace negotiations on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement,
    but they are still unsuccessful.

    The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
    when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
    armed forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
    including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and 7 surrounding districts.

    Observers laid their trust in Kazakhstan, as the OSCE chairman,
    which may also mediate in the conflict settlement. However, the
    experts are skeptical that the country's chairmanship - a stable
    economic partner of Azerbaijan, a neighbor of the Republic in the
    Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) - can somehow affect the
    solution of this conflict.

    "Despite that the Minsk Group is the structure of the OSCE, the role
    of the OSCE chairman has limited opportunities to directly influence
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement," Azerbaijani political
    scientist Rasim Musabeyov told Trend News.

    However, Musabeyov said that Kazakhstan has first-hand knowledge of
    the conflict and about all its complexities.

    In early 1990, along with Russia, the country initiated the
    establishment of the mediation mission, which was called "Zheleznovodsk
    initiative". However, this did not bring adequate results.

    Mediatory role of Kazakhstan, as the chairman, is useful to facilitate
    this process, "but I would not exaggerate," the Director of the
    European Neighborhood, Foreign and Security Policy programme of the
    Center for European Policy Studies, Emerson told Trend News in a
    telephone conversation from Brussels.

    Unlikely the Republic will be actively involved in solving the problem
    of relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia, experts think.

    Despite the opinion of European expert Michael Emerson that chairing
    Kazakhstan will try to reach a solution, other experts doubt it.

    "I do not think that when Kazakhstan will chair the OSCE, it will want
    to more actively intervene in the processes that we are now observing
    in the Caucasus," Director of Risk Assessment Group (Kazakhstan)
    Satpayev told Trend News by telephone from Astana.

    He said that Kazakhstan does not want to spoil relations with either
    Azerbaijan or Armenia, and it is important to maintain the normal
    partnership relations with all the Caucasus nations.

    In addition, according to experts, to resolve the conflict is not an
    easy task.

    The co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group - France, United States
    and Russia, are more powerful and much better able to resolve this
    conflict than Kazakhstan, Musabeyov said.

    And if their mediation in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement has
    no clear progress, it is unworthy to wait for it from Astana, he said.
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