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ANKARA: US Envoy Hopes For Nagorno-Karabakh Deal On Principles Mid-J

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  • ANKARA: US Envoy Hopes For Nagorno-Karabakh Deal On Principles Mid-J

    US ENVOY HOPES FOR NAGORNO-KARABAKH DEAL ON PRINCIPLES MID-JULY

    Hurriyet
    http://www.hurriyet.com.tr/engl ish/world/11918503.asp?scr=1
    June 22 2009
    Turkey

    ISTANBUL - International mediators hope to reach a deal between
    Azerbaijan and Armenia on the principles of a peace deal on the
    disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region at talks tentatively planned for
    mid-July in Russia, the U.S. negotiator told Reuters in an interview
    published Monday.

    U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza said he and
    his fellow mediators from France and Russia were "shooting for"
    a full framework agreement by the end of 2009.

    But Bryza conceded the risk of a last-minute breakdown of the kind
    that derailed earlier efforts to broker agreement between Azerbaijan
    and Armenia.

    "I don't have any reason necessarily to believe that getting as far
    as we have here -- which is similar to how far the mediators and the
    parties got both at Key West and before -- that we're going to get
    further than they did," he told Reuters by phone from Washington at
    the weekend.

    "I do know that we've gotten very far now. What gives me some hope
    that we will keep moving is logic," he added.

    The conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia began in 1988 on Armenian
    territorial claims over Azerbaijan. Since 1992, Armenian Armed Forces
    have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan including the Nagorno-Karabakh
    region and its seven surrounding districts -- a frozen conflict legacy
    of the Soviet Union.

    The OSCE Minsk Group, set up in 1992 and co-chaired by the United
    States, Russia, and France, is engaged in efforts to resolve the
    conflict peacefully.

    Armed clashes still occur regularly along the lines separating Azeri
    and Armenian troops, although major hostilities ended.

    Bryza said the Minsk Group mediators hoped to bring together Armenian
    President Serge Sargsyan and Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan in mid-July,
    the latest in a string of encounters fuelling speculation of a
    breakthrough.

    Vote on final status

    "We hope that if they meet in the middle of July, they will have
    agreed conceptually on all the elements of these basic principles,"
    he said. The parties would then go line-by-line through the
    three-and-a-half pages of text to agree the details.

    "Once that happens, which we the co-chairs are shooting for by the
    end of the year, then we could say, it would be true, that a framework
    agreement has been reached," he said.

    Bryza said the mediators were bridging the gap between the two
    countries for an agreement, but that the final deal would likely
    provide for a vote "that reflects the genuine will of the populations".

    "What we are trying to do is incorporate self-determination through
    a voting process on Nagorno-Karabakh's final legal status, but in
    a way that for the foreseeable future has no impact on Azerbaijan's
    territorial integrity."

    Turkey-Armenia thaw

    Turkey and Armenia agreed in April on a "road map" deal for U.S.-backed
    talks that could lead to the normalization of ties and the opening
    of their border, which Ankara closed in a show of support to Baku in
    1993 after Armenian occupation of Azeri territories in the disputed
    Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    Turkish officials, however, have said Turkey will not open its border
    with Armenia before the neighboring country ends its occupation of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, reassuring Azeri leaders that Ankara's efforts to
    reconcile with Yerevan would not undermine the country's interests.

    Bryza, also closely involved in the Turkey-Armenia roadmap, said the
    processes were separate, but running in parallel. Asked if Turkey
    would only reopen the border once Armenia makes concessions on
    Nagorno-Karabakh, he replied:

    "I do not know if that's right," he said.

    But added: "Where there is unanimity, is that we all say we need to
    see a breakthrough on Nagorno-Karabakh and significant progress as
    soon as possible, and that's the way to make sure all these processes
    move forward smoothly."
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