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Azerbaijan, Armenia, Russia Using Faith To Find Karabakh Peace

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  • Azerbaijan, Armenia, Russia Using Faith To Find Karabakh Peace

    AZERBAIJAN, ARMENIA, RUSSIA USING FAITH TO FIND KARABAKH PEACE
    Mina Miradova

    EurasiaNet
    April 28 2010
    NY

    They have tried threats. They have tried PR. And now, 22 years
    into the search for a Nagorno-Karabakh peace settlement, Armenia,
    Azerbaijan and Russia are turning to the power of faith.

    The head of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Catholicos Garegin II,
    and Azerbaijan's Muslim leader, Sheikh-ul-Islam Allahshukur Pashazade,
    met on April 26. The 90-minute discussion -- facilitated by Kirill I,
    the Russian Orthodox patriarch -- marked the sixth such tête-a-tête
    between the religious leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan since 1988,
    when the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict began.

    More significantly, the meeting, held on the sidelines of the World
    Interfaith Summit, marked Garegin II's first-ever trip to Baku. A
    protest conducted by the Karabakh Liberation Organization in front of
    the summit site at Baku's Gulistan Palace reflected the discomfort
    in some sectors of Azerbaijani society generated by Garegin II's
    presence. A group of women, mostly family members of Azerbaijanis
    killed during the Karabakh conflict, held posters depicting war
    victims to protest the Armenian Catholicos' arrival.

    The protest appeared to do little to dampen summiteers' enthusiasm
    for what Kirill I termed "our religious peace-making process."

    A joint declaration signed after the meeting affirmed the religious
    leaders' intention to "not allow a return to a military solution of
    disputable issues" between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The declaration
    also stated that "our joint efforts will help to overcome animosity
    between nations."

    In downtown Baku, Catholicos Garegin II visited the closed Armenian
    church of St. Gregory the Illuminator, a facility that is now used to
    store books for a library run by the presidential administration. He
    was later received by President Ilham Aliyev at his Zagulba residence.

    The Armenian religious leader and the Azerbaijani president chatted
    for about one hour in what local media described as "an unconstrained
    and sincere atmosphere."

    Tight security measures were maintained throughout the day.

    Journalists were not allowed to attend the two events.

    The meeting appears to have produced some results - or at least verbal
    commitments. President Aliyev reportedly agreed to assist Armenia with
    reconstructing the church of St. Gregory, which was damaged by fire
    in 1990, the Turan news agency reported, citing an unnamed Azerbaijani
    official. In exchange, Garegin II promised to promote the restoration
    of a mosque in the Nagorno-Karabakh town of Shusha, a site with strong
    cultural significance for Azeris. [A mosque restoration project has
    been underway in Shusha for a few years already -- ed.] Catholicos
    Garegin II also invited Pashazade to visit Armenia.

    The trio confirmed plans to continue their discussions and called on
    Azerbaijan and Armenia's political and religious leaders to increase
    efforts to release those detained in connection with the Karabakh
    conflict, as well as to protect religious monuments and sacred places
    within the conflict zone.

    Although few Azerbaijani experts believe that these results will be
    able to jump-start stalled peace talks, they note that the meeting
    at least created grounds for re-building trust and tolerance among
    Armenians and Azeris.

    Others have a less rosy outlook.

    "[H]is arrival to Baku is positive, but the declaration [signed at
    the end of the trilateral meeting] is meaningless with relation to its
    influence on resolution of the Karabakh problem," declared independent
    political analyst Rasim Musabeyov, in reference to Armenian Catholicos
    Garegin II.

    Arif Yunus, an expert at Baku's non-governmental Institute for Peace
    and Democracy, took that appraisal one step further. Given the strong
    secular trend in both Armenia and Azerbaijan, the influence of Garegin
    II and Allahshukur Pashazade is limited, he posited. "The summit and
    meeting can play both a positive and negative role only in societies
    where at least 50 percent of the population are true believers,"
    contended Yunus. "Neither Armenian society nor Azerbaijani society
    is like that, and, on the other hand, the authority of both Garegin
    II and Pashazade is not on such a level that we can talk about their
    contribution to a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict."

    Musabeyov said the religious leaders' commitment to a non-violent
    approach on Karabakh is important. And down the road, he added, their
    influence could prove critical once a peace deal is reached and both
    Yerevan and Baku find themselves confronted by "the need to isolate
    radical forces, and redirect public opinion."

    One leader of Azerbaijan's Muslim community sees another influence
    already at work. Ilgar Ibrahimoglu, head of the Centre for Protection
    of Freedom of Conscience and Faith, thinks that Garegin II's visit to
    Baku demonstrates Russia's increased influence in the South Caucasus.

    "[I]t shows that the Russian Orthodox Church is currently headed by
    a charismatic patriarch who is able not only to create opportunities
    for meetings between belligerent states, but also to make the visit of
    a religious leader of one state to another one a reality," commented
    Ibrahimoglu. "I see the role of Russia here."

    Editor's Note: Mina Muradova is a freelance reporter based in Baku.
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