Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ISTANBUL: Nagorno-Karabakh: progress on the horizon?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ISTANBUL: Nagorno-Karabakh: progress on the horizon?

    Sunday's Zaman , Turkey
    June 19 2011

    Nagorno-Karabakh: progress on the horizon?

    by AMANDA PAUL


    The unpredictable security situation in the South Caucasus is of
    increasing concern to Europe. While the situation in Georgia is far
    from ideal, it is at least contained.

    It is the conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the Azerbaijani
    region of Nagorno-Karabakh that is the most dangerous and the most
    significant obstacle to peace and stability in the region.

    More than 15 years since the cease-fire agreement was signed, Armenia
    and Azerbaijan have been unable to find the political will to reach an
    agreement, or sign any sort of meaningful document that could bring
    them a step closer to peace. While there have been a number of
    occasions when an agreement seemed near, at the end of the day the
    talks crashed and burned. In the meantime, lives continue to be lost
    across the line of contact, including civilians -- even innocent
    children, when sniper bullets go astray. In Azerbaijan some 800,000
    internally displaced persons (IDP) are still waiting to return to
    their homes. Not just in Nagorno-Karabakh (which was predominantly
    populated by ethnic Armenians before the war), but more so in the
    seven other Azerbaijani regions that Armenia occupied during the war
    and now uses as a `security buffer zone' between Azerbaijan and
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    While Azerbaijan continues talk of war to regain these lands (some 17
    percent of the country), Armenia responds by signaling Armenia is
    ready for war. Hate propaganda continues while confidence building
    measures remain limited and have so far had very little impact on the
    way Armenians and Azerbaijanis define each other. It is an extremely
    sad situation for two peoples that are so similar and have so much in
    common. The more time that passes, the more difficult it is to find an
    `exit,' and the more likely renewed warfare becomes, which would be
    devastating for the entire region. Skyrocketing military spending and
    ongoing cease-fire violations are all gloomy signs that time for a
    peaceful settlement may be running out. Shared memories of
    cohabitation are fading, with the divide becoming increasingly
    unbridgeable. There is an urgent need to get a fresh dynamic back into
    the negotiations as well as a counter to the hate propaganda. We need
    more confidence building, particularly steps to engage youth in joint
    projects on all sides.

    For those covering the conflict, all eyes are now on the forthcoming
    troika meeting between the Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents and
    Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on June 25 in the Russian city of
    Kazan. There is some optimism that progress may be made, particularly
    in light of a recent meeting between the two foreign ministers, Elmar
    Mammadyarov and Edward Nalbandian, which has been described in the
    media as making `significant progress,' stating `the sides managed to
    bring their positions closer on a number of issues of the Basic
    Principles of the Karabakh settlement.' However, this is not the first
    time such a statement has been made and there was also no word on the
    issues that progress was apparently made on. The foreign ministers'
    meeting also came just days after US, Russian and French diplomats
    co-chairing the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
    (OSCE) Minsk Group ended yet another tour of the conflict zone issuing
    a joint statement that urged the leaders to finalize the `Basic
    Principles,' drafted by the three mediating powers, at their next
    meeting. They also called upon the parties `to avoid any provocative
    actions or statements that might undermine the negotiating process
    during this critical period.'

    Last week, the European Parliament also held a public hearing on
    Nagorno-Karabakh. The European Parliament has really been the only EU
    institution to give any meaningful attention to the conflict, and in
    May 2010 came up with a report calling for a larger EU role in the
    South Caucasus with specific recommendations for the EU, including
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Among the speakers at the meeting were two-thirds of the Minsk Group
    -- the French and the Americans. The Russian representative, however,
    was nowhere to be seen. This was a pity because it is very much the
    Russians who are driving the process nowadays. Andrzej Kasprzyk, who
    has been heading up the OSCE's small team that has monitored the line
    of contact for more than a decade, was also present. While Kasprzyk
    reported that 17 people had been killed so far this year on the line
    of contact (including a 9-year-old Azerbaijani boy), he said this was
    positive as this represented a decrease on a year ago (35 lives were
    lost in 2010). The French and American co-chairs expressed quiet
    optimism that something positive would come out of Kazan.

    However, it seems to me that agreement is still out of reach. Firstly,
    neither side is showing enough political will to reach a final
    agreement; nor have they begun to take steps to prepare their
    societies for the compromises that such an agreement would
    necessitate. Both leaders are still talking about maximum goals. In
    the case of Azerbaijan, this amounts to Nagorno-Karabakh remaining
    part of Azerbaijan, and for Armenia the exact opposite.

Working...
X