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Karabakh Armenians Insist On Final Say In Peace Process

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  • Karabakh Armenians Insist On Final Say In Peace Process

    KARABAKH ARMENIANS INSIST ON FINAL SAY IN PEACE PROCESS
    Lusine Musayelian

    http://news.google.com/news/search?pz=1&cf=all&ned=us&hl=en&q=armenia+OR+Armen ian+OR+armenians+OR+karabakh&cf=all&scoring=n
    21.06.2011

    Nagorno-Karabakh -- The unrecognized republic's flag flies over the
    presidential building in Stepanakert, 18 Jun 2000

    Possible peace agreements reached by Armenia and Azerbaijan could
    not be put into practice without being approved by Nagorno-Karabakh's
    ethnic Armenian leadership, a senior official in Stepanakert warned
    on Tuesday.

    Georgi Petrosian, foreign minister of the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh
    Republic (NKR), also declined to comment on chances of a breakthrough
    at this week's Armenian-Azerbaijani summit in Kazan, Russia. "We are
    in a wait-and-see regime," he said.

    International mediators hope that Presidents Serzh Sarkisian and Ilham
    Aliyev will finalize the basic principles of resolving the Karabakh
    conflict at that meeting.

    Petrosian did not specify the NKR leadership's position on those
    principles put forward by the U.S., Russian and French co-chairs of
    the OSCE Minsk Group. Nor would he say how the Karabakh Armenians
    will react if Aliyev and Sarkisian cut a deal not acceptable to them.

    Nagorno-Karabakh -- Foreign Minister Georgi Petrosian gies a press
    conference in Stepanakert, 21Jun2010 Petrosian said only that the
    disputed territory should have the final say on any peace accord. "One
    can destroy us, but one can't make decisions without us," he told
    journalists. "In the latter case, one must say, 'We are ready to
    destroy you.' But one must say it openly."

    "International documents concerning Karabakh say that the
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic is a party to the conflict. If we, being
    such a party, were able to stop the war and sign a truce [in 1994,]
    then we also have the right to build our future, a peaceful future,"
    he added.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian likewise said last week
    that the framework accord pushed by the mediators would have to be
    approved by the Karabakh Armenians. "It will be impossible to switch
    to the second phase [of the peace process] if Karabakh doesn't agree
    to the basic principles," he said.

    The Minsk Group co-chairs normally visit Stepanakert and meet Karabakh
    officials during their regular tours of the conflict zone. However,
    Azerbaijan has refused to directly negotiate with the NKR since the
    late 1990s, saying that the territory is occupied by Armenia and has
    no legitimate government.

    Unlike official Yerevan, the Stepanakert government is thought to have
    serious misgivings about the peace formula favored by the mediators.

    But it has until now avoided voicing them publicly, stressing instead
    the need for the NKR's renewed participation in Armenian-Azerbaijani
    peace talks.


    From: Baghdasarian
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