Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

OSCE: Karabakh Conflict May Be Solved

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

  • OSCE: Karabakh Conflict May Be Solved

    OSCE: KARABAKH CONFLICT MAY BE SOLVED
    Yelizaveta Isakova

    Voice of Russia
    June 22 2011

    The forthcoming meeting on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict resolution
    in the city of Kazan (the Volga area) may succeed, the OSCE Secretary
    General Marc Perrin de Brichambaut told reporters in Moscow.

    Nagorno-Karabakh is an Armenian enclave on the territory of Azerbaijan
    which proclaimed its independence in 1991.

    The conflict was the key issue discussed by the OSCE chief and Russia's
    Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in Moscow.

    "The forthcoming meeting in Kazan under the chairmanship of President
    Medvedev will follow the working meeting of foreign ministers held in
    Moscow last week-end. The process of seeking a set of peace principles
    for the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh has been going on since 1992 and
    we've had both high moments and difficulties. We had few moments when
    the expectations were as high as they are now. The personal commitment
    of Dmitry Medvedev and the involvement of the Minsk Group reflected
    in a very strong Deauville statement, which clearly calls for the two
    parties to make a move forward and adopt 14 peace principles which
    have been elaborated throughout many years of negotiations."

    Azerbaijan and Armenia are expected to sign a legally binding agreement
    setting the guidelines for a peace treaty. Armenia says that it views
    one of the main principles as self-determination for the people of
    the breakaway region.

    The OSCE is also considering another long-lasting
    conflict-Transnistria, a breakaway territory between Moldova and
    Ukraine. Moscow hosted a meeting in 5+2 format featuring Moldova,
    Transnistria, the US and the EU as observers and Russia and Ukraine as
    mediators. However, the OSCE chief told the VoR that no consensus has
    been reached as Tiraspol refused to sign a draft treaty proposed by
    Russia. Next meeting will also be held in Moscow and have an official
    status. Brichambaut believes that a breakthrough depends on goodwill
    of the parties.

    The troubleshooting is hindering by the organization's lack of charter
    which makes any action possible only after the approval of all its
    56 members. Three years ago this was an obstacle to preventing the
    Georgia's aggression against South Ossetia and now this may trigger
    more problems in Karabakh and Transnistria . Still, the charter is
    unlikely to be adopted soon as the members can't agree on it, says
    Brichambaut, who has to talk them into it in a short period of time -
    next year his presidency is over and the chief is said to be replaced
    by a Swiss diplomat.


    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X