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Armenian Opposition Parties Warn Against Karabakh 'Sellout'

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  • Armenian Opposition Parties Warn Against Karabakh 'Sellout'

    ARMENIAN OPPOSITION PARTIES WARN AGAINST KARABAKH 'SELLOUT'

    http://www.rferl.org/content/armenian_opposition_parties_warn_against_karabakh_ sellout/24244814.html
    June 23, 2011

    YEREVAN -- Two major Armenian opposition parties have warned President
    Serzh Sarkisian against accepting a compromise solution to the conflict
    over the breakaway Azerbaijani territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, RFE/RL's
    Armenian Service reports.

    The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) and the Heritage
    (Zharangutyun) party reaffirmed their position that the proposed
    basic principles of Karabakh peace envisage disproportionate Armenian
    concessions to Azerbaijan.

    They also argued that those principles -- favored by international
    mediators -- have not been approved by Karabakh's ethnic-Armenian
    leadership.

    Heritage spoke of a "criminal plot" against the Karabakh Armenians
    in a special statement on the Armenian-Azerbaijani summit that will
    take place in the Russian city of Kazan on June 24.

    "We remind and caution the Armenian president who heads for Kazan that
    any meeting held without the presence of the legitimate representatives
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, or any document which is born from
    such a meeting, is legally null and void," read the statement.

    Stepan Safarian, a senior Heritage member, said Sarkisian will face
    street protests if he formalizes Yerevan's acceptances of the basic
    principles at Kazan.

    He told RFE/RL that "If the Republic of Armenia signs a document
    that came into existence as a result of an illegal process excluding
    Nagorno-Karabakh and under Azerbaijani threats, we will not put up
    with that. I am sure that the presidents of both countries would have
    serious trouble selling those decisions to their societies."

    The Heritage statement likewise warned that Sarkisian's "formal
    participation in this conspiracy will entail his effective
    self-resignation from the homeland and his official duty. In the event
    of such unacceptable developments, he must be prepared to legalize such
    resignation through the conduct of preterm presidential elections."

    Both parties, which are represented in parliament, claimed that the
    peace formula at the heart of the settlement, which was first formally
    proposed by the U.S., Russian, and French mediators in Madrid in 2007,
    cannot lead to a lasting peace.

    "The Madrid principles carry a much greater danger of war than even
    the preservation of the status quo," Vahan Hovannisian, the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation's parliamentary leader, told RFE/RL. He would
    not say whether his party, which was represented in Sarkisian's
    government until 2009, is also ready to stage antigovernment
    demonstrations.

    The peace proposals envisage a gradual resolution of the Karabakh
    conflict that would start with Armenian withdrawal from territories
    in Azerbaijan that surround Karabakh.

    Karabakh's final status, the main sticking point, would be resolved
    in a future referendum.

    Government officials and politicians loyal to Sarkisian say the
    referendum would enable the Karabakh Armenians to eventually win
    international recognition of their de facto secession from Azerbaijan.

    Heritage and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation dismiss this
    argument, saying that major territorial concessions to Baku would
    only jeopardize Karabakh's security.

    "I think it would be naive to talk about surrendering territories,
    because life shows that the Azerbaijani side uses every opportunity
    to broaden possibilities of bellicose statements and especially
    hostilities," said Hrayr Karapetian, another senior Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation figure who chairs the parliament committee
    on defense and security.

    Karapetian predicted that Sarkisian and Azerbaijani President Ilham
    Aliyev are unlikely to sign any major agreements in Kazan.

    "I'm sorry to say this because no party -- even the most national
    party, which I think I represent -- wants war," he told journalists.

    "We want a peaceful settlement. But not at the expense of our people
    and our future."

    The Armenian National Congress (HAK), a larger and more influential
    opposition force led by former President Levon Ter-Petrossian, has
    expressed concern about some details of the framework peace accord
    made public so far. But unlike Heritage and Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation, it has not rejected the document out of hand.

    In a newspaper interview published today, Ter-Petrossian pointed out
    that the current peace plan is very similar to a settlement which
    he unsuccessfully advocated during the final months of his 1991-1998
    presidency.

    "There is only one element that makes it different from that draft:
    the idea of holding a referendum on Nagorno-Karabakh's status,"
    Ter-Petrossian told the daily "Moskovskie novosti." "But it is
    not backed up by anything yet.... There has been no talk of legal
    consequences of that referendum."

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