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Armenia, Azerbaijan Blame Each Other For Karabakh Failure

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  • Armenia, Azerbaijan Blame Each Other For Karabakh Failure

    ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN BLAME EACH OTHER FOR KARABAKH FAILURE

    Saudi Press Agency (SPA)
    June 26, 2011 Sunday

    YEREVAN/BAKU, Rajab 23, 1432 H / Jun 25, 2011, SPA -- Armenia and
    Azerbaijan blamed each other on Saturday for failing to reach an
    agreement on a framework document that would set the stage for an
    end to their two decade-old conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, Reuters
    reported.

    Azeri President Ilham Aliyev and Armenia's Serzh Sarksyan held talks
    on Friday in the Russian city of Kazan, 720 km (450 miles) east of
    Moscow, on Nagorno-Karabakh, which Armenian-backed forces wrested
    from Azeri control in the deadliest war to break out during the fall
    of the Soviet Union 20 years ago.

    "The Kazan summit did not achieve a breakthrough because Azerbaijan
    was not ready to accept the last version of the Basic Principles,"
    Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian said in a statement.

    The two sides were under pressure from global powers to agree the
    Basic Principles, a 14-point framework document that would set the
    stage for talks on a peace settlement.

    The document would set guidelines on how to determine the final status
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave, which has run its own affairs with
    Armenia's support since the war. It would also cover the return
    of several territories surrounding the enclave, which also form a
    corridor to Armenia, to Azeri control.

    Other points include the right of refugees from both sides to
    return; an interim status providing security and self-governance for
    Nagorno-Karabakh; and international security guarantees to keep the
    fragile deal from falling apart.

    Baku was quick to respond to Yerevan's allegations that the Azeri
    side was responsible for the failure.

    "Armenia's foreign ministry statement showed once again that the
    Armenian leadership had no intention of abandoning methods of dirty
    propaganda," Novruz Mamedov, head of the presidential administration's
    foreign relations department, told reporters.

    "The unconstructive position of the Armenian side is to be blamed
    for absence of serious progress," he said.

    At the same time, both sides pledged to continue talks.

    The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) on
    Saturday called on both sides to continue peace efforts and pledged
    its support for the process.

    Azeri and Armenian leaders and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said
    on Friday that the sides had reached "a mutual understanding on a
    range of issues whose resolution will help create conditions for an
    approval of the Basic Principles".

    A 1994 ceasefire halted the conflict that killed about 30,000 people
    and drove up to a million from their homes. But gunfire and landmines
    frequently kill soldiers on both sides.

    After years struggling to shepherd the rivals toward a resolution,
    the United States, Russia and France -- which lead mediation efforts --
    are pushing for a serious step forward.

    The dispute also scuttled a rapprochement between Armenia and Turkey
    last year. Azerbaijan has said it could reclaim Nagorno-Karabakh by
    force if the status quo persists.

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