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Russia, US seek to revive Karabakh peace process

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  • Russia, US seek to revive Karabakh peace process

    Agence France Presse
    July 8, 2011 Friday 9:30 AM GMT



    Russia, US seek to revive Karabakh peace process

    YEREVAN, July 8 2011


    Russia's foreign minister shuttled between Armenia and Azerbaijan on
    Friday in a bid to revive the ailing peace process over the disputed
    Nagorny Karabakh region after key talks last month failed.

    Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov brought what he said were new proposals
    after the summit in Russia ended without agreeing on a road-map
    document setting out "basic principles" for future talks on the
    Karabakh conflict, amid fears of renewed war.

    In Yerevan, Lavrov said he handed a "personal letter" to Armenian
    leader Serzh Sarkisian from Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
    outlining the proposals, but gave no details about its content.

    "Directly after this meeting I will fly to Baku, where I will give the
    leadership of Azerbaijan a similar message on behalf of Medvedev,"
    Lavrov said.

    "We want the issue resolved, and resolved in such a way that lasting
    peace and stability will actually be established in our region,"
    Sarkisian told Lavrov.

    However Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian again blamed
    Azerbaijan for undermining the process by demanding changes to the
    road-map document.

    In another sign of international concern over the issue, US Secretary
    of State Hillary Clinton telephoned the Armenian president on Thursday
    to discuss "issues related to the current stage of the NK peace
    process", according to a statement on Sarkisian's website.

    Peace mediators from the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in
    Europe are also due to visit the region next week, US ambassador to
    Baku Matthew Bryza told local media.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan traded bitter accusations after the summit in
    Russia, which was touted by diplomats as a potential breakthrough but
    only produced a vague joint statement that noted "the reaching of
    mutual understanding on a number of questions".

    Nagorny Karabakh, whose population is mostly Armenian but which was
    part of Azerbaijan during the Soviet era, proclaimed its independence
    after a war which resulted in the deaths of some 30,000 people and
    created hundreds of thousands of refugees between 1988 and 1994. But
    it is not recognized by the international community.

    There are fears that a new flare-up in the Karabakh conflict could be
    even bloodier than in the 1990s and potentially threaten pipelines
    taking Caspian Sea oil and gas from Azerbaijan to Europe.

    The two enemies still exchange deadly fire across the ceasefire line,
    with Armenia insisting that Karabakh will never return to Baku's
    control and Azerbaijan saying that the region must remain part of its
    sovereign territory.

    mkh-emc/ma/boc



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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