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BAKU: Baku Condemns Armenian Leader's Karabakh Comments

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  • BAKU: Baku Condemns Armenian Leader's Karabakh Comments

    BAKU CONDEMNS ARMENIAN LEADER'S KARABAKH COMMENTS

    news.az
    Aug 22, 2011
    Azerbaijan

    The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry has accused Armenian President Serzh
    Sargsyan of undermining the Karabakh peace process.

    "These statements show Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan's intention
    to put an end to the agreements reached, beginning from the Prague
    process up to the preparation of the updated Madrid principles," the
    first secretary of the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry press service,
    Elman Abdullayev, told 1news.az, referring to different stages in
    the years of talks to find a peaceful settlement to the conflict.

    Elman Abdullayev said that in remarks made on Saturday to an Armenian
    youth camp Serzh Sargsyan had distorted facts and called for the
    continuing occupation of Azerbaijani land.

    "The sooner Nagorno-Karabakh is recognized, the better for all,
    including Azerbaijan," the Armenian president told the young people.

    He accused the Azerbaijani leadership of failing to recognize that
    Karabakh was Armenian land and pledged that it would never be part
    of Azerbaijan.

    "Instead of preparing his people for peace and thereby contributing to
    the development of the region and its welfare, Sargsyan is radicalizing
    Armenian society," Abdullayev said, echoing Sargsyan's accusation that
    the Azerbaijani leadership was making anti-Armenian statements and
    "preaching hatred".

    "In his statements, the Armenian president shows his real intentions
    and reveals the real policy of Armenia, which is yet more proof that
    he does not seek peace or plan to disavow his nonconstructive policy,"
    Abdullayev told 1news.az.

    He said that Serzh Sargsyan's remarks practically contradicted
    the statements of the presidents of Russia, France and the United
    States, the three countries that co-chair the OSCE Minsk Group,
    the international body mediating a settlement to the conflict.

    The spat highlights the nub of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict
    over Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenia insists on the right of the ethnically
    Armenian population of Karabakh to self-determination, while Azerbaijan
    insists on respect for international law under which the territory
    is part of Azerbaijan.

    The two countries fought a bitter war over the territory which ended
    in a cease-fire in 1994. Armenian forces occupy Karabakh and the seven
    surrounding Azerbaijani districts. The OSCE Minsk Group has since been
    seeking to mediate a settlement of the conflict, but the two sides'
    positions remain far apart.

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