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Armenia, Azerbaijan appear to edge closer to NK peace

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  • Armenia, Azerbaijan appear to edge closer to NK peace

    ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN APPEAR TO EDGE CLOSER TO KARABAKH PEACE
    Emil Danielyan 5/20/05

    Eurasianet Organization
    May 20 2005

    Armenia and Azerbaijan appear to have moved closer to resolving their
    long-running conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, following a face-to-face
    meeting between the Armenian and Azerbaijani presidents.

    Officials in both countries remained tight-lipped about details of
    the latest round of talks. But it appears Armenian President Robert
    Kocharian and his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev built on
    progress made by their foreign ministers over the past year. The two
    ministers are now expected to start another series of peace talks
    to try to flesh out understandings reportedly reached by Aliyev
    and Kocharian.

    The Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders spoke for nearly three hours late
    on May 15 and early on May 16 on the sidelines of a Council of Europe
    summit in Warsaw. "I hope that the negotiations will produce results
    and the issues between us will be resolved," Aliyev told Azerbaijani
    journalists afterward.

    "The Armenian side finds positive the latest meeting in Warsaw
    between the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan," the Armenian
    Foreign Ministry said in a statement on May 18. "It was yet another
    step forward in the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict."

    Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov and his Armenian
    opposite number Vartan Oskanian have said they were given a mandate
    to continue the so-called "Prague process." The two men held a series
    of meetings in the Czech capital last year and in January, reporting
    significant progress toward a long-awaited Karabakh settlement. They
    both said in April that further headway required the personal
    intervention of their presidents.

    Russia's chief Karabakh negotiator, Yuri Merzlyakov, told Radio
    Free Europe/Radio Liberty on May 19 that the two leaders had reached
    "a point where they can no longer say general things." Publicizing
    details of their discussions at this juncture would be highly
    counterproductive, Merzlyakov said.

    But some details have emerged. Speaking on Armenian state television
    May 19, Oskanian revealed that the agenda of the negotiations
    included four basic "elements" -- Karabakh's status (the main bone
    of contention), the liberation of Armenian-occupied Azerbaijani
    territories that surround the disputed enclave, return of refugees
    and post-conflict security. "We have reached common ground on some
    issues and serious disagreements on others. Our differences have been
    somewhat bridged on one issue," he said, adding that it relates to
    Karabakh's future status.

    The conflicting parties have reportedly been discussing a gradual
    resolution of the conflict, under which a formal determination on
    Karabakh's status would be preceded by the evacuation of Armenian
    forces from broad swaths of territory in Azerbaijan. Armenian troops
    occupied the Azerbaijani territory during the 1991-1994 war. This
    so-called "phased" strategy of conflict resolution has always been
    preferred by Azerbaijan. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive].

    Official Yerevan and Karabakh's ethnic Armenian leadership until
    recently insisted on a "package" accord that would resolve all
    contentious issues at once. But they now seem ready to embrace the
    phased formula so long as they get other international guarantees of
    continued Armenian control over Karabakh. Armenian Defense Minister
    Serge Sarkisian noted recently that this could include a formal pledge
    by the international community to hold a referendum of independence
    in Karabakh.

    "The issue of Karabakh's status of paramount importance to us,"
    stressed Oskanian. "Without having it clarified [beforehand] we are
    simply not prepared for serious discussions on other issues ... It can
    be said that we registered a small movement forward on the [status]
    issue, which enables us to tackle other issues in earnest."

    According to Mammadyarov, the Warsaw meeting focused on a timetable
    for Armenian withdrawal from all of the occupied Azerbaijani lands,
    including the Lachin district that links Armenia proper to Karabakh.
    "We are discussing which district should be liberated and when,"
    Mammadyarov told Azerbaijan's ATV channel. "They (the Armenians)
    agree that all the districts should be returned."

    The Armenian side denied the claims, with Oskanian saying that Lachin's
    return is "non-negotiable." He also rejected Aliyev's offer to grant
    Karabakh a "high degree of autonomy." The Armenians maintain that they
    will never agree to a formula that returns Karabakh to Azerbaijani
    jurisdiction.

    Baku's position, at least in public, is diametrically opposite. "We
    demand the restoration of Azerbaijan's territorial integrity," Aliyev
    said in his speech at the Warsaw summit.

    The French, Russian and US diplomats leading the Minsk Group of the
    Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe have so far failed
    to reconcile these conflicting approaches, despite coming close on
    several occasions in the past. An apparent deal hammered out during
    talks at Key West in 2001 fell apart after facing considerable domestic
    opposition in both Armenia and Azerbaijan. [For background see the
    Eurasia Insight archive]. The recent upbeat statements coming from
    Baku and Yerevan suggest that chances for Karabakh peace are better
    now than at any time since the Key West talks ended.


    Editor's Note: Emil Danielyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and
    political analyst.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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