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Clinton 'Very Concerned' By Armenia-Azerbaijan Tensions

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  • Clinton 'Very Concerned' By Armenia-Azerbaijan Tensions

    CLINTON 'VERY CONCERNED' BY ARMENIA-AZERBAIJAN TENSIONS
    By Jim Mannion

    Agence France Presse
    June 4 2012

    YEREVAN - US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Monday she was
    "very concerned" by escalating tensions over Nagorny-Karabakh and
    warned Armenia and Azerbaijan not to settle their conflict by force.

    Clinton was speaking in Yerevan after Armenia said Azerbaijani troops
    killed three Armenian soldiers during an alleged incursion, in the
    latest bloodshed in the long conflict over the Armenian-controlled
    Azerbaijani enclave.

    "While I have only just learned about these incidents, I am very
    concerned about the danger of escalation of tensions and the senseless
    deaths of young soldiers and innocent civilians," she told reporters.

    "The use of force will not resolve the Nagorny-Karabakh conflict and
    therefore force must not be used," she said at a news conference with
    Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian.

    An estimated 30,000 people were killed in the war 20 years ago over
    Nagorny-Karabakh, when ethnic Armenian forces backed by Yerevan seized
    control over the region and surrounding territories in Azerbaijan.

    Skirmishes have been frequent since a 1994 ceasefire. Monday's deadly
    clash erupted in Armenia's northeastern Tavush region, where three
    other servicemen died during an alleged Azerbaijani attack in April.

    Azerbaijani media reported however that the three deaths were caused
    by an Armenian army "provocation" that was repelled.

    Baku has threatened to use force to win back Karabakh if peace
    talks fail to yield satisfactory results, but Yerevan has warned of
    large-scale retaliation against any military action.

    Clinton also urged Turkey to normalize relations with Armenia,
    severed since 1993 at the height of the war over Nagorny-Karabakh.

    "We are committed to seeing Armenia and Turkey normalize relations
    because we think this is a better path forward for the citizens of
    both countries and we strongly support ratification of the protocols
    (of normalization) without preconditions," she said.

    "The ball is in Turkey's court," she said.

    US officials say better relations with Turkey could help Armenia's
    struggling economy, which suffered a 15 percent drop in GDP during
    the 2008-2009 global financial crisis.

    "We believe these are countries that should have open borders,
    should work together, should trade, they should have people to people
    exchanges because it would be mutually beneficial to all concerned,"
    she said.

    Clinton, who met with President Serzh Sarkisian, also planned to
    use her visit to stress the importance of rule of law, transparency
    and fair elections after recent parliamentary polls and presidential
    elections due in 2013.

    Parliamentary elections last month drew charges of vote buying,
    but OSCE monitors said the process was improved over elections in 2008.

    Clinton met with Armenia's leaders as she embarked on a tour of the
    turbulent Caucasus with its volatile mixture of oil, ethnic conflict
    and great power politics.

    Landlocked Armenia is the first stop in a Caucasus swing that will
    also take Clinton to Georgia, Azerbaijan and then to Turkey.

    After her meeting here, Clinton travels to staunch US ally Georgia
    which fought a brief 2008 war with Russia over two breakaway regions
    and whose pro-Western President Mikheil Saakashvili remains an arch-foe
    of Moscow.

    In Azerbaijan, Clinton will see a country with a rapidly growing
    energy-based economy that has made it much-wooed player in the region,
    sitting on a "southern gas corridor" from the Caspian Sea.

    Highlighting the energy interests of the United States, which has
    invested $8 billion in the country since independence in 1991, the
    secretary will visit an oil and gas trade exposition in Baku.


    From: Baghdasarian
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