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Armenia Considers Recognizing Nagorno Karabakh's Independence

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  • Armenia Considers Recognizing Nagorno Karabakh's Independence

    ARMENIA CONSIDERS RECOGNIZING NAGORNO KARABAKH'S INDEPENDENCE

    EurasiaNet.org
    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/65858
    Sept 4 2012
    NY

    To Armenia, Azerbaijan's recent pardoning of Lieutenant Ramil Safarov,
    convicted of the 2004 axe murder of an Armenian army officer during
    a training in Budapest, was a slap in the face. Now, Armenia is
    contemplating a response that could take the two countries' angry
    dispute over Safarov into an entirely new dimension.

    A bill was presented to the Armenian parliament on September 4 to
    recognize as an independent country the breakaway region of Nagorno
    Karabakh, the territory that was the cause of the 1988-1994 war between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan. No date has yet been scheduled for the vote.

    Arguably, Armenia has long interacted with the de-facto government of
    Karabakh as if with an independent country -- if not an additional
    Armenian province -- but has refrained from making that position
    official.

    Coming on the heels of warnings of war from Armenian President Serzh
    Sargsyan, a Karabakh native, the measure might well give outside
    observers pause.

    The bill, though, is far from the enraged response of an isolated few.

    Armenia has severed diplomatic relations with Hungary, where Safarov
    had been serving life for the 2004 murder, for permitting Safarov's
    return to Azerbaijan, with demonstrations staged in Budapest and
    Yerevan, to boot.

    Frustration over the international community's inability to take
    Azerbaijan down to size for the exoneration also appears to feed into
    the measure. In comments widely echoed by others, analyst Richard
    Giragosian on September 3 argued that "If this crisis continues with
    Azerbaijan acting so irresponsible, the Armenian government should
    consider recognizing the independence of Nagorno Karabakh or demanding
    others to do so."

    Washington, Brussels, and Moscow, seen as the key outside actors for
    peace over the Karabakh conflict, have all condemned the pardoning.

    Budapest, for its part, denying reports that it was looking to Baku
    for a debt bailout, claims to be in a state of eye-batting shock at
    Safarov's exoneration.

    But the words of censure do not appear to have had the intended effect
    on Baku.

    Calling the US position on the case "baffling," Azerbaijani Foreign
    Minister Elmar Mammadyarov got on the phone with US Undersecretary
    of State for Political Affairs William Burns to seek an explanation
    for Washington's harsh criticism.

    Azerbaijani officials, as well as many ordinary people, say that
    the atrocities committed by ethnic Armenians against ethnic Azeris
    in Karabakh and otherwise during the Karabakh war, fully justify
    the exoneration.

    But quite a few Azerbaijanis say that Safarov needs a straitjacket
    or a prison, rather than freedom, promotion and an apartment in Baku.

    As one Azerbaijani wrote in a blog post about the dangers of the
    Azerbaijani government's both stoking and pandering to nationalist
    extremism, the state's embrace of Safarov could turn him into a
    frightening role model for other "patriots."

    The Armenian parliament's vote on Karabakh could well prove an
    opportunity to test that theory.

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