Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Test Of Will?: NKR Announces Opening Of Airport As Armenia-Azerbaija

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Test Of Will?: NKR Announces Opening Of Airport As Armenia-Azerbaija

    TEST OF WILL?: NKR ANNOUNCES OPENING OF AIRPORT AS ARMENIA-AZERBAIJAN TENSIONS REMAIN HIGH
    By John Hughes

    ArmeniaNow
    Karabakh | 27.09.12 | 13:11

    Officials in Nagorno-Karabakh are now saying that the self-declared
    republic's airport - which has already been a flashpoint of regional
    tension and controversy - will open "next week".

    The announcement has dominated Armenian media since Wednesday, when
    the head of civil aviation in the internationally-unrecognized NKR
    Government stated that flights will begin, and that the airport just
    outside capital Stepanakert will serve 100 passengers per hour with
    flights on "Artsakh Air".

    The airport was first predicted to open nearly two years ago, drawing
    immediate anger from Azerbaijan officials, who said any flights in
    "occupied" airspace would be viewed as provocation, and subject to
    being shot down. For more than a year, opening of the airport has
    been delayed "for technical reasons".

    Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan - a native Karabakhi - responded
    to threats in March 2011, by saying that he would be the first
    passenger to fly out of the airport, underscoring his confidence in
    safe operation from the troubled territory which has been under cease
    fire since 1994.

    As recently as July of this year, Baku restated its right to shoot
    down aircraft over Karabakh, which covers some 7,000 square kilometers
    of land viewed by Azeris as still belonging to them.

    When the OSCE Minsk Group stated in July that opening the airport
    would be seen as a means of strengthening the potential for peace
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the director of Azerbaijan's State
    Civil Aviation Administration Arif Mammadov reiterated the earlier
    statements on downing planes.

    "This is the right of the Azerbaijani side, according to the law on
    aviation. Whether this right will be implemented or not, it is for
    the government to decide," Mammadov said.

    The apparent decision to now begin operating commercial flights out
    of Karabakh comes as tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan have
    piqued since last month. Hungary extradited an Azeri army officer,
    Ramil Safarov, who had brutally killed an Armenian officer in Budapest.

    Azeri President Ilham Aliyev immediately pardoned the killer, promoted
    him from lieutenant to major, paid him a salary equivalent to the 8
    years he had been in jail in Hungary, and gave him an apartment.

    The action drew international condemnation against Azerbaijan, and
    was widely viewed by political analysts as proof that the warring
    nations - Armenia is Christian, Azerbaijan is Muslim - are too far
    apart in any meaningful way for reconciliation to be expected.

    Since the "Safarov Affair", a peace settlement seems more distant than
    at any time in the protracted conflict. It is likely that international
    attention and concern will focus on the tiny airport should there,
    indeed, be planes flying "soon" as announced by head of the NKR Civil
    Aviation Dmitry Adbashyan.

Working...
X