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  • Hollande bids to boost Caucasus ties

    The Local, France
    May 11 2014

    Hollande bids to boost Caucasus ties

    Published: 11 May 2014 15:53 GMT+02:00


    French President Francois Hollande starts a three-day visit to the
    South Caucasus on Sunday as he seeks to bolster European ties on
    Russia's southern doorstep amid the crisis in Ukraine.

    French President Francois Hollande starts a three-day visit to the
    South Caucasus on Sunday as he seeks to bolster European ties on
    Russia's southern doorstep amid the crisis in Ukraine.

    Hollande was due to arrive in the Azerbaijani capital Baku around 6:00
    pm Sunday, on the same day separatists in eastern Ukraine held
    referendums on breaking away from the country.

    His visit is unlikely to be welcomed in Moscow, which has long
    considered the ex-Soviet republics of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia
    to be in its sphere
    of influence.

    French officials insisted the visit is not confrontational and aimed
    only at boosting the European Union's relations in the region.

    "We do not see this work for closer ties with the European Union as
    against Russia," a source in Hollande's office said.

    "This is not a combative visit, but one aimed at promoting closer
    ties," the source said.

    Hollande will meet Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev before heading
    to Armenia on Monday and Georgia on Tuesday.

    Like Ukraine, all three countries have sought closer ties with Europe,
    with Georgia going so far as to seek to join the NATO military
    alliance.

    Hollande's visit to the Georgian capital Tbilisi is especially
    sensitive in the wake of the 2008 Georgia-Russia war over the
    separatist regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

    The EU is keen to sign "Eastern Partnership" political and trade
    agreements with ex-Soviet countries, including those in the South
    Caucasus.

    Such a deal with Ukraine was at the origin of the country's crisis
    when then-president Viktor Yanukovych unexpectedly refused to sign up
    under Russian pressure.

    His move triggered pro-EU protests in Kiev which evolved into broader
    demonstrations that eventually led to Yanukovych's ousting.

    The ensuing chaos saw Russia annex Crimea from Ukraine and parts of
    Ukraine's Russian-speaking east threatening to break away.

    Much of the focus of Hollande's visit will be on economic ties, in
    particular in Azerbaijan, where European companies are heavily
    involved in the country's energy industry.

    In Armenia he will focus as well on cultural ties, attending a concert
    Monday by Charles Aznavour, the French crooner of Armenian origin, and
    dedicating a square to Missak Manouchian, a French-Armenian poet and
    resistance fighter who was executed by the Nazis.

    There are some 500,000 French of Armenian origin and the community is
    an important political constituency.

    Hollande will also discuss the Nagorny Karabakh dispute with the
    Azerbaijani and Armenian leaders, after years of fruitless
    negotiations on resolving the frozen conflict.

    Along with Russia and the United States, France has for 20 years been
    trying to mediate a peace deal in the conflict, which saw Armenian
    separatist backed by Yerevan seize Karabakh from Azerbaijan in a war
    that claimed some 30,000 lives.

    The conflict has simmered on, with frequent exchanges of gunfire and
    vows from Baku to retake the region by force.

    http://www.thelocal.fr/20140511/hollande-bids-to-boost-caucasus-ties

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