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Azerbaijan calls on EU to solve Karabakh dispute

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  • Azerbaijan calls on EU to solve Karabakh dispute

    Azerbaijan calls on EU to solve Karabakh dispute
    By Sebastian Alison

    Reuters AlertNet, UK
    May 18 2004

    BRUSSELS, May 18 (Reuters) - Azerbaijan called on the European Union
    to help solve a long-running row with Armenia over the disputed region
    of Nagorno-Karabakh on Tuesday, apparently catching the EU's executive
    Commission off its guard.

    The Commission this month added Azerbaijan, with Caucasus neighbours
    Armenia and Georgia, to its New Neighbourhood programme, which seeks
    closer ties with countries around the bloc following its expansion
    eastwards on May 1.

    Azeri President Ilham Aliyev lost no time in challenging Commission
    President Romano Prodi to translate this into action by asking the
    EU to take a leading role in the conflict.

    Nagorno-Karabakh is a territory wholly inside Azerbaijan, populated
    by Christian ethnic Armenians, which broke away from Baku's rule as
    the Soviet Union collapsed. The Azeris, their country controlling
    large oil resources, want it back.

    Prodi told journalists after meeting Aliyev that the EU had expressed
    "our disposal to help if requested". He insisted he could not give
    details as no request had been made.

    Not so, shot back Aliyev. "We already asked, and during today's
    meeting once again," he said.

    A ceasefire, ending a six-year conflict that killed about 35,000
    people, has held for a decade. However, the Minsk Group of 11
    countries, led by France, the United States and Russia under the
    mandate of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe,
    has so far failed to settle the problem.

    Aliyev, who succeeded his father as president last year, backed the
    Minsk Group but said he wanted more.

    "Azerbaijan is very strongly interested that other important European
    organisations, first of all the European Union, take a more active
    stand," he said.

    "If Azerbaijan and Armenia are now in the New Neighbourhood policy, the
    occupation by one country of the territory of another must be stopped,"
    he added, demanding the immediate withdrawal of Armenian troops.

    His remarks suggest the EU may face problems by rolling out the new
    policy, which could mean "importing" several conflicts -- notably
    in Moldova, another New Neighbour, where a stalled war pitting
    Romanian-speaking Moldovans against ethnic Russians has also rumbled
    on for a decade.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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