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Armenian leader pins "modest hopes" on talks with Azeri president

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  • Armenian leader pins "modest hopes" on talks with Azeri president

    Armenian leader pins "modest hopes" on talks with Azeri president

    Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
    2 Jun 06


    [Presenter] Armenian President Robert Kocharyan does not hope that
    special changes will happen at the forthcoming meeting in
    Bucharest. The Armenian president said today that he pinned modest
    hopes on his forthcoming meeting with Azerbaijani President Ilham
    Aliyev.

    Kocharyan also said that the framework of issues discussed currently
    creates an opportunity to ensure a stable and lasting settlement of
    the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict, but there is an impression that
    Azerbaijan is in no mood to resolve the conflict peacefully, which is
    proved by bellicose statements made in Baku.

    [Correspondent] Asked by journalists whether he has expectations from
    one more meeting with Aliyev in Bucharest, if we take into account
    bellicose statements made by the Azerbaijani president who accuses
    Armenia of taking a nonconstructive position, the Armenian president
    said at a news conference in [Armenia's] Vayots Dzor Region that he
    pinned modest hopes on the forthcoming meeting.

    [Kocharyan] I have modest hopes on the forthcoming meeting because of
    bellicose statements and comments that have nothing to do with issues
    under discussion. This creates the impression that the opposite side
    is in no mood to resolve the conflict seriously.

    [Correspondent] The president also noted that statements made by
    Azerbaijani officials that the problem should be solved on the basis
    of Azerbaijan's territorial integrity are surprising.

    [Kocharyan] Since the establishment of the UN, there has not been any
    nation that gained independence and then changed its mind and returned
    to the state from which it had broken away.

    [Correspondent] The Armenian president pointed out that when the UN
    was established, it had 51 members, but there were about 70 countries
    in the world.

    Today the UN has 191 members, but the number of countries in the world
    is about 200. The Armenian president believes that this progress
    results from national liberation movements, the implementation of the
    right to self-determination and the downfall of empires.

    [Kocharyan] I do not understand why the Armenians - the Karabakh
    people - should make a decision that they do not need independence and
    think about returning somewhere. I am surprised why they are thinking
    of us in this way.

    [Correspondent] Kocharyan also spoke about the Orinats Yerkir
    (Law-Governed Country) Party's withdrawal from the ruling coalition
    and the changes that have taken place in the coalition. The president
    described as absurd the comments that the authorities have allegedly
    sent Orinats Yerkir on a mission to the opposition. We are not so
    skilled in politics, he said.

    [Passage omitted: Kocharyan spoke about the role of the opposition and
    ruling coalition; he said that relations between him and Orinats
    Yerkir leader Artur Bagdasaryan worsened because of their different
    views on foreign policy; he said that Bagdasaryan tried to offer his
    personal approaches to issues that were directly related to Armenia's
    national security and that he disagreed with Bagdasaryan]
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