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  • BAKU: Azeri opposition daily lambasts US mediator for Karabakh remar

    Azeri opposition daily lambasts US mediator for Karabakh remarks

    Yeni Musavat, Baku
    14 Jul 06

    An Azerbaijani opposition daily has criticized the new US mediator
    for the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict for ignoring the public opinion in
    Azerbaijan and insisting on a referendum on the breakaway region's
    legal status. The paper said that the US co-chairman of the OSCE
    Minsk Group, Matthew Bryza, was confident that the Azerbaijani
    government could quell any public opposition to an agreement with
    Armenia on holding a referendum in Nagornyy Karabakh. The following
    is the text of Alya's report in Azerbaijani newspaper Yeni Musavat
    on 14 July entitled "Who should make Bryza silent?":

    [US co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group] Matthew Bryza has again
    spoken about a referendum in Adana [in Turkey]. A couple of hours
    before the final completion of the USA's useless project, i.e. the
    opening ceremony of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, he gave
    an interview to journalists to say that there was no other way to
    settle the Karabakh problem and that the [Azerbaijani and Armenian]
    presidents should persuade their peoples to agree to this idea
    [referendum on Nagornyy Karabakh's status].

    It emerged that the new co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group is absolutely
    indifferent to the public opinion outside the USA. This means that
    Matthew Bryza could not care less about the negative attitude of the
    Azerbaijani people towards the referendum. How else can one assess the
    statements by Bryza who is obstinately insisting on the referendum
    even after seeing the negative public reaction following his first
    statement? Even if he had not noticed this negative reaction, he
    should have guessed because of his official post that like other
    world nations, the people of Azerbaijan will protest resolutely
    against the proposal to cede their lands.

    As it is out of the question that the new mediator, who joined the
    Karabakh settlement process late but fervently, knows nothing about
    such simple matters, his behaviour might also be explained by the
    fact that he regards as insignificant both the public opinion in
    Azerbaijan and our reaction to the issue.

    Why? Is it because he is confident that the authorities can at
    any time (for example, after [Azerbaijani President] Ilham Aliyev
    consents to sign a peace agreement on holding a referendum) quell any
    opposition, or does he consider that we are not strong and decisive
    enough? In my view, we should now think more about this rather than
    the international situation that can make a peace agreement possible
    or impossible.

    True, for the time being it is a decisive factor that Russia is not
    interested in the resolution of the Karabakh problem. But there is
    no guarantee that the situation will not change. Russia might one
    day compromise Azerbaijan to its eternal rival as it compromised
    Afghanistan and conceded Iraq to the USA after its international
    position was shaken. The history has seen many events which once
    seemed unlikely.

    The matter has another unpleasant aspect - it is international factors
    that have turned Karabakh into a subject of endless bargaining;
    Ilham Aliyev was permitted to commit election fraud precisely as a
    result of this bargaining; it
    is this bargaining that holds back Azerbaijan's development and
    has doomed
    us to live under the tyranny of a repressive and corrupt regime. We
    have been onlookers of this bargaining for many years and we
    have been feeling the growing damage of it with every cell of our
    body. If we finally want to put an end to it, we should think about
    eliminating the reasons behind this attitude rather than being
    surprised at the occupying boldness and demonstrative disrespect
    of Bush's envoys. There is no need for tedious pondering and long
    research. We simply must get rid of our status of onlookers, stop
    bowing to officials from a district police officer to Ilham Aliyev,
    and remove animal fear from our hearts.

    Given our "qualities", we should not be surprised at what is
    happening. Do we not know that we are "a bit" weak in putting up
    resistance? Those on the other shores of the ocean probably know this
    better than we do. Maybe they hesitated at the beginning. But after
    seeing that we show endurance to the most brutal election violence
    and the worst methods of pillage, they have calmed down and began
    to seek Ilham Aliyev's consent only.

    They were very anxious after the 2003 presidential election. They
    arrived in Baku under the guise of experts of some international
    organization and asked representatives of NGOs and of various layers
    of society and politicians probing questions. They asked everyone:
    "Do you think the election could lead to growing terrorist moods and
    Islamic fundamentalism in Azerbaijan?" They tried to find out how
    real was the danger of a civil war. I myself came across one of them
    at one of those meetings. He insisted that I should tell him if a
    civil war was possible in five or 10 years. In fact, his questions
    made me laugh because just a month had passed since the 16 October
    [2003 presidential election] events and I still remembered well what
    part (percentage) of my dear Azerbaijani people could dare to fight.

    I still remember it. The reason people like Steven Mann, Matthew
    Bryza and others are coming to us demanding that we "concede Karabakh"
    is that there were
    few of us on that day. Those "brave boys" - "impartial" and
    "honest" who
    claimed that we were born to fight not them [referring to ANS TV
    and radio] - dared to call us "violent" because there were few of
    us on that day. But the situation has not changed yet.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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