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Aliev, Kocharian In Fresh Karabakh Talks

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  • Aliev, Kocharian In Fresh Karabakh Talks

    ALIEV, KOCHARIAN IN FRESH KARABAKH TALKS
    By Harry Tamrazian in Prague and Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Nov 28 2006

    The presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan were meeting in the Belarusian
    capital Minsk late Tuesday for crucial peace talks which international
    mediators hoped will produce a breakthrough in their long-running
    efforts to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    Robert Kocharian and Ilham Aliev came face to face for a third time
    in less than a year on the sidelines of a summit of former Soviet
    republics making up the Commonwealth of Independent States.

    An Armenian diplomatic source told RFE/RL that the talks, held at the
    Russian embassy in Belarus, began in the presence of Russia's Foreign
    Minister Sergey Lavrov and the chairman-in-office of the Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe, Belgian Foreign Minister Karel
    de Gucht. French, Russian and U.S. diplomats co-chairing the OSCE's
    Minsk Group were also in attendance before the two leaders continued
    their discussions in a tete-a-tete format, the source said.

    Kocharian's spokesman, Victor Soghomonian, was quoted by the Russian
    Regnum news agency as saying that no statements are likely to be made
    after the talks.

    The Minsk talks were widely seen as the last real chance to settle
    the Karabakh conflict before national elections that are due to take
    place in Armenia and Azerbaijan next year and in 2008. The mediators
    have indicated that failure to cut a framework peace deal now would
    keep the conflict unresolved at least until 2009. They arranged the
    latest Armenian-Azerbaijani summit during a visit to Baku and Yerevan
    last week. It followed a series of negotiations between the foreign
    ministers of the two South Caucasus states.

    Those talks reportedly centered on what the Minsk Group co-chairs
    call "complementary elements" to their existing peace plan that was
    discussed by Aliev and Kocharian during their two previous encounters
    earlier this year. The two men failed to reach any far-reaching
    agreements, contrary to unusually high expectations of a breakthrough
    in the Karabakh peace process.

    The Minsk Group plan calls for a gradual resolution of the dispute
    that would lead to Armenian withdrawal from most of the Azerbaijani
    districts surrounding Karabakh and culminate in a referendum on
    the disputed territory's status. Officials in Yerevan have said the
    peace formula is largely acceptable to the Armenian side. Official
    Baku's position on the issue is more ambiguous, with Aliev repeatedly
    stating that he will never recognize Karabakh's secession from Soviet
    Azerbaijan.

    The unpublicized "complementary elements" are aimed at helping the
    parties bridge their differences. Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian
    and his Azerbaijani counterpart Elmar Mammadyarov indicated after
    their recent talks that they managed to make further progress towards
    that goal.

    However, Kocharian sought to cool fresh talk of Karabakh peace during
    a visit to Germany earlier this month, saying that he is not optimistic
    about the success of the Minsk meeting.
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