
Published on December 01, 2006
Armenia Cools Azeri Talk Of Karabakh Breakthrough
- Armenia and Azerbaijan on Friday made differing assessments of the latest peace talks between their presidents, with Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian saying that progress reportedly made by them is overstated by the Azerbaijani side. His Azerbaijani counterpart Elmar Mammadyarov insisted, however, that Presidents Ilham Aliev and Robert Kocharian agreed on all but one of the basic principles of a peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict favored by international mediators. “As I have always pointed out, in the process of Karabakh settlement there are eight or nine principles, on most of which we have agreed,” Mammadyarov told the Day.az online news agency, commenting on Tuesday’s meeting in Minsk of Aliev and Kocharian. “And we can now say that there remains only one [unresolved] issue. If we manage to make progress on it as well, it will be possible to speak of a breakthrough.” Mammadyarov refused to disclose that issue, saying that it is “very sensitive.” His remarks are in tune with Aliev’s remarkably positive assessment of the Minsk talks. The Azerbaijani leader declared on his return from the Belarusian capital that the conflicting parties are nearing the “final stage” of the Karabakh peace process. While confirming that the talks were “positive” and “constructive,” Oskanian clearly did not share Aliev’s optimism. “It is really hard to say what stage were are in,” he told a news conference in Yerevan. “So I wouldn’t like to say that we are in the final stage. We still have numerous unresolved issues to deal with.” “There is still the question of bringing Nagorno-Karabakh into the negotiations,” continued Oskanian. “If Mr. Aliev thinks that we have really entered the final stage, then he must immediately agree to Nagorno-Karabakh’s participation [in the negotiations]. Because without Nagorno-Karabakh’s participation, at least in that final stage, the problem’s resolution is just impossible.” Oskanian stressed at the same time that the latest Armenian-Azerbaijani summit was more successful than the two previous Aliev-Kocharian meetings in February and June. “I can say that the negotiations are not in deadlock,” he said. “I could not say this with the same certainty after the previous meetings.” Both Oskanian and Mammadyarov said they and the U.S., Russian and French mediators will likely meet in Brussels next week to discuss their next steps. The Azerbaijani official also did not rule out the possibility of another Aliev-Kocharian encounter before the end of this year. He said the parties and the three co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group would like to hammer out a compromise peace accord “as soon as possible” because of Armenia’s approaching parliamentary elections. “There are doubts about which party will win the elections,” explained Mammadyarov. Despite the reported progress in the negotiating progress, the two sides continue to stand, at least in public, by their diametrically opposite positions on Karabakh’s future status, the main bone of contention. Azerbaijan’s leadership insists that it is only prepared to give Karabakh a high degree of autonomy, while the Armenians reject any settlement that would place the disputed territory under Azerbaijani control. “These two seemingly contradictory principles can be reconciled only by means of a referendum [in Karabakh],” Oskanian said. “The agreement [proposed by the Minsk Group] does contain the idea of a referendum on which negotiations have been going on.” Mammadyarov countered that such a vote must not run counter to the Azerbaijani constitution that considers Karabakh an inalienable part of Azerbaijan. (Photolur photo)

- By Emil Danielyan and Anna Saghabalian
Headlines for December 01, 2006
Armenia Cools Azeri Talk Of Karabakh Breakthrough
By Emil Danielyan and Anna Saghabalian
Armenia and Azerbaijan on Friday made differing assessments of the latest peace talks between their presidents, with Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian saying that progress reportedly made by them is overstated ...Markarian Urges Russia To Tackle Hate Crimes
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Prime Minister Andranik Markarian urged Russia’s government to tackle continuing racist attacks on Armenians and minimize losses incurred by Armenian companies as a result of the Russian economic blockade ...Armenian Police ‘Rewarded For Opposition Crackdown’
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Armenian police officers who brutally broke up a opposition demonstration near President Robert Kocharian’s office in April 2004 were subsequently rewarded with cash, medals and even personal firearms, ...
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Today in Armenian history- 1824 The Nerssissian school opens in Tbilissi (Georgia) and continues to operate till 1924.
- 1827 Creation of an Armenian printing-house in Shooshee (Artsakh).
- 1827 Sultan Mahmud the Second expels about 12000 Armenian Catholics from Constantinople. Some 4000 die of exposure along the way and the remainder are banished to provinces of Asia Minor, which they reach in February 1828.
- 1876 The Turkish government orders the burning of the market of Van and destroys Armenian properties.
- 1894 Publication of the "Struggle" newspaper (Association of Armenian Worker-Revolutionaries).
- 1899 Death of Tigran Yerkat, publicist and public figure.
- 1903 Death of Manvel Qadjooni, historian, geographer, and philologist. He was born in 1823.
- 1903 Death of Manuel Katjooni (historian) in Constantinople. He was born in 1823.
- 1914 Battle of Sarighamish. Destruction of the Turkish Army, that was led by Enver Pasha.
- 1915 United States President Theodore Roosevelt states: The crowning outrage has been committed by the Turks on the Armenians. They have suffered atrocities so hideous that it is difficult to name them, such atrocities such as those inflicted upon conquered nations by the followers of Attila and Genghis Khan. It is dreadful that these things can be done and that this nation nevertheless remains neutral.
- 1917 The People's Commissariat of Nationalities of Soviet Russia creates the Commissariat of Armenian Affairs in Moscow. Varlam Avanesov is appointed commissar and Vahan Teryan (poet) is the deputy.
- 1920 The Revolutionary Council of Azerbaijan recognizes Gharabagh, Zangezur, and Nakhichevan to be parts of Armenia.
- 1921 Elections of the first Peasant District and Provincial Unions in Armenia.
- 1923 The Komitas State Conservatory of Music opens in Yerevan.
- 1929 Yerevan's Kanaker radio station starts its broadcasts.
- 1941 Colonel Simon Zakyan heads the new Armenian 89th Rifle Division.
- 1989 The reunification of Artsakh and Armenia is accepted during a joint session of the Parliaments of Armenia and Artsakh. This was followed by the adoption, by Artsakhs legislative body, of a motion to secede from Azerbaijan. The Supreme Soviet of Azerbaijan rejected the decision as illegal and the Supreme Soviet of the USSR declare? it null and void.
- 1989 The Supreme Council of Mountainous Gharabagh (Artsakh) decides to rejoin Armenia in a joint session with the Armenian supreme Council.
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