AZERBAIJAN: Speaking ahead of talks with Armenia on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict Azerbaijan president warns Azeri troops are ready to use force to take back the rebel region if talks fail
Record ID:
217903
AZERBAIJAN: Speaking ahead of talks with Armenia on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict Azerbaijan president warns Azeri troops are ready to use force to take back the rebel region if talks fail
- Title: AZERBAIJAN: Speaking ahead of talks with Armenia on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict Azerbaijan president warns Azeri troops are ready to use force to take back the rebel region if talks fail
- Date: 22nd November 2009
- Summary: GERANBOI, AZERBAIJAN (NOVEMBER 20, 2009) (REUTERS) AZERBAIJAN PRESIDENT ILHAM ALIYEV ARRIVING IN REFUGEE VILLAGE HOUSES IN REFUGEE VILLAGE VARIOUS OF ALIYEV AT HOME WITH REFUGEES WIDE OF NEW HOUSE
- Embargoed: 7th December 2009 12:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Azerbaijan
- Country: Azerbaijan
- Topics: International Relations
- Reuters ID: LVA3PCW6QLJ5CHFW72TCNECNYORI
- Story Text: Azerbaijan has said talks with Armenia on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict would be "decisive" and warned Azeri troops were ready to use force to take back the rebel region if they fail.
Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev meets Armenia's Serzh Sarksyan on Sunday (November 22) in Munich, Germany for the latest in a string of meetings this year on the Armenian-populated mountain region, which broke away from Azerbaijan in the early 1990s.
The conflict has been thrust back into the diplomatic spotlight this year, with Azeri ally Turkey pressing for progress before it seals an historic thaw with neighbouring Armenia and opens the border it closed in 1993 during the war.
"This meeting must play a decisive role in the process of negotiations," Aliyev said late on Friday (November 20) when visiting a new refugee village in the region bordering Nagorno-Karabakh, in comments broadcast by state television on Saturday (November 21).
"If that meetingwithout result, then our hopes in negotiations will be exhausted and then we are left with no other option," he said, saying Azerbaijan had the right to use force to take back the mountain region.
"Azerbaijan is spending billions on buying new weapons, hardware, strengthening its position on the line of contact," he said at a meeting with Azeri refugees from the conflict.
"We are doing that because we never excluded and we do not exclude that option. We have the full right to liberate our land by military means," he continued.
Aliyev often threatens force to take back the territory, at the heart of a key region for transiting its oil and gas to the West. Analysts say the sabre-rattling should be seen in the context of Azeri anger over Turkey's deal with Armenia.
But Western diplomats warn the frontline, a warren of minefields and trenches manned by snipers, is inherently unstable, and it would take little for the frequent clashes there to escalate.
Ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, backed by Christian Armenia, threw off rule by Muslim Azerbaijan in fighting that erupted as the Soviet Union headed towards its 1991 collapse.
The Armenians took control of the territory and seven surrounding Azeri districts before a ceasefire was declared in 1994. Some 30,000 people died and more than 1 million were made homeless. Around 100,000 Armenians live in Nagorno-Karabakh.
Turkey closed the border in solidarity with Azerbaijan. But in October, Ankara and Yerevan, at odds for a century over the World War One mass killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks, signed accords to establish diplomatic relations and open the frontier.
Faced with a backlash from Azerbaijan, and protracted negotiations over Azeri gas supplies from the Caspian Sea, Turkey says it will only ratify the Armenia deal if its sees progress in the talks on Nagorno-Karabakh.
A trio of mediators from the United States, Russia and France say they are making progress in the talks, but analysts and Western diplomats say neither side appears ready to commit to difficult concessions and sell them to their people.
The mediators are working on a deal that would see the return of many of the Azeri districts held by Armenians, greater international legitimacy for the Nagorno-Karabakh authorities and a future popular vote to decide its status. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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