Breakaway Karabakh Adopts Pro-Independence Charter

BREAKAWAY KARABAKH ADOPTS PRO-INDEPENDENCE CHARTER
By Hasmik Lazarian

Reuters, UK
Dec 11 2006

YEREVAN (Reuters) – Azerbaijan’s breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region
has overwhelmingly approved a new pro-independence constitution,
returns from a Sunday referendum showed.

According to official preliminary figures released on Monday, 98.6
percent of voters approved the constitution, which describes Karabakh
as a sovereign state. Turnout was 87.2 percent.

"According to preliminary results, the constitution is adopted and
December 10 from now can be declared as a Constitution Day," election
commission chief Sergey Nasibyan told Reuters by telephone.

The vote was held on the 15th anniversary of a referendum in which
Karabakh, which split from Azerbaijan in a 1990s war that killed
35,000 people, declared independence.

The new plebiscite was seen as a signal of commitment to independence
by the region.

Azerbaijan and the international community do not recognize
Nagorno-Karabakh’s independence. There was no immediate reaction to
the vote by the Azeri government.

Conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, a mountainous territory about half
the size of the Mediterranean island of Cyprus, is still unresolved,
fuelling instability in a part of the world that is emerging as a
major energy supplier.

The majority of people in Nagorno-Karabakh are Christian ethnic
Armenians who associate themselves with neighboring Armenia rather
than Azerbaijan, a majority Muslim state.

Azerbaijan is determined to restore its control over the region and
said the referendum was illegitimate.

The fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh was the bloodiest of the separatist
wars that broke out when the Soviet Union disintegrated. A fragile
ceasefire has been in force since 1994 but there are still occasional
exchanges of gunfire.

A major BP-led pipeline linking Azerbaijan’s Caspian Sea oil fields to
world markets passes a few kilometers (miles) from the conflict zone.

Ethnic clashes in the late 1980s escalated after the collapse of the
Soviet Union into full-scale fighting. Armenia joined the fighting
on the side of the separatists.

Though Azerbaijan lost that war, it is now threatening a new military
campaign to crush the separatists if stalled peace talks do not
produce results soon.

Nagorno-Karabakh differs from other "frozen conflicts" in ex-Soviet
Georgia and Moldova in that former imperial master Russia has no
presence there and no direct interest in supporting either side.