BAKU: Pakistani Envoy Calls Ramil Safarov ‘Hero Of The Entire Muslim

PAKISTANI ENVOY CALLS RAMIL SAFAROV ‘HERO OF THE ENTIRE MUSLIM WORLD’

News.Az
Tue 04 September 2012 12:10 GMT | 13:10 Local Time

Azerbaijani army officer Ramil Safarov, recently extradited home
and pardoned, is the hero of not only Azerbaijan but also the entire
Muslim world.

The statement came from Ambassador of Pakistan in Azerbaijan Inay
Ullah Kakar.

According to him, Safarov’s was released recently and the Pakistani
government has not yet formally responded to it. “But personally, I
appreciate his extradition, and especially the decree of Azerbaijani
President for a pardon”, he added.

He also said that Pakistan has no diplomatic relations with Armenia,
as the country occupied the territory of Azerbaijan.

“Azerbaijan and Pakistan have good political ties. But it would be
nice also to develop economic and cultural relations.The trade between
the two countries amounted to $ 3 million last year. We have great
potential to increase this figure”, he added.

He also said that Pakistan conducts periodic training for Azerbaijani
officers. “Creation of a unified system of protection of the Muslim
countries is a good idea”, the diplomat said.

BAKU: Azerbaijan Expresses Bewilderment With U.S. Position On Ramil

AZERBAIJAN EXPRESSES BEWILDERMENT WITH U.S. POSITION ON RAMIL SAFAROV

Azerbaijan Business Center
Sept 4 2012

Baku, Fineko/abc.az. Since Friday, the day of his extradition to Baku
and pardon by President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan, Ramil Safarov has
been remaining in the centre of foreign policy activity of the country.

Press-secretary of the Azerbaijani Ministry of Foreign Affairs Elman
Abdullayev informed of yesterday’s phone conversation between Foreign
Minister Elmar Mammadyarov of Azerbaijan and the U.S. Deputy Secretary
of State William Burns.

“In the conversation our minister voiced perplexity with the U.S.
position on the issue of Safarov’s extradition. The minister stressed
that precisely Azerbaijan is suffering from the occupation of its
territory by Armenia. Mammadyarov underlined that the issue of Safarov
should not be considered outside the context of the fact of occupation,
as it is a consequence of the aggression of Armenia,” Abdullayev said.

The same position was expressed by Mammadyarov at a meeting held
in Paris with the OSCE Minsk Group on the matter of settlement of
Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagorno Garabagh conflict. However, it did not
find support of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs, who expressed concern
about the pardon of Ramil Safarov in Azerbaijan.

“In the meeting with the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan
on 2 and 3 September the MG co-chairs expressed deep concern and
regret on the fact that the pardon and efforts aimed to praise the
crime harmed the peace process and the trust between the parties,”
the mediators’ statement says.

At that, the co-chairs reiterated the lack of alternative for peaceful
settlement of the Garabagh conflict. They also stated that they would
continue to maintain contacts with Armenia and Azerbaijan in order
to reduce tensions and promote the peaceful process of the Garabagh
conflict.

Hungarian-Azeri-Armenian Relations: The Axe Factor

GUEST POST: HUNGARIAN-AZERI-ARMENIAN RELATIONS: THE AXE FACTOR

Registan
Sept 4 2012

This is a guest post by Peter Marton.

The act

Ramil Safarov, a lieutenant in the Azerbaijani army, came to Budapest
in 2004 to study English at a seminar organized by the Hungarian
National Defense University in the framework of NATO’s Partnership
for Peace program. There were participants of various nationalities
attending the course, including Armenians, and after some more cordial
initial encounters, insults were traded between them and the Azeri
officer.

Safarov’s Hungarian defense lawyer would later claim that he is an
exceptionally intelligent young man, as evidenced by his IQ tests, but
in this case his intelligence clearly did not translate into wisdom.

On the night of February 19, 2004 he proceeded to hack to death one of
the Armenian officers, army lieutenant Gurgen Margaryan, with an axe
he had bought the previous day. He then tried to get into the room
where the other Armenian officer was staying, at the same dorm, but
stopped at calling out the officer’s name in front of the locked door
to his room. An Uzbek student put an end to the madness by grabbing
Safarov, calming him down. Together they lit a cigarette.

Safarov hails from the broader region of Nagorno-Karabakh. His family
members had to flee to Baku, and people whom he referred to as his
cousins were killed during the war which clearly traumatized him. In
his own retelling he also added, however, that he did not kill anyone
during the war with Armenia and that for this reason he felt it was
his duty to act this time, feeling this would be a way to get even
for atrocities that Azeris suffered during the conflict at the hands
of Armenians. He also alleged that at one point his victim insulted
the Azeri flag which he saw as particularly offensive – something
that further convinced him to take action. What he then did shocked
even his fellow Azeri student enrolled in the same program.

The murder caused enormous embarrassment for Hungary. A soldier, for
whose security Hungarian authorities had taken responsibility, killed
by another guest of the Hungarian state, indirectly under the auspices
of NATO. In April 2006, Safarov was sentenced to life imprisonment,
and the following year a Hungarian court of appeal upheld the ruling.

As it turned out, however, this was not the last time Ramil Safarov
would cause major problems for Hungary. Although at the second time
when he was to do so, it would not really be by his doing.

Five and a half years later

On August 31, 2012, Hungary extradited Ramil Safarov to Azerbaijan.

Upon the Azeri request for extradition, the Hungarian Ministry of
Public Administration and Justice reportedly sought formal assurance
from its Azeri counterpart that Safarov would duly serve the remainder
of his sentence in Azerbaijan, and received a fax reply, signed by
the Deputy Minister of Justice, stating that as a matter of general
practice sentenced persons who are transferred to Azerbaijan do serve
the remainder of their sentences “without conversion or having to go
through any new judicial procedure.”

According to the Hungarian government’s version of events, the
Hungarian Ministry was at this point satisfied by the Azeri response.

They claim that they had no reason to doubt the intentions of a
country like Azerbaijan, elected as a non-permanent member of the
United Nations Security Council with strong support in the UN General
Assembly (having competed against Hungary, incidentally, and Slovenia
for the slot reserved for Eastern European countries).

With authorization from Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Hungarian
authorities went ahead with the transfer. Upon Safarov’s arrival,
Azeri President Ilham Aliyev immediately pardoned him, and then
promoted him to the rank of major in the Azerbaijani army. In no
time the masses were celebrating his return home on the streets. The
elated deputy chairman and executive secretary of the presidential
New Azerbaijan Party, Ali Akhmedov declared that now that “Ramil was
released, next is the liberation of Karabakh.”

What changed in-between

In a nutshell, Azerbaijan became very important, for Hungary as well
as for others. By the time Ramil Safarov decided to kill his Armenian
schoolmate, plans for what is widely known now as the Nabucco pipeline
were already being considered. Caucasian developments slowly paved the
way for such a project to seem feasible, and this prompted a wave of
engagements in the field energy diplomacy by hitherto passive players,
including Eastern European countries facing the problem of one-sided
dependence on Russian natural gas imports.

Safarov became very important, too. Zahid Oruj, a member of the
Azerbaijani parliament’s national security committee now claims that
the chief reason for the opening of an Azerbaijani embassy in Budapest
was to defend Safarov’s interests and expedite his release. Azeri
diplomats did indeed work hard on this. On numerous occasions they
requested Safarov’s extradition, only to be turned down.

Then the Hungarian government changed, too, with Prime Minister
Viktor Orban’s government coming to power in 2010. The new leadership
inherited problems with state debt and was seeking to address this
challenge through what it called “unorthodox” solutions. In order
to remain loyal to its own, peculiar vision of economic policy,
the government was now interested in seeking unorthodox sources
of debt refinancing as well, as an alternative to the IMF and its
conditionality-based lending. At the same time they were pushing on
with Hungary’s already intense efforts in energy diplomacy. They also
announced a policy of “global opening” and later a policy of “eastern
opening,” turning, for favorable economic cooperation agreements and
assistance, to countries like China, Saudi Arabia and even Azerbaijan.

In the beginning of August this year, news emerged that Hungary was
considering an issuance of sovereign bonds in Turkey, denominated in
either Turkish lira or Azeri manat, or both. At around the same time,
the Azeri oil firm, SOCARindicated they would eventually decide on
whether they would prefer the Nabucco-West or the TAP (Trans-Adriatic)
pipeline as the priority arm of the gas supply route carrying gas
from the Caspian Shah Deniz field to Europe.

And then Safarov’s extradition took place.

Perceptions

The Hungarian government is left looking either hopelessly naïve or
blatantly cynical in the wake of Safarov’s pardon in Azerbaijan. The
contrast between the two different interpretations gets even starker
when one considers that there may have been occasional talks about
Safarov’s fate between Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban and
Azeri President Ilham Aliyev for over a year, as Novruz Mammadov, the
foreign affairs secretary of the Azeri presidential cabinet now says.

The current Hungarian government version is in line with the former
assumption. Armenian protesters in various capitals from Yerevan
to Washington, for their part, were keen onrunning the point home
that it is the second version – a case of cynicism – that they
believe to be true. Peter Szijjarto, the foreign affairs secretary
of the Prime Minister’s Office in charge of the implementation of
Hungary’s “eastern opening,” engaged in damage control by saying:
“a dull international legal issue and the two countries’ economic
cooperation have no bearing on each other whatsoever.” Meanwhile,
both the Hungarian Government Debt Management Agency and SOFAZ, the
State Oil Fund of Azerbaijandenied the existence of plans for the
issuance or the purchasing of Hungarian sovereign bonds, respectively.

Regardless of this and the Hungarian diplomatic note handed in
protest of the presidential pardon to the Azeri ambassador in
Budapest, Armenia broke off diplomatic ties with Hungary, rather
embarrassingly for a country like Hungary, having, as it does, a
stake in the European Union’s Eastern Partnership. This may be true
even though the Hungarian Armenian National Minority Self-Government
is now saying that the Armenian ambassador to Vienna, Austria, who
would have been accredited to Budapest as well, could not present
his letter of credence to the President of Hungary for over a year,
and that diplomatic ties were thus not functioning really well anyway.

Hard realities

Whatever one thinks of the reasons for Hungary’s decision, there is no
denying the fact that as long as natural gas imports remain important
for the country, it will need to keep the Azeri option alive. And
although calculations regarding this were not necessarily at the core
of the move to extradite Safarov and thus please the Azeri people
and leadership, it now transpires more clearly that popular Azeri
attitudes about Hungary were in fact not very positive.

Ali Akhmedov, in the same speech, quoted above, in which he envisioned
the liberation of Karabakh to follow Ramil Safarov’s release soon,
remembered what happened eight years ago in Budapest in the following
interesting terms: “Both Karabakh, and Ramil became victims of
saboteurs.”

“Saboteur” is an interesting label to apply to a country for sentencing
a murderer. The background to this may perhaps be illustrated by
recent commentary from Azeri political analyist Ilgar Mammadov who
concludes that as Hungary is widely seen in Azerbaijan as a country
where Armenians are integrated into the elite since centuries, “the
case of Safarov was also a strong slap in the face to all holders of
the myth of the power of the Armenian diaspora.”

Ali Akhmedov is now sort-of generously giving credit to Hungary for
“being able to assess” that “in world history no cases of Azerbaijan’s
violence, injustice against any country have been recorded,” and that
therefore “Azerbaijan has the right to expect from the other the same
treatment.” He says he was happy to see that “when there is mind –
no need to use force.”

That such attitudes may change vis-a-vis Hungary now is scarce
consolation for the damage that has been done, not to mention the
morals of the story.

Peter Marton is a lecturer in International Relations at Corvinus
University in Budapest.

http://registan.net/2012/09/04/guest-post-hungarian-azeri-armenian-relations-the-axe-factor/

European Commissioner Concerned About The Pardon Of Azerbaijani Army

EUROPEAN COMMISSIONER CONCERNED ABOUT THE PARDON OF AZERBAIJANI ARMY OFFICER CONVICTED OF MURDER

Vestnik Kavkaza
Sept 4 2012
Russia

The Council of Europe’s Commissioner for Human Rights, Nils Muižnieks,
expressed his deep concerns on Tuesday about Azerbaijan’s decision
to pardon and honour Ramil Safarov, an Azerbaijani army officer who
in 2004 brutally murdered an Armenian officer, Gurgen Margaryan,
the Council of Europe official website informs.

“Racist crimes must not go unpunished. Violent offences motivated
by bias, such as racial or inter-ethnic hatred, are a particularly
pernicious form of criminality. Apart from the destructive effects
on the victims and those close to them, they can be devastating to
whole communities and unravel the very fabric of society. States are
under an obligation to apply strongly dissuasive sanctions against
those who have perpetrated bias-motivated crimes,” the statement says.

Azerbaijan’s Attempts To Justify Itself Are "Monstrous", Armenian De

AZERBAIJAN’S ATTEMPTS TO JUSTIFY ITSELF ARE “MONSTROUS”, ARMENIAN DEPUTY FM SAYS

Mediamax
Sept 3 2012
Armenia

Yerevan/Mediamax/. Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharyan
said today that Baku’s attempts to justify the pardoning of Ramil
Safarov by the provisions of Strasburg Convention “are groundless and
as monstrous as the decision to release and honor the killer who has
been sentenced to life in prison.”

In reply to the question of Armenpress, he said that “this outrageous
act of the Azeri leadership runs counter not only to the humanistic
goals of the Convention but also to the spirit of the European human
rights system.”

Shavarsh Kocharyan went on adding that the efforts of Azerbaijan to
cast a shadow on international legal norms and adapt them to its racist
“system of values” are doomed to failure.

Bako Sahakyan Convoked A Meeting Of The NKR Security Council Dedicat

BAKO SAHAKYAN CONVOKED A MEETING OF THE NKR SECURITY COUNCIL DEDICATED TO THE TRANSFER TO THE CRIMINAL PERFIDIOUSLY DECAPITATED THE SLEEPING ARMENIAN OFFICERTO AZERBAIJAN

19:56, 3 September, 2012

On 3 September Artsakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan convoked a
meeting of the NKR Security Council dedicated to the transfer to the
criminal perfidiously decapitated the sleeping Armenian officer to
Azerbaijan and its immediate release by that state. Armenpress was
informed from Central Information Department of the Office of the
Artsakh in his speech Bako Sahakyan noted that this criminal deal has
generated a deep anger amid the world spread Armenians including that
of Artsakh. According to the Head of the State this incident reflects
the loathsome moral and political atmosphere reigning in Azerbaijan,
which is the continuation of fascist ideology and genocidal policy. It
is a blatant violation of democratic principles and human rights and
must be condemned by the civilized mankind. Bako Sahakyan qualified
this monstrous deed as a hard blow to the negotiation process and
the mediation mission of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chair countries. The
President underlined that such actions of the adversary, his subversive
aggressive behavior cannot and will never be unrequited.

Within this context the Head of the State gave corresponding
instructions to the defense and foreign ministries as well as to
other interested structures. Issues related to economic indicators of
the first 8 months of 2012 were also discussed during the meeting of
the Security Council. Primate of the Artsakh Diocese of the Armenian
Apostolic Church Archbishop Pargev Martirosyan and other officials
were invited to the meeting.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/692073/bako-sahakyan-convoked-a-meeting-of-the-nkr-security-council-dedicated-to-the-transfer-to-the-criminal.html

BAKU: Armenians Demand Resignation Of Foreign Minister Of Armenia

ARMENIANS DEMAND RESIGNATION OF FOREIGN MINISTER OF ARMENIA

News.Az
03 September 2012 13:18

Participants of an action held in the centre of Yerevan have addressed
the Foreign Ministry a letter demanding the resignation of Armenian
Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian.

According to the Armenian media, member of the central body of the
Union “Ayazn” Armen Lazarian read the protesters a letter in which
among the main requirements he also noted suspension of negotiations
on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict within the OSCE Minsk Group and
termination of relations with Hungary for a long period.

In addition, the letter contained the requirements for the immediate
withdrawal of Armenian peacekeepers in Afghanistan, as well as
Armenia’s withdrawal from the European Neighbourhood Policy.

After presenting the letter, the activists returned to the Hungarian
Consulate in Yerevan, where they started the action, and burned the
flag of Hungary in front of the building.

Un office pour les Arméniens

L’Est Républicain, France
Vendredi 31 août 2012
NCY Edition

Un office pour les Arméniens

Religion Arthur Avetyan, réfugié politique veut créer plus de lien au
sein de la communauté lorraine

par Guillaume MAZEAUD

ARTHUR est un colosse souriant. Mais il a retrouvé son sourire une
fois en Europe occidentale. Pour lui, ça ne se passait pas très bien
il y a encore quatre ans. A la suite de la présidentielle dans ce
pays, troubles, émeutes et morts ont déchiré les jours et les nuits
d’Erevan la capitale du pays.

« J’étais journaliste à la radio », se souvient Arthur Avetyan, qui
avec la fougue de sa jeunesse n’admet guère le manque de démocratie du
gouvernement et sa large soumission aux Russes. « Il n’y a plus
d’Union soviétique, mais c’est toujours la Russie qui décide en
Arménie », explique ce garçon de 29 ans au physique de rugbyman, mais
d’un naturel plein de douceur. À force de parler démocratie et liberté
sur les ondes, il a fini par faire plusieurs séjours, heureusement
courts, en prison. « Car, ceux qui font des peines longues se
retrouvent dans des centrales où la mafia fait la loi ». Et comme il
n’a pas envie de retourner derrière les barreaux, et d’y être battu,
comme il lui est arrivé, il a fui dans un premier temps son pays vers
la Russie, avant de passer six mois plus tard en Europe occidentale
avec sa femme Lilit et son fils. C’était en 2008. Il arriva à
vingt-cinq ans en France, à Nancy, et depuis ce temps, il se trouve à
l’Ars en tant que réfugié et espère avoir bientôt une carte de séjour
pour pouvoir travailler.

Arthur, qui est aussi écrivain et poète ne reste toutefois pas les
deux pieds dans le même sabot lorrain, et a décidé d’être un lien
entre ses compatriotes, au sein de la communauté arménienne du sud
Lorrain. « La région de Nancy compte environ deux mille Arméniens,
dont beaucoup sont arrivés seulement ces dix dernières années comme
moi, et ne parlent qu’à peine le français. C’est pourquoi, j’ai créé
une association en décembre dernier, « Hayasa Lorraine » (nom ancien
de l’Arménie), qui est à la fois culturelle et cultuelle ». En
Arménie, les deux choses sont intimement liées…

Le 24 avril
La première manifestation a été l’anniversaire du génocide arménien,
commémoration qui a lieu chaque année le 24 avril. « Nous avons montré
des films et des photos retraçant cette histoire ». Et le volet
religieux a commencé en juillet, avec une première célébration de la
messe par le père Vatché, prêtre de l’église nationale apostolique
arménienne, basé à Strasbourg. « Les communautés arméniennes de
Marseille, Lyon, Paris ont une presse, des radios, une activité très
importante, mais dans l’Est, il n’y a pratiquement rien. »

Il y avait environ 150 personnes. « Il y aura une seconde messe
dimanche prochain 2 septembre à 15 h 30, toujours célébrée par le père
Vatché, avec l’accord du curé de la paroisse Jacques Bertholet ».

Car au-delà des très grandes différences de rituel entre les cultes
catholiques romain et arménien, il n’y a sur le fond que des
différences de détail, qui tiennent surtout à la nature à la fois
humaine et divine de Jésus. Question qui avait été tranchée au concile
de Chalcédoine, au… Ve siècle, et aux conclusions duquel les
Arméniens n’avaient souscrit que très partiellement. L’Arménie a
commencé à être évangélisée par les apôtres Barthélémy et Thaddée au
Ier siècle. « Et aussi, plus tard, par trois chrétiennes, Gayané,
Ripsimé et Chogakat, qui ont été martyrisées. A leur suite, le peuple
arménien a été converti en son entier par Grikor, en 301 après
Jésus-Christ. L’Arménie a ainsi été la première nation chrétienne de
l’histoire ». Grikor, nom arménien, est plus connu sous son nom de «
Saint-Grégoire l’illuminateur ». Il était lui-même prince d’Arménie,
ce qui a facilité la conversion du roi de l’époque, puis de son
peuple, comme pour Clovis et la France tout de même… deux siècles
plus tard !

Mais tout cela est bien loin. Arthur veut surtout aider ses
compatriotes à mieux s’insérer. « Et moi, j’espère travailler, mieux
parler français et étudier… » Un bon programme.

Les manuels d’histoire oublient les héros de 14-18

Le Figaro
Mardi 28 Août 2012

Les manuels d’histoire oublient les héros de 14-18

par Sérès, Aude

ÉDUCATION Mais où sont passés les héros de la Grande Guerre ? Pas de
trace de Foch, Joffre, voire du rôle du maréchal Pétain, vainqueur de
Verdun, dans les nouveaux manuels d’histoire de troisième… En
revanche, plusieurs d’entre eux développent sur deux pages pleines le
génocide arménien de 1917, l’oeuvre du peintre expressionniste
allemand Otto Dix ou encore la bataille de Verdun, mais sans citer le
maréchal Pétain. Des choix éditoriaux qui ne sont pas du goût d’Hubert
Tison, secrétaire général de l’Association des professeurs
d’histoire-géographie.

« Dans plusieurs manuels, Philippe Pétain n’apparaît que dans le
chapitre sur la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Comment comprendre son
arrivée au pouvoir sans avoir évoqué le héros de la Première Guerre
mondiale ? », lance-t-il. Il y a mieux : chez Hachette, aucun général
français n’est cité mais dans le chapitre sur Verdun, c’est celui du
général allemand von Falkenhayn qui seul apparaît. Un choix
surprenant… Chez Belin, l’armistice de Rethondes est signalé, quand
à apprendre que c’est le maréchal Foch qui l’a signé…Les éditeurs
invoquent la rénovation des programmes lancée par les ministres de
l’Éducation Xavier Darcos et Luc Chatel. En cette rentrée 2012, la
totalité des classes bénéficie de ces nouveaux programmes, puisqu’ils
arrivent en troisième et en terminale, avec de nouveaux manuels. En
fin de collège, les élèves auront donc balayé une période allant de
l’Antiquité à nos jours. Dans le programme de troisième, il est bien
précisé que doivent être notamment étudiés le génocide arménien et la
guerre des tranchées. Et pour la seconde, les camps de la mort, la
bataille du Pacifique ou Stalingrad.Au ministère, on temporise : « Il
est évident que dans le traitement de la Première guerre mondiale,
l’enseignant fera référence à ces figures de l’histoire, même si ce
n’est pas dans le manuel. »

L’impasse sur le Débarquement
Autre fait étonnant : la Résistance et le régime de Vichy sont traités
à la fin de l’ouvrage, au chapitre 10, soit après la construction
européenne et la guerre du Golfe, alors que la Seconde Guerre mondiale
est traitée au chapitre 4… « C’est la particularité de ce programme,
qui est à la fois chronologique et thématique », explique Valérie
Perthué, responsable éditoriale des sciences humaines chez Hatier, qui
précise que les maréchaux de la Grande Guerre n’étaient pas non plus
présents dans les précédents manuels ! Reste que le traitement de la
Seconde Guerre mondiale, centré autour des quelques exemples comme la
bataille de Stalingrad, les camps de la mort et la guerre du
Pacifique, fait l’impasse, dans la plupart des ouvrages à l’exception
de Belin, sur des événements essentiels comme le Débarquement. Et ce
n’est que plusieurs chapitres plus tard que les collégiens y
découvriront le rôle du général de Gaulle.« Si l’on se rend compte que
certaines impasses existent, on pourra le compléter par des documents
d’accompagnement », lance-t-on à l’Éducation nationale. Et de conclure
que « le développement d’Internet devrait permettre de passer à une
nouvelle génération de manuels, plus centrés sur la chronologie, avec
des liens vers des documents accessibles sur Internet ». Et peut-être
plus légers pour nos enfants et moins chers pour nos portefeuilles…

BAKU: Paragraph on Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict reflected in NAM Tehr

APA, Azerbaijan
Sept 1 2012

Paragraph on Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict reflected in NAM Tehran
Summit’s last document

[ 01 Sep 2012 15:22 ]

Baku – APA. The paragraph on Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict was reflected
in the last document adopted at the Non-Aligned Summit in Tehran.

Press service of Ministry of Foreign Affairs told APA that the Heads
of State or Government expressed their regret that the conflict
between Armenia and Azerbaijan remains unresolved and continues to
endanger international and regional peace and security. They
reaffirmed the importance of the principle of nonuse of force
enshrined in the Charter of the United Nations and encouraged the
parties to continue to seek a negotiated settlement of the conflict
within the territorial integrity, sovereignty and the internationally
recognized borders of the Republic of Azerbaijan.