VOTING IN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION UNDER WAY IN DISPUTED NAGORNO-KARABAKH, TURKEY OBJECTS
The New Anatolian, Turkey
TNA with Wire Services
19 July 2007
The Armenian-controlled breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh is
holding a presidential election Thursday amid a rumbling dispute with
Azerbaijan over the mountainous enclave’s unrecognized independence.
Turkey has already objected to the elections.
Pollsters and analysts say former security chief Bako Saakian tops
the list of five candidates campaigning to replace the incumbent
Arkady Ghukasian, who is ineligible to run after two five-year terms
in office.
Saakian, 47, headed Nagorno-Karabakh’s security service since 2001,
resigning in June to stand in the election. He is running as an
independent and is backed by the Armenian government in Yerevan.
This is the fourth presidential election in the impoverished territory
inside Azerbaijan that has been controlled by Armenian and ethnic
Armenian forces since a shaky 1994 cease-fire ended one of the
bloodiest conflicts that followed the Soviet collapse.
The six-year war killed 30,000 people and drove more than 1 million
from their homes, including many of the region’s ethnic Azeris.
Today, it remains one of the region’s "frozen" conflicts.
Azerbaijan, which has rejected the vote as having no legal meaning,
is still at loggerheads with Armenia despite more than a decade
of coaxing from international mediators led by the United States,
Russia and France to resolve the region’s status.
No country has recognized the independence of the mostly agricultural
region of 146,000 people, which has faced a steady brain drain and
dire economic problems despite financial aid from Armenia and the
Armenian diaspora.
Saakian has said that international recognition of Kosovo
as an independent state would pave the way for acceptance of
Nagorno-Karabakh’s sovereignity.