Noyan tapan YEREVAN, 16.10.04. The international community has come to terms with Nagorno-Karabakh's secession from Azerbaijan and is ready to recognize its de facto independence, Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian declared on 13 October in response to a question from an Armenian parliamentarian. "Whereas six years ago nobody was letting us even dream about Karabakh not being part of Azerbaijan [under a future peace accord], today not only we but also the international community, including the co-chairs of the [Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe's] Minsk Group, are freely talking about that," he said. "Today the fact of Karabakh not being part of Azerbaijan is real, and the international community looks at it in a very normal manner. This doesn't mean they will publicly affirm it. But I can state for certain that they consider that option a real one." Oskanian was apparently alluding to a Karabakh peace agreement worked out during talks in Paris and Florida during the spring of 2001. According to Western press reports, the plan put forward by French, Russian, and U.S. mediators called for Karabakh's formal incorporation into Armenia in return for the latter guaranteeing a transport corridor between Azerbaijan and its Nakhichevan exclave. The Armenian side maintains that the two sides came close to signing that accord, but that Azerbaijan's former President Heidar Aliyev backtracked on the deal. However, Baku claims that no such agreements were reached at the time.
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