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ANKARA: Tensions w/Armenia figure in Azeri president visit to Turkey

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  • ANKARA: Tensions w/Armenia figure in Azeri president visit to Turkey

    Tensions with Armenia figure in Azeri president's visit to Turkey

    BY BURAK AKINCI

    AP ANKARA
    April 12, 2004


    A long-standing feud between two former Soviet republics over a
    disputed enclave was expected to loom large in talks during a visit to
    Turkey by Ilham Aliyev, president of Azerbaijan, starting Tuesday.

    Azerbaijan and Turkey are neighbours with a shared Muslim and
    linguistic heritage, and Aliyev was expected during his three-day stay
    to urge Turkey not to reopen its border with Armenia.

    Turkey closed this border in 1993 to help Azerbaijan's negotiating
    position in talks with its neighbour Armenia over the enclave of
    Nagorny-Karabakh, situated within Azerbaijan's borders but largely
    populated by Armenians.

    Azerbaijan now fears Turkey will reopen the border in order to please
    the the European Union, which Turkey wants to join.

    The feud sparked war between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the early 1990s
    when Nagorny-Karabakh seceded from Azeribaijan at the time of the
    Soviet Union's collapse, and the two Soviet Caucasian republics became
    independent.

    The war caused claimed more than 20,000 lives and made refugees of
    nearly a million people.

    After a ceasefire in 1994, Nagorny-Karabakh came under de facto
    Armenian control.

    Turkey recognises Armenia but has no diplomatic relations with it,
    against a historic background of long-standing mutual bitterness.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in order to strengthen
    Azerbaijan's hand against Armenia.

    But Aliyev, fearing Turkey will reopen it to please the EU, appealed
    to Turkey last month, saying: "It's no secret that the European Union
    and other influential countries are pressuring Turkey to reopen its
    border with Armenia.

    "If that happened, the Nagorny-Karabakh conflict would never be
    resolved."

    Several European countries have been calling for years for
    normalisation between Turkey and Armenia.

    Aliyev is worried about an EU meeting next December to decide whether
    membership negotiations with Turkey should begin.

    He warned in an interview with a Turkish newspaper that traditionally
    warm relations between Turkey and Azerbaijan could deteriorate if the
    frontier is reopened.

    But he seems confident it will not happen. Azerbaijan holds a strong
    card because Turkey is set to play a key role in Azerbaijan's offshore
    oil from the Caspian Sea.

    A pipeline, operational from 2005, will ship up to one million barrels
    of oil a day from Azerbaijan's capital, Baku, on the Caspian Sea,
    through Georgia and Turkey to a tanker terminal at the Turkish
    Mediterranean port of Ceyhan.

    The Turkish government led by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has
    adopted a diferent foreign policy from its predecessors, favouring new
    openings towards neighbours.

    But Nagorny Karabakh is not the only issue poisoning relations with
    Turkey's neighbour Armenia.

    Turkey and Armenia remain at loggerheads over what Armenia says was
    the genocide of hundreds of thousands of its people by Turks during
    World War I.

    Armenia says the killing and deportation by the Ottoman Empire between
    1915 and 1917 claimed 1.5 million Armenian lives.

    Turkey denies genocide, and says only between 250,000 and 500,000 died
    as a result of the effects of civil war.
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