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ANKARA: Armenia cautious on trilateral meeting w/Turkey, Azerbaijan

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  • ANKARA: Armenia cautious on trilateral meeting w/Turkey, Azerbaijan

    Turkish Daily News
    April 21 2004


    Armenia cautious on trilateral meeting with Turkey, Azerbaijan

    The Armenian foreign minister says his country will not accept Turkey
    as a mediator in the territorial dispute on Nagorno-Karabakh,
    claiming that Turkey is biased

    ANKARA - Turkish Daily News
    Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanyan said that Armenia was not
    opposed to a trilateral meeting with the Azerbaijani and Turkish
    foreign ministers but added that Armenia would not accept Turkey as a
    mediator in the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute, claiming that Turkey is
    biased on the issue.

    Oskanyan's remarks came after a suggestion from Foreign Minister
    Abdullah Gul for a trilateral meeting between the foreign ministers
    of Turkey, Armenia and Azerbaijan prior to the NATO Summit in
    Istanbul in June to discuss a solution to the longstanding
    territorial dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Speaking at a news conference in Yerevan on Monday, Oskanyan said the
    three countries had met in the past to discuss regional cooperation
    and had also touched on bilateral problems such as Nagorno-Karabakh.

    "If a similar agenda were offered this time, I see no problem in
    [Armenia's] participation in such talks. ... Armenia is not opposed
    to such a meeting provided that regional issues are taken up."

    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev was in Ankara last week for talks,
    during which time Turkey declared support for a proposal to resolve
    the dispute with neighboring Armenia through a "phased" process,
    calling on Armenia to withdraw from part of the territory that it
    occupied in Nagorno-Karabakh, a step that would be followed by the
    easing of trade sanctions by Azerbaijan.

    Parallel to these steps, Turkey would also open its border gate with
    Armenia, according to conclusions from Aliyev's talks.

    However, Armenian Minister Oskanyan said they would not accept Turkey
    as a mediator in such a meeting, claiming that Turkey is biased on
    the issue.

    For more than a decade, Azerbaijan's Nagorno-Karabakh region has been
    under Armenian occupation, and international efforts to resolve the
    dispute have failed to bring a solution.

    Turkey severed its diplomatic ties with Yerevan and closed its border
    with the country to protest the occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh and
    Yerevan's support for Armenian diaspora attempts to gain
    international recognition of an alleged Armenian genocide at the
    hands of the former Ottoman Empire.

    But international pressure on Turkey has been growing in recent days,
    with the United States and European Union urging Ankara to lift its
    trade blockade on Armenia and open its borders to the country.

    Upon a question concerning Gul's remark that everybody should learn a
    lesson if a settlement is reached on Cyprus, Oskanyan noted that a
    possible settlement on the island could constitute a model for the
    Nagorno-Karabakh administration.
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