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ANKARA: Turkey seeks catalyst role in Azeri-Armenian conflict

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  • ANKARA: Turkey seeks catalyst role in Azeri-Armenian conflict

    Turkish Daily News
    June 29 2004

    Turkey seeks catalyst role in Azeri-Armenian conflict

    Foreign Minister Gul holds talks with Armenian and Azeri counterparts
    on the sidelines of the NATO summit and discusses Cyprus steps with
    British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw

    ANKARA - Turkish Daily News
    Turkey seeks to become a catalyst between Azerbaijan and Armenia in
    an effort to resolve the dispute over the Nagorno-Karabakh region,
    Turkish officials said.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul on Monday morning met his
    Armenian counterpart, Vartan Oskanian, on the sidelines of the NATO
    summit in Istanbul. Oskanian said that Yerevan was serious in its
    determination to improve relations with Turkey, while Gul noted that
    Turkey had the will to reciprocate.

    Both ministers agreed that due to the public's sensitivity in both
    countries, it would take time to achieve this objective. Gul cited
    the example of Cyprus, noting that they had first laid a foundation
    that had paved the way for negotiations and relations.

    NATO has been discussing a project for launching a Caucasus Stability
    Pact, but the continued tension between Azerbaijan and Armenia is a
    significant obstacle to the plan.

    Gul was scheduled to hold a trilateral meeting with his Armenian and
    Azerbaijani counterparts, Oskanian and Elmar Memmedyarov, later in
    the day.

    Turkey had severed its ties with Armenia and says normalization in
    relations depends upon Armenia's withdrawing its forces in
    Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave in Azeri territory under Armenian
    occupation for the last decade. Other conditions for normalized ties
    include Yerevan putting an end to its support for Armenian diaspora
    efforts to secure international recognition of an alleged genocide of
    Armenians at the hands of the late Ottoman Empire.

    A Turkish official said that Armenia had no objection to developing
    relations but noted that it had posed no objections during other
    international meetings, later reneging on its pledges.

    In this afternoon's meeting, Oskanian was expected to broach the
    issue of stability in the general Caucasus although the raising of
    the topic would not be welcomed by the Armenian people.

    Turkish officials said that all three ministers would express their
    willingness to meet regularly on a trilateral basis in addition to
    meetings at international summits.

    Turkey and Armenia do not enjoy diplomatic relations. A Turkish
    official close to the talks said, "Only the results and indirect
    consequences of the problems between the two countries are of any
    interest to us." The Turkish official also declined to specify how
    Turkey would act as a catalyst in relations between Azerbaijan and
    Armenia.

    Another topic during the meetings is expected to be the replacement
    of private charter flights between Turkey and Armenia with scheduled
    flights.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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