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INTERVIEW: Armenia hopes to join E.U. in 20 years, says minister

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  • INTERVIEW: Armenia hopes to join E.U. in 20 years, says minister

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur
    November 17, 2004, Wednesday
    17:15:22 Central European Time

    INTERVIEW: Armenia hopes to join E.U. in 20 years, says minister

    By Leon Mangasarian, dpa

    Berlin

    Armenia hopes to join the European Union within 20 years and has no
    objections to its arch-rival Turkey joining the bloc if Ankara meets
    strict membership terms, Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanyan
    said Wednesday. "We would like to be a European Union (E.U.) member
    ... the sooner the better," said Oskanyan in an interview with
    Deutsche Presse-Agentur, dpa, after talks between German Chancellor
    Gerhard Schroeder and Armenian President Robert Kocharian in Berlin.
    Oskanyan said the path used by the 10 mainly east European nations,
    which joined the E.U. earlier this year, showed Yerevan the blueprint
    it had to follow. "More needs to be done but a lot will depend on
    Armenia," he said, adding Armenia had to reform its legislature,
    institutions and democratic system as well as fight corruption to be
    on track for possible E.U. accession negotiations. But he stressed
    the process of completing reforms to meet E.U. standards was highly
    positive in itself and that the journey toward joining the Union was
    just as valuable as the final prize. Asked when his country expected
    to join, he said: "Maybe in 15 or 20 years." Turning to Turkey's bid
    to join the E.U., Oskanyan said his government had no objections but
    was noting with concern that the E.U. seemed to have watered down
    some of its criteria in the case of Turkey. Armenia, he said could
    not understand how Turkey could be recommended for E.U. membership
    talks while its border to Armenia remained closed. Oskanyan also
    noted that Turkey's penal code banned any mention of the term
    genocide in reference to the killing of Christian Armenians by Moslem
    Turks during and after the First World War. Armenia and many
    historians say the killings amount to a genocide as between 800,000
    and 1.5 million Armenians died during this period. But Turkey has
    always rejected this and insisted a smaller number of Armenians were
    killed during the war when they rebelled against Turkish rule.
    Nevertheless, Oskanyan said Armenia had "no problem" with Turkish
    E.U. membership because this would lead to European standards of
    minority rights and full freedom of speech in Turkey as well as an
    E.U. member state bordering on Armenia. He said Turkish recognition
    of "genocide" was not a precondition for normal ties between Ankara
    and Yerevan. Turkey is expected to get a green light at the scheduled
    December 17 E.U. summit in Brussels to begin accession talks. Turkish
    leaders admit it could take until 2019 before their country becomes a
    full member. Turning to an uneasy truce over the mountainous
    Nagorno-Karabakh region between Armenia and mainly Moslem Azerbaijan
    which has held since their war over the region ended in 1994,
    Oskanyan complained that Azerbaijan was backtracking on moves aimed
    at a final accord. Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a bitter war over
    Nagorno-Karabakh in which an estimated 35,000 people were killed and
    some one million became refugees. Nagorno-Karabakh is an ethnic
    Armenian region but lies within the internationally recognized
    borders of Azerbaijan. The Armenian state supports ethnic Armenians
    in Nagorno-Karabakh and it military occupies about 16 per cent of
    Azerbaijan. Oskanyan said his government wanted the Organization for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) to continue to mediate the
    dispute, and he opposed recent moves by Azerbaijan to shift talks to
    the U.N. dpa lm emc
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