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Armenia again offers unconditional normalization to Turkey

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  • Armenia again offers unconditional normalization to Turkey

    ITAR-TASS News Agency
    TASS
    April 26, 2005 Tuesday 2:37 PM Eastern Time

    Armenia again offers unconditional normalization to Turkey

    By Tigran Liloyan

    YEREVAN


    Armenia has offered unconditional normalization of the bilateral
    relations to Turkey, and is offering that again, says a reply by
    Armenian President Robert Kocharyan to Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan.

    The Armenian president's press service released the message text on
    Tuesday evening.

    The April 10 letter by Erdogan suggested forming a group of
    historians and other experts for studying the 1915 events (Armenian
    genocide in the Ottoman Empire) in the archives of Armenia, Turkey
    and third countries and informing the world about the research
    results.

    Kocharyan thinks that Armenia and Turkey can form "an
    intergovernmental commission to discuss any problems the two
    countries have for the sake of their settlement and achievement of
    mutual understanding."

    "Being neighbors, we should try to find a way to future accord, so we
    have been suggesting the establishment of diplomatic relations, the
    opening of borders, and the beginning of a dialog between countries
    and peoples from the very start," Kocharyan said.

    "There are neighbor countries with a difficult past, which is given
    different interpretations, in the world, including Europe, but they
    still have open borders, normal relations, diplomatic contacts and
    each other's representatives in their capitals while discussing
    disputable issues," he said.

    The Turkish proposal "to review the past cannot be efficient if it is
    not valid for today and tomorrow," he said. "We need to create a
    favorable political atmosphere for an efficient dialog. The
    governments are in charge of the development of bilateral relations,
    and we have no right to delegate this responsibility to historians."
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