Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Erdogan signals political ties with Armenia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Erdogan signals political ties with Armenia

    ErdoÄŸan signals political ties with Armenia

    TDN Saturday, April 30, 2005


    In remarks seen as a sign of policy shift, the prime minister says
    study of history could run parallel to establishment of political
    relations. FM Gül announces, however, there are no plans to
    open up the border gate

    ANKARA ` Turkish Daily News


    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan was quoted as saying
    yesterday that Turkey could establish political relations with
    neighboring Armenia while historians study events during 1915 and 1918
    in a bid to clarify whether Armenians in the Ottoman Empire were
    subject to a genocide campaign.

    Turkey categorically denies charges of genocide and ErdoÄŸan has
    recently sent a letter to Armenian President Robert Kocharian
    proposing establishment of a joint commission of historians to study
    the events of the World War I years. Kocharian, however, suggested in
    his reply an inter-governmental commission that would be tasked with
    investigating ways to normalize relations between Turkey and Armenia.

    `A political relationship can be established on the one hand, while
    studies continue on the other. There is no great wall between Turkey
    and Armenia,' ErdoÄŸan told daily Milliyet in an interview.

    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gül, when asked to comment upon
    ErdoÄŸan's remarks, said there were no plans at the moment to
    open the border gate with Armenia.

    `What the prime minister emphasized is that Turkey is good
    intentioned, supports stability in its region and is open to
    developing relations with its neighbors. But such things can't be
    one-sided,' Gül told reporters in the central Anatolian city of
    Kayseri. `There would definitely be an improvement if there is mutual
    goodwill.'

    Turkey severed its diplomatic relations with Armenia and closed its
    border gate with the landlocked country in the last decade after
    Armenian troops occupied the Azeri territory of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Ankara says normalization of ties depends on
    Armenia's stopping their support of genocide allegations and formally
    accepting its current borders with Turkey, as well as withdrawal from
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    In his letter delivered to the Turkish side earlier this week,
    Kocharian said the border gate should be opened, as even countries
    which are at war with each other keep their borders open.

    ErdoÄŸan, however, took a cautious line, saying Armenia should
    also demonstrate goodwill. `Why are you continuing efforts to get
    recognition of the alleged genocide all over the world, while asking
    me to open up the border? I should see a sign of goodwill,'
    ErdoÄŸan said.

    Armenians stepped up efforts to win international backing for their
    allegations of genocide, hoping that the 90th anniversary of the
    alleged genocide on April 24 would increase sympathy for their cause.

    ErdoÄŸan said his government has allowed flights between Yerevan
    and Istanbul in a goodwill gesture and the Culture Ministry has been
    given instructions to renovate an Armenian church in eastern Anatolia
    in coordination with the Armenian patriarchate of Turkey.

    `These are positive messages from us. We need to get similar messages
    from the other side too,' ErdoÄŸan said.



    ˜EU provokes nationalism':

    The prime minister also criticized the European Union for
    `intentionally provoking' nationalism in Turkey's Southeast, where
    Kurds dominate the population. `This stirs up another kind of
    nationalism,' he said, referring to the rise in current Turkish
    nationalism.

    ErdoÄŸan said the EU relied on `unhealthy sources' while making
    its assessments on the issue. `I am from the Black Sea region and my
    wife is an Arab from the southeastern city of Siirt ¦ If you stir
    up a certain sort of nationalism, another sort of nationalism begins
    to rise. This is wrong,' he said.
Working...
X