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ANKARA: =?UNKNOWN?Q?G=FCl?= assures Azerbaijan on Armenia policy

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  • ANKARA: =?UNKNOWN?Q?G=FCl?= assures Azerbaijan on Armenia policy

    Turkish Daily News
    Feb 11 2005

    Gül assures Azerbaijan on Armenia policy
    Friday, February 11, 2005


    'Turkey's policy on this matter is clear. The people of Azerbaijan do
    not need to worry,' says Gül relating to the closed Turkish-Armenian
    border gate

    ANKARA – Turkish Daily News

    Turkey gave assurances to Caucasus ally Azerbaijan that its border
    gate with Armenia would remain closed unless Armenia ends occupation
    of the Azeri territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, which has displaced
    hundreds of thousands of Azeris.

    "The border gate is closed at the moment. The continuing occupation
    and the fact that almost a million Azeris are currently displaced
    constitute a big obstacle for any change in Turkish policy," Foreign
    Minister Abdullah Gül told a joint news conference after talks with
    visiting Azeri counterpart Elmar Mammedyarov.

    Turkey closed its border gate with Armenia and severed diplomatic
    ties with Yerevan in the last decade in protest of the Armenian
    occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh. Ankara says normalization in ties is
    related to Armenian troop withdrawal from the occupied territory, in
    addition to Yerevan's official acceptance of the current borders with
    Turkey and stopping its support of Armenian lobby efforts to get
    international recognition for an alleged Armenian genocide during the
    late Ottoman Empire.

    Yet, European Union aspirant Turkey has been facing pressure from
    Europe to revise its Armenia policy and to open the closed gate with
    landlocked Yerevan, something that has alarmed Azerbaijan.

    "Turkey's policy on this matter is clear. The people of Azerbaijan
    do not need to worry," Gül said, indicating that bilateral ties with
    Armenia will return to normal when the occupation ends as a result of
    peace talks on the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.

    Mammedyarov's talks in Ankara come weeks before he meets Armenian
    Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian in Prague on the dispute.

    He and Gül also discussed bilateral economic ties. Turkey and
    Azerbaijan are partners in a multi-billion dollar project, called the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, to transport Azeri crude oil to western
    markets through Georgia and finally to Turkey's Mediterranean port of
    Ceyhan.

    The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline is expected to become operational
    soon, with the first delivery of oil scheduled for mid-2005. Gül said
    he was confident that the project would be completed on time.

    The energy cooperation is set to expand further when a natural gas
    pipeline linking Azerbaijan's Shahdeniz gas fields to Turkey's
    eastern province of Erzurum starts operating. Mammedyarov said the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum pipeline could become operational in 2006 or
    2007 and added that Turkey could import some of the natural gas from
    this pipeline to European countries.



    Seeking Azeri support to end KKTC isolation:

    Gül also sought Baku's backing for efforts to bring into force
    international pledges to end the isolation of Turkish Cypriots.

    Gül reportedly told Mammedyarov that Azerbaijan would become a
    model that other countries could follow if it takes steps towards
    ending the isolation of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus
    (KKTC).

    Mammedyarov said in response that his government would work on the
    issue and encourage Azeri companies to do business in Turkish Cyprus.


    Mammedyarov was received by President Ahmet Necdet Sezer later in
    the day.

    --Boundary_(ID_6aDtGlUlJ5EnicMYumOvBA)--
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