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Turkey tells Azeris no plan to open Armenia border

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  • Turkey tells Azeris no plan to open Armenia border

    Turkey tells Azeris no plan to open Armenia border

    Reuters
    02/10/05 17:11 ET

    ANKARA, Feb 10 (Reuters) - Turkey reassured its ally Azerbaijan
    on Thursday it had no plans to open its border with Armenia while
    Armenian forces occupied part of Azeri territory. Turkey shut its
    border in 1993 to show solidarity with oil-rich, Turkic-speaking
    Azerbaijan in its long and bitter dispute with Armenia over the
    territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Despite Armenia's continued occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh, which is
    inside Azerbaijan's borders, some Turkish businessmen and media have
    called for an opening of Turkey's border and a resumption of trade.

    "The continued occupation (by Armenia) and the fact that nearly a
    million of our Azeri brothers are refugees remain an obstacle (to
    opening the border)," Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said
    after talks with his Azeri counterpart.

    "From this point of view I hope talks towards a peace settlement
    will be productive ... and that the occupation will come to an end.
    Then all relations can be normalised," Gul told reporters.

    Azerbaijan suffered a humiliating defeat in a 1988-94 war with Armenia
    over Nagorno-Karabakh after the region's mainly Armenian population
    tried to break
    away from Azeri rule.

    An estimated 35,000 people were killed and one million refugees fled
    to Azerbaijan, where they remain. At the same time, thousands of
    ethnic Armenian refugees fled to Armenia.

    A ceasefire ended the conflict but the dispute persists despite
    international efforts to broker a deal.

    Turkey's relations with Armenia are also clouded by Armenian claims
    that Ottoman Turkish troops committed genocide against its people
    between 1915 and 1923. Turkey denies the claims.

    Turkey is due to begin entry talks with the European Union. Some
    in the EU, especially in France, home to Europe's biggest Armenian
    diaspora, say Turkey must open its border with Armenia and recognise
    the "genocide" before it can join the bloc.
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