Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey, Armenia Discuss Normalizing Relations

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

  • Turkey, Armenia Discuss Normalizing Relations

    TURKEY, ARMENIA DISCUSS NORMALIZING RELATIONS
    Benjamin Harvey

    AP Worldstream
    May 31, 2006

    Turkish and Armenian officials have been discussing normalizing
    relations, Turkey's Foreign Ministry said Wednesday, despite the fact
    that Armenians accuse Turks of genocide and the two countries have
    no diplomatic ties.

    "A negotiation process has started between the two countries to seek
    a common ground," Foreign Ministry Spokesman Namik Tan said. "Three
    rounds of talks were held so far."

    The talks have apparently led to no breakthroughs, but that the two
    countries are even talking might be considered one in itself.

    Several informal earlier attempts at dialogue faltered amid disputes
    between Turks and Armenians over the massacres of Armenians at the
    time of World War I. Armenians say that Ottoman Turks slaughtered
    1.5 million Armenians in a planned genocide and have demanded that
    Turkey recognize the killings as such.

    Turkey vehemently denies that the mass killings were genocide, saying
    the death toll is inflated and Armenians were killed in civil unrest
    as the Ottoman Empire collapsed.

    The talks between Turkish and Armenian foreign ministry officials
    started after Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan sent a
    letter to Armenian Prime Minister Robert Kocharian asking for the
    two countries to open a joint historical investigation to research
    the killings, Tan said.

    Kocharian wrote back, leading to a series of talks, he said.

    Tan said the talks would continue, but would provide no substantive
    details. He requested that Armenia adopt a more flexible and
    constructive approach to regional problems, saying, "Turkey is
    intending to pursue efforts to normalize relations with Armenia."

    He added: "Success of Turkey's efforts to normalize relations depends
    on a more flexible approach from Yerevan as well as to the overcoming
    of bilateral and regional problems."

    Turkey is under pressure from the European Union to address the
    genocide issue as its bid for membership in the EU progresses.

    Several European countries have recognized the killings as genocide,
    further increasing pressure on Turkey.

    The issue is extremely sensitive in Turkey, and Turks have faced
    prosecution for saying the killings were genocide.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 during Christian
    Armenia's six-year war with Muslim Azerbaijan. Armenia, a tiny,
    landlocked country, says the border closing is devastating its economy.
Working...
X