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Armenia's FM Aims To Normalise Relations With Turkey

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  • Armenia's FM Aims To Normalise Relations With Turkey

    ARMENIA'S FM AIMS TO NORMALISE RELATIONS WITH TURKEY

    Agence France Presse -- English
    October 15, 2006 Sunday

    Armenia's Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian on Sunday said he would
    strive to normalise relations with Turkey despite deep misgivings about
    the Turkish refusal to regard the 1915-17 massacres of Armenians by
    the Ottoman Turks as genocide.

    "That these events... have not been condemned and not recognised
    once so far, is in reality a continuation of the genocide," Oskanian
    was quoted as saying in an interview with the Swiss newspaper NZZ
    am Sonntag.

    "However, as foreign minister I have a duty to look to the future
    and to seek to establish normal relations with Turkey," he added.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993, in support for its
    ally Azerbaijan, which was then at war with Armenia.

    Oskanian in Sunday's comments reiterated his country's satisfaction
    with the French National Assembly's vote last Thursday approving a bill
    that would make it a crime to deny that the Armenian massacres were
    genocide, as well as a similar move by the Swiss parliament in 2003.

    However, he also expressed mixed feelings about the practical value
    of these measures.

    "Whether the French or the Swiss legislation is a good starting point
    is hard to say," he said, adding that recognition of the genocide by
    other countries "is not a goal in itself".

    "Armenia also has no interest in humiliating Turkey," he explained.

    Oskanian said the Turkish government's offer to set up a joint
    commission of historians to examine the massacres was "dishonest"
    so long as Turkey kept its border with Armenia closed and explicitly
    outlawed the use of the word genocide in the sensitive Armenian issue.

    "Our President has told (Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip) Erdogan
    that Armenia is ready to talk, as soon as the borders are open and
    as soon as there are bilateral relations."

    "When this is the case, an intergovernmental commission can discuss
    this question," he told the newspaper.

    The French bill still needs the approval of the Senate and the
    president to take effect.

    Turkey, which strongly rejects the use of the term genocide in the
    Armenian issue, slammed the vote, saying France had dealt "a heavy
    blow" to longstanding bilateral relations.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen were killed in
    massacres or deportations between 1915 and 1917.

    Turkey rejects this claim, saying that between 250,000 and 500,000
    Armenians were killed in civil strife when the Armenians rose up
    against their Ottoman rulers.
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