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Armenia's first president calls for new foreign policy

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  • Armenia's first president calls for new foreign policy

    Earthtimes, UK
    Feb 17 2008


    Armenia's first president calls for new foreign policy
    Posted : Sun, 17 Feb 2008 19:23:07 GMT
    Author : DPA

    Yerevan, Armenia - Armenia's first president Levon Ter-Petrossian,
    who is again campaigning for the executive, on Sunday called
    radically new relations with neighbouring states the "firmest
    safeguard for economic development" in the post-Soviet country. He
    made the remarks during his first meeting with the press after a
    decade out of politics Sunday and only days before elections on
    Tuesday.

    Landlocked Armenia, cradled high in the Caucasus Mountains, has been
    forced to rely on a partnership with Russia and aid from Western
    allies, facing blockades along two of its borders.

    "We are blocked on all sides - the essential roads for Armenia out to
    the world are through Azerbaijan and Turkey," Ter-Petrossian told
    journalists on the last day of campaigning before Tuesday's vote.

    He stressed his foreign policy position had not changed from that he
    advocated when he resigned over a severe backlash to his conciliatory
    stand in peace talks over Azerbaijan's ethnically- Armenian breakaway
    region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Ter-Petrossian apologized for leaving the power in the hands of
    President Robert Kocharian and his favoured successor Prime Minister
    Serzh Sarkisian, calling it "his gravest mistake" in a statement
    typical of his campaign appearances.

    At a rally in the capital Yerevan on Saturday, Ter-Petrossian drew a
    crowd of about 25,000, but this number was easily topped Sunday at
    Sarkisian's final rally.

    Sarkisian leads in polls with 50.7 per cent of the vote, just over
    the 50-per-cent barrier needed to win in the first round of the
    elections.

    Analysts said Sunday that his lead could be challenged if more than
    68 per cent of voters turn out for the vote, one of the most active
    in the country's since the end of the Soviet Union in 1991.

    Just minutes after Kosovo's declaration of independence, which is
    thought to aggravate tensions in the Azeri breakaway region, Ter-
    Petrossian reiterated, "My position is for the fastest possible
    resolution to the Karabakh conflict."

    "The only political resolution is based on compromise and mutual
    concessions," he stressed.

    The longstanding disputes with Azerbaijan and Turkey, over its
    refusal to recognize the 1915 genocide of Armenians under the Ottoman
    Empire, have long been basic moments in the post-Soviet's state's
    foreign policy that are pro-scribed.

    Ter-Petrossian on Sunday accused the Armenian authorities of being
    "committed to the status-quo" and "lacking the political will" for a
    settlement with Nagarno-Karabakh especially because Kocharin and
    Sarkisian hail from the region.

    Despite his comments, Ter-Petrossian refused to elaborate on future
    relations with Turkey, an issue that has complicated Turkey's
    relationship with the West and bid for European Union accession.

    The tense situation in the region has been seen to push Armenia
    closer to relations with Russia.

    Ter-Petrosian, who has spoken in favour of NATO accession talks and
    positively of US plans to deploy missile defence systems opposed by
    Russia, expressed concern over Russia's growing stake in the country.


    "Maybe from an outside perspective Kocharian's policies could be
    viewed as introducing a sovereign, vassal relationship with Russia,"
    he said.

    But the presidential hopeful emphasized that there were no
    pro-Western or pro-Russian candidates in the race.

    He did not deny rumours that he allegedly met with the Russian
    presidential frontrunner Dmitry Medvedev in a recent trip to Moscow a
    week before the vote.
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