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ANKARA: Babacan Welcomes Russian Role In Karabakh Talks

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  • ANKARA: Babacan Welcomes Russian Role In Karabakh Talks

    BABACAN WELCOMES RUSSIAN ROLE IN KARABAKH TALKS

    Today's Zaman
    Nov 5 2008
    Turkey

    Foreign Minister Ali Babacan has praised Russia for hosting talks
    between the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan on the long-running
    dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh, dismissing suggestions that Moscow's
    diplomatic drive is an attempt to steal the mediator role from Ankara.

    Russian President Dmitry Medvedev hosted talks between Azerbaijani
    leader Ä°lham Aliyev and Armenian leader Serzh Sarksyan on Sunday. A
    declaration read by Medvedev after the three-way talks said the
    presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia agreed to have more talks to
    reach a settlement on the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.

    "It is a fact that no solution can be achieved in Nagorno-Karabakh
    without Russia's support and consent," Babacan told reporters en route
    to Marseilles to attend a Euro-Mediterranean meeting late on Monday.

    Turkey proposed a regional platform for discussion and the resolution
    of conflicts in the troubled Caucasus after a brief war between Russia
    and Georgia. With the planned Caucasus Stability and Cooperation
    Platform, Ankara aims to bring Turkey, Armenia, Russia, Azerbaijan
    and Georgia together around the same table.

    Babacan, however, added that it is not possible to reach a resolution
    in this region without including Turkey and the United States.

    Steps taken by Turkey since September 2007 at various levels to
    contribute to the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and
    steps taken by Russia on the same issue are complementary to each
    other, the minister noted.

    Babacan said that Turkey's move to hold dialogue with Yerevan has
    annoyed the Armenian diaspora, which has exerted hectic efforts for
    global recognition of Armenian genocide allegations.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in protest of Armenian
    occupation of a chunk of Azerbaijani territory in the Nagorno-Karabakh
    dispute. Back in September, the foreign ministers of Turkey, Armenia
    and Azerbaijan held a trilateral meeting on the sidelines of the
    UN General Assembly in New York to discuss efforts to resolve
    the bitter territorial dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan over
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian backed
    Turkey's regional cooperation proposal, and Azerbaijani Foreign
    Minister Elmar Mammadyarov said regional problems must be resolved
    in appropriate ways.

    Aliyev and Sarksyan, who had last met to discuss Nagorno-Karabakh
    in June 2007, agreed over the weekend in Moscow to instruct their
    foreign ministers "to speed up further moves in the negotiating
    process." Babacan, a former economy minister, also touched on the
    ongoing global economic crisis, citing the absence of a global
    auditing structure vis-a-vis the global economy as the main reason
    behind the crisis.

    --Boundary_(ID_+wOyqF9A8aFIAijHhFP5/A)--
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