Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Serbia Willing To Improve Its Relations With Turkey

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

  • ANKARA: Serbia Willing To Improve Its Relations With Turkey

    SERBIA WILLING TO IMPROVE ITS RELATIONS WITH TURKEY

    Hurriyet
    Nov 10 2008
    Turkey

    ANKARA - Turkey is a very important country in the region and now a
    member of the U.N. Security Council. It is very active in all regional
    initiatives, we want to have good relations with Turkey. I came to
    build our relations in all areas,' says Ambassador Curgus

    The ambassador of Serbia said his return after almost eight months
    did not mean his country had withdrawn its objection to Ankara's
    recognition of an independent Kosovo.

    Serbia recalled its ambassador to Ankara, Vladimir Curgus, in a show
    of protest shortly after Turkey became one of the first countries to
    recognize the breakaway region's independence in February.

    "I must say it is an illegal decision by Kosovo to declare
    independence. But Turkey is responsible for its own decisions,"
    Curgus told the Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review in his first
    interview with the media after returning in late October.

    He said he came back, "not because we accept the recognition, but
    because Serbia wants to make relations with Ankara better than they
    are at the moment."

    The ambassador said, "Turkey is a very important country in the region
    and a member of the United Nations Security Council. It is very
    active in all regional initiatives. We want to have good relations
    with Turkey. I came to build our relationship in all areas."

    But he said their difference with the Turkish government on the Kosovo
    issue remained unresolved.

    "No, we have not closed the (Kosovo) file," he said. "We do not agree
    that Kosovo is a separate territory from Serbia. Serbia does not accept
    the political decision of Turkey (to recognise its independence)."

    Turkey multinational country

    The process in the run-up to the recognition of Kosovo's independence
    gained momentum early this year with the United States and leading
    members of the European Union pledging support. The critical decision
    as to recognition sparked fears that Kosovo, populated by 2 million
    Albanians, could set a precedent for other states, including Turkey,
    who are concerned about separatism.

    "Every nationality in every part of the world has its own rights. But
    if they all declare independence, every multi-ethnic country including
    Turkey would have big problems. Turkey is not a one-nation country,"
    said Curgus.

    His remarks were in response to questions about Kurdish claims for
    broader autonomy inside Turkish territory.

    "Did Turkey accept claims for territory? No, and it is right of
    Turkey to do so as is the (denial of the independence of Kosovo)
    a sovereign right of Serbia," he said.

    Kosovo plans to open an embassy in Ankara soon. Diplomatic sources
    told the Daily News that suitable sites were being sought.

    "They can open whatever they want to open. It is not a question
    that I want to comment on. It is a decision of the (Turkish)
    government. Tomorrow they must explain their decision to the Tukish
    people," said Curgus.

    The ambassador said Serbia believed the dispute over Kosovo could be
    settled by negotiation.

    "The Balkan territory has had a very difficult history, involving many
    battles. Because of past experience, we want to solve this (Kosovo)
    problem not with guns but with law. We want to believe international
    law still exists," noted Curgus.

    The president of Serbia, Boris Tadic, asked the U.N. Security Council
    to annul the declaration of independence by Kosovo. Belgrade currently
    awaits the United Nations decision on Kosovo.

    "We strongly believe that the U.N. system cannot approve of this. We
    are sure the United Nations will consider the declaration of
    independence illegal," said the ambassador.

    He also expressed optimism about a real compromise with Albanians
    in Kosovo.

    "We insist on making a real deal with Albanians. You can never work
    when there is a frozen conflict," said Curgus.

    He cited another "frozen conflict," Nagorno-Karabakh, between regional
    rivals in the Caucasus, Azerbaijan and Armenia. "You see that it is
    very important to have a solution concerning Nagorno-Karabakh and
    Turkey is involved as frozen conflicts are of no use to neighboring
    countries," he said.
Working...
X