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ANKARA: Turkish Airlines Prepares For Charter Flights To Yerevan

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  • ANKARA: Turkish Airlines Prepares For Charter Flights To Yerevan

    TURKISH AIRLINES PREPARES FOR CHARTER FLIGHTS TO YEREVAN

    Today's Zaman
    Nov 24 2008
    Turkey

    In a move likely to contribute to the recent thaw in bilateral
    relations between Armenia and Turkey, which gained momentum when
    President Abdullah Gul visited Yerevan in September, Turkey's national
    airline company has been preparing to launch charter flights to the
    Armenian capital.

    Turkish Airlines (THY) has recently sent unofficial letters to both the
    Directorate General of Civil Aviation (SHGM) and the Foreign Ministry,
    asking for information regarding charter flights by Armenian national
    air company Armavia from Yerevan to Ä°stanbul and the Mediterranean
    coastal city of Antalya.

    THY asked about the arrangements and agreements involving these
    flights. In its response, the SHGM said the flights have been taking
    place with the Foreign Ministry's approval and that permission for
    Armavia's charter flights to Turkey is renewed every two or three
    weeks. In the coming days, THY is expected to send another letter
    to the Foreign Ministry asking whether launching charter flights to
    Yerevan would "comply with the national interests" of the country. The
    final decision will be made after receiving the Foreign Ministry's
    response outlining Ankara's stance on the issue.

    Currently, Atlasjet, a private Turkish airline company, has been
    conducting charter flights between Ä°stanbul and Yerevan.

    Turkey severed its ties with Armenia and closed its border
    with the landlocked country in 1993 as a sign of solidarity with
    Azerbaijan. There have been no formal ties between the two countries
    since then, and Ankara says the normalization of relations depends on
    Armenia's withdrawal from Nagorno-Karabakh and an end to Yerevan's
    support for the Armenian diaspora's efforts to win international
    recognition for claims that Armenians were subjected to genocide at
    the hands of the Ottoman Empire. Gul broke the ice when he visited
    Yerevan to watch a soccer match between the two countries' national
    teams in early September. Gul invited Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan
    to Turkey for the next game between the two countries' teams next year.

    As part of intensifying contacts between Armenia and Turkey, Armenian
    Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian is scheduled to arrive in Ä°stanbul
    today for a meeting of the Organization of the Black Sea Economic
    Cooperation (BSEC). The Ä°stanbul BSEC meeting will also offer an
    opportunity for a bilateral meeting between Nalbandian and his Turkish
    counterpart, Ali Babacan. Babacan and Nalbandian had three-way talks
    with Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov in September to
    discuss the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute. While trying to re-establish
    relations at the official level through meetings, Turkey has been
    also making certain gestures that it hopes will eventually help to
    normalize ties between the two estranged neighbors.

    A senior Turkish official, speaking with Today's Zaman, said THY has
    been assuming an important role in Turkish foreign policy. Describing
    THY as "an important tool of Turkey's policy of strategic initiatives,"
    the official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the company
    always requests the Foreign Ministry's view when it prepares to launch
    a new flight route abroad.

    --Boundary_(ID_ImkCY37pgLGTuYhn8+KLpg)--
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