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ANKARA: Gul Urges Baku To Be Open To Dialogue With Yerevan

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  • ANKARA: Gul Urges Baku To Be Open To Dialogue With Yerevan

    GUL URGES BAKU TO BE OPEN TO DIALOGUE WITH YEREVAN

    Today's Zaman
    Sept 10 2008
    Turkey

    In a problem-ridden region like the Caucasus, being open to dialogue
    is key to providing a better future for the coming generations,
    Turkey's President Abdullah Gul told Azerbaijani media ahead of his
    visit to Baku, which will take place today.

    Gul's interview with the Azeri Press Agency (APA) published on Monday
    evening focused on the president's impressions of a brief visit to
    Yerevan on Sunday to watch a soccer match between the Turkish and
    Armenian national teams, at the invitation of Armenian President
    Serzh Sarksyan. During the interview Gul highlighted more than once
    that he wanted the Azerbaijani people "to feel certain of us."

    "It demands courage to say to Turkish President to come and to watch
    the match together," Gul told APA. "I wanted to seize this occasion
    for the discussion of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and problems between
    Turkey and Armenia. To tell the truth, I was satisfied with the
    realization of this visit, because state figures should measure
    thrice and cut once and take any decisive step afterwards. If we
    freeze the problem, it will be worse and worse. Then these frozen
    problems become de facto. Therefore, state figures should conduct
    discussions hardily. We all look like each other in this small land
    as Caucasus. The majority speaks Turkish in the region or understands
    this language -- one should move this potential ahead and find solution
    to the problems. During my visit, I very openly talked to president
    Sargsyan on these issues. I talked to him more openly about all what
    I am talking to you and stressed the importance of resolution of the
    conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia," Gul said.

    "I left Yerevan with great pleasure. There can be those, who were
    against this visit in Turkey and Azerbaijan and I respect them. I am
    sure that these initiatives will achieve good results and they will
    also be happy. 50 million people died during World War II in Europe,
    but Germany and France are closer allies at present. We should look
    at the future, not only past and should open doors for the future. I
    will visit Baku on Wednesday and share my opinions with President
    Ilham Aliyev there," he also said, as reported by APA.

    Turkey's Armenian initiative followed its efforts to create a Caucasus
    platform to resolve regional disputes after a brief Georgian-Russian
    war last month. Ankara aims to bring Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia,
    Russia and Turkey around the same table via the Caucasus Stability
    and Cooperation Platform.

    Also Monday, a senior Azerbaijani official told APA that his country
    would not participate in such a platform unless the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict is resolved. "Our participation in any platform together
    with Armenia is impossible unless the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is
    solved. What can we talk about here? Is there a bigger obstacle than
    the Karabakh issue, if we speak about stability and security?" Novruz
    Mammadov, the head of International Affairs Department of Azerbaijani
    presidential office, told APA.

    Meanwhile, Azerbaijani media reported yesterday the results of a
    poll revealing that most citizens of Azerbaijan viewed Gul's visit
    to Yerevan negatively and felt it would have a negative impact on
    resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    According to the poll, conducted by the Ray monitoring center,
    88 percent of respondents viewed the visit negatively, while only
    9 percent found the visit "positive," with 3 percent "neutral,"
    saying the question "What is your opinion about this visit?" was
    "hard to answer."
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