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  • Ankara: Turkey Hopes To Hold Tripartite Meeting With Armenia And Aze

    TURKEY HOPES TO HOLD TRIPARTITE MEETING WITH ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN

    Hurriyet
    HotNewsTurkey.com
    Sep 20, 2008
    Turkey

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul and Foreign Minister Ali Babacan is
    set to leave for the U.S. on Saturday to attend the United Nations
    summit in New York. Turkey also would push for its bid for United
    Nation Security Council membership ahead of the voting in October.

    A new chill in East-West relations overhangs next week's U.N. General
    Assembly gathering of world leaders, the first major international
    meeting since Russia-Georgia war last month.

    The financial turmoil on Wall Street could also cast a pall over the
    annual week of speechifying, whose main theme this year is stepping
    up aid to impoverished countries.

    But for Turkey the most important aim is to bring Armenian and
    Azerbaijani top diplomats together on the same table with the hope
    of taking a step towards the solution of the conflicts.

    Turkish broadcaster CNNTurk said Babacan plans to meet with his
    Azerbaijani and Armenian counterparts in New York on September 25
    and 26 respectively on the sidelines of the UN summit.

    The ministers are expected to meet both bilaterally and trilaterally
    to mainly discuss settlement of the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict.

    Armenia said it is not against holding such a meeting. Armenia's
    foreign minister Edward Nalbandian also sounded optimistic about the
    prospects of a solution in the long-running dispute between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan, saying that such a solution would open up new possibilities
    for regional cooperation in a press conference on Friday.

    ARMENIA GIVES GREENLIGHT

    "Mr. Babacan also proposed that a meeting should be organized in
    a tripartite format. I am not against the organization of such a
    meeting," Nalbandian said when asked about the possibility of a
    trilateral meeting of three countries' top diplomats.

    The conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia began in 1988 due to
    Armenian territorial claims against Azerbaijan.

    Since 1992, Armenian Armed Forces have occupied 20 percent of
    Azerbaijan including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and its seven
    surrounding districts. Some 10 percent of the Azeri population was
    displaced due to a series of bloody clashes both between and within
    the two neighboring countries.

    In 1994, Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement at which
    time the active hostilities ended. The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk
    Group are currently holding peaceful negotiations.

    TURKEY'S PUSH FOR COUNCIL

    Turkish officials also see this summit as one of the latest
    opportunities to push for country's bid to become a United Nations
    Security Council member.

    "I am going to explain (my counterparts) our demand for Council
    membership for the 2009-10 term. I believe that Turkey's, a country
    who is not present in the Council for almost 50 years, election would
    enhance our position and importance in the international relations,"
    Gul told reporters in Ankara on Saturday before he left for the U.S.

    He also said he does not know whether Armenian President Sarz Sargsyan
    would attend the summit or not but there is no scheduled meeting
    between two leaders. Two countries' foreign ministers would meet,
    he added.

    A warmer period began between two neighbors, who do not have any
    diplomatic relations for more than a decade, after Gul paid a landmark
    visit to Armenia early September.

    Turkey hopes this period would lead to normalization of the
    relations. Turkey and Armenia do not have diplomatic relations because
    of Armenia's aggression against Azerbaijan.
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