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Armenia Says Deal With Turkey Could Be Reached Soon

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  • Armenia Says Deal With Turkey Could Be Reached Soon

    ARMENIA SAYS DEAL WITH TURKEY COULD BE REACHED SOON
    Hasmik Lazarian

    Reuters UK
    April 16 2009

    * Armenia says deal on ties possible "in near future"

    * Azerbaijan opposed without progress on Nagorno-Karabakh

    * Turkey says it favours "comprehensive solution"

    Armenia said on Thursday it was close to establishing diplomatic
    relations with Turkey after a century of hostility, but Turkish ally
    Azerbaijan stressed its opposition.

    High-level talks between Ankara and Yerevan began last year and
    expectations have been rising of a deal that could include Turkey
    opening its border with Armenia. Turkey hopes a deal on Armenia will
    improve its chances of joining the European Union.

    "The negotiations are ongoing and progress has been registered," Edward
    Nalbandian, the Armenian foreign minister, told reporters during a
    Black Sea economic conference attended by his Turkish counterpart
    Ali Babacan.

    "We think we can really get close and resolve this question in the
    near future."

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in support of its
    traditional Muslim ally Azerbaijan, which was fighting Armenian-backed
    separatists in the breakaway mountain region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Turkey and Armenia trace their own dispute to the First World War
    killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks, which Armenia describes as
    genocide.

    But diplomats say Turkish concern over the potential backlash in
    Azerbaijan could yet delay the deal.

    OIL AND GAS

    Azerbaijan, a supplier of oil and gas to Europe, insists any deal
    between Turkey and Armenia can only follow concessions from Armenia on
    Nagorno-Karabakh, where a fragile ceasefire holds but a peace accord
    has never been signed.

    Speaking to reporters on his plane to Yerevan, Babacan said: "We want
    a comprehensive solution and full normalisation. We want a solution
    based on a wide perspective."

    Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said this month the deadlock
    over Nagorno-Karabakh should be resolved before any deal is struck
    between Turkey and Armenia.

    Western diplomats are concerned that Azerbaijan, in retaliation for the
    border reopening, might be unwilling to sell its gas in future through
    Turkey to Europe, and instead send most of it to Russia for re-export.

    "Our position is the following -- the establishment of relations
    between Armenia and Turkey can be connected only with the resolving of
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict," Azeri deputy Foreign Minister Mahmud
    Mammad-Guliev said in Yerevan.

    Azeri President Ilham Aliyev was in Moscow on Thursday, three weeks
    after Azeri state energy firm Socar signed a memorandum with Russian
    gas export monopoly Gazprom about starting talks on Russia buying
    Azeri gas for export to Europe from 2010.

    Both the EU and U.S. President Barack Obama, during a visit
    to Turkey last week, have urged Turkey to normalise ties with
    Armenia.
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