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'No Deal Yet' In Armenia-Turkey Border Talks: Yerevan

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  • 'No Deal Yet' In Armenia-Turkey Border Talks: Yerevan

    'NO DEAL YET' IN ARMENIA-TURKEY BORDER TALKS: YEREVAN

    Agence France Presse
    April 16 2009
    France

    Talks between Armenia and Turkey on establishing diplomatic ties and
    opening their border are making progress but no deal has been reached,
    Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian said Thursday.

    "There is no intention today for us to sign an agreement with
    the Turkish side. Negotiations continue," Nalbandian told a news
    conference.

    "There is progress and we think that we really may be very close to
    resolving this question in the near future," he said during a meeting
    of Black Sea region countries seeking closer economic cooperation.

    Media reports had speculated that the two feuding countries may sign
    an agreement during Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan's visit to
    Armenia Thursday for the Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC) meeting.

    Babacan did not take part in the press conference and was not available
    for comment.

    His trip coincides with stepped-up efforts between Turkey and Armenia
    to resolve disputes stemming from a bloody history.

    Reconciliation talks between the countries, held away from public
    eye, gathered steam in September when President Abdullah Gul paid a
    landmark visit to Armenia, the first by a Turkish leader, to watch
    a football match.

    But Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan last week ruled out a
    deal with Armenia unless Yerevan resolved its conflict with Azerbaijan
    over the breakaway Nagorny Karabakh region.

    Azerbaijan has expressed concern that Turkey may be setting aside
    the Karabakh question in its talks with Armenia.

    Turkey has refused to establish diplomatic ties with Armenia because
    of Yerevan's international campaign to have the mass killings of
    Armenians under the Ottoman Empire recognised as genocide.

    In 1993, Turkey also shut its border with Armenia in a show of
    solidarity with close ally Azerbaijan over the Karabakh conflict,
    dealing a serious economic blow to the impoverished Caucasian nation.

    During a visit to Turkey this month, US President Barack Obama urged
    both countries to "move forward" in their talks and signalled that
    he would not interfere in their dispute over Armenia's genocide claims.
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