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Armenia Aims To Renew Turkey Ties

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  • Armenia Aims To Renew Turkey Ties

    ARMENIA AIMS TO RENEW TURKEY TIES

    Al-Jazeera
    April 17 2009
    Qatar

    Armenia has said that it is close to re-establishing full relations
    with Turkey following nearly 100 years of hostilities. Edward
    Nalbandian, Armenia's foreign minister, met his Turkish counterpart
    Ali Babacan in Yerevan for talks that could lead to the border between
    the two nations being reopened after more than 15 years.

    "The negotiations are ongoing and progress has been registered,"
    Nalbandian said after the meeting at a Black Sea economic conference
    in the Armenian capital on Thursday. "We could be very close to
    settling the issue in the near future," he said. Turkish media
    reported Babacan saying on his return to Ankara, the Turkish capital,
    that his country's leaders wanted an "all-encompassing" solution and
    "full normalisation" of ties. "We want a solution based on a wide
    perspective," he said. Genocide dispute Turkey hopes that a deal with
    Armenia could aid their chances of joining the EU, but there remains
    differences between the two nations over the first world war killing
    of up to 1.5 million Armenians under Ottoman rule. The incident is
    regularly cited as the first genocide of the 20th century, but Turkey
    denies that there was any systematic campaign to kill Armenians.
    There is also discord over the Nagorno-Karabakh region, which Armenia
    gained from Azerbaijan after a six-year conflict at the end of the
    Soviet Union's rule of both nations. Turkey closed its border with
    Armenia in 1993 in support of Azerbaijian. Ankara wants the talks
    with Armenia to run in parallel with negotiations between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan over the future of the region. Azerbaijan has said that
    any deal between Ankara and Yerevan could only follow concessions
    from Armenia on the Nagorno-Karabakh issue. The EU and US have
    both urged Armenia and Turkey to resolve their disputes and re-open
    their borders. 'Package deal' Hugh Pope, a senior analyst with the
    International Crisis Group, told Al Jazeera from Istanbul: "It is the
    best chance we have seen for a long time. It is a package deal. As
    far as we know they are gong to establish diplomatic relations,
    open that border and also have a commission to discuss the history
    of everything. "And I think this comes after the two sides are really
    changing. On the one side we have a new government in Armenia over the
    past year. They are seeking some international legitimacy after the
    problems they had at the beginning. "They are also seeking more work
    [and] the economy will be helped on both sides by opening the border.
    "And also the weakness of Armenia. Its isolation was demonstrated
    quite graphically with the fighting in the Caucuses last year.
    "And on the Turkish side we have a government that has for several
    years now been trying to improve relations with all its neighbours
    and it has proved that in Iraq and by opening up to Cyprus.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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