Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Cicek Says Turkey Won't Anger Azerbaijan

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Cicek Says Turkey Won't Anger Azerbaijan

    CICEK SAYS TURKEY WON'T ANGER AZERBAIJAN

    Today's Zaman
    April 22 2009
    Turkey

    Turkey will not take any steps that could be against the interests of
    Azerbaijan while thawing the ice between Turkey and Armenia or any
    other state, said Cemil Cicek, a government spokesperson and deputy
    prime minister.

    "We support overcoming our problems with our neighbors through
    dialogue. We will neither take steps with Armenia nor with any other
    state that would make the Azerbaijanis worry. This should be known by
    everyone. We have a relationship of friendship with our Azerbaijani
    brothers, different than with other states. This relationship is not
    based on material gain. As we have expressed before, we are two states
    but one nation," he said Monday evening after a Cabinet meeting.

    Cicek refuted claims that the government is trying to make a deal with
    Armenia at the expense of the Azerbaijani government, saying this is
    "baseless" speculation.

    "We don't want our friendship to be overshadowed by baseless news. We
    believed that the Cold War was over, but as we look at the world,
    the Cold War has been continuing in an important geographical region,
    the Caucasus," he added.

    As the news about a possible deal for the normalization of relations
    between Turkey and Armenia has spread, the Azerbaijani government has
    grown uneasy about the prospects of rapprochement, fearing it will
    lose key leverage in the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute. Turkey closed its
    border and severed diplomatic ties with Armenia in 1993 in protest
    of the Armenian occupation of a chunk of Azerbaijani territory during
    a war over Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Cicek said the Turkish government has been in contact with Azerbaijan
    about the developments with Armenia, informing its strategic and
    ethnic ally about the process.

    "Turkey has never worked behind the scenes against Azerbaijani
    interests," he said, adding, "Turkey, both in bilateral talks and in
    international platforms, brings the Karabakh issue to the table and
    tries to contribute to the rightful case of its Azerbaijani friends."

    He also said by normalizing its relations with Armenia, Turkey aims
    at having peace and prosperity in the Caucasus. "This is the goal of
    Turkish foreign policy. ... Turkey's Karabakh policy has not changed."

    Elections in Turkish Cyprus Cicek said elections in the Turkish
    Republic of Northern Cyprus (KKTC) last Sunday showed that democracy
    has become rooted in the island and that the year 2009 is important
    for the solution of the problems on the divided island.

    "We support the negotiations. We hope the result will satisfy both
    sides and there will be a solution this year in line with the positions
    of the presidents on both sides. We will continue to support the
    process," he said. The Turkish Cypriots voted to return power to a
    rightist party, the National Unity Party (UBP).

    Talat has held more than 20 rounds of reunification talks with Greek
    Cypriot leader Dimitris Christofias since September, negotiating
    a federal settlement with the Greek Cypriots. Regarding the issues
    touched on last week by Chief of General Staff Gen. Ilker BaÅ~_bug in
    a lengthy speech delivered at the War Academies Command in Istanbul,
    Cicek said the issues would be discussed in a National Security Council
    (MGK) meeting in the coming days.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X