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Turkey, Armenia Agree On 'Road Map' For Normalizing Relations

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  • Turkey, Armenia Agree On 'Road Map' For Normalizing Relations

    TURKEY, ARMENIA AGREE ON 'ROAD MAP' FOR NORMALIZING RELATIONS
    By Michael Heath

    Bloomberg
    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/new s?pid=20601102&sid=a82zb_XUTeUA&refer=uk

    April 23 (Bloomberg) -- Turkey and Armenia agreed on a "road map"
    to normalize relations, the Foreign Ministry in Ankara said after
    reconciliation talks between the neighbors who share a bloody history
    and whose border is shut.

    The negotiations, mediated by Switzerland, "have achieved tangible
    progress and mutual understanding," the ministry said in a statement
    late yesterday. The announcement came as Armenia marks the anniversary
    of the alleged genocide in 1915 of 1.5 million of its people by Turks
    in ceremonies tomorrow.

    Efforts at reconciliation between the two nations have gathered
    momentum since President Abdullah Gul traveled to Armenia's capital,
    Yerevan, in September, the first visit to the country by a Turkish
    head of state.

    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said yesterday she was "very
    encouraged by the bold steps" being taken by Turkey and Armenia to
    reconcile with each other and with their "painful past."

    Steps toward "normalizing relations and opening their borders will
    foster a better environment for confronting that shared, tragic
    history," Clinton said in comments to the House Foreign Affairs
    Committee in Washington.

    The government in Yerevan has accused Turkey of genocide=2 0against
    Armenians in the latter years of the Ottoman Empire, which preceded
    modern Turkey. The Turkish government says massacres took place in
    the context of clashes that related to Armenian groups supporting
    Russia against Turkey during World War I.

    Ottoman Archives

    Turkish officials insist the killings weren't orchestrated by the
    Ottoman government and Gul has proposed opening Ottoman archives to
    international scholars to try to resolve the dispute.

    The French parliament supported the Armenian view that the killings
    amounted to genocide. The lower house of parliament approved
    a resolution in 2006 making it a crime to deny that genocide was
    carried out against Armenians living in what is now Turkey in 1915.

    The U.S. says declaring the killings as genocide would hurt relations
    with an important ally.

    Ties have been further strained by a conflict between Armenia
    and Turkey's ally, Azerbaijan. While Turkey recognized Armenia's
    independence in December 1991 as the Soviet Union collapsed, it shut
    the frontier in 1993 to protest the government in Yerevan's support
    for ethnic Armenians in the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave in their fight
    for independence from Azerbaijan. A cease-fire has held since 1994.

    Road Map

    The Foreign Ministry said Turkey and Armenia "have agreed on a
    comprehensive framework for the normalization of their bilateral
    relations in a mutually satisfactory manner," according20to the
    statement on its Web site. "In this context, a road map has been
    identified."

    Most Armenians oppose their government's efforts to improve relations
    with Turkey, the Istanbul-based Hurriyet newspaper reported a week ago,
    citing a survey by the Ararat Stratejik Merkezi research center.

    Sixty-one percent of respondents to the poll said they were against
    closer ties with Turkey, Hurriyet said. Only 11 percent said they
    support the government's current policy, the newspaper reported,
    without giving further details of the study.

    To contact the reporter on this story: Michael Heath in Sydney at
    [email protected].

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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