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Yerevan Tight-Lipped On Turkish-Armenian 'Roadmap'

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  • Yerevan Tight-Lipped On Turkish-Armenian 'Roadmap'

    YEREVAN TIGHT-LIPPED ON TURKISH-ARMENIAN 'ROADMAP'
    Emil Danielyan, Tatevik Lazarian

    RFE/RL
    24.04.2009

    Armenia's leadership remained tight-lipped on Friday about details of
    a potentially ground-breaking agreement with Turkey despite growing
    pressure from the domestic opposition concerned about its possible
    implications.

    The Armenian government stopped short of explicitly denying the
    purported specifics of the "roadmap" for the normalization of
    Turkish-Armenian relations that were reported by Turkish newspapers.

    According to the "Sabah" daily, Armenia will formally recognize its
    existing border with Turkey and agree to the formation of a joint
    commission of historians tasked with studying the mass killings
    of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire. It said historians from other
    countries could also join the commission. Turkey will in return
    gradually establish full diplomatic relations with Armenia and reopen
    the Turkish-Armenian frontier closed it 1993, reported "Sabah."

    Another paper, "Hurriyet," claimed that the lifting of the Turkish
    blockade will be contingent on a breakthrough in the Nagorno-Karabakh
    peace process. "It would be up to Turkey to decide whether to open
    the gate," it wrote on Friday.

    Commenting on the "Sabah" report, Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman
    Tigran Balayan said: "One should trust information about such serious
    issues only if20it comes from official sources." He did not elaborate.

    Armenia's two main opposition forces demanded, meanwhile, the immediate
    disclosure of the "roadmap" which the two countries' foreign ministries
    announced in a joint statement on Wednesday night. The statement
    said Ankara and Yerevan have agreed on a "comprehensive framework
    for the normalization of their bilateral relations" but did not give
    any details.

    "The Armenian authorities do not have the public mandate to make
    such statements and have in effect put Armenian national interests at
    risk by abusing the principle of confidentiality [of the talks,]" the
    opposition Zharangutyun (Heritage) said in a statement. It condemned
    the fact that the agreement was announced on the eve of the annual
    commemoration of the Armenian genocide.

    A similar statement was issued by the larger Armenian National Congress
    (HAK). "We demand that the authorities immediately disclose that
    document," Levon Zurabian, a top HAK representative, told RFE/RL
    on Friday.

    "I am concerned that this statement could stop more countries
    recognizing the genocide," said Stepan Demirchian, another HAK leader.

    "We support the normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations but not
    at the expense of our national dignity."

    The HAK and its top leader, former President Levon Ter-Petrosian,
    are strongly opposed to the idea of Turkish and Arme nian scholars
    jointly determining whether the 1915-1918 mass killings constituted
    a genocide. "If there is such a thing in that document, it is
    unacceptable to us," said Zurabian.

    That Yerevan agreed to the establishment of a Turkish-Armenian body
    dealing with historic disputes was seemingly admitted by President
    Serzh Sarkisian in an interview with "The Wall Street Journal"
    earlier this week.

    "You are asking what questions can be addressed by that historical
    sub-commission," he said. "I can give you one example. The historic
    Armenian monuments in the Ottoman Empire and today. There are thousands
    of such monuments. I am sure that Turkey would have many questions
    to raise with us."

    When asked whether that can include the genocide issue, Sarkisian
    replied: "We cannot prohibit Turkey from raising any issue in any
    of the sub-commissions, just as they cannot limit us in raising
    any issue."

    The Armenian leader also hit out at Turkish Prime Minister Recep for
    repeatedly stating this month that Ankara will not normalize ties with
    Yerevan before a solution is found to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. "I
    think already now the motivation of Turkey has decreased, because
    as you said Prime Minister Erdogan is now offering preconditions,"
    he said, speaking two days before the announcement of the "roadmap."

    Sarkisian further made clear that he will not visit=2 0Turkey this
    October for the return match of the two countries' national soccer
    teams if the Turkish-Armenian border is not reopened or about to be
    reopened by then. "I was not supposed to travel to Turkey as a simple
    tourist or as a football fan," he said.

    The prospect of a breakthrough in Turkish-Armenian relations
    prompted renewed concerns from Azerbaijan, which maintains that their
    unconditional normalization would deal a heavy blow to its positions
    in the Karabakh conflict. Turkish President Abdullah Gul phoned his
    Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliev late Thursday in a bid to address
    those concerns.

    "There is no misunderstanding in our relations," Gul told journalists
    on Friday. "We are in agreement that everything that is being done is
    of advantage to both our countries, Azerbaijan and Turkey," he said,
    according to news agencies.

    Erdogan, for his part, appeared to downplay the significance of the
    Turkish-Armenian understandings. "We will not take any steps that
    will hurt our [Azeri] brothers," "Hurriyet Daily News" quoted him as
    saying. "There is nothing that is signed but a finalized protocol."
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