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ANKARA: Turk FM comments on Russian gas deal, Armenia, Kurd issues

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  • ANKARA: Turk FM comments on Russian gas deal, Armenia, Kurd issues

    Anadolu Agency, Turkey
    Aug 9 2009


    Turkish foreign minister comments on Russian gas deal, Armenia,
    Kurdish issues


    Ankara, 9 August: The Turkish foreign minister said on Sunday [9
    August] that different energy corridors were not the alternatives of
    each other.

    Turkey's Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said that the energy deals
    signed with Russia this week created the north-south corridor, similar
    to the east-west corridor of the Nabucco pipeline.

    "Therefore, they are not alternatives of each other," Davutoglu told a
    TV programme on private Kanal 7 channel.

    Davutoglu said Turkey did not have endless natural gas or oil
    resources. "However, we have such a geography that if we use it well,
    we can use the resources we do not own for our own advantage," he
    said.

    The South Stream project would partly replace the planned extension of
    Blue Stream from Turkey through Bulgaria and Serbia to Hungary and
    Austria, and is seen as rival to the planned Nabucco pipeline. The
    completion is due by 2015.

    The Nabucco project represents a new gas pipeline connecting the
    Caspian region, Middle East and Egypt via Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania,
    Hungary with Austria and further on with the Central and Western
    European gas markets.

    Davutoglu said Russia was Turkey's number one trade partner with 40bn
    US dollars of trade volume, and Turkey was Russia's number five
    partner.

    Davutoglu said that Turkey and Russia signed customs agreements that
    would eliminate problems.

    Also, he said rapprochement with Russia would definitely contribute to
    settlement of Upper Karabakh dispute.

    "Because, we have to avoid the regional and global dispute area risk
    in the Black Sea and the Caucasus," he said.

    Davutoglu said Turkey's perspective on the Caucasus was to normalize
    relations between itself and Armenia and between Armenia and
    Azerbaijan.

    The minister expressed Turkey's determination to normalize its
    relations with Armenia, and said talks were under way.

    Davutoglu said normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations would
    contribute to solution of Azerbaijani-Armenian problem.

    On the "Kurdish move" of the government, Davutoglu said this move
    should not be regarded as a move aiming at a certain group, but as a
    historic unification move.

    "There may be circles who want to make these brothers enemies, but
    statesmen and intellectuals have a responsibility to protect this
    brotherhood," he said.

    Davutoglu said no freedom should be intimidating, what was
    intimidating should be narrowing democratization, not broadening it.

    The minister underlined importance of brotherhood and democratization
    in this process, and said he would visit Iraq in coming days.

    On 29 July, Turkish Interior Minister Besir Atalay made public the
    "Kurdish move" of the government with a press conference, expressing
    the government's belief that the so-called "Kurdish issue" would be
    solved with an egalitarian approach through democratization.

    On 2 August, Atalay met a group of journalists at a workshop titled
    "Solution of the Kurdish Issue: Towards a Turkey Model" at the Police
    Academy in capital Ankara.

    A statement released after the meeting said the participants had a
    "fruitful brainstorming", and discussed ways to manage the different
    dynamics of the process, as well as short, medium and long-term
    measures needed to be taken within the framework of the
    democratization process.
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