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ANKARA: Armenia Says It's Close To Mending Ties With Turkey

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  • ANKARA: Armenia Says It's Close To Mending Ties With Turkey

    ARMENIA SAYS IT'S CLOSE TO MENDING TIES WITH TURKEY

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 23 2009
    Turkey

    Echoing a recent statement by his Turkish counterpart, the Armenian
    foreign minister has stated that his country is close to normalizing
    relations with neighboring Turkey after a century of hostility.

    The two countries have had no diplomatic ties since 1993, when
    Ankara closed Turkey's land border in a show of solidarity with ally
    Azerbaijan, which was fighting Armenian-backed separatists over the
    Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    Relations have been haunted by the killing of Anatolian Armenians
    by Ottoman Turks during World War I, which ex-Soviet Armenia says
    amounted to genocide. Ankara rejects the genocide claims.

    Turkey showed a willingness to step up diplomatic efforts to normalize
    relations between Ankara, Baku and Yerevan last year when President
    Abdullah Gul visited the Armenian capital for a soccer match between
    Turkey and Armenia.

    The countries have also participated in three-way talks with Azerbaijan
    on normalizing relations.

    "We are very close to normalizing Armenian-Turkish relations,"
    Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian told a news conference on
    Wednesday. "We can take the next step and resolve the issue if Turkey,
    like Armenia, approaches it without preconditions and opens the border.

    "After the border opens, we are ready to form a commission in which
    we can discuss issues relevant to both countries."

    He didn't elaborate; nevertheless, Nalbandian was probably referring to
    three-year-old offer by Ankara. In 2005, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan sent a letter to then-Armenian President Robert Kocharian,
    inviting him to establish a joint commission of historians and experts
    from Turkey and Armenia to study the events of 1915 using documents
    from the archives of Turkey, Armenia and any other country believed
    to have played a part in the incident. No positive response has yet
    been received to this offer.

    Last Friday, Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan said in a television
    interview that the normalization of relations between Armenia and
    Turkey and Armenia and Azerbaijan was no longer a dream.

    "I can easily say we have never come this close to a plan regarding
    the final normalization of relations with Armenia," he said then.

    Turkey wants Yerevan to be part of a proposed Caucasus Stability
    and Cooperation Platform, a regional organization to urge a peaceful
    resolution of conflicts that would include Turkey, Russia, Georgia
    and Azerbaijan.

    In a recent interview with Today's Zaman, Gul dismissed claims that
    Azerbaijan was unhappy about the Turkish-Armenian reconciliation
    initiative and said that Baku was also satisfied because steps in
    the direction of resolving disputes in the Caucasus, including the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia, were in
    everyone's interest.

    Turkish and Armenian diplomats have been holding secret talks on a
    potential normalization of relations since Gul's visit to Yerevan
    in September. Gul declined to comment on the diplomatic contacts,
    saying only that efforts were under way. "Sometimes the efforts are
    made publicly, but sometimes they are carried out in secrecy," he said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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