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ANKARA: Babacan Says No Shift In Turk Position

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  • ANKARA: Babacan Says No Shift In Turk Position

    BABACAN SAYS NO SHIFT IN TURK POSITION

    Hurriye
    Jan 29 2009
    Turkey

    ANKARA - Turkey yesterday stood firmly behind the policy it has
    pursued throughout the Gaza crisis and said it would do the same if
    Israel relaunched an operation into Hamas controlled Gaza.

    "There is no change in our position, there is no shift," Foreign
    Minister Ali Babacan said in a televised interview in Davos. The
    Turkish government has come under heavy criticism for its strong
    rhetoric against Israel during the latest Gaza crisis and has been
    accused of siding with the Islamic group Hamas.

    "We are at an equal distance from all Palestinian groups," Babacan
    told the private NTV television. Babacan's previous remarks Ä~^that
    Hamas must make a choice between being an armed organization or a
    political group Ä~^ led to a perception that the government had begun
    moving toward a more balanced approach.

    "There cannot be an armed solution," repeated Babacan. "This is valid
    for both Palestinians and Israelis. Diplomacy and dialogue must be
    the main instruments."

    Babacan went on to say that the harsh criticism leveled at the Israeli
    policies by the government was natural. "We showed a reaction against
    these wrongful policies," he said, adding Turkey did the same when
    a war broke out between Russia and Georgia last summer.

    "On the fourth day of the (Caucasus) war we, together with the prime
    minister, went to Russia and met with Russian Prime Minister Vladimir
    Putin for hours. Just as we said 'no to war,' we have said the same
    (regarding the Israeli-Palestinian violence)," the foreign minister
    said.

    "Who gained in the end of the conflict (in Gaza)?" he asked. "Is
    Hamas eradicated? Who controls Gaza?" He added Hamas must continue
    its path as a political movement.

    Asked if his statements had not come too late, Babacan said: "Why is
    Turkey a mediator? Because it is trusted by all partiesÃ~I Our stance
    was not favored by some in the short run. There was a game and some
    remained silentÃ~I Just as we tell Israel, we tell the Palestinians
    to resort to political mechanisms at the negotiating table, not
    to violence."

    Babacan said the government's criticism could lead to unease among
    the Israelis but stressed that without Turkey, Israel's presence in
    the region would not be easy.

    No planned meeting with Peres Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said
    yesterday that he had no scheduled bilateral meeting with Israeli
    President Shimon Peres, except for their presence at a Middle East
    panel in Davos.

    "There is no planned meeting (with the Israeli president)," he told
    reporters at the airport before departure. "Such panels usually last
    between 45 to 60 minutes and I will express my opinion in a 10 minute
    time frame."

    Erdogan said Turkey always sought to contribute to peace in the
    Middle East and said the country would never take steps that would
    overshadow peace. The presence of the two leaders at the same panel
    will mark the first encounter since Erdogan's severe criticism of
    Israeli policies in Gaza that caused shock in Tel-Aviv.

    The prime minister said he would hold talks with the leaders from
    different countries, including Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin
    and Azeri President Ilham Aliyev on the sidelines of the World Economic
    Forum. He did not rule out a possible meeting with Armenian Prime
    Minister Serge Sarkisian.

    "There can be a meeting, there is no obstacle," he said. Asked if
    the government was planning to make an opening toward Yerevan before
    April 24, Erdogan said they were two separate issues.

    "No thunderstorm will break on April 24. We have made sincere
    efforts since we came to power to normalize ties with Armenia," said
    Erdogan. He added Turkey had started flights to Yerevan, allowed
    close to 40,000 Armenians to illegally work in Turkey and helped
    restore the Armenian Akdamar Church in eastern Anatolia.

    "These are all gestures," he said. Erdogan implied the agenda of the
    Armenian diaspora was different and was not shared by the Yerevan
    administration.

    Meeting with Nalbandian For his part, Babacan said he met with
    his Armenian counterpart, Edward Nalbandian on the sidelines of
    the World Economic Forum and progress was made in negotiations with
    Yerevan. Pointing to the Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform,
    a proposal Turkey came up with in the wake of the Russia-Georgia war
    last summer, Erdogan said technical negotiations were already under
    way and in the near future the format for talks would be raised to
    the ministerial level.

    Officials from the foreign ministries of Turkey, Azerbaijan,
    Armenia, Russia and Georgia are expected to meet in Istanbul this
    week for the second five-party discussion of its kind on the regional
    security platform, the Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review earlier
    reported. The first was held in December on the sidelines of the
    Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe meeting in
    Helsinki.

    --Boundary_(ID_alIps3rBiFM+beDKp+vVE g)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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