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ANKARA: Davos Venue For Hopeful Meeting Of Armenian, Turkish Leaders

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  • ANKARA: Davos Venue For Hopeful Meeting Of Armenian, Turkish Leaders

    DAVOS VENUE FOR HOPEFUL MEETING OF ARMENIAN, TURKISH LEADERS

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 30 2009
    Turkey

    In January 1988 the tiny ski resort town of Davos, Switzerland, was the
    venue of a landmark meeting between Turgut Ozal and Andreas Papandreou,
    the late leaders of uneasy Aegean neighbors Greece and Turkey.

    The meeting had paved the way of rapprochement between the two
    countries, which had one year prior almost engaged in a military
    clash over oil-drilling rights in the Aegean.

    Twenty-one years later, Davos yesterday evening was preparing for
    another landmark meeting between leaders of estranged neighbors Armenia
    and Turkey, with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan voicing
    hope ahead of his meeting with Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan.

    "We have a basic principle. That is, if states never hold talks, it is
    impossible to have a peace process. At the moment, you know we have
    around 40,000 Armenian citizens. They all have an expectation. In
    addition to the citizens, there are around 40,000 undocumented
    Armenians. Furthermore, Armenia is a neighboring country," Erdogan
    told reporters in Davos yesterday, the Anatolia news agency reported.

    Both Erdogan and Sarksyan participated in an annual meeting of the
    World Economic Forum (WEF) held in the Swiss town. The two were
    scheduled to hold talks in the evening after Today's Zaman went
    to press.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Armenian President
    Serzh Sarksyan hope 2009 will be a turning point in Turkey-Armenia
    relations.

    "Of course, the time for making an assessment on these issues has come
    and even passed. There are also efforts by the Armenian diaspora in
    the world," Erdogan added, in an apparent reference to the Armenian
    diaspora's constant lobbying efforts for global official recognition
    of an alleged Armenian genocide.

    "We can resolve [this issue] by taking certain steps. While resolving
    this, Turkey won't be the party 'giving unilaterally and losing.' We
    will also be happy if there can be an agreement which will provide
    mutual advantages for both sides," he said, while stressing that
    Turkey's rapprochement with Armenia did not at all mean harming its
    friendly relations with Azerbaijan.

    On Wednesday evening Erdogan had talks with Azerbaijani President
    Ä°lham Aliyev, who earlier in the day held talks with Sarksyan
    concerning the two-decade-long Nagorno-Karabakh conflict that has
    uprooted hundreds of thousands of people from both Armenia and
    Azerbaijan.

    "We will never leave Azerbaijan alone concerning Nagorno-Karabakh. That
    is to say that our issues are in a way connected with
    Azerbaijan. Despite all these facts, if Armenia is sincere ... then
    today's meeting may outline a roadmap following our talks yesterday
    evening," Erdogan said.

    Late on Wednesday evening, while announcing that he would meet with
    Sarksyan, Erdogan said, "We are hopeful but I cannot know how hopeful
    Armenia is."Also on Wednesday evening, when asked by reporters whether
    he considered his planned meeting with the Turkish prime minister as
    "a positive step," Sarksyan briefly said, "I believe it will be so."

    Foreign Minister Ali Babacan, who is also in Davos, told reporters on
    Wednesday that he held talks with his Armenian counterpart, Edward
    Nalbandian, earlier in the day. The two ministers were expected to
    hold another bilateral meeting in Davos ahead of the Erdogan-Sarksyan
    meeting.

    "I won't be surprised if a resolution happens this year," Babacan said.

    --Boundary_(ID_7xueh0XX+NHjMQ0us4nRaQ)--
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