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ANKARA: Armenia Reschedules Regional Meeting To Accommodate Turkey

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  • ANKARA: Armenia Reschedules Regional Meeting To Accommodate Turkey

    ARMENIA RESCHEDULES REGIONAL MEETING TO ACCOMMODATE TURKEY

    Today's Zaman
    March 4 2009
    Turkey

    Armenia has rescheduled a foreign ministerial meeting of Black Sea
    countries, apparently as a goodwill gesture to ensure Turkish Foreign
    Minister Ali Babacan will be among the participants, diplomatic
    sources have said.

    Armenian authorities moved the date of the Organization of the Black
    Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC) meeting from the previously announced
    April 29 to April 16. The shift is significant because April 29 is
    only a few days after April 24, which Armenians claim marks the
    beginning of a genocide campaign against Anatolian Armenians in
    the early 20th century. April 24 is also the day when US presidents
    release a traditional message to commemorate the Armenian killings.

    Armenian-American groups expect President Barack Obama to break with
    presidential tradition and use the word "genocide" in his message this
    year, given the strong promises he made to Armenian-American voters
    during his election campaign that he would endorse the genocide claims.

    Turkey is concerned that any US move to acknowledge the genocide
    claims would deal a heavy blow not only to Turkish-US ties but also to
    ongoing efforts to normalize relations with neighboring Armenia, with
    which Turkey has had no formal ties since 1993. Ankara wants a change
    in Yerevan's policy toward the genocide recognition campaign under
    way around the world before normalizing its ties with Armenia. Other
    conditions posed by Turkey are peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan and
    formal Armenian recognition of its current borders with Turkey. Foreign
    Minister Babacan said in an interview with Today's Zaman this week
    that Turkey and Armenia were closer than ever to resolution of their
    dispute. Turkish and Armenian diplomats have been holding closed-door
    meetings on restoration of ties since a landmark visit by President
    Abdullah Gul to Yerevan in September.

    Turkish officials have refrained from discussing whether Babacan will
    attend the BSEC meeting. Although Ankara has a high opinion of BSEC
    and wants to revitalize it as an influential regional consultation
    mechanism, Babacan's participation in the group's next meeting in
    Yerevan will still depend on Armenia's commitment to the ongoing
    rapprochement process and on the course of closed-door talks with
    Armenia, officials say. The same officials also make it clear that
    Turkey has made no request for the foreign ministerial gathering to
    be rescheduled.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian traveled to Ä°stanbul to
    attend the previous BSEC meeting held there. Nalbandian said then
    that his country wanted to invite Babacan to the next BSEC meeting
    in Yerevan. It is not clear whether a formal invitation for Babacan
    has yet arrived.

    Before the foreign ministerial gathering, BSEC countries are due
    to hold ministerial-level working meetings also in Yerevan. The
    energy ministers of BSEC countries will meet on March 13, while
    the transportation and agriculture ministers will gather on March
    27 and April 10, respectively. This means other Cabinet ministers
    may visit Yerevan before Babacan. Diplomatic sources do not rule
    out the prospect of ministerial visits to Armenia, underlining the
    importance Turkey attaches to the BSEC functioning effectively. Turkey
    has traditionally favored senior-level attendance at BSEC meetings,
    and sources say Ankara is unlikely to scale down its role in BSEC
    because of problems with Armenia.
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