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ANKARA: FM Armenia-bound on eve of key date

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  • ANKARA: FM Armenia-bound on eve of key date

    Hürriyet , Turkey
    March 11 2009


    FM Armenia-bound on eve of key date

    ANKARA - Foreign Minister Ali Babacan has accepted an invitation from
    his Armenian counterpart to attend a regional summit in Yerevan. The
    move has been interpreted as a further step by Ankara to avoid a
    U.S. presidential proclamation of the alleged genocide of Armenians
    this April 24, daily Hürriyet reported yesterday.

    Babacan will participate in the foreign ministerial meeting of the
    Black Sea Economic Cooperation set for April 16 and 17 at the
    invitation of Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian. The move is
    expected to give Ankara an upper hand before a critical visit by
    President Barack Obama, who is expected in Turkey next month. But
    Turkish diplomats speaking to the Daily News said nothing yet was
    certain, but that the Foreign Ministry was also contemplating possible
    consequences of Babacan not visiting Yerevan before April 24.

    In a televised interview at the weekend, Babacan said he was invited
    to Yerevan for the summit, adding that he had not yet decided because
    there were other programs that overlapped with next month's meeting.

    The Armenian question was on the agenda during U.S. Secretary of State
    Hillary Clinton's trip to Turkey last Saturday, although diplomatic
    sources in Ankara said it was off the table. A joint statement
    released after the Babacan-Clinton meeting highlighted efforts to
    normalize Turkish-Armenian relations.

    Babacan still sees risk

    Babacan said the new U.S. administration appreciated Turkey's opinions
    and sensitivities regarding the alleged 1915 killings but said there
    was still a "risk" over the U.S. stance on the issue. Obama said on
    several occasions during his election campaign that he would recognize
    the 1915 incidents as "genocide."

    "I can easily say that the current U.S. administration perceives
    Turkey's opinion and sensitivity on this matter. We have no
    difficulties with communication in that sense," Babacan said, adding
    that the issue could be solved without overshadowing relations between
    Turkey and the United States.

    The Black Sea Economic Cooperation was founded in 1992 in order to
    promote stronger economic cooperation among Black Sea countries and
    promote peace and stability. BSEC member states are Bulgaria, Georgia,
    Romania, Russia, Turkey, Ukraine, Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan,
    Greece, Moldova and Serbia. Armenia assumed the rotating presidency of
    BSEC on November.
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