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Mediators Warn Turkey On Pressing Karabakh Linkage

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  • Mediators Warn Turkey On Pressing Karabakh Linkage

    MEDIATORS WARN TURKEY ON PRESSING KARABAKH LINKAGE

    http://www.asbarez.com/2009/05/19/mediato rs-warns-turkey-on-continuing-karabakh-linkage/

    A NKARA (Combined Sources)-The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict cannot
    be linked to the normalization of Armenia-Turkey relations, a top
    diplomat heading international efforts to mediate a solution to the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict said Monday, warning Ankara that any attempt
    to link the two can spoil both processes, reported the Turkish Hurriyet
    Daily Newspaper.

    Ambassador Bernard Fassier, the French co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk
    Group, was in the Turkish capital Ankara meeting with Foreign Ministry
    Undersecretary Ertugrul Apaka.

    "There have recently been many visits from Turkey to Azerbaijan."

    Fassier said at a press conference in Baku Saturday before flying to
    Ankara. "We will discuss them."

    Fassier visited Ankara on the last leg of a regional tour that
    included Yerevan and Baku. The tour comes as Turkey, a non-actor in the
    Karabakh conflict, has sought to boost its role in the peace process
    by conditioning the normalization of its relations with Armenia on
    a resolution to the Karabakh conflict favoring its ally Azerbaijan.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan explicitly reaffirmed
    that linkage during his visit to Azerbaijan last week. He traveled
    to Russia on May 16 where he sought a greater role for his country in
    the Karabakh negotiation process in talks with Russian Prime Minister
    Vladimir Putin.

    "Occupation of Karabakh is the cause here and closing of the border
    is the effect. It is impossible for us to open the border unless
    that occupation ends," he told a joint press conference in Baku with
    Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev.

    Such a condition should not be expected, Fassier said Monday, speaking
    to reporters in Ankara. "There has to be a full settlement allowing
    the changing of all parameters comprehensively," he said.

    Despite Erdogan's insistence, a linkage between the two issues does not
    exist and that the Turkish Prime Minister's ongoing attempt to draw a
    connection between the two can damage regional relations, Fassier said.

    "The normalization of Armenia-Turkey relations should not be confused
    with the Karabakh conflict," the French diplomat said in Baku. "These
    are different and parallel processes."

    Fassier said the Minsk Group, co-chaired by France, Russia, and the US,
    considers negotiations between Turkey and Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh
    peace talks to be parallel processes that can never cross.

    The Minsk Group met with the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan
    in Prague on May 7 and described those talks as constructive and
    positive talks.

    Fassier said that Armenia and Azerbaijan are closer than ever to
    a compromise solution and linking the Karabakh peace process with
    Turkey's negotiations with Armenia can jeopardize the new momentum
    in the talks.

    Armenia has also criticized Erdogan for making the normalization
    of Turkish-Armenian relations conditional on a Nagorno-Karabakh
    settlement, saying that such statements could hamper both the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani, as well as the Armenian-Turkish negotiations.

    President Sarkisian and Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian reacted to
    Erdogan's statements as they separately met in Yerevan on May 14 with
    Brian Fall, Britain's special representative for the South Caucasus.

    In a written statement Sarkisian said that "any Turkish attempt
    to interfere in the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh problem can
    only harm that process." While Nalbanidan, in a separate statement
    said Erdogan's stance "precludes further progress in the ongoing
    Turkish-Armenian fence-mending negotiations."
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