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ANKARA: Turkic world to put ties in inst. framework in Nakhchivan

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  • ANKARA: Turkic world to put ties in inst. framework in Nakhchivan

    Today's Zaman

    03 October 2009, Saturday

    Turkic world to put ties in institutional framework in Nakhchivan

    President Abdullah Gül traveled to Nakhchivan for a two-day
    summit of Turkic-speaking countries. The meeting will end with the
    signing of an agreement outlining the institutionalization of the
    summit.

    President Abdullah Gül traveled to Nakhchivan for a two-day
    summit of Turkic-speaking countries. The meeting will end with the
    signing of an agreement outlining the institutionalization of the
    summit.

    A two-day summit of the Turkic-speaking countries held in the
    autonomous Azerbaijani republic of Nakhchivan will end today with the
    signing of an agreement that outlines the institutionalization of the
    summit.

    The first such summit was held in 1992 at the initiative of
    then-Turkish President Turgut Ã-zal. The most recent edition of the
    summit took place in November 2006 in Antalya. The summit in
    Nakhchivan, where Turkey was represented by President Abdullah
    Gül, was the ninth of its kind.

    Today's agreement foresees the establishment of the Turkic-speaking
    Countries Cooperation Council, with its permanent secretariat to be
    based in Ä°stanbul.

    A separate declaration to be released at the end of the summit will
    call for an end to Armenia's occupation of Azerbaijan's
    Nagorno-Karabakh, with a highlight of Turkey's regional sensitivities.

    In addition to Gül and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, the
    host of the summit, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan were represented at the
    presidential level while Uzbekistan was not represented at
    all. Uzbekistan did not participate in the November 2006 summit in
    Antalya, either.

    Turkmenistan was represented by its ambassador to Turkey at the
    November 2006 summit but did not sign the summit's final declaration.

    Nevertheless, at Gül's initiative, Turkmenistan is now expected
    to send its vice president to the summit, which kicked off on
    Friday. When he hosted his Turkmen counterpart, Gurbanguly
    Berdimuhammedov, in the Mediterranean province of Antalya, Gül
    underlined his view
    ation at the Turkic-speaking countries summit.

    Yet, Turkmenistan will not put its signature on the agreement which
    will be signed today by participants of the Nakhchivan summit. Turkmen
    officials cite their foreign policy based on `positive neutrality' as
    the reason for not signing the agreement.

    The Turkmen policy of neutrality was announced by the late-President
    Saparmurat Niyazov shortly after the country became independent in
    1991. In December 1995, the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution
    recognizing Turkmenistan's status of permanent
    neutrality. Nonetheless, if it changes its mind concerning the
    Nakhchivan summit agreement, Turkmenistan can still sign it in the
    future. This is also valid for Uzbekistan, which was absent from the
    summit. In addition to the establishment of the Turkic-speaking
    Countries Cooperation Council, today's agreement will outline the
    establishment of a consultation mechanism which will regularly hold
    meetings. In addition to the permanent secretariat to be based in
    Ä°stanbul these consultation mechanisms are:

    Turkic-speaking Countries' Heads of State Council, Turkic-speaking
    Countries' Foreign Ministers Council, Senior Officials Council and a
    Wise Men Delegation. Mustafa Ä°sen, secretary-general of the
    presidency, will represent Turkey in the Wise Men Delegation.

    The summits, which have so far been held on an irregular basis, will
    be held every two years and, accordingly, the next summit will be
    hosted by Kazakhstan in 2011.

    After being elected president in August 2007, Gül renewed
    Turkey's relations with the rest of the Turkic world, which had waned
    in recent years. He made official visits to Azerbaijan (three times),
    Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan (twice) and Kazakhstan (twice); he also
    received his Kazakh, Turkmen and Azerbaijani counterparts in Ankara

    03 October 2009, Saturday
    SÃ`LEYMAN KURT ANKARA
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