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  • 'Turkey Likely To Seal Deal With Armenia'

    'TURKEY LIKELY TO SEAL DEAL WITH ARMENIA'

    http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.a sp?id=202087
    Thursday, October 08, 2009

    ANKARA/WASHINGTON: Turkey expects historic accords to normalise ties
    with Armenia to be signed on Saturday in Switzerland in a step towards
    ending a century of hostility, senior Turkish government sources said
    on Wednesday.

    Doubts had emerged in diplomatic circles about whether the ceremony
    would take place because of pressure from the powerful Armenian
    diaspora, as well as opposition within Armenia and to a certain
    extent Turkey.

    "There are no changes to those plans," a senior Turkish government
    source, referring to the planned signature of protocols in Zurich on
    Oct 10, told Reuters. Another government source, who also declined
    to be named, agreed.

    Turkey and Armenia have no diplomatic ties because of hostility
    what the latter says stemming from the mass killings of Armenians
    by Ottoman Turks during World War One. Turkey closed its border with
    Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with fellow Muslim Azerbaijan, then at
    war with Armenian-backed ethnic Armenians.

    Turkey and Armenia agreed on Aug 31 to sign, within six weeks, two
    protocols on the establishment of diplomatic ties, opening a common
    border and for historians to investigate the events surrounding the
    killings of Armenians in 1915.

    But Armenia was taken by surprise when Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip
    Erdogan a nnounced in New York that the agreements would be signed
    on Oct 10.

    Turkish Foreign Ministry officials later told reporters each country's
    foreign minister would attend the ceremony in Zurich.

    Armenian officials were not available for comment.

    Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan is on a week-long intercontinental
    charm offensive to calm concerns in the Armenian diaspora over the
    historic thaw with Turkey. Diplomatic observers also fear the signing
    could be disrupted by demands by some Turks for a resolution on the
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.

    Armenian nationalists demand that Turkey acknowledge the 1915 killings
    as genocide. Ankara rejects the term genocide, saying that many people
    died on both sides of the conflict.

    Once the protocols are signed they must be approved by the respective
    parliaments. This leaves open the possibility that either side delays
    the approval in case they face unexpected domestic opposition.

    Meanwhile, US President Barack Obama urged Turkey and Armenia to
    move swiftly on normalisation talks after decades of hostility,
    the White House said on Tuesday. During a call to Armenian President
    Serzh Sarkisian on Monday, Obama "underscored the US position that
    the normalisation talks should move forward without preconditions and
    within a reasonable timeframe," the White House said in a statement.

    "President Obama pledged his full support for a process that would
    result in normaliszation of relations between the two countries and
    a brighter future for all involved."

    Obama, it added, called Sarkisian to "commend him for his courageous
    leadership" and encourage the "continued progress" of normalisation
    talks.
    From: Baghdasarian
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