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The Guardian: Armenian Delay Casts Doubt On Historic Accord With Tur

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  • The Guardian: Armenian Delay Casts Doubt On Historic Accord With Tur

    THE GUARDIAN: ARMENIAN DELAY CASTS DOUBT ON HISTORIC ACCORD WITH TURKEY

    ArmInfo
    2009-10-09 14:42:00

    ArmInfo. A historic accord to normalise relations between Turkey and
    Armenia, long at odds over Armenian claims of first world war genocide,
    was thrown into doubt tonightwhen Turkey's foreign minister refused to
    say whether the signing ceremony would go ahead as planned in Zurich
    on Saturday.

    Ahmet Davutoglu said he remained confident that the accord, which
    would also reopen the common border closed by Turkey in 1993, would
    be completed. But he added: "I am not giving any dates. Let's wait
    for a statement from the Swiss. As Turkey, we have no doubts the
    protocols will be signed."

    Concern that the long-discussed pact could be delayed has grown
    in recent days after Armenia appeared to backpedal. The country's
    deputy foreign minister, Arman Kirakossian, said he hoped it would
    be signed "very soon" but that no decision had been made as to when
    and where. That led to speculation that Armenia would seek changes
    to the text.

    Diplomats said strong opposition expressed at home and by the Armenian
    diaspora may lie behind the last-minute hesitation in Yerevan. Serzh
    Sargsyan, Armenia's president, has spent the past week trying to
    reassure ethnic Armenian communities in the US, France, Lebanon
    and Russia.

    But many expressed anger that the pact, which would create a joint
    commission of historians to investigate the mass killings of 1915,
    could allow Turkey to avoid taking responsibility for what they say
    was a policy of genocide by the Ottoman empire in which 1.5 million
    Armenians died.

    Ankara has consistently denied the genocide charge. At a rally in
    Beirut on Tuesday, Sargsyan was confronted by a crowd of 2,000 ethnic
    Armenians waving banners saying "We will not forget".

    Opposition parties in Turkey and Armenia say they will vote against the
    pact, which must be approved by their respective parliaments. Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey's prime minister, has warned that passage
    cannot be guaranteed, since the vote will be by secret ballot.

    Another stumbling block is the dispute over the ethnic Armenian
    enclave of Nagorno- Karabakh, inside Azerbaijan's borders. Fighting
    with Azeri forces erupted there in the early 1990s, and 30,000 people
    died. Turkey took Azerbaijan's side, closing its border with Armenia.

    The latest round of talks, sponsored by the US and the EU, to settle
    the Nagorno- Karabakh dispute were due to begin in the Moldovan capital
    Chisinau yesterday, with Sargsyan and the Azeri president, Ilham Aliev,
    in attendance. Diplomats played down the chances of a breakthrough.

    Erdogan said this week that progress in the Chisinau talks was not a
    precondition for signing the Turkey-Armenia accord. "The agreement
    will be signed on 10 October. It doesn't have anything to do with
    what happens in Moldova," he said. But he admitted a positive outcome
    would be helpful overall.

    International pressure on Turkey and Armenia not to let the chance of
    a rapprochement slip is intense. Both are vital links in the chain
    of actual or planned western oil and gas pipelines stretching from
    central Asia to Europe.

    The US and the EU strongly support the pact, which they believe will
    help stabilise the volatile Caucasus region. Bringing Armenia in from
    the cold, as Washington sees it, would also help diminish Russia's
    regional influence after its war last year with Georgia.
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