Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenia-Turkey deal delayed over disagreements [old news]

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenia-Turkey deal delayed over disagreements [old news]

    Armenia-Turkey deal delayed over disagreements

    FT
    ZURICH, Oct 10 - A planned peace agreement between Turkey and Armenia
    to end a century of enmity hit a last minute snag on Saturday over
    disagreements with statements to be read at the historic ceremony.

    US officials sought to help smooth over disagreements with Armenian
    Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian over the statements, while Turkish
    Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu waited at the venue along with
    international dignitaries.

    `We're helping facilitate the two sides come to agreement on statements
    that are going to come out,' US State Department spokesman Ian Kelly
    told reporters. `There's not a breakdown.'

    A US official said a new version of the Turkish statement had been
    brought to the hotel.

    One Reuters witness at the hotel saw the Armenian delegation in a
    huddle, having heated discussions. Other Reuters witnesses described
    the atmosphere at the hotel as tense.

    European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana, Russia's Foreign
    Minister Sergei Lavrov and France's Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner
    were also waiting at the University of Zurich where the ceremony was to
    be signed.

    The deal to normalise ties and reopen the border has faced fierce
    opposition from nationalists on both sides and an Armenian diaspora
    which insists Turkey acknowledge the killings of up to 1.5m Armenians
    by Ottoman forces in World War
    One as genocide.

    A decades-old dispute between Turkey's ally Azerbaijan and Armenia over
    the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh had hung over the deal after
    talks between Azeri and Armenian leaders over the region ended without
    result on Friday.

    An accord would boost US ally Turkey's diplomatic clout in the volatile
    South Caucasus, a transit corridor for oil and gas to the West. US
    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and other dignitaries were to attend
    the signing.

    But disagreements over the Ottoman killings'which Yerevan calls
    genocide, a term Ankara rejects'and a decades-old dispute between
    Turkey's ally Azerbaijan and Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh hang over
    the settlement.

    Under US and EU pressure, officials from European Union candidate
    Turkey and former Soviet republic Armenia said they would sign the
    Swiss-mediated accord, which sets a timetable for restoring diplomatic
    ties and opening their border.

    It must then be approved by their parliaments in the face of
    nationalist opposition and the powerful Armenian diaspora.S
Working...
X