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Turkey, Armenia sign historic accord after last-minute talks

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  • Turkey, Armenia sign historic accord after last-minute talks

    Metro Canada

    Turkey, Armenia sign historic accord after last-minute talks to
    salvage pact

    MATTHEW LEE, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    October 10, 2009 8:13 p.m.

    ZURICH, Switzerland - Turkey and Armenia have signed a landmark
    agreement to establish diplomatic relations and open their sealed
    border after a century of enmity, as U.S. Secretary of State Hillary
    Rodham Clinton helped the two sides clear a last-minute snag.

    The contentious issue of whether the killing of up to 1.5 million
    Armenians during the final days of the Ottoman Empire amounted to
    genocide is only hinted at in the agreement.

    "There were several times when I said to all of the parties involved
    that this is too important," Clinton said. "This has to be seen
    through. We have come too far. All of the work that has gone into the
    protocols should not be walked away from."

    The Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers signed the accord in the
    Swiss city of Zurich on Saturday after a dispute over the final
    statements they would make. In the end, the signing took place about
    three hours later than scheduled and there were no spoken statements.

    Clinton and mediators from Switzerland intervened to help broker a
    solution, U.S. officials said on condition of anonymity, in keeping
    with State Department regulations. Better ties between Turkey, a
    regional heavyweight, and poor, landlocked Armenia have been a
    priority for President Barack Obama, and Clinton had flown to
    Switzerland to witness the signing, not help close the deal.

    Clinton told reporters travelling later on the plane with her to
    London that both sides had problems with the other's prepared
    statement and that the Armenian foreign minister had to call his
    president several times.

    She said it became important just to approve the accord and not have
    the sides make speeches that could be interpreted as putting legal
    conditions on the document. She told each country that could be done
    later, "but let the protocols be the statement because that was what
    we were there to sign."

    The accord is expected to win r
    n from both nations' parliaments and could lead to a reopening of
    their border within two months. It has been closed for 16 years.

    But nationalists on both sides are still seeking to derail
    implementation of the deal.

    U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called the signing a "historic
    decision" that "constitutes a milestone toward the establishment of
    good neighbourly relations," spokeswoman Michele Montas said in New
    York.

    American officials said Clinton; the top U.S. diplomat for Europe,
    Philip Gordon; and Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey were
    engaged in furious high-stakes shuttle diplomacy with the Turkish and
    Armenian delegations to resolve the differences.

    Diplomats said the Armenians were concerned about wording in the
    Turkish statement that was to be made after the signing ceremony at
    University of Zurich and had expressed those concerns "at the last
    minute" before the scheduled signing ceremony.

    Clinton had arrived at the ceremony venue after meeting separately
    with the Turks and Armenians at a hotel, but abruptly departed without
    leaving her car when the problem arose.

    She returned to the hotel where she spoke by phone from the sedan in
    the parking lot, three times with the Armenians and four times with
    the Turks. At one point in the intervention, a Swiss police car,
    lights and siren blazing, brought a Turkish diplomat to the hotel from
    the university with a new draft of his country's statement.

    After nearly two hours, Clinton and Armenian Foreign Minister Edward
    Nalbandian met in person at the hotel and drove back to the university
    where negotiations continued. It was not clear if there would be a
    resolution.

    In the end, the Turks and Armenians signed an accord establishing
    diplomatic ties that could reduce tensions in the troubled Caucasus
    region and facilitate its growing role as a corridor for energy
    supplies bound for the West.

    The agreement faces nationalist opposition, and protests have been
    particularly vociferous among the Armenian diaspora.

    "The success of Turkey in pressurin
    to accepting these humiliating, one-sided protocols proves, sadly,
    that genocide pays," said Ken Hachikian, chairman of the Armenian
    National Committee of America.

    Major countries, however, expressed their support for the accord, with
    the foreign ministers of the United States, Russia, France and the
    European Union in the room to watch the much-delayed signing.

    "No problem, they signed," quipped French Foreign Minister Bernard
    Kouchner.

    In Turkey, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his country was
    showing "goodwill" to restore ties with Armenia. But he said Turkey
    was keen on seeing Armenian troops withdrawn from Nagorno-Karabakh, an
    Armenian-occupied enclave in Azerbaijan that has been a centre of
    regional tensions.

    "We are trying to boost our relations with Armenia in a way that will
    cause no hard feelings for Azerbaijan," Erdogan told reporters.

    Armenian President Serge Sarkisian said his country was taking
    "responsible decisions" in normalizing relations with Turkey, despite
    what he called the unhealable wounds of genocide.

    The agreement calls for a panel to discuss "the historical dimension"
    of the killing of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians during World War
    I. The discussion is to include "an impartial scientific examination
    of the historical records and archives to define existing problems and
    formulate recommendations."

    That clause is viewed as a concession to Turkey, which denies
    genocide, contending the toll is inflated and that those killed were
    victims of civil war.

    "There is no alternative to the establishment of the relations with
    Turkey without any precondition," said Sarkisian. "It is the dictate
    of the time."

    Javier Solana, the EU's foreign policy chief, thanked Turkey, which is
    a candidate for European Union membership.

    "This is an important co-operation, no doubt, of Turkey to solve one
    issue that pertains to a region which is in our neighbourhood," Solana
    told AP Television News.

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov also was present for the
    ceremony in Switzerland, whose d
    mediated six weeks of talks between Turkey and Armenia to reach the
    accord. The signing took place in Zurich University's Churchill room,
    where Winston Churchill gave a speech in 1946.

    Swiss Foreign Ministry spokesman Lars Knuchel declined to comment on
    the contentious issue of speeches but said the important thing was
    that the accord was signed. He said Switzerland stood ready for
    further mediation, if both Armenia and Turkey request it as both sides
    seek to implement the accord and build on them.

    A Turkish official, who was not authorized to speak and demanded
    anonymity, said all sides were happy to dispense with the statements
    and that the important thing was the signatures means the process can
    continue.

    But Turkey's Ahmet Davutoglu appeared the far happier top envoy as he
    smiled broadly while posing for photographs and greeting the other
    foreign ministers in attendance. Armenia's Nalbandian, by contrast,
    only grudgingly smirked as he shook Davutoglu's hand.

    Yilmaz Ates of Turkey's main opposition Republican People's Party said
    the country should avoid any concessions.

    "If Armenia wants to repair relations ... then it should end
    occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh. That's it," Ates said Saturday.

    About 10,000 protesters rallied Friday in Armenia's capital to oppose
    the signing, and a tour of Armenian communities by Sarkisian sparked
    protests in Lebanon and France, with demonstrators in Paris shouting
    "Traitor!"

    On the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, Turks have close cultural and
    linguistic ties with Azerbaijan, which is pressing Turkey for help in
    recovering its land. Turkey shut its border with Armenia to protest
    the Armenian invasion of Nagorno-Karabakh in 1993.

    Turkey wants Armenia to withdraw some troops from the enclave area to
    show goodwill and speed the opening of their joint border, but Armenia
    has yet to agree, said Omer Taspinar, Turkey project director at the
    Brookings Institution in Washington.

    "We may end up in a kind of awkward situation where there are
    diplomatic relations, but the border is still
    ar said.

    -

    Associated Press Writers Alexander G. Higgins and Bradley S. Klapper
    in Zurich, Avet Demourian in Yerevan, Armenia, and Christopher Torchia
    in Istanbul contributed to this report.
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