Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Azeri pullout crucial for accord-Erdogan

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

  • Armenian Azeri pullout crucial for accord-Erdogan

    Armenian Azeri pullout crucial for accord-Erdogan
    Sun Oct 11, 2009 8:38am EDT


    Featured Broker sponsored link
    * Erdogan urges Armenians to withdraw from Karabakh

    * Says withdrawal would help gain Turkish parliament support

    * Azerbaijan says deal "casts shadow" on ties with Turkey


    By Alexandra Hudson

    ISTANBUL, Oct 11 (Reuters) - Turkey's Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan
    said on Sunday that Armenia must withdraw from Nagorno-Karabakh in
    Azerbaijan to assure his parliament's approval for a peace accord
    signed between Turkey and Armenia.

    "Turkey cannot take a positive step towards Armenia unless Armenia
    withdraws from Azerbaijani land...if that issue is solved our people
    and our parliament will have a more positive attitude towards this
    protocol and this process," Erdogan told a party congress in Ankara.

    Turkey and Armenia signed an accord on Saturday aimed at restoring ties
    and opening their shared border. Last-minute disagreements delayed the
    signing for more than three hours, forcing U.S. Secretary of State
    Hillary Clinton to engage in intense talks to salvage a deal.

    The Turkish and Armenian parliaments must approve the accord in the
    face of opposition from nationalists on both sides and an Armenian
    diaspora which insists Turkey acknowledge the killings of up to 1.5
    million Armenians during World War One as genocide.

    "We will bring the protocol to parliament but parliament has to see the
    conditions between Azerbaijan and Armenia to decide whether this
    protocol can be implemented," Erdogan said.

    Turkey cut ties and shut its border with Armenia in 1993 in support of
    Turkic-speaking Azerbaijan which was then fighting a losing battle
    against Armenian separatists in Karabakh.

    In his comments, Erdogan looked to reassure ally Azerbaijan, which
    reacted angrily to the deal, saying it could threaten security in the
    region and "cast a shadow" over its relations with Ankara.

    "The normalisation of relations between Turkey and Armenia before the
    withdrawal of Armenian troops from occupied Azeri territory is in
    direct contradiction to the national interests of Azerbaijan," the
    Azeri Foreign Ministry said on Sunday.

    In a strongly worded statement, the ministry added the deal "casts a
    shadow over the fraternal relations between Azerbaijan and Turkey,
    which are built on historical roots.

    Turkey's Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu and his Armenian counterpart
    Edward Nalbandian signed the Swiss-mediated deal in Zurich at a
    ceremony also attended by European Union foreign policy chief Javier
    Solana, Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and France's Foreign
    Minister Bernard Kouchner.

    If the agreement comes into effect, it would boost European
    Union-candidate Turkey's diplomatic clout in the volatile South
    Caucasus, a transit corridor for oil and gas to the West.

    Turkish officials told Reuters the two sides had many disagreements
    over each others' statements in Zurich, including oblique references to
    the Karabakh conflict. In the end, neither Davutolgu nor Nalbadian made
    public statements.

    Although landlocked Armenia stands to make big gains, opening its
    impoverished economy to trade and investment, Armenia's leader Serzh
    Sarksyan faces protests at home and from the huge Armenian diaspora,
    which views the thaw with suspicion.

    (Additional reporting by Afet Mehtiyeva in Baku; writing by Alexandra
    Hudson; editing by Michael Roddy)
Working...
X