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Turkey-Armenia Accords Aim To Dispel Hostility

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  • Turkey-Armenia Accords Aim To Dispel Hostility

    TURKEY-ARMENIA ACCORDS AIM TO DISPEL HOSTILITY
    By Delphine Strauss in Ankara

    FT
    October 12 2009 03:00

    Turkey and Armenia signed accords aimed at ending a century of
    hostility at the weekend, but only after a nail-biting delay that
    showed how difficult it could still be to turn promises on paper
    into reality.

    Diplomatic convoys raced through the streets of Zurich throughout
    the evening as Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, stepped
    in to help smooth last-minute disagreements that threatened to derail
    the ceremony.

    Foreign ministers Ahmet Davutoglu and Edward Nalbandian finally
    emerged to sign protocols setting a timetable for the two countries
    to restore diplomatic relations and open their shared border - after
    agreeing neither would make any statement.

    After a handshake, punctuated by smiles only from Turkey's Mr
    Davutoglu, the two men received hugs and congratulations from
    on-lookers including Bernard Kouchner, the French foreign minister,
    the European Union's Javier Solana and Russia's Sergei Lavrov.

    By mending ties, Turkey stands to gain influence in the Caucasus,
    smooth its path to EU membership - and lessen the perennial threat of
    US legislators recognising Ottoman massacres of up to 1.5m Armenians
    in 1915 as genocide.

    Armenia would also gain through trade links with a large economy
    closely tied to the EU if Turkey reopens the border it closed in 1994
    to support its ally Azerbaijan in a conflict with Armenia over the
    disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    But Armenians' anger at Turkey's denial that the 1915 killings were
    genocide, and Turks' anger at Armenia's occupation of Azeri territory,
    mean each government faces big obstacles to ratifying and implementing
    the agreement - even though each should technically be able to win
    a parliamentary vote.

    "We are sending the protocols to parliament, but to ratify these our
    parliament will certainly watch what is happening in the matter of
    Azerbaijan and Armenia," Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkish prime minister,
    told his party yesterday. "Turkey cannot take a positive step towards
    Armenia unless Armenia withdraws from Azeri land."

    Azerbaijan has hinted that it could reconsider oil and gas sales to
    Turkey if Ankara mends ties with Yerevan before any solution to the
    conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh. The foreign ministry in Baku said
    in a statement yesterday that the agreement was against its national
    interests and "cast a shadow over fraternal relations" with Turkey,
    which are based on close ethnic ties.

    The protocols make no mention of Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia says that
    there should be no linkage between the two issues. Although Russian
    diplomats said talks between the Armenian and Azeri presidents last
    Thursday were "constructive", Ilham Aliyev, Azeri president, told
    state television there had been no progress.
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