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Armenia facing great risks from Turkey deal

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  • Armenia facing great risks from Turkey deal

    Times of Oman, Sultanate of Oman
    Oct 11 2009


    Armenia facing great risks from Turkey deal



    YEREVAN: Armenia is facing "great risksâEUR after Yerevan and Ankara
    on Saturday signed pacts to establish diplomatic ties following
    decades of hostility, a leading critic of the deal said.


    "With the signing of these protocols we have entered a period of great
    risks and big uncertainty," Stepan Safarian, a leading member of the
    opposition Heritage party, told AFP.

    Opponents of the deal have accused the government of making
    concessions to Turkey, in particular by allowing for the creation of a
    commission to study the two country s historical grievances.

    Critics say the creation of such a commission calls into question
    Armenians claims to have been victims of genocide under Ottoman Turks.
    Ankara strongly rejects the genocide claim.

    Opponents have also warned that Turkey may use the normalization
    process to push Yerevan to make concessions in its longstanding
    conflict with Turkish ally Azerbaijan over the disputed Nagorny
    Karabakh region.

    Up to 10,000 people took to the streets of the Armenian capital
    Yerevan on Friday to protest the deal and analysts say more protests
    are to be expected. Safarian said last-minute disagreements that
    delayed the signing of the deal pointed to the dangers ahead.

    "We have already had the first crisis during the normalisation of
    Armenian-Turkish relations and we expect similar crises ahead,âEUR he
    said.

    He blamed Turkey for the delay, which was caused by an apparent
    dispute over statements the two sides were to make afterward, causing
    them to be scrapped. US State Department spokesman Ian Kelly told
    reporters that the ceremony was delayed after "a last minute hitch"
    with the Armenians.

    "The Turkish side has broken its agreements," Safarian said, though he
    had no details of the dispute.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian and his Turkish
    counterpart Ahmet Davutoglu signed the two protocols in a ceremony in
    the Swiss city of Zurich.

    The deals to establish diplomatic ties and regular dialogue, as well
    as open the two countries common border, still have to clear the
    hurdle of parliamentary ratification in each country before they can
    take effect.

    Despite some vocal domestic opposition, Armenia s ruling coalition has
    backed the protocols, making their approval in parliament almost a
    guarantee.
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