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INTERVIEW - Armenian Opposition Issues Warning Over Turkey Thaw

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  • INTERVIEW - Armenian Opposition Issues Warning Over Turkey Thaw

    INTERVIEW - ARMENIAN OPPOSITION ISSUES WARNING OVER TURKEY THAW
    By Hasmik Lazarian

    Reuters
    Oct 20 2009
    UK

    YEREVAN (Reuters) - An Armenian opposition leader said on Tuesday
    President Serzh Sarksyan lacked public backing to make concessions
    in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict to secure ties with foe Turkey and
    demanded elections if he tries.

    "I do not believe the Armenian authorities are capable of convincing
    the Armenian public that unilateral concessions on two fronts, namely
    Armenian-Turkey relations and the Karabakh conflict, are necessary,"
    Giro Manoyan told Reuters.

    Turkey and Armenia are pursuing a road map to establish diplomatic
    relations, open their border and end a century of hostility stemming
    from the World War One mass killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks.

    But Sarksyan faces resistance from opponents at home and the huge
    Armenian diaspora abroad, who say Turkey should first recognise the
    killings as genocide.

    They are also worried by Turkish demands that Armenia make
    concessions in its festering conflict with Turkish ally Azerbaijan
    over Nagorno-Karabakh before Armenian-Turkish accords are ratified
    by parliament.

    "The Turkish government will use the ratification process in the
    Turkish parliament as leverage to try to pressure the Armenian side to
    give in to Azeri-Turkish demands regarding resolution of the Karabakh
    conflict," said 46-year-old Manoyan, international secretary of the
    opposition Armenian Revolutionary Federation-Dashnaktsutyun.

    Sarksyan denies any link. But analysts say he is under pressure to
    offer something to seal the pact, which would ease Armenia's economic
    woes and boost Turkey's credentials as a moderniser in the West.

    http://in.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idI NIndia-43302620091020?sp=true

    STREET PROTESTS Manoyan's party, which has strong support in the
    diaspora, quit as a minority partner in the ruling coalition in
    April. It holds 16 seats in the 131-seat parliament. The Heritage
    Party with seven seats shares its position on the thaw.

    With 94 seats, Sarksyan's remaining partners enjoy a strong majority
    and can force through the accords. But Armenia is no stranger to
    political street protests, the last coming in March last year when
    police and opposition protesters clashed over Sarksyan's election.

    Nagorno-Karabakh cost former president Levon Ter-Petrosyan his job in
    1998 when he was forced to resign under pressure from opponents angered
    by concessions he offered to Azerbaijan over the mountain region.

    Manoyan said the opposition would seek snap elections, in comments
    that underscored the strength of feeling among Sarksyan's opponents
    and particularly the diaspora, which has played a key role in Armenian
    foreign policy since independence.

    Sarksyan was met with angry protests by members of the diaspora during
    a week-long intercontinental tour to discuss the accords before they
    were signed this month in Zurich.

    Turkey rejects the term genocide, saying many people died on both
    sides of the conflict. But the event remains a central element of
    Armenian national identity.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with close
    fellow Muslim ally Azerbaijan, which was fighting Armenian-backed
    ethnic Armenians in breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Armenian-backed forces took control of the mountain region and seven
    Azeri districts surrounding it in a war that cost 30,000 lives and
    still threatens security in a region key for oil and gas transit to
    the West.

    Beirut-born Manoyan, whose parents fled last century's killings,
    threatened "every available political and constitutional means"
    to block ratification of the accords.

    "If we do not succeed, the only alternative left is to go for a change
    of administration, to have a new president and a new national assembly
    which will renounce these protocols as null and void."
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