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ANKARA: Gov't Sends Protocols To MPs, No Deadline For Ratification

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  • ANKARA: Gov't Sends Protocols To MPs, No Deadline For Ratification

    GOV'T SENDS PROTOCOLS TO MPS, NO DEADLINE FOR RATIFICATION

    Today's Zaman
    Oct 20 2009
    Turkey

    The government will send the two Zurich protocols on normalizing
    relations with neighboring Armenia to Parliament this week, but there
    is no deadline for their ratification, according to a senior Justice
    and Development Party (AK Party) official.

    "The process [of ratification] will proceed according to developments
    in the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute," Bekir Bozdag, an AK Party deputy
    parliamentary group chairman, told Today's Zaman.

    The Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers signed the two protocols
    on Oct. 10 in Zurich, but they must be ratified in order to go into
    effect. The protocols call for the opening of the border, closed
    since 1993, and the restoration of diplomatic relations. Turkey
    closed the border and severed its diplomatic ties with Armenia in
    a show of solidarity with Azerbaijan, who fought a war with Armenia
    over Nagorno-Karabakh. About one-fifth of Azerbaijani territory has
    been under Armenian occupation since then.

    The documents are eventually expected to be passed in Parliament,
    but it is not clear when lawmakers will vote on them. There is no
    timetable on the ratification, and such documents can wait for years
    before being put to vote. One such document was the Kyoto protocol
    on climate change, which waited for 17 years before it was eventually
    ratified earlier this year by Turkey's Parliament.

    Foreign Minister Davutoglu, who has visited the opposition parties
    to inform them of the protocols and lobby for their support, will
    address Parliament on Wednesday regarding the documents. "As to when
    they will be ratified, this is up to our Parliament," he told a press
    conference on Monday.

    The opposition parties have criticized the protocols, saying they
    hurt the interests of Azerbaijan, a regional ally and a key energy
    supplier. "The government says it wants zero problems with the
    neighbors, but we ended up creating problems with a country that we
    had excellent relations with," said Onur Oymen, deputy chairman of the
    opposition Republican People's Party (CHP), who is expected to deliver
    a speech in Parliament on Wednesday expressing his party's stance.

    "We have said that these protocols harm Azerbaijan's interests. We
    will express our regrets and concerns in our speech on Wednesday,"
    seconded Oktay Vural, a deputy parliamentary group chairman of the
    Nationalist Movement Party (MHP).
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