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Turkey Regrets Spats With Azerbaijan Over Gas, Flag

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  • Turkey Regrets Spats With Azerbaijan Over Gas, Flag

    TURKEY REGRETS SPATS WITH AZERBAIJAN OVER GAS, FLAG

    Agence France Presse
    Oct 20 2009
    ANKARA

    Turkey regrets spats with Azerbaijan over gas prices and the removal of
    a Turkish flag in Baku, officials said Tuesday amid tensions between
    the two allies over Ankara's peace efforts with Yerevan.

    "We have been hurt by... the removal of the Turkish and Azeri flag"
    from a cemetary in Baku, where Turkish soldiers who fought for
    Azerbaijan in the early 20th century are buried, Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan said in a speech to his lawmakers.

    Energy Minister Taner Yildiz said he "regretted" comments by Azeri
    President Ilham Aliyev that Baku was no longer happy with selling
    cheap gas to Turkey and would consider other routes to ship gas to
    Europe because of high transit fees Turkey demanded, Anatolia news
    agency reported.

    "I regret this statement," Yildiz said, rejecting that Turkey was
    buying Azeri gas at low prices and asking for transit fees higher
    than market levels. "I guess President Aliyev was given inaccurate
    information," he said.

    Azerbaijan, linked to Turkey with close ethnic and economic bonds, has
    slammed the two protocols Ankara and Yerevan signed this month to end
    decades of hostility, establish formal ties and open their border, wary
    that Turkish support for its own conflict with Armenia will now wane.

    Ankara sealed its border with Armenia in 1993 in a show of solidarity
    with Baku after ethnic Armenian separatists, backed by Yerevan,
    seized the Nagorny Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts
    from Azerbaijan in a war that claimed an estimated 30,000 lives.

    Erdogan gave fresh assurances that Turkey's efforts to normalise ties
    with Armenia would not come at the expense of Azeri interests.

    "It is absolutely out of the question for us to take any step that
    will harm our Azeri brothers," he said.

    Without giving names, Erdogan said some circles -- both in Azerbaijan
    and Turkey -- were "sowing discord" between the two countries, whose
    alliance is often described as "one nation, two states."

    "No one should distort Turkey's sincere efforts and no one should
    try to test Turkey," he said.

    Ankara's bridge-building with Yerevan also faces strong opposition
    at home, with nationalists accusing the government of selling out
    Azerbaijan.

    Erdogan has said progress in resolving the Nagorny Karabakh conflict
    will be a determinining factor in the Turkish parliament's ratification
    of the deals with Armenia.

    The protocols, which will take effect only after they are ratified
    by the legislatures of both countries, are expected to be submitted
    to Turkey's parliament this week, but a vote is unlikely soon.
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