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Azerbaijan, Turkey officials send messages of brotherhood

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  • Azerbaijan, Turkey officials send messages of brotherhood

    Tehran Times, Iran
    Oct 24 2009


    Azerbaijan, Turkey officials send messages of brotherhood



    To alleviate the tensions between Azerbaijan and Turkey over the
    so-called flag crisis, which erupted a week ago, Istanbul Aydin
    University and the Consulate General of Azerbaijan in Istanbul held a
    conference on Thursday at the university to discuss a solution to the
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute, an ethnic-territorial conflict between
    Azerbaijan and Armenia, to point out Turkey's interest in securing the
    disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region within Azerbaijan's territorial
    borders.

    A wide range of participants from many walks of political and academic
    life from both Turkey and Azerbaijan attended the conference to
    discuss the history of Nagorno-Karabakh and offer constructive
    solutions to the problem.

    In the opening speech at the conference, Haydar Aliyev and Caucasus
    Research Center Chairman Salih Güney said the aim of such events is to
    create unity and support between the two countries. Taking the floor,
    Azerbaijan's Istanbul Consul General Seyyad Aran said Nagorno-Karabakh
    is not only Azerbaijan's problem, but Turkey's as well. `In this
    respect, Turkey should expend its efforts on the solution of the
    problem,' said Aran. The chairman of Aydin University's board of
    trustees, Mustafa Ayd?n, said in his speech that it is not appropriate
    to deepen the crisis, which was a result of misunderstandings between
    Turkey and Azerbaijan.

    Speaking during the first session of the conference, Justice and
    Development Party (AK Party) Konya deputy Mustafa Kabakci said there
    may be small misunderstandings and conflicts between two countries but
    they should not become permanent problems. `There needs to be
    definite, concrete actions and steps taken to expand security and
    trust in the region. We have discussed these protocols (on the
    normalization of relations and the establishment of diplomatic ties
    between Turkey and Armenia) with the parliament speaker and the prime
    minister. We have decided not to approve the protocols if there is no
    development noted in the Nagorno-Karabakh issue,' he said.

    Republican People's Party (CHP) Deputy Chairman Onur Oymen said they
    have done their best to promote peace and security in the South
    Caucasus. `The region is not safe today. We saw wars in Georgia last
    year, and the Nagorno-Karabakh issue is too fragile, there might be
    wars in the region again,' he said.

    Criticizing the AK Party government over the protocols signed with
    Armenia, Oymen said the protocols and the normalization of relations
    with Armenia is the project of David Phillips, a senior analyst at the
    Atlantic Council think tank in the United States. He also said the
    protocols do not include either a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    as a condition for opening the border between Turkey and Armenia or
    the Kars Treaty, an agreement between the Ottomans and Soviet Russia
    in 1921 demarcating Turkey's eastern borders with Russia.

    The president of Istanbul Aydin University, Salih Celikkale; the head
    of the Azerbaijan Academy of Sciences History Institute, Yagub
    Mahmudov; the deputy general director of the Turkey State Archives,
    Mustafa Budak; and the director of the Turkish Center for
    International Relations and Strategic Analysis (TURKSAM), Sinan Ogan,
    were also among the participants of the one-day conference.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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