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Turkey And Armenia Set For Ties

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  • Turkey And Armenia Set For Ties

    TURKEY AND ARMENIA SET FOR TIES

    BBC NEWS
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/e urope/8230809.stm
    2009/09/01 10:05:49 GMT

    Turkey and its neighbour Armenia have moved closer to establishing
    diplomatic ties after decades of bitter mistrust on both sides.

    They are to hold six weeks of domestic consultations on the move after
    which their parliaments will vote on it, their foreign ministries
    announced.

    Negotiations on the mending of ties have been brokered by Switzerland.

    The two countries remain deeply divided over the fate Armenians
    suffered under Turkish Ottoman rule.

    Turkey has resisted widespread calls for it to recognise the mass
    killing of Armenians during World War I as an act of genocide.

    Anticipation of a diplomatic breakthrough has been growing ahead of
    a planned visit by Armenian President Serge Sarkisian to Turkey on
    14 October.

    He is due to attend the return leg of a World Cup qualifying football
    match between the two countries.

    'Border to open'

    A roadmap for the normalisation of the relationship between the two
    countries was agreed in April.

    The foreign ministries said the two countries had agreed to start
    internal discussions on two protocols: one establishing diplomatic
    relations and the other developing bilateral ties.

    "The political consultations will be completed within six weeks,
    following which the two protocols will be signed and submitted to the
    respective parliaments for ratification," their joint statement said.

    Armenian President Serge Sarkisian told the BBC that Turkish
    recognition of the killing of Armenians would be an important step
    for justice, for overcoming the barrier between Turks and Armenians,
    and for preventing "further genocides".

    But, he added: "The recognition of the genocide itself is not viewed
    as a precondition for normalising our relations with Turkey."

    The Turkish-Armenian border - closed by Turkey in 1993 - would be
    re-opened within two months of the protocols coming into force.

    In a statement, the US said it welcomed the move and was ready to
    work with both governments to support the normalisation of ties.

    'Historical troubles'

    Dr Taner Akcam, a professor of History at Maryland's Clark University
    in the US, said the "historic breakthrough" was due to increased
    democratisation in Turkey, the reduced influence of the military in
    the political sphere, as well as increased international attention on
    the Caucasus, particularly on the issue of opening borders for trade.

    After first establishing normal relations, he added, the two countries
    would then be able to discuss historical troubles.

    Dr Akcam said Turkey had seen a shift in attitudes since the start
    of an investigation into an alleged ultra-nationalist plot to bring
    down Turkey's government.

    Such killings as the 2007 assassination of the prominent Turkish
    Armenian journalist Hrant Dink - who been given a six-month suspended
    sentence in 2005 for writing about the Armenian "genocide" - had also
    prompted a change in Turkish attitudes, he added.

    Modern Armenia, which took shape as a Soviet republic in 1920, has
    only had diplomatic relations with Turkey as part of the USSR.

    Since declaring independence in 1991, it has pressed for recognition
    of what it says was genocide.

    Relations have also been complicated by Turkish support for Azerbaijan
    in its armed conflict with Armenia over the disputed territory of
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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