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BAKU: Armenian FM Claims Border With Turkey Will Open In January

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  • BAKU: Armenian FM Claims Border With Turkey Will Open In January

    ARMENIAN FM CLAIMS BORDER WITH TURKEY WILL OPEN IN JANUARY

    AssA-Irada
    September 3, 2009 Thursday
    Azerbaijan

    The Turkey-Armenia border is expected to open on January 1, media
    reports quoted Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian as
    saying. Nalbandian was commenting on the latest initiative by the
    two countries to normalize their strained relations, in a bid to end
    a century of hostility. Ankara and Yerevan on Monday agreed with
    Swiss mediation to start consultations on forging diplomatic ties
    and developing bilateral relations.

    The two countries announced they would complete domestic consultations
    over two protocols within six weeks, to be followed by their
    ratification at their parliaments. The protocols ultimately envision
    opening the Turkish-Armenian border, which has been shut since 1993 due
    to Armenias policy of occupation of Azerbaijani territory and Armenian
    claims on the genocide of their ancestors by Ottoman Turks during World
    War I. Nalbandian alleged that the process of mending ties with Turkey
    has no bearing on the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over Upper (Nagorno)
    Garabagh, saying the co-chairs of the mediating OSCE Minsk Group
    support this stance. As for Bakus tough position on the prospect of the
    border opening, the Armenian minister said the changes taking place in
    the turbulent region will benefit Azerbaijan as well. Nalbandian said
    Yerevan would strive to join all regional projects if its relations
    with Ankara normalize. Touching on the alleged 1915 mass killings
    of Armenians, he said the normalization process does not pose any
    threat to efforts in this regard, adding that an intergovernmental
    commission will be set up to research the developments. Turkeys Star
    newspaper reported quoting a source at the countrys energy ministry
    that the energy balance will be altered in the region if the Turkish
    and Armenian parliaments ratify the two mentioned protocols. The
    report claimed that, following approval of the documents, technical
    changes will occur in the project on the Nabucco pipeline, and the
    European Union is likely to call for the conduit passing not through
    Georgia, but Armenia, another South Caucasus republic. According to
    Star, the EU has long been seeking to have Armenia join the project,
    which aims to pump Caspian and Central Asian gas to European markets,
    with France being the most arduous supporter. Pointing out that the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) main export pipeline passes through Georgia,
    which faced a military incursion by Russian troops in August 2008,
    the 27-member bloc considers as risky routing another key pipeline
    through the country. Therefore, it believes Armenia is an alternative
    transit state for energy projects, Star said.
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