Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

BAKU: Azeri politicians rap Turkish-Armenian rapprochement

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • BAKU: Azeri politicians rap Turkish-Armenian rapprochement

    Yeni Azarbaycan, Azerbaijan
    Sept 4 2009

    Azeri politicians rap Turkish-Armenian rapprochement ahead of Karabakh
    solution



    Azerbaijani politicians believe that the protocols signed recently on
    establishing Turkish-Armenian ties and opening the border between the
    two countries will harm Azerbaijan's interests and ties with Turkey.

    In an interview with the ruling New Azerbaijan Party's (NAP) Yeni
    Azarbaycan newspaper, NAP deputy executive secretary and MP Mubariz
    Qurbanli said: "Azerbaijan does not regard acceptable the
    establishment of ties between Turkey and Armenia until the Nagornyy
    Karabakh problem is resolved".

    Qurbanli said that rapprochement with Armenia before the settlement of
    the problem was against Turkey's and Azerbaijan's interests. He said
    that Turkey wanted to achieve peace and stability in the region by
    taking that step. "However, history shows that one should not trust
    the Armenians," he added.

    In an interview with the Azadliq newspaper, the leader of the
    opposition Liberal Party of Azerbaijan, Lala Sovkat Haciyeva, urged
    President Ilham Aliyev to express his position on the ongoing
    developments.

    "It is very likely there have been some consultations [with the
    Azerbaijani president] on this issue. However, the head of Azerbaijan
    should express his opinion on the developments," Haciyeva said.

    The politician noted that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    said in the Azerbaijani parliament in May 2009 that the borders would
    open after the Karabakh settlement.

    "In any case, I want to believe that Erdogan will be loyal to his
    word. Otherwise, this will be a great blow to Azerbaijan's national
    interests and will seriously harm ties between the two fraternal
    countries," Haciyeva said.

    In a comment on the developments, the opposition Yeni Musavat
    newspaper quoted unnamed observers as saying that Baku's reaction was
    rather soft now unlike its reaction to the agreement on a road map
    signed between Turkey and Armenia this April.

    "This gives rise to the opinion that Baku has blessed the
    Armenian-Turkish agreement... Although the agreement was made public
    later, Turkey informed Baku about it last week. It seems that the
    Turkish authorities convinced Baku this time as well that the opening
    of the border with Armenia will depend on the Karabakh issue," Yeni
    Musavat said.

    The paper added that although the protocols to be signed with Armenia
    did not contain any preconditions on Karabakh, Turkey hinted that by
    delaying the ratification of those documents in parliament, it had a
    chance to make their implementation dependent on the resolution of the
    Nagornyy Karabakh conflict.

    Speaking about the impact of the Turkish-Armenian rapprochement on
    major economic projects in an interview to the independent Ekspress
    newspaper, economic expert Sabit Bagirov said that if the protocols
    envisaging the resumption of Turkish-Armenian ties were ratified at
    the level of parliaments, the EU might demand that technical changes
    be made to the Nabucco gas pipeline and that it pass not via Georgia,
    but Armenia. He said that this was a political issue.

    "First, I do not believe that the Turkish parliament will take such a
    decision. Second, this is an unrealistic idea and I do not believe
    that it will materialize, because the Azerbaijani authorities have
    repeatedly stated that Azerbaijan will not transport its hydrocarbons
    via Armenia until the occupied territories are liberated and the
    Karabakh problem is resolved," Bagirov said.

    Ekspress said that the Nabucco pipeline company, which will construct
    the pipeline, also did not rule out Armenia's participation in the
    project.

    "We have stated repeatedly that this project is open to any state
    wishing to join it. If this is the case, then Armenia or another
    country which might be considered as an effective option to increase
    the pipeline's profitability can join the project," Ekspress quoted an
    unnamed source at the company as saying.
Working...
X