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Armenia To Launch Talks On Turkey Deal Amid Protests

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  • Armenia To Launch Talks On Turkey Deal Amid Protests

    ARMENIA TO LAUNCH TALKS ON TURKEY DEAL AMID PROTESTS

    Agence France Presse
    September 15, 2009 Tuesday 6:34 PM GMT

    Armenia said Tuesday it will launch political talks this week
    on establishing ties with Turkey after decades of hostility, as
    nationalist protesters began a hunger strike against reconciliation
    efforts.

    President Serzh Sarkisian will meet with leaders of Armenia's political
    parties on Thursday, his spokesman Samvel Farmanian told AFP, as part
    of internal consultations agreed under a deal with Turkey.

    "These consultations will be one of the important steps in the public
    discussion on normalising Armenian-Turkish relations. As the president
    has promised, these questions, which are of national importance,
    are becoming the subject of a wide public discussion," he said.

    Armenia and Turkey announced last month that they had agreed a
    framework to establish diplomatic ties and re-open their border,
    in what was internationally hailed as a major breakthrough.

    The two countries said they would hold internal political consultations
    for six weeks before submitting to their parliaments two protocols
    on establishing diplomatic ties and developing bilateral relations.

    About 50 protesters from the nationalist Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) launched a sit-in and hunger strike
    against the protocols outside the foreign ministry on Tuesday.

    Chanting "No Concessions to the Turks!", protesters said they would
    remain outside the ministry throughout the six weeks of consultations.

    "These protocols must not be signed in their current form, changes
    must be made," one of the party's leaders, Gegam Manukian, told AFP.

    Protesters said they were especially concerned that the deal calls
    for the creation of an intergovernmental commission to examine the
    two countries' historical grievances.

    Critics say the creation of such a commission calls into question
    Armenians' claims to have been victims of genocide under Ottoman Turks.

    Ankara has long refused to establish diplomatic links with Yerevan
    over the latter's efforts to have World War I-era massacres of
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks recognised as genocide -- a label Turkey
    strongly rejects.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin were systematically killed
    between 1915 and 1917 as the Ottoman Empire, Turkey's predecessor,
    was falling apart.

    Turkey also closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with
    ally Azerbaijan over Yerevan's backing of ethnic Armenian separatists
    in the breakaway Nagorny Karabakh region.
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