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ANKARA: Turkey Sends Envoy To Armenia For High-Level Talks

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  • ANKARA: Turkey Sends Envoy To Armenia For High-Level Talks

    TURKEY SENDS ENVOY TO ARMENIA FOR HIGH-LEVEL TALKS

    Hurriyet
    April 7 2010
    Turkey

    Feridun Sinirlioglu, undersecretary of the Turkish Foreign Ministry,
    will meet with Armenian President Serge Sarkisian, pictured above. AFP
    photo

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has sent Turkey's top diplomat
    to Armenia to discuss snags in reconciliation efforts between the
    two estranged neighbors, Turkish officials said Wednesday.

    Feridun Sinirlioglu, undersecretary of the foreign ministry, was to
    meet Wednesday with Armenian President Serge Sarkisian and Foreign
    Minister Edward Nalbandian, a Foreign Ministry source said.

    He was to discuss disagreements holding up a historic deal that Turkey
    and Armenia signed in October in a bid to end decades of hostility,
    establish diplomatic ties and open their border.

    Sinirlioglu "will reassert Turkey's commitment to the [reconciliation]
    process but will also convey our concerns," the official, who requested
    anonymity, told AFP.

    The envoy will also discuss "steps that need to be taken to ensure
    that the process moves forward," said a senior diplomat, who also
    declined to be named.

    He will also explore the possibility of arranging a meeting between
    Erdogan and Sarkisian on the sidelines of a nuclear security summit
    in Washington next week, the sources said.

    The Turkish-Armenian deal -- comprising two protocols -- needs
    parliamentary ratification in both countries to take effect, but the
    process has been held up by mutual accusations that the other side
    is not truly committed to the terms of the agreement.

    Ankara is irked by a January ruling of Armenia's constitutional court
    that upheld the legality of the protocols but said they could not
    contradict Yerevan's official position that the mass killings of
    Armenians under the Ottoman Empire was genocide -- a label Turkey
    fiercely rejects.

    Yerevan, for his part, has protested Ankara's position that the Turkish
    Parliament is unlikely to ratify the accord without progress in the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, a close
    Turkish ally.

    The peace process has been marred also by resolutions adopted last
    month by a U.S. House of Representatives committee and the Swedish
    parliament that branded the World War I massacres of Armenians as
    genocide, infuriating Ankara.
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