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AFP: Turkey envoy to brief Azerbaijan on Armenia deal: minister

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  • AFP: Turkey envoy to brief Azerbaijan on Armenia deal: minister

    Agence France Presse
    April 8, 2010 Thursday 11:40 AM GMT

    Turkey envoy to brief Azerbaijan on Armenia deal: minister

    Ankara, April 8 2010


    Turkey will send a top diplomat to Azerbaijan to dispel its close
    ally's concerns over revitalized Turkish efforts for reconciliation
    with Armenia, officials said Thursday.

    The envoy -- foreign ministry undersecretary Feridun Sinirlioglu --
    will visit Baku on Friday, bearing a letter from Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan, two days after he made a similar visit to Yerevan,
    Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told reporters here.

    "We hope to achieve normalization between Turkey and Armenia by
    carrying the (Armenia reconciliation) process further in the right
    direction in the coming weeks," he said.

    Azerbaijan -- linked to Turkey with close ethnic, political and
    economic bonds -- was angered by a historic deal Ankara and Yerevan
    signed in October to end decades of hostility, establish diplomatic
    ties and open their border, wary that Turkish support for its own
    disputes with Armenia will now wane.

    A senior Turkish diplomat said Sinirlioglu will meet Azerbaijani
    President Ilham Aliyev and Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov,
    stressing that Ankara's standing on the Nagorny-Karabakh conflict
    between Azerbaijan and Armenia remained unchanged.

    "It is obvious that (Nagorny-Karabakh) is part of the whole," the
    diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity, said.

    Ankara says progress over Nagorny-Karabakh will be a determining
    factor in Turkish-Armenian reconciliation while Yerevan rejects any
    link between the two issues.

    Ankara sealed its border with Armenia in 1993 in a show of solidarity
    with Baku after ethnic Armenian separatists, backed by Yerevan, seized
    the Nagorny Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts from
    Azerbaijan in a war that claimed an estimated 30,000 lives.

    Sinirlioglu's mission to Baku follows his visit to Yerevan Wednesday,
    during which he discussed steps to resolve the impasse in peace
    efforts and secured agreement on a meeting next week between the two
    countries' leaders, on the sidelines of an international gathering in
    Washington.

    The peace deal -- comprised of two protocols which need parliamentary
    ratification in both countries -- has been snagged by disagreements
    over its terms.

    Turkey and Armenia have long been estranged over Armenian alleagations
    that up to 1.5 million of their kin were victims of genocide at the
    hands of their Ottoman rulers during World War I.

    Turkey rejects the genocide label and says the number of those killed
    in what was war-time chaos is exaggerated.
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