Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

BAKU: Turkey, Armenia Should 'Move Ahead'

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

  • BAKU: Turkey, Armenia Should 'Move Ahead'

    TURKEY, ARMENIA SHOULD 'MOVE AHEAD'

    news.az
    April 22 2010
    Azerbaijan

    Sabine Freizer Ankara and Yerevan should act now on the less
    controversial aspects of the rapprochement accords, setting aside
    full ratification until later.

    This is the view put forward by Sabine Freizer, Europe Program director
    for the International Crisis Group.

    Writing for the Global Post, Freizer said that the protocols on
    normalizing relations and opening the border, signed by Armenia and
    Turkey in October 2009, had stalled with no likelihood of ratification
    in the respective parliaments any time soon.

    'The Turkish government decided that it could not ignore Azeri pressure
    and with difficult negotiations going on concerning constitutional
    reform, it does not want to pick a fight over border opening with
    the nationalist opposition in parliament. There is little chance
    that the twin protocols can move until after the next round of
    Turkish elections in 2011, or until Azerbaijan and Armenia sign
    the long-awaited agreement on basic principles on Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict resolution,' Freizer said.

    She writes that Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan is also under
    pressure. 'Even though a quick ratification in Armenia would firmly
    put the ball in Turkey's court and give Yerevan credit internationally,
    domestic opposition is strong.'

    Armenia and Turkey could go ahead and establish diplomatic ties,
    the analyst said.

    'The decade of confidence-building that preceded the Turkey-Armenian
    protocol signing could now be lost unless there is progress soon. The
    best step now would be for Ankara and Yerevan to temporarily put
    aside the most difficult aspects of the protocols and move ahead with
    the less controversial parts. Despite current troubles, they could
    proceed with the establishment of diplomatic ties and recognition of
    their mutual border. These need no parliamentary approval, are purely
    about bilateral relations and are not linked to Nagorno-Karabakh.

    'Turkey and Armenia have a mounting number of bilateral issues to
    address requiring simple consular services. There are up to 40,000
    Armenian citizens living in Turkey, tens of thousands of Armenian
    tourists visit the Turkish riviera every year and countless Turkish
    truck drivers and small businesses operating in Armenia.'
Working...
X