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Turkey Seeks U.S. Help In Armenia Row

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  • Turkey Seeks U.S. Help In Armenia Row

    TURKEY SEEKS U.S. HELP IN ARMENIA ROW

    United Press International UPI
    Feb 3 2010

    ANKARA, Turkey, Feb. 3 (UPI) -- Turkey is seeking the support of
    the United States and Switzerland over an Armenian court ruling that
    threatens the peace process between Turkey and Armenia.

    Feridun Sinirlioglu, a top Turkish diplomat, will travel to Bern
    and Washington "in the coming days to express our concern" over a
    ruling by Armenia's constitutional court, a Turkish Foreign Ministry
    spokesman was quoted as saying by Turkish English-language newspaper
    Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review.

    The ruling threatens a peace process that hit its high last October
    when Turkey and Armenia after decades of conflict signed two documents
    to re-establish ties and reopen the countries' mutual border.

    Armenia's constitutional court upheld the legality of the documents but
    underlined that they can't contradict the official Armenian position
    that the 1915-1923 killings of up to 1.5 million Armenians under the
    Ottoman Empire constituted genocide, a label Ankara strongly rejects.

    The spokesman vowed that Ankara was still eager to improve ties.

    "There is no problem in Turkey's Armenian opening," he was quoted as
    saying. "But Armenia has a problem with its Turkey opening."

    In Turkey, people are critical of Armenia's occupation of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave in neighboring Azerbaijan.

    In 1993 Ankara severed ties with Armenia when it fought a war with
    Azerbaijan, a close Turkish ally. Observers expect some sort of
    political horse-trading between Turkey and Armenia on the genocide
    and Nagorno-Karabakh issues.
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