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BAKU: Turkey Heightens Pressure On Armenia After Court Ruling

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  • BAKU: Turkey Heightens Pressure On Armenia After Court Ruling

    TURKEY HEIGHTENS PRESSURE ON ARMENIA AFTER COURT RULING

    AzerNews Weekly
    Feb 4 2010
    Azerbaijan

    Turkey has moved to ratchet up diplomatic pressure on Armenia after
    the top Armenian court enacted a ruling last month on the 2009
    agreement on normalizing bilateral relations that Ankara labeled as
    unfair. Turkish Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Feridun Sinirlioglu
    is scheduled to hold talks on Thursday with officials of Switzerland,
    which is brokering the process of reconciling the two neighbors,
    who face decades of hostility, Turkey's Hurriyet newspaper reported.

    In a meeting with the Swiss State Secretary of Foreign Affairs, Michael
    Ambuhl, Sinirlioglu will reiterate Turkey's concern over the fact that
    the Armenian Constitutional Court's January 12 ruling contains points
    that are inconsistent with the protocols on mending ties signed with
    Armenia on October 10, 2009 in Zurich. The Turkish official will warn
    that his country will bring an end to the normalization process if
    Yerevan fails to honor its commitments reflected in the documents.

    Ambuhl is considered one of the "architects" of the closed-door
    meetings launched by Turkey and Armenia on July 8, 2008.

    The Armenian court had ruled that the protocols signed in Zurich were
    in line with the introductory part of the country's Constitution and
    the declaration of independence. The declaration of independence,
    however, levels territorial claims against Turkey and calls the
    neighboring country's eastern provinces "Western Armenia". Moreover,
    the declaration says achieving international recognition of the alleged
    World War I-era mass killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire is
    a task facing the Armenian government. The Turkish government has
    criticized the ruling, saying it contained pre-conditions that run
    counter to the premise of the reconciliation accord.

    The Turkish media said that, initially, Ankara intends to put
    diplomatic pressure on Yerevan by means of negotiations. Afterwards,
    a legal document will be submitted to the interested parties.

    Following talks with Swiss officials, Turkish diplomats are expected
    to hold meetings with representatives of the U.S., Russia and France,
    which facilitated the signing of the Turkish-Armenian protocols.

    The protocols, signed in Zurich by Turkey, Azerbaijan's ally, and
    Armenia, with whom Azerbaijan faces a long-standing conflict over Upper
    (Nagorno) Garabagh, seek to establish diplomatic relations and reopen
    the two countries' sealed borders. The move was an attempt to break
    the ice in normalizing Ankara-Yerevan relations, marred by decades
    of hostility due to Armenian occupation of Azerbaijani territory and
    Yerevan's claims on 1915 "genocide".*
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