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ISTANBUL: Turkish and Armenian leader meet in Kiev

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  • ISTANBUL: Turkish and Armenian leader meet in Kiev

    Turkish and Armenian leader meet in Kiev
    Hurriyet Daily News


    Thursday, February 25, 2010
    ISTANBUL- Daily News with wires
    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet DavutoÄ?lu and Armenian President
    Serge Sarkisian met in Kiev on Thursday.
    The Turkish foreign minister told reporters after the meeting that he
    had had the opportunity to talk to the Armenian president about the
    Turkish-Armenian relationship normalization process, anddevelopments
    in the Caucasus.
    "We reviewed the Turkish -Armenian normalization relationship in its
    entirity with open hearts today including our anxieties and the
    obstacles we face," DavutoÄ?lu said. "We spoke about Armenian-
    Azerbaijan relations and the activities of the Minsk Group as related
    to the Karabakh issue," he said.
    "I also had the opportunity to tell Mr. Sarkisian about Turkey's
    vision for the region," he said.
    DavutoÄ?lu said this is the firt meeting between him and
    Sarkisian since a controversial decision from the Armenian
    Constitutional Courtslowing to a grindthe progress made after the two
    countries signed protocols to restore diplomatic ties.
    The Armenian parliament Thursday made it easy for Yerevan to scrap
    protocols signed with Turkey by passing amendments that will allow
    President Serge Sarkisian to suspend ratification and withdraw from
    previously signed international agreements. The amendments were passed
    by a vote of 70-4. The move comes amid growing frustration in Armenia
    over Turkey's Parliament's failure to ratify the protocols signed in
    October.
    The signing of the deals was hailed internationally as a key step in
    overcoming decades of enmity stemming from World War I-era killings of
    Armenians under the late days of the Ottoman Empire.
    But ratification by both countries' parliaments stalled as the two
    sides have traded accusations of trying to modify the deal.
    Ankara has accused Yerevan of trying to set new conditions after
    Armenia's Constitutional Court said the protocols could not contradict
    Yerevan's official position that the Armenian killings constituted "
    or its part, is furious over Ankara's insistence that normalizing
    Turkish-Armenian ties depends on progress in resolving the conflict
    between Armenia and Turkish ally Azerbaijan over the disputed
    Nagorno-Karabakh region.
    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with
    Azerbaijan after ethnic Armenian forces wrested Nagorno-Karabakh from
    Baku's control in a war that claimed an estimated 30,000 lives.
    The conflict remains unresolved despite years of international
    mediation.
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