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Armenia: Court Gives Green Light To Peace Plan With Turkey

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  • Armenia: Court Gives Green Light To Peace Plan With Turkey

    ARMENIA: COURT GIVES GREEN LIGHT TO PEACE PLAN WITH TURKEY
    Marianna Grigoryan

    EurasiaNet
    Jan 12 2010
    NY

    Armenia's Constitutional Court on January 12 approved a draft agreement
    for reconciliation with Turkey, but heated opposition to the agreement
    shows no sign of dying down.

    As protestors in downtown Yerevan yelled for "No concessions to
    the Turks!," the Court, guarded by a police line, ruled that the
    "[o]bligations" contained in the protocols signed on October 10, 2009
    by Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan and Turkish President Abdullah
    Gul" comply with the Constitution of the Republic of Armenia. [For
    details, see the Eurasia Insight archive.]

    The protocols will next go to Armenia's National Assembly for a vote
    on ratification. Turkey's parliament has yet to ratify the documents.

    The protests and the Court's prolonged deliberation - Sargsyan
    submitted the protocols for review on November 19, 2009 - sparked
    some speculation that a decision by the body's nine judges might be
    delayed. But the final verdict took few Armenians by surprise. The
    Court is not known for going against the Sargsyan administration's
    policies.

    Controversy over whether or not the protocols will hold Armenia to
    so-called "pre-conditions" - an expression that embodies multiple
    popular misgivings - nonetheless looks set to continue.

    Many Armenians fear that the protocols presume an Armenian withdrawal
    from territories surrounding the disputed region of Nagorno Karabakh
    that are claimed by Turkish ally Azerbaijan. Others take issue with
    the formation of a commission of historians to review materials
    related to Ottoman Turkey's 1915 slaughter of ethnic Armenians; an
    event most Armenians see as an indisputable case of genocide. Still
    others worry that the protocols' call for the recognition of the
    Armenian and Turkish borders means the permanent loss of lands in
    Turkey once held by Armenia.

    Ruling Republican Party of Armenia spokesperson Eduard Sharmazanov
    counters that the reconciliation process is proceeding according to
    plan, and presents no cause for alarm.

    "We will never agree to establish ties [with Turkey] with any
    preconditions, as we have repeatedly declared," Sharmazanov told
    EurasiaNet.

    The Court found that the protocols' terms "have an exclusively
    bilateral, interstate character and cannot relate to or be attributed
    to a third party. . ."

    But that finding will most likely do little to persuade domestic
    critics of the peace process. The nationalist Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation - Dashnaktsutiun and 14 other political groups have
    announced plans for a joint lobbying effort to persuade parliament
    to vote against ratification. Protestors earlier burned copies of
    the documents outside the Constitutional Court.

    "The Armenian authorities got carelessly stuck in the Armenian-Turkish
    process, but cannot master it," fumed Armenian Revolutionary Federation
    - Dashnaktsutiun member Armen Rustamian at a January 11 rally in
    Yerevan. "The earlier they realize their mistakes, the easier it will
    be to avoid the threats looming over the country and the people."

    Armenia's government coalition holds a clear majority in parliament,
    but that tactical advantage does not discourage key members of one
    minority opposition party allied with the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation-Dashnaktsutiun.

    Oppositi on Heritage Party parliamentary faction leader Stepan Safarian
    charged that Turkey's ongoing references to Nagorno Karabakh leave
    but one option open for Armenia's opposition, despite government
    reassurances that concessions on the issue will not be made. "We will
    do our best both in the parliament and outside it to suspend this . .

    . unpatriotic process," Safarian pledged.

    Editor's Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based
    in Yerevan.
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