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ANKARA: Armenian Thaw With Turkey Clears Court Hurdle

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  • ANKARA: Armenian Thaw With Turkey Clears Court Hurdle

    ARMENIAN THAW WITH TURKEY CLEARS COURT HURDLE

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 12 2010
    Turkey

    Armenia's Constitutional Court on Tuesday rejected opposition
    complaints over the legality of a a government push to end a century
    of hostility with neighbouring Turkey.

    The ruling means accords calling for the establishment of diplomatic
    relations and the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border can move to
    parliament, although there is little sign they will be adopted soon.

    The accords, which need parliamentary approval in both countries, have
    been gathering dust since they were signed by the two governments in
    October 2009, with Turkey facing a backlash from close ally Azerbaijan,
    a key energy supplier to the West.

    The accords seek to overcome a century of animosity stemming from
    the World War One mass killing of both Armenians and Ottoman Turks.

    Reading the ruling, court president Gagik Harutiunyan said the
    protocols "conform with the constitution of Armenia".

    "The decision is final and cannot be challenged," he said, to shouts
    of "Shame!" from opposition supporters in the court. Several hundred
    more protested outside.

    Rapprochement would bring economic benefits to poor, landlocked
    Armenia, while Turkey would burnish its credentials as a potential
    European Union member and boost its influence in the strategic South
    Caucasus.

    Adoption continues to be held up by a Turkish demand that Armenia
    make concessions in the festering conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, a
    mainly Armenian region that broke away from Azerbaijan with Armenian
    backing in the early 1990s.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with
    Azerbaijan during the fighting.

    Azerbaijan, courted by Europe and Russia for its oil and gas reserves
    in the Caspian Sea, has reacted angrily to the thaw, fearing it will
    lose leverage in the Nagorno-Karabakh negotiations if Turkey opens
    the border.
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