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Erdogan Sticks To Karabakh Linkage After Moscow Trip

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  • Erdogan Sticks To Karabakh Linkage After Moscow Trip

    ERDOGAN STICKS TO KARABAKH LINKAGE AFTER MOSCOW TRIP

    Asbarez
    Jan 15th, 2010

    ANKARA (RFE/RL)-The normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations remains
    conditional on a Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement acceptable to
    Azerbaijan, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan reportedly
    said after this week's high-profile visit to Russia.

    "The process of normalizing Turkish-Armenian relations and the
    resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh problem are interconnected. These
    processes may be going on separately, but they are interconnected
    behind the scenes," Erdogan told journalists on his way back
    from Moscow, according to a "Hurriyet" newspaper report cited by
    Azerbaijani media.

    "Once the problem between Armenia and Azerbaijan is resolved, once
    the occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh ends, the Turkish-Armenian issue
    will find a solution," he said. "If Armenia has good intentions let
    it prove them by starting the liberation of the districts around
    Nagorno-Karabakh."

    A senior Turkish lawmaker clarified on Friday that Turkey's parliament
    will not even debate the ratification of the two "protocols" signed
    with Armenia in October in the coming weeks. The Anatolia news agency
    quoted Murat Mercan, chairman of the parliament's foreign relations
    committee, as saying, "We are all eager to bring the protocols to the
    committee and the parliamentary floor, and we do want to see relations
    get normal, but at this time it would be useless to debate the issue
    which is highly likely to be revoked by the committee."

    Mercan is a member of Erdogan's Justice and Development Party, which
    has a clear majority in the Turkish Grand National Assembly.

    Armenian leaders have repeatedly rejected the Turkish precondition,
    arguing that neither protocol makes any reference to the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani dispute. The United States, the European Union
    and Russia have also voiced support for an unconditional and speedy
    implementation of the Turkish-Armenian agreements.

    Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin publicly urged Ankara to drop
    the Karabakh linkage at a joint news conference with Erdogan on
    Wednesday. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov stood by that call
    during a visit to Yerevan on Thursday.

    Erdogan signaled his disappointment with the Russian position as he
    flew back to Ankara. He said Moscow can speed up a Karabakh settlement
    by putting pressure on Armenia, a Russian ally. "If Russia falls back
    on this issue, achieving a result will become more difficult," he said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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