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ANKARA: PM Warns Armenia Ruling Could Derail Normalization Efforts

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  • ANKARA: PM Warns Armenia Ruling Could Derail Normalization Efforts

    PM WARNS ARMENIA RULING COULD DERAIL NORMALIZATION EFFORTS

    Hurriyet
    Jan 20 2010
    Turkey

    Complaining about Armenia's recent constitutional court ruling on the
    two countries' protocols, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    says, 'We took it directly to our Parliament, without making changes.

    We didn't employ a mediator on the text. We didn't carry out any
    read-between-the-lines operations. This is a proof of our sincerity.

    Armenia has tried to change the text' Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan said Wednesday a ruling by a top Armenian court could derail
    efforts to end a century of hostility between the two neighbors.

    In its decision about the constitutionality of protocols that
    could pave the way for diplomatic relations with Turkey, the court's
    reference to the 1915 killings of Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman
    Empire has drawn ire from Ankara. Foreign Ministry sources said the
    reference to the killings in the ruling is against the spirit of the
    normalization process with Yerevan.

    In Saudi Arabia, Erdogan said the court's reference both to the killing
    of Armenians and to the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over
    Nagorno-Karabakh is problematic. "This will challenge the process
    unless the mistake is corrected. It's definitely unacceptable to
    Turkey," Erdogan told a news conference.

    "We have never taken the protocol to our Constitutional Court. We took
    it directly to our Parliament, without making changes. We didn't employ
    a mediator on the text. We didn't carry out any read-between-the-lines
    operations. This is a proof of our sincerity.

    Armenia has tried to change the text," he said.

    The accords, signed by the foreign ministers of Turkey and Armenia
    in October 2009, need parliamentary approval in both countries for
    ratification.

    The Armenian court's Jan. 12 decision established that the Turkish
    protocols conform to the country's constitution, but the six-page
    decision's fifth article makes reference to Armenia's declaration
    of independence in a manner that has provoked Turkey. Meanwhile,
    the document's 11th paragraph says, "The Republic of Armenia stands
    in support of the task of achieving international recognition of the
    1915 genocide in Ottoman Turkey and Western Armenia."

    Another source of uneasiness in Ankara is the ruling's fourth article,
    which stipulates that the mutual obligations being undertaken by the
    protocols are being conducted under principles of international law.

    The court also said the protocols have an exclusively bilateral
    and interstate nature and do not concern any third party. The final
    provision has been interpreted as a response to Turkey's linking of
    the protocols' success with a solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh problem.

    Turkey has repeatedly said progress on full normalization with Armenia
    depends on Yerevan making concessions in its unresolved conflict with
    Azerbaijan over the occupied province.

    FM relays Turkey's concerns to Yerevan

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, who was accompanying Erdogan
    in Saudi Arabia, spoke with Armenian counterpart Edward Nalbandian
    on the phone to convey Ankara's uneasiness over the court ruling.

    Davutoglu relayed Turkey's expectation of an Armenian clarification
    on the issue from the Armenian side, according to ministry spokesman
    Burak Ozugergin.

    Davutoglu told his counterpart the court ruling made unacceptable
    preconditions and restrictive provisions. He also expressed Turkey's
    commitment to the spirit and objective of the protocols and relayed his
    expectation that the Armenian government do the same, Ozugergin said.

    The minister said accusations that the Turkish side was attempting
    to delay the process were baseless since Ankara was one step ahead
    of Armenia having already forwarded the protocols to Parliament.

    Opposition: Withdraw the protocols

    The leader of the opposition Nationalist Movement Party, or MHP, said
    Wednesday the government should permanently withdraw the protocols
    from Parliament in response to the grave situation. The party also
    called on the government to apologize to the Turkish nation.

    Devlet Bahceli said the protocols with Armenia would not change
    the country's policies and was particularly irked by references to
    "genocide" and "Western Armenia."

    "In this ruling, it has been understood once more that Armenia's stance
    toward international law and its hostile approach toward Turkey has
    not changed. This situation is an embarrassing failure and fiasco
    for the [ruling Justice and Development Party] AKP government and
    the foreign minister who signed the protocols," he said.

    Republican People's Party, or CHP, deputy Hakkı Suha Okay, meanwhile,
    also complained about the Armenian court ruling.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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