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BAKU: Turkish gov't documenting Yerevan's reluctance for protocols

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  • BAKU: Turkish gov't documenting Yerevan's reluctance for protocols

    AzerNews Weekly, Azerbaijan
    Jan 22 2010


    Turkish gov't documenting Yerevan's reluctance to enforce reconciliation deal


    22-01-2010 05:49:53
    The Turkish Foreign Ministry is drafting a document that examines in
    detail the extent of compliance of the Armenian Constitutional Court's
    recent decision to approve the 2009 agreement on normalizing the two
    countries' strained relations with the gist of the accord.
    The document will clearly state that Yerevan is essentially leaning
    toward walking away from the two protocols it signed with Ankara on
    October 10, 2009 in Zurich, Turkish Hurriyet newspaper reported. Once
    ready, it will be sent to representatives of Switzerland, a mediator
    in the Turkish-Armenian reconciliation, as well as to those of the
    United States, Russia and France, the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk
    Group (MG), which witnessed the signing of the protocols.
    Turkish diplomats have already conveyed Ankara's stance on the
    Armenian court's January 12 ruling to Switzerland and the MG
    co-chairing countries.
    After Armenia's Constitutional Court declared that the October 2009
    accord complied with the main law of the land, the Turkish Foreign
    Ministry said in a statement that it contained pre-conditions that
    are inconsistent with the document. The ministry said the
    pre-conditions and restrictive provisions cited in the ruling run
    counter to the premise of the protocols and that it `undermines the
    gist of negotiations on these protocols as well as their main goals',
    which is unacceptable.
    Armenia and Turkey have been at odds and the border between the two
    countries has been closed since 1993 due to Armenia's policy of
    occupation against Azerbaijan, Turkey's ally, and past genocide
    claims. The Zurich protocols signed by the Armenian and Turkish
    governments, in a bid to normalize bilateral relations marred by
    decades of hostility, seek to establish diplomatic relations and
    reopen the two countries' shared border. The documents, which still
    require parliamentary approval, also envision setting up a commission
    of historians to research the alleged World War I-era mass killings of
    Armenians in the Ottoman Empire.
    The Turkish opposition deems the situation surrounding the protocols
    as an impasse in the process of normalizing ties with Armenia. Deniz
    Baykal, the chairman of the People's Republic Party, Turkey's main
    opposition bloc, claimed this deadlock had resulted from the
    authorities' improper policy toward neighboring states.*
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