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Turkey expects 'explanation" over Armenia court ruling

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  • Turkey expects 'explanation" over Armenia court ruling

    Agence France Presse
    Jan 22 2010


    Turkey expects 'explanation" over Armenia court ruling

    Ankara, Jan 22 2010


    Turkey said Friday that it expected Armenia to offer an explanation on
    a court ruling which Ankara says contradicts historic deals to
    normalise ties and open the border between the two neighbours.

    The Armenian constitutional court ruling "is against the letter and
    spirit of the protocols," Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told
    reporters.

    "Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian told me in a telephone
    conversation that the ruling did not affect previously agreed points
    in the protocols. But we expect a clearer picture, explanation over
    this," he added.

    Turkey and Armenia signed the protocols in October to establish
    diplomatic ties and reopen their shared border, in a deal hailed as a
    historic step towards ending decades of hostility stemming from World
    War I-era massacres of Armenians under Ottoman Turkey.

    But they have traded accusations over a January 12 ruling by the
    Armenian court, which upheld the legality of the protocols but said
    they "cannot be interpreted" to contradict Armenia's 1990 declaration
    of independence that refers to the "1915 Armenian genocide in Ottoman
    Turkey and Western Armenia."

    Turkey rejects Armenian claims of genocide and says the number of
    those killed during civil strife is inflated. It also objects to a
    reference to "Western Armenia", seeing it as a territorial claim on
    its eastern regions.

    The Armenian ruling also underlined that the protocols did not concern
    any third party, in contrast to Ankara's claim that the reconciliation
    process with Armenia is linked to Yerevan's conflict with Azerbaijan
    over the Nagorny Karabakh enclave.

    "The aim of the protocols is to approve all its elements, including
    the commissions, in their entirety," Davutoglu said.

    He was referring to an article that calls for the establishment of an
    independent commission to study the Armenian massacres under Ottoman
    rule.

    The minister added that he would hold telephone conversations with US
    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Swiss Foreign Minister
    Micheline Calmy-Rey to convey Ankara's concerns over the procees.

    Davutoglu was speaking shortly after Nalbandian warned that historic
    efforts to establish ties with Turkey may break down, blaming Ankara
    for obstructing the process.

    A Turkish diplomat, speaking on conditions of anonymity, termed
    Nalbandian's remarks an "unjust accusation" and underlined that Ankara
    expected Yerevan to confirm that the framework of the protocols
    remained unchanged.

    "If the framework has changed, then we will not be talking about the
    deals that we signed, but something else," the diplomat added.
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