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Turkey Warns Protocols Could Fall Through

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  • Turkey Warns Protocols Could Fall Through

    Turkey Warns Protocols Could Fall Through
    Asbarez
    Jan 29th, 2010


    ThisLONDON (Combined Sources)`Efforts to normalize relations between
    Turkey and Armenia and open their common border could fail unless the
    process is carried out `properly,' Turkey's foreign minister said
    Friday, referring to a ruling by Armenia's Constitutional Court over
    the protocols.

    `If we are not convinced that the process is being carried out
    properly, there is no possibility to carry it forward,' Ahmet
    Davutoglu told Turkish journalists a London.

    Davutoglu's warning is the strongest response yet from Turkey to an
    Armenian court ruling this month that has cast doubt over accords
    signed in October.

    Armenia's Constitutional Court reaffirmed the constitutionality of the
    agreements on January 12, but highlighted that the agreements could
    have no bearing on the Armenian government's constitutional obligation
    to seek international recognition of the Armenian Genocide by Ottoman
    Turkey. The court also reiterated that the protocols could have no
    link to the Karabakh conflict.

    Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian is bound by the constitution to
    include the high court's reservations when he submits the protocols to
    parliament for ratification.

    Davutoglu has accused Armenia of trying to rewrite the protocols that
    launched the reconciliation three months ago.

    `We respect every country's way of functioning. It is their own
    process, but what concerns us is not changing the documents amid that
    ongoing functioning,' he said in reference to the court ruling, the
    Turkish Hurriyet Daily News reported.

    Davutoglu made his remarks after meeting Thursday with his Armenian
    counterpart, Edward Nalbandian, on the sidelines of an international
    conference regarding Afghanistan.

    `We believe [the court ruling] brings restrictions to the protocols.
    We raised our expectation that the process should not be blurred,'
    Davutoglu said of his meeting with Nalbandian.

    Davutoglu said he is seeking clarification from the Armenian side over
    the extent to which Sarkisian's administration will adhere to the
    court ruling.

    `We have worked with Nalbandian on various stages and gone through a
    difficult process. There were disagreements but the process that has
    carried us this far should not be harmed,' Davutoglu said, adding that
    `mutual determination, mutual goodwill and mutual political will are
    needed for normalization' of relations.

    Davutoglu predictably made no mention of growing international
    frustration with Turkey over its attempts to insert preconditions into
    the normalization process by linking the resolution of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict to its parliament's ratification of the
    protocols.

    `We have open-mindedly exchanged our views [with Nalbandian],' said
    DavutoÄ?lu, who declined to elaborate further, saying only, `The
    Armenian side is well aware of our opinion.'

    The two ministers agreed to meet more in the coming days. One of those
    meetings could be on the sidelines of an international security
    conference in Munich, Germany next week, Hurriyet said, quoting
    unnamed Turkish diplomats. Nalbandian, however, is reportedly not to
    attend the Munich conference, according to the Armenian Foreign
    Ministry.

    `There is not a visit to Munich and a meeting with Turkey's Foreign
    Minister in Mr. Nalbandian's schedule,' Foreign Ministry spokesman
    Tigran Balayan was quoted as saying.

    The Armenian court ruling spurred much diplomatic traffic on the
    sidelines of the London conference. Davutoglu met with his Azerbaijani
    counterpart, Elmar Mammadyarov, on Thursday for talks on the matter.

    Davutoglu also held a 15-minute meeting with U.S. Secretary of State
    Hillary Clinton on Wednesday and said he conveyed Turkey's concerns
    over the Armenian court decision to Washington. `I am of the opinion
    that the United States better understands Turkey's concerns.' Clinton
    met separately with Nalbandian.

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov also met separately with
    Nalbandian and his Azeri counterpart over the ongoing Minsk Group
    Karabakh negotiations.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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