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Yerevan To Ratify Protocols Only After Ankara Ratifies Them

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  • Yerevan To Ratify Protocols Only After Ankara Ratifies Them

    YEREVAN TO RATIFY PROTOCOLS ONLY AFTER ANKARA RATIFIES THEM

    RIA Novosti
    March 3, 2010
    Yerevan

    The National Assembly of Armenia plans to ratify Armenian-Turkish
    protocols on bilateral relations only after the Turkish Parliament
    signs them, Armenian speaker Ovik Abramyan said on Wednesday.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian and Turkish Foreign
    Minister Ahmet Davutoglu signed protocols on establishing diplomatic
    relations and on developing bilateral relations last October. They
    are yet to be approved by their parliaments.

    "The Armenian-Turkish protocols should only concern issues of
    establishing diplomatic relations and the opening of the borders
    between the two countries. The speaker said the Armenian Parliament
    will ratify the Armenian-Turkish protocols after they are ratified by
    the Turkish Parliament," the press service of the Armenian Parliament
    said in a statement.

    The Armenian-Turkish border has been closed since 1993 on Ankara's
    initiative. Bilateral relations are complicated over the genocide
    issue as well as by Turkey's support of Azerbaijan's position in the
    Nagorny Karabakh problem.

    Azerbaijan recently renewed threats of military action to retake
    disputed Nagorny Karabakh over a lack of progress in talks with
    Armenia.

    A fragile ceasefire has been in place in the region since a brutal war
    in the 1990s between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the disputed enclave
    inside Azerbaijan with a predominantly ethnic Armenian population.

    Some 30,000 people died in the conflict, which erupted after the
    mountainous region declared independence in 1991. Karabakh has been
    under Armenian control since a Russian-brokered ceasefire in 1994.

    French President Nicolas Sarkozy said Monday at a joint press
    conference after talks with his Russian counterpart Dmitry Medvedev
    that France and Russia will continue close cooperation in settling
    the Karabakh conflict.
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