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Turkey warns against risks to Caucasus stability as U.S. votes

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  • Turkey warns against risks to Caucasus stability as U.S. votes

    Xinhua, China
    March 4 2010


    Turkey warns against risks to Caucasus stability as U.S. votes
    Armenian resolution

    ANKARA March 4


    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on Thursday warned against
    moves that could endanger the normalization process between Turkey and
    Armenia as a U.S. congressional panel pressed ahead with a vote on a
    resolution regarding controversial deaths of Armenians under Ottoman
    rule.

    "We must refrain from all acts that may pose a risk to stability and
    peace in the Caucasus," Davutoglu told a joint press conference with
    his New Zealander counterpart Murray McCully in Ankara, the
    semi-official Anatolia news agency reported.

    The minister's remarks came before the U.S. House of Representatives
    Foreign Affairs Committee voted on a resolution on Thursday that would
    recognize the deaths of Armenians during the World War I as a
    genocide.

    Turkey denies as many as 1.5 million Armenians died and insists the
    Armenians were victims of widespread chaos and governmental breakdown
    as the Ottoman Empire collapsed before modern Turkey was born in 1923.

    The Turkish government has urged the U.S. panel not to pass the
    resolution on Armenians' deaths, saying its adoption would hurt
    Turkish-U.S. relations and the ongoing normalization process between
    Turkey and Armenia.

    "Turkish-U.S. relations are probably in a stage where cooperation is
    needed more than ever before," Davutoglu was quoted of telling
    reporters Thursday.

    Close ties between Turkey and the United States could have a positive
    impact on the situation in the Balkans, Middle East and Caucasus as
    well as issues at the United Nations, he said.

    The U.S. White House has urged the House panel not to adopt the
    resolution, which it said could impede progress on the normalization
    of relations between Turkey and Armenia, U.S. media reported.

    Davutoglu called on all parties involved to "take into serious
    consideration the Turkish-U.S relations and their influence on global
    peace."

    Turkey and Armenia have been bogged down in the row over the deaths of
    Armenians and have no diplomatic or economic ties since Armenia
    declared its independence in 1991. Also, Turkey closed its border with
    Armenia in 1993 to support Azerbaijan, which had a territorial
    conflict with Armenia over the Upper Karabakh region.

    The two countries signed last October historic deals on normalizing
    ties and reopening their borders after decades of hostilities. The
    agreements need to be ratified by both countries' parliaments before
    taking effect.
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