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Armenian, Azerbaijani, Turkish Delegates Cross Swords At Rose Roth S

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  • Armenian, Azerbaijani, Turkish Delegates Cross Swords At Rose Roth S

    ARMENIAN, AZERBAIJANI, TURKISH DELEGATES CROSS SWORDS AT ROSE ROTH SEMINAR

    ITAR-TASS
    March 12 2010
    Russia

    The process of international recognition of the Armenian Genocide
    - particularly the resolution approved by the U.S. House of
    Representatives Committee on Foreign Affair and the one approved
    by Swedish Parliament on March 11 - impede the ratification of the
    Armenian-Turkish protocols, Suat Kiniklioglu, Vice-Chairman of the
    Justice and Development Party (Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi, or AK),
    stated at the NATO-held 73rd Rose Roth seminar in Yerevan.

    "Such decisions will only lead to a collapse of the Armenian-Turkish
    process," he said. Kiniklioglu stressed that, should the process fail,
    the Armenian-Turkish relations will be even worse than before it, and
    the situation in the region will grow increasingly tense. Kiniklioglu
    stated Turkey does not set the issue of the Armenian Genocide as
    a precondition for normalizing the bilateral relations. However,
    the issue, as well as the international recognition of the Armenian
    Genocide, complicates the ratification of the protocols. Even if
    Recep Erdogan gathered the Justice and Development faction and told
    them to vote for the protocols, it would not happen because of the
    political atmosphere, Kiniklioglu said. "I cannot understand the
    reason for Armenia setting artificial terms - Yerevan used to state
    the protocols were to be ratified before this January, but now they
    are speaking of April. They used to say Armenia would withdraw its
    signature unless Turkey ratified the protocols before this January,
    but they never did that. Turkey will not have ratified the protocols
    by the April either, and let us see what Yerevan does this time. The
    Armenian-Turkish border has been closed for 17 years, and we can wait
    for one year more," the Turkish MP said. He asked why Armenia does
    not want the issue of the Genocide to be discussed by a subcommittee
    of historians to be set up after the protocols have been ratified. "If
    Armenians are so sure they are right, let them, together with Turkish
    scholars, prove they are right. If they succeed, the decision will
    be binding on Ankara," Kiniklioglu said.

    The Azeri expert Ilgar Mamadov supported the Turkish MP by stating
    that "it is unclear what Yerevan is giving in the Armenian-Turkish
    process after the Armenian Constitutional Court returned its verdict
    concerning the protocols." "Any talks are a bargain -- each party gives
    something in exchange. But, after the Constitution Court returned
    its verdict, it is now unclear what Armenia is going to give," the
    Azerbaijani delegate said with indignation. According to him, Armenia's
    readiness to renounce its claims on Turkish territories and, party,
    its policy of international recognition of the Armenian Genocide -
    "a conviction, rather than historical reality" -- was clear before the
    RA Constitutional Court returned its verdict. "But the Constitutional
    Court's verdict showed Armenia has no intention to renounce anything,"
    Mamadov stated angrily.

    Head of the Armenian delegation to the NATO Parliamentary
    Assembly Karen Avagyan tried to calm down the Azerbaijani and
    Turkish delegates. He stated that Armenia has never intended to
    discuss the Armenian Genocide in any committee - the Genocide is
    a historical fact. "Moreover, I cannot understand why Turkey hoped
    the Armenian-Turkish talks would stop the process of international
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide. On the contrary, the talks
    stirred up the international community's interest in Armenian-Turkish
    problems, and the world began examining historical facts more closely,"
    Avagyan said.

    The seminar organizers brought documentaries telling about the
    Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Turkey in 1915-1923, as well as about
    acts of vandalism against Armenian cultural heritage in Nakhchevan.
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