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Armenia to ratify bilateral protocols after Turkey - speaker

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  • Armenia to ratify bilateral protocols after Turkey - speaker

    Itar-Tass, Russia
    March 13 2010

    Armenia to ratify bilateral protocols after Turkey - speaker

    13.03.2010, 04.31


    YEREVAN, March 13 (Itar-Tass) -- The Armenian parliament will ratify
    the Armenian-Turkish protocols only after the Turkish parliament has
    done that, the speaker of Armenia's National Assembly, Onik Abramian,
    said on Friday, as he received visiting Polish Prime Minister Donald
    Tusk.

    The protocols on the establishment of diplomatic relations and on the
    principles of bilateral relations have been submitted to the
    parliaments of both countries for ratification. On January 12 the
    Constitutional Court of Armenia recognized both documents as
    constitutional.

    Armenia and Turkey share a 330-kilometer-long border, but have not
    established diplomatic relations to this day. As a pre-condition for
    the normalization of bilateral relations Ankara demanded that Yerevan
    should give up steps to press for the international recognition of the
    very instance of genocide of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in 1915.
    Also, it wants Armenia to curtail support for Nagorno-Karabakh in its
    conflict with Azerbaijan, as well as return to Azerbaijan the
    territories it occupies. According to foreign economic experts, the
    closed border and indirect cargo traffic cost Armenia
    300-400-million-dollar losses a year.

    When elected Armenia's president in 2008, Serzh Sargsyan came out with
    the initiative of normalizing relations with Turkey. That policy
    earned wide support form the international community. At the
    invitation of Armenia's leadership Turkish President Abdullah Gul on
    September 6, 2008 paid a brief several-hours-long visit to Yerevan for
    a 2010 World Soccer Cup qualifier. That was the first-ever visit by a
    Turkish head of state to Armenia. On October 14 last year the city of
    Bursa, Turkey, hosted a return match and Serzh Sargsyan went there for
    the event at President Gul' s invitation. The exchange was promptly
    dubbed as `football diplomacy.'

    On October 12 last year the foreign ministers of Armenia and Turkey
    gathered for a ceremony, attended by the foreign ministers of Russia
    and France and the US Secretary of State, to put their signatures to
    Armenian-Turkish protocols on the establishment of diplomatic
    relations and on the principles of bilateral relations.

    `The international recognition of and condemnation of the genocide of
    Armenians for the Armenian people and for the republic of Armenia is a
    matter of historical justice,' Sargsyan said. He believes that the
    process of normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations by no means
    signifies an end to the efforts to press for the international
    genocide of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in 1915.

    The Armenian leader believes `today is the right time to display the
    determination, to take a long stride forward in bilateral relations
    and to let future generations inherit a stable and safe region.'

    The Armenian authorities' decision to normalize relations with Turkey
    sparked a mixed response inside the country and the foreign diasporas,
    which regard themselves as a result of the 1915 genocide. In protest
    against this decision the Dashnaktsutyun party quit the government
    coalition and declared it was going into opposition.
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