Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ISTANBUL: Turkey, Armenia at political deadlock on protocols

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ISTANBUL: Turkey, Armenia at political deadlock on protocols

    Hurriyet Daily News , Turkey
    March 27 2010

    Turkey, Armenia at political deadlock on protocols

    Saturday, March 27, 2010
    DÃ-NDÃ` SARIIÅ?IK
    ANKARA ' Hürriyet Daily News


    Turkish and Armenian parliaments have yet to ratify the normalization
    protocols signed last October. 'The normalization process between
    Turkey and Armenia has turned into a game of chess. Each side waits
    for next move to develop new tactics,' a high-ranking AKP official
    says. Nonetheless, there is hope in the air for social projects
    between the two neighbors

    Despite deadlock on the political aspects of the normalization process
    between Armenia and Turkey, there are glimmers of hope for a
    breakthrough in social relations between the two, a Turkish government
    spokesman said Friday.

    The political path to normalization seems to have suffered a reverse
    as both parliaments have yet to ratify the protocols signed last
    October. At the same time, Armenian diaspora networks have mounted
    lobbying efforts to achieve international recognition for Armenian
    `genocide' claims, thereby encouraging Turkish nationalists at home to
    ask for a withdrawal of the protocols.

    Despite their contradicting political views, however, all have praised
    a governmental initiative to open for worship an Armenian church in
    Van that had become a museum and to provide education for the children
    of undocumented Armenian workers in Turkey. `Both worship and
    education are basic human rights,' Turkish Parliamentary Foreign
    Affairs Committee Chairman Murat Mercan said in a Friday interview
    with the Daily News.

    `[However,] the normalization process between Turkey and Armenia has
    turned into a game of chess. Each side is waiting for the next move so
    as to develop new tactics,' a source close to Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip ErdoÄ?an said on condition of anonymity to the Hürriyet Daily
    News and Economic Review on Friday.

    No progress on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the Armenian
    Constitutional Court's qualified approval of the protocols and the
    March 4 Armenian `genocide' resolution from the U.S. Foreign Affairs
    Committee have made it difficult for Turkey to ratify the protocols,
    Mercan said.

    `Of course, the protocols should be voted on in more positive
    atmosphere [to avoid any negative result]. Whenever those problems are
    resolved, we will able to ratify the protocols,' Mercan said.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is looking to increase pressure on Turkey
    to ratify the protocols before April 24, when he extends his
    condolences to Armenians on their day of mourning after avoiding the
    word `genocide' last year, according to Å?ükrü ElekdaÄ?, a veteran
    diplomat and deputy for the main opposition Republican People's Party,
    or CHP.

    `Washington failed to realize that Armenia's Constitutional Court had
    perverted the sense of the protocols. The government cannot take the
    risk of a parliamentary vote as even the [ruling Justice and
    Development Party] AKP is mixed,' ElekdaÄ? told the Daily News on
    Friday. `Regretfully, there is no way out and the process is at a
    deadlock.'

    The Armenian court's reservations virtually ruled out three vital
    articles since the country's constitution demands land from eastern
    Anatolia and Turkish recognition of its genocide claims.

    The protocols, however, envisage the recognition of the existing
    borders and the establishment of a joint historical committee to
    investigate the 1915 events.

    `The Turkish Parliament shouldn't ratify the protocols that were made
    ineffective by the Armenian court or ratify them with reservations,'
    said Sedat Laçiner, director of the Ankara-based International
    Strategic Research Organization, or USAK.

    Noting that April 24 is not a deadline for Ankara, Mercan said: `We
    are not looking for any specific date, but required conditions.
    Regardless of speculations or anti-peace efforts by the other, we're
    working to keep alive the process in line with our principles.'

    Nursuna Memecan, a deputy for the AKP and member of the Parliamentary
    Assembly of the Council of Europe, or PACE, criticized news reports
    that have served to provoke hawks on both sides of the divide.

    `Both sides have been too sensitive in this process. I think silence
    is better than reports [that have provoked nationalists],' Memecan
    told the Daily News in a phone interview Friday.

    `Both presidents took serious risks for their political career by
    shaking hands in spite of harsh criticisms. They could have opted for
    the status quo but dared to fix long-suffering ties for the sake of
    regional peace and stability.'

    Memecan said the genocide claims are being promoted by the diaspora,
    not those in Armenia. `[Serge] Sarkisian is aware of how important
    this normalization is for his country's development,' Memecan said.

    The problem is multi-dimensional and complicated, Memecan said. `It is
    too difficult to sort out at once in the face of aggregation of long
    years. It is not only our bilateral problem; there are dimensions
    related to Azerbaijan and Russia.'

    Underlining the same view, Mercan said: `We are seeking a total and
    comprehensive solution in the region. That's the only way to secure
    the stability.'

    Turkey will develop new strategies in the event of changing scenarios,
    Memecan said. `In line with new conditions, there will be plans B and
    C.'

    Seeking normalization via social projects

    `Turkey is not who has to take all steps. They [Armenians] have to do
    so, too. We are also introducing social projects to restore ties
    between people while the political play is ongoing,' Memecan said.

    Establishing social and cultural ties between two communities will
    ease worries and help for mutual trust, Memecan said. `New projects
    will be initiated. We are even considering joint cheese-production in
    Kars to show that there is no reason to be afraid of each other.'

    ElekdaÄ?, meanwhile, said, `I see humanitarian concerns and back the
    projects restoring social and cultural ties. [However,] diplomatic
    realities and romantic aspirations shouldn't be mixed up.'

    Laçiner said, `These steps should have been taken earlier but opening
    social channels are different than protocols.'
Working...
X