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FM Advisor in Ankara talks to Armenian journalists on past and prese

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  • FM Advisor in Ankara talks to Armenian journalists on past and prese

    Armenia-Turkey: FM Advisor in Ankara talks to Armenian journalists on
    past and present

    Opinion | 18.09.10 | 10:39


    Photo: Gayane Lazarian/ArmeniaNow


    Turkish Foreign Ministry assistant adviser Selim Yener says Karabakh,
    `April 24' remain stumbling blocks in relations with Yerevan

    Gayane Lazarian
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    A Turkish Foreign Ministry official says the rapprochement between
    Ankara and Yerevan has stalled because `the issue is very delicate to
    both countries.'


    Still, assistant adviser to the Minister Selim Yener expressed hope
    that improvement in relations between the two neighboring states would
    be achieved as he met with a group of visiting Armenian journalists in
    Ankara on Friday.

    `We will do everything to achieve it [improvement]. We were one of the
    first countries to recognize the independence of the Republic of
    Armenia. Both countries took courageous steps by signing the
    protocols. We stopped at the stage of ratification. And this is also
    what we need to do, but unfortunately there are some sensitive issues
    that we have to take into consideration,' said the official, referring
    to the recent Armenian-Turkish normalization process and relevant
    documents signed by the foreign ministers of Armenia and Turkey in
    Switzerland in October 2009.

    The process came to a standstill this April after both sides blamed
    each other for setting conditions for parliamentary ratification.

    In an interview with the Ukrainian Profile magazine earlier this week
    Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan said: `...The Turkish side refused to
    ratify the signed protocols in parliament. And now we are waiting for
    a political force or political leaders to appear in Turkey who will be
    ready to show political will.'

    Yener explains that at this point even if the Armenian-Turkish
    protocols enter the Turkish legislature, they will still fail to get
    ratified by the country's lawmakers.

    `The problem is connected with Karabakh. Armenia should make a step.
    Whatever happens, we will always reckon with Azerbaijan. At the moment
    of the signing of the protocols, Azerbaijan thought that Turkey had
    betrayed it and hit it from the back,' says Yener.

    The assistant advisor says that Turkey has adopted a new policy: zero
    problems with neighbors and having an open dialogue. He says that
    today much more is being said about the 1915 Armenian massacres than a
    few years ago and that `April 24 [Armenian Genocide commemoration day]
    should not create problems for the two countries.'

    `But for the Armenian Diaspora, it would have been easier for us today
    to come to terms with Armenia. No doubt, I understand the emotions of
    the Diaspora, and, of course, most of them are the result of 1915. But
    here there is another important issue. If Turkey admits [the
    genocide], we don't know where the Armenian side's demands will take
    us to,' he says.

    Yener acknowledges that the events of 1915 are an `established
    reality' for the Armenians and that there is no Armenian that would
    deny this reality.

    `A solution should be found one day. But you won't find an Armenian
    who would make a compromise. They do not agree when you say let's sit
    and talk to see how it happened. Genocide is a very harsh word and no
    state would want to say that its predecessors committed genocide,'
    says the Turkish ministry advisor.




    From: A. Papazian
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