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Armenia-Turkey: Genocide, Karabakh Issues Cause Fresh Round Of 'Dipl

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  • Armenia-Turkey: Genocide, Karabakh Issues Cause Fresh Round Of 'Dipl

    ARMENIA-TURKEY: GENOCIDE, KARABAKH ISSUES CAUSE FRESH ROUND OF 'DIPLOMATIC BOXING' BETWEEN YEREVANA AND ANKARA
    By Naira Hayrumyan

    ArmeniaNow
    14.12.11 | 13:29

    A real "diplomatic boxing" match has started between Armenia and
    Turkey, and while formally the reason was the latest statement by
    Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, it seems that Turkey is simply
    nervous because of growing international pressure.

    Meeting with some senior representatives of the Armenian community in
    the French city of Marseilles on December 7, President Sargsyan said:
    "One day the Turkish leadership will find the strength to reconsider
    its approaches towards the Armenian Genocide... Sooner or later Turkey,
    which considers itself a European country, will have leadership which
    will bow at Tsitsernakaberd."

    The statement caused a stormy reaction from Turkey.

    Chairman of the Turkish Grand National Assembly Cemal Cicek said that
    "the normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations entirely depends on
    the solution of the Nagorno-Karabakh problem." Speaking at an event
    in Ankara commemorating Azerbaijan's late leader Heydar Aliyev on
    December 12, Cicek accused the president of Armenia of organizing the
    "Khojalu tragedy" in Karabakh in 1992 in which Azerbaijan claims the
    Armenian military killed Azeri civilians - an accusation strongly
    denied by Armenians. "We all know who Serzh Sargsyan is. He is one
    of the authors of the Khojalu genocide," Turkish media quoted Cicek
    as saying.

    For his part, Turkish State Minister for EU Affairs Egemen Bagis said
    that Sargsyan went beyond the limits by making that statement. He
    stressed that the Armenian people cannot be strong "due to poverty
    and hunger". As quoted by the Turkish Anadolu news agency, Bagis
    said that some Armenians were working in Turkey which showed "the
    sincerity of Turks."

    An official response came from Armenia. Commenting on Turkey's EU
    affairs minister, Armenia's Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharyan
    said: "Such a response from the mouth of an official responsible for
    the integration of Turkey into the European Union proves that today's
    Turkey does not yet have the leadership befitting a European country,
    and some Turkish officials are not bearers of European values and
    espouse the mentality in the spirit of the worst traditions of the
    Ottoman Empire."

    For his part, Deputy Speaker of Parliament Eduard Sharmazanov said
    that Cicek "repeated the legends of Azerbaijani propaganda about a
    million refugees and occupied territories." "What a cynic one has to
    be to talk about occupation when your country has for decades occupied
    the territory of an EU member state (Cyprus)? To talk about genocide
    when your country has turned the denial of crimes against humanity
    into a state policy?!" said Sharmazanov.

    But international pressure on Turkey and at the same time on Azerbaijan
    seems to be gradually building up. The U.S. Senate is voting on
    Resolution 306, which calls on Turkey to return the confiscated
    Armenian, Greek and Assyrian church property.

    France's position on Turkey's membership in the EU has not changed,
    with French President Nicolas Sarkozy confirming that he would not
    approve Turkey's entry bid.

    Also, in France a draft law criminalizing the denial of the
    Armenian Genocide seems to have reached the homestretch. MPs from
    the French president's Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) party that
    has a parliamentary majority on December 8 submitted a bill to the
    legislative committee of the National Assembly aiming to criminalize
    the denial of the Armenian Genocide.

    And in her December 9 statement in connection with International
    Human Rights Day U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton mentioned
    Azerbaijan, along with Zimbabwe, as one of the negative examples in
    the field of human rights and countries where there are political
    prisoners.

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