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UN chief: Turkey should solve local problems

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  • UN chief: Turkey should solve local problems

    UN chief: Turkey should solve local problems

    Associated Press Worldstream
    May 21, 2010 Friday 2:08 PM GMT


    U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Friday praised Turkey's
    contributions to world peace but encouraged it to be more active in
    solving its own conflicts with Armenia and Cyprus.

    Turkey said Monday it would not ratify a deal to normalize ties with
    Armenia until Armenian forces were withdrawn from the Nagorno-Karabakh
    enclave in Azerbaijan. On Cyprus, it insists on the lifting of what it
    calls an unofficial trade embargo on the breakaway Turkish Cypriot
    state in return for opening Turkey's ports to ships and planes from
    Cyprus.

    "Let us build on your new diplomatic relations with Armenia," Ban said
    in an address at Istanbul's prestigious Bogazici University. "And let
    us seize the opportunity in Cyprus. Talks resume next week. A
    convergence of views is taking shape. We should seize this critical
    moment."

    The division of Cyprus between an internationally recognized Greek
    Cypriot south and a breakaway Turkish Cypriot north is complicating
    Turkey's own accession negotiation in the European Union. The
    Mediterranean island split in 1974, when Turkey invaded after a coup
    by supporters of union with Greece.

    "The leaders of the two communities should make a decision, people
    have suffered too much, too long," Ban said. "I hope they will be able
    to make a decision based on compromise and flexibility. This is what
    international community really wants."

    On Friday, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Ankara was
    prepared to allow planes and ships from Cyprus to use its ports and
    airspace if the embargo was lifted, allowing Turkish Cypriots to trade
    through its ports of Kyrenia and Famagusta and through Ercan airport
    in the Cypriot capital of Nicosia.

    "The world will open three ports to the Turkish Cypriots, we in Turkey
    will open all our ports to Greek Cypriots. It's a promise," he said.

    Ban arrived in Istanbul to attend an international conference focusing
    on restoring order in Somalia gripped by anarchy and political
    turmoil. High level officials met Friday in a preliminary session to
    lay the ground for Saturday's conference, which will be attended by
    Ban and Somali President Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed.

    Somalia has been mired in anarchy since 1991, allowing piracy to
    flourish off its shores. Ahmed on Thursday reversed his decision to
    fire the country's prime minister amid divisions over how to combat
    Islamic insurgents allegedly linked to al-Qaida, saying there is need
    for unity.

    The conference is co-hosted by the United Nations and Turkey, which is
    keen to expand relations with African nations.

    Ban welcomed Turkey's hosting of the conference as well as its
    participation in peacekeeping operations in Lebanon and Afghanistan.
    He said Turkey's mediation efforts in the nuclear standoff with Iran
    and attempts to work out territorial disputes with Greece had opened
    "channels of communication that might otherwise close."

    Turkey and Brazil on Wednesday urged the U.N. Security Council to
    refrain from more sanctions for Iran, saying a compromise they
    brokered this week is the best way to resolve the dispute over
    Tehran's nuclear program.

    "We hope that this and other initiatives may open the door to a
    negotiated settlement," Ban said. "The International Atomic Energy
    Agency will provide its own professional assessment, of course."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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