Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Questions Linger Over Swiss Assurance For Normalization Talk

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

  • ANKARA: Questions Linger Over Swiss Assurance For Normalization Talk

    QUESTIONS LINGER OVER SWISS ASSURANCE FOR NORMALIZATION TALKS

    Hurriyet
    Feb 4 2010
    Turkey

    Turkish Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Feridun Sinirlioglu (R)

    A top Turkish diplomat will travel to Switzerland to seek support
    against an Armenian court ruling that Ankara says threatens the
    normalization process between Turkey and Armenia. Questions linger
    over his efforts, however, because Bern considers it a crime to deny
    the Armenian "genocide."

    Feridun Sinirlioglu, the Foreign Ministry undersecretary, will seek
    assurances from Swiss authorities that Armenia's constitutional
    court will not legally prevent discussion of the validity of Armenian
    "genocide" claims by a historians' commission that will be established
    as part of the Turkish-Armenian deal.

    Sinirlioglu's visit will also take place just a few days before a final
    verdict is issued for three Turks who were found guilty of denying
    genocide claims, the Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review has learned.

    After months of Swiss-mediation and U.S. encouragement, Turkey and
    Armenia signed two protocols in October to establish diplomatic ties
    and reopen their shared border. It was a historic step toward ending
    decades of hostility due to World War I-era killings of Armenians.

    But the process hit the rocks after the Armenian court upheld
    the legality of the protocols, but underlined that they could not
    contradict Yerevan's official position that the Armenian mass killings
    during the late days of the Ottoman Empire constituted "genocide."

    Sinirlioglu will visit Switzerland and the United States "to express
    our concern" over last month's ruling, Foreign Ministry's spokesman
    Burak Ozugergin told reporters Wednesday.

    Dialogue process

    The Armenian court said the interpretation and application of the
    protocols should be in compliance with the Armenian Declaration
    of Independence, which states: "The Republic of Armenia stands in
    support of the task of achieving international recognition of the
    1915 Genocide in Ottoman Turkey and Western Armenia."

    The protocols noted the parties' agreement to launch a dialogue
    process, including the formation of a committee of historians, to
    handle historical issues. If the Armenians continue to consider the
    events of 1915 as an undisputable "genocide," in the Turkish view,
    the court's verdict in effect renders the historians' work obsolete.

    Following the decision, Turkey asked Switzerland and the United
    States for clarification, the Daily News learned from official
    sources. Both said the decision would not hamper the commission's
    discussions but refused to give an assurance in writing, according
    to diplomatic sources.

    Sinirlioglu will try to convince Swiss authorities at talks in Bern
    on Friday to give a binding assurance that the historians' commission
    will work without any prejudice about the final outcome. This could
    prove difficult, however, because denial of the Armenian "genocide"
    is a crime according to Swiss law.

    The decision to outlaw denying the Armenian "genocide" carries the
    signature of Switzerland's Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey, who
    held a different ministerial post in 1998 when the denial amendment was
    passed. Calmy-Rey, however, has played a key role in Turkish-Armenian
    normalization talks, including the decision to create a commission
    to discuss "historical issues."

    Meanwhile, a final verdict is expected Feb. 9 on an appeal from
    three Turks found guilty of denying Armenian genocide claims. Turkish
    politician Dogu Perincek was the first Turkish citizen to be found
    guilty by the Swiss court. He is also among the suspects in the trial
    of an alleged gang called Ergenekon that is suspected of seeking to
    topple the government by staging a coup.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X