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Armenia Says Turkey Must Vote First On Peace Deal

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  • Armenia Says Turkey Must Vote First On Peace Deal

    ARMENIA SAYS TURKEY MUST VOTE FIRST ON PEACE DEAL
    By Adrian Croft

    Reuters
    Feb 10 2010
    UK

    * Armenia warns it could break off peace process
    * Accord would bring big gains

    LONDON, Feb 10 (Reuters) - Accords aimed at burying a century of
    hostility between Turkey and Armenia must be voted on by the Turkish
    parliament before Armenia's parliament will approve them, Armenia's
    president said on Wednesday.

    Serzh Sarksyan also warned that Armenia could break off the effort
    to normalise relations if Turkey dragged its feet.

    Armenia and Turkey agreed last year to establish diplomatic ties and
    open their common border within two months of parliamentary approval.

    The accords were signed with the endorsement of the United States,
    European Union and Russia, but the Armenian and Turkish governments
    have since accused each other of trying to re-write the texts,
    throwing the process into question.

    Sarksyan said he would tell his staff on Wednesday to submit the
    accords to the Armenian parliament, but that Turkey's parliament
    would have to be first to ratify them.

    "The parliament of Armenia will vote on the protocols if the Turkish
    parliament goes ahead with that," he said, answering questions at
    the Chatham House thinktank in London.

    "Otherwise we can find ourselves in a situation where the Armenian
    parliament ratifies and the Turkish parliament fails to," he said,
    speaking through an interpreter.

    Sarksyan said he could guarantee a positive vote in the Armenian
    parliament "if the Turkish side does it in a reasonable time frame
    and without pre-conditions".

    But he said Turkish officials had said their parliament was independent
    and its decisions unpredictable.

    LONGSTANDING DIVISIONS

    The deal is the closest the sides have come to overcoming the legacy of
    the mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during World War One.

    It would bring big economic gains to poor, landlocked Armenia. Turkey
    would burnish its credentials as a potential EU entry state and boost
    its clout in the South Caucasus, a region criss-crossed by pipelines
    carrying oil and gas to the West.

    Sarksyan said Armenia was committed to rapprochement with Turkey. "We
    have agreed to move forward without any pre-conditions, not making
    our relations contingent upon Turkey's recognition of the Armenian
    genocide," Sarksyan said.

    "However, if, as many suspect, it is proven that Turkey's goal is
    to protract rather than to normalise relations, we will have to
    discontinue this process," he said.

    Turkey has also warned that the peace process could fail unless it
    was carried out properly.

    It has demanded that ethnic Armenian forces pull back from the
    frontlines of the disputed mountain region of Nagorno- Karabakh as
    a condition for ratifying the peace deal. This has aroused fierce
    resistance in Armenia.

    The Turkish condition is aimed at placating close Muslim ally
    Azerbaijan, an oil and gas exporter which lost control over
    Nagorno-Karabakh when ethnic Armenians backed by Christian Armenia
    broke away as the Soviet Union collapsed. Ankara closed the border
    with Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with Azerbaijan.

    Sarksyan said he would invite Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev if
    a ceremony was held to mark the opening of the Armenian-Turkish border.

    Sarksyan accused Azerbaijan of stockpiling weapons and said that,
    while Armenia despised war, "we realise that we must be ready for
    war in case others wish to fight." (Editing by Noah Barkin)
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