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Armenia Rejects Preconditions On Turkey Deal

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  • Armenia Rejects Preconditions On Turkey Deal

    ARMENIA REJECTS PRECONDITIONS ON TURKEY DEAL

    Tehran Times
    April 14 2010
    Iran

    Armenian President Serge Sarkisian told Turkey's prime minister
    Monday that Yerevan would not accept "preconditions" on reconciliation
    efforts between the two countries, his office said.

    Sarkisian spoke with Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the sidelines of a U.S.

    nuclear summit in Washington, the Armenian presidency said in a
    statement, at a meeting arranged last week in a bid to revive the
    floundering efforts.

    "I met this morning with the prime minister of Turkey. Our position
    was and remains clear: Turkey cannot speak to Armenia and Armenians
    in the language of preconditions," Sarkisian was quoted as saying in
    the statement.

    The two neighbors signed a landmark deal in October to establish
    diplomatic relations and open their border after decades of hostility.

    But parliamentary ratification of the deal has stalled in both
    countries over the contentious issue of World War I-era killings
    of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey, which Yerevan insists constituted
    genocide but Ankara staunchly denies. Another sticking point is
    Turkey's support for Armenia's foe Azerbaijan in their dispute over
    the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    "We are not prepared in any way to question the issue of the genocide
    or to pretend that Turkey may play any positive role in the negotiating
    process for resolving the Karabakh question," Sarkisian said.

    The deal has been snagged by disagreements over its terms, with both
    sides accusing each other of lacking true commitment to reconciliation.

    Ankara is irked by a January ruling of Armenia's constitutional court
    that cleared the deal but said it could not contradict Yerevan's
    official line that Armenians were victims of genocide under the
    Ottoman Empire -- a label Turkey fiercely rejects.

    Yerevan, for its part, has protested that the Turkish Parliament seems
    unlikely to ratify the accord without progress in the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, a close Turkish ally.

    The process has also been marred by resolutions adopted last month by
    a U.S. House of Representatives committee and the Swedish parliament
    that both branded the massacres of Armenians as genocide, infuriating
    Ankara.

    Erdogan was to meet U.S. President Barack Obama on the sidelines
    of the summit, just over a week after Turkey decided to return its
    ambassador to Washington after a row over the U.S. House vote.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin perished in deportations
    and orchestrated killings during World War I.

    Turkey counters that 300,000 to 500,000 Armenians and at least as
    many Turks perished in civil strife when Armenians rose up against
    their Ottoman rulers and sided with Russian forces invading the
    crumbling empire.
    From: Baghdasarian
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