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Turkey PM Says Not To Open Border With Armenia Unless Nagorno- Karab

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  • Turkey PM Says Not To Open Border With Armenia Unless Nagorno- Karab

    TURKEY PM SAYS NOT TO OPEN BORDER WITH ARMENIA UNLESS NAGORNO- KARABAKH CONFLICT SOLVED

    Xinhua General News Service
    April 14, 2010 Wednesday 1:19 AM EST
    China

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Wednesday the border
    between Turkey and Armenia would remain closed unless a solution
    was reached in the conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region, the
    semi-official Anatolia news agency reported.

    Turkey is ready to open the border as soon as Armenia ends " occupation
    of Azerbaijan's territory," Erdogan was quoted as telling reporters
    upon his arrival in Turkey from the Nuclear Security Summit held in
    the United States from April 12 to 13.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 to support Azerbaijan,
    which had a territorial conflict with Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh
    region. Ankara has said the border could be opened only after the
    withdrawal of Armenian troops from the disputed land.

    Turkey and Armenia have no diplomatic or economic ties. The two
    neighbors signed protocols to normalize relations and open long-
    sealed borders last October but the move has stalled since then.

    The reconciliation process suffered a further blow after a U.S.

    congressional panel and the Swedish parliament last month passed
    resolutions that recognize killings of Armenians under Ottoman rule
    during the World War I as "genocide."

    Erdogan said Turkey stood behind its commitments in the protocols
    signed with Armenia last October to normalize relations, while noting
    that "no one has the right to impose one's own memories on Turkey"
    when referring to Armenia's "genocide" claim.

    Turkey strongly denies the "genocide" claim and has argued the
    Armenians were victims of widespread chaos and governmental breakdown
    as the Ottoman Empire collapsed before modern Turkey was founded
    in 1923.

    Erdogan also reiterated his support for a "democratic and diplomatic
    solution" of Iran's nuclear issue and Turkey's readiness to help find
    a settlement of problems in Kyrgyzstan.

    Last week, Kyrgyz opposition parties claimed to form an interim
    coalition government, while President Kurmanbek Bakiyev refused to
    step down and fled the capital to southern Kyrgyzstan after a day of
    bloody unrest.

    Bakiyev had not made any demand to Turkey for asylum, said Erdogan.
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