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Turkey Renews Support For Baku Over Karabakh

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  • Turkey Renews Support For Baku Over Karabakh

    TURKEY RENEWS SUPPORT FOR BAKU OVER KARABAKH

    Agence France Presse -- English
    April 4, 2006 Tuesday 3:15 PM GMT

    Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer on Tuesday renewed his country's
    support for Azerbaijan in its territorial dispute with its fellow
    former Soviet republic of Armenia.

    The dispute over the ethnic Armenian enclave of Nagorno Karabkh
    "should be resolved within the framework of the territorial integrity
    of Azerbaijan," Sezer told reporters after meeting his Azerbaijani
    counterpart Ilham Aliyev.

    This is "in line with international norms," Sezer added.

    The status of the mountainous region, controlled by Armenian forces
    since Yerevan and Baku signed a ceasefire in 1994 after a six-year
    war, remains unresolved and Turkey has backed the Azerbaijanis in
    the dispute.

    The ceasefire is periodically broken and tensions have escalated
    as troops form both sides make the annual move into high mountain
    positions during the spring thaw. At least half a dozen soldiers have
    been killed this year alone.

    Sezer was speaking at a news conference during a two-day official
    visit to Baku, where he also lauded economic ties with the booming
    Caspian Sea oil economy, saying total trade volume would hit one
    billion dollars (800,000 euros) in 2006.

    Both Turkey and Azerbaijan have severed ties with Armenia, closing
    borders and imposing an economic blockade on Yerevan as a result of
    the Karabakh dispute.

    Ankara is under European Union pressure to normalize ties with Armenia
    but worries that reconciliatory moves sought by the bloc may damage
    its alliance with Azerbaijan.

    Turkish-Armenian ties have also been strained by Yerevan's campaign to
    have the World War I massacres of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire
    internationally recognized as genocide.
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