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  • BAKU: Armenia optimistic for Turkey

    Baku Sun
    July 2, 2004

    Armenia optimistic for Turkey

    YEREVAN (AP) - Armenia Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian said Wednesday
    that a brief meeting with the Turkish leader on the sidelines of this
    week's NATO summit convinced him that relations could improve between
    the uneasy neighbors.

    Oskanian spoke for 10 minutes with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan at the summit in Istanbul, which was also attended by numerous
    leaders from non-NATO member states such as Armenia. President Robert
    Kocharian had refused to attend, saying that he was dissatisfied with
    his country's relations with Turkey.

    `During that meeting I was again convinced that the current Turkish
    government sincerely wants to achieve a change for the better in
    resolving relations with Armenia,' Oskanian said, without elaborating.

    Armenia and Turkey do not have diplomatic relations. Armenians accuse
    Turks of a genocide of up to 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and
    1923. Turks claim the number of deaths is inflated and say the victims
    were killed in civil unrest.

    Armenia and Turkey are also at odds over Nagorno-Karabakh, a region
    within Azerbaijan that has been under ethnic Armenian control since a
    war that ended in 1994 without a political settlement. Azerbaijanis and
    Turks share close ethnic ties, although recently Turkey has expressed a
    willingness to improve relations with Armenia.

    Oskanian said that he used a separate meeting his with his Turkish
    counterpart, Abdullah Gul, to discuss the possibility of resuming
    railroad service between their nations. Turkey, which supported
    Azerbaijan in the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, has maintained an
    economic blockade of Armenia, hobbling economic development in this
    landlocked ex-Soviet republic.

    Oskanian noted, however, that despite gradually developing ties with
    Turkey, Armenia would object to Turkey `pretending to be an impartial
    mediator' in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    Oskanian also said that he held discussions Wednesday with the U.S.
    administration about Armenia's intention to veto a proposal that would
    give Turkey the acting chairmanship of the Organization for Security
    and Cooperation in Europe in 2007. Oskanian said that Armenia thinks
    the role can only be filled by a nation that has diplomatic relations
    with all the OSCE's member states. But he added that Armenia was still
    holding talks on the issue.
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