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Armenia wants open border with Turkey

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  • Armenia wants open border with Turkey

    Agence France Presse -- English
    January 19, 2007 Friday


    Armenia wants open border with Turkey

    YEREVAN, Jan 19 2007


    Armenia's defence minister joined calls on Friday for the border
    between his country and Turkey to be reopened as a step towards
    normalising relations.

    "I support this and I think that in the near future (the closure)
    will change. I think that relations need to be established with
    Turkey without any preconditions," Defence Minister Serzh Sargasian
    told journalists in the Armenian capital Yerevan.

    The 355-kilometre (221-mile) border was closed in 1993 at the height
    of the Nagorno Karabakh war in which ethnic-Armenian separatists in
    Azerbaijan took over almost a fifth of Azeri territory.

    Armenia fully backed the separatists, while Turkey gave diplomatic
    support to Azerbaijan.

    Armenia and Turkey are also in a dispute over Turkey's refusal to
    agree with Armenia that mass killings by Ottoman Turks of ethnic
    Armenians in 1915-1917 constituted genocide.

    Sargasian, who is considered likely to run for president in 2008,
    echoed comments made Thursday by the deputy foreign minister, Gegam
    Garibdzhanian, that "Armenia is ready to open the border with
    Turkey."

    Last weekend, business and political delegates at a Turkish-Armenian
    conference in Yerevan said that opening the border would increase
    Turkey's access to the Turkic-speaking countries of Central Asia,
    where Ankara has sought a greater role since the Soviet Union's 1991
    collapse.

    They said it would also increase trade and boost tourism. Armenians
    visit Turkey on holiday in large numbers, despite the lack of
    diplomatic ties.

    Ankara recognised Armenia's independence in 1991 but the two sides
    did not establish diplomatic ties. Turkey's drive to join the
    European Union has drawn greater attention to its relationship with
    its eastern neighbour in the strategic Caucasus region.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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