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Armenia Has No Preconditions To Normalize Ties With Turkey, FM Says

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  • Armenia Has No Preconditions To Normalize Ties With Turkey, FM Says

    ARMENIA HAS NO PRECONDITIONS TO NORMALIZE TIES WITH TURKEY, FM SAYS

    AP Worldstream
    Published: Jun 25, 2007

    Armenia's foreign minister said Monday that his country was willing
    to normalize relations with Turkey without any preconditions.

    The foreign minister, Vartan Oskanian, told reporters at a regional
    economic conference in Istanbul that Armenia wants to have "good
    neighborly relations and open its borders" with Turkey.

    The two countries do not have diplomatic relations because of a
    historical dispute. Armenia says Turks killed up to 1.5 million
    Armenians around the time of World War I, toward the end of the
    Ottoman Empire, in what should be labeled genocide. Turkey says the
    killings occurred at a time of civil conflict and that the casualty
    figures are inflated.

    "My key message today was that Armenia wants to see that border open,"
    said Oskanian, who held a meeting with his Turkish counterpart,
    Abdullah Gul.

    The Armenian minister said the genocide issue was "deeply rooted in
    the psyche" of his people, but was not an obstacle to having better
    relations.

    "Genocide recognition, although it's in our political agenda to
    pursue it, has never been a precondition to normalize the relations,"
    Oskanian said.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 during a war between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan, a Muslim ally of Ankara. The move hurt the
    economy of tiny, landlocked Armenia.

    This year, Turkey lobbied against a proposed U.S. congressional
    resolution that would recognize the killings of Armenians in the
    last century as genocide. Some of Turkey's 65,000 Armenian Orthodox
    Christians say they endure harassment in Turkey, which has an
    overwhelmingly Muslim population.

    Hrant Dink, an ethnic Armenian journalist murdered in Istanbul in
    January, was apparently targeted by nationalists. He had been an
    advocate of minority rights and free expression.
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