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ANKARA: Gul Tells Armenia To Solve Its Problems With Azerbaijan

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  • ANKARA: Gul Tells Armenia To Solve Its Problems With Azerbaijan

    GUL TELLS ARMENIA TO SOLVE ITS PROBLEMS WITH AZERBAIJAN
    EmÝne Kart Ýstanbul

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    June 26 2007

    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said Armenia should work to resolve
    its territorial disputes with neighboring Azerbaijan, suggesting that
    this would help the landlocked country to resolve its problems with
    Turkey, too.

    Gul made the suggestion at a rare meeting with Vartan Oskanian,
    the Armenian foreign minister, on the sidelines of a meeting of
    the Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC) in Istanbul. Neighbors
    Turkey and Armenia have no formal ties due to disputes over Yerevan's
    support for Armenian diaspora efforts worldwide to win international
    recognition for an alleged genocide of Armenians at the hands of
    the Ottoman Empire as well as due to the continuing occupation of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian enclave within Azerbaijan, by Armenian
    forces. Turkey also refuses to open its border gate with Armenia,
    closed following Armenian occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh in the past
    decade, unless there is an improvement in Armenia's stance.

    Oskanian said at the closed-door meeting with Gul that Armenia wanted
    to improve ties with Turkey and stressed that the reopening of the
    border would help mend fences, a Turkish diplomat close to the talks
    said. Gul, however, responded that Armenia should work to resolve
    the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.

    "We also expect some gestures from you," the diplomat quoted Gul
    as saying, in reference to a Turkish proposal to set up a joint
    committee of Turkish and Armenian academics to study the genocide
    allegations. At a press conference following his talks with Gul,
    Oskanian expressed disappointment at the lack of progress.

    He said unlike leaders of the rest of other member countries of BSEC,
    Armenian President Robert Kocharian declined to come to Ýstanbul to
    attend the 12-nation organization's 15th anniversary summit because
    there were no diplomatic relations between Turkey and Armenia.

    He noted that Kocharian had come to Turkey when he first came to
    power in 1998, to attend a meeting of the Organization for Security
    and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) because he then had high hopes for
    peace and progress. "Unfortunately there has been no change since
    then," he told the conference.

    Oskanian reiterated that Armenia had no precondition for improvement of
    relations with Turkey but complained that Turkey had clear conditions
    to take any step in this direction. The Armenian foreign minister
    criticized Turkish conditions to open the border gate and claimed
    that they were not "justifiable."

    Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen died in a systematic
    genocide campaign during World War I, but Ankara categorically rejects
    the label, saying that both Armenians and Turks died in civil strife
    during World War I when the Armenians took up arms for independence in
    eastern Anatolia and sided with Russian troops invading the crumbling
    Ottoman Empire.

    --Boundary_(ID_lgK1AJSWlODPtAbOIwbpmQ)--
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