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ANKARA: Armenia Responds To Gul's Remarks In Azerbaijan

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  • ANKARA: Armenia Responds To Gul's Remarks In Azerbaijan

    ARMENIA RESPONDS TO GUL'S REMARKS IN AZERBAIJAN
    Suleyman Kurt Ankara

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Nov 12 2007

    Armenian Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan has reiterated that his
    country is ready to normalize its relations with Turkey without
    any precondition, but added Yerevan would reject any "imposition"
    by Turkey or Azerbaijan.

    Sargsyan's remarks, made at a congress of his political party on
    Saturday during which he was nominated as a candidate for presidency
    for the February 2008 elections, came after Turkish President Abdullah
    Gul pledged solidarity with Azerbaijan during a visit there last
    week. Turkey severed formal ties with Armenia after Armenian troops
    occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian enclave within Azerbaijan,
    in the past decade. Ankara now says normalization of relations
    with Armenia depends on the withdrawal of Armenian troops from
    Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as Yerevan's stopping efforts to win
    international recognition for claims of an Armenian genocide at the
    hands of the late Ottoman Empire and formally recognize the current
    borders.

    In veiled remarks widely interpreted as directed at Armenia, Gul said,
    while examining a sword given to him as a gift during his visit to
    Azerbaijan, that one should always be ready to draw his sword in
    a region like the Caucasus. Gul, addressing a special session of
    Azerbaijani Parliament on Wednesday, said as long as Yerevan insists
    on continuing its efforts for designation of the World War I era
    killings of Anatolian Armenians as "genocide" by the parliaments
    of third countries, it cannot expect any development concerning the
    normalization of relations between Armenia and Turkey.

    "We will not let Turkey and Azerbaijan impose their will on us,"
    Sargsyan told the party meeting in remarks apparently aimed at
    responding to Gul. "We are ready to restart relations with Turkey
    without any precondition."

    Turkey, which denies charges of genocide, has called for a joint
    study of the Ottoman archives to discover what happened in the past,
    but Armenia refuses the offer, claiming that it is undisputed that
    what happened was genocide. Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of
    their kin were slaughtered in orchestrated killings during the last
    years of the Ottoman Empire. Turkey categorically rejects the claims,
    saying that 300,000 Armenians along with at least as many Turks died
    in civil strife which emerged when the Armenians took up arms for
    independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with the Russian troops
    who were invading Ottoman lands.
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