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Armenia: Foreign Minister Appeals For EU Pressure On Turkey

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  • Armenia: Foreign Minister Appeals For EU Pressure On Turkey

    ARMENIA: FOREIGN MINISTER APPEALS FOR EU PRESSURE ON TURKEY
    By Ahto Lobjakas

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep.
    Oct 9 2007

    October 9, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian
    today called on the European Union to press Turkey to open its border
    with Armenia, saying Yerevan has no preconditions for normalizing
    relations with Ankara.

    Addressing the European Parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee in
    Brussels, Oskanian admitted that there are "outstanding issues" in
    the countries' relations, but said that none should stand in the way
    of dialogue.

    Armenia and Turkey continue to disagree over the status of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, the disputed ethnic-Armenian region in Azerbaijan,
    and are clearly at odds over the interpretation of the mass killings
    of Armenians that took place in Ottoman Turkey between 1915-18.

    Oskanian's comments mirror those he made last week in New York, where
    he attended the 62nd session of UN General Assembly and met with his
    Turkish counterpart, Ali Babacan.

    They also come as a U.S. Congressional committee prepares to consider
    on October 10 a draft resolution that would define the World War
    I-era killings as genocide.

    Oskanian appealed to the European Parliament's Foreign Affairs
    Committee to put more pressure on Turkey to open a dialogue with
    Armenia. He said land-locked Armenia is particularly keen to see Turkey
    lift the border blockade it imposed against Armenia in the early 1990s.

    "The border opening is not only important for Armenia, but it's also
    important for the European Union, because Turkey is the natural bridge
    between the Caucasus and Europe, and the European Union," Oskanian
    said. "Without Turkey's equitable and even-handed policy vis-a-vis
    our region, our relationship is not as effective as it could have
    been under conditions of normal ties between Turkey and Armenia."

    An Urgent Issue

    Oskanian's call was met with some sympathy among the European deputies
    in attendance. The chairwoman of the European Parliament's delegation
    for the South Caucasus, Marie Anne Isler-Beguin, said the bloc was
    not putting enough pressure on Turkey during EU-accession talks.

    Isler-Beguin said opening the border would greatly benefit both
    sides. An impact study on the effects of the border closure on
    both Armenia and Turkey found that it is "really urgent to open the
    border for the good of the populations on both sides," she said. The
    European Parliament is scheduled to hold a hearing on the issue in
    early November, during which the study will be made public.

    Oskanian criticized the EU for its "neutrality" on the issue, an
    attitude he said was understandable, but misplaced.

    He claimed that while Armenia has no preconditions to pursue closer
    links between the two countries, Turkey does. He dismissed Ankara's
    concern that Armenia harbors territorial claims against it, saying
    the border between the two countries is "clearly marked" and conforms
    to the boundary set out in a 1922 treaty between Turkey and the
    Soviet Union.

    Oskanian also said Armenia's conflict with Azerbaijan over the
    ethnic-Armenian region of Nagorno-Karabakh does not involve Turkey
    and should not be raised by Ankara in a bilateral context.

    He also rejected a call by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan to set up a commission to study the events of 1915-18. He
    said talks on the issue remain impossible as long as Turkey's penal
    code continues to criminalize any depiction of the mass killings as
    "genocide." Oskanian also said dialogue was impossible as long as
    the border between the two countries is closed.

    Balancing Between East And West

    Armenia's difficulties with Turkey undermine much of the country's
    policy of "complementarity," its balancing act in relation to its
    neighbors and global players with an interest in the region.

    Oskanian explained the policy as a refusal to "choose between East
    and West" in other countries' disputes and conflicts, and to remain
    "considerate" to everyone's interests.

    "For countries like Armenia there is no reason to choose between one
    [side] and another. We will benefit from all the opportunities that
    are available from all sides in security terms, energy terms, economic,
    and otherwise, so that we augment the end product as much as we can,"
    Oskanian said.

    Oskanian defended Armenia's heavy reliance on Russia in security and
    energy issues, saying both were necessitated by blockades imposed
    by neighbors.

    He also described as "absolutely inappropriate" Azerbaijan's attempts
    to discuss Nagorno-Karabakh at the United Nations. He said Armenia
    believes the OSCE Minsk Group remains the only appropriate venue for
    talks on the frozen conflict.

    Oskanian said the OSCE talks have revealed "serious prospects of
    resolution," noting that only four issues remain from a three-page
    document addressing the "basic principles" of resolving the conflict.

    Oskanian said that so far the two countries' leaders have been unable
    to come to a consensus on the four issues, but expressed hope that the
    differences could be overcome before Armenia's presidential elections
    in February 2008.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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