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Turkey Says Accord Reached With Armenia On Roadmap

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  • Turkey Says Accord Reached With Armenia On Roadmap

    TURKEY SAYS ACCORD REACHED WITH ARMENIA ON ROADMAP

    AP
    2009-04-22 23:47:05

    ANKARA, Turkey (AP) - Turkey and Armenia have made solid progress
    toward reconciliation and reached agreement on a roadmap to normalize
    ties, a foreign ministry statement said Wednesday. The statement
    said the two countries have reached a framework agreement to work
    for a solution that will satisfy both sides. The development came
    just weeks after President Barack Obama, during a visit here, called
    on Turkey to reckon with its past, resolve its dispute with Armenia
    and reopen their shared border. The European Union has also mounted
    similar pressure on Turkey, which is a candidate for EU membership.

    Obama's call on this U.S. ally and predominantly Muslim country in
    early April heated up a public debate over what course Turkey should
    take in relations with Armenia. Turkey's government had already
    been working to improve ties with Armenia while facing deep-seated
    antagonism toward Armenia rooted in WWI-era killings and opposition
    from nationalists who oppose against concessions. The accord
    was announced hours after U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham
    Clinton praised what she described as bold reconciliation efforts
    between Turkey and Armenia. "Turkey and Armenia with the mediation
    of Switzerland have been engaged in intensive efforts to normalize
    their bilateral ties, develop good neighborly relations in mutual
    respect and progress peace, security and20 stability in the entire
    region," the Turkish Foreign Ministry statement said. "Both sides have
    recorded solid progress and reached mutual understanding to normalize
    ties in a way to satisfy both sides, agreeing on a comprehensive
    framework. Within this framework, a roadmap has been determined.

    A senior government official, however, said the agreement did not
    mean Turkey was ready to open the Turkish-Armenian border, closed
    in 1993. "It is out of question," he said, speaking on condition
    of anonymity because he was not allowed to speak to media. Turkey
    wants its talks with Armenia to advance in parallel with negotiations
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan over disputed territory controlled by
    Armenia. Turkey closed the border in support of Azerbaijan during its
    conflict with Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh region. Turkey backs
    Azerbaijan's claims to the disputed region, which has a high number of
    ethnic Armenian residents but is located within Azerbaijan's borders.

    Clinton said the United States has assured Azerbaijan it will intensify
    efforts to resolve the dispute. It was not immediately clear how
    Turkey and Armenia would tackle the sensitive and divisive issue
    of the Ottoman-era killings of Armenians. Armenians say 1.5 million
    Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turks around the time of World War
    I in what Armenians and several other nations recognize as the first
    genocide of the 20th century. Turkey vehemently rejects the allegat
    ion, saying the death toll is inflated and Armenians were killed in
    civil unrest as the Ottoman Empire collapsed. Turkey on Wednesday
    recalled its ambassador to Canada, after government ministers there
    reportedly took part in an event that labeled the Ottoman-era killings
    of Armenians as genocide. Ambassador Rafet Akgunay was called back for
    "thorough evaluations and consultations," Foreign Ministry spokesman
    Burak Ozugergin said, without saying why Akgunay was recalled or for
    how long. U.S. lawmakers have also introduced a resolution that would
    call the deaths genocide. If passed, the resolution could undermine
    efforts by Obama's administration to win NATO ally Turkey's help on
    key foreign policy goals such as fighting terrorism in Afghanistan.

    U.S. legislators almost passed a similar resolution two years ago,
    but congressional leaders did not bring it up for a vote after
    intense pressure from the Bush administration. Obama avoided the term
    "genocide" when he addressed Turkish lawmakers during his visit early
    April. But he said, in response to a question, that he had not changed
    his views. As a presidential candidate, Obama said the killings
    amounted to genocide. Armenia and Turkey do not have diplomatic
    relations and, despite overtures including Turkey's opening of an
    air corridor to the landlocked country, they have failed to establish
    a commission of historians to examine Turkish and Armenian archives
    and to share their 0Afindings with the public.

    However, they have been in closer contact since Turkey's President
    Abdullah Gul visited Armenia in September 2008 to watch a World Cup
    qualifying match as a goodwill gesture. The agreement has provided
    "a positive perspective" for the ongoing process, the foreign ministry
    statement said.
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