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ANKARA: Armenian President Welcomes Turkish Plan For Caucasus Forum

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  • ANKARA: Armenian President Welcomes Turkish Plan For Caucasus Forum

    ARMENIAN PRESIDENT WELCOMES TURKISH PLAN FOR CAUCASUS FORUM

    Hurriyet
    Sept 3 2008
    Turkey

    Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan on Wednesday welcomed a Turkish
    proposal for a new forum in the volatile Caucasus region, AFP reported.

    Sargsyan was speaking after a meeting with a senior Turkish envoy on
    the eve of an expected visit to Armenia by Turkish President Abdullah
    Gul that would mark a major breakthrough in ties.

    "Armenia has always welcomed and welcomes all efforts directed at the
    strengthening of confidence, stability and security, and at deepening
    cooperation in the region," Sarkisian said in a statement after meeting
    with Gul's special envoy Unal Cevikoz in the Armenian capital Yerevan.

    He added Cevikoz's visit "raises the possibility of talks to settle
    mutual relations" between the two countries, which have no diplomatic
    ties.

    Sargsyan invited Gul to Armenia to watch together the 2010 World Cup
    qualifying round game between the two countries national teams on
    Sept. 6 to mark "a new symbolic start in the countries' relations".

    Gul's close circles and recent reports claim the Turkish president
    would accept the invitation and travel to Yerevan to watch the
    game. But Turkish officials have refrained from revealing the final
    decision until the last moment.

    Gul could become the first Turkish leader to visit neighboring Armenia
    on Saturday.

    NATO member Turkey has called for the establishment of a forum to
    boost cooperation in the Caucasus, involving regional countries
    and Moscow, after tensions between Georgia and Russia erupted in a
    military conflict last month.

    Turkey is among the first countries that recognized Armenia when it
    declared its independency. However there is no diplomatic relations
    between the two countries, as Armenia presses the international
    community to admit the so-called "genocide" claims instead of accepting
    Turkey's call to investigate the allegations, and its invasion of
    20 percent of Azerbaijani territory despite U.N. Security Council
    resolutions on the issue.

    A warming period had started between two neighboring countries when
    the two presidents exchanged letters after Sargsyan's election victory.
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