Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

BAKU: Ankara Keen On Mediating Garabagh Conflict Settlement

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • BAKU: Ankara Keen On Mediating Garabagh Conflict Settlement

    ANKARA KEEN ON MEDIATING GARABAGH CONFLICT SETTLEMENT

    AzerNews Weekly
    Sept 17 2008
    Azerbaijan

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan intends to discuss the Upper
    (Nagorno) Garabagh conflict with his Armenian and Azerbaijanian
    counterparts in late September.

    "The Garabagh conflict is also Turkey`s problem," Babacan said,
    stressing that while in Yerevan, he had forwarded to the Armenian
    foreign minister a proposal on arranging a meeting of the three
    countries` foreign ministers, and the initiative was accepted.

    "After meeting my Azerbaijani counterpart and inquiring about his
    views, we will be able to hold such a meeting on the sidelines of
    the UN session," he told a local television channel.

    Babacan stressed that peace talks are expected to intensify after
    Azerbaijan`s October 15 presidential election.

    The 63rd session of the UN General Assembly began in New York on
    Tuesday.

    The Garabagh conflict will be discussed by Turkish and Armenian
    Presidents Abdullah Gul and Serzh Sarkisian on the sidelines of the
    session, CNN Turk TV channel said. Given that the meeting will be
    held shortly before elections in Azerbaijan, President Ilham Aliyev
    will not be able to attend, the report said.

    In reference to Turkish-Armenian relations, Babacan said outstanding
    differences cannot be unilaterally ironed out.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian has told CNN Turk that if
    efforts are being made to normalize ties between Ankara and Yerevan,
    no pre-conditions should be set.

    "If we seriously and sincerely want to make amends, we should not talk
    about any conditions, as restoring relations between Turkey and Armenia
    would benefit both countries. Peace should not be expected in the
    region until the Ankara-Yerevan relations are rectified, because a full
    integration of the region is impossible with the border being closed."

    The presidents of Turkey and Armenia attended a soccer match together
    in the Armenian capital on Saturday. Yerevan called the accompanying
    talks an opportunity to forge ties with the neighboring country.

    Armenia and Turkey have been at odds and the border between the two
    countries has been closed since 1993 on Ankara`s insistence due to
    Armenia`s policy of occupation of Azerbaijan territory and its claims
    that Ottoman Turks committed mass killings in the early 20th century.

    Nalbandian pledged that if Turkish-Armenian relations normalize,
    Armenia will not put forth its "genocide" claims and all unresolved
    issues would be solved through negotiations.

    Yury Merzlyakov, Russian co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group (MG),
    a team of US, Russian and French diplomats brokering Garabagh peace
    talks, has confirmed that Turkish, Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign
    ministers are due to meet. He said, however, that the date of the
    meeting has not been scheduled.

    Merzlyakov said the possibility of such a ministerial meeting was
    discussed by the Azerbaijani and Armenian ministers during their
    meeting in Moscow on August 1.

    "The three ministers` meeting is a good idea and the co-chairs would
    only welcome that," the diplomat said.

    He emphasized that it was wrong to cite possible changes in the format
    of peace talks. "Turkish President Abdullah Gul`s mediation [of talks]
    between the Azerbaijani and Armenian leaders could be beneficial for
    the resolution of the Garabagh conflict."

    Merzlyakov added that the MG co-chairs are expected to visit the
    region soon.

    Meanwhile, the Armenian opposition expressed concern over Turkey`s
    actively joining peace talks, claiming that Ankara`s assuming a
    mediating role in the peace process has raised eyebrows. It further
    maintained that Turkey`s mediation is unacceptable, given that the
    country is Azerbaijan`s closest ally.

    The conflict between the two South Caucasus republics reared up
    in the late 1980s due to Armenia`s territorial claims. Armenia has
    been occupying over 20% of Azerbaijan`s internationally recognized
    territory since the early 1990s. Years of peace talks have brought
    few tangible results. Azerbaijani officials have repeatedly warned
    against Armenia`s policy of aggression, saying the country`s land
    will be freed at any cost.
Working...
X