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ANKARA: More Contact With Armenia In The Offing, Says Babacan

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  • ANKARA: More Contact With Armenia In The Offing, Says Babacan

    MORE CONTACT WITH ARMENIA IN THE OFFING, SAYS BABACAN

    Today's Zaman
    Nov 13 2008
    Turkey

    Foreign Minister Ali Babacan (R) speaks during a joint press conference
    with his Algerian counterpart, Mourad Medelci, on Wednesday.

    Turkey will intensify contacts with Armenia and Azerbaijan, Foreign
    Minister Ali Babacan said yesterday, announcing that his Armenian
    counterpart, Eduard Nalbandian, will soon visit Turkey.

    Babacan, speaking at a news conference after talks with visiting
    Algerian Foreign Minister Mourad Medelci, also said he would visit
    Azerbaijan, which has been locked in a dispute with Armenia over
    Nagorno-Karabakh, under Armenian occupation since the early 1990s. The
    dates for the visits will be announced later, said Babacan, adding
    that there will be intense diplomacy among the three countries until
    end of the year.

    Babacan had three-way talks with Nalbandian and Azerbaijan's Foreign
    Minister Elmar Mammadyarov in New York on the sidelines of UN General
    Assembly in September, where they discussed the Nagorno-Karabakh
    dispute.

    The row has poisoned not only Armenia-Azerbaijan ties but also
    relations between Turkey and Armenia. Turkey severed its ties with
    Armenia and closed its border with the landlocked country in 1993 in
    show of solidarity with Azerbaijan. There have been no formal ties
    between the two countries since then, and Ankara says the normalization
    of relations depends on Armenian withdrawal from Nagorno-Karabakh and
    an end to Yerevan's support for the Armenian diaspora's efforts to
    win international recognition for claims that Armenians were subjected
    to genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire.

    President Abdullah Gul broke the ice when he paid a visit to Yerevan to
    watch a soccer match between the two countries' national teams in early
    September. Gul invited Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan to Turkey
    for the next game between the two countries' teams next year. But
    Babacan suggested the next meeting would be earlier than that.

    Asked when the two presidents would meet again, Babacan said it was
    not necessary to wait for another soccer game for the next top-level
    meeting between Turkey and Armenia. "My expectation is that such a
    meeting could take place in months," he said. "What is important here
    is the Caucasus platform for lasting peace and stability."

    Turkey has proposed a Caucasus Cooperation and Stability Platform
    to improve dialogue for conflict resolution among regional countries
    following a brief war between Georgia and Russia over the breakaway
    region of South Ossetia. The proposed platform is planned to include
    Russia, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkey.

    Russian President Dmitry Medvedev hosted a summit with Sarksyan
    and Azerbaijani President Ä°lham Aliyev early this month to discuss
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Babacan reiterated that Turkey supported
    the Russian initiative and said Russia's role was crucial in efforts
    to normalize relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    A new three-way meeting of the foreign ministers of Turkey, Azerbaijan
    and Armenia is also planned, but the agenda should be set carefully
    before deciding on a date, Babacan said. The foreign minister also
    said his Georgian counterpart told him in a recent visit to Ä°stanbul
    that Georgia would be part of the proposed Caucasus platform, despite
    earlier Georgian statements that the country would not sit at the same
    table with Russia unless it fully withdraws its troops from Georgia.

    Gul will visit Azerbaijan today to attend an energy summit in the
    capital city of Baku at the invitation of his Azerbaijani counterpart,
    President Aliyev.

    Turkey, Algeria discuss political, energy cooperation

    The foreign ministers of Turkey and Algeria have said they saw eye
    to eye on many issues when they met to discuss efforts for peace in
    the Middle East and cooperation in business and energy yesterday.

    "Algeria and Turkey are two countries that work for stability and
    peace in their region. Our views on many problems and our stances on
    the right solutions for regional problems overlap," Turkish Foreign
    Minister Ali Babacan said at a joint press conference with his Algerian
    counterpart, Mourad Medelci, in Ankara.

    Medelci said the two countries had grown apart from each other in the
    past but that they have been converging again in recent years. Now,
    he stressed, there is growing cooperation in many areas. He added
    that they had discussed expanded cooperation in trade, energy,
    investment, tourism and the banking sector and that, in politics,
    the two countries would work together for a more just world.

    Turkey currently imports liquefied natural gas from Algeria. Babacan
    said Algeria helps Turkey deal with shortages when there are
    fluctuations in natural gas supplies from other countries by increasing
    the amount of liquefied gas it provides. The two countries agreed
    to have more talks to expand the existing cooperation in this area,
    he added. Ankara Today's Zaman

    --Boundary_(ID_9Kq39z+WL7LYk2uCLR9GfQ)--
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