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ANKARA: Armenian FM Says Obama's April 24 Statement A Step Forward

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  • ANKARA: Armenian FM Says Obama's April 24 Statement A Step Forward

    ARMENIAN FM SAYS OBAMA'S APRIL 24 STATEMENT A STEP FORWARD

    Hurriyet
    April 28 2009
    Turkey

    ISTANBUL - U.S. President Barack Obama's statement regarding the 1915
    incidents is a "step forward" compared with the statements made by
    former U.S. presidents, Armenia's Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian
    said Monday.

    "There are very strong points in this statement. President Obama said
    that he has many times expressed his approach toward what happened
    in 1915, and he has not changed his opinion. President Obama used the
    'Meds Yeghern' phrase, we - Armenians - use either the 'genocide' or
    'Meds Yeghern' concepts," Nalbandian told the Armenpress News Agency.

    "But of course, all Armenians were waiting for the U.S. president to
    utter the word 'genocide,'" he added.

    Obama, who pledged to recognize the Armenian claims regarding the
    1915 incident during his presidential campaign, did not use the word
    "genocide" while describing the events in his annual April 24 statement
    to mark the "day of remembrance of the Armenian deaths."

    Instead, he used the Armenian term for the killings, "Meds Yeghern,"
    which has been variously translated into English as the "Great
    Calamity" or "Great Disaster." He also branded the events as "one of
    the great atrocities of the 20th century."

    TURKEY-ARMENIA THAW Nalbandian also praised "the important personal
    assistance" Obama displayed for the normalization of relations between
    Turkey and Armenia.

    Obama's statement came days after Turkey and Armenia announced that
    under Switzerland's mediation they agreed on a comprehensive framework
    for the normalization of ties between the two neighboring countries
    that have not had diplomatic relations for more than a decade. The
    U.S. president extended his support to the normalization process.

    Nalbandian said Armenia is seeking to fully normalize relations with
    Turkey without preconditions, including those connected with the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and recognition of the "genocide" claims.

    He said he hopes that once the two countries normalize their relations
    the leaders from Turkey and Armenia would attend the ceremonies
    commemorating the 1915 incidents together.

    "I hope that when we improve - normalize our relations - not only
    will the leadership of our country put flowers in Tsitsernakaberd but
    the Turkish leadership will join us. Why can we not do what Charles
    de Gaulle and Adenauer did? I am sure that such a day will come and
    Armenian and Turkish leaders will make that step," he said.
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