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Oskanian Says Armenia-Turkey Relations May Get Worse

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  • Oskanian Says Armenia-Turkey Relations May Get Worse

    OSKANIAN SAYS ARMENIA-TURKEY RELATIONS MAY GET WORSE

    http://www.asbarez.com/2009/05/21/oskanian- says-armenia-turkey-relations-may-get-worse/
    May 21st, 2009

    YEREVAN-Armenia's longtime former Foreign Minister, Vartan Oskanian,
    has said Turkey and Armenia will not be able to make progress in their
    efforts to normalize relations if Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan continues to bring the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict to the table,
    the Turkish Today's Zaman newspaper reported on Thursday.

    Oskanian's remarks came during a discussion with a group of Turkish
    journalists who are in Yerevan this week participating in the
    International Hrant Dink Foundation's Turkey-Armenia Journalist
    Dialogue Project.

    Speaking to the journalists, Oskanian warned that Ankara could make
    relations with Armenia even worse if Turkish officials continue to
    politicize the negotiations.

    "The moment we leave Karabakh out, we can improve Turkish-Armenian
    relations. If we bring Karabakh in, I really don't see this
    happening. Karabakh is a separate issue," Oskanian was quoted by Zaman
    as saying. "My conviction is that if Turkey normalizes its relations
    with Armenia first, then the Karabakh solution will be much easier."

    Oskanian said the Turkish Prime Minister began bringing the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict to the forefront of Turkey's negotiations
    with Armenia three months ago.

    "Until that time, I was really hoping that there was a change of
    policy on the part of Turkey and we would get results," he said.

    Visiting Baku last week, Erdogan reaffirmed his government's intention
    to link the two issues. "Occupation of Karabakh is the cause here
    and closing of the border is the effect. It is impossible for us to
    open the border unless that occupation ends," he told a joint press
    conference in Baku with Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev.

    Turkey, a non-actor in the Karabakh conflict, has been seeking to boost
    its role in the peace process by conditioning its own negotiations
    with Armenia to a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict being
    mediated by the US, France and Russia through the OSCE Minsk Group.

    The French co-chair of the group, Bernard Fassier, on Monday warned
    Ankara to drop efforts to link the two unrelated issues. He said
    that linking the Karabakh peace process with the normalization of
    Armenia-Turkish relations can jeopardize the new momentum in the
    Karabakh talks.

    Armenia's Government has also criticized Erdogan for the statements,
    saying they could hamper both processes.

    Oskanian reiterated those warnings, stressing also that Erdogan's
    threats to Armenians deport Armenians working in Turkey were also
    not helpful to fence-mending efforts between the two countries.

    "I am beginning to be concerned that not only will Turkish-Armenian
    relations not improve, but they may even get worse," said Oskanian,
    who founded the Yerevan-based Civilitas Foundation late last year to
    advocate peace and stability in the Caucasus.
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