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ANKARA: Kiniklioglu: we pass Turkish concerns to Armenians

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  • ANKARA: Kiniklioglu: we pass Turkish concerns to Armenians

    KINIKLIOGLU: WE PASS TURKISH CONCERNS TO ARMENIANS

    Today's Zaman
    May 27 2009
    Turkey

    Suat Kiniklioglu, member of Parliament and deputy chairman of external
    affairs for the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party),
    has said a workshop like this week's Turkey-Armenia relations gives
    an opportunity to Turkey to talk about concerns of the both sides
    as the process of rapprochement with Armenia continues. "We want
    to share the concerns in Turkey here. Even from the language used
    at the workshop we see that we don't know each other well. We talk
    about Turkey-Armenia relations as well as Azerbaijan's role in it
    in the context of regional dynamics," said Kiniklioglu yesterday at
    Turkey-Armenia Relations Workshop organized by the Foundation for
    Political Economic and Social Research (SETA).

    Asked about the influence of the Karabakh issue in that regard,
    Kiniklioglu said there is parallel process to the Turkey-Armenia
    negotiations on the issue taken by the Minsk group. "The process
    is parallel and they support each other. But these are difficult
    topics. They would have been solved in 16 or 17 if they were easy,"
    he said. "Turkey has good relations with both Azerbaijan and Georgia,
    and wants to add Armenia into this. News of the normalization process
    with Armenia affects Karabakh but the film is continuing and there
    will be developments, hopefully positive." He also indicated that
    normalization of relations with Armenia and resolution to the Karabakh
    conflict are both "mutually reinforcing each other and interacting."

    Attending the workshop Alexander Iskandaryan, director of the Caucasus
    Institute based in Yerevan, said that they don't expect that the
    border between Armenia and Turkey will be open soon, closed by Turkey
    in 1993 protesting the Armenian occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh in
    Azerbaijan. "We don't expect that the border will be open in a short
    period of time but once the border opens historical dimension of
    Turkey-Armenia relations will not be so much important," he said.

    Most of the participants at the workshop indicated that a closed
    border with Armenia, "an anomaly of the Cold War years," should be
    corrected, and this is the last legacy of the Soviet Union as NATO
    member Turkey faces a closed border.

    Bulent Aras from SETA said the Cold War has been continuing in the
    Caucasus although it ended in the rest of the world. Yonca Poyraz
    Dogan Istanbul
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