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ANKARA: Right-Wing Party Defiant On Thorny Issues

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  • ANKARA: Right-Wing Party Defiant On Thorny Issues

    RIGHT-WING PARTY DEFIANT ON THORNY ISSUES

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Sept 10 2009
    Turkey

    Thursday, September 10, 2009 Vercihan Ziflioglu YEREVAN - Hurriyet
    Daily News

    Turkey wants Armenia to change its stance on thorny issues, such as
    the long-standing Nagorno-Karabakh dispute and 'genocide' issues,
    says a top official from a right wing Armenian party, adding they will
    not make concessions on these topics. Without progress on Karabakh,
    borders will not be opened, he adds

    While giving tacit support to normalization talks between Turkey and
    Armenia, a senior Armenian right wing official said his party would
    not make concessions on the long-standing territorial dispute over
    self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh region or the alleged "genocide"
    issue.

    "Despite the fact that no Turkish preconditions were mentioned in
    the protocols, Turkey still has them. The Turkish government wants
    Armenia to backpedal on the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute and the genocide
    issue," said Levon Lazarian, member of the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation, or Dashnaktsutyun, and former deputy foreign minister
    during the administration of Armenia's second President Robert
    Kocharyan. Dashnaktsutyun left Armenia's governing coalition in April
    in protest over the talks with Ankara.

    Turkey and Armenia agreed on steps toward establishing full diplomatic
    ties for the first time between the neighbors last month. The countries
    will hold six weeks of domestic debate over the protocols, drawn up
    under Swiss mediation, before they are submitted for ratification by
    their parliaments, the Turkish Foreign Ministry in Ankara said in a
    statement on its Web site on Sept. 1. Armenia's ministry issued an
    identical announcement.

    The first sign of rapprochement came in September last year, when
    Turkish President Abdullah Gul went to the Armenian capital of Yerevan
    to visit President Serge Sarkisian and watch a World Cup soccer
    qualifying match between the two countries. Sarkisian is expected to
    visit Turkey for a return match on Oct. 14.

    The two neighbors have no diplomatic relations and their border was
    closed in 1993 in response to Armenia's invasion of 20 percent of
    Azerbaijani territory and Armenia's pressure on the international
    community with the backing of its diaspora to support the genocide
    claims, instead of accepting Turkey's call to investigate the
    allegations. U.S. President Barack Obama visited Ankara in April and
    said he hoped efforts to normalize relations between the two would
    "bear fruit."

    Karabakh, border link

    Lazarian, who also served as education minister between 1998 and
    2001, said he believes that the border between Armenia and Turkey
    would not be opened without progress in the Karabakh issue. "Turkey
    places its loyalties with Azerbaijan. Without progress on Karabakh,
    borders will not be opened and the Turkish Parliament will fail to
    ratify the protocols," he said.

    Turkey suggested that a committee of Turkish and Armenian historians
    re-examine the events of 1915, which could open ways for Turks and
    Armenians to come together by using archives in Turkey, Armenia and
    other countries. Ankara has said the Turkish authorities would respect
    the conclusions of such a task force, but the Armenian leadership has
    rejected the overture, dismissing it as merely a political maneuver.

    Commenting on the offer of a committee of historians, Lazarian said:
    "Genocide is a fact and we, the Armenians spread all over the world,
    are the living proof of that. The foundation of a committee would
    mean Armenian suffering for a second time."

    The stance among the Armenian politicians over the events of 1915 is
    clear, no matter whether they are in the ranks of the ruling party
    or the opposition, said Lazarian. "There is only one way for Turkey
    regarding the solution of the problem: recognizing the genocide and
    take its historic responsibility. Progress could be made, if Turkey
    fulfills its responsibilities."

    Settling a century of animosity between Turkey and Armenia would help
    foster stability in the southern Caucasus, through which Caspian oil
    flows to European markets, experts say. It may also boost Turkish
    chances of achieving European Union membership and, predominantly,
    improve the country's relationship with the United States, where
    congress has been pressed to push for Turkish recognition of the
    1915 events.

    Lazarian also criticized Western nations for their mediation role in
    Armenian-Turkish negotiations, saying: "The West do have their own
    political agenda for the Caucasus region. So, they have made swift
    decisions on the Karabakh dispute. However, Karabakh has historical
    links with Armenia and we don't have any interest in abandoning
    the region."
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