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Armenia Says Protocols Will Fail If Not Ratified By March

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  • Armenia Says Protocols Will Fail If Not Ratified By March

    ARMENIA SAYS PROTOCOLS WILL FAIL IF NOT RATIFIED BY MARCH

    Asbarez
    Dec 18th, 2009

    YEREVAN (Hurriyet)-Time is running out for Ankara to ratify agreements
    signed in October to normalize relations between Armenia and Turkey,
    an assistant to the Armenian President warned on Friday during a
    press conference in Yerevan with visiting Turkish journalists, the
    Turkish Hurriyet daily reported.

    Vigen Sarkisian said Armenia will withdraw from the process if
    progress does not occur by March. "In March, there will be a point of
    no return. January is the best timeframe. After that, every morning
    it will be more difficult to do this than the day before."

    "The whole world has supported these protocols and they should be
    approved at once," Nalbandian was quoted by Hurriyet as saying. He
    expressed frustration that the deal has become embroiled with Turkish
    demands for Armenia to capitulate to a pro-Azerbaijani settlement of
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    Armenia's parliament has yet to ratify the protocols and, according
    to Hurriyet, officials in Yerevan said Friday they would do so only
    if the Turkish Parliament does so first.

    During the course of the press conference, Nalbandian was asked whether
    Armenia would make a symbolic step on the Karabakh front to appease
    Turkey and move the ratification process forward. Nalbandian insisted
    that the Karabakh issue is an absolute non-starter for Armenia, adding
    that the Karabakh peace process and the Turkey-Armenia rapprochement
    are two distinct and "parallel," issues that cannot be coupled.

    "There can be no preconditions - in the protocols there are absolutely
    no preconditions," Nalbandian said, adding that he was "saddened
    that three journalists have now asked the same question about Armenia
    taking a step on Nagorno-Karabakh."

    He said the Armenian and Azerbaijani presidents have met repeatedly
    on the matter, and that is where any discussion of Nagorno-Karabakh
    must remain.

    He said it would be inappropriate for him to comment on the domestic
    politics of Turkey behind Erdogan's declarations but said if the
    border-opening initiative dies, it will be the next generation of
    Turks and Armenians who will have to resolve their differences.

    "Turkey and Armenia have been divided for nearly 100 years," he said.

    "Let's not live this for another 100 years."
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