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  • BAKU: Turkish reporters meeting counterparts in Yerevan

    AzerNews Weekly, Azerbaijan
    Dec 18 2009


    Turkish reporters meeting counterparts in Yerevan
    18-12-2009 06:38:04

    Reporters of Turkey's major media outlets are meeting in the Armenian
    capital Yerevan with their counterparts. The discussions aim to forge
    ties and create an environment of mutual understanding by covering
    relations between the two nations, who face decades of enmity.
    The meeting, to last till Sunday, is taking place as part of a project
    of the Eurasia Partnership Foundation aiming to promote unbiased
    coverage in the Turkish and Armenian media, Novosti Armenii news
    agency reported. Attending the meeting are employees of Turkey's
    leading media, including CNN Turk and NTV channels, as well as
    Milliyet, Sabah, Hurriyet, Cumhuriyyet and Akhsham newspapers.
    Kadri Gursel, a Milliyet commentator, said at the meeting that Turkey
    will not ratify the agreement on normalizing ties signed with Armenia
    in October unless progress is made in settling the Armenia-Azerbaijan
    conflict over Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh. `And there is no change in
    Ankara's stance at this point.'
    Farhad Boratav, a CNN Turk department head, said Turkey and Armenia
    `are not a couple dancing tango, as the United States, Russia and
    Azerbaijan are also involved in this dance.'
    `No one was expecting Azerbaijan to put up such resistance [against
    normalization of Turkey-Armenia relations]. Neither was anyone
    anticipating Azerbaijan's pressure in the East-West energy game. And
    this is the reason of Turkey's ending up in a challenging situation.'
    The Turkish and Armenian governments signed protocols in Zurich
    October 10 to forge diplomatic ties and open the sealed border,
    following decades of hostility caused by the Armenian occupation of
    Azerbaijani territory and claims on `genocide' in the Ottoman Empire.
    Ankara's move caused a cool-down in its relations with Baku. Turkey
    assured its ally, however, that parliamentary approval of the
    documents depends on a fair Garabagh settlement.
    The meeting of the Turkish and Armenian reporters was funded by the
    Norwegian government and the US Agency for International Development
    (USAID).
    The two countries' journalists met for the first time in the Turkish
    town of Bursa this past October and discussed the media's role in
    promoting Turkey-Armenia reconciliation.*

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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