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Armenia Won't Ratify Relations Deal Before Turkey: Speaker

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  • Armenia Won't Ratify Relations Deal Before Turkey: Speaker

    ARMENIA WON'T RATIFY RELATIONS DEAL BEFORE TURKEY: SPEAKER

    Agence France Presse
    December 24, 2009 Thursday 2:56 PM GMT

    The head of Armenia's parliament said Thursday that it will not ratify
    a landmark deal on ties with Turkey before the Turkish parliament does,
    accusing Ankara of setting new conditions on the agreement.

    "The National Assembly of Armenia will start discussions on the
    ratification of the protocols only after their ratification by the
    Turkish parliament," speaker Hovik Abrahamian told journalists.

    He accused Turkish officials of trying to link the ratification
    to Armenia's conflict with Azerbaijan over the disputed Nagorny
    Karabakh region and the question of whether World War I-era killings
    of Armenians under Ottoman Turkey constituted genocide.

    "These are not fair steps, as initially this was a question of
    normalising relations without preconditions," Abrahamian said.

    Turkey and Armenia signed two protocols in October on establishing
    diplomatic ties and re-opening their shared border in a deal hailed
    as a historic step towards ending decades of hostility stemming from
    the World War I-era massacres.

    But Armenia in recent weeks has expressed growing frustration over
    Turkey's failure to ratify the protocols, with President Serzh
    Sarkisian earlier this month threatening to walk away from the deal
    if Ankara "drags out" the process.

    Turkish officials have repeatedly said the agreements will not be
    ratified without progress in Armenia's dispute with Azerbaijan over
    Nagorny Karabakh.

    Backed by Yerevan, ethnic Armenian separatists seized control of
    Karabakh and seven surrounding districts from Azerbaijan during a
    war in the early 1990s that claimed an estimated 30,000 lives.

    Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in a show of solidarity
    with Azerbaijan -- with which it has strong ethnic, trade and energy
    links -- against Yerevan's support for the enclave's separatists.
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