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ANKARA: Turkey Attempts To Breathe Life Into Armenia Reconciliation

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  • ANKARA: Turkey Attempts To Breathe Life Into Armenia Reconciliation

    TURKEY ATTEMPTS TO BREATHE LIFE INTO ARMENIA RECONCILIATION PROCESS

    Today's Zaman
    April 8 2010
    Turkey

    Turkey and Armenia signed protocols on the normalization of their
    relations in October, but it is not clear when they will go into
    force. Turkish Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Feridun Sinirlioglu
    discussed ways to overcome the deadlock in the reconciliation process
    in Yerevan.

    A senior Turkish diplomat arrived in Yerevan yesterday to deliver a
    letter from Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to Armenian President
    Serzh Sarksyan as a process of rapprochement aimed to restore relations
    between the two estranged neighbors has come to a stalemate.

    Erdogan, speaking to journalists during a visit to France, said Foreign
    Ministry Undersecretary Feridun Sinirlioglu visited Armenia as his
    special envoy. "We have sent Mr. Sinirlioglu there. We have sent my
    letter with him," Erdogan said, without elaborating on the contents
    of the letter. Sources told Today's Zaman that the letter contained
    a message that an agreement would better serve the interests of the
    two countries, especially when compared to the cost of a failure to
    make peace.

    Erdogan is expected to meet with Sarksyan on the sidelines of a
    nuclear summit in Washington next week. In Paris he was cautious,
    saying that whether the meeting will take place or not depends on
    the response to his letter. Erdogan will attend the summit on April
    12-13, along with the leaders of 46 other countries. US President
    Barack Obama, a staunch supporter of Turkish-Armenian efforts to
    normalize their relations, will have bilateral talks with Sarksyan
    but no meeting is currently scheduled with Erdogan, the White House
    has announced. Turkish officials said meetings with Obama or other
    world leaders could be scheduled in the coming days if necessary.

    Turkey and Armenia signed two protocols on normalizing their ties
    in October but the ratification of the documents in both national
    parliaments -- necessary for them to go into effect -- has been
    stalled as both sides accuse each other of modifying the protocols.

    Sinirlioglu discussed measures that could be taken to overcome the
    deadlock in Yerevan, according to Turkish sources. The private NTV
    television, meanwhile, reported that the Armenian parliament will
    soon begin discussing the protocols. The parliamentary debate on
    the protocols will increase the pressure on Turkey to do the same,
    NTV said.

    Sinirlioglu's visit to Yerevan also follows tensions between Turkey
    and the United States over a congressional committee vote on March
    4 to pass a resolution acknowledging Armenian claims of genocide at
    the hands of the late Ottoman Empire. Ankara is now waiting to see
    if Obama will use the word "genocide" in an annual message due to
    be released on April 24, which Armenians claim mark the beginning of
    the genocide campaign in Anatolia a century ago.

    Sinirlioglu was to tell the Armenian leadership that the diaspora's
    efforts to win international recognition for genocide claims had
    damaged the Turkish-Armenian reconciliation process, diplomatic
    sources speaking to Today's Zaman said. The senior diplomat's visit
    underlines that Turkey is still committed to the reconciliation
    process, disregarding the obstacles.

    When reminded of the lack of progress in Armenia's Nagorno-Karabakh
    dispute with Azerbaijan, the same sources said Sinirlioglu was not
    in Yerevan to discuss the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, but that this does
    not mean it will not come up in the talks. Turkey, a close ally of
    Azerbaijan, closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in protest of
    Armenia's occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh and the adjacent territory.

    The dispute is not formally linked with the Turkish-Armenian
    reconciliation process but Turkish leaders have repeatedly assured
    Azerbaijan that the border with Armenia will not be opened unless
    the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute is resolved.

    Response to the EU Meanwhile, Ankara criticized the European Union,
    which has linked Turkish-Armenian relations with Ankara's bid
    to join the 27-nation bloc. In a statement on Wednesday, Foreign
    Ministry spokesman Burak Ozugergin said Turkey was committed to the
    normalization of its ties with Armenia as part of its vision for
    regional peace and stability.

    "Turkey does not need to be reminded of this mission that it has
    [willingly] undertaken," he said.

    "Good relations with neighbors are very important in the framework of
    any country's entry to the European Union," EU Enlargement Commissioner
    Stefan Fule was quoted as saying by Armenian media on Tuesday during
    a visit to Yerevan.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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