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Armenian President Urges Turkey To Drop Preconditions To Peace Talks

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  • Armenian President Urges Turkey To Drop Preconditions To Peace Talks

    ARMENIAN PRESIDENT URGES TURKEY TO DROP PRECONDITIONS TO PEACE TALKS

    World Markets Research Centre
    Global Insight
    April 14 2010

    The Armenian president Serzh Sargsyan's press office issued a
    statement on Monday (12 April) confirming that Sargsyan has spoken
    to Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the sidelines
    of a nuclear summit in the U.S. capital Washington D.C. about
    the progress of the bilateral peace process. According to the
    statement, Sargsyan reiterated the Armenian government's commitment
    to continuing the process of rapprochement with Turkey. However he
    has told Erdogan that "Turkey cannot speak to Armenia and Armenians
    in the language of preconditions." The Armenian president had urged
    the Turkish government to stick to the main principle of the two
    peace protocols--establishing diplomatic ties and opening common
    border checkpoints--without any preconditions. Sargsyan further had
    clarified that his country would not accept Turkish preconditions,
    which boil down to two demands--the Armenian government should drop
    the pursuit of international recognition of the mass killings of
    1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915-1917 as genocide;
    and the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh must
    be resolved in favour of Azerbaijan, Turkey's ethnic kin. The two
    protocols were mediated by the European Union (EU), United States
    and Russia and signed by the Armenian and Turkish foreign ministers
    in Zurich, Switzerland, on 10 October 2009 (seeTurkey - Armenia:
    12 October 2009:).

    Significance:The much hailed Armenian-Turkish rapprochement is
    progressing slowly with several twists and turns along the path to
    official reconciliation (seeTurkey - Armenia: 8 April 2010:). When
    Armenia and Turkey made the historic deal in 2009, many in the West
    hoped for a quick opening of diplomatic channels between the two
    peoples that have been divided by a centuries-old animosity. The
    Armenian president, partially aided by his near-absolute monopoly
    over power in his country, managed to make significant headway with
    the protocols. The Armenian constitutional court confirmed that the
    accords' implementation did not contradict the country's constitution
    and sent them to the National Assembly for ratification. However,
    Ergodan's government is backtracking on the agreements by imposing
    fresh preconditions which were not part of the deal in October 2009.

    The Turkish government is in a peculiar state as its hopes of
    containing the issue of the Armenian massacres as well as resolving
    the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict did not work out well. With the approach
    of 24 April, marked worldwide by Armenians as a day of commemoration
    of victims of the genocide, Turkey is likely to be under increased
    international pressure, particularly by the United States, to show
    at least some signs of compromise even if the government fails to
    deliver on them.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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