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Armenia halts ratification of Turkey deal

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  • Armenia halts ratification of Turkey deal

    Agence France Presse
    April 22, 2010 Thursday 3:16 PM GMT


    Armenia halts ratification of Turkey deal

    Yerevan, April 22 2010


    Armenia said Thursday it was halting ratification of an accord on
    normalising ties with Turkey, dealing a critical blow to the two
    countries' efforts to overcome decades of hostility.

    President Serzh Sarkisian said that the Armenian parliament would no
    longer consider ratifying the US-backed deal, but he insisted Armenia
    was not withdrawing fully from the peace process.

    "We have decided... not to exit the process for the time being, but
    rather, to suspend the procedure of ratifying the protocols. We
    believe this to be in the best interests of our nation," Sarkisian
    said in a televised address.

    "Armenia shall retain her signature under the protocols, because we
    desire to maintain the existing momentum for normalising relations,
    because we desire peace," he added.

    Sarkisian lashed out at Turkey for trying to set "preconditions" on
    the deal, in a clear reference to Ankara's position that the process
    cannot move forward without progress in Armenia's conflict with
    Turkish ally Azerbaijan over the breakaway Nagorny Karabakh region.

    "For a whole year, Turkey's senior officials have not spared public
    statements in the language of preconditions," he said.

    "From this moment on, we consider the current phase of normalisation exhausted."

    Armenia's ruling coalition of three parties had earlier announced it
    was freezing ratification of the deal because "the Turkish side is
    refusing to ratify the protocols without preconditions and in a
    reasonable timeframe."

    The coalition described as "unacceptable" recent statements by Turkish
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan that it said linked the process of
    ratifying the protocols "with the process of settling the
    Karabakh-Azerbaijani conflict".

    Erdogan refused to back down, saying in response to the statement that
    Turkey remained faithful to reconciliation with Armenia but insisted
    on conditions.

    "We have expressed on several occasions our commitment to the letter
    and spirit of the protocols and the target of putting them into
    practice," Erdogan told reporters in Ankara.

    "We have also explained on several occasions... how the ratification
    process can be advanced and how we can achieve the target of
    comprehensive peace in the region. Our determination remains
    unchanged," he added.

    Erdogan's mention of regional peace was a clear reference to Turkey's
    position linking the reconciliation with Nagorny Karabakh.

    Armenia and Turkey signed a landmark deal in October to establish
    diplomatic ties and re-open their border after decades of hostility
    over Ottoman-era massacres of Armenians during World War I.

    But the deal, which needed parliamentary ratification in both
    countries to take effect, faltered amid mutual accusations that the
    other side is not committed to reconciliation.

    Analysts warned the decision to freeze ratification had dashed what
    little hope remained of the reconciliation process quickly moving
    forward.

    "It's a big step backwards for the process and I'm not sure it can
    continue in its current form," Yerevan-based political analyst Gevorg
    Pogosian said.

    The announcement of the freeze came two days before Armenians mark the
    95th anniversary of the 1915-1917 massacres, which they insist
    constituted genocide. Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin
    perished in deportations and orchestrated killings during World War I
    but Turkey rejects the genocide label and says that 300,000 to 500,000
    Armenians and at least as many Turks perished in civil strife as the
    Ottoman Empire crumbled.

    Ankara accused Yerevan of undermining the reconciliation efforts after
    a January ruling of Armenia's constitutional court cleared the deal
    but said it could not contradict Yerevan's official line that
    Armenians were victims of genocide.

    Yerevan for its part has repeatedly slammed Turkey's linking of the
    deal with the dispute over Karabakh.

    Turkey sealed its border with Armenia in 1993 in a show of solidarity
    with Azerbaijan after ethnic Armenian separatists, backed by Yerevan,
    seized the Nagorny Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts
    from Baku in a war that claimed an estimated 30,000 lives.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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