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ANKARA: Opening Armenian Border Adds to Caucasus Tension

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  • ANKARA: Opening Armenian Border Adds to Caucasus Tension

    Zaman Online, Turkey
    June 29 2005

    Opening Armenian Border Adds to Caucasus Tension
    By Enes Cansever, Ramil Ęsmailov
    Published: Wednesday June 29, 2005
    zaman.com

    On June 28, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is to make
    his first official visit to Azerbaijan after coming to office.

    Within the framework of the two-day visit, Erdogan will meet with
    Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev and other authorities. The visit
    will mainly emphasize economic matters. Prime Minister will also
    lay the foundations for the new Turkish Embassy building. As well as
    confirming Turkey's full support to Azerbaijan, the Prime Minister is
    expected to deliver messages about the Armenian occupation in Karabakh
    and the alleged Armenian genocide. Azerbaijan Presidential Foreign
    Policy Adviser Nevruz Mehmedov said, "Erdogan's visit can once again
    launch a new turn in the relations between the two countries." Advising
    that the foreign policies of Ankara and Baku were being executed upon
    a 'common' ground, Mehmedov noted that there was no other two such
    states like it in the world.

    Mehmedov said Azerbaijan is in favor of Turkey's current Armenia
    policy; the reopening of the Armenian border gate would raise tensions
    in the region and worsen the current situation in the Caucasus,
    he claimed, asking "What positive steps came from the Armenian party
    after the opening of Turkish air space?" Armenia receiving the support
    of its Diaspora presses Turkey to reopen of the border gate, he said:
    "On the one hand Armenia is willing to get closer with Turkey, on the
    other hand it increases its military built up in the vicinity of its
    border. What is this built up for?"

    On the so-called Armenian Genocide that until recently Turkey has
    remained indifferent, Mehmedov suggested, "Turkey could have brought
    about a solution before entering the 21st century." He also pointed
    out that the greatest support to Ankara in this regard came from Baku.

    Turkey's Azerbaijan Ambassador Turan Morali said Baku "had to make
    encouraging steps" so that Turkey could become more efficient in
    the region, during a June 27 news conference. Morali denied any link
    between Erdogan's visit and the domestic politics of Azarbaijan during
    the pre-electoral period.

    --Boundary_(ID_vYq2aKTKdxY8xfKH7knUbg)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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