Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey's Railway Announcement 'Aimed To Appease Baku'

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkey's Railway Announcement 'Aimed To Appease Baku'

    TURKEY'S RAILWAY ANNOUNCEMENT 'AIMED TO APPEASE BAKU'

    Thursday, November 14th, 2013
    http://asbarez.com/116203/turkey%E2%80%99s-railway-announcement-%E2%80%98aimed-to-appease-baku%E2%80%99/

    ARF political affairs director Giro Manoyan

    ISTANBUL (Hurriyet Daily News)--Giro Manoyan, director of the
    international secretariat of the ARF, says Turkey's consideration
    of reopening the railway link between Turkey and Armenia is aimed at
    "opening a position in negotiations with Azerbaijan." Manoyan was in
    Istanbul to attend a Socialist International meeting.

    "I believe Mr. Davutoglu's announcement was more like a negotiation
    maneuver with Aliyev, rather than with Armenia. I'm not sure what
    Turkey is expecting from Azerbaijan, but I think Davutoglu's not so
    secret announcement, which was made during a closed door session in
    Parliament, was actually made public for the Turkish side to have a
    sort of opening position in negotiations with Azerbaijan," Manoyan
    said on Nov. 12 in an interview with the Hurriyet Daily News.

    Manoyan was in Istanbul to attend a council meeting of the Socialist
    International (SI), representing the ARF, which is an opposition party
    in the Armenian parliament, holding 5 of 90 seats. He was commenting
    on recent news reports that Turkey is considering reopening the
    Kars-Gyumri section of the Kars-Gyumri-Tbilisi railway line, which
    has not been operational since 1993, when Turkey closed the border
    with Armenia, amid its war with Azerbaijan for Nagorno-Karabakh.

    The idea to reopen the railway came as a question to Foreign Minister
    Ahmet Davutoglu during a closed-door Parliament briefing on Nov. 6.

    The minister said opening the border with Armenia and reopening the
    railway could be brought to the agenda under the framework of a peace
    plan that includes the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    Rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia stopped after signing the
    protocols in 2009, and there is nothing that has happened since then,
    Manoyan said. "So I don't think what Mr. Davutoglu said has anything
    to do with reality."

    "Consensus for moving on from recognition efforts" Manoyan, who is also
    a member of the State Commission for the Coordination of the Armenian
    Genocide Centennial, expressed his views on 2015 preparations. "There's
    a certain consensus among the Armenian community that they should
    move on from efforts to push Turkey to recognize the 1915 killings as
    genocide for the 2015 centennial campaign," according to Manoyan. "That
    doesn't mean there should be no recognition effort," he maintained,
    adding that they "should go further and start presenting claims
    regarding Armenian rights."

    "Discussions, studies are going on regarding what reparation claims
    should be made and there's some approach that regardless of whether
    Turkey recognizes the genocide or not, there are certain claims which
    can be made against Turkey as a state or those who have benefitted
    from Armenian properties, et cetera," Manoyan said.

    In further comments on the protocols signed between Armenia and
    Turkey in 2009 in an effort to normalize relations, Manoyan reiterated
    his party's position and suggested that Armenia should withdraw its
    signatures because "it has already given too much to Turkey."

    Instead, Armenia should put a very short draft on the table, with
    three to four paragraphs saying, "The two countries have decided
    to establish diplomatic relations, the two countries have decided
    to establish land links and develop economic and other ties, and
    the two countries have decided to resolve all outstanding issues
    between the two countries peacefully, based on international law,"
    according to Manoyan. "We should put this on the table and wait. If
    there's ever any government in Turkey that is really in a position
    to establish relations with Armenia, without any preconditions, then
    they sign it, we sign it and we start. Because the position Turkey
    has taken regarding Armenia, especially the blockade, is really,
    according to international law, an expression of hostility," he said.

Working...
X