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Comments Of The Speaker Of Armenia's National Assembly

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  • Comments Of The Speaker Of Armenia's National Assembly

    COMMENTS OF THE SPEAKER OF ARMENIA'S NATIONAL ASSEMBLY

    08/31/05 16:08 EDT

    WASHINGTON (AP) - The speaker of Armenia's National Assembly said
    Wednesday he supports neighboring Turkey's application to join the
    European Union and suggested the eventual accession to the EU of
    other countries in the south Caucasus region.

    "What's wrong with having a neighboring country a member of the
    EU?" Artur Baghdasaryan replied when asked about Turkey's possible
    entry into the 25-nation organization. Baghdasaryan, leader of
    the center-right Orinats Yerkir (Country of Law) party in Armenia's
    governing coalition, said that if Turkey can comply with EU standards
    and join the EU, then other countries of the region should seek
    accession.

    "I see the future of our region in an expanded EU," he said at
    a meeting of the Center for Strategic and International Studies,
    a policy research group.

    Baghdasaryan was in Washington for talks with State Department
    officials, the U.S. Agency for International Development and the
    Millennium Challenge Account, a Bush administration aid program for
    which Armenia was among the first group of qualifying countries.

    He also said Turkey and Armenia, which do not have diplomatic
    relations, should "not set barriers to cooperation but sit down and
    talk, not avoiding past problems but moving forward with constant
    dialogue."

    The Turks and Armenians have been at odds for decades over the deaths
    of hundreds of thousands of Armenians at the time of World War I.
    Armenians say the Ottoman Turks caused the deaths of 1.5 million
    Armenians in a planned genocide and have demanded that Turkey recognize
    the killings as genocide.

    Turkey says the death toll is wildly inflated. Many Turks fear that
    Armenia is pressing for recognition of the killings as genocide as
    a step toward making territorial claims against Turkey.

    "The slaughter cannot be forgotten," Baghdasaryan said. "That would
    not be correct." He contended that the Holocaust occurred because
    Adolf Hitler reasoned the international community had ignored the
    genocide of the Armenians.

    On another foreign policy issue, he welcomed weekend talks between the
    presidents of Armenia and neighboring Azerbaijan over the disputed
    Nagorno-Karabakh enclave. Baghdasaryan said a resolution to the
    decade-old dispute would open the way to increased regional cooperation
    with the objective of turning the south Caucasus into a unified market.
    "There has to be compromise on both sides and a solution acceptable
    to both sides," he said.

    Tension between Armenia and Azerbaijan remains high more than
    a decade after a 1994 cease-fire ended a six-year war that left
    Nagorno-Karabakh, a mostly ethnic Armenian enclave within Azerbaijan,
    in Armenian hands.

    Some 30,000 people were killed and a million displaced, and the
    lack of resolution of the enclave's status has impeded the region's
    development.
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