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Turkey and Central Asia Eye Closer Security Ties

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  • Turkey and Central Asia Eye Closer Security Ties

    Turkey and Central Asia Eye Closer Security Ties
    By REUTERS, ANKARA

    Defensenews.com
    Posted 11/17/06

    Turkey called on Central Asian states on Nov. 17 to form a united
    front with Ankara in fighting terrorism and cross-border crime.

    Turkey, hosting a gathering of Turkic-speaking countries in its
    Mediterranean resort of Antalya, also pledged continued strong support
    for Muslim ally Azerbaijan in its long dispute with Armenia over the
    territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    "The development and stability of the Eurasian region are threatened
    by international terrorism, religious fundamentalism, separatist and
    extremist currents, illegal migration and other organized crimes
    such as drug and weapons smuggling," President Ahmet Necdet Sezer
    told his fellow leaders in televised remarks.

    "We attach great importance to multi-level cooperation in the struggle
    with terrorism and on issues which pose a threat to the region's
    development," he said, adding that Turkish business should step up
    investment in energy-rich Central Asia.

    Turkish firms are already active across the region, especially in
    construction, though Ankara has abandoned the ambitious hopes of
    building a pan-Turkic commonwealth that it nurtured in the early
    1990s after the Soviet Union's demise.

    The presidents of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Azerbaijan were in
    Antalya for the two-day summit.

    But President Islam Karimov of Uzbekistan stayed away in protest at
    Turkey's support for a U.N. report critical of his autocratic rule,
    Turkish media said. Turkmenistan's reclusive leader also did not show
    up, sending an envoy instead.

    Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiyev called for more joint transport
    and communications projects to help bind together a vast, mostly
    under-developed and poor region that stretches from the Balkans to
    China's western border.

    Azeri President Ilham Aliyev sought political support for his country's
    efforts to regain Nagorno-Karabakh, controlled by Armenian separatists
    since armed conflict erupted in the early 1990s which killed an
    estimated 35,000 people.

    A major pipeline linking Caspian Sea oil fields to world markets
    passes a few km from the conflict zone to Turkey.

    Sezer made clear Ankara's continued solidarity with Azerbaijan
    despite concerns that Turkey's poor relations with Armenia - their
    shared border is closed due to the Karabakh dispute - could hurt its
    efforts to join the European Union.

    "I want to stress our continued resolve to support fraternal Azerbaijan
    on the Nagorno-Karabakh issue," Sezer said.
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