HistoryofTruth.com - Armenian Allegations

Saturday
May 26th
Text size
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size

ARMENIA REJECTS TURKISH DEMAND ON KARABAKH

E-mail Print PDF
Image

Armenia’s foreign minister has rejected Turkish calls for concessions in the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh in exchange for the historic rapprochement between Yerevan and Ankara.

Speaking to Reuters late on Friday, Edward Nalbandian said negotiations between Turkey and Armenia were over and both sides were obliged to move quickly to establish diplomatic relations and open their border under accords signed this month.

Turkish leaders say they want to see progress in negotiations between Armenia and Turkish ally Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh before parliament in Ankara ratifies the accords, a link Armenia rejects.

“Why did we sign two protocols if we are not going to ratify and implement them?” Nalbandian, 53, said in an interview in the Armenian capital, Yerevan.

“I think the whole international community is waiting for quick ratification and implementation and respect for the agreements which are in the protocols,” he said, speaking in English.

“If one of the sides will delay and create some obstacles in the way of ratification and implementation, I think it could bear all the responsibility for the negative consequences.”

Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with fellow Muslim Azerbaijan in its war with Armenian-backed ethnic Armenians in the mountain region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

“SEPARATE PROCESSES”

The deal has encountered opposition in both countries, but full rapprochement and an open border carries huge significance for Turkey’s clout as a regional power, for its bid to join the European Union and for landlocked Armenia’s crisis-hit economy.

But Ankara’s Turkic-speaking ally Azerbaijan has reacted angrily, fearing it will lose leverage over Armenians in their conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh. The dispute threatens to tilt energy policy in Azerbaijan, a supplier of oil and gas to the West through Turkey but which is also being courted by Russia.

Diplomats and analysts say Turkey, before it ratifies the accords, is seeking at least a small sign of progress in negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh, where a fragile ceasefire has held since 1994 but a peace deal has never been agreed.

Nalbandian said the Armenian-Turkish thaw and the Nagorno-Karabakh negotiations were “two separate processes.”

“This is not only the Armenian approach but the approach of the international community,” he said, adding that negotiations between Turkey and Armenia were over.

“Negotiations were finalised at the beginning of February.”

Analysts are uncertain how firm the Turkish condition for ratification really is, and say pressure on Ankara could mount with next April’s 95th anniversary of 1915 events, when the U.S. president traditionally issues a statement of commemoration.

Armenia says the eventswere genocide, and wants U. S. President Barack Obama to stick to an election campaign pledge to say the same. Turkey rejects the term, saying many people died on both sides of the conflict.

Mediators from the United States, Russia and France say they are making progress towards a peace deal on Nagorno-Karabakh in talks between Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan and Azerbaijan’s Ilham Aliyev.

But Nalbandian played down talk of an imminent breakthrough.

There is a “positive dynamic,” he said. “But to say that tomorrow or in one month’s time or in a very short period of time we will come to the agreement, I don’t think this is very serious.”

 

Interview

 

Mccurdy: Pressure Must Be Exerted On Armenia To Establish A Joint Commission Of Historians

Documentary

 

Aghet Propaganda, Movie Subtitles Replied

Ömer Engin Lütem

 

Elections In Armenia

Ergun Kirlikovali

 

Chatham University Global Focus Program:turkey, Armenia And Principles Of International Dispute Resolution

TABDC Policy Review, 2010 (pdf)

Advertisement