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Turkey hopes progress on Karabakh will allow progress on Armenia

Sat 21 November 2009 | 09:51 GMT

Turkey has said it is hopeful that Armenia and Azerbaijan will make progress on resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, thereby facilitating the imminent normalization of relations between regional foes Ankara and Yerevan.

“The technical work was completed with regard to the corridors linking Armenia to Karabakh. We are informed of the progress [regarding the negotiations],” a senior Turkish diplomat told the Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review.

The leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan, Serzh Sargsyan and Ilham Aliyev, are expected to meet on Sunday at the French consulate in Munich. It will be the eighth presidential meeting since Turkey and Armenia began reconciliatory talks.

In addition to this meeting, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu and his Armenian counterpart Eduard Nalbandyan are also expected to meet in Athens on the sidelines of the ministerial meeting of the Organization of Security and Cooperation in Europe, or OSCE.

Turkey and Armenia signed two protocols on 10 October but have not yet initiated ratification of them in either parliament. Turkey has submitted the protocols to its parliament, but Armenia is still trying to pass them through the Constitutional Court. “I do not think that one could press Turkey at this moment when Armenia has still not submitted them to parliament,” the senior diplomat said.

For Turkey, the condition to go ahead with the protocols is progress in the Nagorno-Karabakh talks.

“There are important developments,” the senior diplomat said, adding that a technical delegation had completed an exploration of the Lachin corridor, a mountain pass within the official borders of Azerbaijan that is the shortest route connecting Armenia with Nagorno-Karabakh. “Its status and how to provide its security are important matters to be solved.”

Davutoglu held a telephone conversation with his Azerbaijani counterpart Elmar Mammadyarov last week and was informed about the talks. The co-chairmen of the OSCE’s Minsk Group held meetings last week in Yerevan and Baku. Mammadyarov is expected to pay a visit to Ankara next month.

“The public is aware that there will be no further steps taken unless there is progress on the Karabakh issue,” Davutoglu said on Tuesday in Parliament while defending his ministry’s budget. “We are now expecting concrete results [out of the negotiations].”

The three things Turkey expects are the withdrawal of Armenian troops from the seven districts surrounding the Nagorno-Karabakh province and the return of the Azerbaijani people who were expelled from their homeland; clearer definition of the status of the corridor and how its security would be assured; and, lastly, the reaching of an interim agreement.

For Turkish diplomats, there are no additional obstacles to the two parties being able to shake hands in the near future. “Talking about deadlines is not always productive, but everyone is aware of the need to accelerate the process,” another Turkish diplomat said.

“Who knows, maybe Armenia’s borders with Turkey and Azerbaijan will be opened simultaneously,” the diplomat added.

According to Davutoglu, simultaneous rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia and Armenia and Azerbaijan would be the best formula for reaching a comprehensive settlement in the southern Caucasus.

Hurriyyet Daily News


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