Armenian Fm On Armenian-turkish Relations
YEREVAN, JANUARY 10. ARMINFO. 2005 saw no significant changes were observed in Armenian-Turkish relations due mostly to Turkey's policy on Armenia, Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan said at a press-conference today.
Turkey continues linking the improvement of Armenian-Turkish relations with Armenia's no longer demanding the international recognition of the Armenian Genocide, recognizing Turkey's territorial integrity, settling the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, etc, while Armenia makes no preconditions for its rapprochement with Turkey. Armenia has always been for negotiating mutual problems, finding solutions to them, making no preconditions. Meanwhile Turkey and Azerbaijan continue debarring Armenia from regional projects.
Oskanyan says that the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide gave rise to wide political and public discussions in Turkey itself. In Apr the Turkish parliament held a special hearing of the problem with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Erdogan proposing Armenian President Robert Kocharyan in a letter to set up a joint group of historians. This was the first written proposal made by such a high-ranking Turkish official. In his response Kocharyan reaffirmed Armenia's position that it is ready to discuss any issue of Armenian-Turkish relations on intergovernmental level after the establishment of normal relations between the countries. In May and July Turkey organized two meetings of the Armenian and Turkish deputy FMs in Vienna for specifying the positions of the sides after the Erdogan-Kocharyan correspondence.
In 2005 NGOs continued showing activity in Armenian-Turkish relations, says Oskanyan.
YEREVAN, JANUARY 10. ARMINFO. 2005 saw no significant changes were observed in Armenian-Turkish relations due mostly to Turkey's policy on Armenia, Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan said at a press-conference today.
Turkey continues linking the improvement of Armenian-Turkish relations with Armenia's no longer demanding the international recognition of the Armenian Genocide, recognizing Turkey's territorial integrity, settling the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, etc, while Armenia makes no preconditions for its rapprochement with Turkey. Armenia has always been for negotiating mutual problems, finding solutions to them, making no preconditions. Meanwhile Turkey and Azerbaijan continue debarring Armenia from regional projects.
Oskanyan says that the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide gave rise to wide political and public discussions in Turkey itself. In Apr the Turkish parliament held a special hearing of the problem with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Erdogan proposing Armenian President Robert Kocharyan in a letter to set up a joint group of historians. This was the first written proposal made by such a high-ranking Turkish official. In his response Kocharyan reaffirmed Armenia's position that it is ready to discuss any issue of Armenian-Turkish relations on intergovernmental level after the establishment of normal relations between the countries. In May and July Turkey organized two meetings of the Armenian and Turkish deputy FMs in Vienna for specifying the positions of the sides after the Erdogan-Kocharyan correspondence.
In 2005 NGOs continued showing activity in Armenian-Turkish relations, says Oskanyan.
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