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10/30/09 2:56 AM

#8669 RE: fuagf #8661

Ankara moves toward ‘privileged partnership’ with Moscow
Qctober 30, 2009

Turkey, which has already announced its intention to hold a joint cabinet meeting with Russia similar to those recently held with Iraq and Syria, hopes to hold such a meeting with its Black Sea neighbor in early December.

“We have proposed a similar step [to the joint cabinet meetings with Syria and Iraq] with Russia, but there is nothing being implemented at the moment,” Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said last week before departing for a visit to Iraq, during which he and the nine ministers accompanying him held a joint cabinet meeting with the Iraqi government. Erdogan and his Iraqi counterpart, Nouri al-Maliki, co-chaired the meeting of the Turkish-Iraqi High-Level Strategic Cooperation Council.

Earlier last week, a ministerial-level meeting of the Turkish-Syrian High-Level Strategic Cooperation Council was held in the Syrian city of Aleppo and the Turkish city of Gaziantep. At the time, Erdogan said an agreement to initiate a similar mechanism with Russia was signed when Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin visited Ankara in August, when Turkey and Russia signed about 20 agreements on cooperation in a number of areas, including, most notably, energy. “We will put into force a similar mechanism with Russia.”

The timing of the meeting planned to be held with Russia has been found particularly interesting as it comes just before a December summit of the European Council. Observers suggest that the planned meeting with Russia is a message to European Union members who offer a “privileged partnership” to Turkey instead of full EU membership. Turkey will show how a privileged partnership is constituted through the meeting with Russia, the same observers argue. Turkey firmly rejects any option that falls short of full EU membership.

The EU opened accession talks with Ankara -- an EU candidate since 1999 -- in October 2005, but they have been progressing slowly amid opposition from France and Germany. The unresolved Cyprus dispute and a slowdown of reforms in Turkey are other factors hampering the accession process.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel are the most high-profile European politicians opposed to Turkey's accession. Sarkozy claims Turkey does not belong in Europe, while Merkel promotes privileged partnership, an option Ankara categorically rejects. In Berlin in May, Merkel and Sarkozy made a joint statement declaring that they shared a common position regarding Turkey's accession to the EU, in that it should be offered a privileged partnership, not full EU membership.

The first step toward holding a joint cabinet meeting with Russia was taken on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in New York in September, with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov responding positively to a proposal by his counterpart, Ahmet Davutoglu. Moves to organize the joint meeting have been continuing since then. The meeting between Russia and Turkey is planned to be held at a ministerial level. Meetings with Iraq and Syria, on the other hand, are chaired by the prime ministers.

Gül discusses Karabakh dispute with Medvedev

President Abdullah Gül had a phone conversation with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
about the situation in the Caucasus on Monday, sources at the Turkish Presidency announced.

President Gül reportedly asked Russian President Medvedev to boost efforts to solve
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, a territorial dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

During the phone conversation, Gül asked the Russian president to accelerate the process to find a lasting solution for the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute, adding that the determinant actor in the South Caucasus is Russia. Presidential sources labeled the Gül-Medvedev talk a “long, comprehensive and useful conversation to make stability and peace in the South Caucasus dominant.”

Pointing to the troubled South Caucasus region, political commentators argue that even positive gestures could destabilize the region. Amid a growing crisis with Azerbaijan due to the Turkey-Armenia rapprochement, President Gül is working hard to push international actors to work for a solution to the problem.

While the process of the ratification of the protocols to normalize relations between Turkey and Armenia is in progress in both the Turkish and Armenian parliaments, President Gül also met with the Minsk Group's French, Russian and American co-chairs, who have striven for 17 years to solve the problem, during October to ask them to intensify peace negotiations to find a solution for the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

During the conversation, Medvedev and Gül also reportedly spoke of Turkish-Armenian relations, and Gül explained how the Karabakh conflict impacted relations between Azerbaijan, Armenia and Turkey. “We need your support. We want you to continue your support of the preservation of the peace and stability in the region,” Gül said to Medvedev. In turn, Medvedev promised Gül that Russia would always support peace efforts in the region. Gül and Medvedev also spoke of the South Stream gas project, which is planned to transfer Russian gas under the Black Sea. Medvedev thanked Gül for allowing the use of Turkey's territorial waters in the Black Sea.

Gül also recently addressed the same issues while speaking with US President Barack Obama. In addition, during his visit to France Gül asked French President Nicolas Sarkozy to do what he could to accelerate the Azeri-Armenian peace process. “Solve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, and let's open the borders together. Let the honor of this be yours,” Gül was quoted as saying to Sarkozy. Süleyman Kurt Ankara

21 October 2009, Wednesday
CELIL SAĞIR İSTANBU

http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/news-190549-ankara-moves-toward-privileged-partnership-with-moscow.html

fuagf

11/14/09 6:57 PM

#8679 RE: fuagf #8661

Turkey unveils reforms for Kurds
By Jonathan Head
BBC News, Istanbul
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Insert: The row over the extradition of Kurdish guerrilla leader
Abdullah Ocalan has pitched Italy and Turkey into a diplomatic war

http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?Message_id=43525476&txt2find=turkey
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Turkish forces have been fighting
Kurdish rebels in a 25-year conflict

The Turkish government has formally launched a peace plan to
try to end the conflict in the mainly Kurdish south-east of the country.

The interior minister presented a reform package to parliament, including freedom to use the Kurdish language.

But Besir Atalay said more substantial reform to the Turkish constitution would take time.

There was no mention of the amnesty that the armed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) has requested.

Four months after it first announced a plan to end the Kurdish conflict,
the government is still having trouble spelling out what it intends to do.

"We should never forget that behind our all our problems lies injustice," Mr Atalay told MPs.

"We want everyone in this country to be treated equally," he said, but then warned that there would
need to be a complete change in the mindset of the Turkish people to achieve that goal.

Easing tensions

He listed reforms the government wanted to implement soon - full freedom to
use languages other than Turkish, fewer military checkpoints in the south-east,
new human rights bodies and bringing back people driven from their homes by fighting
.

But throughout his half-hour speech, Mr Atalay refused to refer specifically to the
Kurds, whose resistance to the Turkish state is the real reason for these reforms.

Instead he chose to describe them as primarily for combating terrorism and preserving national unity.

The ferocious criticism the government has received over its initiative
has clearly made it nervous, despite its commanding majority in parliament.

The leader of one nationalist party accused the government of lacking the courage to fight terrorism head-on.

In this deeply polarised society, there will certainly be many people who agree with that view.

Some 40,000 people have been killed in the 25-year Kurdish fight for autonomy.

Abdullah Ocalan, the PKK leader, has been in jail since 1999.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8359582.stm