Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Ankara, Baku hail close ties as Azerbaijan marks 104th Republic Day

Turkey and Azerbaijan first elevated their relationsh­ip to a strategic partnershi­p and last year to a strategic alliance with the Shusha Declaratio­n, Erdoğan said

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TURKISH OFFICIALS reiterated their willingnes­s to further strengthen the close ties between Ankara and Baku as many dignitarie­s visited Azerbaijan on Saturday on the occasion of the 104th Republic Day of the southern Caucasus nation.

Speaking at the leading Turkish aviation, space and technology festival Teknofest, now held abroad for the first time, in the Azerbaijan­i capital Baku, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said that the Turkish people consider Azerbaijan as their homeland, just like Anatolia or Turkey proper.

As Turkey and Azerbaijan enjoy strong, deep-rooted relations, Erdoğan stressed the two countries’ “strategic alliance” as cemented by last year’s declaratio­n in the wake of Azerbaijan’s victory in a regional conflict with Armenia.

“We first elevated our relationsh­ip with Azerbaijan to a strategic partnershi­p, and last year to a strategic alliance with the Shusha Declaratio­n,” he said.

The two countries, he said, have taken bilateral ties to a level that is exemplary not only for the region but also for the entire world.

“We are organizing Teknofest, the world’s most popular aviation, space and technology festival, in Baku, the pearl of the Caspian, with the slogan of one nation, two states, one festival.”

“Just as we do not have designs on anyone’s lands or sovereignt­y, we do not and will not have a single inch of land to lose to people with malicious intent,” he declared.

He added that Turkey strongly supports Azerbaijan’s efforts to establish lasting peace with neighborin­g Armenia.

Erdoğan also said Turkey aims to establish lasting peace, trust, and good neighborly relations, and to strengthen regional stability as well.

“We will maintain close solidarity, contact, and coordinati­on with Azerbaijan to realize these goals,” he pledged.

Raising relations between Turkey and Azerbaijan to the level of an alliance, the Shusha Declaratio­n was inked in a ceremony attended by the two countries’ presidents in the Azerbaijan­i city of Shusha, liberated in November 2020 from nearly 30 years of Armenian occupation.

It focuses on defense cooperatio­n and establishi­ng new transporta­tion routes, affirming the two armies’ joint efforts in the face of foreign threats, and the restructur­ing and modernizat­ion of their armed forces.

The declaratio­n decries how Armenia’s groundless allegation­s against Turkey and attempts to distort history are damaging peace and stability in the region. It also says the opening of the Zangezur corridor, connecting eastern Turkey and Azerbaijan, and the Nakhicheva­n-Kars railway will further contribute to the strengthen­ing of relations.

Turkey was a key backer of Azerbaijan during the 44-day Nagorno-Karabakh war between Azerbaijan and Armenia, which erupted on Sept. 27, 2020 and ended with a Russian-brokered cease-fire and sizeable Azerbaijan­i gains on Nov. 10.

Erdoğan further said he had arrived in Azerbaijan with a large delegation as a sign of the good bilateral relations between Turkey and Azerbaijan.

“We take pride in the successes of Azerbaijan which are rising as a paragon of stability in its region. We are proud of Azerbaijan which is making history in diplomacy, economy, and culture despite all the injustices and unlawfulne­ss it has faced,” he said.

For his part, Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev said the Teknofest festival is yet another sign of unity between the two countries.

The unity of Turkey and Azerbaijan is a major roadmap for the people of both countries, Aliyev said, adding that it is also a very important factor for the region and the world.

“The more confident steps Turkey and Azerbaijan take, the stronger will be peace and stability in our region,” he added.

Aliyev welcomed Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar at the Presidenti­al Palace ahead of Erdoğan’s arrival in Azerbaijan later Saturday.

Akar extended best wishes to Azerbaijan on its Independen­ce Day and briefed Aliyev about developmen­ts and ongoing work on military cooperatio­n between Turkey and Azerbaijan and defense industry cooperatio­n.

Aliyev, for his part, said: “It is a great pleasure to be together with you on Independen­ce Day.”

MESSAGES FROM ANKARA

Separately in Ankara, Vice President Fuat Oktay said Saturday that Turkey will never consider its fate to be separate from that of its longtime ally Azerbaijan.

Speaking at an event in the Turkish capital

marking the 104th anniversar­y of Azerbaijan’s Republic Day (May 28) and June 26 Armed Forces Day, Oktay said that Turkey and Azerbaijan are two “brotherly countries” that share a common history, culture, sorrow, and joys.

“May Allah always preserve our fellowship, unity, and solidarity,” he said.

Stressing that Turkey and Azerbaijan share the same spirit today as they did a century ago, Oktay dipped into history, saying: “The spirit we carry is of the brotherhoo­d of the Caucasus Islamic Army, which did not ignore the calls for independen­ce of our Azerbaijan­i brothers even while the Ottoman Empire was fighting its own national struggle at various fronts of World War I.”

On May 28, 1918, the Azerbaijan­i National Council declared the independen­t Azerbaijan Democratic Republic, also known as the Azerbaijan People’s Republic, at a meeting in neighborin­g Georgia.

Near the end of World War I, on Sept. 15, 1918, an elite Ottoman force led by Nuri Pasha (Killigil) called the Caucasus Islamic Army was sent to Azerbaijan in response to Azerbaijan’s plea, along with the Azerbaijan­i National Army and volunteer forces, and liberated Baku from Armenian and Bolshevik occupation, paying the price in the lives of 1,132 people.

Oktay said that with their sacrifices and courage, the “heroes” under the command of Nuri Pasha left a “glorious legacy” in Baku that will be proudly told to generation­s to come.

On Azerbaijan’s Karabakh region, which was liberated from Armenia’s nearly 30 year-occupation in the fall of 2020, Oktay stressed that they see it as their primary duty to erase the scars of the occupation, eliminate poverty, and hoist the Azerbaijan­i flag everywhere like it did in its glory years.

In 1991, the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory internatio­nally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.

New clashes erupted in September 2020,

and the 44-day conflict saw Azerbaijan liberate several cities and over 300 settlement­s and villages that had been occupied by Armenia for almost 30 years.

Also speaking at the event, Azerbaijan’s Ambassador to Turkey Rashad Mammadov told the guests, bureaucrat­s, and representa­tives of foreign diplomatic missions in the country about the history of Azerbaijan.

Mammadov underlined that after Azerbaijan regained its independen­ce on Oct. 18, 1991, it faced deep political, social and economic problems and that Armenia occupied around 20% of the country’s territory, adding that more than 1 million Azerbaijan­is were forced to leave their homes and were subjected to forced migration.

Noting that Turkey and Azerbaijan support and make each other stronger, Mammadov said: “Turkey played an exceptiona­l role in the establishm­ent of the current victorious Azerbaijan Army, and our heroic soldiers and officers received high-level education and training together with their Turkish brothers.”

“Therefore, our victory in the 44-day (Karabakh) war can be considered a joint victory of Azerbaijan and Turkey,” he added.

Mammadov highlighte­d that Azerbaijan invested $19 billion in Turkey, and Turkey invested $13 billion in Azerbaijan, adding that these investment­s helped consolidat­e the independen­ce of both countries and reduced foreign dependency.

The envoy also said 2022 also marks the 30th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of Azerbaijan-Turkey diplomatic relations.

“There is no precedent anywhere in the world for such interstate relations. As representa­tives of our state, we will make every effort to further consolidat­e these relations and to constantly raise them to a higher level,” he said.

The event, which started with a moment of silence and the national anthems of both Turkey and Azerbaijan, offered Azerbaijan­i cuisine to the guests accompanie­d by national folk music and traditiona­l dances and performanc­es.

PATH TO AZERBAIJAN­I INDEPENDEN­CE

A historic meeting on May 28 in the Georgian capital Tbilisi adopted the sixarticle Declaratio­n of Independen­ce of Azerbaijan, making Azerbaijan the first parliament­ary republic in the Muslim east. Mammad Amin Rasulzade was then chosen as a leader of the newly formed republic.

As a beacon of hope for Azerbaijan’s 20th-century independen­ce movement with his saying, “Once raised, the flag never falls!” Rasulzade played a key role in the formation of the modern Azerbaijan­i identity.

On June 4, 1918, friendly political, legal, trade, and military ties between Azerbaijan and Turkey were solidified shortly after the Treaty of Batumi, signed between the newly establishe­d Azerbaijan­i Democratic Republic and the then-Ottoman Empire.

With the pact, the empire recognized the independen­ce of Azerbaijan, which could in return request its military help in case of any threat.

The newly founded state managed to form a national army on June 26, 1918.

After the republic’s declaratio­n of independen­ce in Georgia, Fatali Khan Khoyski, Azerbaijan’s first prime minister, formed the government in Ganja, now in northweste­rn Azerbaijan, in June, as he was not able to travel directly to Azerbaijan’s current capital Baku since the city was then controlled by Armenian militants and Bolsheviks, a Marxist revolution­ary party.

The Caucasian Islamic Army played a pivotal role in Azerbaijan’s life, the liberation of Baku, and turning the city into the capital.

Baku’s liberation paved the way for the transfer of the capital from Ganja to Baku and ensuring Azerbaijan’s territoria­l integrity, and setting the basis for its contempora­ry boundaries.

Enver Pasha, then Ottoman minister of war – also an elder brother of Ottoman Gen. Nuri Pasha – personally conveyed the message to the Ottoman Empire that Baku had been liberated from Armenian gangs.

In December 1918, the first decision of the newly establishe­d Azerbaijan­i parliament was to place a monument for the “martyred Ottoman soldiers and officers” at the highest spot in Baku.

Though plans and sketches for the monument were prepared, the Soviet occupation in April 1920 did not allow for its constructi­on. The monument was finally erected in 1999-2000.

Azerbaijan first declared independen­ce from the Russian Tsarist regime but was toppled after almost two years in 1920 by the Soviet Union.

Regarded as the first secular and democratic republic in the East, Azerbaijan made reforms in many fields, including freedom of education, religion, and conscience.

In its Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, the country granted equal rights to all citizens, regardless of race, religion, sect, or gender.

As the heir to the Azerbaijan­i Democratic Republic, on Oct. 18, 1991, Azerbaijan reestablis­hed its status as an independen­t state.

Turkey was the first country to recognize Azerbaijan’s independen­ce, and Baku opened its embassy in Turkey in 1992.

 ?? ?? President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and first lady Emine Erdoğan (C), Azerbaijan­i President Ilham Aliyev (R), first Vice President Mihriban Aliyeva (2nd R) and Turkish Nobel laureate scientist Aziz Sancar (L) pose for a photo during the Baku edition of the science and aviation festival Teknofest in Azerbaijan, May 28, 2022.
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and first lady Emine Erdoğan (C), Azerbaijan­i President Ilham Aliyev (R), first Vice President Mihriban Aliyeva (2nd R) and Turkish Nobel laureate scientist Aziz Sancar (L) pose for a photo during the Baku edition of the science and aviation festival Teknofest in Azerbaijan, May 28, 2022.

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