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Armenia/Turkey: Still Divided On Genocide, But Signs Of Warming

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  • Armenia/Turkey: Still Divided On Genocide, But Signs Of Warming

    ARMENIA/TURKEY: STILL DIVIDED ON GENOCIDE, BUT SIGNS OF WARMING
    By Luke Allnutt

    Radio Free Europe/ Radio Liberty, Czech Republic -
    April 23 2007

    PRAGUE, April 23, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- Armenians around the world
    are commemorating the 92nd anniversary of the mass killings and
    deportations of Armenians by Ottoman Turks.

    Armenians refer to this chapter in their history as genocide --
    a term the Turks firmly reject.

    It's an issue that continues to blight relations between Armenia
    and Turkey. The two countries do not have diplomatic relations and
    the 268-kilometer border between the two countries has been closed
    since 1993.

    Armenians say that Turks killed up to 1.5 millions Armenians in 1915-18
    as the Ottoman Empire was beginning to crumble. Turks say the killings
    were part of the wider conflict of World War I, and that only 300,000
    Armenians died.

    Global Recognition

    Today, the controversy has gone global, with a number of countries
    debating whether the killings can be called genocide -- the deliberate
    and systematic destruction of a racial, political, or cultural group.

    Many countries, including Russia, and Canada, have passed legislation
    recognizing the killings as genocide. In France, the courts can
    impose a one-year prison term and a fine of about $64,000 for anyone
    found guilty of denying the genocide -- the same penalty for denying
    the Holocaust.

    'I think we should live in the present, since there are more important
    issues, real issues, today.'In the United States, the Congress --
    dominated by the opposition Democrats -- has endorsed a bill to
    officially recognize the Armenian killings as genocide. The bill
    has met with stiff opposition from supporters of the presidential
    administration, which is eager to maintain smooth ties with its NATO
    ally Turkey.

    But even as the genocide debate has occupied international politics,
    some Armenians believe it's time for their country to move on.

    Davit Gevorgyan, a 21-year-old computer programmer from Yerevan, says
    he thinks that pushing the issue of genocide is no longer appropriate.

    "We should remember everything that's happened, but we don't need
    to use that to create a certain political course. I think we should
    live in the present time, since there are more important issues,
    real issues, today," Gevorgyan says.

    "It would be better to solve these than to devote all our energy and
    efforts to those old issues. Many politicians are using the Armenian
    genocide to create their political platform in Armenia and it serves
    as a trump card, a way to manipulate people. They simply abuse it."

    Politically Charged

    But politicians in both countries aren't likely to shift toward a
    more moderate stance on the genocide issue in the months ahead.

    Armenia holds parliamentary elections in May; Turkey will have
    presidential and general elections this year.

    A dramatic policy switch on such an emotional issue could prove
    a massive political liability in a season when officials will be
    fighting to hold onto votes.

    Soner Cagaptay, who heads the Turkish research program of the
    Washington Institute for Near East Policy in Washington, D.C., says
    that "the public is as staunch, in some ways, on this issue and in
    their entrenched commitments, as the politicians are."

    An Armenian woman mourns the death of a boy during the deportation
    (epa) Officially, Turkey has said that to establish diplomatic
    relations it would require Armenia to drop its policy on seeking
    recognition of the genocide internationally.

    However, some Turkish politicians have said that Turkey should not
    attach such preconditions to the opening of the border.

    That is mirrored by recent Armenian comments. Speaking at the OSCE in
    Vienna recently, Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian said that
    in order to normalize relations with Turkey, the Armenian side has
    no preconditions and expects that Turkey should not have any either.

    What complicates the issue is the powerful and wealthy Armenian
    diaspora. The diaspora has huge lobbying power in the West,
    particularly in the United States.

    Cagaptay says that Armenia and the Armenian diaspora do not always
    have the same position.

    "Armenia seems to be more pro-dialogue with Turkey -- unconditional
    dialogue, that is. Whereas the Armenian diaspora will not start
    a dialogue or a normalization of the relations unless Turkey
    unconditionally recognizes there is something called the Armenian
    genocide," Cagaptay says.

    Another complication in relations between the two countries is
    Nagorno-Karabakh, the ethnic Armenian enclave that Azerbaijan,
    Turkey's traditional ally, and Armenia fought over in the beginning
    of the 1990s.

    Business Links

    Despite the impasse, however, there are significant business links
    between the two countries.

    The border, while officially closed, is quite porous in places.

    Traders also travel from Armenia via Georgia to sell their goods in
    Turkey. Some Armenians labor as guest workers in eastern Turkey and
    there are regular flights between Yerevan and Istanbul.

    Many in the business community in Armenia and Turkey have lobbied
    for the border to be opened. They say it would have a huge effect in
    revitalizing poor regions on both sides of the border.

    Noyan Soyak from the Turkish-Armenian Business Development Council
    says trade has grown significantly, from $35 million in 1997 to well
    above $150 million now.

    "The free flow of people, the free flow of commodities, would
    definitely have a great impact on the development of the region,
    of the economical development of the region," Soyak says.

    In the troubled relationships between Armenia and Turkey, there have
    occasionally been brief periods of hope for reconciliation.

    Turkey's earthquake in 1999 was one of them, when Armenians sent
    truckloads of aid. The murder of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant
    Dink in January 2007, when tens of thousands of Turks turned out for
    his funeral, was another.

    Turkey also recently completed a $1.5 million restoration of an ancient
    Armenian church located on an island on historic Lake Van in Turkey's
    eastern Anatolia region.

    Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, called the
    reconstruction a "positive" message. But a better one, suggested
    Armenian Foreign Minister Oskanian, would be to open the border.

    (RFE/RL's Armenian and Azerbaijani services contributed to this
    report.)
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