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Turkish Businessman Pessimistic About Open Border With Armenia

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  • Turkish Businessman Pessimistic About Open Border With Armenia

    TURKISH BUSINESSMAN PESSIMISTIC ABOUT OPEN BORDER WITH ARMENIA
    By Shakeh Avoyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep
    Jan 15 2007

    The Turkish-Armenian border will remain closed without a breakthrough
    in international efforts to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,
    according to a Turkish businessman who has long campaigned for
    normalization of relations between Ankara and Yerevan.

    Kaan Soyak, co-chairman of the non-governmental Turkish-Armenian
    Business Council (TABC), indicated on Monday that the Turkish
    government is unlikely to drop its main precondition for lifting the
    economic blockade it imposed on Armenia in 1993 out of solidarity
    with Azerbaijan.

    "This was the reason why Turkey closed the border," Soyak told
    reporters in Yerevan, referring to the unresolved Karabakh conflict.

    "So unless there is movement or progress in this area, I don't see
    any green light from the Turkish side."

    "But what I see at the same time on Turkish side is a willingness to
    approach Armenia more than ever before. They are also trying to find
    a way out," he added.

    Successive governments in Ankara have adhered to this policy despite
    pressure from the United States and the European Union that say
    normalization of Turkish-Armenian ties is essential for regional peace
    and stability. Armenia's leadership also stands for the establishment
    of diplomatic relations and reopening of the land border between the
    two nations without any preconditions.

    Deputy Foreign Minister Aram Kirakosian reaffirmed Yerevan's position
    on the issue in a speech at a weekend international conference that
    discussed possible economic consequences of an open border. He urged
    Turkey to act "impartially" towards all regional states and "abandon
    its policy of driving Armenia out of regional projects."

    Speaking to RFE/RL last November, Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah
    Gul made no mention of the Karabakh dispute and reiterated instead
    his government's demands for joint Turkish-Armenian academic research
    of the mass killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire. Gul said
    Ankara insists on the idea of setting up a commission of Turkish and
    Armenian historians which was floated by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan in a 2005 letter to President Robert Kocharian.

    Kocharian effectively turned down the proposal, saying that this
    and other problems hampering Turkish-Armenian rapprochement should
    first be tackled by the two governments. Armenia and its worldwide
    Diaspora believe that the 1915-1918 genocide of some 1.5 Armenians
    in Ottoman Turkey is a proven fact that can not be disputed by
    historians. They see the Turkish offer as a ploy designed to scuttle
    greater international recognition of the genocide.

    Soyak, who also attended the Yerevan conference along with several
    Turkish experts, admitted that chances of the opening of the frontier
    are slim. "It's been almost ten years since we started work on opening
    the border," he said of the TABC. "We then hoped that the border will
    open next month. We now want to [see it] open before we die."
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