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  • Business Weary of Border Dispute

    http://www.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2007/01/19/0 16.html

    Friday, January 19, 2007. Page 4. (javascript:window.print();)
    Business Weary of Border DisputeBy Hasmik Lazarian
    Reuters

    YEREVAN, Armenia -- The Turkish-Armenian border has been shut for 14
    years because of a dispute rooted in the centuries-old suspicions
    between Muslims and Christians in this remote part of the world.

    But the business communities in both countries pay heed to a different
    imperative -- making money -- and they are telling their political
    leadersto put the past behind them.

    "I want the borders opened," Turkish businessman Kaan Soyak said on
    the sidelines of a conference in Armenia's capital over the weekend
    that brought together business leaders and officials from both
    countries.

    "The first problem is the lack of trust. Turks don't know Armenians,
    and Armenians don't know Turks because there is no connection. ... We
    need more dialogue, more visits."

    Turkey and Armenia share a 355-kilometer frontier that snakes through
    the Caucasus mountains.

    Ankara closed all border crossings and cut diplomatic ties in 1993 to
    pr otest the seizure by Armenian forces of territory in Azerbaijan,
    Turkey's historical ally that at the time was fighting a war with
    Armenia.

    Lurking in the backdrop are Armenian accusations that Turkey carried
    out a genocide of 1.5 million Armenians during the last days of the
    Ottoman Empire.

    Turkey denies that there was a genocide, a stance that has complicated
    its bid to join the European Union.

    These, however, are not the most immediate concerns for businesses
    struggling to operate in this isolated corner.

    For Turkey, the closed border means building materials and textiles it
    exports to the booming Russian market have to go by road via Georgia
    to the north, instead of using the cheaper but now rusting railway
    route through Armenia.

    Armenia, under virtual blockade because its border with Azerbaijan to
    the east is also closed, has to import goods from Turkey by air or
    through third countries. And Armenian exports have to go around
    Turkey.

    "There are two aspects: [opening the border] will make trade with
    Turkey cheaper and on the other hand it will open up transit routes
    for Armenia to the Mediterranean," said Arsen Kazaryan, an Armenian
    businessman.

    With no sign of any diplomatic thaw soon between Yerevan and Ankara,
    business groups are trying to ratchet up the pressure for the border
    to bereopened.


    The conference, at Yerevan's plushest hotel, was organized by a
    U.S.-based think tank and attracted several hundred entrepreneurs,
    economists, researchers and officials.

    It was supported by the U.S. government. All speakers were in favor of
    reopening the border.

    A cross-border business lobby, the Turkish-Armenian Business
    Development Council, is spearheading the campaign.

    Mayors and regional bosses near the border with Armenia in eastern
    Turkey -- one of the poorest parts of the country and the area that
    would gain most from free trade links -- are also pressing Ankara on
    the issue.

    Soyak, co-chair of the Business Development Council, said opening the
    border would mean a flood of Armenian tourists visiting historic sites
    in eastern Turkey like Ani, once the capital of a medieval Armenian
    kingdom.

    "That would mean $100 per day [from each visitor]," he said. "The
    eastern part of Turkey doesn't have that sort of
    money. ... Unfortunately, the central government in Turkey does not
    take into consideration the problems of the eastern part."

    In the meantime, people in Turkey and Armenia are not waiting for the
    politicians.

    Charter flights regularly take Armenian tourists to Turkish holiday
    resorts and Turkish businessmen can be seeing cutting deals in hotel
    lobbies in Yerevan.


    _© Copyright 2007 The Moscow Times_
    (http://www.themoscowtimes.com/other/reprin ts/copywrite.html) .
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