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Armenia open to talks with Turkey

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  • Armenia open to talks with Turkey

    Al Jazeera: Armenia open to talks with Turkey
    July 31, 2007

    Armenia's prime minister says he is ready to negotiate with Turkey's new
    government after more then 90 years of severed ties.

    Serzh Sargsyan told Al Jazeera on Tuesday: "We can't stay in a situation
    without having communication and talks with our neighbour because the
    easiest way of resolving this issue is dialogue and negotiations."
    A row over the mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during the
    first world war is at the heart of the issue.

    Turkey says they were casualties of war, but the people of Armenia want what
    happened to be recognised as genocide.
    The continuing closure of the border has isolated Armenia, which is a
    landlocked country, hitting the economy hard.

    *Isolation*

    In Armenia's border villages, people are isolated for most of the winter,
    and are forced to live off the land.

    The village leader told Al Jazeera there was nothing there: no jobs, all the
    young people have left the village to go to find work, and they are
    completely dependent on the harvest.

    He said people had adapted to life behind a fence: "The border has always
    been closed there has never been any communication. I think it would be very
    nice if there was communication and interaction between us and the people
    across the border."

    Local farmers can cross the Armenia-Turkey border but they need special
    permission in order to give water to their cattle.

    In the village, no one can remember a time when the border was ever open.

    *Change*

    Armenia has only two out of four borders open.

    It has stopped the economy from moving forward hundreds of millions of
    dollars of trade are lost every year. It is no surprise that Sargsyan wants
    change.

    He had this message for Turkey's newly elected government: "We didn't choose
    the location of where we live and whatever happens we will have to be
    neighbours for a very long time. I think it would be better if Armenians and
    Turks come to an understanding."

    Sargsyan may be willing to talk but the country still has a long way to go
    if wants to return to the days of the great Silk Road, when Armenia
    connected east with west.



    http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/62 25C1AD-28E5-4B50-86D3-2AD885C17EAA.htm
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