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Armenia Urges Turkey To Open Border

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  • Armenia Urges Turkey To Open Border

    ARMENIA URGES TURKEY TO OPEN BORDER
    By Gareth Jones, Reuters

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    June 25 2007

    Armenia appealed to Turkey on Monday to open their shared border,
    saying this was the essential first step for making any progress on
    historical disputes that divide the two countries.

    Turkey closed the border in 1993 to protest against Armenia's
    occupation of territory inside Azerbaijan, Ankara's close Turkic
    ally. Ties between Ankara and Yerevan have also been strained by
    Armenia's claim -- backed by many other countries -- that its people
    suffered a systematic genocide at Ottoman Turkish hands in 1915.

    Turkey denies any genocide took place.

    "First and foremost, to address the problematic issues between us,
    we need as a bare minimum an open border between our two countries,"
    Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian told a news conference
    in Istanbul. "This is how civilized countries operate ... The only
    closed border on the European continent today is that between Turkey
    and Armenia."

    But Oskanian, in Istanbul for a meeting of the Black Sea Economic
    Cooperation Organization (BSEC), said his talks with Turkish Foreign
    Minister Abdullah Gul on Monday gave little ground for hope. "There
    is no change in the Turkish position," he said, adding that Armenia
    hoped that after July 22 elections in Turkey a new government might
    be ready to review the border policy.

    Ankara says Armenia must first reach a peace settlement with Azerbaijan
    over the disputed province of Karabakh, an enclave populated by ethnic
    Armenians inside Azeri territory. On the genocide issue, Turkey has
    proposed forming a joint commission of Turkish, Armenian and other
    historians to investigate the events of 1915 and to determine whether
    they constituted genocide.

    Ankara acknowledges that large numbers of Armenians living in
    Turkey were killed or deported during that period, but not in
    a systematic genocide. It says many Muslim Turks also perished in
    fierce inter-ethnic conflict as the Ottoman Empire collapsed.

    Oskanian said Armenia would consider taking part in such a commission
    if the border were opened and normal diplomatic ties established
    between the two countries. But he also criticized the Turkish
    commission proposal, saying it was an attempt to discourage parliaments
    around the world from recognizing the Armenian massacres as genocide.

    Turkey fears the U.S. Congress may in the coming months approve a
    resolution recognizing the killings as genocide, following the lead
    of the European Parliament and legislatures in France, Russia, Greece,
    Canada and many other countries.

    In Turkey, asserting that there was an Armenian genocide is a crime.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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