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Turkey Prepares For Ceremony To Mark Renovation Of Armenian Church

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  • Turkey Prepares For Ceremony To Mark Renovation Of Armenian Church

    TURKEY PREPARES FOR CEREMONY TO MARK RENOVATION OF ARMENIAN CHURCH
    Selcan Hacaoglu

    AP Worldstream
    Published: Mar 14, 2007

    Turkey may host Armenian officials at a ceremony marking the renovation
    of the 1,000-year-old Akhtamar church, one of the finest surviving
    monuments of ancient Armenian culture, Turkish media and sources
    close to the project said Wednesday.

    Turkey has invited Armenian officials to attend the ceremony but it
    was not clear whether any of them would show up, sources involved
    in the renovation said Wednesday, speaking on condition of anonymity
    because authorities had not announced or confirmed the invitations.

    Turkey's foreign ministry said preparations for the ceremony were
    continuing. It denied reports in the Turkish media that the government
    would allow direct flights between the Armenian capital Yerevan and
    the Turkish city of Van for the ceremony.

    Turkey and Armenia have no diplomatic ties and border crossings
    remain closed, but there are regular commercial flights between
    Yerevan and Istanbul.

    The ceremony will be held on March 29 on the tiny island of Akdamar,
    situated on a lake in the eastern city of Van, bordering Iran.

    Turkey, under pressure from the European Union to improve its treatment
    of minorities, began restoring the church in 2005 after a century of
    neglect and decades of political wrangling.

    The European Union urged Turkey in 2004 to consider registering
    Akhtamar in UNESCO's World Heritage List and the $1.5 million
    restoration, ordered and paid for by the Turkish government, was
    intended to send a positive message to Armenia.

    The ceremony is expected to be attended by Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan. Cahit Zeydanli, a subcontractor who supervises the
    renovation of the church said that although around 3,000 people would
    attend, only 300 of them would be allowed to travel to the tiny island.

    Eastern Turkey was once a heartland of Armenian culture and more
    than a million Armenians lived in the area at the turn of the 19th
    century. But they were driven out by what Armenia contends was a
    policy of genocide by Turks.

    Akhtamar was one of the most important churches of those ancient
    Armenian lands.

    The two countries are involved in a long and bitter dispute over
    whether the killings of as many as 1.5 million Armenians by Turks at
    the beginning of the last century qualifies as genocide or not.

    Turkey vehemently denies that the killings were genocide, and is
    currently lobbying against a proposed U.S. congressional resolution
    that would recognize them as such.
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