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VoA: Turkey and Armenia Relations Thaw a Bit

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  • VoA: Turkey and Armenia Relations Thaw a Bit

    Voice of America
    Sept 5 2008

    Turkey and Armenia Relations Thaw a Bit

    By Dorian Jones
    Istanbul
    05 September 2008


    Turkish President Abdullah Gul has accepted an invitation from
    President Serge Sargsyan of Armenia to attend a World Cup qualifying
    soccer match between the countries. The two nations remain deeply
    divided over the World War I-era massacres of Armenians under the
    Ottoman Empire and do not have diplomatic relations. As Dorian Jones
    reports for VOA, the visit is being seen as an important breakthrough
    for bilateral relations.

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul will head Saturday to Yerevan to watch
    the Turkish national football team play a World Cup
    qualifier. Although President Gul will only spend a few hours in the
    Armenian capital, Turkish international relations expert Cengiz Aktar
    says the visit is significant.


    "It is very important but one should not exaggerate its
    significance. Either if they can establish a sort of personal
    relationship, President Gul and President Sargsyan, all the best. This
    is how things advance. But the problems are so deep that one such
    visit is definitely not enough to solve them," he said.

    In a statement released by Mr. Gul, the visit has the potential of
    creating a climate of friendship in the region. The Turkish president
    is scheduled to meet with his Armenian counterpart for talks during
    his visit.

    Turkey and Armenia have no diplomatic relations because of Turkey's
    opposition to Armenia's occupation of a region of Azerbaijan -- a
    close ally of Turkey.

    The rivalry also stems from Armenia's insistence that the deaths of an
    estimated 1.5 million ethnic Armenians around the time of World War I
    be recognized as genocide. Turkey says the killings occurred at a time
    of civil conflict and that the casualty figures are inflated.

    The embargo has hit the Armenian economy hard and, according to Cengiz
    Aktar, that hardship has intensified with the Georgian conflict
    restricting trade access to the important Black Sea port of Poti.


    "The port of Poti is under Russian occupation and the Turkish border
    is closed, so Armenia is in the hands of Russia and Iran. They want
    desperately for this Turkish border to reopen," he said.


    The leaders of Turkey's main opposition parties have strongly
    condemned President Gul's decision to visit Yerevan, accusing him of
    betraying the country and its Azerbaijan ally. And, in Armenia, the
    nationalist Dashnaktsutyun party said it activists will be at the
    airport where Mr. Gul is to arrive and the football stadium to stage
    protests demanding Turkey recognize the World War One killings as
    genocide.

    But the United States and the European Union have welcomed the
    president's decision. The Turkish media also is broadly supportive of
    the visit, along with many organizations.

    One such group is Fans Without Borders which is sending a group to
    Yerevan to call an end to the Armenian embargo. One member is Ceran
    Kener:


    "Our is aim is that to say that we don't leave this issues to the
    States. We don't want to leave this issue to the Diaspora. We want to
    deal with this issue with ourselves," he said.

    Turkish diplomatic sources say that while little diplomatic progress
    will be made during short visit, the real test will be if substantial
    negotiations will follow after Mr. Gul's visit.
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