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Opposition fuming over `soccer diplomacy' with Armenia

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  • Opposition fuming over `soccer diplomacy' with Armenia

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Sept 6 2008

    Opposition fuming over `soccer diplomacy' with Armenia


    Opposition parties have stepped up criticism following an announcement
    by President Abdullah Gül that he would go to Armenia on
    Saturday to watch a soccer game between the national teams of the two
    countries, saying the move is "unacceptable."

    "We do want relations with Armenia to improve, but it is unacceptable
    that we as a large country have such a submissive stance in the face
    of such grave hostility on the part of Armenia," Deniz Baykal,
    chairman of the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP), said
    in an interview with NTV yesterday. "This is not a serious
    policy. This is just another example of the inconsistencies we see in
    acts of the government."

    Gül announced late on Wednesday that he would pay a one-day
    visit to Armenia, a neighbor with which Turkey has had no formal ties
    since 1993, at the invitation of his Armenian counterpart, Serzh
    Sarksyan, to watch a Saturday World Cup qualifying game between the
    national teams of the two countries. A majority of the public, as well
    as the United States and the European Union, welcomes the visit, the
    first ever by a Turkish president to Armenia.

    But opposition parties are unhappy, saying Armenia has not changed any
    of its policies that caused the ties to be severed in the first place
    and warning that Turkey's regional ally Azerbaijan will be
    offended. Baykal took the criticism to such a level on Thursday as to
    suggest that Gül visit a "genocide" monument in Yerevan while
    there. "This is what Baykal does all the time, building his policies
    on negative elements," Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an said
    in response to the CHP leader.

    The genocide claims are at the heart of problems with
    Armenia. Armenians claim 1.5 million of their kin were killed in the
    Ottoman Empire as part of a systematic genocide campaign, while Turkey
    says there were deaths on both sides as Armenians took up arms against
    the Ottoman Empire during World War I.

    Critics say Gül's visit to Armenia contradicts official policy,
    which holds that normalization of ties depends on Armenia withdrawing
    its support for the Armenian diaspora's efforts to win international
    recognition of the genocide claims, formal recognition by Armenia of
    the current border with Turkey and the withdrawal of Armenian troops
    from Azerbaijani territory. Baykal recalled a past speech by
    Gül, then a member of the now-defunct Welfare Party (RP), in
    Parliament in which he criticized then-Armenian President Levon
    Ter-Petrosyan for coming to Turkey to attend a funeral for the late
    Turkish President Turgut Ã-zal. He said not much has changed in
    Armenia's policies since then and criticized Gül for going to
    Yerevan for "publicity" purposes now.

    The Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) also opposes the visit, saying it
    will be a grave mistake.

    A group of supporters of the ultranationalist and secularist Workers'
    Party (Ä°P) staged a protest outside the presidency on Friday to
    protest Gül's visit to Yerevan. Demonstrators said the visit
    was against Turkey's national interests and claimed it was taking
    place under pressure from the United States.

    06 September 2008, Saturday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN ANKARA
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