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Match kicks off Turkish and Armenian peace moves

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  • Match kicks off Turkish and Armenian peace moves

    The Age, Australia
    Sept 6 2008


    Match kicks off Turkish and Armenian peace moves

    Robert Tait, Yerevan
    September 6, 2008

    THE first tentative steps towards healing generations of bitterness
    between Turkey and Armenia will take place in a football stadium in
    Yerevan today when the nations meet in a World Cup qualifier watched
    by their respective presidents.

    In what has been termed "football diplomacy", Turkey's President,
    Abdullah Gul, will attend the match at the invitation of his Armenian
    counterpart, Serge Sarkisian, in an attempt to establish relations
    between two neighbours who do not have diplomatic ties.

    An estimated 5000 Turkish fans are expected in Yerevan, Armenia's
    capital, after authorities waived normal visa controls in a goodwill
    gesture. Their presence has provoked fears of clashes with Armenian
    nationalists, who have vowed to demonstrate against the first visit to
    Armenia by a modern Turkish head of state.

    Mr Gul confirmed only on Wednesday that he would make the trip. A
    statement from his office said the occasion had "meaning beyond being
    just a sporting event ¦ The match will be an opportunity to overcome
    obstacles and prepare a new ground to bring the two people together."

    The presidents are expected to watch side-by-side after discussions
    onissues that evoke emotion, mistrust and vast differences in
    perception.

    Ankara and Yerevan have long been at odds over Turkey's refusal to
    accept as genocide the deaths of up to 1.5 million Armenians at the
    hands of Ottoman troops during the First World War. Turkey insists far
    fewer died and many deaths were caused by starvation and disease, but
    proposes a joint historical commission to examine the issue.

    Despite that longstanding disagreement, Turkey was among the first
    countries to recognise Armenia's independence after the collapse of
    the Soviet Union in 1991. But formal relations were subsequently
    frozen when Armenia occupied the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region
    following a war with Azerbaijan, Turkey's close ally.

    Opposition politicians urged Mr Gul not to accept the invitation, but
    the Government supports rapprochement with Armenia as part of Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's proposal for a Caucasus stability
    pact, following the recent clash between Russia and Georgia.

    Mensur Akgun, foreign policy program director of Tesev, a Turkish
    think tank, said the visit could be productive. "There may be some
    progress on the joint commission to see if it was really genocide
    under the 1948 UN definition, meaning we will be able to face our own
    history, which is obviously really good for a democracy," he
    said. "With respect to Turkey's international relations there is a lot
    to be gained."

    Alexander Iskandarian, director of the Caucasus Institute in Yerevan,
    said normalised relations with Turkey would provide landlocked Armenia
    with a direct pathway to Europe.

    "At the moment we have open borders with just two of our neighbours,
    Georgia and Iran," he said. "It costs us the same to import one
    kilogram of goods from Europe as it does from Australia, yet most of
    our trade is with Europe. Open borders with Turkey would be very
    important to us."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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