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Turkey not ready to reconcile with bloody past: analysts

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  • Turkey not ready to reconcile with bloody past: analysts

    Agence France Presse -- English
    September 5, 2008 Friday 2:36 AM GMT

    Turkey not ready to reconcile with bloody past: analysts

    by Hande Culpan
    ANKARA, Sept 5 2008


    Turkish President Abdullah Gul's visit Saturday to Armenia is a brave
    step, but it is unrealistic to expect Ankara to reconcile soon with a
    bloody past that has poisoned ties with Yerevan, analysts say.

    In a first for Turkish diplomacy, Gul will fly to Armenia on Saturday
    to watch a qualifying match between the two countries for the 2010
    World Cup finals upon an invitation from his Armenian counterpart
    Serzh Sarkisian.

    "Gul's visit is a bold move, but one should not expect much from it,"
    said Cengiz Aktar, an international affairs expert at Istanbul's
    Bahcesehir University.

    "First of all, there is no a real desire in Turkey to make peace with
    Armenia and the atmosphere is not suitable for ground-breaking moves,"
    he explained.

    Turkey and Armenia, two neighbours with no diplomatic relations, have
    long been held hostage by their common tragic past: Yerevan claims
    that up to 1.5 million Armenians perished in systematic killings
    between 1915 and 1917 as the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor of modern
    Turkey was falling apart.

    Ankara categorically denies the genocide label and argues that 300,000
    Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife during World
    war I when Armenians revolted against Ottoman rule and sided with
    invading Russian troops, resulting in an order to deport them em masse
    from their homelands.

    The Armenian question for years remained a taboo in Turkey with school
    books mentioning in a brief paragraph a problematic people who were
    sent into forced exile for betraying the Ottomans and clearing Turks
    of all guilt for their deaths.

    Only recently have Turks -- albeit only liberal-minded intellectuals
    and the educated elite -- begun to question the official line and
    alternative books re-examining Turkish history have begun to hit the
    shelves.

    But the self-reflection has yet to spread to rural parts of Turkey
    where many still believe deeply in official nationalist history.

    "Fundamentally, the Turkish population is deeply nationalistic and one
    of the founding stones of the Turkish nationalistic streak is
    animosity to Armenians," Aktar said.

    Last year, ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, reviled by many for
    calling the Armenian killings a genocide, was shot dead outside his
    office in Istanbul by an ultra-nationalist youth.

    Several intellectuals, among them Turkey's first Nobel laureate Orhan
    Pamuk, were recently tried in court for remarks contesting Ankara's
    version of the events.

    "The loss of Hrant opened the way for Turkish people to come closer
    mentally to discussing what happened in those years, but politically
    we are still far from any reconciliation with the past," said Etyen
    Mahcupyan, who replaced Dink as chief editor of the Armenian newspaper
    Agos.

    The government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is too weak to
    make any ground-breaking moves.

    The Islamist-rooted ruling party has only just survived a legal bid
    seeking its closure; it is under pressure over a controversial
    investigation into an ultra-nationalist gang and the influential
    army's top brass has begun to step up warnings of rising Islamist
    threats to the secular country.

    "There needs to be a period of stability in order to see clearly
    ahead. Turkey is lacking that at the moment and that is why it is
    unable to discuss the past," Mahcupyan said.

    The Armenians massacres is also fodder for domestic politics on both
    sides of the border, preventing an honest discussion of the issue, he
    explained, as seen by opposition parties attacking Gul even before he
    confirmed his visit.

    Turkey was one of the first countries to recognise Armeania when it
    gained independence in 1991 but no diplomatic relations were
    established because of Armenian efforts to have the killings
    internationally recognised as genocide.

    In 1993, Turkey also shut its border with Armenia in a show of
    solidarity with Azerbaijan, which was at war with Armenia over the
    Nagorny-Karabakh enclave.
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