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  • ANKARA: Turkish FM says Armenia trip opens door

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Sept 6 2008

    Turkish FM says Armenia trip opens door


    A historic visit by Turkish President Abdullah G?Ã?¼l to long-time foe
    Armenia on Saturday could open the door to restoring diplomatic
    relations, Turkey's foreign minister said.

    "My president's visit to Yerevan ... is going to be an important step
    to open doors for dialogue with Armenia," Ali Babacan told Reuters.

    Last month's war between Russia and Georgia had dislodged a series of
    frozen conflicts in the Caucasus, raising risks of further instability
    but also creating opportunities for new diplomatic efforts to resolve
    them, he said.

    "The current circumstances, we believe, are conducive for such a bold
    step," Babacan said in an interview late on Friday night in Avignon,
    France, where he was attending a meeting of European Union foreign
    ministers.

    G?Ã?¼l seized the opportunity of a World Cup soccer qualifying match in
    Yerevan to break a diplomatic deadlock that has endured since the
    early 1990s and try to overcome an enmity going back nearly 100 years.

    Ankara severed ties and closed its border with the former Soviet
    republic after Armenia occupied part of neighbouring Azerbaijan in the
    conflict over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    "Now is the time to talk about the problems openly, boldly and to try
    to find solutions," said Babacan, who left the EU meeting early to
    accompany the president to Yerevan.

    "We don't have diplomatic relations right now with Armenia. What are
    we going to do about that? That's another issue for discussion."

    Asked whether a restoration of ties could be an outcome of the visit,
    he said: "I don't want to raise expectations that much. We have to see
    how (Saturday's) meeting goes. We are ready for more dialogue. This
    all has to be discussed."

    HISTORIANS' COMMISSION

    Reopening the border with Armenia, a major barrier to the landlocked
    Caucasus state's economic development, may take longer, Babacan
    indicated, noting that the closure was linked to the Armenian military
    presence in Azerbaijan.

    He noted that the two countries already did $500 million in annual
    trade due to charter flights and exports via Georgia.

    Turkey was ready to talk about all issues, he said, including a
    profound dispute over the mass killings of Armenians in 1915 in
    Ottoman Turkey.

    Turkey vehemently denies genocide, disputing both the scale of the
    killings and their systematic nature. It says they were part of a
    series of massacres and population movements in the collapse of the
    Ottoman empire.

    Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdo?Ä?an has proposed establishing a
    commission of historians from both Turkey and Armenia and mutually
    agreed third countries to examine the archives and seek an agreed
    version of events.

    Asked whether he expected an agreement on such a commission during
    G?Ã?¼l's visit, Babacan said: " I don't think we should raise
    expectations so high. But when we open a dialogue, it means we are
    starting talking about the problems. Of course the events of 1915 are
    a very important agenda item for us." Babacan acknowledged fierce
    opposition among Turkish and Armenian nationalists to any
    rapprochement between the two countries, but he said they had yet to
    understand that times had changed in the Caucasus and it was time to
    discuss all issues.

    EU enlargement chief Olli Rehn commended G?Ã?¼l's initiative in going to
    Yerevan and praised Turkey's energetic diplomacy to help solve frozen
    conflicts in the Caucasus.

    "I certainly hope that this will pave the way for a breakthrough in
    Turkey-Armenian relations and return to normal diplomatic relations,
    to the opening of the border and dealing with sensitive historical
    issues," Rehn said.

    If Turkey plays as well as they did in the European (soccer)
    championship, they should cause a diplomatic incident in Yerevan, he
    joked.

    06 September 2008, Saturday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN WITH WIRES ?Ä?°STANBUL
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