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Al-Jazeera: Armenians protest Gul visit

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  • Al-Jazeera: Armenians protest Gul visit

    Aljazeera.net, Qatar
    Sept 6 2008


    Armenians protest Gul visit



    Abdullah Gul, the Turkish president, has been greeted by protests
    after arriving in Armenia to attend a football match in an attempt to
    improve relations between the two countries.

    Gul's arrival on Saturday in Yerevan, the Armenian capital, marked the
    first visit to the country by a Turkish head of state since Armenian
    independence in 1991.

    The two countries have long argued over Armenia's attempt to have
    recognised as genocide a massacre of hundreds of thousands of
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks during the First World War.

    Hundreds of Armenians lined the route of Gul's motorcade to protest
    against Ankara's refusal to consider the 1915-1917 atrocities as
    crimes against humanity.

    Bardasar Akhpar, a demonstrator, said: "We are here because we want to
    tell the entire world that we do not forget the genocide of 1915.

    "We will not welcome Gul nor any other Turk until they have recognised
    the genocide."

    Breakthrough 'unlikely'

    Gul was taken to meet Serzh Sakisian, the Armenian president, after
    being invited by him to attend a world Cup football qualifier between
    Armenia and Turkey at Yerevan's Hrazdan stadium.

    The invitation was extended despite the fact the two countries do not
    share diplomatic relations.

    On meeting Sarkisian, Gul offered the Armenian leader the opportunity
    to watch a return football match between the two countries in Turkey
    next month.

    "I hope that this visit will create the possiblity to improve
    bilateral relations," said Gul at a joint press conference with
    Sarkisian in Yerevan.

    Sarkisian said the visit there is a "political will to decide the
    questions between our countries, so that these problems are not passed
    on to the next generation".

    Armenians say that up to 1.5 million of their people were slaughtered
    by Ottoman Turks as their empire fell apart at the height of the First
    World War.

    Yerevan's claim has won support from several other countries.

    Turkey rejects the accusation and says that 300,000-500,000 Armenians
    and at least as many Turks died in civil strife after Armenians took
    up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia.

    Nadim Baba, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Yerevan, said Armenians
    appear to be holding out for improved relations with their country's
    westward neighbour.

    "From the people that we have spoken to on the streets of Yerevan, I
    would say that the majority are longing for better relations with
    Turkey, while being very much concerned that their government do not
    give away too many concessions to Ankara," he said.

    "They do not want to let go of the hope that one day the world will
    recognise what happened almost a hundred years ago as a genocide.

    "They also want to see their economy improve through better relations
    with Turkey and other countries in the region."

    'Lifting barriers'

    Ali Babacan, Turkey's foreign minister, said diplomatic ties between
    Ankara and Yerevan would be discussed between during talks between Gul
    and Sarkisian but he a major breakthrough was unlikely.

    "I do not think we should raise expectations that high ¦ But on the
    other hand, when we open the doors for dialogue, that means we are
    ready to talk about the problems," Babacan said.

    "It is my wish that this match will help lift the barriers dividing
    two people who share a common history and will contribute to regional
    friendship and peace," Gul said ahead of his visit.

    Turkey has refused to establish diplomatic ties with Armenia since the
    former Soviet republic gained independence.

    Turkey also shut its border with Armenia in 1993 in a show of
    solidarity with its close ally Azerbaijan, then at war with Armenia
    over Nagorny Karabakh, a secessionist Armenian-majority region in
    Azerbaijan.

    http://english.aljazeera.net/news/ asia/2008/09/200896135958322832.html
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