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ANKARA: Soccer sows seeds of new era between Turkey and Armenia

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  • ANKARA: Soccer sows seeds of new era between Turkey and Armenia

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Sept 8 2008



    Soccer sows seeds of new era between Turkey and Armenia


    President Abdullah Gül's brief yet still landmark visit to
    Armenia raised hopes for dialogue that could eventually restore
    relations between the two estranged neighbors and help bury an almost
    a century old hostility over history.

    "My visit broke psychological barriers in the Caucasus," Gül
    told reporters on his way back to Turkey on Saturday night after
    watching a World Cup qualifying match between the national teams of
    the two countries in Hrazdan Stadium. During his brief stay in
    Yerevan, Gül also had a one-and-a-half-hour meeting with his
    Armenian counterpart, Serzh Sarksyan, who had invited him to watch the
    game.

    The visit has huge symbolic importance: It is the first time ever
    a Turkish president has set foot in Armenia since it declared
    independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. It is also a landmark step
    because Turkey and Armenia have had no formal ties since 1993, when
    Turkey severed relations and closed its border with Armenia in protest
    of Armenian occupation of a chunk of Azerbaijani territory over a
    dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh. But the origins of dispute go much
    deeper in history. Armenia claims the Ottoman Turks killed 1.5 million
    Armenians in eastern Anatolia during the World War I years as part of
    a systematic campaign of genocide.

    Both Gül and Sarksyan were hopeful that the visit could
    break the ice and open the way for dialogue to resolve
    differences. "We hope we will be able to demonstrate goodwill to solve
    the problems between our countries and not leave them to future
    generations," Sarksyan told a news conference after meeting with
    Gül on Saturday. Gül, alongside Sarksyan, said he was
    "leaving optimistic."

    "If we create a good atmosphere and climate for this process, this
    will be a great achievement, and will also benefit stability and
    cooperation in the Caucasus," he told reporters after the game, which
    Turkey won 2-0.

    Sarksyan said he would attend the return match in Turkey in October
    2009, and that the invitation to do so suggested Gül "also has
    some expectations that there will be some movement between these two
    meetings."

    Gül left Foreign Minister Ali Babacan in Yerevan for several
    more hours for "technical discussions" with his Armenian counterpart,
    Eduard Nalbandiyan, on how to normalize ties. There was no statement
    on their talks, which lasted into the early hours of Sunday morning,
    but diplomatic sources said both sides had agreed at the meeting that
    "full normalization" in relations must be achieved. Officials of the
    two countries will meet again at UN General Assembly, scheduled for
    the end of September, sources said, without specifying whether the
    meeting will be at the presidential level.

    A report in daily Hürriyet said yesterday that the regular
    consulting mechanism between Turkey and Armenia will be improved and
    that negotiations between the two countries will be raised to the
    foreign ministerial level.

    The report also said the efforts to establish a joint commission of
    historians for resolving the dispute over Armenian claims of genocide
    would speed up and that a separate commission would be formed to
    address the economic field. In 2005, Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip ErdoÄ?an took a first step towards resolving the issue by
    proposing that a joint commission of historians launch an
    investigation and publish their conclusions, but the proposal was
    rejected by Yerevan.

    Sarksyan raises Nagorno-Karabakh, no mention of `genocide'

    Gül, speaking aboard the plane en route to Turkey, said there
    was not even a veiled reference to the "genocide" issue during his
    talks with Sarksyan. In contrast, the Armenian president raised the
    issue of Nagorno-Karabakh, Gül said. "I wasn't expecting we
    would discuss the issue at such length," he added.

    The Azerbaijani government has refrained from publicly criticizing the
    visit, but politicians and newspapers lamented what they see as a
    "betrayal" of the alliance with Turkey. But others say Turkish
    dialogue with Armenia could help a solution in the Nagorno-Karabakh
    dispute, a row that has remained unresolved for 15 years.

    Turkish officials have said they were in contact with Azerbaijani
    officials and that they have raised no objection to Gül's visit
    to Armenia.

    Gül also said on Saturday night that the issue of opening the
    border was not on the agenda of the talks. "If this atmosphere is
    maintained, everything will be back on track, will normalize. But
    there is no such thing at this moment," he said. In an interview
    earlier, Babacan also indicated that reopening the border with
    Armenia, a major barrier to the landlocked state's economic
    development, may take longer, noting that the closure was linked to
    the Armenian military presence in Azerbaijan.

    Gül flew to Armenia and the official vehicles Gül and
    the Turkish delegation used during their stay in Yerevan traveled to
    Armenia through Georgia, instead of by way of the closed border.

    The government's initiative to have contacts with Armenia, which
    received serious criticism from the opposition parties at home, has
    gained new impetus since Russia's war with Georgia last month, which
    raised fears for the security of energy supplies from the Caspian Sea
    to Western Europe.

    The establishment of normal relations could have huge significance for
    Turkey's role as a regional power, for energy flows from the Caspian
    Sea and for Western influence in the South Caucasus. Landlocked
    Armenia, a Soviet republic until 1991, could also derive enormous
    benefit from the opening of the border with its large neighbor and the
    restoration of a key rail link. Western-backed pipelines shipping oil
    and gas from the Caspian Sea to Turkey's Mediterranean coast bypass
    Armenia and bend north instead to go through Georgia. With that route
    looking vulnerable after the Russian intervention, Armenia could be an
    attractive alternative.

    "Now is the time to talk about the problems openly, boldly and to try
    to find solutions," Babacan said in an interview with Reuters ahead of
    Gül's meeting with Sarksyan. "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 are ready
    for more dialogue. This all has to be discussed."
    Ä°stanbul/Yerevan Today's Zaman

    08 September 2008, Monday
    EKREM DUMANLI / SÃ`LEYMAN KURT YEREVAN
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