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  • Success of football diplomacy has a catch

    The National, United Arab Emirates
    Sept 8 2008


    Success of football diplomacy has a catch


    Thomas Seibert, Foreign Correspondent

    Last Updated: September 07. 2008 8:56PM UAE / GMT ISTANBUL // The
    historic visit by Turkey's president, Abdullah Gul, to Armenia has
    opened the door for a process of reconciliation between the two
    neighbours, a move that could dramatically improve Turkey's image in
    the European Union, but Mr Gul has failed to convince critics at home
    who argue that Ankara has made too many concessions to Yerevan.

    `A psychological wall has been demolished,' Mr Gul said of his short
    trip to Yerevan, the first by a Turkish president. `I hope that this
    visit will be a new start for a solution of the problems between the
    two countries.' Mr Gul met his Armenian counterpart, Serzh Sarksyan,
    for talks, and the two presidents watched a World Cup qualifying match
    between the football teams of their countries, which the Turkey won
    2-0.

    `We will solve these problems and not leave them to the next
    generation,' Mr Sarksyan said. There was a `political will to decide
    the questions between our countries'.

    Given that Turkish-Armenian relations are overshadowed by the death of
    hundreds of thousands Anatolian-Armenians during the final years of
    the Ottoman Empire in the First World War, which Armenia says
    constituted a genocide, Mr Gul's trip was hailed as a step of historic
    proportions in Turkey and abroad.

    `Our children will talk about this gesture,' wrote commentator Ferai
    Tinc in Hurriyet, a daily newspaper. `Football diplomacy has been
    successful,' the Milliyet newspaper said. In a poll made public
    shortly before Mr Gul went to Yerevan on Saturday, two out of three
    Turks said they supported the initiative.

    Nicolas Sarkozy, the president of France, which is home to a strong
    Armenian minority and holds the rotating presidency of the European
    Union, also praised Mr Gul. `While the region is in the midst of a
    serious crisis, [the visit] is a courageous and historic gesture for
    Turkish-Armenian relations,' Mr Sarkozy said in a statement.

    Although reconciliation with Armenia is not part of the EU conditions
    for Turkey's membership, French politicians in particular have called
    on Ankara several times to mend its ties with Armenia.

    The Turkish president was greeted by sporadic demonstrations in
    Yerevan during his six-hour visit, with some protesters carrying signs
    that read `Recognise the genocide'. Several thousand policemen were on
    duty, and Mr Gul and Mr Sarkisian watched the match from behind a pane
    of bulletproof glass. Yerevan says the Ottoman government decided to
    wipe out the Armenian minority in 1915; Turkey does not deny that many
    innocent people died, but insists that the deaths were the result of
    unrest and harsh wartime conditions.

    The row over the Armenian massacres is not the only issue that has
    kept Turkey and Armenia apart. Some politicians in Ankara accuse
    Armenia of claiming Turkish territory, saying Yerevan has not
    officially recognised the border between the two countries. Turkey
    closed the border in 1993 in support for Azerbaijan during the
    fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh, a predominantly Armenian region in
    Azerbaijan. The two countries have no diplomatic relations.

    The `football diplomacy' has created a new opening for direct
    talks. `I stressed in my contacts [in Yerevan] that there are no
    problems that cannot be solved by dialogue,' Mr Gul said after he
    returned to Ankara late Saturday. He invited Mr Sarksyan for the
    return match between the two football teams in Turkey, which will take
    place in October next year. The two presidents will also meet on the
    fringes of the UN General Assembly in New York this month, Turkish
    media reported. Mr Gul and Mr Sarksyan agreed that the two countries'
    foreign ministers should put into place a mechanism of consultation,
    according to the reports. High-level contacts like that would have
    been thought impossible only a short time ago.

    According to Mr Gul, Armenia signalled its support for the Turkish
    idea for a `Caucasus Platform', a regional grouping planned as a forum
    for conflict prevention and resolution. The Turkish government tabled
    the initiative after the fighting between Georgia and Russia in South
    Ossetia in early August.

    In Yerevan, the two presidents avoided any discussion about the thorny
    issue of the massacres. `They neither mentioned nor referred to the
    so-called genocide,' Mr Gul said. Hurriyet reported that the two
    countries agreed to speed up the establishment of a joint committee of
    historians that would deal with the events of 1915. A joint committee
    dealing with economic questions was also planned, the newspaper
    reported. Almost a decade ago, Turkey began a similar process of
    rapprochement with Greece, another traditional neighbourhood
    foe. Since then, co-operation has increased in a number of fields,
    although difficult questions like the exact delineation of their
    maritime border in the Aegean remain unresolved.

    But while many commentators had only good things to say about Mr Gul's
    trip, some remained unconvinced. In scathing remarks aimed at the
    president, the opposition leader, Deniz Baykal, suggested that Mr Gul
    may as well lay a wreath at a memorial commemorating the Armenian
    genocide in Yerevan. He also reminded Mr Gul that he himself had been
    very critical of Armenia as a parliamentary deputy in 1993.

    `What has changed since then?' Mr Baykal asked, referring to Armenia's
    positions concerning the border, the genocide issue or
    Nagorno-Karabakh. `Nothing has changed.'

    The presidential trip `will earn Turkey important points on its road
    to the EU', wrote Yildiz Devici Bozkus, an analyst at the Centre for
    Eurasian Strategic Studies, a think tank in Ankara. But Turkey would
    be giving Armenia the chance to be at the table of the Caucasus
    Platform without Yerevan having to give up any of its own positions in
    the various disputes with Turkey, she added.

    http://www.thenational.ae/article/20080907 /FOREIGN/344378535/1002&profile=1002
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