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ANKARA: Armenian Team Returns To Mount Ararat Emblem

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  • ANKARA: Armenian Team Returns To Mount Ararat Emblem

    ARMENIAN TEAM RETURNS TO MOUNT ARARAT EMBLEM

    Today's Zaman
    Dec 24 2008
    Turkey

    The Armenian national soccer team, which had replaced its emblem
    featuring a silhouette of Turkey's Mount Ararat, known in Turkey as
    Mount Agrı, ahead of a match against Turkey in a World Cup qualifying
    game in September, has recently started to use the old emblem again.

    The previously new emblem of the Armenian national team, featuring
    a tiger and a lion instead of the silhouette of Mount Ararat, was
    introduced to the public at a September press conference in Yerevan,
    with Armenian Football Federation President Ruben Hayrapetyan saying
    that the change of emblem was due to demands from football fan
    associations. Hayrapetyan also said at the time that the previous
    emblem was not popular among fans of the national team.

    Armenian officials had dismissed a connection between the new emblem
    and the upcoming match; however, the change was widely considered to
    be a gesture of goodwill by the Armenian side ahead of the match on
    Sept. 6. Turkish President Abdullah Gul broke his country's foreign
    policy taboo by visiting Armenia to watch the soccer game. The visit
    paved the way for contact between Turkey and Armenia, which have had
    no formal ties since 1993.

    Since then, public criticism of the Armenian Football Federation's
    decision to change the previous emblem has surfaced in Turkey's
    estranged neighbor. The federation has decided to return to its
    previous emblem, which features a stylized representation of Mount
    Ararat.

    One of the conditions Ankara expects Yerevan to fulfill to
    normalize relations is formal recognition of the current border
    with Turkey. Turkish decision-makers are concerned that the Armenian
    administration has claims on Turkish territory, and the depiction of
    Mount Ararat on the Armenian national team emblem has been interpreted
    by some as a sign of Armenian irredentist desires.

    Sarksyan thanks Turkish people for help during 1988 quake

    It has emerged meanwhile that Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan sent
    a message to his Turkish counterpart on the 20th anniversary of the
    disastrous Spitak earthquake, expressing his gratitude for the Turkish
    people's help to Armenian people at the time.

    Dec. 7 marked the 20th anniversary of the Spitak earthquake, which
    flattened towns and villages across swathes of the then-Soviet
    Socialist Republic of Armenia, killing 25,000 people and leaving tens
    of thousands homeless.

    The world turned its attention to the tragedy in his country soon
    after the earthquake, Sarksyan noted in his message, adding that this
    proved that "grief is not one-sided."

    Sarksyan said that both he and the Armenian people have been grateful
    to Turkish people and the government of the Turkish Republic for
    their assistance in the aftermath of the Spitak earthquake.

    "We are sure that human actions will always be remembered, will
    increase clemency and will enlighten the world," he said.

    --Boundary_(ID_xSMIB1WTnFGmRydkKER2fQ)--
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