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Ally Backs Sarkisian Visit To Turkey

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  • Ally Backs Sarkisian Visit To Turkey

    ALLY BACKS SARKISIAN VISIT TO TURKEY
    Ruzanna Stepanian

    Armenialiberty.org
    Sept 10 2009

    Armenia -- Heghine Bisharian, a leader of the pro-government Orinats
    Yerkir Party, speaks at a May 2009 rally in Yerevan.

    President Serzh Sarkisian should visit Turkey next month to keep
    up momentum in the ongoing efforts to normalize Turkish-Armenian
    relations, a junior partner in his coalition government said on
    Thursday.

    Sarkisian has been invited to attend with his Turkish counterpart,
    Abdullah Gul, the return match between the two countries' national
    teams to be played in the Turkish city of Bursa on October 14. Gul
    extended the invitation after watching their first game during a
    historic visit to Armenia in September 2008.

    Sarkisian made clear throughout the summer that he will go to
    Turkey only if Ankara takes "real steps" to establish diplomatic
    relations with Yerevan and reopen the Turkish-Armenian border. The
    two governments unveiled draft agreements to that effect on August 31.

    Heghine Bisharian, a leader of the Orinats Yerkir Party, which holds
    three portfolios in the Armenian government, spoke out in favor
    of Sarkisian's acceptance of Gul's invitation. "If they came here,
    we should go there too if we are committed to the normalization of
    relations," she said.

    Bisharian also expressed her party's unequivocal support for the
    Turkish-Armenian protocols that are due to be signed by October
    14. She said an open border with Turkey would greatly benefit the
    Armenian economy. "People think that prices in our country will fall,
    there will be more [business] activity, more people will come to our
    country, trade and business will develop," she told a news conference.

    Speaking at a news conference, Bisharian also defended the two
    governments' plans to set up a panel of historians who would
    jointly study the 1915 mass killings of Armenians in the Ottoman
    Empire. Sarkisian's political opponents are strongly against such a
    study, saying that Turkey would exploit it to keep more countries of
    the world from recognizing the massacres as genocide.

    "We have many historical facts, documents with which we can prove
    our point through that sub-commission," countered Bisharian. She
    also dismissed opposition speculation that as part of its deal with
    Ankara, Yerevan agreed to make more concessions in the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict.

    "Not a single provision of the protocols mentions the Artsakh issue,"
    she said, echoing statements by Sarkisian and his political allies.
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