Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Reporters Meet to Turn a New Page on Turkish-Armenian Relati

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Reporters Meet to Turn a New Page on Turkish-Armenian Relati

    Sabah Daily News, Turkey
    Oct 18 2014


    REPORTERS MEET TO TURN A NEW PAGE ON TURKISH-ARMENIAN RELATIONS

    AA

    IZMIR ' A new engagement program brought together 18 journalists and
    bloggers, 10 from Armenia and eight from Turkey, to spend a fortnight
    travelling around Turkey and Armenia, two countries that share a
    divided and troubled past.

    Vazgen Karapetyan, 44, studied medicine but never practiced, claiming
    it was difficult to find a job in Armenia just after its independence
    from the Soviet Union in 1991. He is the deputy director of the
    Yerevan-based Eurasia Partnership Foundation, a mainly U.S. and
    EU-backed institution. "If, fifteen years ago, someone had told me
    that I would be working on Armenia-Turkey relations, I would have
    said: 'No, you are joking'," Karapetyan says.

    The tour claims that it will provide an opportunity for participants
    to explore the neighboring country while rediscovering their own
    nation.

    Relations between Ankara and Yerevan have historically been poor owing
    to bitter disagreements over events in 1915 which the Armenian
    diaspora and government describe as "genocide," fuelling demands for
    compensation.

    Turkey says that, although Armenians died during deportations in 1915,
    many Turks also lost their lives in attacks carried out by Armenian
    gangs in Anatolia.

    In April this year, Turkey's then-prime minister-now president-Recep
    Tayyip ErdoÄ?an, became the first Turkish statesman to offer
    condolences for the Armenian deaths.

    As diplomatic ties between Ankara and Yerevan stall, engagement
    between the two countries is now mainly through non-governmental
    groups and civil society.

    Karapetyan's family is originally from Turkey's eastern city of Van
    which was once an important center of Armenian culture.

    When Karapetyan had a chance to visit Istanbul for the first time in
    2004, he didn't want it "because I was prejudiced about Turks and
    Turkey."

    "I said I would never visit eastern Turkey, historical Armenian land,
    because it is painful," he adds.

    Speaking in Turkey's Aegean province of Izmir he says: "I couldn't
    imagine even talking with a Turkish person because Turks were our
    enemies. When I started to communicate with Turkish intellectuals, I
    saw that it wasn't true."

    Karapetyan has since been working on normalization projects, first
    between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia and then Armenia and Turkey,
    that bring together civil society and non-governmental organizations.

    He recalls his first visit to Van in eastern Turkey where his
    grandfather was born.

    "It was OK," he says, reflectively. "I wouldn't say it was painful, no.

    "My grandfather, who died in 1994, had always dreamed about going back
    to his hometown, to see the Armenian Cathedral of the Holy Cross on
    Akdamar Island in Lake Van. It was gorgeous. It was also reconstructed
    under the current [Turkish] administration."

    According to Karapetyan, Armenia was a closed society during the
    Soviet era and the 1915 events were not openly discussed as a result
    of Russian central government policies until 1965 when Moscow
    permitted the building of a memorial in Yerevan.

    Turkish-Armenian relations also mean Armenian-Azerbaijan relations as
    Turkey closed its border in 1993 to protest Yerevan's occupation of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, a disputed territory between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    "When the Turkish government decided to close the border, it was
    perceived in Armenia as a hostile step. It increased the notion that
    Azerbaijanis and Turks are the same and they are against Armenia,"
    says Karapetyan.

    Turkey's foreign ministry says Ankara was one of the first to
    recognize the independence of Armenia in 1991 and "actively supported
    the country's integration with regional and Euro-Atlantic
    organizations."

    "It is not only an Azerbaijan-Armenia problem, there is also Russia,"
    says Mensur Akgün, a professor from Istanbul Kültür University, who
    adds that today Moscow almost wholly controls Armenia's security, for
    example at airports.

    Pointing out that Armenia agreed to become part of a Russia-led custom
    union on October 10, Akgün foresees that Moscow's influence in the
    Caucasus country will increase.

    The Russia-led Eurasian Economic Union will come into force on Jan. 1,
    2015 and it is seen as an alternative to the EU for Russia and former
    Soviet countries.

    One of the Armenian participants in the project is Gayane Arustamyan,
    a 44-year-old freelance journalist who was born in Nagorno-Karabakh
    says, "The new custom union limits the independence of Armenia."

    Arustamyan points to Russian influence on Armenia-Turkey relations:
    "The question of influence on the Caucasus becomes an issue for
    Russia," she says.

    "Armenia is on the verge of losing its independence. It depends on
    Russia. In Armenia people are demanding a halt to this process. The
    opposition doesn't want to be part of a custom union.

    "I am one of those people who are against it. Because it doesn't
    matter how small your country is you should govern yourself," she
    adds.

    In May this year, Turkey' current prime minister, then-foreign
    minister, penned an article for British newspaper The Guardian. Ahmet
    DavutoÄ?lu recalled a protocol signed in Zurich on Oct. 10, 2009 -
    derailed at the last moment - which would have normalized relations
    between Turkey and Armenia.

    DavutoÄ?lu wrote: "I believe we now have the opportunity to recapture
    the engagement and reconciliation that eluded us in 2009."

    "What we share is a 'common pain' inherited from our grandparents," he added.

    Another traveller is Meri Musinyan, 37, from Yerevan who works for
    state-owned Public Radio of Armenia.

    According to Musinyan, who visited Turkey for the first time last
    October, ordinary people living in the two countries have a huge role
    to play in normalizing relations.

    "This kind of visits are very important because governments make their
    politics but the ordinary people should talk to each other," she says.

    "I have met a lot of people who are open-minded and very open to
    discussing things which were dangerous to discuss before" she
    explained, adding that she was not aware that in Turkey the new
    generation and intellectuals were more ready to discuss the 1915
    events.

    http://www.dailysabah.com/nation/2014/10/18/reporters-meet-to-turn-a-new-page-on-turkisharmenian-relations


    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X