Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ninety years after fleeing, Armenians return to Turkey

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

  • Ninety years after fleeing, Armenians return to Turkey

    Ninety years after fleeing, Armenians return to Turkey
    by Mariam Haroutiounian

    Agence France Presse -- English
    April 22, 2005 Friday 2:33 AM GMT

    YEREVAN April 22 -- Ninety years after massacres in Ottoman Turkey
    caused an Armenian exodus from eastern Anatolia, Armenians are
    returning to Turkey by the thousands.

    This time the Armenians travel as tourists to a nation which still
    holds no diplomatic relations with their homeland.

    Armenia will mark on Sunday the mass killings by Ottoman Turks, a
    slaughter that is among the most painful episodes of the country's
    ages-old history and that continues to strain ties between it and
    its neighbour.

    Though Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen perished in
    orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917 as the Ottoman Empire
    fell, they are now drawn by sunny beaches and low prices, travel
    agencies say.

    At home and abroad, Armenians have spent the better part of the last
    century fighting for international recognition of the massacres as
    genocide and for an apology from Turkey.

    But Ankara refuses. Instead Turkish officials say 300,000 Armenians
    and thousands of Turks were killed in "civil strife" during World War
    I when the Armenians rose against their Ottoman rulers and sided with
    invading Russian troops.

    Turkey has frozen diplomatic relations with Armenia over the issue
    and crippled its economy by shutting its land border with the country
    when it occupied the territory of its close ally Azerbaijan.

    None of this has stopped visitors from land-locked Armenia pouring
    onto Turkey's sun kissed beaches.

    "There is a noticeable tendency for more people to spend their holidays
    in this neighboring country and it's not just because of the cheap
    travel packages. Unlike the United States and Europe it's easy to
    get a visa," said Artak Kagramanyan, a manager for the Yerevan-based
    Armentur agency.

    Like visitors from almost any other former Soviet republic, Armenians
    can purchase Turkish visas for 10 dollars upon arrival. A weeklong
    holiday including airfare costs an average of 1,200 dollars (920 euros)
    while bus trips to Turkey through Georgia are even cheaper.

    Still, the bad blood between Armenia and Turkey means many Armenians
    are often uncomfortable with visiting at first.

    "In the beginning we were worried," said Sofia Davdyan who recently
    spent her vacation in Turkey with her brother.

    "We were going to a country with which we have so many unresolved
    problems, but then when we got to the resort in Alania and saw the
    conditions and services we calmed down," she said.

    Davdyan said ordinary Turks were not concerned with the ethnicity of
    their visitors because "business is business and they make a lot of
    money on tourism."

    Many Armenians, however, consider it to be disrespectful to the
    victims of the Turkish massacres to spend money in a state that has
    not acknowledged them as genocide.

    Ayk, 20, a student in Yerevan State University said visiting Turkey
    was simply wrong.

    "Turkey needs to admit to the genocide and apologize to our people,
    we can talk about better relations, mutual visits only after that,"
    Ayk said.

    When it comes to visiting the parts of Eastern Anatolia from which
    Armenians were expelled during World War I, things are not so simple
    with the Turkish authorities either.

    "The Turks have no problem with tourists from Armenia who spend
    piles of cash on shopping, holidays and sightseeing, but when it
    comes to visiting the historic homeland politics comes into play,"
    said a travel agent who asked not to be named.

    According to Anitur, one of the only agencies in Armenia that sells
    tours to Eastern Anatolia, known as Western Armenia to Armenians,
    visitors are required to get a special pass from Turkish authorities.

    "Not everyone is ready to overcome these difficulties," the agency's
    director Vladimir Arushanyan said, adding that only 100 Armenian's
    make the emotionally difficult trip every year.
Working...
X