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Bridging A Divide In Europe

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  • Bridging A Divide In Europe

    Tufts E-News
    February 14, 2005

    TOP STORY:
    Bridging A Divide In Europe

    A Fletcher School graduate student says that tensions between Turkey and
    Armenia won't subside as long as the border between the countries remains
    sealed.

    Medford/Somerville, Mass. Centuries-old tensions between Armenia and Turkey
    continue to percolate, thanks in large part to the sealed border that divides
    the two countries. The counterproductive closed-border policy, says a Fletcher
    School student, has impoverished many people in the two nations while blocking
    any chance of working toward a resolution.

    "The current policies in the region applied by both countries are indisputably
    a failure. It is time to open a fresh process of dialogue and reconciliation by
    opening the Turkish-Armenian border," Harout Semerdjian, a graduate student in
    international relations, wrote in the English-language publication Moscow Times.

    When Armenia achieved independence in 1991 after the dissolution of the Soviet
    Union, it faced many problems.

    "For the large and influential Armenian diaspora worldwide, the most important
    issue remained recognition of the events of 1915 as genocide," Semerdjian
    wrote. "However, for the majority of Armenians living in Armenia, the most
    significant issue became survival in a period of economic hardship and social
    turmoil."

    Turkey, he added, also faces setbacks: "In recent years, farmers have put
    entire villages in the Sivas region of the country up for sale. Isolated
    eastern provinces such as Erzerum, Kars and Igdir near the Armenian border are
    anxious to boost their economy in order to improve their low standards of
    living."

    Enforcing a sealed border, Semerdjian contended, only exacerbates the problem.

    "It only maintains the poverty in the border regions, which would otherwise
    benefit from cross-border economic activity."

    The tension stems from long-standing conflicts, such as the slaying of over a
    million Armenians at the hands of Turkish soldiers in 1915 (whether or not it
    was genocide is a hotly debated subject) and the recent dispute over the
    Azerbaijani enclave of Nagorny Karabakh, which is heavily populated by
    Armenians.

    These tensions, Semerdjian asserted, are hurting both nations.

    "While authorities in Turkey may feel they are punishing Armenia in support of
    Azerbaijan, both countries are in fact merely punishing their own people by
    maintaining closed borders."

    But a foundation of understanding cannot be established without communication,
    Semerdjian wrote.

    "How can Turkey expect the Armenian diaspora to behave in a positive,
    conciliatory manner when it is unwilling to establish basic communication links
    between the two countries? How can Armenia expect Turkey to understand its
    needs and historical issues when Mount Ararat currently acts as an Iron Curtain
    rather than a mountain of peace?"

    Semerdjian, a member of the Turkish-Armenian Business Development Council,
    wrote that unsealing the border would be mutually beneficial.

    "Open borders would encourage contact, trade, business opportunities and
    tourism between the population of both countries -- which would in turn create
    a sense of confidence and greater understanding between the two peoples."

    He added that opening the border would be a strong, independent step for both
    nations.

    "It would demonstrate to the international community the strong will and
    determination of both countries to solve their differences themselves, not in
    the corridors of the French senate or the U.S. Congress," he wrote.

    Semerdjian urged top Armenian and Turkish officials to reconsider their reasons
    for keeping the border sealed.

    "Leaders of both countries should be encouraged to think in global and
    realistic terms and start taking alternate steps toward peace, if they are
    serious about bringing harmony and eventual prosperity to the region."
    From: Baghdasarian
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