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Armenians Reject Trade, Commerce with Turkey

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  • Armenians Reject Trade, Commerce with Turkey

    Angus Reid Global Scan, Canada

    Polls & Research

    Armenians Reject Trade, Commerce with Turkey
    September 21, 2006

    - Many adults in Armenia believe their border with
    Turkey should not be reopened unless there is an acknowledgement of
    the genocide, according to a poll by the Gallup Organization. 57 per
    cent of respondents reject resuming cross-border travel and commerce.

    Relations between Armenia and Turkey are still tense due to historical
    factors. In 1915, the government of the Ottoman Empire-formed by
    members of the Turkish nationalist Committee of Union and Progress
    (ITC)-ordered hundreds of thousands of Armenians to relocate from
    the Caucasus to Mesopotamia.

    The state-sponsored deportation campaign led to a high number of
    Armenian fatalities, estimated at anywhere from 200,000 to 1.8
    million. While some scholars believe the campaign was a deliberate
    attempt to exterminate Armenians, Turkey has never formally accepted
    the use of the term "genocide" to describe the event.

    Yesterday, Turkish deputy prime minister Egemen Bagish discussed
    the situation, saying, "(Turkish prime minister Recep Tayip) Erdogan
    took a step that no one has ever taken. He declared that the Turkish
    people are ready to stand face-to-face with their past and offered
    discussions with Armenia if it can do the same. Armenians rejected
    to stand-face-to-face with their past and said they will make Turkey
    accept what they want. So, there is nothing to say in this case."

    The poll was conducted with the support of the Armenian Sociological
    Association, the U.S. Agency for International Development and the
    International Republican Institute.

    Polling Data

    Do you agree or disagree with reopening of the Turkish-Armenian
    border, that is, the unconditional resumption of cross-border travel
    and commerce, without Turkish recognition of the genocide?

    Agree
    39%

    Disagree
    57%

    Source: Gallup Organization / Armenian Sociological Association /
    U.S. Agency for International Development / International Republican
    Institute Methodology: Interviews with 1,200 Armenian adults, conducted
    in early August 2006. Margin of error is 3 per cent.
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