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  • ANKARA: Gul To Send Message To Yerevan With

    GUL TO SEND MESSAGE TO YEREVAN WITH ARMENIA BORDER VISIT

    Today's Zaman
    July 19 2008
    Turkey

    photo: Ani is an uninhabited medieval Armenian city in the province
    of Kars on the Armenia border.

    President Abdullah Gul will send neighboring Armenia a conciliatory
    message wrapped in a warning over regional isolation when he visits
    the Turkish-Armenian border next week.

    Gul will visit Ani, an uninhabited medieval Armenian city in the
    province of Kars on the Armenia border, on July 23, during a visit
    to the region to attend a ceremony to inaugurate the construction
    of the Turkish part of a regional railway passing through Turkey,
    Georgia and Azerbaijan; the line excludes Armenia. The presidents of
    Azerbaijan and Georgia will also attend the inauguration ceremony,
    scheduled for July 24.

    Despite Turkish efforts to deepen cooperation with other regional
    countries at the expense of landlocked Armenia, Gul's visit to Ani
    is a sign of readiness to improve ties with Yerevan. Armenia wants
    Turkey to restore medieval churches in Ani and Turkish authorities
    began renovation works in the city early this year.

    The president's visit to Kars comes as the two estranged neighbors
    exchange warm messages, raising hopes for dialogue. Foreign
    Minister Ali Babacan yesterday appeared to confirm a report in the
    Turkish media that Turkish and Armenian officials had secret talks
    in Switzerland earlier this month. The report in the Hurriyet daily
    said the officials met for a few days starting on July 8 and that a
    senior Foreign Ministry official headed the Turkish delegation.

    "Such talks are held from time to time," Babacan told reporters. In a
    statement, the Foreign Ministry also said there had been occasional
    contacts between Turkey and Armenia -- noting that Turkey had
    recognized the neighboring state since it declared independence from
    the now-defunct Soviet Union in 1991 -- but warned that no specific
    conclusion should be drawn from them. "Meetings between members of the
    foreign ministries of the two countries are part of these contacts. We
    believe no different meaning should be attributed to these meetings."

    In 2005, Turkish and Armenian officials were reported to have had
    similar meetings. Turkey recognizes Armenia but severed its diplomatic
    contact with the landlocked country after it occupied Nagorno-Karabakh
    in Azerbaijan. Ankara says normalization of ties hinges on Armenian
    withdrawal from Nagorno-Karabakh as well as Armenian recognition of
    the current border and a change of Yerevan's policy on claims of an
    Armenian genocide at the hands of the late Ottoman Empire. Ankara
    denies claims that Armenians were subject to genocide and says
    both Armenians and Turks died in a civil conflict that erupted
    after Anatolian Armenians revolted against the Ottoman Empire for
    independence during the World War I years.

    "We have problems about current issues and disagreements about the
    1915 events. It is essential that these problems are handled through
    dialogue," Babacan said.

    Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan proposed "a fresh start" in relations
    with Turkey in an article published in The Wall Street Journal earlier
    this month. "The time has come for a fresh effort to break this
    deadlock, a situation that helps no one and hurts many. As president
    of Armenia, I take this opportunity to propose a fresh start -- a new
    phase of dialogue with the government and people of Turkey, with the
    goal of normalizing relations and opening our common border," he said.

    Sarksyan also invited Gul to a World Cup qualifying match between
    Armenian and Turkish teams in September. Officials say the invitation
    is still under consideration and that the president will decide
    according to developments.

    In the absence of a solution to problems with Armenia, Turkey has
    taken steps to deepen regional cooperation on energy, transportation
    and trade with Azerbaijan and Georgia. The planned Baku-Tbilisi-Kars
    railway will link the three countries and revive the historical Silk
    Road by connecting Central Asia and the Far East to Europe via Turkey.

    Construction of the Georgian section of the railway, expected to begin
    operation in 2011, began in November. Gul joined Georgian President
    Mikhail Saakashvili and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev at the
    inauguration ceremony then. Some 1.5 million people and 6.5 million
    tons of cargo are expected to be transported through the railway in
    the first year following its launch. The project is estimated to cost
    $450 million.

    ---------------------------------------- -----------------------------------

    Gul: Sarksyan's invitation being considered

    President Abdullah Gul has said he is contemplating Armenian President
    Serzh Sarksyan's formal invitation to visit Yerevan for a soccer
    match in September.

    When Gul received Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki in
    Ankara on Thursday, journalists asked if he would go to Yerevan,
    and Gul replied: "You will see when the time comes. The offer is
    being considered." Armenia and Turkey will play against one another
    in the Armenian capital on Sept. 6 in a qualifying match of the 2010
    FIFA World Cup, which will be held in South Africa.

    Sarksyan's call to Turkey to launch "a fresh start" in relations
    between the estranged neighbors has been met with a positive response
    in the Turkish capital.

    However, sources said Ankara's response greatly depends on Yerevan's
    attitude regarding resolutions in other countries' parliaments to
    consider the killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during World War
    I as "genocide." If Armenia continues to support such resolutions,
    relations will remain strained, the same sources noted. Ä°stanbul
    Today's Zaman with wires

    --Boundary_(ID_6Bl79X5v9BxP0cZdsfbF2g)--
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