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ANKARA: Turkey And Armenia Extending Olive Branch To Each Other

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  • ANKARA: Turkey And Armenia Extending Olive Branch To Each Other

    TURKEY AND ARMENIA EXTENDING OLIVE BRANCH TO EACH OTHER

    Turkish Daily News
    July 25, 2008 Friday


    Political circles and the public in Armenia are quite curious about
    Turkish President Abdullah Gul's response to an invitation extended
    by Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan to watch the Turkey-Armenia
    football World Cup qualifier that will take place in Yerevan Sept. 6.

    Rumors that Turkish and Armenian diplomats held secret negotiations
    over the topic in Switzerland have further increased the level of
    curiosity. Contact between the two sides certainly does not take place
    only in the meeting rooms of third parties. A group from Turkey also
    had contacts in Yerevan last week. Yet both sides, Turkey and Armenia,
    prefer to remain silent for now.

    On the other hand, top-level Armenian politicians insistently refrain
    from being interviewed by journalists from the Turkish media these
    days, because they think any interviews they'd have with Turkish
    journalists would be manipulated, and therefore, not be reflected
    objectively to the Turkish public. So they try to be cautious
    about interviews, with the idea that they might spoil the course of
    softening relations between Turkey and Armenia. Even though I, as a
    Turkish journalist of Armenian descent, was not treated like other
    journalists in Yerevan, this did not save a planned interview that
    I was going to conduct with a top-level politician from postponement
    to an uncertain "next time" due to a last-moment occurrence.

    I asked the opinions of many Armenians on the street. Most of them do
    not have a positive perspective toward the Sargsyan administration. My
    general impression is that the majority of citizens in Armenia want
    to see country's first president, Levon Ter-Petrosyan, in power again.

    By the way, many citizens also think that the last presidential
    elections were biased. For them, the government of Sargsyan is the
    main source of the internal conflict that occurred in March. That is
    actually the reason why Sargsyan has recently been trying hard to
    regain the public's confidence. One of his big goals is to develop
    Armenia's economy, which has had a significant growth rate in
    recent years, and in this way, to increase the level of prosperity in
    Armenian society. But his priority is to expand the scope of bilateral
    relations with neighboring countries, which definitely, and above all,
    include Turkey.

    Turkey's addressee Armenia, not the diaspora

    Meanwhile, the "genocide" issue is still a taboo in Armenia. Only young
    intellectuals have a moderate approach toward possible dialogue with
    Turkey. "I believe in the importance of possible dialogue with Turkey,"
    said Dr. Hayk Demoyan, the 33-year-old director of the Genocide Museum
    in Yerevan. "Turkey's internal peace is highly important for us. I
    lost a large part of my family during the painful event that occurred
    in the past decades. I am still a part of those lands. My roots belong
    to those lands. That's why a dialogue with Turkey is important."

    University students, too, have an interest in Turkey and the
    Turks. This is the impression I got as a result of a number of
    interviews I conducted with students in different universities in
    Yerevan. Some students even spend their holidays in Turkey. Young
    people in Armenia also hold the opinion that the two peoples need to
    communicate with each other and talk about the traumas that happened
    in the past. And they are quite critical about interferences by
    the diaspora and the countries of the West in the problems between
    Turkey and Armenia. Young academics, on the other hand, underline
    that Armenia is an independent country and the problems between it
    and Turkey can be solved only with the cooperation of both.
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