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Turkish President To Stage Historic Visit To Armenia

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  • Turkish President To Stage Historic Visit To Armenia

    TURKISH PRESIDENT TO STAGE HISTORIC VISIT TO ARMENIA

    Agence France Presse
    Sept 3 2008

    ANKARA (AFP) -- President Abdullah Gul will on Saturday become
    the first Turkish head of state to visit Armenia, his office said,
    fuelling hopes of easing almost a century of hostility over massacres
    by Turkish Ottoman empire forces.

    Gul will go to Yerevan to attend a football match between the two
    countries, which do not have diplomatic relations and have spent
    decades at loggerheads over Armenia's attempts to get the massacres
    classified as "genocide."

    Armenia's President Serge Sarkisian invited Gul last month to attend
    the qualifying match for the 2010 World Cup finals. Turkish diplomats
    and security officials have been in Yerevan this week making final
    preparations.

    "A visit around this match can create a new climate of friendship
    in the region," the Turkish presidency said in a statement posted on
    its website. "It's with this in mind that the president has accepted
    the invitation.

    "This match could lift the obstacles blocking the coming together
    of two peoples who share a common history and can create a new
    foundation," it said.

    The Turkish presidency said it hoped the visit means "an opportunity
    for a better mutual understanding."

    The trip, which comes amid heightened tensions in the Caucasus region
    following the conflict last month between Georgia and Russia, will
    only last a few hours, a Turkish diplomatic source said.

    Sarkisian earlier welcomed a Turkish proposal for a new forum in
    the volatile Caucasus region after meeting a senior Turkish envoy to
    prepare the visit.

    "Armenia has always welcomed and welcomes all efforts directed at
    the strengthening of confidence, stability and security, and at
    deepening cooperation in the region," Sarkisian said in a statement
    after meeting Gul's special envoy Unal Cevikoz.

    He added that Cevikoz's visit "raises the possibility of talks to
    settle mutual relations" between the two countries.

    Turkey has refused to establish diplomatic relations with Armenia
    since it became independent from the Soviet Union in 1991. The key
    reason is Yerevan's campaign for the deaths of Armenian civilians in
    1915-1917 to be classified as genocide.

    Armenia says up to 1.5 million people were killed in orchestrated
    massacres during World War I as the Ottoman Empire fell apart before
    being dismantled in 1920.

    Turkey rejects the genocide label and argues that 250,000-500,000
    Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife as Armenians
    fought for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with invading
    Russian troops.

    About 20 countries have recognised the events as genocide. The European
    parliament recognised the "genocide" in 1987 and France in 2001 became
    the first major European nation to publicly recognise the Armenian
    genocide but did not explicity blame the Turks.

    In 2005, Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan took a tentative
    first step towards resolving the thorny genocide issue by mooting
    that a joint commission of historians launch an investigation and
    publish their conclusions.

    The proposal was rejected by Yerevan.

    A Turkish diplomatic source said Gul's visit would last only a few
    hours and expectations that he would announce his agreement were not
    welcomed by opposition deputies and nationalist militants in Turkey.

    "I would have preferred to go to Baku for a match and not to Yerevan,"
    said opposition chief Deniz Baykal, referring to Turkey's traditionally
    warm ties with Azerbaijan.

    In 1993, Ankara closed its border with Armenia over Nagorny
    Karabakh, an Armenian-majority region in Azerbaijan which proclaimed
    independence.

    Backed by Armenia, ethnic Armenian forces took control of the
    mountainous territory during a war in the early 1990s that left nearly
    30,000 dead and sparked an exodus of around one million.
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