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ANKARA: Soccer diplomacy brings Turkey's Gul to Armenia

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  • ANKARA: Soccer diplomacy brings Turkey's Gul to Armenia

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Sept 6 2008


    Soccer diplomacy brings Turkey's Gül to Armenia



    The presidents of Turkey and Armenia went to a soccer match together
    on Saturday during a landmark encounter in Yerevan designed to help
    end almost a century of hostility and aid security in the Caucasus.

    Abdullah Gül became the first Turkish leader to visit Armenia. The
    neighbours have no diplomatic ties but a relationship haunted by
    whether ethnic Armenians killed during World War One were victims of
    systematic genocide.

    Security was tight. Helicopters escorted Gül's jet on arrival and
    hundreds of demonstrators lined the streets of the Armenian capital.

    But the two presidents expressed hope the World Cup qualifier, the
    first match between the two national sides, would help thaw relations
    and foster dialogue.

    The initiative has gained new impetus since Russia's war with Georgia
    last month, which raised fears for the security of energy supplies
    from the Caspian Sea to western Europe.

    "We hope we will be able to demonstrate goodwill to solve the problems
    between our countries and not transfer them to future generations,"
    Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan told a news conference after
    receiving Gül.

    Gül said he hoped the game -- which Turkey won 2-0 -- would aid
    rapprochement and contribute to regional peace and security.

    "This match is important beyond being the first match between the
    Turkish and Armenian national teams," Gül said on departure from
    Ankara. "It has a significance that will present important
    opportunities."

    Turkey has never opened an embassy in Armenia and in 1993 Ankara
    closed their land border in a show of solidarity with Azerbaijan, a
    Turkic-speaking ally which was fighting Armenian-backed separatists
    over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    ALTERNATIVE ENERGY ROUTE

    But even as the two presidents took their seats together in the
    Hrazdan stadium, the challenges were obvious.

    Armenian fans booed the Turkish national anthem, and dozens of
    demonstrators held torches and flowers in silent vigil at an imposing
    monument to the World War One killings on a hillside behind the
    stadium.

    Protesters in the streets held banners that read:"1915 - Never Again ,
    and "We Demand Justice."

    Armenia says 1.5 million Armenians died at the hands of Ottoman Turks,
    and Yerevan insists Ankara should recognise the killings as
    genocide. Turkey rejects the claims, saying that 300,000 Armenians
    along with at least as many Turks died in civil strife that emerged
    when the Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia.

    But Russia's decision last month to send its forces into Georgia, an
    ex-Soviet state which borders both Armenia and Turkey, has convinced
    many that it is time for Ankara and Yerevan to put their differences
    aside.

    Gül said the events made his trip "especially important ." Sarksyan
    said Gül had invited him to the return game next year.

    Establishment of normal relations could have huge significance for
    Turkey's role as a regional power, for energy flows from the Caspian
    Sea and for Western influence in the South Caucasus.

    Landlocked Armenia, a Soviet republic until 1991, could also derive
    enormous benefits from the opening of the frontier with its large
    neighbour and the restoration of a key rail link.

    Western-backed pipelines shipping oil and gas from the Caspian Sea to
    Turkey's Mediterranean coast bypass Armenia and bend north instead to
    go through Georgia.

    With that route looking vulnerable after the Russian intervention,
    Armenia could be an attractive alternative.

    06 September 2008, Saturday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN WITH WIRES Ä°STANBUL
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