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Turkey, Armenia start to mend old emnities via World Cup football

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  • Turkey, Armenia start to mend old emnities via World Cup football

    Turkey and Armenia start to mend old emnities via World Cup football
    matchTony Halpin Yerevan


    The Times/UK
    September 7, 2008


    It was a football game that could set the ball rolling to resolve one
    of history's most bitter enmities.

    In an unprecedented visit for two countries divided by the legacy of
    the 20th century's first genocide, the presidents of Turkey and Armenia
    sat together in the Armenian capital, Yerevan, to watch their national
    teams play a World Cup qualifying match.

    Turkey's national anthem was almost drowned out by booing from 35,000
    Armenian fans at the Hrazdan Stadium, where Abdullah Gül and Serzh
    Sargsyan watched the game from behind bullet-proof glass. Turkey won
    2-0, but the smiles and handshakes between the presidents showed that
    they believed `football diplomacy' had achieved the most important
    result.

    `I was happy to see that we were unanimous with the Armenian side on
    the need for mutual dialogue to remove barriers to improving bilateral
    ties. I underlined that there is no problem that dialogue cannot
    solve,' President Gül said after the two held talks.

    President Sargsyan said that there was a `political will to decide the
    questions between our countries, so that these problems are not passed
    on to the next generation'. He has been invited to Ankara to watch the
    return match next year.

    There is a lot to discuss. Turkey refused to establish diplomatic
    relations after the collapse of the Soviet Union because of Armenia's
    campaign for international recognition of what it calls the Turkish
    genocide of Armenians at the beginning of the 20th century. Yerevan
    repeatedly said that it was ready to establish relations without
    preconditions.

    Compounding a sense of historical injury, Armenia's national symbol,
    Mount Ararat, towers over Yerevan just beyond the Turkish border.
    Turkey closed the border between the two countries in 1993 as a gesture
    of support for Azerbaijan in its war with Armenia over the separatist
    enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Turkey insists that there was no genocide, although a growing number of
    countries have backed Armenian claims.

    Ankara says that up to half a million Armenians and a similar number of
    Turks died in civil conflict as Russian troops invaded the crumbling
    Ottoman Empire from the east.

    Hundreds of Armenian protesters held up banners demanding `Turkey admit
    your guilt' and `1915 never again' as President Gül's motorcade
    travelled from the airport into Yerevan for the game on Saturday.

    The visit also brought a stream of Turkish journalists and television
    crews to Yerevan's Genocide Museum, next to a memorial to the victims
    on a hill overlooking the football stadium. Hayk Demoyan, the museum's
    director, told The Times that many Turks were confronting this history
    for the first time because school textbooks made no mention of it.

    `You can see the shock on their faces at this lack of knowledge. It is
    a very painful process for Turkey to open up its history that has been
    censored for years,' he said.

    Mr Demoyan admitted that he had been shocked to see the Turkish flag
    flying over the stadium after so many decades of hostility. But he
    welcomed Mr Sargsyan's invitation to Mr Gül as an opportunity to forge
    new relations.

    `He is the first Turkish leader to visit Yerevan, even the Ottoman
    Sultans never came,' he said. `We have to have diplomatic relations and
    history. Nobody can make us forget, memory is not something that can be
    traded.'

    Most Armenians seemed to support that view. An open border would also
    boost landlocked Armenia's economy, which depends on Georgia, embroiled
    in conflict with Russia, and Iran for access to the outside world.

    Mr Gül sounded optimistic on the flight back to Ankara saying: `I
    believe my visit has demolished a psychological barrier in the
    Caucasus.'

    Contentious history

    'Between 1915 and 1923, the Ottoman Empire's `Young Turk' Government
    allegedly set about exterminating the two million Turkish Armenians,
    who had been seeking greater independence

    ' Many of the deaths took place as Ottoman forces were fighting
    Imperial Russia during the First World War. By 1923 a total of 1.5
    million Armenians are believed to have perished in massacres, on death
    marches and in concentration camps set up in the desert on the Syrian
    border

    ' April 24 is the day when Armenian communities worldwide commemorate
    the genocide. It was on this date in 1915 that 200 Armenian leaders in
    Constantinople were rounded up and executed

    ' Turkey rejects the allegation of genocide. It maintains that
    Armenians and Turks died during civil strife in the context of Wthe
    First World War and that the state had no role in planning mass
    extermination

    Sources: Armenian National Institute, Times Archives
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