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ANKARA: Businessmen Press For Opening Of Border After Historic Visit

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  • ANKARA: Businessmen Press For Opening Of Border After Historic Visit

    BUSINESSMEN PRESS FOR OPENING OF BORDER AFTER HISTORIC VISIT

    Today's Zaman
    Sept 9 2008
    Turkey

    President Gul (R) and his Armenian counterpart, Sarksyan, had a
    1.5-hour meeting in Yerevan on Saturday.

    Turkish and Armenian businessmen are hopeful that a historic visit
    by President Abdullah Gul to neighboring Armenia last weekend could
    bring economic benefits for both countries if the positive political
    atmosphere is followed by a reopening of the border, which has been
    closed since 1993.

    Kaan Soyak, co-chairman of the Turkish-Armenian Business Development
    Council, says Turkish and Armenian businessmen could set up an
    industrial zone in Turkey if the border is opened. According to Arsen
    Ghazaryan, the Armenian co-chairman of the council, the opening of the
    gate will boost tourism revenue for residents of the border provinces
    in eastern Turkey.

    Turkey closed its border with landlocked Armenia in 1993 in protest of
    Armenian occupation of a chunk of Azerbaijani territory in a dispute
    over Nagorno-Karabakh. Ankara says ties will not be normalized unless
    Armenia withdraws from Azerbaijani territory, stops backing its
    diaspora's efforts to win international recognition for claims that
    1.5 million Armenians were victims of genocide at the hands of the
    Ottoman Empire and formally recognizes the current border with Turkey.

    President Gul broke the ice on Saturday when he visited Yerevan,
    becoming the first Turkish president to set foot in Armenia since
    it declared independence from the Soviet Union, to watch a World
    Cup qualifying match between the national soccer teams of the two
    countries. Gul said the border issue was not on the agenda of his
    meeting with his Armenian counterpart, Serzh Sarksyan, but the
    two countries are expected to hold further talks to discuss how to
    normalize ties.

    "The progress achieved in Gul's visit should be taken further. We
    should take steps to ensure the free movement of goods in the
    Caucasus," Soyak told Today's Zaman. He said a closed railway link
    between Turkey and Armenia should be opened immediately, emphasizing
    that the railway has the capacity to transfer 10 million tons of
    goods annually.

    Ghazaryan said textile and tourism were the two sectors
    in which Turkish-Armenian business cooperation could start
    immediately. "Armenia's potential is not confined to its population
    of 3.5 million. Armenians from all over the world, from Canada to
    Brazil, from South Africa to Qatar, come to Armenia every year," he
    said. "The immediate effect of the opening of the border gate would
    be a boom in tourism in eastern Anatolia because diaspora Armenians
    coming to Armenia want to see the Anatolia."

    Soyak said approximately 200,000 diaspora Armenians visit Armenia
    every year. "These people have roots in Anatolia. If they each stay
    for three days in Turkey and spend $100 a day, this would mean $60
    million in tourism revenue for eastern Anatolia. It's not big money
    for Ä°stanbul, but hotels in eastern Anatolia will enjoy a boom in
    income," Soyak said.

    Ghazaryan is also optimistic that Turkish businessmen will be able
    to operate freely in Armenia despite concerns over public misgivings
    against the Turks. "Turkish businessmen have already been operating
    successfully in Armenia for 15 years," he said.

    Ghazaryan is also hopeful that Saturday's soccer game opened a new era
    in Turkish-Armenian ties. He said there has been a change of thinking
    among Turkish politicians towards Armenia in recent years. "We have
    to live together in this region and build a common future," he said.

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

    Gul to visit Azerbaijan on fence-mending mission after trip to
    Yerevan President Abdullah Gul will visit regional ally Azerbaijan
    on Wednesday, days after he became the first Turkish president,
    since Armenian independence from the USSR, to visit Armenia, which
    is currently occupying a part of Azerbaijan.

    The Azerbaijani government has refrained from publicly criticizing
    the visit, and Turkish officials said Baku has raised no objection
    to Gul's visit on Saturday. But newspapers and politicians have said
    Gul's visit could undermine the alliance between Turkey and Azerbaijan.

    Turkey wants Azerbaijan and Armenia to join a Caucasus Stability
    and Cooperation Platform, a scheme it proposed after a brief
    Georgian-Russian war last month after Georgia launched a military
    offensive into the breakaway region of South Ossetia. Gul will meet
    with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev during his one-day visit.

    Gul's visit to Armenia raised the hopes of a breakthrough in relations
    between the two estranged neighbors, but the two countries face the
    daunting task of normalizing ties despite complicated problems.

    Gul is expected to once again meet with his Armenian counterpart,
    Serzh Sarksyan, in New York on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly
    next month. Foreign Ministers Ali Babacan and Eduard Nalbandian will
    also have talks during the UN gathering. Talks between the two sides
    on how to normalize ties are expected to gain momentum after the New
    York meetings.

    Despite Armenian wishes for an immediate opening of the border with
    Turkey, closed since 1993, Ankara is cautious, saying progress will
    depend on Armenian steps for reconciliation in a territorial dispute
    with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh. Ankara severed its diplomatic
    relations and closed the border with Armenia after Azerbaijan occupied
    a part of Azerbaijani territory. Ankara Today's Zaman

    --Boundary_(ID_MZKXYJsTatnQVCTpMY/gmg)--
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