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Last Remnant Of The Iron Curtain Set To Fall In Victory For Football

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  • Last Remnant Of The Iron Curtain Set To Fall In Victory For Football

    LAST REMNANT OF THE IRON CURTAIN SET TO FALL IN VICTORY FOR FOOTBALL DIPLOMACY: ARMENIA
    by Tony Halpin

    The Times
    April 14, 2009 Tuesday
    London

    A potholed road runs through the village of Margara into a barbed-wire
    fence that marks Europe's last Cold War frontier. All that separates
    Armenia and Turkey is a narrow bridge across the River Araks and
    almost a century of enmity that began with the massacres of Armenians
    in Ottoman Turkey in 1915 and continued with the Iron Curtain that
    divided the Soviet Union from the West.

    The Soviet legacy in the Caucasus and the painful burden of history
    have conspired to keep the border closed long after the end of the Cold
    War. Now more than 70 years of separation may be only weeks from ending
    as relations between Turkey and Armenia undergo a remarkable thaw.

    The opening of the border is being seen as a pivotal moment in
    Turkey's rise as a major force in the Caucasus and beyond to Central
    Asia. With Russia also resurgent in the Caucasus after last summer's
    war with Georgia the stage is being set for an intensified struggle
    for control of the region's energy resources.

    Russian and Turkish troops eye each other warily from observation
    towers on either side of the bridge. The Russian Army patrols the
    border under a security agreement with Armenia and, with Turkey in
    Nato, this is the last place where

    the former Cold War foes still confront each other across a sealed
    border.

    Turkey refused to establish diplomatic relations with Armenia
    after it became independent in 1992 because of a dispute over border
    recognition. Ankara denies Armenian charges of genocide and is fearful
    of a claim for land in eastern Turkey once occupied by Armenians.

    Turkey briefly allowed trucks to cross the border in 1992 to
    deliver wheat to Armenia, where the population risked starvation
    as its Soviet-era economy collapsed. It sealed the border in 1993
    in protest at Armenia's war with Azerbaijan for Nagorno-Karabakh,
    a Soviet enclave populated largely by Armenians.

    Repeated negotiations, often secret, failed to end the stand-off but
    a bout of "football diplomacy" brought a breakthrough in September
    when President Sargsyan of Armenia invited President Gul of Turkey to
    watch the two countries play a World Cup qualifying match in Yerevan,
    the capital.

    Mr Gul accepted and invited Mr Sargsyan to watch the return match in
    Turkey in October. Mr Sargsyan has said that he wants to cross the
    land border to go to the game.

    Ali Babacan, the Turkish Foreign Minister, is expected in Yerevan
    on Thursday for a meeting of the Black Sea Economic Co-operation
    Organisation, only nine days before Armenia traditionally marks the
    anniversary of the genocide.

    He is not expected to announce a date for the opening of the bo rder
    but all sides believe that it is close.

    Richard Giragosian, director of the Armenian Centre for National
    and International Studies, said that he expected the opening of the
    border to be followed by diplomatic recognition and an agreement to
    establish joint commissions dealing with everything from trade and
    transport issues to the genocide.

    "This is the first time that both sides have been ready and willing
    at the same time and this, combined with Russian support, makes me
    optimistic," he said.

    "It's a Turkish effort but also part of a Russia-Turkish warming that
    I think is only temporary because they are inherently rivals in the
    long term."

    The West views the Caucasus as a key channel for pipelines to link
    Central Asia's massive oil and gas reserves with Europe, bypassing
    Russia. The opening of the border has special resonance in Margara,
    however, an impoverished village 40km (25 miles) from Yerevan, where
    refugees crossed the river to safety.

    The snow-capped peak of Mount Ararat also stands tantalisingly out
    of reach, rising majestically above farmland 40km inside Turkey. The
    biblical resting place for Noah's Ark is sacred to Armenians, who
    were the world's first state to adopt Christianity.

    Kostan Piliposyan, 75, told The Times that he was eager to visit
    Ararat and to see his mother's birthplace in nearby Igdir when the
    border opened.

    Then he dissolved into tears as he recal led how she had left behind
    her dead parents as she fled the genocide.

    "Of course, Turkey doesn't want to talk about this question," he
    said. "But it will be good for Armenia that the border is open. The
    Turks are also people and we need to talk and trade with each other,
    so let them come."

    Thawing relations

    1915 Armenia claims that the Young Turks, the dominant party in the
    Ottoman Empire, arranged the killing of 1.5 million Armenians

    1920 Armenia invaded by Turkey and Russia. An agreement with the
    Bolsheviks leads to Armenia proclaiming itself a socialist republic

    1993 Turkey shuts its border with Armenia after separatists fight
    for independence in the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh

    2001 Armenia becomes a full member of the Council of Europe.

    France ignores Turkish objections and introduces a law stating that
    Ottoman Turks committed genocide against Armenians in 1915

    2005 Turkey says that it is ready for political relations with Armenia
    and proposes joint commission to investigate the 1915 killings

    2008 Talks accelerated after Turkish President attends a Turkey-Armenia
    football match in Yerevan
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