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ANKARA: Lifeline For Kars Just Across The Border

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  • ANKARA: Lifeline For Kars Just Across The Border

    LIFELINE FOR KARS JUST ACROSS THE BORDER

    Hurriyet
    April 20 2009
    Turkey

    KARS - If trade is life, one could easily say the province of
    Kars in the northeast of the country is slowly losing its will to
    survive. While Turkey shut its border with Armenia as reparations
    to that country, the declining living standards, bankrupt economy
    and migration has left the people of Kars thinking they are the ones
    being punished.

    Since the closure of the border with Armenia in 1993, an act of
    solidarity with Azerbaijan, the city's economic development was
    arrested just when it was so close to taking off. The collapse of the
    Soviet Union had opened many opportunities for the city that borders
    both Armenia and Georgia, that it believed it was destined to be the
    gateway to the Caucasus and to Central Asia beyond.

    Whomever one talks to in the city, an overwhelming desire to see
    the border with Armenia reopened is often followed with a cautious,
    "but." Once the hospitable people of this city start opening up though,
    the "but" becomes less intense.

    Locals want the border to be opened but their desire for the promised
    economic advantages are tempered by the possibility of them being
    accused of being "Armenian lackeys" because of the perception towards
    Armenians and nationalist pressure that has built up over the years.

    FELINE FOR KARS JUST ACROSS THE BORDER
    Kars Kafkas University Department of Economics president, Professor
    Mehmet Dikkaya, said ethnic divisions also played a part in the way
    people addressed the issue. "There are four main ethnic groups in
    the province. There are Kurds, Azerbaijanis, Karapalpaks and Turks,"
    he said, Karapalpaks being a Turkic group with close ethnic links to
    the Kazakhs of Central Asia.

    "We can say that Azerbaijanis and Karakalpaks are against any border
    opening while Kurds and Turks welcome the move," Dikkaya said.

    He said the province was in dire straits in terms of its economic
    situation. "Kars has no trade potential. Of the 80,000 who live in
    the city, half have green cards," he said. Green cards provide free
    healthcare for the poor.

    The only sector that keeps more or less creeping along is the
    traditional sector of animal husbandry, he said, with the industry
    based on dairy products.

    "Its organized industrial zone is dormant. If the border is opened,
    Kars will become a center on a trade route and its production sector
    will pick up. The province shares 325 kilometers of border with Armenia
    and has two border gates. Average annual loss of trade in $700 million
    since 1993. If the border opens, Turkish exports will increase by
    $400 million. If only 20 percent of this passes through Kars, this
    region will be a paradise," said Dikkaya. He said Turkish goods were
    widely consumed in Armenia. "According to a recent study of ours,
    Armenia purchases $100 million worth of Turkish goods a year and all
    of it go via Georgia and Iran. We have also learned that there is no
    disapproval of Turkish goods there," he said.

    Petition The former mayor of the city, Naif Alibeyoglu, who lost
    in the March 29 local elections after switching allegiances from
    the ruling Justice and Development Party, or AKP, to the opposition
    Republican People's Party, or CHP, said he had collected a petition
    for the opening of the border during his term in office. "I collected
    50,000 signatures in a city with a population of 80,000. The economic
    life of Kars has been suspended since 1993. As a municipality, we
    can't even collect taxes from the locals."

    He said opening the border was the first step after which all bilateral
    problems between Armenia and Turkey would be resolved with subsequent
    steps. The prejudice Armenians feel toward Turks dies once they
    visit Kars, he said. "They told us they thought we were monsters. My
    granfather's grandfather was killed by Armenians. There is no reason
    to keep bitter memories alive. Dialogue solves everything. Let's open
    the border and start trading.

    The real trade embargo is on Kars, not Armenia, says Kars Chamber of
    Commerce and Industry Chairman Ali Guvensoy, noting that airplanes
    from Armenia frequently land in Istanbul, Antalya and other regions.

    "Turkish goods reach Armenia via Iran and Georgia and are sold more
    expensively. If there is an embargo, it is on Kars," he said. In
    explaining the industrial decline of the province, Guvensoy
    said the foundations of 44 factories were laid but only 23 were
    completed. "Nowadays, only 18 of them are operational and all 18 are
    focused on dairy products. There are a meat plant and a cement factory
    but after they were privatized, many workers were laid off. They will
    soon privatize the sugar factory," he said.

    The region's economy is now centered on public servants, said Guvensoy,
    and added that most locals had begun to pack up and leave in order
    to make a living elsewhere.

    Still, he said, peace had to be established before the border was
    opened, adding, "We want access to Armenia but we need to make
    sacrifices and Armenia needs to withdraw from Nagorna-Karabakh."

    Guvensoy gave the neighboring province of Igdir and its border gate
    Nahchivan as an example to what trade could accomplish. "Trade there
    is booming. If the border is opened, ours will too."

    Zeki Yagci, a jewelry salesman for the last decade, wants the border
    to be opened. "Opening the border will attract investment and create
    opportunities for local businessmen. There is no commerce to speak
    of in our city. Igdir used to be a district of Kars. Now it is a
    separate province and ahead of us. Why? Because there is cross-border
    trade there," he said.

    Businessman Ozfer Kocal said the local economy thrived when the border
    with Armenia was open before 1993. "Closed borders help no one. If
    there is an embargo on Armenia, it should encompass everyone. There
    are flights to Yerevan from everywhere. There is trade from Trabzon
    and Hopa. This embargo is a way of punishing Kars," he said. Kocal
    also admitted that a certain environment was needed before the border
    could be opened. "Nagorno-Karabakh, genocide claims and demand for
    land. If Armenia forgoes these, the doors should be opened," he said.

    Shoe-shiner Hasan Perincek sees the economic collapse first hand
    everyday, he said. "We definitely want the border to open. Here,
    the state is nowhere to be seen. Animal husbandry is the only way
    people earn a living. Let Armenia and Azerbaijan settle their own
    differences. The city is constantly shrinking because of all the
    economic hardship. The city will soon be empty. There are 'for sale'
    signs everywhere. It seems like the city itself is for sale," he said.

    Calls for caution Shopkeeper Seyhan Karadeniz also wants the border
    to open. "There is no economy here. Winters are long and living is
    hard. If the border is opened, business will boom," he said. The
    fact that Armenians could go to Istanbul by plane while they couldn't
    cross the border to Kars was a shame.

    However, he also said the border could not be opened before the
    Nagorno-Karabakh issue was resolved.

    Ahmet Sarar, who has been involved in textiles for the past 40 years,
    said the city was bankrupt but also noted that the historical animosity
    between Turks and Armenians could prove uncomfortable if the border
    was opened. "I have my doubts. If the border is opened, the rich
    there will purchase land here and their demands will increase. If the
    Armenians over here behaved, those across the border won't," he said.

    The head of Kars' Association for Supporting Contemporary Living,
    or CYDD, Vedat Akcaiz, who is also a journalist, said during his
    visit to Armenia he had realized that the prejudices there could be
    ended easily.

    "There, the elderly welcomed me and my associates as 'Kardas'
    [brother]. Unfortunately, the young are very prejudicial. A dialogue
    needs to be established as soon as possible," he said.

    "There is serious trade between Trabzon and Armenia. What kind of
    embargo is this? And furthermore, what is important for us is the
    regional Turkic republics beyond Armenia. We don't want to be the end
    of a one-way street. We want to be the gateway to the east," he said.

    The opening of the border was just one part of a complicated matter,
    noted Akcaiz, adding that the public needed to be ready for what
    took place.

    "If an Armenian comes here and something untoward happened, everything
    could get even worse. There is that kind of potential here which should
    not be ignored. We cannot ignore Azerbaijan, the Nagorno-Bkarabakh
    issue and Armenia's demands. If the border is opened before these
    problems are resolved, there will be chaos," he said.
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