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  • Armenia's grief

    Armenia's grief

    FT
    April 26 2009 20:01

    The agreement between Turkey and Armenia on a `road map' to normalise
    their relations is very good news. Their historic animosity since the
    slaughter and mass deportation of Armenians from the collapsing Ottoman
    empire in 1915 has destabilised the region, poisoned internal politics,
    isolated and impoverished Armenia, and cast a shadow over Turkey's
    relations with Europe and America. Now there is a chance of beginning
    to heal the wounds.

    Yet first a word of caution. Last week's declaration gave no clues to
    the precise terms of the agreement, nor a timetable. It seems to have
    been rushed out to enable Barack Obama, US president, to issue a
    statement commemorating the 1915 massacres without using the word
    `genocide' to describe them. That marked a sensible retreat from his
    election campaign position in order not to alienate Turkey.

    The prize of Turkish-Armenian reconciliation is worth it, but the
    process remains fragile and bedevilled by mistrust. Both sides are
    still only inching forward, and both face strong resistance at home to
    making any concessions at all.

    The deal would provide for diplomatic recognition, and reopening of the
    border between them, which was closed by Turkey in 1993 after ethnic
    Armenian forces seized control of Nagorno-Karabakh in neighbouring
    Azerbaijan. Both moves would be done gradually to build confidence.
    That is sensible.

    On two vital points, however, there is still no clarity. A historical
    commission is to be set up to investigate the events of 1915. How will
    it be constituted and how will it work? If it decides that the
    massacres did amount to genocide, or did not, it will still be
    politically explosive unless there is agreement to abide by its
    results. Second, what progress needs to be made on resolving the
    Karabakh dispute for Turkey to reopen the border fully?

    There seems to be a serious intent in both Ankara and Yerevan to find a
    way forward in spite of opposition, including from the influential
    Armenian diaspora in the US and European Union. But pressure on them
    both from Washington, Brussels and ` most significantly ` from Moscow
    for more progress and a clear timetable is still essential.

    The one country that might try to scupper progress is Azerbaijan,
    fearful that reopening the border would take away pressure for Armenia
    to do a deal over Karabakh, or at least to withdraw from the buffer
    zone where 500,000 Azeri refugees used to live. But the 19-year border
    closure has done nothing to hasten an agreement on that score. All
    sides have an interest in reconciliation, not confrontation.
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