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  • Ankara: Armenian Experts Skeptical On Turkish-Armenian Thaw

    ARMENIAN EXPERTS SKEPTICAL ON TURKISH-ARMENIAN THAW

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Wednesday, October 7, 2009

    Two senior Armenian experts express pessimism over the normalization
    talks between Turkey and Armenia, saying the hostility between the
    two countries will not be resolved in the near future. The rancor will
    not end, unless the Turkish government accepts responsibility for the
    'genocide,' says one

    Armenian experts skeptical on Turkish-Armenian thaw

    The recent thaw between Turkey and Armenia, which are nearing a
    historic diplomatic agreement after years of animosity over alleged
    killings of Armenians during the late days of the Ottoman Empire,
    has been met with cynicism from some senior Armenian experts.

    "For nearly 100 years, Turkey has denied the genocide fact that
    has wrecked Armenians. This hostility will not end unless the
    Turkish government accepts responsibility for the genocide," said
    Ara Khachatourian, editor of Asbarez Daily News, one of the leading
    diaspora newspapers published in the United States.

    Razmig Panossian, author and director of Policy for Programs and
    Planning at Rights and Democracy in Canada, agreed with Khachatourian,
    saying that he does not believe the long-standing hostility between
    the two nations will be solved in the near future. "It would be wrong
    to expect such a delicate historic trauma to come to a solution in a
    short time." However, Panossian also said the dialogue between Turkey
    and Armenia should be encouraged despite the problematic timing and
    the thorny issues that are waiting to be solved.

    Armenia claims up to 1.5 million Armenians were systematically killed
    in 1915 under the rule of the Ottoman Empire. Turkey denies this,
    saying that any deaths were the result of civil strife that erupted
    when Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia.

    Turkey and Armenia agreed on steps toward establishing full diplomatic
    ties for the first time between the neighbors in late August. Despite
    fierce d pposition, the two countries are expected to sign a landmark
    diplomatic deal this weekend in Zurich.

    Diplomatic sources said both countries are now in a win-win situation,
    while admitting that the job of Armenian President Serge Sarkisian was
    much more difficult considering the protests of the Armenian diaspora,
    which were evident in Paris, New York and Los Angeles.

    Khacatourian said the protest against Sarkisian would continue "because
    it is a basic right of the diaspora." But, Panossian's stance on the
    protests differs from Khacatourian. He said there are two diasporas:
    the "post-genocide diaspora" and the "post-1988 diaspora."

    "The 'post-genocide diaspora' will oppose Sarkisian's policies toward
    Turkey due to its ultra-nationalist nature. On the other hand, the
    birthplace of the 'post-1988 diaspora' is Armenia and this group would
    support Armenia, therefore the policies of Sarkisian, whatever it
    costs," he told Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review for the fourth
    edition of the Postcard from Armenia series.

    Diaspora's stance:

    After the signing ceremony in Switzerland, the documents that aim to
    establish full ties will be dispatched to the respective parliaments
    for ratification. The ceremony will be followed by the World Cup
    qualifying match that will take place in Bursa on Oct. 14 between
    the Turkish and Armenian national teams.

    The first protocol, covering the establishment of diplomatic relations,
    and the second, on the further development of bilateral relations,
    are accompanied by an annex that sets a clear timetable for the
    implementation of both.

    A first sign of rapprochement came in September last year, when Turkish
    President Abdullah Gul went to the Armenian capital, Yerevan, to visit
    Sarkisian and watch a World Cup soccer qualifying match between the
    two countries.

    The two neighbors have no diplomatic relations and their border
    has been closed since 1993, after Turkey's decision to support its
    key ally, Azerbaijan, against Yerevan's backing of ethnic Armenian
    catourian also criticized Turkey for its Nagorno-Karabakh precondition
    to opening the Turkish-Armenian border. "Turkey has unilaterally
    closed the border and now it puts the Nagorno-Karabakh problem as the
    precondition to open it. Turkey is playing innocent at every stage
    and does not accept its responsibilities. The border should be opened
    with no preconditions because that is the fair thing to do."

    Panossian also said Turkey should not link the matter of the border
    opening with the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, urging the two countries to
    open their borders immediately. "Rather than discussing preconditions,
    the border between the two countries should be opened and diplomatic
    relations should begin," he said

    In our fifth Postcard from Armenia, geologists tell of the
    obstacles they have faced during their groundbreaking work near the
    Turkish-Armenian border.
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