Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The View from Armenia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The View from Armenia

    Le Monde diplomatique
    27 August 2009
    Blog Posts

    Exclusive: The View from Armenia

    By Vicken Cheterian

    Mount Ararat towers above Armenia's capital, Yerevan. Just 50 km to
    the south of the city, you see the mountain soaring 4 km high (on a
    fine day) and glimpse its beauty, glaciers that seem to hang from the
    sky. But you can't hike or climb it, for the border with Turkey
    remains closed, and there are military installations, patrols and
    barbed wire. It is the last closed border of the cold war.

    What is hampering the normalisation of relations between Ankara and
    Yerevan is a dispute over Karabakh and Turkey's support for
    Azerbaijan, not the widely discussed topic of genocide. Ankara wants
    Armenia to withdraw its troops from Karabakh and other
    Azerbaijani-occupied territories before it opens the border and
    establishes diplomatic relations with Armenia.

    But in the last two years, diplomatic activities have increased. Since
    2007, Armenian and Turkish diplomats have been meeting secretly in
    Switzerland. Sources say they have studied in detail all the remaining
    sticking points between the two countries.

    There has also been a year of football diplomacy. The Armenian
    president Serge Sarkissian invited his Turkish counterpart, Abdullah
    Gul, to attend a World Cup match between the two national teams in
    Yerevan in September 2008. Gul came ` and left his foreign minister,
    Ali Babacan, behind for further negotiations. Hopes were high that
    after a century of hostilities there would be some positive move.

    There were further expectations this 24 April (the date on which
    Armenians commemorate the 1915 genocide). American Armenians were
    hopeful that, once in power, Barack Obama would respect his campaign
    pledges and recognise the Armenian genocide. Instead, on 22 April, the
    Turkish foreign ministry announced that it had reached agreement with
    Armenia on a `road map' to normalise relations (confirmed by the Swiss
    and Armenian foreign ministries). No details were forthcoming. The
    word `road map' seem
    of the failed road maps for Israeli-Palestinian negotiations. Then
    Obama, in his 24 April speech to the Armenians, used the expression
    `medz yeghern', meaning `great calamity', and not the word which
    Armenian militants have been struggling for decades to hear, and which
    has juridical power: genocide.

    Since April little has happened. Ankara has repeated that there can be
    no opening of borders before the Karabakh conflict is settled. Sources
    have spoken of divergent views within the Turkish AKP, including
    between Gul and his prime minister Recep Erdogan.. Others speak of
    pressures on Gul from nationalist circles or from Azerbaijan. The lack
    of progress has also increased pressure on the Armenian president for
    handing Turkey too many concessions: the Tashnak Party has quit the
    governing coalition and is demanding the resignation of foreign
    minister Edward Nalbandian.

    On 14 October, it is the turn of the Armenian football team to play in
    Turkey. Sarkissian is invited, but may not go unless the border opens,
    according to renewed speculation in Armenia. Whatever the outcome,
    football diplomacy has sparked new interest in the region. In recent
    years, Armenian and Turkish intellectuals and human rights activists
    have had continuous exchanges and discussed a wealth of projects. The
    fence dividing the two peoples has fallen and the attempt to define a
    new relationship has started.


    http://mondediplo.com/blogs/the-view-fr om-armenia
Working...
X