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Ankara: Armenian Journalists Talk More Diplomacy Than Football

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  • Ankara: Armenian Journalists Talk More Diplomacy Than Football

    ARMENIAN JOURNALISTS TALK MORE DIPLOMACY THAN FOOTBALL

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Wednesday, October 14, 2009

    In Bursa, the talk of the town for newly arrived Armenian journalists
    is not Wednesday evening's football match between the Armenian and
    Turkish national teams. Instead, they discuss the countries' recent
    strides in diplomatic relations and how the progress can be sustained
    AFP photo

    Football was forgotten Wednesday among the Armenian journalists who
    arrived in Bursa to watch the Turkey-Armenia match. Instead, talk
    focused on last weekend's historic signing of protocols to normalize
    the countries' relations, ending decades of enmity.

    Speaking to the Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review before the
    match between the two national teams, neither of which will go to
    the World Cup finals, Bedros Ghazaryan said Turkey and Armenia are
    passing through a difficult test.

    "Yes, the road to be covered is very long, but if we can manage to
    turn a new page, it would be a great accomplishment for our peoples,"
    Ghazaryan said.

    Although the protocols to normalize relations between Turkey and
    Armenia were signed, Turkey emphasizes that the border will not be
    opened unless the Nagorno-Karabakh problem is solved. The Armenian
    government, on the other hand, states that relations should be built
    without preconditions.

    Ghazaryan said a process is required to solve the problem. "A chance
    for consensus between the two peoples is available for the first time
    in 94 years; we should not miss that. If Turkey continues to offer
    Karabakh as a precondition, the process will be stuck."

    One of the most important articles of the protocols is the recognition
    by both sides of the countries' borders. "The borders have been drawn
    already; it is meaningless to discuss this and make claims," Ghazaryan
    said. "We are living in the 21st century; we should be looking forward,
    not backward. Yes, our homeland is not ours anymore. We have to get
    used to accepting that.â~@ nians who originated from Anatolia living
    in various countries. Ghazaryan pointed to the demonstrations held
    by Armenians of the diaspora in recent weeks to protest the Sarkisian
    administration and the protocols.

    "Armenia is an independent republic; therefore its decisions should
    be respected," Ghazaryan said, adding that he is following the Turkish
    press closely.

    "News on Armenia and the diaspora entering a process of division are
    being published in the Turkish press. Such a thing cannot happen; this
    is just a Turkish fantasy," he said. "The Armenians of the diaspora
    are a part of our body. The children of the genocide survivors that
    have been spread throughout the world. Our only request of them is
    to support this process, not block it."

    'Our country needs open borders'

    Levon Barseghyan, director for Journalists Club Asparez from Armenia's
    second biggest city, Gyumri, was more critical about the diaspora. "We
    thank you for your support to Armenia, but our country needs open
    borders and democracy in order to be integrated in the world," he said.

    Although the dialogue process between Turkey and Armenia seems to
    have accelerated under the Sarkisian administration, one of the major
    and most important actors of this process is Levon Der Bedrosyan, the
    first president of the country. One of Sarkisian's biggest opponents
    in the 2008 elections was Der Bedrosyan, who was running for a second
    term. Barseghyan said the Sarkisian administration came into power
    through deceit and without the support of the people. Although he
    supports the process, he said he does not support Sarkisian.

    "Sarkisian may be successful in his politics, but we will not consider
    his success as our own because we did not elect him," he said.

    Barseghyan said the process is in Armenia's interests but that the
    protocols favor Turkey. "The protocols are in favor of Turkey because
    it wants to get rid of its responsibility by founding a commission
    of historians [to investigate the events of 1915]," he said.
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