Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Call For Peace Fails In Turkey

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

  • Call For Peace Fails In Turkey

    CALL FOR PEACE FAILS IN TURKEY

    News.am
    14:03 / 10/17/2009

    Supporters of the Armenia-Turkey pact (U.S. and the E.U.) hope it will
    stabilize the region which after the Georgia-Russian war has become
    crucial for oil and gas transit. However, in Kars - a historically
    Armenian city now on the Turkish territory, people are skeptical
    about the normalization as they point to the Monument to Humanity
    symbolizing unity between the two nations.

    "The statue of two 100-foot tall human figures, standing face to
    face on a hill above the city, is incomplete: A giant hand that would
    join the figures was never attached. The monument, built last year,
    is now under threat of destruction," The Wall Street Journal reads.

    "Small-minded people blocked the monument and they will block the peace
    process too," says Naif Alibeyoglu, October 8 who had the statue built
    when he was mayor of Kars. "You wait and see, [the deal] will end up
    like my statue: a statue without hands," the WSJ goes.

    "The statue was my call for peace," Alibeyoglu says. "Prejudices on
    both sides are deep, because neither side knows the other. We needed
    to break the ice," Eurasia Insight informs.

    "Why is one figure standing with its head bowed, as if ashamed?" asks
    Oktay Aktas, an ethnic Azeri and local head of the Nationalist Action
    Party. In fact, the two figures are standing straight. But he insists
    the monument is "an Armenian statue" representing Armenia reaching out
    to embrace eastern Turkish lands that had a large Armenian minority
    until 1915. "I said I would smash the statue down with my own hands,
    and I will," Aktas adds, EI reads, Oct. 16.

    According to the WSJ, "Kars would stand to benefit from the ability
    to trade across a border 25 miles away by train and truck. But some
    20% of the city's population is ethnic Azerbaijanis, who consider
    opening the border while Armenia remains in control of a fifth of
    Azerbaijan's territory a betrayal."

    In November, Turkey's Commission for Monuments ordered that the
    Monument to Humanity be demolished.
Working...
X