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  • Zurich Ceremoney Baffles Armenians

    ZURICH CEREMONY BAFFLES ARMENIANS
    By Seda Muradyan in Yerevan

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting
    Oct 15 2009
    UK

    Live TV feed interrupted by Armenia v Spain football game, as last
    minute hitches delay signing of historic deal with Turkey.

    At 7.30 pm, on October 10, thousands of Armenians sat in front of
    their televisions as a live feed from Zurich showed the room where
    the future of their country was to be decided.

    An excited presenter, speaking from the studio, told his audience
    the ceremony of signing the peace deal between Turkey and Armenia
    was just about to begin.

    His excitement was understandable. The deal would end a century of
    animosity, which started with the genocide of Armenians in Ottoman
    Turkey in 1915, and continued more recently with Armenians' control
    over Nagorny Karabakh, which is internationally considered to be part
    of Azerbaijan, home to Turkey's ethnic kin.

    The hall, in the history faculty of the University of Zurich, was an
    appropriate venue for such a historic event, but the presenter began
    to run out of things to say. No one entered the room, and no one spoke,
    leaving him with the task of explaining why nothing was going on.

    "10 October, 2009, the signing of the protocols between the Republic
    of Armenia and the Turkish Republic," said the banner on the screen,
    although that was clearly not happening.

    After 15 minutes, the live feed was interrupted, apparently for
    technical reasons, with viewers none the wiser. Speculation was
    frantic. Had the two sides pulled out at the last minute?

    The Associated Press reported that the two sides had disagreed on
    statements their foreign ministers would make after the ceremony.

    Officials later said it took three hours to persuade the two foreign
    ministers not to make speeches about their respective grievances after
    the signing ceremony, and to let the "protocols speak for themselves".

    Armenian public television viewers knew none of the fraught negotiating
    process, in which American, French, Swiss and Russian officials
    shuttled back and forth between the two camps, since TV bosses decided
    to show a live feed of Armenia playing Spain at football in a World
    Cup qualifying match in Yerevan.

    After the first half, by which time Spain were beating their hosts
    1-0, the live feed of the empty hall resumed, and viewers were left
    listening to the same announcer promising that the signing ceremony
    would start soon. Suddenly, the voice told viewers Armenian foreign
    minister Eduard Nalbandian and his Turkish counterpart Ahmed Davutoglu
    were about to enter the room.

    But then half-time ended, and coverage returned to the football at
    the Yerevan stadium. The match ended at last, Armenia losing 1-2
    and the two ministers finally appeared on the screen. At 11.15 pm,
    four hours later than planned, a close-up showed their hands signing
    the documents laying out the future ties between their two countries.

    It was clear from Facebook that thousands of Armenians had stayed
    awake to watch the ceremony. Status messages on the networking site
    reflected the new reality of their country having diplomatic relations
    with its giant neighbour, despite the fact that Turkey still refuses
    to recognise that its mass slaughter of Armenians was genocide, and
    Armenia refuses to pull its forces from territories internationally
    considered to belong to Azerbaijan.

    "How did his hand not shake?" asked one user.

    "Why was Nalbandian so pale?" asked another.

    "The protocols are signed, Turkey is rejoicing," was the conclusion
    of a third who reflected the doubts of the whole country after this
    strange, unsatisfying evening.

    Seda Muradyan is IWPR's Armenia country director.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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