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Armenia May Wait For Turks To Vote On Border Accord

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  • Armenia May Wait For Turks To Vote On Border Accord

    ARMENIA MAY WAIT FOR TURKS TO VOTE ON BORDER ACCORD
    By Helena Bedwell

    Bloomberg
    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/n ews?pid=20601085&sid=agtGJy2n0uvs
    Oct 27 2009

    Oct. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Armenian lawmakers may delay voting on a
    treaty that would open the border with Turkey and boost the former
    Soviet republic's economy until the Turkish parliament has considered
    the measure.

    Armenia will probably wait for Turkey to act on the treaty, said
    Nairi Petrosyan, a spokesman for the parliament in Yerevan. The
    Turkish government submitted the agreement to parliament last week,
    though no date has been set for a ratification vote.

    The two nations agreed on Oct. 10 to reestablish ties and open their
    border within two months of ratification. Relations have been frozen
    since Turkey closed the border in 1993 to protest Armenia's occupation
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh region in Azerbaijan, a key Turkish ally and
    energy supplier. Many Armenians are concerned the treaty could lead
    to compromise on Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia's demand that Turkey
    recognize the World War I massacre of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey
    as genocide.

    "The Armenian public is confused because of a lack of information,"
    Richard Giragosian, director of the Armenian Center for National and
    International Studies, said by telephone from Yerevan yesterday. "The
    vast majority supports opening the border and normalizing relations,
    but the question is at what price? What we're seeing is a rather
    mistaken trade-off."

    The government of Armenia, a landlocked country of 3.2 million people,
    estimates opening the border will increase foreign investment by
    50 percent.

    'Real Test'

    "I don't see any real problems on passage in the Armenian parliament,"
    Giragosian said. "The real test will come from the Turkish side."

    Armenia's diaspora, estimated at 6 million people, greeted President
    Serzh Sargsyan with protests in Los Angeles, Beirut and Paris as he
    toured the world this month to gain support for the plan.

    Giragosian said Turkish lawmakers are likely to postpone a vote until
    next February or March to coincide with the 95th anniversary of the
    World War I massacre. "Turkey is trying to maximize the political
    benefits," he said.

    Turkey hopes that normalized ties with Armenia will assuage European
    Union opponents of Turkish membership.

    Mikheil Saakashvili, president of Georgia, which shares borders with
    both Turkey and Armenia, welcomed the agreement.

    'Northern Neighbor'

    "We don't need any isolated neighbors in the region and opening up
    would be good," he said in an interview last week, adding that he
    also hopes to see progress between Armenia and Azerbaijan. "Overall
    I think these regions will be less susceptible to manipulations from
    the northern neighbor," he said, referring to Russia.

    Armenia's government forecasts an economic contraction this year of
    as much as 15 percent, followed by 1 percent growth in 2010, Economic
    Development Minster Nerses Yeritsyan said in an interview. Opening
    the border would have "enormous benefits" for Armenia, he said.

    "Turkey is a member of the World Trade Organization and would provide
    Armenia with access to markets," Yeritsyan said. "Investment will
    also increase about 50 percent. We used to get $1 billion a year,
    but that fell significantly this year because of the global crisis."

    Trade with Turkey would "definitely add a few percentage points to the
    growth of Armenia's economy," Arsen Ghazaryan, head of the country's
    Union of Manufacturers and Businessmen, said by telephone.

    Brandy, Electricity

    Armenia would find markets in Turkey for its agricultural products,
    especially in border areas, as well as for its brandy in Turkish
    tourist havens, Ghazaryan said. Imports would include construction
    materials and electricity, he said.

    For Karyna Petrosyan, opening the border would mean a return to work
    after 16 years of waiting. The 45-year-old railway guard has reported
    for duty every day, in uniform, at the station in the village of
    Gharibjanian since the closure of the border a few kilometers away.

    "We're looking forward to a thaw in relations with Turkey because
    the area would thrive again and the station will open," Petrosyan said.

    "It will create jobs and give us something to do." The state still
    pays Petrosyan's salary for maintaining the station though no trains
    have arrived since 1993.

    In the nearby town of Gyumri, city leaders have been "aggressive
    advocates" of opening the border, Lilit Aghekian, a spokeswoman for
    the town's mayor, said in an interview. "But there's no way Armenia
    should compromise on Nagorno-Karabakh or the genocide. No trading is
    possible on these issues."

    Massacres

    In the Oct. 10 agreement, Turkey and Armenia pledged to set up a joint
    commission of historians to investigate the World War I massacres,
    recognized by France and other countries as genocide. Armenia says as
    many as 1.5 million were systematically killed. Turkey cites a lower
    figure and says the deaths were the result of civil strife in which
    many Turks were also killed.

    Armenia's political opposition has criticized the government for
    moving too fast to repair relations with Turkey before first resolving
    the disputes.

    "The opposition has never said we don't want normalized ties," Arman
    Mysinian, a leader of the opposition National Congress of Armenia,
    said in an interview. "But the genocide and Karabakh shouldn't have
    been included in the foreign-policy agenda."

    Samvel Farmanyan, a spokesman for Sargsyan, said the agreement
    doesn't call into question the legitimacy of Armenia's position on
    the massacres or Nagorno-Karabakh, and the government will never
    compromise.

    In the markets of Yerevan, some vendors say the agreement would change
    little for Armenians who import goods through neighboring Georgia.

    "Nothing will change," Zaven Khachatryan, a market vendor, said. "Why?

    The government will slap big customs duties on everything that crosses
    the border and the end result will be the same as it is now."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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