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ANKARA: Only Opening Border Not Stimulate Economy Without Azerbaijan

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  • ANKARA: Only Opening Border Not Stimulate Economy Without Azerbaijan

    ONLY OPENING BORDER NOT STIMULATE ECONOMY WITHOUT AZERBAIJAN

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Sept 2 2009
    Turkey

    Turkey and Armenia's efforts to reconcile their differences will
    relieve some tension in the Caucasus, but a boom in trade from
    reopening the border can only take place if Azerbaijan is included in
    the equation and that is dependant on unraveling the Nagorno-Karabakh
    problem, according to Turkish leaders

    Despite the historic step taken by Turkey and Armenia, local
    businessmen and experts warn that only a comprehensive solution that
    includes Azerbaijan could boost economic and trade opportunities for
    the region.

    "It is quite important to find a parallel solution for the
    Azerbaijan-Armenian track. We actually think Turkish-Armenian
    reconciliation will accelerate the Nagorno-Karabakh solution,"
    Kaan Soyak, co-chairman of the Turkish-Armenian Business Development
    Council, or TABDC, said Wednesday in an interview with the Hurriyet
    Daily News & Economic Review.

    The normalization process is expected to have an enormous impact
    on trade between the border towns of the two countries. Igdır,
    which is linked to Armenia through the border gate Alican, is one of
    them. "The border trade has become the main actor of the local economy
    as livestock and agriculture production decreased," Kamil Arslan,
    president of Igdır Industry and Trade Chamber told the Daily News
    on Wednesday.

    The exclusion of Azerbaijan from the peace process would be the worst
    scenario for local tradesmen, according to Arslan. Pointing out that
    many local businessmen have deals in autonomous Azeri areas such
    as Nahchivan, Arslan said: "In such a case they might lose their
    current market."

    "It takes 10 to 12 days to send our goods to Azerbaijan and
    Turkmenistan through Georgia. However, it will only take four hours
    to export through Armenia. That's why we insist on a comprehensive
    solution that includes the Azerbaijanis."

    He advocated Armenia had no promising potential, saying: "Trade only
    with Armenia will not be profitable. It doesn't have medium or large
    industry. Its economy is weak with no significant production. We
    already sell our goods to them thanks to our dealers across the
    country."

    "But if a transit corridor linking Igdır to Baku is opened, then
    our trade volume will be doubled" he said.

    Economic growth to stem 'democratic move'

    Turkish government has nowadays been working on a "democratic move,"
    also known as a Kurdish initiative, but it will fail without economic
    growth in the region, Soyak said.

    "An economic initiative is needed in eastern and southeastern Anatolia
    and I believe that reconciliation with Armenia will promise it. You
    can reach nowhere through only political campaigns without financial
    solutions," Soyak said.

    Richard Giragosian, director of the Armenian Center for National
    and International Studies, or ACNIS, voiced the same opinion,
    saying: "Opening its closed border with Armenia would constitute a
    new strategic opportunity for galvanizing economic activity in the
    impoverished eastern regions of Turkey, which could play a key role in
    the economic stabilization of the already restive Kurdish-populated
    eastern regions and thus meet a significant national security
    imperative of countering the root causes of Kurdish terrorism and
    separatism with economic opportunity."

    Turkey will also offer Armenia not only a way to overcome its regional
    isolation and marginalization, but also a bridge to larger markets
    crucial for economic growth and development, he said.

    Promising projects to boost bilateral economic ties

    Border trade isn't the only key element to boost bilateral relations,
    according to TABDC's Soyak. It seems that the tourism sector will be
    an initial driving force. Approximately 400,000 to 500,000 Armenians
    visit their homeland once a year and they are quite interested in
    small tours to historical attractions in eastern Turkey. Initially
    $60 million is expected even if 200,000 of them stay for three days.

    He said there could be a railway linking Turkey to the Caucasus, the
    Central Asian states, Russia and China will be realized, strengthening
    Turkey's geostrategic position.

    Turkish builders can invest in sub-construction projects in the
    neighboring country. Armenia can provide natural gas and electricity
    since it became an energy hub in the southern Caucasus, Soyak said.

    And lastly, the textile sector, severely affected by Russian customs,
    may utilize a free-trade agreement between Russia and Armenia if its
    production is partly completed there, he said.
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