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Turkish Opinions: 'One Nation, Two States,' An Unreal Idea

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  • Turkish Opinions: 'One Nation, Two States,' An Unreal Idea

    TURKISH OPINIONS: 'ONE NATION, TWO STATES,' AN UNREAL IDEA

    HULIQ
    Tert.am
    Sept 15 2009
    SC

    In Azerbaijan, the idea of "one nation, two states" is often referred
    to: it means that the Turkish people and Azerbaijani people are from
    the same roots, parts of one nation, but live in two different states.

    During numerous talks with public figures and journalists in Istanbul,
    Tert.am's correspondents tried to find out to what extent this
    corresponds to reality.

    "This is an idea, which, in fact, only opposition representatives speak
    about in Turkey, using it as a 'trump card' in their struggle with
    the governing parties. When it comes to Armenian-Turkish relations,
    they immediately remind everyone that the Azerbaijani people are
    our brothers," said one Turkish citizen, who is well aware of the
    ups and downs of Turkey's inner political life: he works with a NGO,
    cooperating with international bodies and dealing with Armenian-Turkish
    and Turkish-Greek relations.

    In fact, he states, even the opposition representatives don't speak
    about "one nation, two states" in that way.

    "For ordinary Turkish people, it is something unreal. You can come out
    to the streets in Istanbul and ask people, I am sure most of them will
    not get the essence of the issue at all, because they have a vague idea
    of Azerbaijan and the situation in Azerbaijan," said the NGO worker.

    He is convinced that Turkish-Azerbaijani relations are on a good level,
    particularly in terms of the economy, but it doesn't mean that an
    understanding of the different issues should be the same.

    Tert.am correspondents spoke with a number of journalists, both
    Turkish and Armenian, on the same topic over two to three days while
    in Istanbul.

    As Agos (a Turkish paper) Editor Aris Nalci noted in conversation with
    Tert.am, in Turkey, talks on such understandings are not possible,
    and that is unequivocal.
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