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Cengiz Aktar: Turkey will be liberated if it faces up to the truth

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  • Cengiz Aktar: Turkey will be liberated if it faces up to the truth

    Cengiz Aktar: Turkey will be liberated if it faces up to the truth of
    what happened to its missing Armenians in 1915

    14:31 17/04/2010 » Politics

    Not many borders are closed in our globalized world, but the frontier
    between Armenia and Turkey is still a dead zone where the railroad
    stops, Thomas de Waal writes in The Foreign Policy.

    People on both sides of this closed border want it open as it will
    contribute to the economic boost, the columnist says. In a
    conversation with Thomas de Waal, Turkish academic Cengiz Aktar said
    that Turkey will be liberated if it faces up to the truth of what
    happened to its missing Armenians, at the catastrophe of 1915 when the
    entire Armenian population of eastern Anatolia was deported or killed
    in the dying days of the Ottoman Empire.

    Aktar initiated an Internet petition apologizing for the "Great
    Catastrophe" of 1915 (adopting the Armenians' own phrase for the
    tragedy) and expressing sympathy for "my Armenian brothers and
    sisters."

    More than 30,000 Turks have signed it -- remarkable for a country
    whose schoolbooks were, until recently, saying that Armenians killed
    Turks in the dying days of the Ottoman Empire and not the other way
    around. It is not an easy process, but the taboo on discussing the
    issue of what happened to the missing Armenians has now been lifted in
    Turkey.

    Last October, the Armenian and Turkish presidents, Serzh Sargsyan and
    Abdullah Gul, moved to sign two protocols on normalizing relations,
    pledging that, once the documents were ratified by their countries'
    parliaments, the closed border would open within two months. Six
    months on, insecurities and local politics are again winning the day,
    and the protocols are in trouble. Turkish leaders are postponing
    ratification of the agreements, the source says.

    `What has gone wrong? Ankara has gone cool on the process, saying it
    wants to see progress on the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over
    Nagorno-Karabakh -- even though the conflict is not mentioned in the
    protocols. The Turks clearly did not expect the furious reaction the
    rapprochement would have with Azerbaijan. The latter has been lobbying
    hard and effectively against the protocols, and its fears are
    understandable -- it is worried that if the Armenia-Turkey border
    opens, a key lever of influence on the Armenians to make concessions
    over Nagorno-Karabakh will be lost,' the columnist writes.


    Source: Panorama.am
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