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Turkey And Armenia At Loggerheads - Huffington Post

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  • Turkey And Armenia At Loggerheads - Huffington Post

    TURKEY AND ARMENIA AT LOGGERHEADS - HUFFINGTON POST

    TERT.AM
    27.03.13

    Turkey and Armenia missed an historic opportunity to improve ties
    when Turkey refused to ratify the Protocols on the Establishment
    of Diplomatic and Bilateral Relations signed on October 10,
    2009. Rather than rapprochement, Armenians are now fully mobilized
    to organize worldwide activities commemorating the one hundred year
    anniversary of the Armenian Genocide on April 24, 2015. Armenia would
    never sacrifice gaining greater global recognition of genocide for
    cross-border cooperation with Turks. However, trade can still play
    a helpful role reducing tensions and creating positive momentum in
    Turkish-Armenian relations.

    More than a closed border, Turks and Armenians are divided by
    different perceptions of history. More thanone million Armenians
    perished during the final years of the Ottoman Empire between 1915
    and 1923. Turkey disputes these facts, referring to the events as
    "shared suffering." Turkey demands a joint historical commission
    to address the "Armenian question." The political impasse between
    Turkey and Armenia is compounded by Ankara's linking of relations
    with Armenia to resolution of the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh where
    Armenians and Azerbaijanis fought a brutal war displacing 600,000
    people in the early 1990s.

    The governments of Turkey and Armenia may be at loggerheads,
    but Turks and Armenians are still engaging in economic diplomacy,
    working on cross-border activities beneath the radar. Commercial
    contact involves mostly "suitcase trade" involving consumer goods
    transported from Turkey through Georgia to Armenia.

    But bigger business is possible. Armenia could sell surplus electricity
    to Turkey which needs energy to power its economic boom.

    Armenia could also tap into Turkey's state-of-the-art fiber optic
    cable to meet its growing demand for Internet. Railway service between
    Kars in Turkey and Gyumri in Armenia could resume when Turkey opens
    its border gate. In anticipation, Armenia could begin conforming the
    country's Soviet-era railway gauge to Turkish and European standards.

    In addition, Qualifying Industrial Zone (QIZ) could be established
    to catalyze joint enterprises between Turks and Armenians. A QIZ
    is an industrial park and a free-trade zone, which is linked to
    a free-trade agreement with the United States. Goods qualify when
    partners contribute raw material, labor, or manufacturing. Kazan, an
    area in Armenia on the Turkish border, would be a suitable destination
    for joint ventures in textile and piece goods manufacturing.

    The QIZ should proceed with steps to relax restrictions on the
    surface transport of commercial goods. Armenian trucks are allowed
    to use Turkey as a transit country, but can't off-load on Turkish
    soil. The same holds true for Turkish trucks transiting through
    Armenia. Trucks should be allowed to transfer goods destined for
    markets in the neighboring countries, with Turkey and Armenia
    identified as destinations in the export registry.

    Normalized travel and trade would also stimulate the tourist industry.

    Many Armenians are coming from Russia to cultural sites in Eastern
    Turkey. Allowing Armenian tourist buses to cross the Turkish-Armenian
    border would be a windfall for local business. Charter flights between
    the eastern Turkish city of Van and Yerevan would enhance commercial
    contact and a Turkish Airlines office in Yerevan would boost travel.

    The Ani Bridge across the Akhurian River, which symbolized the
    connection between Armenian civilization and the Anatolian plain,
    should be restored.

    A useful database is being prepared by the Turkish-Armenian Business
    Development Council profiling opportunities and connecting potential
    business partners. Linkages could also be established between
    local chambers of commerce and mayors with the goal of establishing
    sister-city relationships and fostering trade and investment.

    Such civil society and private sector initiatives have intrinsic
    value. Moreover, they can also incentivize official diplomacy or
    serve as a safety net when diplomacy stalls. They are not, however,
    a substitute for official diplomacy.

    There is currently no contact between Turkish and Armenian officials.

    While the Turkey-Armenia protocols called for a "dialogue on the
    historical dimension," Armenians balked when Turkey demanded a
    commission to determine whether the events of 1915 met the definition
    of genocide.

    Instead of trying to reinvent history, Turkey's Prime Minister Erdogan
    can make history through an executive order to open the border and
    normalize travel and trade as a step toward diplomatic relations.

    Bolder yet, he could submit the protocols on normalization and
    diplomatic relations to the Turkish parliament with his personal
    endorsement for ratification.

    With an eye on his legacy, Erdogan could also call for parliament
    to repeal Article 301 of the penal code, which makes it a crime to
    "denigrate Turkishness" and is used to repress free the freedom of
    expression. Repealing regressive legislation would make Turks more
    free, and also benefit Turkey's EU aspirations.

    Turkey's moral authority is undermined by the government's denial of
    the Armenian Genocide. On Remembrance Day, April 24, Erdogan should
    apologize for what happened to Armenians during the waning days of
    the Ottoman Empire. Reconciling with Armenia would help consolidate
    Turkey's role as a regional power, as well as a force for good in
    the world.

    Mr. Phillips is Director of the Program on Peace-building and Rights
    at Columbia University's Institute for the Study of Human Rights


    From: Baghdasarian
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