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Turkey Eyes Normal Ties With Armenia After Election

TURKEY EYES NORMAL TIES WITH ARMENIA AFTER ELECTION
Reporting by Gareth Jones

Reuters
Thursday, February 21, 2008; 6:06 AM

ANKARA (Reuters) – Turkey’s president said on Thursday he hoped the
victory of Serzh Sarksyan in Armenia’s presidential election would
lead to a normalization of relations between their estranged countries.

Turkey has no diplomatic relations with Armenia and keeps their
land border closed in protest at Yerevan’s occupation of territory
belonging to ally Azerbaijan.

Turkey and Armenia are also at loggerheads over Ankara’s refusal
to acknowledge as genocide the mass killings of ethnic Armenians by
Ottoman Turks in 1915-16.

"I hope your new position … will permit the creation of the necessary
environment for normalizing relations between the Turkish and Armenian
peoples, who have proven over centuries they can live together in
peace and concord," President Abdullah Gul said in a message of
congratulations to Sarksyan.

"I sincerely wish that … an atmosphere based on reciprocal trust
and cooperation can be established that will contribute to regional
peace and prosperity," Gul said.

Sarksyan, 53, took 52.86 percent of the votes in Tuesday’s election but
thousands of supporters of his main challenger Levon Ter-Petrosyan,
Armenia’s first president, say the ballot was rigged and have staged
protests in the capital Yerevan.

Western observers say the poll was broadly fair.

The tiny ex-Soviet republic of Armenia is sandwiched between Turkey
and Azerbaijan in a region that is emerging as an important transit
route for oil exports from the Caspian Sea to world markets, though
Armenia has no pipelines of its own.

Turkey was among the first countries to recognize Armenia’s
independence after the 1991 fall of the Soviet Union but has no
diplomatic ties due to Armenia’s occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh,
a slice of Azeri territory populated by ethnic Armenians.

Sarksyan, like his predecessor Robert Kocharyan, who is seen in Ankara
as a hardliner, is a native of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Turkey strongly denies Armenian claims, backed by many Western
historians, that the massacres of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during
World War One amounted to a systematic genocide.

Ankara says large numbers of both Christian Armenians and Muslim
Turks were killed during the violent breakup of the Ottoman Empire. It
also notes that many Armenians in eastern Turkey sided with invading
Russian troops against the Ottomans.

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