Hürriyet, Turkey
Sept 8 2008
Turkey, Armenia decides to improve diplomatic ties after match- report
Turkey and Armenia decided to improve relations, including raising the
level of regular consulting mechanism to foreign ministers, speeding
up efforts to form a joint commission and opening the border for
humanitarian aid. (UPDATED)
Turkish President Abdullah Gul paid a landmark visit to Yerevan after
Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan invited him to watch a 2010 World
Cup qualifying match between the two countries’ national teams.
The visit was hailed as a step towards the normalization of relations
between the two neighbors, who do not have any diplomatic relations
because of Armenia’s invasion of Azerbaijan.
The two leaders decided to improve diplomatic ties at the meetings
held in Yerevan, Hurriyet daily reported on Sunday.
The regular consulting mechanism between Turkey and Armenia will be
improved and these negotiations will be raised to the foreign
ministers level, the report said adding that presidents of both
countries will meet again at United Nation’s summit scheduled for the
end of September.
The report also said the efforts to establish a joint commission for
resolving the so-called genocide claims would be sped up and a
separate commission would be formed to address the economic field.
In 2005, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan took a first step
towards resolving the issue by proposing that a joint commission of
historians launch an investigation and publish their conclusions, but
the proposal was rejected by Yerevan.
Armenia, with the backing of the diaspora, claims up to 1.5 million of
their kin were slaughtered in orchestrated killings in 1915. Turkey
rejects the claims, saying that 300,000 Armenians along with at least
as many Turks died in civil strife that emerged when Armenians took up
arms for independence in eastern Anatolia.
HUMANITARIAN AID TO ARMENIA
The closed border between two countries could also be opened for
humanitarian aid purpose depending on the gestures from Armenian side
and the direction of the relations, Hurriyet said citing diplomatic
sources.
The border has been closed since 1993, when Turkey protested Armenia’s
occupation of the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan, a close
Turkish ally.
Turkish president also said the visit showed a will to set up an
atmosphere to eliminate the problems between Turkey and Armenia adding
that he hoped that his visit would be a start to solving the problems
and raising the obstacles that exist between the two countries.
Gul added that he thanked Sargsyan for extending his support to
Turkey’s Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform proposal.
The Armenian president also thanked Gul for accepting his invitation
to Yerevan and said that the Turkish president had invited him to
watch the Turkey-Armenia match to be played in Istanbul.
Turkey is among the first countries that recognized Armenia when it
declared its independency in the early 1990s.
However there is no diplomatic relations between two countries, as
Armenia presses the international community to admit the so-called
"genocide" claims instead of accepting Turkey’s call to investigate
the allegations, and its invasion of 20 percent of Azerbaijani
territory despite U.N. Security Council resolutions on the issue.
GUL RETURNS POSITIVE
"I believe that my visit was fruitful and that it promises hope for
the future," Gul said after returning to Ankara, adding that he had a
constructive and sincere" meeting with Sargsyan.
He said he had won Yerevan’s support for a new regional grouping in
the Caucasus following last month’s conflict between
Georgia and Russia.
"We were pleased with Armenia’s announcement that it supports Turkey’s
proposal of a ‘Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform’," Gul said
adding that there was a ball in their court and this ball should not
have remained in their court.
"The most important issue in the Caucasus is the Karabagh issue. My
visit to Yerevan may contribute to the solution of this problem," Gul
added.
But Gul said that neither the dispute nor the closed border between
the two neighbors figured in his meeting with Armenian President Serzh
Sargsyan.
"He did not mention, or even imply at, the so-called genocide claims,"
Gul was quoted as saying by the Anatolian Agency said.