09.04A new era on the way for Turkish-Armenian ties
Hurriyet
After years of diplomatic distance, Turkish President Abdullah Gul is set to head to Armenia to watch a football match between the two countries with his Armenian counterpart. Turkey hopes it will help thaw relations and strengthen its regional agenda, despite domestic accusations of a sell-out.
After weeks of puzzling over a rare, “low-profile” visit to Armenia, it is almost certain Gul will break a political taboo and honor his counterpart’s invitation to attend the Turk-Armenian football match this weekend.
But Turkish officials have refrained from revealing the final decision until the last moment.
Ahead of the president’s visit, a group of Turkish diplomats, headed by the deputy undersecretary of the Foreign Ministry, Unal Cevikoz, was scheduled to depart for Yerevan Wednesday morning.
The Turkish delegation is expected to sound out Armenia’s approach to the Turkish proposal for a new regional cooperation mechanism as well as laying the groundwork for the two president’s landmark meeting on the sidelines of the match, amid security fears and strong reactions from Armenian nationalists — the Tashnaks, the Turkish Daily News (TDN) wrote on Wednesday.
Turkish opposition parties were up in arms, making their voices heard as soon as plans for the visit were leaked. Republican People’s Party (CHP) leader Deniz Baykal claimed that Turkey’s true friend was Baku, not Yerevan, while Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) leader Devlet Bahceli argued such a high-level visit would be tantamount to a historic mistake.
In order not to allow the opposition to use the visit as leverage to mount criticism of the government, lawmakers from the ruling party canceled its plans to accompany the president to the match.
The ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), parliamentary group yesterday issued a written statement announcing their decision not to send any deputies to the football match in Yerevan.
The visit alone is enough to raise eyebrows in Azerbaijan, Turkey’s closest regional ally, which is formally at war with Yerevan over the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.
While speaking in front of cameras last week, Azerbaijan’s visiting foreign minister refrained from a public criticism of the proposed visit and only said that the decision would be made by the Turkish president.
Away from the cameras Azerbaijanis have not officially communicated uneasiness over future steps toward a thaw in the Ankara-Yerevan axis, but they were advised by Turkish officials to look into the matter “broadly and in the long run,” according to diplomatic sources.
AZERBAIJAN KEEPS NERVOUS EYE
Azerbaijani diplomatic sources are rather cautious on the other hand and refuse to interfere in what they say are, “Turkey’s domestic affairs,” but believe that their Turkish kinsmen would not do anything that could hurt Azerbaijan.
“We believe Turkey will always side with us since we are two-states-one-nation with our Turkish brothers,” Hasan Sultanoglu Zeynelov, consul general of Azerbaijan in the eastern Anatolian province of Kars, told the TDN. “We cannot imagine otherwise.”
Azerbaijanis believe the normalization of Turk-Armenian ties is not possible without a solution to a series of problems, including the dispute over Nagorno
Karabakh, Armenian territorial claims from Turkey and the diaspora’s attempts for international recognition of the alleged genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire.
Turkey recognizes Armenia as an independent state but never established diplomatic relations and closed the border with that country in 1993 after Armenian troops invaded Nagorno-Karabakh, an Azeri territory.
“We are not sure if Turkey’s fair demands have received a positive response from Armenia; we are also in favor of peace but our territory is under occupation,” Zeynelov added.
Fazıl Abbasov, owner and editor-in-chief for Azernews newspaper, said Turkey wished for normal ties with Armenia in good faith but he did not believe Armenians truly wanted peace.
“Armenians are trying to rebuild an image to show the international arena that they are in favor of peace,” he said.
Source: www.hurriyet.com.tr/english/world/9810609.asp?scr=1

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