Yerevan To Host Exhibition On "Manliness"

YEREVAN TO HOST EXHIBITION ON "MANLINESS"

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
13.10.2009 19:39 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On October 17, Hamazgayin (All-National) theatre
will host an exhibition titled "Manliness: to Break Stereotypes".

Within exhibition frameworks it is planned to screen two films –
"Manliness and Man’s Image" and "Man and Faith", as well as display
photos, pottery works and paintings by young Armenian artists.

Main sponsor is "Public Information and Need of Knowledge" NGO.

Exhibition is held under the aegis of Norwegian government.

IMF Executive Directors Make Statement At The Conclusion Of Their Vi

IMF EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS MAKE STATEMENT AT THE CONCLUSION OF THEIR VISIT TO ARMENIA

Panorama.am
16:40 12/10/2009

A mission of Executive Directors of the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) comprising Ms. Meg Lundsager, Messrs. Age Bakker, Ambroise
Fayolle, HE Jianxiong, Thomas Moser, and Klaus D. Stein, issued the
following statement on October 12, 2009 in Yerevan at the conclusion
of its visit to Armenia:

"We are grateful for the opportunity to visit the country and thank
the people of Armenia, President Serzh Sargsyan, Prime Minister
Tigran Sargsyan, Chairman of the Central Bank Arthur Javadyan,
Minister of Finance Tigran Davtyan, and Minister of Economy Nerses
Yeritsyan for their warm hospitality and productive discussions. Our
visit has offered us a unique opportunity to hold discussions with a
wide range of stakeholders, including representatives of the public
and private sectors, the civil society, and development partners.

"Armenia has been severely hit by the global crisis, with real GDP
expected to decline by about 15 percent in 2009. Foreign inflows
have fallen and tax revenues have dropped, which have weakened the
balance of payments and the public finances. These developments posed
additional hardships on the Armenian population.

"We commend the authorities for efficiently addressing these
challenges. Fiscal policy continues to be expansionary, given that,
with the help of the IMF and other donors, the government has been
able to keep expenditures close to the original 2009 budget, while
increasing spending on priority infrastructure projects.

"The financial system remains stable and the return to a floating
exchange rate on March 3, 2009 has been a success. The Central Bank
(CBA) has expanded its instruments to provide liquidity to the banking
system in order to stimulate credit to the private sector. At the
same time, inflation is on track to meet the authorities’ end-2009
target of 4+1.5 percent.

"Continued progress in tax and customs administration reforms will be
critical to ensuring sound public finances, and a fair and equitable
tax burden. Once the economy recovers, the government will need to
reduce the fiscal deficit to preserve medium-term fiscal and debt
sustainability, while continuing to support needed public spending
and investment.

"We welcome promising signs for regional cooperation, which will help
economic development in the region. We support the IMF continuing
excellent relationship with the Armenian authorities."

Political Scientist Recommends The Armenian President To Refuse To G

POLITICAL SCIENTIST RECOMMENDS THE ARMENIAN PRESIDENT TO REFUSE TO GO TO TURKEY FOR SOCCER
By Georg Khachaturyan

ticle&AID=4146&CID=3949&IID=1256&l ng=eng
Published: 12 October, 2009

Richard Giragosian, director of the Armenian Center for National and
International Studies (ACNIS) advises the Armenian president not to
go to Turkey for the World Cup qualifier between Turkish and Armenian
soccer teams (on October 14), this way responding to the October 11
statement made by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Giragosyan says the "game has just started" and Armenia has "be strong"
in order to pass yet many "diplomatic tests".

It is noteworthy that a day after the protocols on the normalization
of the Armenian-Turkish relations were signed in Zurich, Erdogan
once again stated that Armenia "must withdraw its troops from
Nagorno-Karabakh" and that Turkey "cannot open the borders with
Armenia until Armenia withdraws its troops from the conflict zone."

According to the political scientist, October 10 made Turkey’s tactics
of "playing with Armenia and dragging time" obvious to everybody,
and, first of all, to the international community.

By threatening to leave and having made the Turkish side remove the
unacceptable for Armenia wording from the post-signing statement (to
be made by Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoghlu) Armenia passed
a unique diplomatic test set by Turkey, but the game has only started
and many such tests to be yet expected. Turkey respects and reckons
with the viewpoints of only those countries which demonstrate strength;
that is why Armenia must develop a strong diplomatic strategy. It is
clear that Turkey is playing "good cop" (Abdullah Gul), "bad cop"
(Recep Tayyip Erdogan) game and the logical response to it should
be either Serzh Sargsyan’s refusal to visit Bursa or a threat to do
so in case the Turkish side does not stop taking provocative steps,
concluded Giragosian.

http://armenianow.com/?action=viewAr

ANCC Expresses Deep Concern For The Signing Of The Armenian-Turkish

ANCC EXPRESSES DEEP CONCERN FOR THE SIGNING OF THE ARMENIAN-TURKISH PROTOCOLS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
12.10.2009 09:48 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The ANCC expresses dismay and deep concern for the
signing of the Turkey-Armenia protocols in Zurich. In the opinion of
the ANCC, as well as the vast majority of the Armenian Diaspora, this
agreement was the result of immense and undue pressure on landlocked
and blockaded Armenia by leading powers within the international
community, and in full disregard of historical facts, human rights
and justice, and self-determination rights.

In our opinion, forcing a nation to accept conditions to so-called
normalizing relations with a State which carried out a clear policy
of annihilation towards that same nation, should be regarded as
unwarranted at best.

The President of Armenia, upon the completion of his informational
visits to the five largest communities. He stated that "the wounds
of genocide do not cicatrize", "there is no alternative to the
establishment of relations with Turkey without preconditions". The
President of Armenia then went on to reiterate, verbatim, the honest
expressions of concerns of various Armenian organizations within and
outside of Armenia, summarized in the three citations as follows:

"1. Any relation with Turkey cannot call into question the fact of
the genocide of the Armenian people. This is a well-known fact, which
should be recognized and condemned by all humanity. The corresponding
sub-commission of the intergovernmental commission is not a commission
of historians." Nonetheless, ANCC points out that the protocols do
in fact put the condition of the creation of an intergovernmental
commission. It is obvious that this commission’s only aim will
be to delay and hamper the process of international recognition
of the Armenian Genocide, reward denialism, and sacrifice justice
for the benefit of political expediency. The aim behind creating
a commission to examine historical issues, namely the Genocide, is
very questionable indeed: the Armenian Genocide ld-renowned scholars,
reputable historians as well as by over 20 States, including Canada.

"2. The issue of borders between Armenia and Turkey is a question
to be solved in line with international law. The protocols do not
provide for more than this." In ANCC’s opinion, Turkey is convinced
that, by this signature, the historically questionable borders between
Turkey and present-day Armenia will be solidified, hence voiding any
legitimate claims.

"3. These relations are in no way connected and cannot be connected
with the settlement of the Karabakh issue, which is an independent
and separate process. Armenia does not view the issues of territorial
integrity and inviolability of borders as a remark connected with
the Karabakh issue." Yet, statements pronounced throughout the
protocols’ process by Turkey’s President and Prime Minister, have,
to the contrary, directly linked territorial integrity of States to
the issue of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Otherwise, the existence of such a clause in the Protocols is
meaningless.

The ANCC finds questionable the logic behind signing the Protocols
after the President of Armenia presented the exact reasons for which
the Armenian side should have refrained from doing so. ANCC President,
Dr Girair Basmadjian, made the following statement following today’s
signature:

"Armenian organizations, both within Armenia and abroad, will hold
the signatories of the Protocols accountable for any interpretation or
unwarranted consequence that deviates from the above-cited statements
of the President of Armenia."

Football Update

FOOTBALL UPDATE

NEXT
October 12, 2009 02:07AMT

Real Madrid’s sporting director, Miguel Pardeza, has stated in a
recent interview that the club made the correct decision in off-loading
Dutchmen, Arjen Robben and Wesley Sneijder, and that Los Blancos have
a better chance despite the departure of those individuals.

As part of Florentino Perez’s revolution this summer, Sneijder was
sold to Serie A side Inter, while Robben made the switch to the
Bundesliga to join German giants Bayern Munich.

In an interview with publication Marca, Pardeza commented that both
players had different reasons for leaving the Bernabeu during the
close season.

"In the case of [Arjen] Robben, he wanted to go, and he came to us
requesting a move," he said, before adding, "with Wesley Sneijder,
Inter simply made us an offer that he could not refuse."

Turkey’s coach resigns

Fatih Terim, coach of Turkey’s team, will step down as manager after
his team’s 2-0 defeat away to Belgium on Saturday and their failure
to qualify for the 2010 World Cup.

The Turkish Soccer Federation said in a statement on Sunday that they
had accepted his resignation. Terim will preside over Turkey’s one
remaining World Cup Group Five qualifying match on Wednesday against
Armenia, who also failed to qualify.

Barca eyeing Robinho

Barcelona are looking to add to their squad in the January transfer
window, sporting director, Txiki Begiristain, was quoted as saying
on Sunday.

The European champions may need reinforcements as they will lose
Ivory Coast midfielder Yaya Toure during January’s African Cup of
Nations and will also be without Seydou Keita should Mali qualify
for the three-week long tournament in Angola.

"There are options for us to strengthen (the squad) yes," Begiristain
said in an interview with Sport newspaper.

Asked whether Barca would make an offer for Manchester City’s Brazilian
forward, Robinho, Begiristain said: "He is a very interesting
footballer and could play (for us) in th lub was still interested
Franck Ribery and Cesc Fabregas.

Buffon needs knee surgery

Gianluigi Buffon needs knee surgery in the coming months, the Italy
and Juventus goalkeeper said on Sunday.

"My knee is wrecked. I need an operation. I’ll carry on as long as
I can," Buffon told reporters as Italy arrived back in the country
following their 2-2 draw in Ireland on Saturday which secured their
place at next year’s World Cup.

Santana’s future more uncertain

The future tenure of South African coach, Joel Santana, was plunged
into further uncertainty at the weekend as the World Cup hosts lost
again and his own players spoke of their frustration at the spiral
of continuing defeat.

A 1-0 defeat by Norway in Oslo on Saturday in their latest preparatory
match means South Africa have now lost seven of their last eight
internationals and show little sign of becoming anything but a minor
sideshow at next year’s finals.

ANKARA: deal with Armenia not in effect until it withdraws from NK

Turkey says deal with Armenia not in effect until Armenia withdraws
from Nagorno-Karabakh
Suzan Fraser

taragana.com
October 11th, 2009
Turkey: Armenia must pull out of Nagorno-Karabakh

ANKARA, Turkey ‘ A day after Turkey signed a deal to end a century of
enmity with Armenia, the Turkish prime minister called on Armenia to
withdraw from the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, saying Sunday
the deal cannot come into force until that happens.

The statement appeared to be an effort by Turkey to appease its close
ally Azerbaijan, which said the new agreement will aggravate the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

On Sunday, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan hailed the
agreement to establish diplomatic ties with Armenia, which has been a
bitter foe, as an `important step’ that would lead to cooperation and
dialogue.

Erdogan said however, the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute must be resolved.
Nagorno-Karabakh is an Armenian-occupied enclave in Azerbaijan.

`We want all conflicts to be resolved and we want all borders to be
opened,’ Erdogan said. `(But) as long as Armenia does not withdraw from
occupied territories in Azerbaijan, Turkey cannot take up a positive
position.’

Erdogan also said a solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh issue would ensure
that the agreement is approved by Turkey’s parliament. To take effect,
the agreements must be ratified by the Turkish and Armenian
0Aparliaments, but it faces stiff opposition in both countries.

The agreement signed Saturday at a ceremony in Zurich, Switzerland,
would establish diplomatic relations between Turkey and Armenia and
open the joint border, which was sealed after the 1993 Armenian
invasion of Nagorno-Karabakh, which is inhabited primarily by ethnic
Armenians.

The ceremony went ahead after a last-minute hitch over Turkish and
Armenian objections to language in statements to be read after the
signing, was overcome ‘ by having neither side make a statement.

The contentious issue of whether the killing of up to 1.5 million
Armenians during the final days of the Ottoman Empire amounts to
genocide is only hinted at in the agreement, as is the dispute over
Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Azeri Foreign Ministry said Sunday that the agreement `clouds the
spirit of brotherly relations’ between Azerbaijan and Turkey. It said
Turkey should not have re-established diplomatic ties with Armenia
before the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh was settled.

The enclave in Azerbaijani territory is occupied by Armenian troops.
Turks have close cultural and linguistic ties with Azerbaijan, which is
pressing Turkey for help in recovering its land. Turkey wants Armenia
to withdraw some troops from the enclave area to show good will and
speed the opening of the border.

With the agreements signed, attention has turned to an Oct. 14 soccer
World Cup qualifier between Turkey and Armenia.

Turkish President Abdullah Gul attended an initial game in Armenia last
year, but Armenian President Serge Sarkisian has said he will not
attend the return game in Turkey unless there is progress toward
opening the border.

`I strongly believe that he will come,’ Erdogan said. `I hope this game
will turn into a match of total friendship.’

Armenian-Turkish border to create supply line for Afghanistan

News.am

Armenian-Turkish border to create supply line for Afghanistan:
U.S. official
19:35 / 10/10/2009

U.S. was interested in seeing the border opened primarily to create a
new supply line for Afghanistan, U.S. State Department official told
Associated Press news agency on condition of anonymity.

`We’re certainly prepared to help diplomatically in talking to both
sides and helping them narrow their differences,’ the source
said. According to him, U.S. takes a strong interest in maintenance of
peace and stability in that part of world.

President Barack Obama spoke to Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan to
reaffirm his support for the normalization process, the official
underlined, adding that a lot of Americans care deeply about Armenia
and Turkey.

Gul and Sargsyan Nobel Prize winners?

News.am

The Christian Science Monitor: Gul and Sargsyan Nobel Prize winners?
01:27 / 10/11/2009

The Christian Science Monitor wonders whether Armenian and Turkish
leaders will become next Nobel Prize winners.

`It’s not every day that two neighboring but not neighborly countries
agree to overcome a century of deep hostility, especially states that
sit at one of the world’s most strategic ` and volatile ` crossroad.

In Zurich, diplomats from both countries ` one a Christian nation and
the other Muslim ` signed an historic agreement Oct. 10 to normalize
relations and open their border.

Nationalist forces in Turkey and Armenia will try to derail the
agreement, and prevent ratification. It will take skilled leadership
on the parts of Gul and Sargsyan to sail past these political shoals `
and perhaps all the way to Oslo to collect the next Nobel,’ the
article reads.

Armenians Angry Over Turkey Accords

ARMENIANS ANGRY OVER TURKEY ACCORDS
By Tanya Goudsouzian

09/10/2009108125343689908.html
09/10/09

Diaspora Armenians have held annual commemorations of what they claim
is a genocide perpetrated by Turkey in 1915 and say the draft protocols
could whitewash Ankara’s role [AFP]

When the Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers meet in Switzerland
on October 10 to sign an agreement to normalise relations, they will
put a century of conflict and controversy behind them.

The draft protocols of agreement, first made public on August 31,
seek to establish diplomatic relations and the possible reopening of
the long-closed Turkish-Armenian border.

However, the draft protocols have sparked heated debate among
nationalists on both sides and provoked outraged condemnation from
many diaspora Armenians.

There have been protests in the Armenian capital Yerevan and
demonstrations across Argentina, Canada, France, Lebanon, Russia and
the US.

"Armenia is not for sale," they say, with some going as far as branding
Serzh Sarkisian, the Armenian president, a traitor.

Armenian genocide claims

In 2008, Abdullah Gul, left, met with Sarkisian in Yerevan to launch
the draft protocols [EPA] The move to sign the protocols comes one
year after an historic visit to Armenia by Abdullah Gul, the Turkish
president and follow, reportedly, months of secret talks brokered by
Swiss mediators.

Earlier this month, Sarkisian began a world tour of diaspora Armenian
communities in an effort to alleviate their concerns and explain his
government’s position.

However, it is doubtful he will succeed as many Armenians believe
the protocols relinquish too many of their rights for far too little
in return.

Pitched as a means to boost landlocked Armenia’s stagnant economy,
the protocols are being rushed through the legislature in the capital
Yerevan.

Critics believe the protocols have been hastily drawn up and largely
favour Turkey.

If the protocols are ratified, they say, Armenia would essentially
forfeit its right to demand that Turkey recognise, and be held
accountable for, what they describe as the genocide in which more
than 1.5 million Armenians perished.

Ankara has always rejected such charges and says many died on both
sides during the first world war. f

While noted experts around the world have already established the
veracity of Armenian genocide claims, the protocols call for the
establishment of an independent fact-finding commission to "determine
the truth".

"These protocols, by establishing a historical commission, fuel
Turkey’s denial of the Armenian genocide, a policy that represents
a grave offence to the Armenian nation and a direct security threat
to the Republic of Armenia," says Aram Hamparian, executive director
of the Armenian National Committee of America.

"In requiring that the borders be recognis ed first, as a precondition
for even the establishment of relations, the Turkish side clearly
seeks to pressure the Armenian government into forfeiting the rights
of all Armenians to a just resolution of this crime."

Nagorno-Karabakh

In 1988, Armenia and Azerbaijan clashed over the disputed enclave of
Nagorno-Karabakh after ethnic Armenians declared their independence
from Azerbaijani rule.

Armenian forces seized control of the disputed territory and seven
surrounding regions from Azerbaijan in the early 1990s and declared
an independent state – the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.

Turkey sided with Azerbaijan, a country it feels is a traditional
and ethnic ally, imposed an embargo on Yerevan, and closed the
border thereby preventing land-locked Armenia from easy access to
European trade.

Despite repeated diplomatic efforts since a tenuous ceasefire took
hold in 1993, Armenia and Azerbaijan have failed to negotiate a
settlement on the region’s status.

However, since the protocol agreements were first drafted, Turkey
has promised that it will re-open borders with Armenia, leaving
Azerbaijan fearful of losing any leverage it may have had in final
settlement talks.

Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, meanwhile, fears losing its only real
support for independence in Yerevan in favour of the protocols
with Turkey.

US influence

Armenia was the only country to recognise the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
Joseph Kechichian, editor of the Journal of the Society for Armenian
Studies, told Al Jazeera: "The Turks are in a bind vis-a-vis Azerbaijan
because if, and when, they open the border, Azerbaijan will fall back
into even more irrelevance."

"Watch for added Azeri pressure on Turkey in the weeks and months
to come.

What kind of economic sweeteners will be dangled by Moscow and
Ankara in front of Yerevan and Baku will probably determine whether
contemplated accords will work," he said.

Kechichian also believes that ratification of the protocols will
strengthen US influence in the region, if indirectly, through its
traditional ally and fellow Nato member Turkey.

Some experts believe that since the visit of Barack Obama, the US
president, to Turkey in April, there has been growing momentum in the
Middle East and South Caucasus to position Ankara as a counterweight
to Iranian and Russian influence in the region.

"Sadly, it would seem that the US, in pressuring Armenia to accept
the one-sided terms of these protocols, is effectively acting as
Turkey’s surrogate in the region," says Hamparian.

Armenian interests sidelined?

Vartan Oskanian, a former Armenian foreign minister, has also voiced
reservations. While supporting the establishment of normal relations
with Turkey, he maintains he "would have never signed this document".

According to Oskanian, the protocols – prepared with the participation
of the US and other influential countries – do not ser ve Armenian
interests.

He has urged people to hold mass rallies "so that the authorities
can understand that 70 per cent of the people [are] against it".

But many Armenians inside the country believe that "bread-and-butter"
realities must precede any lofty historical principles.

Relations with Turkey, they argue, are essential to improving
Armenia’s crippled economy. They dismiss as irrelevant the protests
and condemnations by diaspora Armenians, many of whom are descendants
of survivors who fled Turkey in 1915.

They insist that the policies and economic vicissitudes of the Armenian
republic have no direct, or even indirect, impact on their lives, and
as such, those outside the country do not have the right to interfere.

Stabilising the region

Some Armenians fear that their claims of genocide may be ignored
[GETTY] Richard Giragosian, the director of the Armenian Centre for
National and International Studies in Yerevan, contends that "open
borders and normal relations are essential and stand as prerequisites
to development and stability".

"An agreement with Turkey would offer Armenia an immediate end to
the country’s dependence on Georgia, and would do much to lessen
over-dependence on Russia by bringing Armenia closer to the West,
while also bringing Europe closer to Armenia," he says.

"And in a strategic sense, the normalisation with Turkey is an
imperative for overcoming the two strategic threats=2 0now facing
Armenia – isolation and insignificance."

Russia and Iran

But if the US is attempting to wean Armenia from its traditional
allies, notably Russia and Iran, and to alter the dynamics in the
Caucasus, there may be challenges.

"Armenian-Russian and Armenian-Iranian ties are immensely important
to Yerevan. They may be impossible to break given Armenia’s survival
instincts.

Nothing will jeopardise that," says Kechichian.

"Lest we forget, both Russia and Iran provided vital assistance to
Armenia during some of its darkest hours after independence in 1991,
when the country confronted a systematic embargo that was akin to
strangulation.

"Moscow and Tehran may well have acted for their own strategic
reasons to aid Yerevan, but the critical support was a life-saver
nevertheless."

Energy rush

According to Harry Hagopian, a London-based international lawyer and
EU political consultant with the Paris-based Christians in Political
Action group, the geopolitical situation in the Caucasus has changed
drastically since the Georgia-Russia war.

He believes that it is not simply altering the political balance in
the region or possible membership of the European Union that is at
stake. The key issue, he says, is oil.

"Signing the protocol on the historic lands would allow Turkey to
use them for its energy and transport routes – including the Nabucco
pipeline project – without any possible legal prejudice.

=0 D "I do not claim that those lands could return to Armenia, but
a customary line has been gratuitously crossed in those protocols
between territorial integrity on the one hand and the recognition
of current borders on the other – a distinction which is applied by
many countries both in the Caucasus and elsewhere worldwide, so why
not in this instance too?" he points out.

Armenia’s needs notwithstanding, the speed with which the protocols
were presented and are being imposed on the diaspora indicate that
powerful outside forces are at play.

For Yerevan, however, these must be secondary concerns given the
historical burden that the Armenia assumes on behalf of the Armenian
nation.

It remains to be seen whether decisions made by politicians will
bridge the growing gulf that has emerged between the two to three
million citizens of the Republic of Armenia and the estimated seven
to eight million Armenians living in the diaspora.

"The Armenian government erred when it did not consult more
transparently with the diaspora and [instead] sprang the agreement
on them in the way it did last August," says Hagopian.

"After all, just as Israel listens to its Jewish lobbies worldwide
and even uses them to pursue its national interests, Armenia should
have done the same with its own diaspora."

http://english.aljazeera.net/focus/20

Turkey,Armenia Eye Peace Deal Afer Century-Old Enmity

TURKEY,ARMENIA EYE PEACE DEAL AFER CENTURY-OLD ENMITY
By Zerin Elci

Reuters
10 Oct 2009 09:33:25 GMT

ZURICH, Oct 10 (Reuters) – Turkey and Armenia are due to sign a peace
accord on Saturday to end a century of hostility stemming from the
World War One mass killing of Armenians by Ottoman forces.

A decades-old dispute between Turkey’s ally Azerbaijan and Armenia
over the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh hangs over a final
settlement. Talks between Azeri and Armenian leaders over the region
ended without result on Friday. [ID:nL9673847]

Turkey and Armenia are under U.S. and EU pressure to sign the
Swiss-mediated peace accord in a ceremony to be attended by
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and other dignitaries.

The deal, first announced in August, sets a timetable for restoring
diplomatic ties and opening the joint border. Turkish officials said
it would be signed on schedule. Armenian officials were not immediately
available for comment.

The accord must then be approved by the Turkish and Armenian
parliaments in the face of opposition from nationalists on both sides
and a powerful Armenian diaspora which insists Turkey acknowledge
the killings as genocide.

An agreement would boost European Union candidate Turkey’s diplomatic
clout in the volatilie South Caucasus, a transit corridor for oil and
gas to the West. Ankara is keen to be seen as a stabilising force in
the strategically important region.

"This is a sign that Turkey is changing and is now dealing with
things of its past and that it’s a valuable partner for the West,"
said Hugh Pope, senior analyst at the International Crisis Group and
author of books on Turkey.

"Not having a relationship with Armenia hobbles Turkey’s role in the
Caucasus," said Pope, adding the thaw would also benefit Ankara’s
troubled quest to join the European Union.

HURDLES TO COME

Turkey cut ties and shut its border with Armenia in 1993 in support
of Turkic-speaking Azerbaijan which was then fighting a losing battle
against Armenian separatists in Karabakh.

Ties between Muslim Turkey and Christian Armenia are also strained by
what Armenian and many Western historians say was the mass deportation
and deliberate killing of up to 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman
Empire during World War One.

Turkey says Armenians were among many thousands killed in the chaos
as the Ottoman Empire fought off Russian, British, French and Greek
armies and attempted to put down an Arab revolt before eventually
imploding under the strain. But Turkey denies the killings of Armenians
amounted to genocide.

The issue, until recently taboo in Turkey, has damaged ties between
Ankara and Washington, where Armenian-Americans have long lobbied
for a law to name the massacres a genocide.

Although landlocked Armenia stands to make big gains, opening its
impoverished economy to trade and investment, Armenia’s leader Serzh
Sarksyan faces protests at home and from the huge Armenian diaspora,
which sees the thaw with suspicion.

Armenians demand that Turkey acknowledge the 1915 killings as genocide,
a defining element in Armenian national identity.

About 10,000 people rallied in Yerevan on Friday against the accords,
waving Armenian flags and holding posters saying: "No to Turkish
preconditions!", "No to concessions to Turkey!"

Turkey and Armenia will set up an international commission of
historians to study the events under the deal, which Turkey’s Foreign
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu and his Armenian counterpart Edward Nalbandian
are due to sign at 5 p.m. (1600 GMT).

Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said earlier this year he would
not open its border with Armenia until Yerevan ended what he called
its occupation of Azerbaijan.

Violence erupted in Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian enclave within
Azerbaijan’s internationally recognised borders, in the late 1980s
as the Soviet Union headed towards its 1991 collapse.

Ethnic Armenian forces, backed by Armenia, drove out Azeri troops
and took control of seven districts of Azerbaijan adjacent to
Nagorno-Karabakh. Some 30,000 people were killed. (Writing by Ibon
Villelabeitia; editing by Philippa Fletcher)