
Published on August 18, 2008
TURKEY 'NO ENEMY' TO ARMENIA
- President Abdullah Gul sent a reconciliatory message to neighboring Armenia on Saturday, saying Turkey is "no enemy" to any country in its region, as he mulled a possible landmark trip to Yerevan. The conflict between Georgia and Russia shows the need for "early measures to resolve frozen problems in the region and... prevent instability in the future," said Gul in televised remarks in the central city of Nevsehir. "This is our understanding on all problems. We are no enemy to anyone in the region," he said, reiterating a Turkish proposal to set up a regional forum for stability in the Caucasus. Gul's conciliatory remark came in response to a question on whether he would accept an invitation by Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian to go to Yerevan in September to watch a World Cup qualifying match between Turkey and Armenia. He replied he was still evaluating the invitation. Ankara has refused to establish diplomatic ties with Yerevan since the former Soviet republic gained independence in 1991 because of Armenian efforts to secure international recognition of Armenian massacres under the Ottoman Empire as genocide. In 1993 Turkey shut its border with Armenia in a show of solidarity with its close ally Azerbaijan, then at war with Armenia, dealing a heavy economic blow to the impoverished nation in the strategic Caucasus region. Diplomats from Turkey and Armenia met secretly in Switzerland in July in a fresh effort to normalize ties following three rounds of talks in 2005 and 2006. No progress is so far publicly known. Turkish and Armenian leaders have meanwhile met on the sidelines of international gatherings, including a Black Sea regional summit in Istanbul last year.

- AFP
Headlines for August 18, 2008
ARMENIA SCRAMBLES TO RESTORE VITAL SUPPLIES VIA GEORGIA
By Shakeh Avoyan
Armenia sent repairmen and a convoy of fuel trucks to Georgia following the weekend explosion on a key Georgian railway bridge that severed the two South Caucasus states’ main trade link with the outside ...ARMENIANS URGED TO JOIN NEW OPPOSITION ALLIANCE
By Ruzanna Stepanian 16
Former President Levon Ter-Petrosian began on Monday recruiting individual members of his new opposition alliance as part of preparations for an impending fresh campaign of anti-government protests. ...TURKEY 'NO ENEMY' TO ARMENIA
AFP 1
President Abdullah Gul sent a reconciliatory message to neighboring Armenia on Saturday, saying Turkey is "no enemy" to any country in its region, as he mulled a possible landmark trip to Yerevan. ...
Most read news (last 7 days)
ARMENIA FACES TRADE BLOCKADE AS RUSSIA WIDENS GEORGIA ASSAULT
By Karine Kalantarian
SARKISIAN DISCUSSES GEORGIA CRISIS WITH RUSSIA’S MEDVEDEV
By Emil Danielyan
THOUSANDS POUR INTO ARMENIA FROM WAR-STRICKEN GEORGIA
By Satenik Vantsian in Gyumri, Ruben Meloyan and Emil DanielyanARMENIA RULES OUT SUPPORT FOR RUSSIAN STRIKES ON GEORGIA
By Emil Danielyan
ARMENIA SCRAPS VISAS FOR TURKISH SOCCER FANS
By Emil DanielyanARMENIANS URGED TO JOIN NEW OPPOSITION ALLIANCE
By Ruzanna Stepanian
DASHNAKS WANT ARMENIAN ROLE IN GEORGIA MEDIATION
By Emil DanielyanARMENIAN OPPOSITION HAILS GEORGIA TRUCE
By Ruben Meloyan
ARMENIA ‘UNAFFECTED’ BY GEORGIA CRISIS
By Ruben MeloyanMPS QUESTION GOVERNMENT VERSION OF ARMENIAN UNREST
By Karine Kalantarian
© AUA
Today in Armenian history- 1826 The Armenian cathedral of Constantinople, including many valuble manuscripts and documents, catches fire. The church was in Gum-Gapu (Constantinople).
- 1876 Birth of Shooshanik Kiurghinyan (poet) in Alexandropol. She died in 1927.
- 1910 Birth of Harootyoon Kalents (artist). He died in 1967.
- 1917 Hovhannissyan publishes the "Support" newspaper in Shooshee (Artsakh).
- 1954 Death of Hrant G. Pastrmadjian. He was born in 1904.
- 1993 Ghapan (Armenia) suffers heavy bombardment by Azeri Turkish forces.
- 1994 Catholicos Vazgen the First passes away in Yerevan. He was born in 1908.
Forum most active discussions
ARMENIAN NEWS
INTERACTIVE NEWS
INFORMATION
MY ARMTOWN

How to quit smoking?
How to write in Armenian on Windows XP?

