Businessmen from Turkey, Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan gathered in Tbilisi, the Georgian capital, July 17-20 for the second “Caucasian Cheese Exhibition,” organized by the Caucasus Business and Development Network (CBDN) in a bid to promote sectoral cooperation in the volatile region ravaged by protracted ethnic conflicts. The cheese they put on exhibit is a mixture of cheese types from different parts of the region. During the four-day event, CBDN also offered “Caucasus Bouquet,” a wine brand jointly created by Caucasus winemakers, as an accompaniment to the cheese tasting.
The exhibition brought together people from many spheres, including CBDN’s Turkey, Armenia and Georgia project coordinators Alin Ozinian, Artush Mkrtcyhan and Tengiz Svanidze, as well as cheese experts and cheese producers.
Speaking to Today’s Zaman, Ozinian, who is also the press representative of the Turkish-Armenian Business Council (TABDC), said there are now efforts to produce a Caucasian honey and that talks with honey producers regarding the project are already under way, adding that producers have welcomed the idea of producing “Caucasus honey.” She said the initiative was more aimed at strengthening confidence and regional cooperation among Caucasus nations than making commercial profit.
In 2008, Turkish, Armenian, Azerbaijani and Georgian producers unveiled what they called “Caucasian cheese” in Gyumri, Armenia. The initiative came to symbolize reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia and across the Caucasus.
Turkey and Armenia have had no formal ties since 1993, when Turkey closed its border and severed diplomatic ties in show of solidarity with Azerbaijan, who was fighting a war with Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh region. Hopes for reconciliation emerged when President Abdullah Gül visited Armenia in September 2008 to watch a football game between the national teams of the two countries. The two countries signed protocols in October 2009 to restore normal ties but progress has been slow since then, and whether and when they will be implemented remain an open question.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| BÜLENT KENEŞ | ![]() |
||
| ‘Deep Anatolia’ factor in democratization | |||
| NICOLE POPE | ![]() |
||
| Right and wrong | |||
| YAVUZ BAYDAR | ![]() |
||
| The empire strikes back #267 | |||
| ETYEN MAHÇUPYAN | ![]() |
||
| Why does the AKP still attract support? | |||
| ALİ BULAÇ | ![]() |
||
| Sunni-Shiite-secular | |||
| HÜSEYİN GÜLERCE | ![]() |
||
| MİT, the judiciary and the new constitution | |||
| ORHAN KEMAL CENGİZ | ![]() |
||
| A Turkish court case against Armenians and Sarkozy | |||
| ASIM ERDİLEK | ![]() |
||
| Deleveraging is slow and painful (1) | |||
| CHARLOTTE MCPHERSON | ![]() |
||
| The clash of values | |||
| MERVE BÜŞRA ÖZTÜRK | ![]() |
||
| Two groups in the state | |||
| LALE KEMAL | ![]() |
||
| Will CHP be routed in next election? | |||
| EMRE USLU | ![]() |
||
| Press freedom concerns again in Turkey? Give me a break… | |||
| MARKAR ESAYAN | ![]() |
||
| How did we step into the missionary threat trap? | |||
| İBRAHİM ÖZTÜRK | ![]() |
||
| Towards a strategic partnership between two rising stars: Turkey and South Korea (1) | |||
| İBRAHİM KALIN | ![]() |
||
| What now in Syria? | |||
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||