| Turkey may hold key to opening up of Turkmenistan | |||
| With a crescent moon still hanging low in the pre-dawn sky, a dozen black Mercedes sedans lined up in front of the Presidential Hotel in this hard-to-reach Central Asian capital. | |||
The cars, flanked by Turkmen police vehicles, came to escort the delegation of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğ whose country appears to have gained unparalleled access to Turkmenistan's reclusive new government. The strengthening of the Turkmen-Turkish alliance has been clear since the death of Sapurmurat Niyazov in December of 2006. His successor Gurbanguli Berdymukhamedov, who was inaugurated Wednesday, has dropped tantalizing hints of reform that some expect could lead to the natural gas-rich country opening up to the world. The Turks and the Turkmens are natural allies. The Turks and the Turkmens are natural allies. Descended from common ancestors, they share close ethnic and linguistic ties and a common religion, Islam. Turkish officials were on hand in force both for Niyazov’s funeral and Berdymukhamedov’s inauguration. Turkey-based journalists were given visas for both events while journalists from many other countries - including Russia, which held sway over Turkmenistan during seven decades of Soviet power - were shut out. | |||