ANKARA: =?unknown?q?Erdo=F0an?= Slams Sarkozy’s Conditions

ERDOðAN SLAMS SARKOZY’S CONDITIONS

Turkish Daily News
Oct 10 2006

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan blasted conditions French
Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy laid down in return for voting down
a controversial bill penalizing any denial of the alleged genocide
of Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman Empire.

Presidential hopeful Sarkozy said on France-Inter radio that he had
spoken with Erdoðan on the telephone twice with regard to the French
bill, which will be debated at the National Assembly on Thursday,
and told him that they could oppose the bill if Turkey opens its
border gate with neighboring Armenia, scrap Article 301, which the
European Union says is restrictive of freedom of expression, from
its penal code, and establish a joint commission between Turkey and
Armenia to study the genocide allegations.

In response to Sarkozy’s conditions, Erdoðan said it was the Turkish
side which proposed the establishment of a joint commission for
academic debates on genocide allegations and made clear that Turkey’s
good intentions were not welcomed by Armenia, which rejected the
proposal.

On Article 301, Erdoðan said the French suggestion on that issue
had nothing to do with the issue, stressing that France was not in
a position to demand something from Turkey.

"First of all France should take a look at itself," Erdoðan said.

Facing pressure from the EU to amend or scrap Article 301 under which
scores of Turkish intellectuals have been put on trial, Turkey has
accused the bloc of applying double standards, saying that France
itself is blocking free speech under the bill that it plans to
legislate.

On opening the border gate, Erdoðan said Armenia should first act
with good will toward Turkey’s approach.

The border gate between Turkey and Armenia has been closed for more
than a decade. Turkey closed the gate and severed its diplomatic
relations with Armenia after Armenian troops occupied Azeri territory
of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Ankara now says normalization of ties depends on Armenian withdrawal
from Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as on progress in resolution of a
series of bilateral disagreements, including Armenia stopping to
support Armenian diaspora efforts to get international recognition
for the alleged genocide.

–Boundary_(ID_i03bILoDs1a18XHzxKfRhg)- –

BAKU: Turkey Former FM Offered To Deport 70 000 Armenians Migrants

TURKEY FORMER FM OFFERED TO DEPORT 70 000 ARMENIANS MIGRANTS

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Oct 9 2006

"Turkey should deport 70 000 Armenian migrants if the bill on
punishment for denying Armenian genocide is adopted by France
Parliament," Yashar Yakish, Turkey former Foreign minister and chairman
of the Parliament’s Adaptation Commission to the EU said, APA reports.

He said 70 000 Armenians work illegally in Armenia.

"They will have problems when Turkey government sends them back to
Armenia. Armenians should realize its responsibility," he said.

Turkey’s Membership In EU Would Be End Of Political Europe

TURKEY’S MEMBERSHIP IN EU WOULD BE END OF POLITICAL EUROPE

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.10.2006 14:02 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ French Interior Minister and presidential hopeful
Nicholas Sarkozy on Friday reiterated his opposition to Turkey’s
membership in the European Union. Speaking to French magazine Le
Meilleur des Mondes, Sarkozy claimed that Turkey’s possible membership
in the Union would be the end of "political Europe." "I love Turkey,
but its membership would be the end of Europe politically," Sarkozy
said, reiterating his support for a "privileged partnership" for Turkey
rather than full membership. Accusing British Prime Minister Tony Blair
and U.S. President George W. Bush of not wanting the development of
Europe politically, meaning their support for Turkish membership,
Sarkozy also described their attitude as "inconsistent," reported
The New Anatolian.

Genocide armenien: Accoyer =?unknown?q?=28UMP=29_=22regrette=22?= qu

Genocide armenien: Accoyer (UMP) "regrette" que le PS legifère sur l’histoire

Agence France Presse
6 octobre 2006 vendredi 2:23 PM GMT

Le president du groupe UMP a l’Assemblee nationale, Bernard Accoyer,
a declare vendredi a l’AFP "regretter" que le PS veuille "legiferer a
nouveau sur l’histoire", a propos de la proposition de loi PS reprimant
la negation du genocide armenien.

"Le president de la Republique a rappele lors de sa visite en Armenie
que la France avait reconnu officiellement le genocide armenien et
oeuvrait pour une meilleure entente entre les Etats de la region",
a declare M. Accoyer.

"En tant que president de groupe, je regrette que le groupe PS de
l’Assemblee ait juge utile de proposer au Parlement de legiferer a
nouveau sur l’histoire", a-t-il ajoute.

En visite a Erevan, Jacques Chirac avait juge samedi dernier que la
Turquie devait reconnaître le genocide armenien avant de pouvoir
adherer a l’Union europeenne. Il avait en outre estime que la
proposition de loi socialiste faisant de la negation du genocide un
delit "relève de la polemique".

La Turquie a averti vendredi la France que les relations bilaterales
allaient souffrir en cas de vote, jeudi prochain, de la proposition
de loi PS visant a penaliser la negation du genocide armenien de 1915.

–Boundary_(ID_x33v+12dCTuF45qA6lRAoA)–

BAKU: "Zerkalo": Armenian Separatists Undermined OSCE "Fire" Monitor

Ïðaâî Âûaîða, Azerbaijan
Democratic Azerbaijan
Oct 6 2006

"Zerkalo": Armenian Separatists Undermined OSCE "Fire" Monitoring
06.10.2006

"We regret that OSCE didn’t provide necessary conditions for
participation of representative of Nagorni Garabagh in preparation of
OSCE mission in order to evaluate ecologic situation on territories
damaged by fire.

However, it doesn’t exclude Garabagh experts’ opportunity to realize
given monitoring as realization of it has been postponed to next
day in connection with necessity of joining of "Nagorni Garabagh"
representatives to mission". "Minister of Foreign Affairs of Nagorni
Garabagh", Georgiy Petrosyan, said it while informing "Regnum"
correspondent on activities of "official Stepanakert" connected
with departure of OSCE group from Baku to the places where fires
were committed.

G. Petrosyan also informed that "Minister of Foreign Affairs of
Nagorni Garabagh" sent note to OSCE stating position of "leadership of
Republic" concerning participation of experts from "Nagorni Garabagh
Republic" in monitoring. "Part of territories where evaluation is
expected to be made, is under jurisdiction of "Nagorni Garabagh
Republic" being serious ground for our participation in mission
realized on opposite side", "minister" stressed.

We should remind that accordingly to information available at "Nagorni
Garabagh Republic" authorities "alarming ecological situation is
observed on Garabagh territories "occupied by Azerbaijan": felling of
woods in Shaumyan region is going on, ecological balance of eastern
part of Martuni region with damaged soil structure is upset".

Thus Garabagh separatists undermined OSCE monitoring that should have
started October 4.

–Boundary_(ID_O4q6klNTv+OXMmPMxfWKcg)–

Moscow Police Marks Year Of Armenia In Russia

MOSCOW POLICE MARKS YEAR OF ARMENIA IN RUSSIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
05.10.2006 12:49 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The first creative concert for Moscow police
dedicated to the Year of Armenia in Russia was given in Moscow. The
attendees not only enjoyed the Armenian songs and art but also got
useful information about Armenia and the Armenian people since the
ancient times up to our days and certainly about the centuries-old
Russian-Armenian friendship, President of the Armenian-Russian
Friendship Association Victor Krivopuskov told a PanARMENIAN.Net
reporter. "Events of the kind will be held by a worked out
scenario. "The presenters of the concerts will furnish information
taking into account the peculiarity of the audience," he said.

"These creative meetings will be held by the initiative of the Russian
association of friendship and cooperation with Armenia till the end
of the year for the law enforcers of all the Moscow administrative
districts. By decision of the Moscow state department of interior open
lessons of international friendship "Armenia our friend" will be held
in police training centers and colleges. According to the Moscow state
department of interior, the events will help the policemen in their
activities in the multinational city and strengthen the international
community of Muscovites," Victor Krivopuskov said.

ANKARA: Turkish Minister Urges EU, France Not To "Interfere" In Arme

TURKISH MINISTER URGES EU, FRANCE NOT TO "INTERFERE" IN ARMENIAN ISSUE

Anatolia news agency, Ankara,
4 Oct 06

Brussels, 4 October: Turkish State Minister and Deputy Prime Minister
Abdullatif Sener warned the EU and some other countries not to
interfere in Turkish-Armenian relations.

Sener is in Belgian capital of Brussels to participate in events
organized by the Turkish Industrialists’ & Businessmen’s Association
(TUSIAD) and European Policy Centre to mark the first anniversary of
the start of Turkey-EU negotiations.

In an exclusive interview with the AA [Anatolia] correspondent,
Sener referred to French President Jacques Chirac’s remarks about the
so-called Armenian genocide allegations, and said: "Chirac said that
recognition of so-called Armenian genocide should be a precondition
before Turkey’s EU membership. A resolution is being discussed in
France and it foresees fine and imprisonment for those who deny
Armenian genocide. It is not possible to accept such an attitude.

This is against the cultural atmosphere the EU is trying to create."

"Armenia is not a European country, it is an Asian country. So, it is
a third country for the EU. So, it is meaningless to bring this matter
up within the scope of Turkey’s EU membership process," he stated.

Sener added: "Whether it is an EU member or another country, everybody
who is affecting the Armenian policy from outside should give up his
endeavours. Chirac’s remarks are not sincere, they aim to affect the
domestic policy." [Passage omitted]

Merzlyakov: Armenia And Azerbaijan Will Be Presented "Modified Versi

MERZLYAKOV: ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN WILL BE PRESENTED "MODIFIED VERSION" OF THE BUCHAREST DOCUMENT

Public Radio of Armenia
Oct 3 2006

Russian Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk Group Yuri Merzlyakov told the
journalists that in case an agreement is reached on holding a recurrent
round of negotiations, Armenia and Azerbaijan will be presented the
"modified version" of the Bucharest document, Day.az reports. "In
the forthcoming talks the parties will be suggested to discuss a
document, which the Presidents were presented in Ramboulliet and
which was later reedited in Bucharest, and now with some amendments
it should be presented at the next meeting," he noted. The Russian
diplomat said that the new ideas are based on the clarification of
the document presented to the sides in May 2006 by the mission on
the level of Foreign Ministers of the Co-Chair countries.

BAKU: Turkey Concerned With Statements By French President – Turkish

TURKEY CONCERNED WITH STATEMENTS BY FRENCH PRESIDENT – TURKISH AMBASSADOR
Author: S.Agayeva

TREND, Azerbaijan
Oct 3 2006

Turan Moraly, the Turkish Extraordinary & Plenipotentiary Ambassador to
Azerbaijan told journalists that Turkey is very concerned regarding
the statements made by France’s leadership. They contradict the
existing historic, friendly and mutually profitable relationships
between Turkey and France, Trend reports citing the local television
channel ANS. He was commenting on the last statement made by the
French President Jacques Chirac, who called on Turkey to recognize
the Armenian genocide and open its borders with Armenia.

Turkey is ready for open channels of communication with Armenia,
but on condition that Armenia stabilizes its relationships with the
Turkic-speaking neighbors," the diplomat stressed.

Georgia And Russia: With You, Without You

GEORGIA AND RUSSIA: WITH YOU, WITHOUT YOU
Donald Rayfield

Open Democracy, UK
Oct 3 2006

Wine and roses, spies and sanctions, Abkhazia and South
Ossetia…Tbilisi’s long, intimate and turbulent relationship with
Moscow has gone badly wrong. Donald Rayfield explains how and why.

The current quarrel between Georgia and Russia – which started with
the arrest of an alleged Russian spy-ring on Georgian territory,
and quickly escalated via embittering mutual accusations towards
the imposition of a range of severe sanctions by Russia on its small
southern neighbour – is based on more than a conflict of interests;
it has all the viciousness of a love affair gone sour, which is
why it seems so hard to see an end to the ever-escalating series of
recriminations between the two countries.

For hundreds of years Russia was for Georgia a distant Christian
neighbour, if one slowly but surely expanding towards Georgia’s
northern frontiers. After the collapse of the Byzantine empire and
the devastations wrought by the Mongols, Georgia was for centuries
vulnerable to invasion and despoliation by Iran from the east and
Ottoman Turkey from the west, while the wild highland tribes of
the north periodically came down like wolves on the fold. Russia
during this period was a land more of myth than reality: only a
few inter-dynastic marriages linked the ruling families of the two
countries, and the remnants of the Scythians and the Golden Horde
put an impenetrable barrier between them.

Likewise, Georgia was at first a Shangri-La for Russia, a Christian
kingdom which would in principle be an ally in the expansion of Russian
rule and Orthodoxy throughout the orient, a state which had a common
interest in dominating the Circassians and Chechens who resisted all
forms of statehood and empire.

Donald Rayfield is professor in the department of modern languages,
Queen Mary College, University of London. Among his books is Stalin
and his Hangmen (Random House, 2005)

A wary embrace

Only in the 17th and 18th century did reality modify the dreams;
Russia and Georgia made contact, at first over the Caspian sea and
then, spasmodically, across the mountain passes. Russia provided
hospitality for Georgian exiles and refugees from Iranian depredations;
through Russia, Georgians got a European education, access to western
culture, and experience as officers in the Russian armies. They were
even given large estates and their aristocratic rank was recognised.

Finally, in the 1780s Russia offered military assistance in
repelling the Iranian forces. And here the first rifts appeared in
the relationship. Russian help consisted too often in encouraging the
Georgians to attack Persians or Turks, standing by while both sides
fought each other to a standstill, and then mopping up the remnants.

Georgians had their first lesson in modern Realpolitik.

When in 1783 the exhausted Georgian kingdom accepted the Russian
offer of protectorate status, they had their second lesson: within
two decades the Georgian kingdom was dismantled, the royal family
was exiled (comfortably and respectfully) to St Petersburg, the
Georgian church was incorporated into the Russian church – its
frescoes whitewashed, its polyphonic singing replaced by chant –
and a Russian viceroy governed the country.

Still, under Russian rule a corrupt, ignorant bureaucracy was
a distinct improvement over Persian and Turkish satraps. Nobody
was beheaded, castrated or enslaved, even if they were taxed and
occasionally exiled, and Georgian nobles enjoyed unfettered control
over their peasants and protection from bankruptcy. The Georgian
rebellions against Russian rule were half-hearted, and for most of
the 19th century, given liberal viceroys, the gratitude was greater
than the grievances.

The aftermath of the Bolshevik revolution of 1917 transformed
the picture. Soviet rule in 1921 violently crushed the independent
Georgian state that had sprung up in 1917; while lip-service was paid
to the status of Georgian language and culture, both Lenin and Stalin
systematically destroyed all hopes of any real autonomy. Instead,
autonomy (accompamnied in some cases by Russification) was granted to
several of Georgia’s provinces – Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Adzharia –
following the same tactics of divide and rule that the Iranian shahs
had applied. Georgians were subjected to mass arrests and executions in
the "great terror" of 1937-38, and their male population was reduced
by a fifth in the terrible fighting of the second world war.

The problem is that, relatively, Georgia remained a land of
plenty, even in the hungriest years of the 1930s and 1940s. Soviet
Russia, like Czarist Russia, was convinced that it had provided the
protective mantle under which grateful Georgians could enjoy peace and
prosperity. But gratitude was not apparent; many Russians were aware
of Georgian attitudes to them as a nation of male boors and female
sluts. After Stalin’s death the conviction steadily grew among ordinary
Russians that Georgians had parasitically exploited Soviet tolerance.

On the rocks

Today’s mutual hostility has escalated from this misunderstanding.

Georgia’s eagerness to declare independence in 1990 was taken by many
Russians as monstrous ingratitude. Within two years, Georgia seemed
on the verge of dismemberment, as Abkhazia broke away, South Ossetia
rose up against the abolition of its autonomy and Adzharia fell into
the hands of a narco-baron (Aslan Abashidze) with close links to the
mayor of Moscow.

Much of the responsibility for the loss of Georgia’s provinces
has to be blamed on Georgian politicians and their inflammatory,
nationalist – at times even fascist – rhetoric, in which they insisted
that their own minorities (Abkhaz, Ossetes, even Armenians) were just
"guests" on Georgian territory. But Georgian suspicions that Russia
was surreptitiously fomenting separatism are justified. South Ossetia
is a paradise for racketeers among the Russian army "peacekeepers",
while Abkhazia’s magnificent villas and resorts are coveted by the
Russian business and bureaucratic elites. The issue of offering Russian
passports to the population of Abkhazia, the Georgians rightly believe,
amounts to effective annexation of Georgian territory.

There are many varieties of anti-Georgian opinion in Russia. At the
crudest level is the view that all Caucasians are gangsters; at a
higher level, Eduard Shevardnadze (the former Soviet foreign minister
who returned to head Georgia in 1992 after the chaotic rule of Zviad
Gamsakhurdia) is seen as the traitor who enabled Mikhail Gorbachev
to dismantle the Soviet Union and hand the remnants to the Americans.

Mikheil Saakashvili’s "rose revolution" of November 2003-January 2004
was in fact given tacit assent by elements in the Russian government:
primarily in order to punish Shevardnadze, and secondarily because
Saakashvili was seen as an amateur who would not be able to intrigue
as cunningly as his tetri melia (white fox) predecessor.

In fact Saakashvili has shown a mixture of astuteness and
incompetence. On one hand, he secured the return of a lost province,
hounding out Abashidze from Adzharia, and he has made the Russians
agree eventually to evacuate their military bases. On the other hand,
to assuage his electorate he has made one inflammatory statement
after another, for each of which Georgia has been punished by denial
of energy and bans of exports.

No Georgian politician dares admit to the electorate that Abkhazia
is lost forever, like a wife that has run off to be with a bigger
and richer man, and that South Ossetia is now almost certainly
irrecoverable; nor would he or she have the wisdom of a Czech or
Hungarian politician to say that the country is all the better off
for being smaller and ethnically more homogeneous.

Meanwhile, although Russia has reconciled itself to the independence of
the Baltic states, Russian public opinion cannot swallow the idea of
an independent Georgia. Given the disparity of size and power between
the two countries, and given the certainty that if the Americans and
Europeans ever have to make a choice they will side with the Russians
(who have gas, oil and platinum, whereas the Georgians have only
a pipeline route to offer), Georgia is going to get the worst of
the conflict.