OSCE PA Delegation Arriving In Armenia

OSCE PA DELEGATION ARRIVING IN ARMENIA

armradio.am
10.03.2010 11:42

The OSCE Parliamentary Assembly delegation headed by President Joao
Soares is arriving in Armenia today.

The delegation is expected to meet Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan,
Chairman of the National Assembly of Armenia Hovik Abrahamyan, Chairman
of the NKR National Assembly Ashot Ghoulyan, Armenian Foreign Minister
Edward Nalbandian.

The delegation will be hosted by His Holiness Gargin II, Supreme
Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians. The OSCE delegation will
lay a wreath at the memorial to the Armenian Genocide victims.

On March 11 the delegation headed by OSCE PA President Joao Soares
will participate in Rose Roth seminar of NATO Parliamentary Assembly.

BAKU: OSCE PA President Joao Soares: "Several Steps Have Been Taken

OSCE PA PRESIDENT JOAO SOARES: "SEVERAL STEPS HAVE BEEN TAKEN TOWARDS SOLUTION TO NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT"

APA
March 9 2010
Azerbaijan

Tiflis. Nizami Mammadzadeh-APA. OSCE PA President Joao Soares and OSCE
Parliamentary Assembly’s special representative for Nagorno Karabakh
and Georgia Goran Lennmarker arrived in Tbilisi within the framework
of their visit to South Caucasus.

They met with Georgian Parliament’s Deputy Speaker Gigy Tsereteli,
APA reports. Discussions on Georgia-Russia conflict were held at
the meeting.

The OSCE PA President told APA’s correspondent that the main purpose
of the visit was to hold discussions on conflicts in the region:
"It also concerns Nagorno Karabakh conflict. Special Representative of
the OSCE PA Goran Lennmarker and OSCE PA Deputy Secretary General Tina
Schoen worked hard on Nagorno Karabakh. We will meet with Azerbaijani
and Armenian officials, as well as discuss the ways of solution to
Nagorno Karabakh conflict. I think that several steps have been taken
in this direction. Now both parties need to take some political steps.

Their positions must be discussed in the direction of solution to the
problem. We have met with the presidents and other officials of both
countries and conducted negotiations. Answers of the both sides were
positive in this direction".

An Unpaid Debt

AN UNPAID DEBT
By Henry Dumanian

/dumanian-an-unpaid-debt/
March 7, 2010

I like to think we’re a good people. Our greatest poets are humanists,
and our greatest heroes did not fight to create empires, they fought
to preserve life. We have always been friendly to newcomers, and our
church made it a point to be tolerant of other religions. There is,
however, one group of people that we have oppressed: our women.

The story of our women’s oppression has a paradoxic narrative. On the
one hand, they have been subject to backwardness at best and violence
at worst, and on the other hand, the monumental role they have played
in our nation’s life has always been applauded. This is why, in 1919,
as we attempted democracy for the first time, we gave women the right
to vote and voted women into parliament with little debate, while it
took the United States years of advocacy to eventually (reluctantly)
give half their population the right to the ballot. This is why
a writer like Silva Kaputikyan rose to such fame and prominence,
often went head to head and even more often surpassed her male
contemporaries, all without a feminist movement or Feminine Mystique.

And yet, there is another side to this story-one of constant beatings,
betrayal, bigotry, and cruelty.

We are, arguably, a nation created by women. The last paragraphs (and
the most touching) of Egishe’s History of Vartan and the Armenian
War describe an Armenia depleted of its men and soldiers, and the
feminine response. The bridal chambers of young girls became empty,
the widowed became again "as virtuous brides," and even the noble women
of Armenia, "who had been brought up in luxury and petted in costly
clothing and on soft couches, went untiringly to the houses of prayer,
on foot and bare-footed, asking with vows that they might be enabled
to endure their great affliction." It was the principles and stories
of our ancient mothers that the new generation of Armenian men were
raised on. In the coming years, as Armenia’s Muslim population grew,
Armenian men began to learn their languages, customs, and traditions.

The Armenian mother, remaining pure and untainted at home, was charged
with giving the future generation the gifts of our culture.

Apparently, the lessons Armenian mothers taught their kids were not
forgotten through the years. One community leader in 1919 told his
fellow men, "Our manly pride will lose nothing of its strength if
we have the magnanimity to confess that, before all else, it is the
Armenian woman who has preserved our national existence, clinging to
all the sacred relics left to the nation by our forefathers: religion
and language, family and morals." (*) And since then, the narrative
has not changed much.

When the new diaspora communities of the Middle East started to
shake off the trauma of the death marches, they were faced with an
unparalleled task: rebuilding the Armenian nation. Today, we have the
gift of retrospection and look at that period of heroism with a sense
of inevitableness. At the time, however, most of the survivors thought
the entire nation had indeed been wiped off the face of the planet.

They never imagined that the diaspora would grow to number in the
millions. Nor did they realize that their brothers and sisters on the
other side of the Arax River were still fighting and still numerous. A
sense of panic led to a sense of duty.

Due to the limited resources and obstacles they had, this often
meant making painful decisions. For one, the women who had been
raped, sexually molested, forced into prostitution, or had "married"
Muslims were left out of the rebuilding process altogether. By 1919,
Armenians had begun to seek their lost sisters and mothers. The search
sparked great controversy, and the findings weren’t always the happy
moments we often imagine them to be. Would a bride who had been forced
to marry a Kurd or Arab for her life’s sake be allowed back? Would
women who were forced to prostitute themselves in the streets of
Aleppo feel at home amongst their own people, or would they be forever
stigmatized? And what if traumatized women, who had spent years with
Muslim spouses and bore them children, didn’t want to come back? Most
of the young women who survived, in fact, were the beautiful Armenian
women kept alive by Turks, Arabs, and Kurds as sex objects. Instead,
Armenian leaders chose to concentrate on the "pure" orphans and su
rvivors who had not been "tainted" by the Turkish yoke. One writer,
Yervant Odian, tried to help. He had survived as a translator for
Turkish troops. On his way back to Istanbul in a railway carriage, he
noticed a beautiful hayuhi, who was, surprisingly, familiar with his
work. She had become a mistress for the singing and drinking Turkish
veterans he was accompanying. When he tried to convince her to go back
and search for her family, she replied: "It’s far too late. Things
have gone too far. I have lived this life for three years now; who
will look me in the face? You see, I’m the daughter of an honourable
family from Banderma. Still, I don’t dare go back home now; I feel
ashamed to look my relatives and friends in the face…"

Years have passed and we have recovered from that nightmare. Today,
we must deal with another one: domestic violence.

The most conservative estimates suggest that more than half of married
women in Armenia in the 1990’s were subjected to some form of physical
violence at home. In December 2000, a group called the Minnesota
Advocates for Human Rights investigated the issue and prepared a
brilliant report on the matter. The findings are horrific: "In [a]
case recorded by one of the hotlines, a pregnant woman lived in a
rural community and worked as a nurse. She called the hotline several
times to say she was being beaten by her husband and sisters-in-law.

Her husband had two children from a previous marriage and did not want
additional children. The woman was told repeatedly by her in-laws that
she had been brought to the home to look after the children rather
than to work. Fearing she would have nowhere to go, the woman resisted
seeking a divorce. This woman was ultimately killed by her husband."

Although cases like this are extreme, they underline the general
attitudes older men have toward their spouses, especially the less
educated.

The report also provided convincing evidence to suggest that all
government institutions, whether they be the judiciary or the police,
not only discriminate and make it difficult for women to feel safe
from their husbands, but they often explicitly discourage women from
speaking out altogether.

Since then, while conditions have gotten reportedly better with
the younger generations, it is still nothing to brag about. Amnesty
International’s latest report on domestic and sexual violence should be
a wake up call for the diaspora. This is not a political or partisan
issue, this is an emergency. One anonymous victim said it better than
any of us ever could: "I put up with his beatings for 14 years because
that’s what’s expected here in Armenia. In the Armenian family the
woman has to put up with everything, she has to keep silent. The fact
that I did something about it, that I went to the police and divorced
my husband, people in my village point at me and say she’s crazy,
look at what she did to her husband, she should have kept quiet. It’s
a stereotype, a national stereotype maybe, I don’t know, that if a
woman goes to the police or the courts, she’s destroying the family."

Currently, despite the alarming state of many married women, there is
no law specifically designed for domestic violence. The attitude of
the police (who are often the first responders) is arguably one of
sympathy for the husband and distaste for the woman. Yet the issue
is not only one of law enforcement or a better, more just, and less
corrupt judicial system (although that’s certainly a good place to
start). The underlying issue is bigotry. While our views on family and
marriage have been the bedrock of our survival, we need to weed out
the more parochial elements in them. When I volunteer in Armenia, most
of the local volunteers are almost all women. When I go to meetings
and conferences, I pray that there are women present; all-male events
tend to turn into fights between egos, not ideas. My experiences, I
have discovered, are not different from many other Diaspora Armenians.

The rise of women in Armenia is a pre-requisite to an Armenian
renaissance.

One of my favorite poems (turned song) is by Aramyis Sahakyan,
a Soviet dissident writer, properly entitled "Armenian women." It
reads like an apology on behalf of Armenian men:

You have burned our flame, you have raised our young, You have
protected our language, honor, and life.

While we haven’t cherished you enough, And while we are still in your
debt; that debt, we will repay.

Of course, the Armenian original sounds eternal and true (or perhaps
my translation doesn’t do it justice). We wouldn’t have forgiven
our grandfathers’ generation had they not preserved our nation. We
wouldn’t have forgiven our fathers’ generation had they not seized
the opportunity for independence. We shouldn’t forgive our generation
unless we pay the unpaid debt to our women.

(*) Vahe Tachjian, "Gender, nationalism, exclusion: the reintegration
process of female survivors of the Armenian genocide," Nations and
Nationalism 15, no. 1 (2009): 60-80, p. 69.

Henry Dumanian is a political science and history major at Hunter
College in New York City. He was born in Armenia and moved to the
United States in 1996. He recently completed his honors thesis on
the fragmented nature of Armenian national identity. He contributes
political commentary to the Armenian Weekly.

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2010/03/07

Armenia crushes Azeri saboteur group – ministry

Interfax, Russia
March 5 2010

Armenia crushes Azeri saboteur group – ministry

YEREVAN March 5

A group of five or six alleged Azeri saboteurs who illegally crossed
the border into Armenia has been "neutralized" in a predawn security
operation on Thursday, some of its members being killed while "no one
was killed or wounded on the Armenianside," the Armenian Defense
Ministry said on Friday.

The group had been involved in assaults and stealing farm animals,the
ministry told Interfax.

"The body of one of the Azeris is on Armenian territory, another
saboteur, who was heavily wounded, died on his way to the hospital,
andone more body is thought to be on neutral territory," it said.

The rest of the group managed to escape to Azerbaijan, the ministry said.

The site of the operation against it was in the vicinity of the
village of Koti, it said.

Turkish Ambassador to US back in Turkey

Turkish Ambassador to US back in Turkey

armradio.am
06.03.2010 14:58

Turkey’s Ambassador to Washington D.C. Namık Tan arrived in Istanbul
on Saturday after being recalled to Turkey for consultations following
the decision of a U.S. congressional panel approving a resolution on
Armenian Genocide, the Hurriyet Daily News reports.

Tan made a short statement to reporters after his arrival. "As you
know I have been recalled for consultations," he said. He will meet
with officials, including the president, prime minister and foreign
affairs ministers, for consultations, Tan said. "After the
consultations, I will return when it is deemed fit," he said.

BAKU: Turkish politician criticized Armenian bill

news.az, Azerbaijan
March 7 2010

Turkish politician criticized Armenian bill
Sat 06 March 2010 | 06:10 GMT Text size:

Devlet Bahcheli ‘Turkey should withdraw its signatures on the
protocols signed with Armenia’.

Nationalist Movement Party Chairman Devlet Bahcheli reacted against
the bill in a statement saying that Turkey should withdraw its
signatures on the protocols signed with Armenia and Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan should postpone his US visit he has to make in
April.

Bahcheli said it is obvious that the totally baseless and foul spoken
claims have been used to create an atmosphere of settling accounts
with the past of the Turkish Nation.

TRT

FM: Linking Armenian-Turkish reconciliation to Genocide recog unwise

news.am, Armenia
March 6 2010

Linking Armenian-Turkish reconciliation to Genocide recognition
unwise, Armenian FM states

11:15 / 03/06/2010`To put it mildly, it is unwise to link the
recognition of the Armenian Genocide to the Armenian-Turkish
normalization process,’ RA Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian stated
in his interview with the RA Public TV.

Commenting on the approval of the Armenian Genocide Resolution by the
U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs, he expressed his gratitude to
the U.S. Congressmen that voted in favor of panhuman values. He
pointed out that the statement and articles of the Turkish press
remind him of Paris in 2001 ` `the same statements, articles,
warnings, recalled Ambassador.’

`Some time later the Ambassador returned, and the relations followed
their normal course. What did the articles say? Turkey played an
important role in battling terrorism, establishing and consolidating
peace in the context of settling some regional conflicts. So no
resolution of the Armenian Genocide was to be adopted. What does it
mean? If the Armenian Genocide is recognized, Turkey will support
terrorism and declare against peace? Quite a strange approach,’
Nalbandian said. He also pointed out that Turkey’s steps caused some
French political figures, who had spoken in Turkey’s favor before, to
change their minds.

The Armenian FM also stated that it was not easy for Armenia to launch
the reconciliation process without its admitting the Armenian
Genocide, but Armenia did that step.

T.P.

Le Congres Americain Reconnait Le Genocide Armenien

LE CONGRES AMERICAIN RECONNAIT LE GENOCIDE ARMENIEN

Journal Metro, week-end (Montreal)
Journalmetro.com
Vendredi 5-7 Mars 2010-03-06

Armenie
1.500.000
« La Turquie reconnaît le massacres des chrétiens arméniens par les
Ottoman, mais nie qu’il ai fait plus de 1,5 million de morts et qu’il
s’agisse d’une génocide »

La Commission des Affaires étrangers de la Chambre des représentants a
approuve hier une résolution sur la reconnaissance du « génocide
arménien » par la Turquie en 1915.
Le texte a été vote par 23 voix contre 22, bien que
a’administration Obama ai exhorte le Congres a ne pas la voter, de
crainte d’offenser la Turquie.
Quelques minutes après la gouvernement turc a annonce qui
`Il rappelait son ambassadeur à Washington pour des consultation a la
suite de ce vote. La résolution va toutefois maintenant être soumise
au vote de toute la Chambre des représentants, ou son adoption est
incertaine.
La Turquie, un allie de l’OTAN jouant un rôle pour les intérêts
américains au Moyen-Orient et en Afghanistan, avait prévenu que
l’approbation de la résolution pourrait mettre en péril la coopération
américano-turque et nuire aux négociation destinées a ouvrir la
frontière entre la Turquie et l’Armenie
Assosiated Press

Turkey reacts with fury to US genocide claim

The National, UAE
March 6 2010

Turkey reacts with fury to US genocide claim
Thomas Seibert, Foreign Correspondent

Last Updated: March 05. 2010 11:17PM UAE / March 5. 2010 7:17PM GMT

Photo; Turkish nationalists hold signs calling for sanctions against
the US after American politicians called the killing of Armenians in
1915 genocide. EPA

ISTANBUL // Turkish-American relations were in turmoil yesterday after
a US congressional panel called on the United States government to
recognise the death of hundreds of thousands of Armenians in the First
World War as genocide, a move observers said would obstruct chances of
reconciliation between governments in Ankara and Yerevan.

`This was the last nail in the coffin of the protocols’ foreseeing the
establishment of diplomatic relations and the opening of the border
between Turkey and Armenia, Cengiz Aktar, a political scientist at
Istanbul’s Bahcesehir University, said yesterday. The protocols were
signed by both governments last year but have not been ratified.

Prof Aktar, a leading member of a group of Turkish intellectuals that
is calling for reconciliation between Turks and Armenians, said
government efforts to bring the two countries closer together had
ended in a `total fiasco’.

Despite lobbying by Turkey and a last-minute appeal by the White
House, the House of Representatives foreign affairs committee voted
23-22 to approve a non-binding resolution which calls on the US
president, Barack Obama, to ensure US policy formally refers to the
killing of the Armenians in 1915 as genocide.

It is not clear yet whether the resolution will reach the floor of the
House. Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, warned against such
a resolution.

Following the vote, Ankara recalled its ambassador in Washington, a
very strong sign of protest in international diplomacy rarely seen
between two allies such as Turkey and the US. The office of Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish prime minister, said in a statement the
his nation had been `accused of a crime it did not commit’.

Abdullah Gul, the Turkish president, warned of the adverse effects on
Turkish-US relations. `Turkey will not be responsible for any negative
consequence of this vote.’

Before the decision, Turkish media had reported that Ankara threatened
to cancel defence and civilian deals with US companies worth billions
of dollars. A small nationalist party said it would stage
anti-American demonstrations in several Turkish cities in protest.

Ahmet Davutoglu, the foreign minister and a driving force behind the
Turkish-Armenian protocols last year, said the US lawmakers were
`preventing a historic peace between the Turkish and the Armenian
peoples’. Mr Davutoglu said Turkey’s efforts to resolve disputes with
Armenia would continue, but that the vote in Washington put those in
jeopardy.

But there were also signs that Ankara is not interested in further
escalating tensions with the US. Mr Davutoglu said it was `early’ to
talk about retaliatory steps, in a reference to possible sanctions
concerning the Incirlik airbase in southern Turkey, an important
logistical hub for US troops deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan. He also
said there was no question of pulling back Turkish soldiers from
Afghanistan.

Turkey fears a genocide recognition by a growing number of western
countries could lead to compensation demands or territorial claims by
Armenia. Parliaments in France, Switzerland and other countries have
passed resolutions condemning the Armenian genocide in recent years.

Mr Obama supported recognition as a US presidential candidate, but has
refrained from doing so since he came to office last year, citing
reconciliation efforts between Ankara and Yerevan.

The fate of the Anatolian Armenians is one of the most delicate issues
in Turkish society. Armenia and many international scholars say the
Ottoman Empire ordered the killing of the Armenians in the First World
War and that up to 1.5 million people perished in massacres and death
marches.

Turkey puts the death toll much lower and says the deaths were
unintentional consequences of a relocation campaign under wartime
condition. Ankara also says that many Muslim Turks were killed by
Armenian militants.

In the protocols signed after Swiss mediation last year, Turkey and
Armenia agreed to have historians look at the events of 1915. They
also said they would exchange ambassadors and open the border, which
has been closed since the early 1990s, when a conflict between
Turkey’s ally Azerbaijan and Armenia erupted over the region of
Nagorny-Karabakh, an Armenian enclave on Azerbaijani territory.

Under pressure from Azerbaijan and nationalists at home, Mr Erdogan
has promised his government would not send the protocols to parliament
for ratification until there is progress in the Karabakh question.
>From there, the process started to unravel as both the US and Armenia
had rejected linking the issues.

But Prof Aktar predicted that Turkish-Armenian reconciliation efforts
by individuals and society would continue.

One example is a project to rebuild a 10th-century bridge over the
Arpacay river that forms the border between Turkey and Armenia. The
bridge, which used to be an important crossing point on the Silk Road,
the historical trade route linking Europe and China, would be rebuilt
in a joint Turkish and Armenian effort, according to reports in the
Turkish press. Prof Aktar said that over time, the track of `civilian
diplomacy’ may become strong enough to influence official policy in
both countries.

l/article?AID=/20100306/FOREIGN/703059806/1140

http://www.thenational.ae/apps/pbcs.dl

"The Opposition Has Nothing To Say"

"THE OPPOSITION HAS NOTHING TO SAY"

Aysor
March 4 2010
Armenia

The representative of the RA President in the NA Garnik Isagulyan
on the meeting with the journalists said that the mistake of the
opposition is that since 2008 when Serzh Sargsyan stretch them his
hand they refused the suggestion of cooperation.

"We should confess that by that time the stretched out hand was not
accepted. Surely, we also have to mention that unfortunately since the
very first day of the presidency started the economic crises which was
to have its influence over the governing system", – stressed Isagulyan.

According to him after the 1st of March in 2008 it was clear that it
will become a serious problem which Armenia will have to face.

"In the NA was formed a commission which was investigating the case
of the March 1 and instead of supporting the opposition did everything
to fail the operation of the commission", – the speaker added.

After all of those things, Isagulyan says, the opposition has nothing
to say, we do not have a political crises and the inner political
issues are solved long before.