ANALYSIS-EU Dream Has Already Turned Sour For Some Turks

ANALYSIS-EU DREAM HAS ALREADY TURNED SOUR FOR SOME TURKS
By Jon Hemming

Reuters, UK
Sept 29 2005

ISTANBUL, Sept 29 (Reuters) – It may take 10 years before Turkey joins
the European Union, but even at this nascent stage of negotiations
EU demands have inflamed Turkish nationalism.

The constant stream of criticism from the European Union has revived
memories of Western meddling in the 19th and early 20th centuries that
put an end to Turkey’s empire and, but for a nationalist uprising,
would have dismembered Turkey itself.

“The whole issue of nationalism represents the most difficult and
the deepest gap between Turkey and the EU,” said one Turkey-based
EU diplomat.

While the EU was formed to overcome the discredited nationalism that
came close to destroying the continent in World War Two, Turkish
identity was forged by Kemal Ataturk’s 1920s nationalist struggle
that fought off French, British and Greek invaders and suppressed
Kurdish and Islamist threats.

Thus European calls for more rights for the Kurds, pressure over
Cyprus and for Turkey to recognise the Armenian genocide 90 years ago,
unite the far right, far left and many in the secular establishment
against what they see as underhand EU plots.

“Turkey is experiencing the same betrayal by intellectuals that
broke up the Ottoman Empire,” said nationalist party leader Muhsin
Yazicioglu this month.

LEFT AND RIGHT UNITE

While most Turks still favour joining the EU, support has fallen from
73 percent a year ago to 63 percent in a recent survey. However,
as Turkey and the EU get down to the nitty-gritty of negotiations,
support could fall even further, analysts say.

“There is only one fault line in Turkey and that is between those for
and against the EU,” said Istanbul University professor Mehmet Altan.

Meanwhile, opposition in Europe to Turkey’s membership — as high as
80 percent in Austria and 74 percent in Germany — feeds the sense
of suspicion and discrimination felt by many Turks.

This has made for some strange bedfellows.

Scruffy leftists with bushy Lenin beards found themselves rubbing
shoulders with smart dark-suited right-wing nationalists last weekend
at a demonstration against an Istanbul conference by liberal academics
discussing claims of Armenian genocide.

“No EU, no USA, but a completely independent Turkey,” the leftists
chanted, pointing angrily at the EU flag flying above the exclusive
private university hosting the conference.

“Turkey is Turkish and will stay Turkish,” the rightists clamoured,
in similar vein.

The EU closely watched the conference controversy.

“We see this is a question of whether the Turkish mentality can change
and whether openness can prevail over those who prefer a nationalist
view of their history,” the diplomat said.

Both the right-wing Nationalist Action Party and the Turkish Communist
Party are planning anti-EU protests on Oct. 2, the day before Brussels
is due to start long and difficult talks that could lead to Turkey’s
eventual entry to the bloc.

However, more worrying for Turkey’s EU supporters and Turkish liberals
dreaming of shedding their oriental past is the depth of nationalism
in the establishment and the army.

STATE CHALLENGED

For most Turks, Kemal Ataturk is still a hero who saved Turkey from
foreign forces during and after World War One, restored national
pride and turned the country towards Europe.

However for some, his state-centred, top-down legacy sits uneasily
with the pluralist, democratic EU Turkey seeks to join.

“The way to democratise this country, to realise individual rights
and freedoms, to transform a Kemalist state into a democratic state
which values people is the EU,” said Altan.

The so-called “deep state” and the powerful military are uneasy about
surrendering any sovereignty to Brussels, he said.

Europe is “trying to change our national culture by imposing foreign
values, fashion and languages that do not match Turkish customs and
traditions”, complained Turkish Chief of General Staff Hilmi Ozkok
this year.

Increased Kurdish rebel attacks and a violent nationalist backlash
have raised tension in Turkey ahead of Oct. 3 and undermined Prime
Minister Tayyip Erdogan’s government which has cast aside its Islamist
roots to champion Turkey’s EU cause.

However, many in Erdogan’s own party, including ministers, come from a
nationalist background. They, and many across the political spectrum,
could baulk at too many concessions to EU demands on Cyprus, the
Kurds and minority rights.

“When they get bored by this EU process and because they cannot
offer any logical counter-argument, they’ll get angry and work up
nationalist reaction,” Altan said. “It is a reaction by those fattened
in the past and represents their helplessness.”

Police investigating Moscow court shooting

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
September 28, 2005 Wednesday

Police investigating Moscow court shooting

MOSCOW

Moscow police are investigating the shooting incident in a city
magistrate’s court, when a defendant fired a submachine gun at the
plaintiff and his lawyer, wounding both.

Police overpowered and detained the attacker, a 39-year-old ethnic
Armenian, immediately after the incident, which occurred in
Domodedovskaya Street about noon on Wednesday.

He is likely to undergo a psychiatric test. “The man must have been
displeased with the court hearing and sought revenge in this manner,”
a law-enforcement officer told Itar-Tass.

“During the court hearing, the defendant took out a submachine gun
and fired several shots at the plaintiff and his lawyer, wounding one
to the stomach and the other to the arm,” the official said.

Both victims were hospitalized. Their condition is now satisfactory,
according to medics.

Police said they had seized a home-made submachine-gun from the
Armenian.

Eastern Promise: No Alternative To Talks On Full Turkish EU Membersh

EASTERN PROMISE: NO ALTERNATIVE TO TALKS ON FULL TURKISH EU MEMBERSHIP

The Times, UK
Sept 29 2005

The formal opening of accession talks with Turkey in London due to
begin on Monday would mark a pivotal moment in the development of
the European Union. Turkish membership would alter the character of
the EU more profoundly than the accession of any other country in
almost 50 years. It would extend the EU some 900 miles to the east,
taking its external frontier to the borders of Syria and Iran. It
would bring into the EU some 70 million Muslims, profoundly altering
its demographic and cultural profile and admitting a country that
would soon become the EU’s largest member.

The opening of accession talks will also be the most substantial
achievement of Britain’s otherwise lacklustre EU presidency, a
step to which this country has been committed for longer and more
wholeheartedly than any of its partners. The nearer the formal start
comes, however, the greater the dissent, backsliding and outright
opposition to Turkish membership by EU governments and fretful
publics. Yesterday the European Parliament postponed ratification of
the customs union – a prerequisite of full EU membership – and added
two conditions to entry talks: that Ankara recognise the present
(solely Greek) Government of Cyprus and that it acknowledge the
killings of Armenians during and after the First World War as genocide.

The conditions, as provocative as they are politically disingenuous,
pander to an increasingly hostile EU opinion by citing issues that
appear reasonable but are calculated to anger Ankara. The same is true
of those European politicians, especially Angela Merkel in Germany
and Nicolas Sarkozy in France, who are now talking of “privileged
partnership” as a substitute for full EU membership. The phrase may
sound emollient, but it signifies a dishonour-able reneging on past
promises and a humiliating rejection of Turkish aspirations for
the past 42 years. “Privileged partnership” is knowingly vacuous,
offering no decision-making powers and little more than the vague
relationship promised to Russia, North Africa and the Middle East by
the 2003 European Neighbourhood Policy.

What politicians in Strasbourg, Paris and Berlin are hoping is that
a piqued Turkey will itself flounce out of the talks. For what they
fear has, at heart, little to do with agricultural costs, Turkey’s
human rights record or the tortuous Cyprus negotiations. It is, more
crudely, the atavistic clash of civilisations – the contention that
a Europe based on Christian values and culture has no place in its
midst for a Muslim nation. Beneath the rumblings in France, Germany,
Austria and the Netherlands also lie popular hostility to Islam and
a rejection of any more Muslim immigration.

To reject Turkey on these grounds is not only dishonourable but wrong;
it is to ignore the entire Ataturk legacy and the huge strides that
Turkey, as a secular nation (as are also all the members of the EU),
has made towards democracy. Of course there is a way to go. But it
is the promise of membership that has removed the death penalty,
upgraded civil status laws, expanded minority rights and overhauled
the criminal code. If the EU now reneges on its negotiating framework,
it loses all power – unprecedented in Turkish history – to influence
domestic policy. Difficult details, such as freedom of movement of
labour, can be worked out in the lengthy accession talks.

What cannot be worked out is any alternative to immediate talks on
full membership.

Newsletter from Mediadialogue.org, date: 21-Sep-2005 to 27-Sep-2005

Yerevan Press Club of Armenia presents `MediaDialogue” Web Site as a
Regional Information Hub project.

As a part of the project web site is maintained,
featuring the most interesting publications from the press of Armenia,
Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey on issues of mutual concern. The latest
updates on the site are weekly delivered to the subscribers.
**********************************************************************

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REGION
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THE ISSUE OF AUTONOMY TO BE RAISED IN JAVAKHETI?
————————————— ————————————-
Source: `Resonanci’ newspaper (Georgia) [September 24, 2005]
Author: Manana Mchedlishvili

This afternoon local public and social political organizations are
planning discussion of the law on self-regulation in Akhalkalaki. The
forum organizers are such radical organizations as `Javakhk’, `Virk’
and Javakheti Youth Union. According to Georgian Parliament Deputy Van
Bayburt, the forum will also consider the issues of the region’s
autonomy. The deputy is confident that the real organizers of the
event are in Moscow.

Van Bayburt emphasized in the conversation with `Resonanci’ newspaper
correspondent that representatives of various Russian media contacted
him throughout the day and asked to comment on Akhalkalaki forum.

`Russian journalists telephoned me all day and I did not have a clear
understanding what type of information they want. This huge number of
appeals raised my suspicions as to how should Moscow be informed about
such details from a small region. Why are they so interested in
Javakheti, as if anticipating another hurricane? Maybe Javakheti has
become a center of some global political events? Many Russian
journalists are planning to attend the forum and cover it in their
publications from the venue of the event. I think this interest only
confirms my suspicions that the forum is organized by people in Moscow
whose intentions about Georgia are easy to guess. Our authorities
should not ignore this, since delay may be a fatal mistake’.

`Resonanci’ editorial office contacted the head of `Virk’
organization, David Rstakian. He confirmed the information that it is
planned to organize a forum in Akhalkalaki, which will consider the
issues on possible federalization of Georgia.

`I mean the pattern of state and territorial organization of
Georgia. Possibly, there will be people among the forum participants
who will be willing to discuss also the status of Javakhk within
Federal Georgia’, Rstakian stated.

It is interesting how the representatives of `Virk’ perceive
federalization of Georgia and autonomous status of Javakheti. David
Rstakian draws a parallel between the Western models of autonomy and
the old Soviet one. He himself prefers Swiss and German models of
state and territorial organization.

`Thus based on Soviet ideology, there could even be autonomous regions
in the country. Sometimes self-regulation may signify the same
autonomy or self-regulation in separate issues. The majority of
Georgian population links autonomy with the idea of
separatism. Therefore, this term raises irritation. I think our
meeting in Akhalkalaki will have a scientific character and will raise
the issues of federalization, state models of organization of the
country, so this forum cannot be assessed as anti-constitutional. I
also wish to state that autonomous organization is dominant in most
countries of the world. I mean multinational and multiconfessional
countries. For instance Switzerland has 24 federation members. The
same is true for Germany. In other words, our forum is not devoted to
the issue of the region’s secession from Georgia. To be more precise,
we will consider the issues of national-territorial autonomy. If we
ever reach the period of decentralization of power, Javakhe! ti will
have the status of national-territorial autonomy’, one of `Virk’
organization leaders, David Rstakian thinks.

WHAT TO EXPECT FROM BAKU MEETING ON CASPIAN?
—————————————————————————-
Source: “Echo” newspaper (Azerbaijan) [September 22, 2005]
Author: R. Orujev

Nothing new – the expert is confident
Regular 18th session of Special Working Group (SWG) for drafting the
Convention on Legal Status of the Caspian Sea will start October 6 in
Baku, as previously stated to media by special representative of
Azerbaijani President at the negotiations on the legal status of the
sea-lake, AR Deputy Foreign Minister Khalaf Khalafov. The session will
include the delegations of all the five Caspian states.

Meanwhile, serious doubts are raised by the concern that these
negotiations of SWG will lead to a breakthrough in the disputable
issue. To this effect, it is sufficient to remember the results of the
two recent sessions on Caspian in Ashgabad and Tehran, to say nothing
of the useless duration of such meetings up to 10 years.

After the Ashgabad meeting (January 28-29), the sides stated that the
text of the draft of the Convention is accorded by 70% against the
previous `success’ by 67%. The next 17th SWG session, held in Tehran
May 16-17, was not very distinctive. It resulted in accordance of the
Convention by 75%. Thus it should be noted that none of the previous
sessions saw the parties change the positions on principle points. In
other words, Iran and Turkmenistan keep insisting on their vision of
sea borders on the Caspian.

`The SWG session in Baku will just be a regular one, `the same’
without new developments’, as forecasted by a famous Azerbaijani
expert on maritime law Rustam Mamedov. `May be some not very principle
points will be discussed, and, progress is likely to be achieved on
these issues. However, no progress is expected on key issues. It is my
opinion and I repeatedly stated that solution of any principle issues
on the legal status of the Caspian first demands considering common
security and its guarantees. We need to solve the issues of
delimitation principles, also the problems of our future existence in
one, common Caspian space. What are our steps on common initiative?
Anyway, it is clear today that Caspian states do not intend to
establish common regional organization. The framework convention on
the ecology of the Caspian is adopted by all coast countries, however
on the level of resolutions often of purely declarative nature. All
this points to the fact that no serious radical changes occurred in
the Caspian besides the bilateral agreements on delimitation of the
sea zones between Russia, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan”.

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NEIGHBOURS
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MURAD BELGE: `ARMENIAN ISSUE IS ONE OF THE DARKEST PAGES OF OUR HISTORY’
————————————————— ————————-
Source: “Azg” newspaper (Armenia) [September 27, 2005]
Author: Tatul Hakobian

The Council of Europe encourages the organizers of the conference on
Armenian issue for their boldness and determination

With a special statement, CE Secretary General congratulated the
organizers of the conference on the Armenian issue at Istanbul `Bylgy’
University for their courage and determination. Mediamax quotes Terry
Davis noting, `People believing in modern, democratic and tolerant
Turkey no longer fear radical nationalists in Istanbul streets’.

`I again express support for Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
position, defending freedom of expression in Turkey. I hope this
attitude will prevail also in the issue of shameful court proceedings
against one of the most famous Turkish writers, Orhan Pamuk, accused
of public statements on Armenian issue’, Davis stated.

Though Istanbul Administrative Court of 4th Jurisdiction cancelled the
conference on `Ottoman Armenians At Decline of the Empire. Scientific
Responsibility and Issues of Democracy’, it was still held at `Bylgy’
University on weekend. The European Commission condemned the court
decision on canceling the conference, assessing it as a fraud. The
Istanbul court did not accept organization of the conference in
`Bosphorus’ and `Sabanci’ Universities, initiating the conference
together with `Bylgy’ University. At the last moment, `Bylgy’
administration had the courage to hold the conference.

`Ottoman Armenians At Decline of the Empire’ conference was to be
convened on May 25-27 at `Bosphorus’ State University; however, one
day prior to its organization two deputies of opposition and governing
parties accused the organizers of treason. Turkish Minister of Justice
qualified the initiative of the Turkish historians as a stab in
Turkey’s back. Recep Tayyip Erdogan condemned the decision of Istanbul
court and expressed his support for the organizers of the conference,
whereas Foreign Minister Abdullah Gull on a visit to New York sent an
address to conference organizers. Gull noted in particular, `We wish
for both our and other archives to be opened, shedding light on the
history of that period… We believe that a thorough study of this
period will reveal more historical facts promoting improvement of the
relations between countries and peoples. Thus, we suggested to the
Armenian government that the two countries form a historical (problem
investigation) commission th! at will study Turkish-Armenian common
history’.

The conference was covered by such leading world media as `Washington
Post’, `Independent’, `Associated Press’, `France Presse’ and Turkish
media as well. In his speech at the conference, professor of `Sabanci’
University, Halil Berktay stated that the term `Genocide’ should be
placed aside and everyone should try to understand what happened in
1915-1916. `We cannot allow the discussions to be limited by two
contradicting opinions: did Genocide take place or not? We should try
to understand what happened’, Berktay stated.

Professor of history department at German `Ruhr’ University, Fikret
Adamir noted that in scientific research he uses `Armenian Genocide’
expression. `In 1915-16 the scale of deportation was much higher than
extermination. A whole nation – women, children and elders – were
deported and died on the roads’, he stated and insisted that Armenian
massacres may be qualified as Genocide.

Professor of `Bilkent’ University, Oktay Belgen noted that after
1893-1923 clashes, the Black Sea region was completely cleansed of
non-Muslim population. Taner Akcam, referred to by `Associated Press’
agency as author of the book `An Act of Shame. Armenian Genocide and
the Issue of Turkish Responsibility’, stated in his speech at the
conference that there are too many documents proving extermination of
Armenians.

One of the conference organizers, Murad Belge stated, `I think many
people understand that old stance is not acceptable. I mean the smoke
screen around (Armenian) issue, the policy of rejection’. He noted
that Turkey’s EU accession requires democratic processes, however
Turkey, as any other society, has forces hostile to this
democratization, clashing with their interests. `The young generation
of Turkey has no idea about Armenian issue, which is the consequence
of educational system. The Armenian issue is one of the darkest pages
of our history and it is natural that no one is willing to accept it’,
Belge stated.

On his behalf, Halil Berktay added, `Reading the Turkish press after
the silly decision of the court, I understood that the conference will
be a success. The old official clichés and the ideology of
rejection are now extinct’.

`A few hundred Turkish nationalists, assembled at `Bylgy’ University,
met the conference participants with tomatoes and eggs. The majority
of the participants were Turkish scientists and historians. Turkish
nationalists qualified them as `traitors’, menacing that `treason will
not be left unpunished’, `this is Turkey, either love this country or
leave!’

ARMENIAN FORUM STIRS UP TURKEY
—————————————————————————-
Source: “Los Angeles Times” newspaper (USA) [September 25, 2005]
Author: Amberin Zaman

Defying a court ban, panelists discuss the mass killings of the WWI
era. Western observers hail the talks; protesters throw eggs.

ISTANBUL, Turkey – A controversial conference on the mass killings of
ethnic Armenians during the last days of the Ottoman Empire opened
here Saturday amid heavy security in defiance of a court ban.

The forum was hailed by participants and Western observers as a
groundbreaking event where Turkish academics could for the first time
publicly challenge their country’s official version of the events
leading to the Armenian genocide. Hundreds of protesters waving
Turkish flags pelted the arriving panelists with eggs and rotten
tomatoes, expressing the fury felt by many Turks over efforts to open
their country’s painful past to debate.

“The aim [of the conference] … is to declare Turkey guilty of
genocide,” said Erkan Onsel, local head of the small left-wing
Turkey’s Workers Party.

The conference had been canceled twice, most recently on Thursday,
when an Istanbul court ruled in favor of a group of lawyers who
opposed the gathering on procedural grounds.

Turkey’s reformist prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, harshly
condemned the ruling, saying it was timed to undermine the country’s
efforts to join the European Union. Turkey is scheduled to open
long-awaited talks with the EU on Oct. 3.

“I want to live in a Turkey where freedoms are enjoyed in their
broadest sense,” Erdogan told reporters Saturday.

His words were echoed by Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, who sent a
letter of support to the conference. He earlier said the cancellation
was a further example of how “Turks are so good at shooting themselves
in the foot.”

Emotions ran high among a packed audience of academics, journalists
and diplomats as panelists deconstructed Turkey’s official explanation
of how the country’s once-thriving Armenian population, estimated at
more than 1 million in the early 20th century, was reduced to its
current level of 80,000.

More than a million Armenians were systematically killed in a genocide
campaign launched in 1915 by forces of the Ottoman Empire, which
became the modern republic of Turkey. The government continues to
dispute the view that a genocide took place. It says several hundred
thousand Armenians died of exposure, disease and attacks from brigands
as they journeyed south to Syria after being deported for
collaborating with invading Russian troops.

Most speakers took a cautious tone, saying the purpose of the
conference was not to deliver a verdict on whether the killings
constituted genocide.

“We cannot allow debate to be trapped between these two conflicting
points of view. We need to try to understand what happened in 1915,”
said Halil Berktay, a prominent Ottoman historian. He noted
nonetheless that Ottoman officials had declared “an open season to
hunt Armenians” at the start of World War I.

One speaker did maintain that the killings could be described as
genocide. “That is my view,” said Fikret Adanir, a Turkish historian.

“What about the Muslims who were killed, why won’t you mention them?”
participant Mustafa Budak, deputy director of the state-run Ottoman
archive, demanded during a heated question-and-answer session.

Turkey recently opened the archive to the public, but critics say
incriminating documents have been purged. Budak denied that claim in
an interview and said “the conference’s credibility would have been
vastly enhanced had other academics” supporting the official line been
invited to speak as well.

A European diplomat observing the panel said its significance went
beyond free debate of the Armenian issue. “It proves that Turkey is
maturing into a Western-style democracy, where all opinions, no matter
how contentious, can be freely expressed.”

Hrant Dink, managing editor of the Armenian-language weekly Agos, said
the session would surprise Armenians around the world. “Some will now
find the courage to enter into dialogue with the Turks,” he said.

Some participants expressed concern that they might face prosecution
under Turkey’s newly revised penal code, which specifically proscribes
description of the killings as genocide.

Internationally acclaimed Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk was charged
under the law last month with insulting Turkey’s dignity. He said in a
Swiss newspaper interview published in February that “1 million
Armenians and 30,000 Kurds were killed in these lands, but no one but
me dares say so.” He is scheduled to appear in court Dec. 16 and could
face three years in prison if convicted.

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NATO PA Rose-Roth Seminar To Start In Yerevan Oct 6

NATO PA ROSE-ROTH SEMINAR TO START IN YEREVAN OCTOBER 6

Pan Armenian News
26.09.2005 04:13

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ October 6-9 NATO PA Rose-Roth seminar with the
participation of 60 parliamentarians from 22 states will be held
in Yerevan.

The agenda includes the issues referring to the Karabakh conflict
settlement, regional cooperation, and reformation of defense and police
systems. The Armenian party expressed readiness to host participants
from Azerbaijan and guarantee their security. An invitation for
the seminar was sent to PACE Rapporteur on Nagorno Karabakh Goran
Lennmarker. By the RA government’s decree 32 million 549 thousand
AMD was allocated to the National Assembly for the conduction of
the seminar.

Albania president sends message of “Good will” to Armenian president

Albanian News Agency (ATA)
ATA news agency, Tirana, in English
23 Sep 05

ALBANIAN PRESIDENT SENDS MESSAGE OF “GOOD WILL” TO ARMENIAN PRESIDENT

Tirana, 23 September: President of the Republic Alfred Moisiu
congratulated Friday [23 September] in a message the president of
Armenia, Robert Kocharyan, sources close to Presidency Office make
known in a press statement.

“On occasion of Independence Day of the Republic of Armenia, I wish
to assure you of the good will to carry ahead the bilateral
cooperation with Armenia establishing it on stable basis,” President
Moisiu says among others in his message.

Hotel business successfully developing in Karabakh

ArmInfo, Armenia
Sept 23 2005

HOTEL BUSINESS SUCCESSFULLY DEVELOPING IN KARABAKH

STEPANAKERT, SEPTEMBER 22. ARMINFO. During the recent years the hotel
business has been successfully developing in the Nagorno-Karabakh
Republic.

According to the report of ARMINFO correspondent in Stepanakert,
major investments in this sphere of economy have been made by the
Armenian diaspora of the USA, Great Britain, Australia and
Switzerland. Particularly, the Sirkap Armenia Swiss company has spent
about $1,500,000 on several modern hotels in the regions of Karabakh.

The hotel owners in Karabakh are satisfied with the country’s tax
policy. For example the manager of the “Nairi” hotel, one of the
biggest hotels in Stepanakert, Mr. Akob Bulakian, a citizen of
Australia, says that his hotel has been exempted from taxes for 3
years, and that the taxes he is paying now are half of what he pays
in Australia. The number of hotel visitors has increased by 30%
during 4 years.

To the opinion of experts, the hotel business in NKR can increase
even more after the airway, connecting Stepanakert to Yerevan, is
opened.-A-

New Elections in Qanaqer-Zeytoun

A1+

| 22:35:55 | 23-09-2005 | Politics |

NEW ELECTIONS IN QANAQER-ZEYTOUN

The September 19 elections of the community head in Qanaqer-Zeytoun have
been announced invalid. The Qanaqer-Zeytoun Local Electoral Committee
session has just been over which announced the elections invalid and fixed
the new elections on October 2.

According to the Central Electoral Committee information service, the votes
have been distributed the following way: Arayik Qotanjyan – 7486, Valeri
Haroutyunyan – 7428, Robert Sinoyan – 6158, Petros Soghoyan – 311. There
have been 96 mistakes. 11 electoral areas have been opened.

A Campaign To Terrorize Foreigners Linked With Armenian Genocide

A CAMPAIGN TO TERRORIZE FOREIGNERS LINKED WITH ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

AZG – 09/24/05: Turkey has launched a campaign to terrorize all foreigners
who are somehow connected with the issue of the Armenian Genocide, a press
release by Turkish Press Review says. According to September 19 reports of
Ankara Anatolia news agency, the Republican Prosecutor of Skyutar brought an
indictment against a number of Armenian scientists who demonstrated
Ataturk’s picture with puppets in front of him at the conference on Armenian
Genocide at UCLA (it was a hint at a poster depicting Ataturk with 2 dead
children at his feet that was once well-known in a number of Armenian
communities in Diaspora).

Among the participants of the conference there were Vahram Shemmasian,
Artashes Kasakhian and Levon Marashlian. The indictment came from Dr.
Ibrahim Oztek, Dr. Zihni Papakci and Metin Hajimustafaogli, owner of Iqtidar
weekly. “We sue them for insulting the Turks and the founder of Turkey
Ataturk “, Oztek said.

The same day Ankara Anatolia agency informed that the leader of Turkish
Labor Party, Mehmed, Bedri Gyultekin, announced about it’s Party’s campaign
under the banner of “Do Not Buy Swiss Products” that will last until the
Swiss Parliament reconsiders its decision on Armenian Genocide. The Party
members gathered at one of the main squares of Ankara, Kizika, call for
their fellow citizens not to buy Swiss goods.

By Hakob Tsulikian

BAKU: US To Scrutinize ‘Genocide Of Armenians’ Issue

US TO SCRUTINIZE ‘GENOCIDE OF ARMENIANS’ ISSUE

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Sept 22 2005

Baku, September 21, AssA-Irada
The United States government supports scrutinizing the so-called
‘genocide of Armenians’ issue, US ambassador to Azerbaijan Reno
Harnish told reporters on Wednesday.

In reply to a question whether frequent mentioning of the issue may
negatively affect the US-Turkey and US-Azerbaijan relations, the
ambassador said putting the ‘genocide’ issue on discussion at the
US Congress has been proposed by some committee chairmen so far. He
also called on Turkish research scientists to cite specific facts
and materials concerning ‘this bloody page in history’.

Last week, pro-Armenian chairs of committees made proposals on putting
the ‘genocide’ issue on discussion at the US Congress.*