Was It Suicide?

WAS IT SUICIDE?

A1+
03:37 pm | March 16, 2009

According to Russian mass media, a 22-year-old Armenian has committed
suicide in Russian city Volgograd by hanging in his own apartment.

According to the same Russian sources, the youth had gone to Russia
with his two elder brothers in search of better work opportunities. The
brothers were able to find a job.

Before the suicide the boy left a note which holds: "Dear brothers,
I beg your pardon. Do not look for wrongdoers or blame anyone for
my death. It was my own decision. Please, do not send my body to
Armenia. Just burn it."

The Deputy Chief of Police, Igor Mantula, today announced that the
dead Armenian resided in Russia legally and had no problems with
documents. No other details are reported.

What Price Should Armenia Pay For Turkish Border Opening?

WHAT PRICE SHOULD ARMENIA PAY FOR TURKISH BORDER OPENING?
Karine Ter-Sahakyan

PanARMENIAN.Net
14.03.2009 GMT+04:00

Armenia is a bone in the throat of Turkey and Azerbaijan, whose final
aim is but complete destruction of the Armenian nation.

With the Armenian-Turkish border opened, if it should ever happen,
there would be put a final stop to the story of the World War I. If
we believe the Turkish sources (and there is absolutely no ground
not to believe them), Armenia has agreed to the "preconditions"
put forward by Ankara. As we recall, the basic condition was the
recognition of the modern borders of Turkey after the collapse of
the Ottoman Empire. After the USSR breakdown, Turkey has been looking
forward to getting confirmation from Armenia and Russia of her right
of full succession of the Soviet Union including all the agreements,
in spite of the fact that the Moscow and Kars treaties were signed
by Russia and not by the USSR.

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Another condition was the establishment of a
joint commission on investigating the events of 1915. Besides, the
Turkish authorities have laid down a new condition before Yerevan –
the opening of the Turkish border is possible only after April 24.

According to the Turkish newspaper Star, the talks between Armenia
and Turkey have entered the final stage. "The document to be signed
by both parties envisages opening of the common border, establishment
of trade relations and formation of a commission for investigation
of 1915 events. Karabakh issue is not a governing condition," Turkish
newspaper Star quoted a source in the ruling AK Party as saying. It is
quite clear both for Turkey and Armenia that the joint commission can
define nothing regarding the "events of 1915". The Ottoman archives of
the period of World War I, if any are preserved, must have long been
"cleared". However, there are also the archive documents of the US
State Department, which keeps all the dispatches of US Ambassador to
Istanbul Henry Morgenthau… Besides, it is improper for historians
of international fame to deny the fact of the Armenian Genocide.

Talks between Armenia and Turkey started still in Berne in
2007. Despite the fact that the Armenian side kept denying the
information on secret negotiations between the two countries, Turkish
media circulated the misinformation for rather long. It is common
knowledge that Turkey needs opening of the border much more than
Armenia does, and under such circumstances it becomes incomprehensible
why should Armenia give another tramp card to Turkey for the latter’s
integration into the EU and consolidation of her position as a regional
power. If we consider the changes in the Armenian-Turkish relations
for the past year, it must be admitted that it wasn’t so successful
for the Armenian diplomacy, though the border is nearly certain to
open and Armenia has more chances to be part of regional projects. It
is also of no small importance that Turkey is carrying out her policy
without a glance at Azerbaijan. It would be too naïve, however, to
consider that Ankara will utterly refuse the support from Azerbaijan,
but, at the same time, she will make a curtsey to Yerevan, perfectly
realizing that there is no other way out. However, we Armenians
should never forget that Armenia is a bone in the throat of Turkey
and Azerbaijan, whose final aim is but complete destruction of the
Armenian nation. Even 94 years later the words of Talat Pasha put us
on our guard as before, "No Armenian can be our friend after what we
did with them…" One does not even want to believe that Armenians
might be made to forget the year of 1915 and those following it.

Head of the Caucasus Institute, political scientist Alexander
Iskandaryan believes, opening of the border depends on two
factors. "The first factor is the Municipal elections in Turkey
due on March 29. At the forthcoming elections the ruling AK Party
must ultimately strengthen its positions in the field of domestic
policy. The other factor is related to the United States: whether
President Barack Obama will use the term ‘genocide’ in his April 24
statement or not," Iskandaryan said, adding that the Karabakh issue
is not, in fact, a key condition for Turkey in improving relations
with Armenia.

Naturally enough, no border can remain eternally closed, especially
in the 21st century. But one must always be aware and make sure that
each of the sides is ready to pay the price for the uncertain world
and for even more uncertain friendship. Karabakh issue is not central
for Turkey now, but the situation might be changed when Turkey has to
obey the orders of the USA and Europe in relation to Armenia. Then
she will have a lever for oppressing Yerevan and there will be no
need to close the border another time once again.

Armenian Finance Minister Advocates Spending Cuts

World Markets Research Centre
March 13 2009

Armenian Finance Minister Advocates Spending Cuts

Natalia Leshchenko

Armenia’s Finance Minister Tigran Davtian has argued at the Cabinet
meeting that the spending of 131 billion drams ($354US million) should
be delayed until the fourth quarter of 2009, armenialiberty.org
reports. The minister says that the spending was planned on the basis
of projections for 21% rise in tax and other revenues for the budget,
but the January statistics has shown a 11% drop in revenues as well as
the shrinking of GDP. Davtian said that the fall in tax revenues could
reach 93 billion drams or over 10 % of the yearly target. Davtian was
supported by Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian who said that the
government should effectively switch to quarterly planning, and asking
ministers for austerity.

Significance:A transfer to effective quarterly planning might have
good rationale but will require careful organising due to the
existence of early payments. Austerity is also challenged by the
rising utility tariffs, but the Armenian government hopes to fall back
on Russia’s $500US million loan to cover most essential budgetary
needs. Overall, the governing team has proven reasonable and capable
so far, and the minister’s recent speech suggests that they are able
to react to the changing circumstances.

Sofia: Turkish and Bulgarian sister cities sever ties over genocide

Sofia Echo – Bulgaria
March 12 2009

Turkish and Bulgarian sister cities sever ties over Armenian genocide issue

Thu, Mar 12 2009 15:40 CET
by Svetlana Guineva

Twelve Turkish municipalities have severed ties with their Bulgarian
sister cities, because the latter have recognised the existence of
Armenian genocide in Turkey, Bulgarian National Radio (BNR) said on
March 11 2009, citing Turkish-language newspaper Hürriyet.

It first started on October 4 2007, when Plovdiv municipality, then
Bourgas and Stara Zagora, declared that the events of 1915 were
genocide. Those Bulgarian cities have traditionally been the home to
generations of Armenian families. The events in question refer to
April 24 1915, when a number of Armenian intellectuals and prominent
community leaders were arrested in Constantinople, the capital of the
Ottoman Empire. Subsequently, the military uprooted many ethnic
Armenians from their homes, making them march to the desert of what is
now Syria. The people in this forced exodus were subjected to torture
and annihilation.

The other nine Bulgarian municipalities that have sister city
partnerships with Turkish cities have not yet officially stated their
position on the issue.

Hürriyet said that the act of protest conformed to an ordinance
issued by the Turkish ministry of foreign affairs, dated July 18
2008. Cities like Bursa, Kırklareli and Adapazari severed ties with
Plovdiv, Shoumen and Dobrich, respectively. As of now, all mutual
agreements for partnership have been called off.

However, recently in Edirne, a forum was launched with the
participation of "young Thracians" from Turkey, Greece and
Bulgaria. More than 50 people from Yambol, Haskovo and Kurdjali were
participating, BNR said.

Battle Over Orthodox Christian Monastery Tests Turkey’s Tolerance

Order of St. Andrew, Archons of the Ecumenical Patriarchate
March 12 2009

The Wall Street Journal highlights ‘Battle Over an Orthodox Christian
Monastery Tests Turkey’s Tolerance of Minorities’

Kartmin, Turkey
3/11/2009

Mor Gabriel, one of the world’s oldest functioning Orthodox Christian
monasteries in Turkey for more than 1600 years, is in jeopardy of
losing more than half its property. Turkish surveyors and Muslim
villagers, armed with old maps and aerial photographs, are redrawing
property boundaries owned by the monastery and plan to designate their
land as public forest.

Last summer, Turkish officials informed the monastery that
approximately 100 acres of land, currently enclosed within a high wall
was actually state-owned forestland, resulting in a loss of about 60
percent of its core property. Even the monastery wall was also
declared illegal. This threat by the Turkish government is an ongoing
signal of religious persecution and confiscation of property rights of
non-Muslim minorities, which includes institutions owned by the
Ecumenical Patriarchate.

The dispute over Mor Gabriel is being closely watched in the United
States and abroad as it is now in the hands of a Turkish court. Bishop
Timotheus Samuel Aktas is battling to keep the monastic lands and has
mobilized support from foreign diplomats, clergy, and politicians. The
European Union and several embassies in Ankara sent observers to a
court hearing in February, and a Swedish diplomat attended this week’s
session.

The trial comes at a critical stage in Turkey’s 22-year drive to join
the EU since protection of minority rights is a condition for entry.

The historic monastery, viewed by Syriacs as a "second Jerusalem", was
built in 397 A.D. and has seen invasions by Romans, Byzantines,
Crusaders, and Muslim armies. Three monks, fourteen nuns, a bishop,
and thirty-five students reside and worship on the ancient grounds and
preserve the Syriac liturgy in a chapel adorned with Byzantine
mosaics.

The originally published article, which appears in The Wall Street
Journal and reported by Andrew Higgins, can be read in its entirety
below.

——————————— ——————————–

Defending the Faith
Battle Over a Christian Monastery Tests Turkey’s Tolerance of Minorities

By Andrew Higgins, The Wall Street Journal
Saturday, March 7, 2009
Read this article on the website of The Wall Street Journal

KARTMIN, TURKEY — Christians have lived in these parts since the dawn
of their faith. But they have had a rough couple of millennia, preyed
on by Persian, Arab, Mongol, Kurdish and Turkish armies. Each group
tramped through the rocky highlands that now comprise Turkey’s
southeastern border with Iraq and Syria.

The current menace is less bellicose but is deemed a threat
nonetheless. A group of state land surveyors and Muslim villagers are
intent on shrinking the boundaries of an ancient monastery by more
than half. The monastery, called Mor Gabriel, is revered by the Syriac
Orthodox Church.

Battling to hang on to the monastic lands, Bishop Timotheus Samuel
Aktas is fortifying his defenses. He’s hired two Turkish lawyers —
one Muslim, one Christian — and mobilized support from foreign
diplomats, clergy and politicians.

Also giving a helping hand, says the bishop, is Saint Gabriel, a
predecessor as abbot who died in the seventh century: "We still have
four of his fingers." Locked away for safekeeping, the sacred digits
are treasured as relics from the past — and a hex on enemies in the
present.

The outcome of the land dispute is now in the hands of a Turkish
court. Seated below a bust of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, modern Turkey’s
secular founding father, a robed judge on Wednesday told the feuding
parties that he would issue a ruling after he visits the disputed
territory himself next month.

The trial comes at a critical stage in Turkey’s 22-year drive to join
the European Union. When it first came to power in 2002, the ruling AK
party, led by observant Muslims, pushed to accelerate legal and other
changes demanded by Europe for admittance into its largely Christian
club. But much of the momentum has since slowed. France has made clear
it doesn’t want Turkey in the EU no matter what, while Turkey has
seemed to have second thoughts.

A big obstacle is Turkey’s continuing tensions with its ethnic
minorities, notably the Kurds, who account for more than 15% of the
population and are battling for greater autonomy. Also fraught, but
more under the radar, is the situation confronting members of the
Syriac Orthodox Church, one of the world’s oldest and most beleaguered
Christian communities. The group’s fate is now seen as a test of
Turkey’s ability to accommodate groups at odds with "Turkishness," a
legal concept of national identity that has at times been used to
suppress minority groups.

The dispute over Mor Gabriel is being closely watched here and
abroad. The EU and several embassies in Ankara sent observers to a
court hearing in February, and a Swedish diplomat attended this week’s
session. Protection of minority rights is a condition for entry into
the EU.

Founded in 397, Mor Gabriel is one of the world’s oldest functioning
monasteries. Viewed by Syriacs as a "second Jerusalem," it sits atop a
hill overlooking now solidly Muslim lands. It has just three monks and
14 nuns. It also has 12,000 ancient corpses buried in a basement
crypt.

The bishop’s local flock numbers only 3,000. Mor Gabriel’s influence,
however, reaches far beyond its fortress-like walls, inspiring and
binding a community of Christians scattered by persecution and
emigration. There are hundreds of thousands more Syriac Christians
across the frontier in Iraq and Syria and in Europe. They speak
Aramaic, the language of Jesus Christ.

"The monastery is all we have left," says Attiya Tunc, who left for
Holland as a child and returned this February to find her family’s
village near here reduced to ruins and overrun with sheep, since most
of the villagers abandoned it. Ms. Tunc says she came in response to
telephone call from Bishop Aktas appealing to former residents to come
back and show their support in the land battle.

Historical Claims

Turkish officials say they have no desire to uproot Christianity. They
point to new roads and other services provided to small settlements of
Syriac Christians who have returned in recent years from abroad.

Mustafa Yilmaz, the state’s senior administrator in the area, says
Turkey wants to clarify blurred property boundaries as part of a
national land survey, something long demanded by the EU. He says the
monastery could lose around 100 acres of land currently enclosed
within a high wall, meaning a loss of about 60% of its core
property. Some of that could be reclassified as a state-owned forest,
with the rest claimed by the Treasury on the grounds that it’s not
being used as intended for farming or other purposes.

Mr. Yilmaz says none of this would affect the monastery’s operations
as the land targeted isn’t being used by monks or nuns, and he notes
that the court could yet side in part with the monastery. He says the
government has no desire to hurt a monastery he describes as a "very
special place" that, among other things, helps boost the region’s
economy by bringing in throngs of pilgrims and tourists.

Christian activists, says Mr. Yilmaz, have "blown up" a mundane muddle
into a religious issue. "Look, everyone wants to have more land," he
says.

Syriac Christians see a more sinister purpose. They say the Turkish
state and Muslim villagers want to grab Christian land and force the
non-Muslims to leave. "There is no place for Christians here" until
Turkey changes in fundamental ways, says Ms. Tunc.

The dispute has spurred some Muslims in neighboring villages to launch
complaints against the monastery. Mahmut Duz, a Muslim who lives near
Mor Gabriel, lodged a protest last year to the state prosecutor in
Midyat, a nearby town. Mr. Duz alleged that the bishop and his monks
are "engaged in illegal religious and reactionary missionary
activities."

Mr. Duz urged Turkish authorities to remember Mehmed the Conqueror, a
15th-century Ottoman ruler who routed Christian forces and conquered
the city now called Istanbul for Islam. He said Turkish officials
should recall a vow by the Conqueror to " ‘cut off the head of anybody
who cuts down even a branch from my forest.’ " Bishops and priests,
Mr. Duz told the prosecutor, can keep their heads, but "you must stop
the occupation and plunder" of Muslim land by the monastery.

No one at the monastery has been prosecuted for the crimes alleged by
Mr. Duz and other villagers. The monastery says these claims are
ludicrous. It says it tutors 35 Syriac Christian school boys in
Aramaic and religion but conducts no missionary activities.

Syriac Christians take an even longer view than Mr. Duz. They deride
local Muslims as newcomers, saying Mor Gabriel was built two centuries
before Islam was founded. "Mohammed did not exist. The Ottoman Empire
did not exist. Turkey did not exist," says Issa Garis, the monastery’s
archdeacon.

A Long List of Raids

Syriac Christians have indeed been living — and often suffering —
here for a very long time. Mor Gabriel’s history is a "long list of
raids, wars, droughts, famines, plagues and persecutions," says
British scholar Andrew Palmer. "Time and again, they’ve had to start
again from nothing."

In the eighth century, plague swept through the area and took the
lives of many of Mor Gabriel’s monks. Survivors dug up the body of
Saint Gabriel, the monastery’s seventh-century abbot, and propped him
up in church to pray for help. The plague, according to tradition,
passed.

When disease later ravaged a Christian center to the north, Saint
Gabriel’s right hand was cut off and sent there to help. One of the
fingers was then removed and dispatched to avert another crisis
elsewhere. The finger is now missing.

As Islam extended its reach, the monastery shut down repeatedly, but
always reopened. It was attacked by Kurds, Turks and then Kurds
again. In the 14th century, Mongol invaders seized the monastery and
killed 40 monks and 400 other Christians hiding in a cave. Perhaps the
biggest blow of all came in the modern era, when Turkey’s slaughter of
Christian Armenians during World War I led to massacres of Syriac
Christians, too. The patriarch of the Syriac Orthodox Church later
decamped to Syria.

Ms. Tunc, the woman now living in Holland, grew up with stories of
massacred relatives. Her father "told us never to trust Turks or
Kurds," and ordered her to master Dutch ways "because we could never
go back."

Her family and many others left Turkey in the 1980s during a brutal
conflict between Turkish soldiers and Kurdish guerrillas. Syriac
Christians, viewed with suspicion by both sides, frequently got caught
in the crossfire.

The exodus drained towns and villages of Christians, including Midyat,
the town where the court is reviewing the land dispute. Midyat used to
be almost entirely Christian but now has just 120 non-Muslim families
out of a population of 60,000. The town has seven churches, but just
one preacher.

Running a Tight Ship

As Christians fled, Bishop Aktas took charge of Mor Gabriel. He’d
earlier studied in New York but found the U.S. too permissive. "I
didn’t like America. It is not for monks like me," he says.

By some accounts, he ran a very tight ship. Aydin Aslan, a student
there from 1978 until 1983, says discipline was extremely strict, each
day devoted to study and prayer. "It was like a prison," recalls
Mr. Aslan, who emigrated to Belgium.

Alarmed by a spate of thefts and determined to keep Muslim neighbors
from encroaching, Bishop Aktas started building a high wall around his
land. When Muslims from the village of Kartmin planted crops and
grazed livestock near a well on monastic property, monks and school
boys filled the well with stones to keep them away.

Muslim resentment grew against the monastery, which was being
bolstered thanks to funds from abroad. Following a drop-off in
fighting between the Turkish military and Kurdish guerrillas after
2000, Syriac Christian emigres seized on the relative calm. They
poured money in to rebuild old churches, expand the monastery compound
and build summer homes.

A few decided to move back for good. Jacob Demir returned from
Switzerland with his family to a new villa on the outskirts of
Midyat. "They thought we would go to Europe and melt away," says
Mr. Demir. Instead, he says, exile only made him more aware and
assertive of his Syriac identity. (His older children are less
enthusiastic: A daughter stayed behind in Europe and a son who came
back to Turkey left when he discovered how low local salaries are.)

The return to Turkey of relatively prosperous Christians helped the
economy and provided jobs in construction. But it also needled some
Muslims, especially when returnees began to claim abandoned property
occupied by Muslims.

Turmoil in neighboring Iraq added to the unease. After the 2003
U.S. invasion, hundreds of thousands of Syriac Christians in Iraq fled
mainly to Syria and Jordan as security collapsed and Muslims turned on
their neighbors. Iraq’s most prominent Syriac Christian, Saddam
Hussein’s foreign minister Tariq Aziz, was arrested by the
U.S. Acquitted this week in the first of three cases against him, he
remains in jail on other charges relating to the massacre of Iraqi
Kurds in the 1980s.

As uncertainty mounted about the future of the Syriac church,
officials in Midyat were ordered to survey all land in their area not
yet officially registered. Surveyors, armed with old maps and aerial
photographs, began fanning out through villages trying to work out who
owned what.

Last summer, officials informed the monastery that big chunks of
territory it considered its own were actually state-owned forest
land. The monastery wall was declared illegal. Surveyors also redrew
village borders, expanding the territory of three Muslim villages with
which the monastery had long feuded.

The monastery went to court to challenge the decisions. Three village
chiefs filed a complaint against the monastery with the Midyat
prosecutor. Bishop Aktas, they complained, had destroyed "an
atmosphere of peace and tolerance" and should be investigated.

The monastery’s emigre lobby swung into action. Late last year and
again in January, Syriac activists organized street demonstrations in
Sweden and Germany. Yilmaz Kerimo, a Syriac Christian member of the
Swedish parliament, protested to Turkey’s Ministry of Interior,
demanding an end to "unlawful acts and brutalities" at odds with
Turkey’s desire to join the EU.

Ismail Erkal, the village head here in Kartmin, one of the three
settlements involved in the dispute, blames Bishop Aktas for stirring
tempers. "This bishop is a difficult person," says Mr. Erkal. Standing
on the roof of his mud-and-brick house. Looking out towards the
monastery, he points to swathes of monastic land which he says should
belong to Kartmin. His village used to have a church but, with no
Christians left, it is now a stable. Next door is a new mosque.

Mr. Erkel says Islam "does not allow oppression," and denies any plan
to get the last Christians in the area to leave.

Bishop Aktas says the message is clear: "They want to make us all go
away."

.asp?id=295

http://www.archons.org/news/detail

Fresno writer Arax joins Florez’s staff

Fresno Bee, CA
March 10 2009

Fresno writer Arax joins Florez’s staff

State senator hires former L.A. Times reporter.
Monday, Mar. 09, 2009
By E.J. Schultz / Bee Capitol Bureau E-Mail

SACRAMENTO — Fresno’s Mark Arax is giving up his byline for a
government job.

State Sen. Dean Florez, D-Shafter, announced Monday that he is hiring
the former Los Angeles Times reporter and author of three books as his
senior policy director.

Arax will make about $85,000 a year and will focus on air quality
issues, said Jennifer Hanson, a spokeswoman for Florez.

He will fill an existing position and will work primarily from Fresno,
she said.

"Instead of reporting to newspaper readers, I’ll be reporting to the
political leaders of the Senate majority," Arax said in a statement.

Arax, an Armenian-American, left the Los Angeles Times in 2007 after a
public dispute about the paper’s decision not to publish a story he
wrote about the Armenian genocide.

His career at the paper was marked by his coverage of the the San
Joaquin Valley, including reporting on air quality and migrant
farmworkers.

His books include "In My Father’s Name," about the murder of his
father, and the soon-to-be released collection of stories titled "West
of the West: Dreamers, Believers, Builders and Killers in the Golden
State."

l/story/1249809.html

http://www.fresnobee.com/loca

EC released EUR 3.25 mil under Sector Policy Support Programme

EC released EUR 3.25 million to Armenia under Sector Policy Support
Programme

armradio.am
10.03.2009 18:03

The European Commission released EUR 3.25 million to Armenia under
Sector Policy Support Programme in Vocational Education and Training
(VET)

The specific objective of the Sector Policy Programme is to strengthen
the reform of the vocational education and training (VET) sector
focusing on institutional capacity to steer and monitor the reform
process as well as link it with budgeting and resource management.

It is coherent with the sector policy support programme funded under
European Commission TACIS AP 2006, ENP AP2007 and builds on the reform
measures undertaken by the Ministry of Education and Science (MoEs) in
2005-2008.

The programme has an overall budget of Euro 16 million, out of which
Euro 1 million is earmarked for the Technical Assistance component. The
?¬ 15m component of budget support is implemented against satisfactory
fulfillment of policy conditions identified and agreed upon by the
Commission and the Government of Armenia. Installments are payable to
the Armenian State budget subject to fulfillment of policy conditions.
The first fixed tranche of ?¬5 mln was paid to the state budget in June
2008 upon fulfillment of two pre-conditions and signature of Financing
Agreement. Second tranche of Euro 3.25 million was paid in February
2009.

Main implementing partners under this Programme are the Ministry of
Education and Science, Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs, Ministry
of Finance, Ministry of Economy as well as social partners.

52% of Armenian population prefer to vote for men but not women

PanARMENIAN.Net

52% of Armenian population prefer to vote for men but not women
07.03.2009 18:40 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ There no men and women’s professions. Everything
depends on the degree of competence, an Armenian MP said

`Majority of stereotypes tend to change. But the problem is not men
but women themselves,’ said Naira Zohrabyan, Prosperous Armenia
faction member. `Social surveys show that 52% of Armenian population
prefer to vote for men but not women,’ she added.

`I think that there is nothing more important than family for a
woman. If a woman is a good wife and mother, she can be an excellent
political figure as well. But if I had to choose between family and
career, I would not hesitate to choose family,’ the MP said.

Iran has test-fired a new air-to-surface missile

PanARMENIAN.Net

Iran has test-fired a new air-to-surface missile
09.03.2009 11:42 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Iran has test-fired a new air-to-surface missile,
Reuters reported.

"Iran test fires new long range missile," Press TV, Iran’s
English-language television station, said in a scrolling headline.

The report came days after Iran’s military chief warned Israel that
its nuclear facilities are within the range of Iranian missiles.

The warning from Revolutionary Guards commander Gen. Mohammad Ali
Jafari is the latest message from Tehran that it will strike back if
attacked.

Iran’s Shahab-3 missiles have a range of up to 1,250 miles, putting
Israel within striking distance.

Jews must reject Turkey’s genocide denial

AZG DAILY #41, 10-03-2009

Genocide Update: 2009-03-10 00:22:37 (GMT +04:00)

JEWS MUST REJECT TURKEY’S GENOCIDE DENIAL

Guest Voice
By Norman L. Epstein
Thursday, 05 March 2009

"Dogs can enter, but no Jews, no Armenians" read the odious sign that
encapsulates the pernicious anti-Semitism percolating in Turkey ` all
in response to Israel’s recent incursion in Gaza.

Demonstrators in Turkey disparage Jews and Armenians.

Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan has been leading the charge,
foaming at the mouth with his repeated rantings and accusations
against Israel of "mass murder" and "massacring innocent civilians."
Turkish media outlets have further fomented anti-Israel and
anti-Jewish sentiment with similar hyperbole. Mass rallies all over
Turkey, some of the largest worldwide, have deteriorated into vile
anti-Semitic spectacles.

The height of hypocrisy is self-evident in Turkey’s own highly suspect
human rights record. Moreover, its own campaign against Kurdish
separatists in northern Iraq has caused thousands of innocent civilian
deaths over the years, with little effort to avoid mass casualties.

Israel has carved out a close strategic alliance with Turkey recently,
the only genuine one it has with a country in the Muslim world. It was
born out of necessity, and Turkey has served as a mediator in peace
talks, particularly with Syria, in exchange for advancing Turkey’s
military know-how and technology.

In light of recent events, there has been much reflection in Israel on
the make-up and tenor of this expedient alliance. I am not going to
debate the merits of the relationship. However, there is a very
unsettling element to it. This partnership is predicated on pro-Israel
groups in the United States working in concert with pro-Turkey groups
to prevent the U.S. Congress from passing a resolution (which has
passed in Canada) recognizing the genocide of the Armenians by Turkish
nationalists at the beginning of the 20th century. This denial by
Turkey exists despite compelling and irrefutable evidence.

During the waning years of the Ottoman Empire, a group of army
officers overthrew the sultan in 1908. Turkish nationalism began to
flourish, and the Armenians, a significant Christian minority, began
to assert their own cultural identity and push for regional
autonomy. The Turkish leadership resented the Armenians’ resistance to
assimilation, and plans were made to exterminate the Armenian
population.

It started on April 24, 1915, when Armenian leaders were summarily
executed. Men of military age were forced into labour camps, and those
who survived starvation and illness were shot in mass graves. Hangings
and mass executions continued on a large scale. Women, children and
the elderly were forced to march for weeks without food, with few
surviving.

Females of all ages were brutally subjected to torture, rape and
murder. Those who survived such atrocities threw themselves off
cliffs. In the end, 1.8 million Armenians perished.

Since the inception of modern Turkey in 1922, resolute denial of the
Armenian genocide has been intrinsic to Turkish society. It’s a crime
to speak of the genocide.

A further disturbing aspect of this denial of history is that Adolf
Hitler used the Armenian genocide as a template for the Nazis’ Final
Solution, curtly saying at the time, "Who today remembers the
extermination of the Armenians?"

As Jews, we are ever so vigilant and outraged whenever diabolical
Holocaust deniers rear their ugly heads and spread poisonous
hatred. Therefore, it is an absolute moral imperative that Jewish
groups not become a party to Turkey’s denial of its crime.

Israel is strong enough to redefine its strategic alliance with Turkey
on its own terms. But it is morally unacceptable that a people reborn
out of the ashes of the Holocaust be complicit, even reluctantly, in
the denial of another genocide. It goes against the very essence of
the Jewish soul.

Norman Epstein is a physician in Toronto and the founder of Canadians
Against Slavery and Torture in Sudan.