Karabakh Defence Ministry Disproves Information About Death Of Azerb

KARABAKH DEFENCE MINISTRY DISPROVES INFORMATION ABOUT DEATH OF AZERBAIJANI CIVILIAN AS A RESULT OF CEASE-FIRE REGIME VIOLATION

ArmInfo
2008-12-24 14:16:00

In Karabakh Defence Ministry they have disproved the information about
the death of the Azerbaijani civilian as a result of the cease-fire
regime violation.

‘This is a regular lie disseminated by the Azerbaijani party for
the propagandist purpose and for heating up tension at the border’, –
press-secretary of the NKR Defence Ministry Senor Asatryan told ArmInfo
correspondent. He also added that the Azerbaijani party continues
violating the cease-fire regime from time to time especially at night.

As Azerbaijani pass media reported, the 55 year old resident of
Terter region Asif Sheldiev was allegedly killed by a sharp shooter
when implementing agricultural work.

Ex-Soviet States Earmark $10 Bln To Fight Crisis

EX-SOVIET STATES EARMARK $10 BLN TO FIGHT CRISIS
Maria Golovnina

Reuters
Thomson Financial News
12.22.08, 08:27 AM EST

ALMATY, Dec 22 (Reuters) – A group of former-Soviet nations will create
a $10 billion cross-border fund to fight the effects of the global
financial crisis, Kazakhstan, one of the participants, said on Monday.

Regional economies, linked by trading and infrastructure networks
inherited from their Soviet past, have been hit hard by the global
credit crisis and have sought to join forces to ease the impact.

Kazakhstan, Armenia, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan agreed last week at
a meeting in Kazakhstan to set aside $10 billion to ‘overcome the
effects of the global economic crisis’, Kazakhstan’s presidential
press service said.

Its statement did not say how much each country would contribute and
gave no details on how the fund would operate.

Russia and Kazakhstan are the richest of the five, with oil revenues
contributing to much of their wealth, while the other three, poorer
nations operate much smaller state budgets.

Ex-Soviet governments have been worried that grim economic times may
spill over into broader political instability and spark a wave of
public discontent.

They Raped Femida And Enjoyed It

THEY RAPED FEMIDA AND ENJOYED IT

Hayots Ashkharh Daily
20 Dec 2008
Armenia

The Criminal Court of Yerevan yesterday started the hearing of the
"Case of Seven" (in the building of the General Jurisdiction Court
of Shengavit community). The seven culprits accused of organizing
mass disorders and usurping power were Alik Arzoumanyan, Myasnik
Malkhasyan, Hakob Hakobyan, Sassoun Mikayelyan, Souren Sirounyan,
Grigor Voskerchyan and Shant Haroutyunyan.

As was expected, the building of the court and the surrounding area
were overcrowded with the revolutionary leaders, the ardent supporters
of the Armenian Pan-National Movement and aggressive activists. Having
participated in the "spontaneous" acts of violence in the center
of the capital city, the pro-Levon public had now come to the court
to follow the trial and holding the pictures of the seven "heroes",
was screaming, "Freedom!", "Levon, President!".

This is a phonogram which we heard both on March 8 and April 24,
as well as on the day of the protection of children… in short, on
all the days marked on the Armenian calendar. And yesterday, we heard
the same words pronounced before the start of the trial of the "seven".

Hranush Hakobian: Equal Conditions Should Be Ensured For Armenians B

HRANUSH HAKOBIAN: EQUAL CONDITIONS SHOULD BE ENSURED FOR ARMENIANS BORN IN ARMENIA AND DIASPORAN ARMENIANS

Noyan Tapan

Dec 18, 2008

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 18, NOYAN TAPAN. Reports on the problems of the
1946-1948 repatriation, georgaphy and demography, Stalin’s geopolitical
ambitions in those years, and the historiography of repatriation
were given during the first sitting of the first working day of the
conference "The 1946-1948 Repatriation and Its lessons. The Problem of
Repatriation Today" held in Tsakhkadzor on December 13-14. The complete
study of these problems is still ahead, and the files of repatriates
of that period, which are kept in the RA National Archive and were
removed from the secret list in early 1990s, are an important source
for throwing light on these problems. The director of the National
Archive Amatuni Virabian said that the reports of Soviet emmissaries
who visited Diasporan colonies are also kept in the Archive.

According to him, Hovik Meliksetian’s work "Homeland-Diaspora Relations
and Repatriation: 1920-1980" published in 1985 could not present
the whole truth, and it is the time to create a complete work on
repatriation problems. A. Virabian added that some steps have already
been taken in this direction by the RA National Academy of Sciences.

During the December 13 sittings, participants discussed the
role of traditional Armenian parties and organizations in the
1946-1948 repatriation process, the recollections of repatriates,
the Stalin dictatorship’s oppression of repatriates, as well as the
legal problem of current repatriation. The results of the day were
summarized by the Minister of Diaspora Hranush Hakobian who stated
that both the Western and Eastern Armenian languages are a national
value and should be preserved, while Western Armenian should also
be used in citizen-state relations. As regards the legal problems
of repatriation, she expressed an opinion that legislatively, equal
conditions should be ensured in Armenia for both Armenians born in
Armenia and Diasporan Armenians. In particular, the matter concerns
health care, general and higher education. Besides, according to the
minister, it is not ruled out that new political shocks may happen
in the region adjacent to Armenia where Armenian colonies of many
thousands exists so the country must be prepared to accept repatriates.

The subjects of the reports made on the second working day of
the conference were on the repatriation-related moods in various
colonies of the Diaspora, their reflection in the Diasporan press,
Israel’s experience of repatriation. The issue of assessment of
national identity of an Armenian was also a subject of discussion. In
response to NT correspondent’s question, Tiran Lokmagyozian, a public
figure from Turkey, said: "I consider as Armenians all those who
are Armenians by birth, that is, who belong to the Armenian nation
from the racial point of view". In the opinion of Gevorg Yazchian, a
journalist from Lebanon, "those who have national self-consciousness
and separate themselves from other nations as a independent nation
are Armenians. This a necessary but not sufficient condition. To me,
the sufficient condition is assumption of mandatory obligations with
respect to his/her nation and homeland by the given person".

The conference "The 1946-1948 Repatriation and Its Lessons. The
Problem of Repatriation Today" is perhaps one of the first attempts
to determine what national and geopolitical factors influenced
the repatriation of that period, and what impact it left on the
consciousness of the Armenian people who survived the genocide. As
for further steps, the dean of the Law Department of the American
University of Armenia Tom Samuelian believes that we "should
be consistent as there are quite difficult problems and we must
solve them. No one will solve these problems instead of us. Some
circumstances or conditions may solve these problems, but not in a
way advantageous for our nation and country".

The reports made at the conference will be summed up in publications.

Scientists and experts from Armenia, Iran, Canada, Syria, the U.S,
Argentina, Turkey, Russia, Lebanon and other countries took part
in the conference organized by the RA Ministry of Diaspora, the RA
National Academy of Sciences, Yerevan State University, and "Noravank"
Scientific and Educational Foundation.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1010730

More Than 5,000 Turks Sign Up To Apologize To Armenia

MORE THAN 5,000 TURKS SIGN UP TO APOLOGIZE TO ARMENIA

Monsters and Critics.com
Dec 16 2008

Ankara – More than 5,000 Turks have signed up to apologize for the
‘great catastrophe’ during the First World War when hundreds of
thousands of Armenians died at the hands of Ottoman Turks.

The petition on the website , initiated by
Turkish journalists and academics, is headed by the simple phrase
‘I apologize.’

‘I cannot accept the denial of the great catastrophe of 1915 that
Ottoman Armenians were subjected to. I condemn this injustice and
acting on my own behalf I share the feelings of pain of my Armenian
brothers,’ the petition says, followed by the names of the more than
300 people who started the campaign.

The website showed that by Tuesday afternoon, a day after the site
was launched, more than 5,300 people had signed up to the petition.

The campaign is in direct contrast to official state policy that
refuses to admit that the deaths of up to 1.5 million Armenians in
the last days of the Ottoman Empire actually constitute a genocide.

Turkey says that while there were massacres of ethnic Armenians the
events were the result of a civil uprising during the war. A group of
former Turkish ambassadors have issued a counter statement declaring
the petition as against Turkey’s national interests.

Neighbouring Turkey and Armenia do not have any diplomatic relations
and the land border between the two countries was closed by Turkey
in 1993 in protest at the Armenian occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh.

A thawing in relations has begun in recent months with Turkish
President Abdullah Gul in September becoming the first Turkish head
of state to visit the Armenian capital Yerevan.

www.ozurdiliyoruz.com

Situation Along The Line Of Contact Discussed At NKR President’s Off

SITUATION ALONG THE LINE OF CONTACT DISCUSSED AT NKR PRESIDENT’S OFFICE

armradio.am
15.12.2008 18:07

On 15 December NKR President Bako Sahakyan held a consultation with
the supreme command staff of the NKR Defense Army at the head of
defense minister Movses Hakobyan, Central Information Department of
the Office of the NKR President reported.

Issues related to army building, situation along the line of
contact between Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan armed forces and
improvement of social conditions of the servicemen were discussed at
the consultations.

BAKU: China, Armenia Sign Agreement To Further Inter-Parliament Coop

CHINA, ARMENIA SIGN AGREEMENT TO FURTHER INTER-PARLIAMENT COOPERATION

Trend News Agency
Dec 15 2008
Azerbaijan

China and Armenia signed a memorandum of understanding here on
Monday on exchange and cooperation between the two parliaments,
reported Xinhua.

"The signing of the memo marks a new era for the relationship between
the two parliaments", Chinese top legislator Wu Bangguo said when
witnessing the signing ceremony with visiting chairman of the Armenian
National Assembly Ovik Abramyan, according to a press release from
the news office of the Standing Committee of China’s National People’s
Congress (NPC), China’s top legislature.

In his meeting with Abramyan, Wu, Chairman of NPC Standing Committee,
highlighted the roles that the two parliaments play in promoting
Sino-Armenian relations as "highly important", expressing his hope
that the two sides could maintain the exchange at various levels and
cement cooperation in fields such as legislation and legal supervision.

China highly values its ties with Armenia, Wu told Abramyan, saying
that the country is willing to promote relations with Armenia to
a higher level based on the principles of mutual respect, equality
and reciprocity.

Echoing Wu’s views on the ties between the two nations and the two
parliaments, Abramyan said Armenia was committed to developing its ties
with China especially in the fields of trade, science and technology,
and education.

The Armenian National Assembly would regard the signing of the
agreement memo as an opportunity to boost friendly exchange and
pragmatic cooperation and inject new vigor into relations, said
Abramyan.

He said that Armenia would continue to adhere to the one-China policy.

ANKARA: Sayari: Obama Realizes US Cannot Sit On Fence Over PKK

SAYARI: OBAMA REALIZES US CANNOT SIT ON FENCE OVER PKK

Today’s Zaman
Dec 15 2008
Turkey

Sabri Sayarı, professor of political science at Sabancı University,
has said US President-elect Barack Obama realizes that to maintain
good relations with Ankara, the US needs to support Turkey’s fight
against the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

"He is likely to place more emphasis on relations with Turkey because
of the critical nature of American policies in the region regarding,
for example, Iran. And, in the context of the Georgian crisis and
Russia’s growing assertiveness, Turkey is an important neighboring
country," he said.

Toward the end of his presidential campaign, Obama accused the
administration of President George W. Bush of straining the country’s
ties with Turkey.

He also pledged to lead efforts to bring Turkey and the Iraqi Kurds
to find a solution to the terror threat posed by the separatist PKK.

In a foreign policy document published on his election campaign Web
site, Obama said, "The result is that this strategically important
NATO ally, the most advanced democracy in the Muslim world, is turning
against the West," recalling recent opinion polls indicating that
the number of Turks with a favorable opinion of the United States
had fallen to 12 percent.

For Monday Talk, Sayarı elaborated on the repercussions Turkey should
expect from Obama’s election as the next US president.

Should Turkey be relieved or concerned with the election of Barack
Obama as the next US president?

The Turkish press focused only on the Armenian genocide issue, but
there is a broader context. Considering the fact that Obama represents
the end of the Bush era, this is a welcome result.

Why were you concerned about the focus on the Armenian issue?

The Armenian genocide issue has been largely seen in Turkey as the
most important thing that came out of the American election. We should
be more broad minded and think about larger issues.

Like what?

Iraq is very important for Turkey. That’s how the two candidates
started out their campaigns; Obama was supporting the withdrawal
of troops, McCain favored America’s presence there. This issue had
priority in the campaign, although later the economic crisis dominated
the scene.

Do you think Obama will attempt a total pullout of American troops,
or will he maintain a significant force there?

He says he is going to withdraw, but he is likely to maintain a
significant presence there in the form of military bases. The northern
Iraqi Kurdish leadership has already stated that they welcome American
bases in their part of Iraqi territory. You cannot simply take out
150,000 troops overnight. This would leave America exposed. It’s
going to be a gradual process. Given the unhappiness in American
public opinion about the American presence in Iraq and given the
fact that Obama benefited from that unhappiness, he is going to do
something about it. In his mind, Afghanistan is more important and,
given the size of the US military, you can’t fight on two fronts,
so he will move some of the American troops to Afghanistan.

>From a Turkish viewpoint, is an American troop withdrawal from Iraq
a good move?

Initially, there was much opposition in Turkey to the American presence
there. In time, officials in Ankara started to think that a withdrawal
would be a potential danger for Turkey. So Turkey’s position has
shifted. Turkey would not be happy with an immediate withdrawal,
but with something of a gradual nature.

Why?

The expectation is that an American withdrawal form Iraq will be
accompanied by some sort of formation of a democratic government
in Iraq. It is to Turkey’s advantage if that becomes a reality. The
nightmare scenario is that with the American withdrawal you will have
a civil war situation.

‘If the United States is going to withdraw troops, it will do so with
the help of Turkey’

Toward the end of his election campaign Obama released a document
arguing that US-Turkey relations had been deeply strained by the Bush
administration’s mismanaged intervention in Iraq, which helped revive
the terrorist threat posed to Turkey by the separatist PKK. Why do
you think he published this document?

With recommendations from his foreign policy team, he emphasized
that you cannot sit on the fence when it comes to this issue. If
you want to maintain good relations with Turkey, you need to support
Turkey’s fight against the PKK. He is likely to place more emphasis
on relations with Turkey because of the critical nature of American
policies in the region regarding, for example, Iran. And, in the
context of the Georgian crisis and Russia’s growing assertiveness,
Turkey is an important neighboring country. If the United States is
going to withdraw troops, it will do so with the help of Turkey —
and probably through Turkey.

Observers had said that a John McCain presidency would lead to a
more interventionist course for America than an Obama presidency. Now
that Obama has been elected, should the world forget about American
interventionism?

If something happens that will adversely affect American interests,
he is going to support intervention. It is not that he is an idealist
who will support solving every issue through diplomacy. His approach
will be more multilateral than unilateral. That means working with
the allies, with the United Nations, and using diplomacy. Even
George W. Bush did not act unilaterally in the last two years, and
he consulted with allies in Europe.

Why did Obama target Pakistan while explaining his foreign policy
priorities prior to the election?

There is a growing belief in the United States that the problem in
Afghanistan is Pakistan and that Pakistan needs to cooperate with the
United States. Since Obama places the most emphasis on Afghanistan
and capturing Osama bin Laden, who is probably hiding on the border
area between Pakistan and Afghanistan, he also places emphasis on
Pakistan. Can he intervene in Pakistan? It seems like a distant
possibility. But Obama wanted to send a forceful message to Pakistan
that they need to cooperate.

How do you think Turkey’s "zero conflict" foreign policy will be
affected by Obama’s presidency?

Turkish foreign policy stresses a "zero conflict" policy, but that
could be a source of problems with Turkey’s Western allies, for
example, with the United States on Iran and to some extent with the
EU. The French are not at all on the same wavelength with Turkey on
Syria because they think Syria is still involved in Lebanon. So to
maintain a "zero conflict" policy and at the same time maintain good
relations with the West is a delicate balancing act for Turkey. It
needs to be done very carefully; otherwise, you could loose on
both ends.

‘We may see people familiar with Turkey in the Obama administration’

What do you think of Obama’s quick call to economic experts to discuss
the first steps toward healing the damaged US economy?

Obviously he wants to emphasize how critical the problem facing the
American economy is. The economic experts he has consulted are mostly
members of Bill Clinton’s economic team. I think he also wanted to
emphasize that this team was responsible for the achievements of the
economy under President Clinton.

What would you say about familiar names such as Richard Holbrooke
and Anthony Lake, as they are being discussed as potentials for the
position of secretary of state?

When there is a Republican administration in charge, the democratic
thinkers on foreign and domestic policy move out to think tanks and
universities. When there is a Democratic administration, the reverse
happens. Now that Obama is the president-elect, various people in
the think tanks and universities are trying to get a position in the
new administration. As far as personalities, Richard Holbrooke’s name
has been mentioned, but he was so heavily involved with the Hillary
Clinton campaign that I doubt that he will be chosen as secretary of
state. Anthony Lake, who moved to Georgetown University as a professor
after Clinton left, could be chosen as national security advisor.

Looking from a Turkish perspective — considering that the Israeli
father of Rahm Emanuel, who has been selected as Obama’s chief of
staff, said his son would naturally influence the president to be
pro-Israel — how would you evaluate Obama’s choice of Emanuel?

Obviously Emanuel is a friend of Israel. But I doubt that Obama’s
approach to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will be shaped by
Emanuel’s background and views. As you know, Henry Kissinger is
also Jewish, but the Nixon presidency (where he served as a top
foreign policy official) did not witness a major pro-Israel tilt. More
importantly for Turkey, let’s not forget that Emanuel has been a strong
opponent of the Armenian "genocide" resolution and he has been vilified
and criticized by the Armenian lobby for his position on this issue.

And your views on such names as James Steinberg, Gregory Craig and
Susan Rice for the position of the White House national security
adviser?

Steinberg served as deputy national security advisor to President
Clinton. He is a veteran foreign policy expert who worked at the State
Department, the Brookings Institution and the US Congress. Currently he
is a dean at the Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University
of Texas. Craig is a well-known Washington lawyer who defended
Clinton against impeachment. He has been a foreign policy advisor
to Senator Edward Kennedy, Madeleine Albright and, most recently,
Barack Obama. Rice is a respected and well-known foreign affairs
expert. An African-American, she served at the National Security
Council and was also assistant secretary of state for African
affairs during the Clinton presidency. She was John Kerry’s top
foreign policy advisor during the 2004 election campaign. I think
all three will occupy important positions in foreign policy in the
Obama administration. Among them, Jim Steinberg has the best chance
of becoming the next national security advisor.

What would you say about names like Henri Barkey and Philip Gordon,
who are involved in the Obama campaign?

Philip Gordon from the Brookings Institution could be in Obama’s policy
planning bureau, perhaps. On the Obama team, you may see some other
people familiar with Turkey, such as Barkey of Lehigh University,
former US Ambassador to Turkey Morton Abramowitz and Alan Makovsky,
a specialist on Middle Eastern and Turkish affairs.

How about the Joe Biden factor?

The foreign policy of this administration will be partly in the
portfolio of Joe Biden because he is an experienced person who served
on the Senate Committee for Foreign Relations for a long time. He
will probably bring some of the people from his own network.

And what would you say about Biden and Obama’s commitment to the
Armenian "genocide" issue pushed by the Armenian diaspora?

Obama was elected from Illinois and Chicago, the state capital,
has a large Greek and Armenian population. For electoral reasons,
Obama has been pushing for this for years now. Joe Biden was elected
from Delaware, which also has a small but influential Greek-American
population. Greek and Armenian Americans work together on this
issue. When you have both the president and the vice president
strongly pushing for this, the resolution will pass in Congress this
time in April. Both Biden and Obama have been tremendously committed
to the issue.

If Turkey and Armenia open their mutual border as the next step of the
recent rapprochement between them, could the American administration
take a different stance on the genocide resolution?

It could change the equilibrium in Turkey’s relations with Armenia,
but it would not affect the diaspora. We have seen what happened in the
Greek-Turkish situation. Turkey reached a rapprochement with Greece
in 1999 and the relations are quite warm, but the Greek-American
diaspora is still critical of Turkey. Just two weeks ago, the
founding of the Turkish Republic was being celebrated in Los Angeles
by Turkish-Americans and 200 young Armenians demonstrated there. What
happens between Turkey and Armenia does not seem to be affecting the
diaspora community.

Sabri Sayarı A professor of political science at Sabancı University,
he also serves on the executive board of the Ä°stanbul Policy Center
at Sabancı. Prior to his current position, he was the director
of the Institute of Turkish Studies at Georgetown University’s
School of Foreign Service in Washington, D.C., (1994-2005) and a
senior staff member at the National Academy of Sciences’ National
Research Council (1991-1993). From 1974 to 1984, he served on the
faculty of Bogazici University in Ä°stanbul. He has also been a
visiting professor of political science at Columbia University,
Aarhus University (Denmark), the University of California at Irvine
and George Washington University.

Professor Sayarı has published numerous works on Turkish politics and
foreign policy. His publications include four co-edited books published
in the United States: "Turkey’s New World: Changing Dynamics in
Turkish Foreign Policy"; "Politics, Parties and Elections in Turkey";
"Political Leaders and Democracy in Turkey"; and "Turkish Studies in
the United States."

–Boundary_(ID_bSfWNERxJxYcfTa4hSvJ UQ)–

ANKARA: Ex-Turkish Envoys Slam Campaign Apologizing To Armenians

EX-TURKISH ENVOYS SLAM CAMPAIGN APOLOGIZING TO ARMENIANS

Hurriyet
Dec 15 2008
Turkey

A group of retired ambassadors slammed the recent internet campaign
launched to issue a public apology to Armenians regarding the 1915
incidents.

Around 200 Turkish academics, writers and journalists are planning
to issue an apology to the Armenians.

Retired diplomats and ambassadors issued on Monday a response to the
attempt, saying the campaign is "unfair, wrong and unfavorable for
the national interests".

"Such an incorrect and one-sided attempt would mean disrespecting our
history and betraying our people who lost their lives in the violent
attacks of the terror organizations in the final days of the Ottoman
Empire, as well as after, during the formation of the Republic," the
statement issued by around 60 retired ambassadors and diplomats said.

Armenia, with the backing of the diaspora, claims up to 1.5 million
of their kin were slaughtered in orchestrated killings in 1915.Turkey
rejects the claims saying that 300,000 Armenians, along with at least
as many Turks, died in civil strife that emerged when Armenians took
up arms, backed by Russia, for independence in eastern Anatolia.

The issue remains unsolved as Armenia drags its feet in accepting
Turkey’s proposal of forming a commission to investigate the claims.

The statement also acknowledged that the forced emigration of the
Armenians during World War One had created "sour" consequences,
but the pain of the Turkish people suffered from the Armenian riot,
as well as terror attacks, is as much as the Armenians.

The diplomats also said in order to improve the relations between
neighboring countries both sides should recognize each other’s borders
and mutually share the pain each side suffered.

The statement was signed by CHP deputies Sukru Elekdag and Onur Oymen.

Taner Akcam Appointed Chair At Clark University’s Strassler Center F

TANER AKCAM APPOINTED CHAIR AT CLARK UNIVERSITY’S STRASSLER CENTER FOR HOLOCAUST AND GENOCIDE STUDIES

PanARMENIAN.Net
12.12.2008 17:48 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish scholar Taner Akcam has been appointed Chair
at Clark University’s Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide
Studies, Armeniаn Mirror Spectator reports.

Akcam, who is moving from the University of Minnesota to Worcester,
Mass., in June, in preparation for taking up his new position in
September, said, "Ever since 1976, when I was a teaching assistant
at the Middle East Technical University in Turkey, it was my dream
to become a scholar, to go to Europe or the US and get my PhD. I
was arrested and my life changed, but in the 1980s, I committed
myself [to this goal]. I have worked very hard to be where I am,
and I am very happy about the appointment and that I have realized my
dream." Because Akcam is Turkish and will teach, among other subjects,
a course on the Armenian Genocide, his appointment in some circles is
bound to be considered controversial, but Akcam sees it as the result
of a normal process that has opened the field to non-Armenian scholars.

Akcam has lived outside of Turkey since 1978, first as a political
refugee. He later came to the United States and has taught in the
Department of History at the University of Minnesota since 2002. He
last visited Turkey in 2007 for the funeral of his close friend,
Hrant Dink, the Turkish-Armenian journalist and editor of Agos,
who was assassinated in Istanbul in front of his newspaper office.

Akcam has filed a lawsuit in the European Court to completely rescind
Article 301 of the Turkish Criminal Code, which imposes harsh penalties
on those whose views are seen as "insulting Turkishness," for example,
mentioning the Armenian Genocide. Although Turkey has recently
passed amendments to soften the penalties, Akcam will not withdraw his
suit. "Nothing has been decided yet," he said. "Of course, the European
Court might use the Turkish amendments as a reason to drop the case."

–Boundary_(ID_DSZIQyzmxdgb2z65D0sBDQ )–