Conscious Harm-Doing

CONSCIOUS HARM-DOING

March 2, 2010

"This is a question, which we cannot avoid. The targeting of concrete
businesses and the creation of obstacles for concrete businesses may
create dangerous impact on the country," during yesterday’s press
conference said Aristomene Varudakis, head of the World Bank office
in Yerevan as a response to the question of our reporter as to what
extent could the arrest of the director of the ArmEconomBank Saribek
Sukiasyan affect the business environment of Armenia. "I think the
government is aware of this," added Varudakis. Let us remember that the
European Bank of Development and Reconstruction released a statement,
which particularly says that the arrest of Saribek Sukaisyan harms
the business reputation of Armenia. The WB Armenia representative
shares this opinion. This means that Varudakis has diplomatically
said that the government represses those businessmen of Armenia, who
have contrasting political views and in this case the Sukiasyans. The
interesting thing is that after all the WB makes optimistic statements
and proposes optimistic expectations from the Armenian government,
hoping that the latter will efficiently fight corruption and even
oligopolies.

http://168.am/en/articles/7199

BAKU: Turkish FM Hopes U.S. Committee Not Adopt Resolution On Armeni

TURKISH FM HOPES U.S. COMMITTEE NOT ADOPT RESOLUTION ON ARMENIAN ALLEGATIONS

Trend
March 4 2010
Azerbaijan

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said that Turkey hoped the
resolution on Armenian allegations related to the incidents of 1915
would not be adopted at the U.S. House of Representatives Committee
on Foreign Affairs during March 4 voting, Anadolu Agency reported.

The U.S. Committee will vote the resolution recognizing the events
of 1915 as "genocide" on March 4, 2010.

Speaking to reporters in Cairo on Wednesday, Davutoglu said that if
the resolution was adopted at the committee, then the U.S.

administration should exert efforts against a voting at U.S. Congress.

Davutoglu said that making such a decision which would disturb a
country –that made great contributions to world and regional peace–
was irrational and illogical. He expressed hope that committee members
would not make such a mistake.

He noted that the U.S. administration knew Turkey’s stance about the
issue very well.

Noting that the congress members, who would vote the resolution,
should make a decision by firstly considering the U.S.-Turkey and
Turkey-Armenia relations, Davutoglu said that voting with political
reasons would harm not only Turkey but also those relations.

Regarding normalization process in Turkey-Armenia relations, Davutoglu
said that the two countries were now in the most comprehensive
cooperation process ever, adding that there were multi dimensional
relations in many platforms.

Noting that Turkey-Armenia relations had been on the best level in the
past one year, Davutoglu said that the two countries signed protocols.

Turkey and Armenia signed two protocols on October 10, 2009 to
normalize relations between the two countries. The protocols envisage
the two countries to establish diplomatic ties and open the border
that has been close since 1993. Turkey and Armenia also agreed to take
steps to operate a sub-commission on impartial scientific examination
of the historical records and archive to define existing problems
and formulate recommendations, in which Armenian, Turkish as well
as Swiss and other international experts would take part. However,
on January 12, 2010, the Constitutional Court of Armenia declared a
decision of constitutional conformity on the protocols. Turkey thought
the fifth article of Armenian Constitutional Court’s verdict regarding
the protocols was against the target and basis of the protocols.

Also, in 2005, Turkey officially proposed to Armenian government the
establishment of a joint commission of history composed of historians
and other experts from both sides to study together the events of
1915 not only in the archives of Turkey and Armenia but also in the
archives of all relevant third countries and to share their findings
with the public.

Foreign Minister Davutoglu is currently in Cairo to hold talks.

Earlier in the day, he made a speech at a meeting of foreign ministers
of the Arab League, and met with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

He also held meetings with Qatar’s Prime Minister & Foreign Minister
Hamad bin Jasim bin Jabir al-Thani, and Syrian Foreign Minister
Walid Mualem.

Leader Of The Armenian Catholic Church Patriarch Nerses-Petros 19th

LEADER OF THE ARMENIAN CATHOLIC CHURCH PATRIARCH NERSES-PETROS 19TH VISITS RA EMBASSY TO ITALY

1/lang/en
2010-03-02

YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS: Leader of the Armenian Catholic
Church Patriarch Nerses-Petros 19th, accompanied by bishops,
visited RA embassy to Italy March 1. An official from the press and
information department of RA Foreign Affairs Ministry told Armenpress
that some issues concerning the embassy and the Armenian community,
Armenia-Diaspora cooperation and the process of the Armenian-Turkish
relations normalization were discussed during the meeting.

The ambassador emphasized the importance of joint activities and mutual
cooperation of the members of the Armenians community in Italy and
said the embassy is willing to unite the Armenians living in Italy
for solving primary issues of state and national importance.

The Patriarch said he is willing to assist the embassy in
implementation of projects and its missions.

http://www.armenpress.am/news/more/id/59266

Italian-Armenian Community Reps Gather In Rome

ITALIAN-ARMENIAN COMMUNITY REPS GATHER IN ROME

2010/03/02 | 15:26

diaspora

A gathering of various Armenian organizations in Italy was held for
the first time in Rome on February 27.

Community representatives met with the RoA Ambassador to Italy, Ruben
Karapetyan, to discuss ways of improving bilateral relations between
the two countries, supporting the drive to obtain Italian recognition
of the NKR and upcoming plans to commemorate the 95 anniversary of
the 1915 Genocide.

http://hetq.am/en/diaspora/havaq/

All-Armenian Hayastan Foundation Turns 18

ALL-ARMENIAN HAYASTAN FOUNDATION TURNS 18

Aysor
March 2 2010
Armenia

Tomorrow, on March 3 the All-Armenian Hayastan Foundation will
mark its 18th birth anniversary. The Foundation was established by
Armenian President’s decree in 1992 "to contribute to development of
the country with joint efforts of Armenians all around the world."

Over 18 years All-Armenian Hayastan Foundation has implemented
numerous programmes and projects, aimed at contribution to Armenia’s
development. It provided hundreds of Armenian residents with houses,
gas and water supply, and various living conditions. More than 300,000
people donated for charitable purposes nearly $200 million.

Included in Foundation’s activities are: maintenance campaign of 470
kilometer roads, water mains through 212 kilometers, gas pipeline
through 144 kilometers, and 75 km of electric lines.

Due to donations, there were built 218 schools and kindergartens,
34 hospitals and medical centers, and 21 sport and culture centers.

60 Minutes Transcript: Turkey And Armenia’s Battle Over History

TURKEY AND ARMENIA’S BATTLE OVER HISTORY

CBS News
March 1 2010

Bob Simon Reports on the Longtime Feud Between Turkey and Armenia
over Genocide

(CBS) Wars are fought over oil, land, water, but rarely over history,
especially about something that happened nearly 100 years ago. But
that’s what Turkey and Armenia are still fighting over: what to label
the mass deportation and subsequent massacre of more than a million
Christian Armenians from Ottoman Turkey during World War I.

Armenians and an overwhelming number of historians say that Turkey’s
rulers committed genocide, that its actions were a model for what
Hitler did to the Jews. The Turks, meanwhile, say their ancestors never
carried out such crimes, and that they too were victims in a world war.

Ever since, this battle over history has not only ensnared the two
nations but even the White House and Congress, where resolutions
officially recognizing the genocide are currently moving through the
House and Senate.

But our story begins where the lives of so many Armenians ended,
far from Istanbul, in the desert.

"60 Minutes" and correspondent Bob Simon took a drive into what is
now Syria, to the barren wilderness, to what amounts to the largest
Armenian cemetery in the world.

"As many as 450,000 Armenians died here," author Peter Balakian
told Simon.

Balakian is an Armenian American who has written extensively about
what happened in this desolate place.

According to Balakian, 450,000 Armenians died in this spot in the
desert. "In this region called Deir Zor, it is the greatest graveyard
of the Armenian Genocide," he explained.

Deir Zor is to Armenians what Auschwitz is to Jews. The most ghoulish
thing about the place is that 95 years later the evidence of the
massacres is everywhere.

Just a short distance from the banks of Euphrates there’s a dump. It’s
also the site of a mass grave. It has never been excavated. All we
had to do was scratch the surface of the sand to collect evidence of
what had happened here.

Under the surface was evidence of bones. "It’s the hill full of bones,"
said Dr. Haroot Kahvejian, an Armenian dentist who showed Simon around.

"Nobody bothered to dig them up until now?" Simon asked.

It was extraordinary standing on a mound where perhaps thousands of
people lie entombed. There is no record of who they were or where
they could have come from.

"Look at that. There are kids who know exactly where they are. They
are finding them by the dozen," Simon observed.

"Evidence comes in many forms. It comes in photographs, it comes in
texts and telegrams," Balakian said. "And it also comes in bones."

So just how did all these bones end up here?

In 1915, the First World War was raging and the Ottoman Empire was
crumbling. The Armenians were a Christian minority who were considered
infidels by the ruling Muslims — a fifth column who sided with the
enemy in the war.

The fact that they were prosperous didn’t help, says Balakian, whose
great uncle survived the genocide and wrote about it in a memoir
Armenian Golgotha.

"Like the Jews of Europe the Armenians of the Ottoman Empire had
a dominant role in commerce and trade, they were highly educated,
many of them," Balakian.

And he said they were highly resented.

Asked what happened next, Balakian said, "What happens from the
spring of 1915 on through the summer is a well orchestrated project
of government planned arrests and deportations."

(CBS) Some were forced to buy round trip tickets for train journeys
from which they never returned. They ended up in box cars; the rest,
mostly women and children were forced on death marches for hundreds of
miles. Many perished from starvation, disease or brutal killings. The
survivors ended up in concentration camps hundreds of miles from
Istanbul, out of sight.

At the time of the deportations, American diplomats in the region sent
dispatches to Washington detailing what they had seen and heard. Just
weeks after the arrests had begun, Henry Morgenthau the U.S.

ambassador, sent off this one: "Deportation of and excesses against
peaceful Armenians is increasing and from harrowing reports of
eyewitnesses it appears that a campaign of race extermination is
in progress…"

To this day the Turks vigorously deny there was any such campaign.

When we spoke to Nabi Sensoy, he was Turkey’s ambassador to Washington.

"We were in Syria, sir, and we scratched the sand and came up with
bones. How can you argue with that?" Simon asked the ambassador.

"Well bones you can find anywhere in Turkey, you know. There have
been a lot of tragedies that have happened in those lands," he replied.

"Excuse me, sir. We dug up these bones in a place called Deir Zor,
which Armenians say is their equivalent of Auschwitz," Simon pointed
out.

"Well, I don’t think that it was anything to comparable to Auschwitz.

This was only deportation. And things happened on the road," Sensoy
replied.

"But the deportations ended in massacres, didn’t they?" Simon asked.

"No, it did not," the ambassador insisted.

"Weren’t there massacres, mass executions and death marches of the
Armenians?" Simon asked.

"There was no death marches of Armenians. There was deportation and
tragic things happened. Many people perished under the deprivations
of the First World War," Sensoy said.

But did what happen in 1915 amount to genocide? The UN defines it as
the intent to destroy a racial, ethnic or religious group.

"The most important thing is the intent. The killings are something
else. It happened on both sides. But whether it constitutes genocide
is another matter. It is a legal word and it should not be lightly
used," Sensoy explained.

"But you’re saying there was no intention of the Turkish
government…," Simon said.

"There was no intention of annihilating in all or in part the Armenian
population," Sensoy said.

Bishop Sarkin Sarkissian is convinced that the massacres were intended
and meticulously executed. He showed us one of the caves into which
he said untold numbers of Armenians, women and children were thrown.

It was, the Armenians believe, a primitive gas chamber.

According to the bishop, they lit fires at the mouth of the cave.

"And the people inside couldn’t breathe anymore?" Simon asked.

"Exactly. And there is no other way to escape out," Bishop Sarkissian
replied.

(CBS) The Ottoman Turks developed a template, which according to
genocide scholars, was later adopted by the Nazis.

"Most dramatically we have Adolf Hitler saying eight days before
invading Poland in 1939, ‘Who today, after all, speaks of the
annihilation of the Armenians?’ Hitler was inspired by the Armenian
extermination. You know, it made him think, ‘Well, sure you know, you
can get rid of a hated minority group and if you’re powerful and your
side wins, that event will never get recorded,’" Balakian explained.

The Turks dispute the evidence that Hitler ever uttered those words
or was inspired by the events of 1915. Nonetheless, when the Ottomans
were swept from power, and the modern Turkish state was founded,
all memory of what happened to the Armenians was erased. Records were
destroyed, a new alphabet was adopted and ever since, the massacres
have not been taught in schools.

The use of the word genocide is regarded as an insult to Turkish
nation; it is a jailable offense.

Hrant Dink, who edited an Armenian newspaper in Turkey, was prosecuted
three times for insulting the Turkish nation. He also received
thousands of death threats from extremists, but kept on writing.

His daughter Delal recalls the Turkish authorities telling her father
they couldn’t protect him.

"They were kind of warning my father about what might happen. And
the days following that, nationalists groups came in front of Agos
[her father’s newspaper] … in front of the newspaper shouting that
he’s their target. And he’s their enemy. And one day they will come
for him," Delal Dink remembered.

Days later, as he stepped outside that same office, he was shot at
point blank range.

Dink is viewed as a martyr now, in Armenia, where he is seen as the
latest victim of the genocide. His picture emerges from the wall
of flowers on a hillside outside the capital Yerevan, where every
April hundreds of thousands attend a memorial to remind the Turks,
and the world, of what they went through. They pay homage to those
who died nearly a century ago. It’s as if the entire country turns
out for what is emotionally a funeral, a burial the victims never had.

And on the same day, in Times Square, thousands of Armenian Armenians
gather to demand that Congress pass a resolution recognizing the
genocide.

(CBS) Two years ago, before a resolution was to be put to a vote in
the House, Turkey recalled Ambassador Sensoy in protest. Its president
warned of "serious troubles" and its top general said that military
ties with the U.S. would never be the same. To limit further damage,
the Bush administration and eight former secretaries of state then
weighed in to kill the bill. It worked.

"Eight former secretaries of state rallied behind Turkey to defeat
that resolution," Simon told Ambassador Sensoy. "Why do you think
that was, Sir?"

"Well, I think it’s the importance of Turkey for the United States. We
have a long list of positive agenda between us," he replied.

And the items on that list, Sensoy says, are far more important than
the Armenian issue: Turkey is, after all, a regional superpower and
an essential broker between the U.S. and the Muslim world. It has
the second largest army in NATO and the U.S. relies on the country’s
Airbases for its wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Seventy percent of
American supplies to those wars go through Turkey, which is also a
crucial conduit for oil.

Which is probably why no U.S. president has uttered the word genocide.

During his presidential campaign, Candidate Obama promised that, if
elected, he would use the word. "The Armenian genocide," he said,
"is a widely documented fact supported by an overwhelming body of
historical evidence."

But when President Obama made his first overseas trip to Turkey,
he never mentioned the word.

Late last year, the U.S. brokered an agreement between Turkey and
Armenia to establish diplomatic relations, with one key condition: that
a historical commission be formed to rule on whether a genocide took
place. Nearly six months later, the deal appears to be unravelling. The
battle over the use of the word is far from over.

0minutes/main6246574.shtml?tag=currentVideoInfo;se gmentTitle

Watch the segment at

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/02/26/6
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=6253043n

Saryan’s Exhibition Opened In Tretyakov Gallery

SARYAN’S EXHIBITION OPENED IN TRETYAKOV GALLERY

news.am
March 1 2010
Armenia

The exhibition dedicated to the 130th anniversary of the renowned
Armenian painter Martiros Saryan opened in the Tretyakov Gallery,
Moscow.

Paintings, watercolors and drawings painted by the artist during his
trips to Turkey, Egypt and Iran, still lifes and portraits of Anna
Akhmatova, Nikolay Mordvinov, Armenian painter Khachatour Yesayan
were exhibited. Besides, the exhibition includes still-lifes painted
in 1930-1960 years.

The exposition also portrays works of theatre, sets of Odessa Opera
and Ballet Theatre plays. It will close on March 26.

Martiros Saryan (1880-1972) was born into an Armenian family in Nor
Nakhchivan. In 1895, he finished the Nakhchivan school and from
1897-1904 studied at the Moscow School of Arts, including in the
workshops of Valentin Serov and Konstantin Korovin. He was heavily
influenced by the work of Paul Gauguin and Henri Matisse. Since 1921,
the painter lived in Armenia and died in 1972 in Yerevan.

ANC: Ankara Does Not Have To Hurry

ANC: ANKARA DOES NOT HAVE TO HURRY

news.am
March 1 2010
Armenia

Turkey has got all that it wanted from the Armenian-Turkish process
an does not have to hurry, the leader of the opposition Armenian
National Congress (ANC) Levon Ter-Petrosyan stated at a rally in
Yerevan on March 1.

According to him, all the talks about the "alleged stalemate" in the
Armenia-Turkey normalization process are ungrounded. "Another matter
is that it is the collapse of the so-called policy of initiatives by
Serzh Sargsyan," Ter-Petrosyan.

"By renouncing the Armenian Genocide, Serzh Sargsyan hoped to
legitimize himself somehow and relieve the international pressure
concerning the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process. But, as we can see
today, the situation is quite opposite now," Ter-Petrosyan said.

He pointed out five equally urgent problems facing the Armenia people:
Armenian-Turkish relations, Nagorno-Karabakh peace process, restoration
of democracy, rule of law and end to corruption.

However, the international community gives priority to the first two
tasks, as it is pursuing its own interests in the region.

Specifically, the international community underlines the need for
resolving the problems posing a threat to regional security.

"The only thing we expected from European agencies is an impartial
appraisal of the state of democracy in Armenia, but they give priority
to the resolution of the first two problems. We have to put up with the
fact that they will openly speak of human rights in Armenia only after
the Nagorno-Karabakh problem has been resolved and Armenian-Turkish
relations normalized. It is good that the resolution of the two
problems meets our people’s interests," Ter-Petrosyan said.

The ANC leader also said that the ANC must make efforts for Armenia
to sustain the minimal losses from the present foreign political
situation.

Turkish Organizations React To US TV Channel Program On Armenian Gen

TURKISH ORGANIZATIONS REACT TO US TV CHANNEL PROGRAM ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Armradio.am
01.03.2010 15:42

Two Turkish organizations reacted on Sunday to a US TV channel for
broadcasting a program on the Armenian Genocide.

The Federation of Turkish American Associations (FTAA) and the
Assembly of Turkish American Associations (ATAA) sent a letter to
executives of the US CBS TV channel to show their reaction to the
biased broadcasting of the channel.

Also, Turks living in the United States have launched a campaign to
protest the TV channel by letters, fax and e-mail messages.

"We are sorry to see that a program that will lobby for the Armenians
has been broadcast on a TV channel in a period when Turkey and Armenia
are trying to ease their diplomatic relations with mutual protocols,"
FTAA’s President Can Kaplan said, Today’s Zaman reports.

ATAA’s President Ali Cinar said they would continue their campaign
against the CBS until the TV channel apologized.

One of the worlds most respected and watched current affairs program,
60 Minutes (CBS TV Network), aired a segment on the Armenian Genocide.

Bob Simon and Peter Balakian traveled all the way to Deir Elzor to
shed light on the untold stories of the victims of the first Genocide
of the 20th century.

The channel said "whatever Auschwitz meant for the Jews, Deir ez-Zor
meant the same for the Armenians."

Armenian music holds a steady beat

Armenian music holds a steady beat
by Tom Vartabedian

Published: Monday February 22, 2010
armenian-music-holds-a-steady-beat

Haverhill, Mass. – Maybe it’s a sign of old age but more and more,
I’ve preferred listening to Armenian music as opposed to dancing by
it.

That was not the case 20-30 years ago when I would be the first to
approach a dance floor and "halleh" the night away.

People used to look at me and get inspired themselves to do a "bar" or
two. And before you knew it, we were perspiring in our own sweat.

Now, the only sweat I’m being exposed to is someone else’s. This was
evident at AYF Olympics when I was more attuned to watching the
musicians perform.

These guys never seem to age, especially Onnik Dinkjian in his 80s.
(Sorry, my friend, this was meant as a compliment.) If anyone is the
Tony Bennett of our society, it’s this crooner.

I’m waiting for his next song, "I Left My Heart in Yerevan."

He’s joined at the hip by Johnny Berberian and Hachig Kazarian – both
of whom became anointed as teenagers. If I’m getting AARP material, so
are they.

Again, maybe it’s me, but these guys don’t skip a beat, whether they
sing their song or play their instrument.

Like any transition, we’re fortunate to have many talented newcomers
harping (no pun intended) upon the scene. The industry is in capable
hands with bands like the Aravod and Jason Naroian.

It must also make others like veteran oudists Joe Kouyoumjian and
Richard Hagopian proud. They’ve had their day and still beating
strong. But there’s no hiatus in the ranks, at least not yet.

Growing up, I had the best music from all fronts. My goodness! If it
wasn’t the Vosbikians one week, it was the Gomidas in another. The New
England Ararats were going strong, not to mention the Aramites, Hye
Echoes and another venerable – Artie Barsamian – who continues to give
old age a bad name.

Then we had the juniors – sons of the greats – who injected a lot of
their own rhythm into the mix. I heard the junior Vosbikians perform
and I couldn’t tell the difference.

It does my heart so much good at Olympics in watching young Steve
Vosbikian win his gold medals as an exceptional athlete for
Philadelphia and then seeing the father right by his side. I sense a
great deal of mutual respect that started with music and spilled over
to the athletic field.

I had the benefit of being entertained by the greatest oud player who
ever lived. My wife and I were honeymooning in New York City back 42
years ago (eeks!) when we decided to spend an evening at Greektown.

We randomly picked a spot on a Thursday and in we walked. The place
was virtually empty except for a few seats taken at the bar. We were
led to a table and given a couple menus.

The food wasn’t bad but what was to follow was exceptional. In walked
an hombre sporting dark glasses and carrying a large case. Goodness, I
thought it was the Mafia ready to shoot up the place.

Just as we were ready to make a run for it, out came an oud and the
musician began strumming a tune – one song after another done with
impeccable virtuosity.

"Do you take requests?" I asked.

He did. And we gave him all he could handle for the next three hours.
I said "we" because my bride and I were the only ones seated in the
audience.

He couldn’t have noticed otherwise. Come to find out, the man was
blind. If you’re in my generation, you may have heard of Oudi Hrant.

Well, that’s who entertained us on our honeymoon. A year or two later,
he was gone and I still think of that day. I think about how such a
great musician wouldn’t consider it beneath his dignity to play in an
inferior hall as opposed to a Carnegie stage, symphony or performing
stage.

It must be the music in the man. Maybe that’s the reason why guys like
Johnny and Onnik and the late Roger Krikorian gave so much of
themselves to make our world a performing art.

Roger’s gone. How wonderful it would be to have all the musicians come
together annually for a benefit dance in his honor. They could play in
shifts and attract an Olympics-size crowd.

The proceeds could go toward a music scholarship for some deserving
high school graduate. Let the music continue, whether we listen or
dance. We owe it to our proud heritage.

http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2010-02-22-