Protest Outside US Embassy In Baku

PROTEST OUTSIDE US EMBASSY IN BAKU

Tert.am
15:18 ~U 09.03.10

Demonstrators have protested outside the US embassy in Baku against
a US House committee decision to recognize the deaths of Armenians
in 1915 as genocide, reports 1news.az.

On March 8, students and youth demonstrated at 1 pm local time for
about one hour.

They chanted slogans urging the United States to conduct an objective
policy on Azerbaijan and Turkey.

The demonstrators held Azerbaijani and Turkish flags and photos of
the victims of the Khojaly massacre. They urged the United States
to recognize the "massacres of Azerbaijanis committed by Armenians
as genocide."

The spokesperson for the US embassy in Azerbaijan, Terry Davidson,
came out to listen to the demonstrators.

The US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee recently
voted to approve a non-binding resolution recognizing the killing of
Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in 1915 as Genocide.

Does Foreign Policy Need Religion?

DOES FOREIGN POLICY NEED RELIGION?

Gerard Russell
guardian.co.uk
Monday 8 March 2010 15.00 GMT

Do we need more religion in foreign policy? A US thinktank, the
Chicago Council on Foreign Affairs, thinks we do. In a recent report,
it urges diplomats to get over the instinctive queasiness they feel
when they step off their normal turf of secular politics.

The report hints that the US should be open to dialogue with
hardline religious groups such as Hamas or Hezbollah., under certain
circumstances (and this is interesting, because Martin Indyk, former
US ambassador to Israel, is among the signatories).

But its main message is twofold: first, that "religion that is civil
and public", not secularism, is the answer to religious extremism; and
second, that engaging with religion is not just about de-radicalising
Muslims. Religion, it suggests, is a global force for good that the US
should do more to harness. In order to do so, US aid agencies should
direct more funding through faith-based organisations, and diplomats
should learn more about the religions of the countries to which they
are posted.

There are good reasons to disagree. First of all, forays by secular
governments into the field of religion often end up seeming clumsy and
manipulative. Worse, categorising people by their religious belief
can be dangerously divisive – as some Iraqis claimed to me in 2003,
for example, when complaining about western emphasis on the difference
between Shia and Sunnis in Iraq.

It is also simplistic. An approach to the world that divides its people
by religion has little to offer one Jerusalemite who told me proudly
he was "Armenian by ethnicity, Palestinian by nationality, religiously
Christian and culturally Muslim". His words are a reminder that there
are very few foreign policy concerns that are the property of only one
religion. Christian Arabs care about Palestinian suffering as much as
Muslims do; the Taliban’s destruction of the Bamiyan Buddhas angered
many Afghan Muslims, not just Buddhists. When we begin to address
these issues as if they were the concern only of one religious group,
we risk undermining the concept of universal human rights.

In Britain, the only parliamentarian who has unequivocally been elected
by British Muslims is George Galloway – whose own religious beliefs
are rightly his own business, but who has not advertised himself
as a Muslim at all. In other words, Muslims may not seek for their
religious scholars to represent them politically – any more than I,
as a British Catholic, would want to be represented in parliament by
the pope. So let us not assume that dialogue with religious scholars
is a shortcut to avoiding the knotty, secular, political issues that
matter to the people who share their faith.

The report is right, though, in a more fundamental way. Before
I defend it, let me make a full disclosure. Immediately after 11
September 2001, the Foreign Office asked me to set up a unit wholly
dedicated to political dialogue with Muslims – the first of its kind,
as far as I knew.

I got the news as I stood on the steps of a Ramallah restaurant and my
first thought was: they have the wrong man for the job. I knew about
dialogue with Muslims, because that was what I had been doing for
three years. I knew little, though, about dialogue with Islam. The
Muslims that I knew were mostly Palestinian leftist intellectuals
and nationalists. They read Mahmoud Darwish and Edward Said, not Ibn
Taymiyya or Abu Hanifa. They didn’t want a dialogue with the west
about religion: they wanted to hear about social justice and a vision
for peace.

Nonetheless, I feel that the Foreign Office, and the Chicago Council,
were and are pointing in the right direction. If foreign policy
is increasingly to be about shaping the culture and beliefs of
people around the world, rather than simply doing deals with their
governments, then diplomacy will have to change. In the past 50 years
the attention of European governments has been focused on multilateral
institutions and international law. For what were originally good
reasons, culture and beliefs have taken a back seat. This is clearly
due for a reappraisal, in an era in which it has become obvious
that negotiations in Washington, New York or Geneva are inadequate
as a way of making disenfranchised people feel that the world order
includes them.

Heading for a UAF Flight to Armenia-Artsakh

PRESS RELEASE

Regional Executive
Armenian Relief Society of Western U.S.A., Inc.
517 W. Glenoaks Blvd., Glendale, CA 91202-2812
Telephone: (818) 500-1343
Fax: (818) 242-3732
Web Site:
Contact: Rita Hintlian
Email: [email protected]

Heading for an UAF Flight,
Gifts for Armenia and Artsakh leave the ARS Offices in Glendale

Glendale, CA.- On March 10, official ceremonies of the Centennial of
the Armenian Relief Society are set to begin in New York City. As over
85 ARS of Western U.S.A. members from Northern to Southern California
converge to New York City to attend Centennial ceremonies, a truck
load of 27 boxes (weighing half a ton) has already started to make its
way to New York, to eventually reach Yerevan through the next United
Armenian Fund flight.

The boxes include mostly educational and fun toys, school supplies and
new clothing for the ARS Sosse Kindergartens in Artsakh (Karabagh) and
needy children in Armenia. Other than items for children, the boxes
also include clothing for their teachers.

Numerous individual and group donor contributions are included. Some
groups started new traditions of sharing their gifts through the ARS,
others have been doing it for many years. Donations for local children
were already distributed during early January. Two examples of how the
community contributed to this shipment follow.

Homenetmen Ararat Chapter `Arenoush’ Troop #5 (girl scouts), who are
11 to 18 years old, hosted a long-term toy and clothing drive starting
in late October 2009. Over four months, on a weekly basis, scouts from
other `Ararat’ Chapter troops generously contributed to their drive.
The girl scouts delivered the donations to the ARS headquarters, where
Jasik Jarahian, General Manager, hosted a reception for them.

`We hope to make this an annual event’ wrote Elena Mirzaians, one of
the Homenetmen Ararat Arenoush troop 5 members, who added `We send our
deepest thanks to ARS for all of their work and for making this
possible.’

Continuing many years of tradition, gifts also arrived from
Fresno. The AYF `Kevork Chavoush’ Chapter, with the help of other AYF
chapters, Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church and the Armenian
Students Organization of Fresno State, completed another successful
toy drive. Chapter members, while visiting Armenia, were deeply moved
by the children in the orphanages and learnt not to takes things for
granted. The Sevag Jierian, AYF chairperson, noted that they take the
toy drive very seriously and that they have touched people’s hearts.

It is encouraging that young members of our society have been
instilled with such attitudes, which inspire them to give of
themselves to gain the joy of giving, especially, when it comes to
helping children. For the ARS with a century-old tradition to serve
those in need, it is a pleasure to observe educational toys and
supplies helping to build self-esteem, making learning a joy, and
bridging the gaps between the Diaspora and the homeland. We are
grateful that as a member-agency of the UAF, the ARS is entrusted with
the opportunity to make a difference in the lives of the new
generation, locally and globally.

www.arswestusa.org

Turkey’s Opp Parties Call for Withdrawing Protocols from Parliament

Turkey’s Opposition Parties Call for Withdrawing Protocols from Parliament

16:02 ¢ 06.03.10

The adoption of the resolution (H.Res.252) on the Armenian Genocide by
the US Congress Committee on Foreign Affairs has evoked a huge wave of
fury in Turkey.

While Turkish authorities threaten Washington by saying that the
adoption of the resolution could harm US-Turkey `strategic relations,’
two large opposition parties have taken advantage of the situation and
are calling for the Armenia-Turkey Protocols to be withdrawn from
parliament amid concerns that those protocols could be detrimental to
Turkey, according to Turkish daily Today’s Zaman.

`As stated by Foreign Minister Ahmet DavutoÄ?lu, Turkey is not a
country that will act under pressure. Under such circumstances, it
would be a display of weakness to keep the Protocols in the
parliament,’ said Onur Ã-ymen, Deputy President of the
Democrat-Republican Party of Turkey.

Referring to the necessity of calling the Protocols back from
parliament, Oktay Vural, from the opposition Nationalist Movement
Party, said the following: `No single parliament can condemn my
history.’

Tert.am

An Undesired Resolution

Khaleej Times , UAE
March 7 2010

An Undesired Resolution

7 March 2010 The politics of exigency is at work at Capitol Hill. In
what seems to be a mindless and getting-carried-away exercise by US
legislators, Turkish-US relations have come to founder on the rock.
Ankara has reacted angrily to a Congressional panel’s resolution
describing as genocide the killings of Armenians in World War I.

It has also recalled its envoy from Washington in protest, and warned
that a simmer campaign against it would be detrimental to bilateral
relations. President Barack Obama’s election campaign promise to brand
the mass killing of Armenians as genocide has been at the root of the
ongoing discord. This move has unnecessarily dented the growing trust
between both the countries and, to a great extent, almost derailed
Turkey’s evolving thaw with Armenia.

Though Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had urged the House
committee not to vote on the resolution, it seems to be a belated
damage control move. Turkish President Abdullah Gul has correctly
stated that there is no point in penalising his country for a crime it
didn’t commit. He said that it is indeed an injustice to history to
take such a decision with political concerns in mind. Hundreds of
thousands of Armenians were massacred during the First World War as
they were deported en masse from eastern Anatolia by the then Ottoman
Empire. Sowing the seeds of consolation and ensuring reconciliation
between the Turks and the Armenians can only undo that tragic part of
history. In fact, both the countries were on one such path as they had
inked peace accords last October. This extra-foreign policy influence
from US legislators has come as a spanner in the works, destabilising
peace and cooperation prospects in the long run.

If at all the US Congress is interested in being judgmental on
history, there is no dearth of issues. The genocide in the heart of
Europe during the Balkan wars, massacres in the African continent and,
last but not the least, the systematic killings and mayhem in occupied
territories at the hands of Israel can make a fair beginning of
current history. There is no point in playing to the gallery with
issues that serve political objectives of a select gathering, and that
too with insidious consequences. The West, for long, has treated
Turkey with bias and discrimination, as it still waits for a full
membership of the European Union. Its democratic and secular
credentials have always been overlooked for unknown reasons. Despite
being the lone Muslim country, which is also part of NATO, the wisdom
of alienating such an ally is questionable. This Armenian discord is a
purely bilateral issue between Ankara and Yerevan; let them handle it.
Washington will do well to supplement the efforts of both the
countries in reconciling with their bitter past and cementing a
happier future for the region. It’s time for White House to intervene
with the multipurpose of not only saving US-Turkish relations from
deteriorating, but also ensuring that Ankara goes ahead with the
ratification of peace accords with Armenia. Rather than annoying
Turkey, ¨the US can make use of its potential to address the region’s
treacherous problems.

Michael and Kitty Dukakis at Tufts Genocide Commemoration Event

Michael and Kitty Dukakis to Speak at Tufts Genocide Commemoration Event

chael-and-kitty-dukakis-to-speak-at-tufts-genocide -commemoration-event/
By Weekly Staff – on March 5, 2010 –

MEDFORD, Mass. – Tufts University, the Darakjian-Jafarian Chair in
Armenian History, the Department of History, and the National
Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) will sponsor the
annual Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide at Tufts on Tues., April
6, at 7 p.m. The Tufts Day of Remembrance will feature a talk by
former governor of Massachusetts Michael S. Dukakis and wife Kitty
Dukakis titled, `Do We Really Remember the Armenians?’

The commemoration and lecture will take place in Goddard Chapel on
Tufts’ Medford campus. A reception will follow in the Coolidge Room in
nearby Ballou Hall.

Michael S. Dukakis, the son of Greek immigrants, studied law at
Harvard University and served in the Massachusetts House of
Representatives from 1963-70. He was governor from 1975-79 and from
1983-91. In 1988, he was the Democratic nominee for president.
Currently Dukakis is a professor of political science at Northeastern
University and a visiting professor in the UCLA School of Public
Policy and Social Research.

Kitty Dukakis has served on the President’s Commission on the
Holocaust, on the United States Holocaust Memorial Council, on the
board of the Refugee Policy Center, and on the Task Force on Cambodian
Children.

For more information on the lecture, call (617) 489-1610, email
[email protected], or write to NAASR, 395 Concord Ave., Belmont, MA 02478;
or email Prof. McCabe at [email protected].

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2010/03/05/mi

U.S. House Panel’s Vote on Genocide Riles Turks

Truthdig
March 5 2010

U.S. House Panel’s Vote on Genocide Riles Turks

Posted on Mar 5, 2010

Armenian civilians are marched to a prison in Mezireh by armed Turkish
soldiers in 1915.

Turkey has recalled its ambassador and warned of serious damage to
bilateral relations after a U.S. House committee approved a nonbinding
resolution calling the massacre of more than 1 million Armenians
almost 100 years ago a `genocide.’

Turkey has been a strategic location for the U.S., given America’s
wars and oil interests in the region, which has made Washington’s
position on the genocide a hairy issue. ‘JCL

The Guardian:

Turkey’s prime minister warned of serious damage to US-Turkish
relations today after a congressional committee approved a resolution
describing the massacre of more than 1 million Armenians by the
Ottoman empire during the first world war as genocide.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his country had been accused of a crime it
did not commit, adding that the resolution would hamper efforts by
Turkey and Armenia to end a century of hostility.

Turkey last night recalled its ambassador after the house foreign
affairs committee approved 23-22 the non-binding measure despite
objections from the Obama administration, which had warned that such a
move would harm relations with Turkey’a Nato ally with about 1,700
troops in Afghanistan’and could imperil fragile reconciliation talks
between Turkey and Armenia.

tem/turkey_turns_cold_after_house_vote_20100305/

http://www.truthdig.com/eartotheground/i

BAKU: Murat Marjan: "This Is Not History, This Is A Comedy"

MURAT MARJAN: "THIS IS NOT HISTORY, THIS IS A COMEDY"

APA
March 5 2010
Azerbaijan

Washington. Isabel Levine – APA. The Turkish parliament delegation,
that observed the process of the hearing on the "Armenian genocide"
issue at the US House Committee today, called the voting process
"a comedy".

"This is not history, this is a comedy", Murat Marjan, the head
of foreign committee of Turkish Parliament told APA’s Washington
correspondent after the voting.

According to him, US Congress Committee made a biggest mistake in
its history.

Mr. Marjan pointed out that, the voting process was prolonged for
no usual reason. "This is the biggest shame against the history" –
he added.

Turkish representative also stressed that, his government will respond
to that sharply. "The results of this decision will be observed in
the shortest time" – he added.

Then other member of Turkish delegation, former Turkish ambassador to
the US Shukru Elekdag believes that, this it’s unfair decision the
Congress stroke a major blow to the Turkish-Armenian negotiations
and Nagorno-Karabakh peace process as well.

"We said from the very beginning that we are not bluffing", – Mr.

Marjad added to his colleges opinion.

In an conversation with APA’s correspondent Mr.Elekdag also pointed
out that, Turkey will inform Washington about its worries through
different ways.

The Washington Post: Major Lobbying Company Gerhardt Group Receives

THE WASHINGTON POST: MAJOR LOBBYING COMPANY GERHARDT GROUP RECEIVES $ 70,000 A MONTH FROM TURKEY

PanARMENIAN.Net
04.03.2010 18:20 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Each year Americans remember the massacres killed
hundreds of thousands of Armenian men, women and children during and
immediately after World War I, and every year the U.S. Congress is
drawn into a fierce debate between Armenia and Turkey, whether to
characterise the events of early 20th century in the Ottoman Turkey
as Genocide, today’s issue of The Washington Post wrote.

"Introduced this week to the U.S. Congress a resolution on the
Armenian Genocide is calling on the president to publicly recognize
the massacres of 1915 as "genocide" and to use this term during the
annual address to the Armenian community of the USA on 24 April. The
resolution puts President Obama, Vice President Biden and U.S.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in an "uncomfortable " position,
since they, as senators, strongly advocated the recognition of the
Armenian Genocide", the article stated.

According to the newspaper, the resolution has caused Turkey’s
aggression and has intensified its lobbying activities. "The Turkish
government has been spending millions on lobbying in Washington
over the last decade, most of which focused on the issue of genocide
recognition. Major lobbying company Gerhardt Group receives $ 70,000
a month from Turkey ," The Washington Post stressed.

The Armenian Genocide(1915-23) was the deliberate and systematic
destruction of the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire during
and just after World War I. It was characterized by massacres, and
deportations involving forced marches under conditions designed to
lead to the death of the deportees, with the total number of deaths
reaching 1.5 million.

The date of the onset of the genocide is conventionally held to be
April 24, 1915, the day that Ottoman authorities arrested some 250
Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in Constantinople.

Thereafter, the Ottoman military uprooted Armenians from their homes
and forced them to march for hundreds of miles, depriving them of
food and water, to the desert of what is now Syria.

To date, twenty countries and 44 U.S. states have officially recognized
the events of the period as genocide, and most genocide scholars
and historians accept this view. The Armenian Genocide has been also
recognized by influential media including The New York Times, BBC,
The Washington Post and The Associated Press.

The majority of Armenian Diaspora communities were formed by the
Genocide survivors.

Armen Nazaryan Wins Judo 2010 World Cup

ARMEN NAZARYAN WINS JUDO 2010 WORLD CUP

Panorama.am
14:10 01/03/2010

Sport

Armenian judoka, former European champion Armen Nazaryan (66kg) had
successful performance in Judo 2010 World Cup due in Prague, Czech
Republic, February 26-27. It took him 2 min. 54 sec. to win against
the French Florent Urani in the final and gain champion’s title,
Armenian National Olympic Committee press office reported.