Freedom isn’t just academic to him

News & Observer, NC
Oct 16 2005

Freedom isn’t just academic to him
Out of Armenian jail, Duke scholar resumes his work

By JANE STANCILL, Staff Writer

DURHAM — Stuck in a jail cell that steamed to more than 100 degrees
in the daytime, the prisoner couldn’t eat the rice, cabbage soup and
boiled potatoes provided by the guards. The lights stayed on all
night, making sleep difficult. The screams of other inmates
punctuated long days of fear and worry.
The accused criminal was Yektan Turkyilmaz, 33, a soft-spoken Duke
University scholar who spent 60 days in an Armenian prison over the
summer.

The crime, apparently, was his love of books.

Turkyilmaz, a Turkish citizen of Kurdish descent, wasn’t a spy or a
drug smuggler. He was a scholar, and he learned firsthand that
scholarship can be hazardous. He will never again take academic
freedom for granted.

When the captors released Turkyilmaz in August, he walked on wobbly
legs into the sunshine, eyes squinting at the natural light he hadn’t
seen in two months. Now he is back at Duke, quietly working on his
doctoral dissertation and ready to talk about his ordeal.

Accused of smuggling books in the small country in southwestern Asia,
Turkyilmaz underwent what he described as KGB-style interrogations
and a trial that drew worldwide attention. Academics from the United
States and beyond rushed to his defense, signed petitions, created a
Web site and mounted a global campaign for his release from Armenia,
formerly part of the Soviet Union. U.S. politicians and the U.S.
embassy jumped in, exerting pressure on the Armenian government.

The subject of his dissertation is so sensitive that his work is
viewed with suspicion by historic enemies, Armenia and Turkey. And he
believes it may have landed him behind bars.

Turkyilmaz’s research is about how modern Armenian, Kurdish and
Turkish nationalism developed after a traumatic conflict in which
more than a million Armenians were killed starting in 1915. The facts
of the genocide have long been disputed from the Turkish side. It’s a
painful but important chapter in 20th-century history, and one that
Turkyilmaz is said to be uniquely qualified to dig into.

He speaks four languages — Armenian, Kurdish, Turkish and English —
and can read French. He was the first Turkish scholar allowed in the
Armenian national archives to conduct research.

“His trip was unprecedented for a Turkish citizen and also a huge
feather in his cap for his academic career,” said Charles Kurzman, an
associate professor of sociology at UNC-Chapel Hill and one of
Turkyilmaz’s advisers. “That’s high-risk, high-gain research.”

Books spark trouble

Turkyilmaz, who first traveled to Armenia in 2002, has been there
five times. He went back in April and worked for two months, while
also engaging in one of his hobbies — book collecting. He had picked
up more than 100 used books and pamphlets at a flea market in
Yerevan, the Armenian capital. Turkyilmaz already had a collection of
10,000 books, so it was not unusual for him to leave the country with
two heavy suitcases full of books.

The day he was to leave Armenia, Turkyilmaz began to notice something
odd at the airport. A strange man behind him at the security
checkpoint spoke to him in broken English, even though Turkyilmaz had
been speaking Armenian.

“I realized that something was up,” he recalled.

Just after his passport was stamped, he was surrounded by more than
half a dozen agents from the National Security Service, which
Turkyilmaz says “loves to be called KGB.” The agents told him to
empty his pockets. They confiscated his luggage.

He tried to explain that scholars carry books. “I kept telling them I
was a historian, because if I said I am a cultural anthropologist it
doesn’t make any sense to them,” he said.

It became clear, he said, that they already knew a lot about him.

They took the books out of his suitcase one by one and spent seven
hours doing paperwork in the airport, meticulously copying the
titles. At times, Turkyilmaz helped the Russian-educated agents
translate titles that were written in old Armenian.

One of the agents started making accusations, poking a pen at his
stomach.

“He started shouting and cursing at me and said, ‘OK, you are taking
these books to Turks to be destroyed.’ I said, ‘What?'”

But Turkyilmaz and others believe the books were not important to the
Armenian authorities, who dragged them around in plastic bags or
piled them on the floor.

The agents started asking questions that had nothing to do with the
books: What are your political views? What is your family’s ethnic
background? What is your research about? Why did you come to Armenia?
Whom do you know in Armenia?

The arrest came as such a shock that Turkyilmaz said he didn’t really
have time to get scared. “I never thought that they would, like, you
know, detain me. I thought it was something silly.”

They wouldn’t let him call his parents in Turkey. His friends in
Armenia were too frightened to contact his family. For almost 24
hours, his parents didn’t know what had happened to him.

Spy accusations fly

Turkyilmaz was put in a small cell in Yerevan. For the first month,
he said, agents interrogated him almost daily. They went through his
computer files and CDs, and soon Turkyilmaz realized where they were
headed: They would accuse him of being a spy.

An espionage charge could carry a 15-year prison term, he said. One
of his interrogators, Turkyilmaz recalled, told him, “All scholars
are spies. Just tell us whom you are working for.”

On the third day after his arrest, he was charged with an obscure
violation of taking books more than 50 years old out of the country
without permission — a regulation that was unfamiliar to even the
booksellers. The charge fell under a law that also covered drug
smuggling and the transport of guns, explosives and weapons of mass
destruction. It carried a possible prison term of four to eight
years.

In his cell, Turkyilmaz ate fruit and the hazelnut spread Nutella —
items his friends could bring him. He refused food from the jailers.
He was allowed one shower a week.

He had a couple of cellmates who were accused of petty crimes and had
little contact with the outside world, though he did hear occasional
reports of his case on Radio Free Europe.

As word of Turkyilmaz’s detention spread, scholars in North Carolina
and the larger higher education community began to organize.
Turkyilmaz’s professors had initially been told he would be released
any day, but days turned into weeks.

“The nightmare scenario was that the hard-liners in the Armenian
government would try to make an example of Yektan and sentence him to
eight years,” said Kurzman, who started a Web site, ,
to raise awareness of his ordeal.

Human-rights groups, scholarly organizations and the Duke community
sent letters and petitions signed by hundreds of students and faculty
around the globe. Duke President Richard Brodhead wrote the Armenian
president, calling Turkyilmaz “a scholar of extraordinary promise.”
Former U.S. Sen. Bob Dole, who had experience with Armenian affairs,
wrote to President Robert Kocharian and said, “Your treatment of
Yektan makes Armenia look bad — with good reason. Armenia has many
friends in the United States, but we cannot and will not defend the
indefensible.”

Officials at the Armenian embassy in Washington did not return phone
calls about the Turkyilmaz case.

As the summer wore on, Orin Starn, a professor of cultural
anthropology at Duke and primary adviser to Turkyilmaz, monitored the
case and became more concerned that a prison term was likely for his
student.

“The whole idea that you could be sentenced to years in prison for
taking used books out of the country was preposterous,” Starn said.

Refocusing on research

Starn, who attended the trial, watched as Turkyilmaz was led into the
courtroom in handcuffs. In attendance, at some risk to themselves,
were Armenian friends, including booksellers, an accountant, a
janitor and a medical student.

“People love Yektan,” Starn said. “He has friends everywhere. …
People were very willing to do whatever they could to try to get him
out.”

On Aug. 16, a judge convicted Turkyilmaz but gave him a two-year
suspended sentence. After 60 days in prison, he was free but not
allowed to leave the country for two weeks.

E-mail messages and news reports announced his release, and
Turkyilmaz is now a celebrity in his field. But he also worries about
the implications. He may have difficulty traveling in that part of
the world, which could hamper his research. He now has a criminal
conviction on his record, something that could cause him trouble with
U.S. authorities when his visa expires in a few months.

Yet, he said he’s not bitter about the experience, which has cemented
his desire to pursue an academic career in the United States.

“I’m so glad to be back,” he said. “I feel so safe here, so secure. I
just want to go back to my work. That’s the only thing I want to do
with my life.”

www.yektan.org

Egoyan Rips into Pop Culture Icons in “Where the Truth Lies”

Egoyan Rips into Pop Culture Icons in “Where the Truth Lies”

October 15, 2005

In the 1950s, there was no greater entertainment team than manic
comedian Lanny Morris (Kevin Bacon) and suave singer Vince Collins
(Colin Firth). There was also no team with bigger secrets to hide,
including the truth behind how a female corpse managed to turn up in
their hotel room one inconvenient evening. In bringing his adaptation
of Rupert Holmes’ novel, “Where the Truth Lies,” to the screen, Atom
Egoyan follows an ambitious writer’s (Alison Lohman) investigation
into the mystery of a decades-old crime, and in the process once again
explores the many ways humans revise their pasts to salvage their
presents. IFC News’ Dan Persons had an opportunity to speak with the
director: Just a wild guess: The title’s what first attracted you to
the project.

It’s a title that could kind of serve as a guide to a lot of the work
that I’ve done. But I think it was an enormously entertaining and
vivid window into American pop culture that Rupert Holmes provided. I
was delighted by the book and the possibilities, but the latent theme
that the title suggests was compelling as well.

There are several levels to the romanticism in “Where the Truth Lies:”
There’s the otherworldliness of the sequences in the TV studio, but
even when you move out of that environment, you’re dwelling in a
stylized world.

But only because one of the characters, Lanny Morris, is trying to
present that stylized world. He has an agenda with the way he’s trying
to present what his life meant at that time, what his life was geared
towards at the height of his fame. The Kevin Bacon character, in his
voice-over — purportedly writing his autobiography — is trying to
present a version where everything, and anyone, was available to
him. He was this voracious, lascivious, erotic being moving through
countless women, so it behooves his legacy to sustain that.

He does that very meticulously, but we find out that that’s not the
case.

There are obvious parallels between Vince and Lanny and the real-life
team of Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. What was the line you had to walk
to make the characters stand on their own?

Well, in the book, they’re actually modeled after [Martin and Lewis],
and I found that very distracting. I wanted to create an act that
didn’t exist, but which people felt could have existed. There’s a
whole kind of history of duos that we’ve lost a sense of, because we
don’t have teams anymore in our popular culture. There’s a Freudian
make-up to them, which is based on a sort of ego/id principle: One is
unleashed, very impulsive, and the other is always trying to civilize
and tame him. It’s a recurring sort of construction, and I just
thought, Why don’t we look at this idea of the Englishman, the
ultimate civilizing influence, and how that intersects with American
culture at that time? You did have these people like Noel Coward and
David Niven and Rex Harrison, even Peter Lawford — kind of suave and
the picture of etiquette — trying to tame someone else, trying to
keep a lid on it. That just seemed an interesting way to construct a
team. We worked on that and scrupulously avoided direct references to
Martin and Lewis.

Am I off-base in thinking you don’t have any romantic regard for the
past? I’m certainly fascinated by the role of sentiment in the way we
construct our sense of what the past is about, the ability to
manipulate and present histories that may not have been what they seem
to be, but which have a powerful hold over our subconscious
otherwise. Those can sometimes be romantic constructions, and often I
will create a view of something which seems to be loaded with a
romanticism, only to have that deconstructed, ultimately, just because
the characters are trying to arrive at some sort of clarity. But I’m
also trying to create an atmosphere which is seductive and which draws
us in, so I will use any one of a number of stylistic devices to do
that. So sometimes the music can be very romantic, and there’s a type
of imagery which seems to suggest another world, but my goal is to
arrive at something with as much clarity as possible.

“Where the Truth Lies” opens in New York and Los Angeles on October 14,
rolling out to other cities in subsequent weeks. For more on the film, see the
_official site._ ()

IFC is IFC is a network of _Rainbow Media Holdings LLC_
() ,a subsidiary of _Cablevision Systems
Corporation_ () a network of _Rainbow Media
Holdings LLC_ () ,a subsidiary of
_Cablevision Systems Corporation_ ()

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Russia Is Not Oriented Yet

RUSSIA NOT ORIENTED YET

A1+
| 21:36:25 | 13-10-2005 | Politics |

The Armenian enterprises conveyed to Russia due to Property for Debt
Treaty do not function since the Russian party has not decided on
their strategic or civic destination, Co-Chair of the Armenian-Russian
Inter-Governmental Commission for Economic Cooperation, Russian
Minister of Transport Igor Levitin stated during today’s press
conference.

As of restoration of communication via the Abkhaz part of the railway,
the state of the rail line and conditions necessary for its restoration
are being examined at present, he noted. The conditions include
participation of Russia, Georgia and Armenia as well.

Igor Levitin also touched upon matter of RAO UES participation in
development of energy grids of Armenia. He reported RAO UES is a
participant of an energy holding, operating in Armenia. RAO UES will
continue dealing with development of energy grids and generation of
additional electric power, he also confirmed. “As of Iran-Armenia gas
pipeline, the matter was also discussed and we understand Armenian
party’s actions. I consider these logical and correct in the situation
that is available between Gazprom and RAO UES and the Armenian party,”
I. Levitin stated.

Next Session Of Council Of CIS Government Heads To Be Held November

NEXT SESSION OF COUNCIL OF CIS GOVERNMENT HEADS TO BE HELD NOVEMBER 25

Pan Armenian
13.10.2005 20:54 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Next session of the Council of CIS Government
heads is scheduled November 25, reported the CIS Executive Committee
in Minsk. Some 30 issues, 21 of which are ready for consideration,
are to be submitted for discussion. These include forming common
electric energy market of the Commonwealth states, complex of
medium-term measures to promote competitive production at the CIS
internal market and those of third countries up to 2010. The agenda
draft also includes the bill of Convention on Border Cooperation and
the issue of introducing changes and amendments to the provision on
Inter-State Council of Natural and Man-Caused Emergency Situations.

In the course of the session of the Council of CIS Government Heads 25
various documents are suggested to be signed without discussion. These
include agreements on foundations of harmonizing technical regulations,
on joint methodology of customs statistics in foreign trade, on
competition for Commonwealth Prize for achievements in production and
service quality, on concept of development of adult education in CIS
states, on cooperation in work with the youth. A significant part of
documents arranged for the signing is devoted to defense matters and
those of interaction between law-enforcement bodies. Specifically,
agreements on state interaction in fighting trafficking, trade of human
organs and tissues, on cooperation in struggle against hijacking, on
a bureau of coordination of struggle against organized crime and other
dangerous types of crimes are proposed for signing without discussion.

The set of military issues includes signing of documents on targeted
program for providing complex counteraction of CIS armed forces to
air force and means attacks, on making assignments for creation
and development of united antiaircraft defense system of the
Commonwealth states in 2006, on extending the term of implementation
of common programs of enhancement of the united antiaircraft defense
system. These and other questions were considered at the 25th session
fo the CIS Economic Council in Moscow October 12.

Armenian NPP May Be Shut Down In Case Of Alternative Energy Capaciti

ARMENIAN NPP MAY BE SHUT DOWN IN CASE OF ALTERNATIVE ENERGY CAPACITIES

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Oct 12 2005

YEREVAN, October 12. /ARKA/. The Armenian NPP can be shut down only if
alternative energy-generating capacities will be created, RA Minister
of Energy Armen Movsisyan stated at his meeting with Secretary of the
US Energy Department Samuel W.Bodman. During the meeting, Minister
Movsisyan pointed out that Armenia expects the USA’s assistance in
ensuring safety of the Armenian NPP and in developing alternative
energy. Movsisyan appreciated the US assistance to Armenia’s energy
sector as well as presented the sector’s tasks. In his turn, Samuel
W.Bodman expressed readiness to examine the ways of assisting energy
development in Armenia, pointing out the USA’s experience. He also
pointed out the USA’s interest in the project of constructing the
Iran-Armenia gas pipeline. The meeting participants proposed
organizing an Armenian-American energy forum, pointing out the
advisability of participation of not only private sector, but also
financial organizations.

Armenian DM Awards Peacekeepers For Successful Service In Iraq

ARMENIAN DM AWARDS PEACEKEEPERS FOR SUCCESSFUL SERVICE IN IRAQ

Mediamax News Agency, Armenia
Oct 11 2005

Yerevan, 11 October: Armenian Defence Minister Serzh Sarkisyan today
thanked the Armenian peacekeepers serving in Iraq “for successfully
implementing their task”.

Serzh Sarkisyan said this at a ceremony to award the Armenian
servicemen who participated in the international peacekeeping operation
in Iraq, Mediamax news agency reports.

The first rotation of the Armenian peacekeeping contingent, which
serves in Iraq as part of the multinational division under the Polish
command, took place this July. The first non-combatant unit of the
Armenian armed forces, which consists of sappers, medical officers
and drivers, left for Iraq in February 2005.

“You represented the Armenian armed forces in Iraq with credit and
promoted the authority of your motherland. Striving to integrate into
the European family, Armenia cannot stay away from problems facing this
family. We cannot remain indifferent, which is why we are carrying out
peacekeeping missions in Kosovo and Iraq,” the defence minister said.

Armenian Energy Minister Meets U.S. Secretary of Energy

PRESS RELEASE October 11, 2005
Embassy of the Republic of Armenia
2225 R Street, NW, Washington, DC, 20008
Tel: 202-319-1976, x. 348; Fax: 202-319-2982
Email: [email protected] ;Web:

Armenian Energy Minister Meets U.S. Secretary of Energy

On October 11, 2005, Armenian Energy Minister Armen Movsisyan met with his
U.S. counterpart, Secretary of Energy Samuel W. Bodman to discuss
U.S.-Armenian cooperation in the energy sector.

Minister Movsisyan expressed appreciation for continuing U.S. assistance to
the Armenian energy sector, and presented the current status of the energy
sector reforms. The Energy Minister highlighted the need to build
replacement energy capacity prior to the closure of the Metzamor Nuclear
Power Plant. Minister Movsisyan said he looked forward to working with the
United States on the development of alternative energy sources in Armenia,
including geothermal and wind power sources.

It was suggested to explore the possibility for a U.S.-Armenian energy
investment forum with participation of private sector and financial
organizations.

Secretary Bodman expressed willingness to explore ways to assist Armenia on
the issues facing its energy sector, based on relevant U.S. experience. The
U.S. Secretary of Energy inquired on the status of the Iran-Armenian gas
pipeline.

Ambassador Tatoul Markarian also participated in the meeting.

www.armeniaemb.org

Leading Article: The Friendship Bridge Must Not Be Lost: KashmirEart

LEADING ARTICLE: THE FRIENDSHIP BRIDGE MUST NOT BE LOST: KASHMIR EARTHQUAKE

The Independent (London)
October 10, 2005, Monday

The scale of the devastation caused by the earthquake that struck the
Indian subcontinent defies imagination. More than 30,000 are believed
dead and more than double that injured across three countries.

Yesterday, with the death toll still rising, it was clear that the
region worst afflicted by far was Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

Officials described it as the worst-ever disaster to have struck
Pakistan.

None of the countries affected is a stranger to natural disaster.

But, as with the South-east Asian tsunami last Christmas and more
recently with hurricane Katrina, the speed of modern travel and
communications now means that the images of human suffering are
brought into our homes early enough for us to feel that something
can still be done.

And much has been done. International rescue teams arrived in stricken
parts of Pakistan within 24 hours of the disaster. People have been
saved who would otherwise have died. Food, medicine and shelter
have been rushed to the region from dozens of countries, including
Britain. Inevitably there was criticism of lack of co-ordination,
duplicated effort and bureaucratic delays. But this was also a disaster
across vast and difficult terrain.

It would be invidious to draw any direct comparison between the
response to this massive disaster and the aftermath of Katrina in
New Orleans. The two are quite different. But President Musharraf
broadcast an urgent appeal for international assistance as soon as
the extent of the disaster was apparent. Formalities for incoming
aid and rescue teams appear to have been kept to the minimum.

Mutual offers of help between India and Pakistan were an especially
positive development. Natural disasters have provided unheralded
opportunities for human and diplomatic rapprochement in the past. The
Armenian earthquake of 1988 prompted the then Soviet Union to issue an
unprecedented call for international aid and throw open the country
to aid workers and reporters. Greece and Turkey sent rescue teams
and assistance to each other’s country after earthquakes in 1999,
defusing tension in other areas of bilateral relations.

The past two years have witnessed a gradual warming of relations
between India and Pakistan, with attempts to defuse the bitter and
long-running dispute over Kashmir. One of the casualties of Saturday’s
earthquake was the so-called friendship bridge that had recently
facilitated bus and foot traffic across the Line of Control.

The co-operation set in train by the earthquake raises the hope that it
will be the repair of the bridge, rather than its collapse, that will
set the tone for relations between these two neighbours in the future.

Festivities Marking City 2787th Anniversary Start In Yerevan

FESTIVITIES MARKING CITY 2787TH ANNIVERSARY START IN YEREVAN

Pan Armenian
08.10.2005 12:24 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Festivities marking Yerevan Day – the 2787th
anniversary of the founding of the city start in the Armenian capital
today. The measures will start with the opening of festivities at
the National Academic Theater of Opera and Ballet after Alexander
Spendiaryan, while a concert and fireworks will take place in the
Republic Square in the evening. Open doors day will be held in all
medical institutions of the capital and patients will get medical
consultation, humanitarian medicines for free and will be sent
to hospitals if necessary. Concerts with participation of child
bands will be held in Yerevan parks Sunday, while a gala-concert
of Armenian pop stars will take place in the Republic Square in the
evening. Erebuni-Yerevan holiday was first marked in 1967, when the
city was 2750. Before 1988 the holiday was marked annually, however
after declaration of the independence the tradition resumed only
in 1998.

Olli Rehn rencontre a l’ecrivain turc Orhan Pamuk qui sera juge

Agence France Presse
8 octobre 2005 samedi 10:49 AM GMT

Olli Rehn rencontre à Istanbul l’écrivain turc Orhan Pamuk qui sera jugé

ISTANBUL (Turquie) 8 oct 2005

Le commissaire européen à l’Elargissement Olli Rehn a rappelé que la
liberté d’expression était l’une des valeurs-clés de l’UE, à
l’occasion d’une rencontre samedi à Istanbul avec le célèbre
romancier turc Orhan Pamuk, qui doit prochainement être jugé.

“Tout pays qui souhaite intégrer l’UE doit partager cette valeur”, a
déclaré M. Rehn devant la presse après s’être rendu dans
l’appartement stambouliote d’Orhan Pamuk, dans le quartier
cosmopolite de Cihangir.

Ce déplacement s’est inscrit dans le cadre de la “partie privée” du
séjour du commissaire européen, à l’issue de la partie officielle de
sa visite en Turquie qui l’a mené à Ankara et à Kayseri (centre), a
précisé à l’AFP Jean-Christophe Filori, du cabinet de M. Rehn.

Au terme de leur entretien, Olli Rehn et Orhan Pamuk ont dit aux
journalistes avoir parlé de littérature.

“Nous avons parlé de littérature, des enfants, de la vie. Il m’a
remercié pour mes romans, je l’ai remercié pour ses efforts, pour
tout ce qu’il a fait pour la Turquie”, a expliqué le romancier.

Orhan Pamuk s’est félicité du lancement des négociations d’adhésion
de la Turquie à l’UE. “Je lui ai dit que c’était positif au plus haut
point”, a-t-il souligné.

Orhan Pamuk, qui recevra le 23 octobre à la Foire internationale du
livre de Francfort le prestigieux Prix de la paix des libraires
allemands, doit être jugé en décembre devant une cour d’Istanbul pour
“insulte délibérée à l’identité turque” en raison de ses propos
reproduits dans un magazine suisse sur le massacre des Arméniens en
1915 (jusqu’à 1,5 million de morts, selon les Arméniens).

Interrogé sur le fait de savoir s’il avait évoqué avec M. Rehn son
procès, l’écrivain a répondu : “nous n’avons pas parlé du procès
(mais) de la démocratie, des droits de l’Homme, de la liberté de
pensée”.

Très lu en Turquie où il a autant d’admirateurs que de détracteurs,
Orhan Pamuk s’est attiré les foudres des nationalistes turcs pour sa
défense des causes arménienne et kurde.

Le romancier, dont les oeuvres sont traduites en plus de vingt
langues, risque de six mois à trois ans de prison.

Son inculpation avait suscité les critiques de l’UE avec laquelle la
Turquie a entamé le 4 octobre des négociations d’adhésion.