Turkey’s Prime Minister Says No Genocide In Darfur

TURKEY’S PRIME MINISTER SAYS NO GENOCIDE IN DARFUR

Tert
Nov 9 2009
Armenia

While the eyes of the international community are the message Turkey
will deliver to Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, wanted by the
International Criminal Court (ICC) for war crimes and crimes against
humanity in Darfur and scheduled to arrive today in Ä°stanbul for a
meeting of Muslim countries, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has
reiterated his view on the Darfur issue, saying there was no genocide
there, reports Turkish news agency Today’s Zaman.

Bashir, who in March became the first sitting head of state to
be indicted by the ICC at The Hague, is among heads of state and
government that Ä°stanbul will host for an economic summit during the
25th session of the Standing Committee for Economic and Commercial
Cooperation (COMCEC) of the Organization of the Islamic Conference
(OIC).

Erdogan, speaking on Sunday in an interview broadcast by the Turkish
Radio and Television Corporation (TRT), noted that Bashir was an
invitee of COMCEC, thus no bilateral invitation was extended by Turkey,
reiterating earlier statements by Turkish leaders and officials.

"Gaza and Darfur should not be confused with each other.

Fifteen-hundred people were killed in Gaza. If there was something like
this in Darfur, we would follow that to the end as well," Erdogan said,
in response to those criticizing him for not showing Darfur the same
kind of sensitivity he has shown vis-a-vis Israel’s Gaza offensive.

ArmenTel opens 10 sales and service offices in Armenia

ArmenTel opens 10 sales and service offices in Armenia

2009-11-06 16:19:00

ArmInfo. ArmenTel (trade mark Beeline) has opened 10 sales and service
offices in all over Armenia. Director General of ArmenTel Igor
Klimenko was present at the opening ceremony of one of the offices in
Yerevan, Khudyakov street 165/15 in Avan district. The rest offices
were opened at Koryun str, 7b, Raffi 33/5, Paruyr Sevak 51, Nubarashen
22/1. The rest 5 new offices were opened in the regions – Armavir,
Abovyan, Byuregavan, Razdan and Bagradashen village. Another 10
offices will be opened by the end of the year. ‘In these new offices
we are creating all the conditions to give maximally comfortable
services to our present and potential clients’, – Klimenko said and
added that at present the company studies effectiveness of opening new
offices for giving service to the corporative clients, just the same
way as it was done in September, at the Northern Avenue in the center
of Yerevan. At present Beeline has 72 offices in Armenia, 21 of which
are in Yerevan.

NATO Cannot Protect One Of The Parties To The Process Between Armeni

NATO CANNOT PROTECT ONE OF THE PARTIES TO THE PROCESS BETWEEN ARMENIA AND TURKEY

ArmInfo
2009-11-06 13:40:00

ArmInfo. Normalization of the relations between Armenia and Turkey
is important for stabilization in the South Caucasus region, Special
Representative of NATO Secretary General for Caucasus and Central Asia,
Robert Simmons, said in Yerevan today.

He also added that the Armenian-Turkish Protocols are regarding
the relations between the two countries. Although NATO supports
establishing of relations between Armenia and Turkey, it cannot become
a participant in the process and support any of the parties, he said.

Simmons hopes that the protocols will ratified in the parliaments of
both states.

He also said that he discussed the Armenian-Turkish process with the
leadership of Armenia and NATO is pleased with possible normalization
of relations between Armenia and Turkey.

EU Addresses Protest Note To Turkey

EU ADDRESSES PROTEST NOTE TO TURKEY

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.11.2009 18:57 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir has
announced plans to attend an Organization of the Islamic Conference
(OIC) summit in Istanbul on Monday.

Turkey has received a request from the European Union to reconsider
its decision to invite Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir to
a meeting of Islamic countries, a Turkish foreign ministry official
said on Friday.

Bashir has announced plans to attend an Organization of the Islamic
Conference (OIC) summit in Istanbul on Monday.

The Turkish official, who is in Paris accompanying Turkey’s Foreign
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu during a state visit, showed the EU request
letter to Reuters, which reads: "The EU calls on Turkey to reconsider
its invitation to Bashir to attend the OIC meeting."

Richard Giragosian: Turkey Cannot Bring Karabakh Issue Back To The A

RICHARD GIRAGOSIAN: TURKEY CANNOT BRING KARABAKH ISSUE BACK TO THE AGENDA OF ITS RELATIONS WITH ARMENIA ANY MORE

ArmInfo
2009-11-05 15:59:00

ArmInfo. The Karabakh conflict is not included in the Armenian-Turkish
protocols. This is very important and it means that Turkey will not
bring it back to the agenda any more, Richard Giragosian, director of
the Armenian Center for National and International Studies ( ACNIS),
said at a seminar in Yerevan.

He said that even U.S. officials admit that Nagorny Karabakh issue is
the second track of diplomacy between the two parties which moves much
slower and there is less optimism about possible breakthrough for the
nearest future. He said that Nagorny Karabakh conflict is naturally
related to the Armenian-Turkish relations. However, he thinks that
this issue is no longer linked to these relations directly and can no
longer be a precondition to the Armenian-Turkish diplomacy. This issue
must not be brought back on the agenda any more, R. Giragosian said.

Tickets For 2010 Olympic Winter Games Can Be Purchased Through IOC W

TICKETS FOR 2010 OLYMPIC WINTER GAMES CAN BE PURCHASED THROUGH IOC WEB-SITE

PanARMENIAN.Net
05.11.2009 16:53 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The final stage of on-line ticket sale for the
Olympic Winter Games-2010 in Vancouver will be launched November
7, the official website of the International Olympic Committee
says. 100 thousand tickets for various competitions will be on offer,
particularly for team sports – curling and hockey, including the
finals. Organizers are also plan to launch a special website for the
ticket resale.

Aznavour Would Be Pleasant To See Open Borders

AZNAVOUR WOULD BE PLEASANT TO SEE OPEN BORDERS

armradio.am
04.11.2009 10:25

Western Armenian lands must be returned to Armenia, said Armenia’s
Ambassador to Switzerland, famous singer Charles Aznavour in an
interview with Italy’s RIA3 television channel.

"When I was born, in 1924, they promised Armenia to the return of
lands. I am 85 years old and I cannot wait much longer," said Aznavour.

"In 1924, Stalin promised Armenia the return of Erzeroum, Erzngan,
Sebastia, Kharpert, Dikranagert, Bitlis, Van, Moush… The ‘Wilsonian
Armenia’ also included regions of Trabizon, Erzeroum, Van and Bitlis,"
said Aznavour while welcoming the prospects for establishment of
diplomatic relations between Armenia and Turkey.

"It would be pleasant to see open borders in the last part of my life,"
added Aznavour

Turkey Is Rising Star For Europe: Safaryan

TURKEY IS RISING STAR FOR EUROPE: SAFARYAN

news.am
Nov 4 2009
Armenia

Europe does not have an unambiguous slant on Armenia-Turkey relations
that disables upsetting unbalance between Armenia and Turkey, Head
of the oppositional "Heritage" faction Stepan Safaryan stated at
Nov. 4 press conference after the meetings with European structures’
officials in Brussels and Strasburg.

According to him, Armenia would have been interested in balancing
of asymmetric relations through Europe’s mediation by undertaking
certain issues of Armenia-Turkey agenda. Safaryan also spoke of
Turkey’s perception in Europe as a rising regional star for which
the door to OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs is open. According to him,
today European politicians link Armenia-Turkey normalization with
Karabakh conflict resolution, though do not baldly say it. It is the
result of successful blackmail by Baku, that by turnback to Russia
implied fallout both for Turkey and Europe. Rejecting the linkage
between thes two processes, Armenian authorities enjoy permit for
making statements for backroom, Safaryan assured.

Presently, Turkey is also eligible of enjoying this right. So far,
both countries exercise this right with a glance to certain problems,
the politician concluded.

Monument At University Sonoma Now Bears Hrant Dink’s Name, Alongside

MONUMENT AT UNIVERSITY SONOMA NOW BEARS HRANT DINK’S NAME, ALONGSIDE THOSE OF OTHER PEACE ACTIVISTS

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.11.2009 20:20 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ A monument at California State University Sonoma
honoring the survivors and victims of genocides and hate crimes now
bears the name of Agos Armenian weekly’s founder, Hrant Dink, alongside
the names of peace activists and visionaries such as Mahatma Gandhi,
the Dalai Lama, Albert Einstein, Vaclav Havel and Pete Seeger.

Hrant Dink’s name was added in March thanks to the sponsorship of
Armenian organizations in California, which financed a memorial
"brick" in Dink’s honor.

Dink’s widow Rakel Dink visited the monument during a September
28-October 6 trip to the U.S., where she was hosted by Mgrditch
Melkonyan, pastor of the First Armenian Presbyterian Church of Fresno,
California.

ANKARA: ‘October Road’ Taken By Gov’t Isn’t Perfect

‘OCTOBER ROAD’ TAKEN BY GOV’T ISN’T PERFECT
Fulya Ozerkan

Hurriyet Daily News
Nov 2 2009

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu. Hurriyet photo

The government-sponsored peace initiative in October encompassing a
wide region from the Caucasus to the Middle East is positive following
months of effort but cannot be portrayed as excellent considering
the results, according to foreign policy analysts.

"October can be considered positive in terms of foreign policy but
it would not be correct to portray it as perfect. There are questions
and exclamation marks," Faruk Logoglu, Turkey’s former ambassador to
Washington, told the Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review.

Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu earlier declared October to be the
"month of peace" as Ankara’s far-reaching diplomatic efforts included
the normalization of relations with Armenia and transitions from
cooperation to integration with Iraq, Syria and Iran.

"We can say October was a month of peace as we did not see any
conflicts," said Huseyin Bagcı, an international relations professor
at the Middle East Technical University. "It is not easy to get swift
results when the process is ongoing on all fronts," he said.

The Caucasus

Despite the signing of the documents between Turkey and Armenia in
Zurich on Oct. 10, the process remains deadlocked, Logoglu said.

"Their signing was good but it is not possible to talk about the
concept of peace before the whole process is concluded. The problem
is still there for the time being," he said.

The agreements inked with Yerevan must pass the Turkish and Armenian
parliaments before they can come into force. The development in
Turkish-Armenian ties drew criticism from Azerbaijan, which opposed
the signing because there has not yet been a settlement to the
Karabakh problem.

"Turkey cannot unilaterally resolve the Karabakh dispute. This is
being abused by Azerbaijan," said Bagcı.

The Middle East

The government has advanced relations with Syria, Iraq and Iran in
the region while the ties with Israel moved in the opposite direction,
said Logoglu.

Accompanied by many ministers, Davutoglu traveled to Syria on Oct. 13
and chaired the first ministerial meeting of the high-level strategic
cooperation council with his Syrian counterpart, a mechanism similar
to the one established with Iraq. Over the weekend, the minister
was in northern Iraq where he met with Iraqi Kurdish leader Massoud
Barzani and inaugurated Turkey’s consul in Mosul.

"I welcome Turkey’s relations with Iraq but we don’t know how the
central government in Baghdad looks to growing ties between Turkey
and the Kurdish administration in the north. I don’t think [Baghdad]
applauds it," said Logoglu. "The current picture in Iraq is not good.

This is a question mark."

Turkey has been the protector of the Iraqi Kurds, according to Bagcı,
who welcomed the government’s northern Iraq policy. "Turkey is a
project manager in the region, not a project designer. The project
designer is the United States and Europe," he said.

EU vs Middle East

Tension in Turkish-Israeli relations already strained by the Gaza
War spread to the military domain when the government excluded Tel
Aviv last month from a military exercise for political reasons.

"Turkey is criticizing Israel in a constructive way [and is
suggesting] that the latter should change its policy but Turkey is
not anti-Israel," said Bagcı.

Ankara’s alliance with Iraq, Iran and Syria have once again sparked
fears over the direction of foreign policy and is leading to
speculation in Western media that Turkey is drifting away from the
Europe Union.

"Turkey’s level of integration with Iraq, Syria and Iran is, on paper,
superior to that with the EU, which shows not where Turkey is looking
to but where the country is," said Logoglu. "I think Turkey’s cooling
ties with Europe and turning its face to Arab and Islamic countries
is not a foreign policy preference but a result of Turkey’s domestic
policy dynamics," he said.

Bagcı, however, said Turkey was anchored to the West but had
broadened its vision in comparison to past years. "Turkey is like a
sheep with its rope tied to a post. The rope was two meters in the
past, but today, the sheep is grazing on a wider pasture – although
the post is still there, that is, the West," he said.