Armenia Ranks 4th In FIDE Rating List

ARMENIA RANKS 4TH IN FIDE RATING LIST

Public Radio, Armenia
Oct 17 2006

President Robert Kocharyan received today Chairman of the World Chess
Federation, the President of Kalmykia Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, who arrived
in Armenia to participate in the under 20 World Chess Championship.

FIDE President welcomed the efforts of Armenian authorities directed
at the development of chess in Armenia, saying that "when there is
serious attention, there is result and the success of Armenian chess
players is a good evidence of this." IN his words, Armenia ranks 4th
among 165 countries in FIDE rating list.

President Kocharyan said that the recent numerous victories of Armenian
chess players have become inspiring examples for many and the interest
in chess has grown.

The interlocutors exchanged views on the prospects of further
development of chess in our country, and teaching chess in schools.

They turned to the possible collaboration between Armenia and
Kalmykia. Noting that our country has a good experience of cooperation
with Southern regions of Russia, Robert Kocharyan said it is necessary
to combine the economic potential of the countries and clarify the
directions of cooperation.

Ryzhkov: "How Can We Punish Armenians, When We Live Beside Them?"

RYZHKOV: "HOW CAN WE PUNISH ARMENIANS, WHEN WE LIVE BESIDE THEM?"

PanARMENIAN.Net
17.10.2006 17:02 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Russia’s actions regarding Georgia are not
aimed against Armenia, Co-Chair of Armenian-Russian Commission on
Interparliamentary Cooperation Nikolay Ryzhkov stated in Yerevan. "We
never thought to punish our friends. How can we punish Armenians,
when we live beside them? Moreover given 2 million Armenians living
in Russia," he said.

Ryzhkov is sure that Russia’s political leaders did not have thoughts
like that, excellent relations between leaders, parliaments and
governments of the two countries are established. "Another matter is
that taking into account the transport communication between Georgia
and Armenia, today’s situation has indirectly influenced Armenia,
however, as far as I know, there is an agreement, according to
which cargo may pass through the territory of Georgia to Armenia,"
he remarked, reports Novosti-Armenia.

ANKARA: "We Must Debate 1915 Ourselves"

"WE MUST DEBATE 1915 OURSELVES"
Tolga Korkut

BÝA, Turkey
Oct 16 2006

"Genocide Denial Law" will neither serve to resolve incidents in 1915
nor benefit Armenians in Turkey says minorities law expert attorney
Cetin. "Turkey should come to the level where it can solve its problems
itself" believes EU specialist Dr. Aktar.

BÝA (Istanbul) – Minority Law expert, attorney Fethiye Cetin has
said the French Parliament’s passing of the bill on the denial of
an Armenian genocide will neither serve to resolve what happened in
1915 in Turkey under Ottoman rule not benefit the Armenian community
in today’s Turkey.

"Just the opposite", she said, "as we have seen in the past it will
inflict harm. Because the nationalist circles in Turkey use such
bills and decisions as an excuse and increase the repression and
expression of resentment of Armenians. Unfortunately we hear such
expression from official mouths".

Cetin, also the author of the Turkish book Anneannem (My Grandmother)
based on the true story of her maternal grandparent being converted to
Turkish Islam in the broader concept of Christians and Armenians later
becoming Turks and Muslims, believes it is wrong to "turn such grief
in history into material for political purposes" and that Armenian,
Turkish and French intellectuals need to work together to preempt
the goals of this latest legislation and similar other.

"Turkey should do the same thing" she said. "Intellectuals should
preempt all legislation that can block mutual discussion, dialogue,
refreshing of memory and empathy".

According to Cetin Turkey needs to come to the point where it can
solve the problem itself and that the only way forward for this is
to conduct work based on refreshing of memories and empathy.

"Unless we solve this problem ourselves, it is tying up Turkey’s
feet. It is being turned into material of political benefit to some
parliaments. This is very painful. Turkey should as a priority solve
the problem and should get rid of these things that tie her down."

Cetin says a solution to the problem related to what the Ottoman
Armenians encountered in 1915 is based on two things:

Memory revival: "We need to work on memory based on mutual dialogue
in Turkey".

Developing empathy: "We have an empathy problem in the society. We
need to be able to see and feel the grief of others for real outside
of the bounds of all political conflicts and nationalist prejudice.

We need to be able to listen to each other’s grief, see it and feel
it. Such initiatives have started and it has been seen they have very
positive effects. People have started to isten to the grief of each
other. The path should be opened for this."

Cetin believed that what happened in 1915 "is sensitive and painful,
requiring a priority solution" but that the sharing of memories on
mutual dialogue and developing empathy between the communities is an
essential part of that solution.

"If we look at the law adopted at the French Parliament" she adds, "it
can be seen this serves neither memory work nor developing empathy".

Aktar: We need to debate the massacre

Bahcesehir University European Union Center President Dr. Cengiz
Aktar also believes that France took a mistaken decision which he
describes as being "foolish".

In an interview with the Turkish NTV television on the issue, Aktar
said that rather than allow third parties to take over the issue "we
must talk ourselves that there was not a genocide but that there was
a serious massacre. If this happens, we will not leave the discussion
up to lawmakers at the French Parliament".

Aktar believes it would be a mistake to regard the issue only in the
context of Franco-Turkish relations or give impulsive reactions. He
says the Turkish government can overcome this period.

"In France there has been no debate that Turkey would be further
excluded or that it would be excluded from the EU process. But if
we give a response in the same way, it will mean a continuation of
a no-solution" he said.

Noting that there could be economic reaction to the decision, Aktar
recalled French capital had over 5 billion euro in investments in
Turkey and said "it would be mistaken for us to touch the industry".

–Boundary_(ID_Kl1Bo1xGHREK6O/pRc eS3A)–

French President Sorry Over Adoption Of Armenian Genocide Bill

FRENCH PRESIDENT SORRY OVER ADOPTION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL

Xinhua General News Service
October 15, 2006 Sunday 6:00 AM EST

French President Jacques Chirac expressed his regret over adoption of a
bill that would make it a crime to deny the alleged Armenian genocide,
Turkey’s semi- official Anatolia news agency reported on Sunday.

Chirac made the regret on Saturday evening over a telephone call
to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, saying that he was
sorry over the adoption of the Armenian genocide bill in the French
National Assembly.

"I am very sorry over the initiative of the French National Assembly.

I understand your feelings and furthermore I share them, " Chirac
was quoted as saying.

The report said that Chirac noted this was a development pertaining
to the upcoming general elections in France, vowing that he would do
his best to prevent the bill to become a law.

The French president said the adoption of the bill would not affect
Turkey’s negotiations with the European Union (EU), reiterating his
support to Turkey’s EU process.

Erdogan, for his part, briefed Chirac the indignation of the Turkish
people and his government, underscoring that the bill contradicted
freedom of speech principle in the French constitution.

On Thursday, the French National Assembly adopted a bill calling for
up to a year in prison and fines of up to 56,000 U.S. dollars for
anyone who denies the Armenian genocide in the early 20th century.

The bill must be passed by the Senate and signed by French President
Jacques Chirac. However, business and consumer groups in Turkey have
threatened to boycott French products.

Turkey, which is facing increasing pressure from the EU to fully
acknowledge the killings, has always denied that up to 1.5 million
Armenians were subjected to genocide.

But Turkey does acknowledge that up to 300,000 Armenians died during
fighting and efforts to relocate populations away from the war zone
in eastern Turkey.

ANKARA: Turkish General Staff Says Shots Fired On Border Troops From

TURKISH GENERAL STAFF SAYS SHOTS FIRED ON BORDER TROOPS FROM ARMENIA

Anatolia news agency, Turkey
Oct 13 2006

Ankara, 13 October: "Turkish soldiers came under harassing fire from
Armenian territories on the Turkey-Armenia border on 11 October 2006,"
the Turkish General Staff said on Friday [13 October].

According to the General Staff, two shots were fired on Turkish
soldiers from Armenia.

Turkish General Staff has informed the Turkish Ministry of Foreign
Affairs and asked it to take appropriate action on the border incident.

There were no casualties or property damage due to the harassing fire
from Armenia.

What Caused A Century Of War?

WHAT CAUSED A CENTURY OF WAR?
By Edward Cuddihy – News Book Reviewer

Buffalo News, NY
Oct 15 2006

Nonfiction

At the dawn of the 20th century, the West enjoyed an economic and
social prosperity unequaled in 1,600 or 1,700 years. The industrial
revolution had fueled an economic powerhouse; empirical nationalism
had led to worldwide European domination. Western religions had long
ago learned to live in relative harmony, and the peoples of the West
had carved out their own megastates, often along ethnic lines. The
people of the European peninsula appeared on the verge of unimagined
greatness.

What followed was a century of barbaric bloodletting which began
as localized fratricide and mushroomed into an orgy of worldwide
indiscriminate killing. This debacle reached a pinnacle of madness
just before the midpoint of the century and then continued to bubble
on in a series of lethal aftershocks nearly to the century’s close,
leaving the West fragmented, economically emaciated and decidedly on
the descent.

This is the way best-selling author and historian Niall Ferguson
sees the 20th century as he attempts in his latest book to answer
the question: Why did such a thing happen?

Keep in mind that Ferguson is Tory to his roots, and despite ties to
Harvard and Stanford universities, he views the world from the banks
of the Thames. So to him, the capital and center of the West is London.

This massive work is the latest in Ferguson’s string of six volumes,
and perhaps represents his most ambitious work to date. And he’s still
in his mid-40s. In this volume, he attempts the task of analyzing
the events of the past 100 years in the context of the struggle to
dominate the West, and thus, the world.

As he did in earlier volumes, especially in "The Pity of War," and
"The Cash Nexus," Ferguson takes pleasure in debunking the rock-solid
premises of modern historians. And this debunking, often controversial
and sometimes politically incorrect, is backed by mountains of research
and copious statistics.

You can’t argue with his facts, though you might have misgivings about
some of his interpretations, because, as you know, facts seldom if
ever speak for themselves.

A sampling of his premises:

~U The Holocaust, as horrific and inexcusable as it was, was one of
a series of racial wars perpetrated throughout the world. He cites
as being racially motivated Stalin’s purges, Mao’s civil war, the
Armenian genocide at the hands of the Turks and the Japanese mass
murder of its mainland neighbors.

~U Hitler’s decision to attack the Soviets was an attack on "Jewish
Bolshevism," a threat to the Third Reich.

~U He questions whether Adolf Schicklgruber, known to the world
as Hitler, or Iosif Dzhugashvili, better known as Stalin, was the
greater threat to humankind. On an objective scale of atrocities,
he awards a clear advantage to Stalin, describing Hitler as a "kind
of apprentice." Yet, it is Stalin who is seen smiling like a cat
with Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt in 1940s newsreels,
while Hitler stood for all that is evil.

~U Ferguson continues to develop his theme from his earlier "The Pity
of War" that the British entry into World War I was a mistake of the
greatest magnitude. This was not a war of good versus evil. It was
a natural fallout of the disintegration of the Habsburg, Romanov,
Hohenzollern and Ottoman empires.

~U Appeasement didn’t lead to war. World War II began in 1937
with Japan’s invasion of China. War, he claims, led to attempts
at appeasement.

Some other Ferguson observations, accompanied by massive bodies of
fact, are that Russian, British and U.S. atrocities were on a par with
Germany’s and Japan’s, especially in the indiscriminate fire bombings
of civilian cities. Yet, the ultimate bomb, as atrocious as it might
appear 60 years later, was no more than the natural development of the
science of industrialized warfare, and in fact might be seen as "poetic
justice," an achievement of Jewish scientists, refugees from the Nazis.

And if you think JFK stared down Nikita Khrushchev over Cuba, Ferguson
would disagree, claiming that both men swerved at the last moment in
an international game of chicken. Most of these concepts have surfaced
before. The value of this work is in its clear presentation of an
overwhelming body of facts to back up each assertion. This volume
contains vivid details of atrocities that will be thought-provoking
and sad reminders of man’s treatment of his fellow man. But don’t
look for battles or war heroes. Ferguson treats with the national
psychology and big-picture strategy of the war of the century, not
the invasions or triumphs of one military machine over another.

In fact, if you aren’t familiar with the military history of the
world wars and the ensuing Cold War, Ferguson will leave you lost.

This is a major work. It might tail off in the last quarter of the
century, hinting that the task Ferguson set up for himself was near
impossible – to analyze in great detail the bloodiest century in the
history of mankind. And the Cold War, a mere 50 pages in this 800-page
work, will likely be revisited in another Ferguson book.

This body of modern history, now well over 4,000 pages from the pen
of the prolific Niall Ferguson, just continues to grow in volume and
in depth.

Edward Cuddihy is a former News managing editor.

Armenian dissident sees a threat to free speech

The Irish Times
October 13, 2006 Friday

Armenian dissident sees a threat to free speech

by Nicholas Birch in Istanbul

Turkey: Hrant Dink knows all about freedom of speech and the lack of
it.

An Armenian Turk who edits the bilingual Istanbul-based weekly Agos,
he is the only person to have been convicted so far under a notorious
law that has been used to bring Nobel prize-winner Orhan Pamuk and
dozens of others to trial.

With a six-month suspended sentence under his belt for "insulting
Turkishness", Dink now faces up to three years’ prison under the same
law for describing the deaths of at least 600,000 Armenians in 1915
as "genocide". Not that that has stopped him criticising the French
parliament’s vote yesterday morning to make denying genocide a
punishable offence.

"If this law passes through the senate, I will go to France and say
that there was no genocide, even if it pains me to say so," he said.
"There is no difference in mentality between the Turkish and French
laws. Let French and Turkish justice compete to see which of them can
judge me faster."

Like other liberals here, Dink sees both pieces of legislation as
flagrant breaches of the European Convention on Human Rights, which
argues that freedom of speech can only be limited if national
security, territorial integrity or public safety is under threat.

But his greatest concern is that this slew of legislation and
counter-legislation will stifle the rapidly growing debate in Turkey
on the reality of 1915.

The biggest taboo in a country political analyst Fuat Keyman
describes as "founded on historical amnesia", the Armenian genocide
is the subject of an increasing number of books, exhibitions and
academic conferences. "Beneath the bluster, the Turkish
establishment’s position is crumbling," says Halil Berktay, referring
to the state’s insistence that Armenians were the victims of a civil
war that killed more Muslims.

A historian at Istanbul’s Sabanci University, Berktay was the target
of months of death threats in 2000 when he became the first Turkish
historian publicly to describe 1915 as a genocide.

He doesn’t like using the word, though. "Turks are furious when you
use it, Armenians when you don’t", he said. "What is needed is to
find common ground, but the climate of polarisation makes that near
impossible."

For him, the meddling of any parliament in the matter is "no better
than those Turkish policemen who used to raid tourist hotels at night
to check couples were married."

The author of a powerfully moving 2005 memoir of her grandmother, who
told her late in her life that she was an Armenian who converted to
Islam in 1915, Istanbul lawyer Fethiye Cetin agrees: "These debates
over terminology and statistics are barren,", she says. "They hide
the lives and deaths of individuals and do nothing to encourage
people to listen."

A wake-up call better late than never

The Age, Australia
Oct 14 2006

A wake-up call better late than never
October 13, 2006

NOBEL literature laureate Orhan Pamuk said he was honoured to win,
even though his initial reaction was confusion about the late-night
call.

"It’s such a great honour, such a great pleasure," Pamuk told
journalists at Columbia University, New York, where he studied in the
1980s.

"I’m very happy about the prize."

The boyish Turkish author, now a fellow at Columbia, said the award
was a cause for celebration not just for him, but his country and
culture.

"I think that this is first of all an honour bestowed upon the
Turkish language, Turkish culture, Turkey and also recognition of my
labours," he said.

The decision to award the prize to a writer and campaigner who is an
advocate of Turkey’s European ambitions, and a harsh critic of
authoritarian trends in his country, comes as a boon to freedom of
expression and to Turkey’s beleaguered literary class.

But Pamuk, a hero to Istanbul liberals, is reviled by his country’s
nationalists, who see him as a traitor.

A 54-year-old native and chronicler of Istanbul who has devoted
himself to his writing for more than 30 years, Pamuk was in New York
when the 1.1 million ($A1.8 million) prize was announced in
Stockholm on Thursday.

Sporting a wide grin, the novelist was ebullient as he described how
he learned of the award. His first reaction? "Who is calling me in
the middle of the night? I have a new mobile, there’s something wrong
with my mobile."

Pamuk, who has courted controversy in Turkey by tackling such
subjects as the treatment of the Kurdish minority and the Ottoman
massacre of Armenians during World War I, declined to be drawn by
reporters’ questions.

"This is a time for celebration, for enjoying this, rather than
making political comments," he told journalists.

When pushed, he said: "This is a day for celebration, for being
positive.

"I have lots of critical energy deep in me but I’m not going to
express it today.

"I want to tell my readers, both in Turkey and all over the world,
that this prize will not change my working habits, my devotion to
this art."

CoE Justice Ministers Deliberate On Support To Victims

CoE JUSTICE MINISTERS DELIBERATE ON SUPPORT TO VICTIMS

Panorama.am
12:35 12/10/06

The 27th conference on Council of Europe (CoE) Justice Ministers
kicked off in Yerevan today. The conference is titled: "Victims:
status, rights and assistance."

CoE General Director on Legal Issues Guy de Vel said this topic is
selected because the number of victims in the world is growing. Human
trafficking, terrorism, violence against women and children are
widespread in the world and not only in Europe, the speakers
mentioned. The general director as well ass Anna Lomperova, CoE
representative, presented the legal documents that CoE has adopted
to face the challenges.

They also said a lot more has to be done.

They said there are member-states that have not ratified these
documents. Taking the chance, seven countries, including Armenia,
signed conventions on victims’ rights. Armenian Justice Minister
David Harutunyan and Guy de Vel signed a document on fight against
xenophobia through computer.

Armenian Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan greeted the guests,
welcoming the discussion on victims’ rights.

Margaryan said Armenia has developed normative acts, which will
support judicial reforms and is ready to take up new commitments.

Armen Rustamyan, chairman of interim committee on legal issues at
the Armenian parliament, said the Armenian parliament has adopted a
number of laws on victims. Later he told reporters, "Basically our laws
comply with the European standard. We have problems at the second –
implementation phase. Here the exchange of experience is valuable."

Azerbaijan and Turkey participate on the level of department heads at
the conference. Azerbaijan came with two delegates and Turkey with one.

Representatives from Andorra, Island, Sweden, Liechtenstein and Cyprus
were not present.

BAKU: Turkey Former Foreign Minister: Armenians’ Deportation By Turk

TURKEY FORMER FOREIGN MINISTER: ARMENIANS’ DEPORTATION BY TURKEY IS NOT CONTRADICTION TO INTERNATIONAL CONVENTIONS

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Oct 11 2006

Turkey Foreign Minister of Abdulla Gul administration Yashar Yakish’s
exclusive interview of to APA Turkey bureau.

– Will Turkey deport Armenians from the country if France Parliament
adopts a bill on false Armenian genocide?

– The author of this proposal is Shukru Elekdag (former Turkey
ambassador to he US and CHP MP). Experiences prove this version
acceptable. We can cite as an example the latest events in
Georgia-Russia relations. Russia deported all Georgians (including
legal immigrants) from its territory, because Georgia did the same
with four Russian spies. But Turkey will deport only illegal Armenian
immigrants. Turkey does not contradict to international conventions.

– You are one of those politicians who control Turkey integration
to the EU. Can 70 000 illegal Armenian immigrants live and work in
France? Don’t you think Turkey is too magnanimous to Armenia?

– Of course, if wed deport Armenians the West will express their
dissatisfaction. Armenian lobby is very active in France. One of the
best friends of France Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy is Patrick
Devechiyan. He plays an important role in setting the position
of ruling party in France. The head of Turkey Friendship Group in
France Parliament invited us to breakfast during our visit to the
country last week. But France Socialist Party forbade its members to
have a breakfast with us. Because Armenians told them that Turkish
parliamentarians can ask you questions to which it will be difficult
to answer. I regret that France parliamentarians are in hand of
Armenian lobby.

– Don’t you think Armenians want to make Khojali genocide forgotten
by bringing false Armenian genocide to the fore?

– We should discuss this problem with our Azerbaijani colleagues. We
should acknowledge that Armenians are more active than we are. We react
only after they bring something false to the fore. If we object to
the discussion of false genocide in France Parliament and do nothing
later it means we undermine self-confidence.

– Will Turkey pass from word to deed?

– Devechyan said Turkey will object to the adoption of bill by France
Parliament for some time and then come down, because did the same
when France Parliament recognized the false genocide. He mentioned
that Turkey promised to break economical relations with France, but
trade turnover rose by 30 percent between the two states since that
time. Devechiyan also added that Turks never pass from words to deed.

– Are Turkish people difficult to act systematically?

– We treat this as additional problem. But we should set up special
commission to deal with the problem. Turkey should lobby as long as
the situation is table.