Reflections As An Armenian Woman On International Women’s Day

REFLECTIONS AS AN ARMENIAN WOMAN ON INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY

ianyan magazine

March 8 2010

I often think about what my life would have been like if my parents
had decided to weather the Iranian Revolution and stay put in Tehran.

At least on a superficial level I would look different, forced to wear
a chador if and when I decided to step out of the house, but would my
life be any different? Would I still have chosen the same career path?

Would my priorities change? As a woman, there is little doubt that I
would be subject to some kind of discrimination, certainly if I was
involved in a movement or in media. Having been raised in the United
States, I will never know what my future in Iran would have been like
and because I have never lived in Armenia, I cannot speak from first
hand experience about the trials and tribulations Armenian women face
in their country.

As an Armenian-American however, a title I have finally begun
making peace with, I can speak about the experiences, struggles,
disappointments and long road ahead to progress women who struggle
to blend two identities face.

This two-fold identity is as strong and binding as a long,
interconnected strand of DNA, and the pressures of both are equally
distributed throughout an Armenian-American women’s body.

Two polarizing tides are always battling with each other, one always
overriding the other, but never managing to leave enough room for
equal footing.

Although I feel fortunate enough to have had parents who never once
told me what I could or couldn’t do on the basis of my gender,
on International Women’s Day, here is my take on a few issues
Armenian-American women face.

Marriage

At the heart of Armenian culture lies the nuclear family. Its tentacles
reach outward in every direction, having a hold in every aspect of
your life and the decisions you make for it. While this might keep
you grounded and focused, the traditional expectations piled on you
in a Western, progressive setting is many times too much to handle.

Conquering the world of marriage and dating is perhaps the best
example. You’ll be sitting quietly, at a family gathering, sipping
some tea and eating baklava, and your grandma, aunt, cousin, [insert
relative here] will wander over and sure enough, ask you the age old
question you don’t want to hear.

"So…when are you getting married?"

You look down, trying to rack your brain for an intelligent answer
to a stupid question and you draw a blank, and then, before you can
answer, the microphone is snatched.

"You know, you don’t know have much time. Do you want to be alone
for the rest of your life?"

Armenian relatives and family members have this amazing charm of making
a young 20-something girl feel like a 60-year-old woman with five
cats. It’s precious. The fact is that Armenians, just like other close
knit cultures, have an obsession with marriage. And babies. If you’ve
reached the old age of 25, and still, no outrageously expensive diamond
has appeared on your finger, then that’s it. You better give up hope
right now and build yourself a bunker under the ground, because you’re
doomed. If you can’t get married, what’s the purpose of your life? And
worse, if you don’t pop out some kids no later than a few years of
being married, what will you ever have to look forward to? Clearly,
you are tarnishing the good name and fortune of your family, right?

I have heard stories like this and I have experienced some of it
by extended relatives myself, albeit not as extreme as the scenario
above, but as an Armenian-American woman, there are a few choice words
I have for this particular mentality, mainly, that there is no time
line on love, marriage and family. There is no, "you must" and no
"you have to." You are not less of a person, less of an Armenian,
and certainly not less of a woman if you decide to not get married,
or not have kids, or have kids and get married in your 30s, 40s or 50s.

Your life can play out however you want it to. There is no cookie
cutter formula you must follow.

To Armenian-American women whose goal in life it is to find a money
making Armenian man, I want to say, you are worth so much more than
that. You define yourself and you (not your mother or grandmother)
are in charge of your own life and you are entitled to march to the
beat of your own drum.

Education & Career

It is interesting how Armenian parents push their daughters to get
married and start their lives, yet discourage them from going away
to college and carving out career paths that don’t involve being a
doctor, dentist or lawyer. Even in 2010, I hear stories from college
age women who have settled on local community colleges or universities,
even with acceptance in to some of the best universities the U.S. has
to offer, because their parents denied them the opportunity to be away
from home. Many of those who stay near their families are encouraged
to choose majors not on the basis of passion or creativity, but of
money. The best gift parents can give their children, they feel, is a
safety net lined by dollar bills. This attachment causes a plethora of
problems for talented women who now feel that anything that involves
risk shouldn’t be an option and the possibility of exploring more
than just the 25 mile circle their in is paved with fear.

It’s not un-Armenian to move out before you’re married or to go
hundreds or thousands of miles away from your family in order to
pursue the passions you hold dear to your heart. It is however,
blatant discrimination and bad parenting to never allow your child
to flourish the way they want to, especially when you’ve come to a
country that gives women the opportunities of lifetimes from countries
in which opportunities are not readily available for women.

Guess what? Armenian women have sex. Lots of it, most of them before
marriage. You know what else? It doesn’t make them dirty, used, less
valuable or shameful. It also, has nothing to do with faith or God
and most of the time, it has absolutely no connection to yielding
offspring. Women enjoy sex. Armenian women enjoy sex. They find
pleasure in it and no one has the right to tell a woman that it’s
"amot" to explore their sexuality.

A woman has a relationship with her body, a body that she owns, a body
that is under no law, no rules from anyone else. A sexually active,
responsible Armenian woman is not less of a woman, in fact, I would
argue to say that she is more of a woman. Armenian women, have sex,
but arm yourself with the most important of tools: not religion,
but knowledge. Educate yourself on STDs, about HIV/AIDS, about
contraceptives, about your bodies and do not give a second thought
to any man who has the audacity to tell you or make you believe that
you are less of an Armenian, or less of an Armenian woman because
you did the same thing he’s probably been doing for years.

My ending thoughts are this: Armenian women are strong, confident
human beings who should be given equal opportunities and equal rights
in all aspects of life and should be respected by not only men
and women alike, but they should respect themselves, their wants,
desires, needs and their bodies. Women, do not feel obligated to
carry cultural crosses. Being a strong, independent woman doesn’t
replace your Armenian culture, it enhances it.

http://www.ianyanmag.com/?p=2084

Necessity Of Pension Security System Reforms Topical In Armenia

NECESSITY OF PENSION SECURITY SYSTEM REFORMS TOPICAL IN ARMENIA

NOYAN TAPAN
MARCH 8, 2010
YEREVAN

Issues regarding pension security system reforms were discussed
at RA President Serzh Sargsyan’s March 6 working consultation in
the enlarged staff. Heads of all interested structures took part in
it. According to RA President’s Press Office, S. Sargsyan mentioned
that this system inherited from the Soviet years today obviously
does not meet and correspond to the demands of the time, therefore
the necessity of reforms in this sphere is topical.

RA Deputy Minister of Social Security Artem Asatrian and Deputy
Minister of Finance Vardan Aramian in detail presented the pivotal
directions of the program of reforms stressing that the most important
of them is the introduction of the accumulation system the goal of
which is creating a possibility of living a well-off life for citizens
after the pension age. They also said that the offered model takes
into consideration modern world’s experience of pension reforms and
gives a possibility to confront introduction of the accumulation
system with the principle of social solidarity.

The consultation participants accepting the necessity and importance
of offered changes meanwhile presented their considerations, proposals
and concerns.

S. Sargsyan summing up the consultation charged heads of the proper
bodies to hold additional studies and discussions in connection
with the voiced concerns, to assess all possible risks, to work out
possible mechanisms of guarantees and to present the total work at
the next consultation.

BAKU: Turkish FM: Liberation of occupied Azerbaijani terr. a goal

Trend, Azerbaijan
March 5 2010

Turkish FM: Liberation of occupied Azerbaijani territories was one of
goals of Turkish-Armenian protocols

Liberation of the occupied Azerbaijani territories was one of the
goals of the Turkish-Armenian protocols, in addition to normalization
of the Turkey-Armenia bilateral relations, Foreign Minister Ahmet
Davutoglu was quoted as saying by CNN Turk.

"The international community must understand that, one-sided peace is
impossible in the South Caucasus," he added.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
armed forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and 7 surrounding districts.
Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The
co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia, France, and the U.S. – are
currently holding the peace negotiations.

Armenia has not yet implemented the U.N. Security Council’s four
resolutions on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh region and the
occupied territories.

Hay Tad Cyprus vs Euro News

HAY TAD CYPRUS Vs EURO NEWS

Gibrahayer – Nicosia

Armenian National Committee of Cyprus Press Release (24 February,
2010) – The Armenian National Committee of Cyprus is greatly
disappointed that the TV channel Euro news has produced and broad
casted in early February a false and biased video report on the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict named `Forgotten Victims Of A Frozen
Conflict’ (
-a-frozen-conflict/).
The Euro news reporters, among many inaccuracies, have failed to
comprehend the following:
That Nagorno-Karabakh was never part of Azerbaijan, as such a country
never existed till 1918 when Azerbaijan was formed. That to the
peaceful and civilised demonstrations of the Armenian in Yerevan and
Stepanakert in February 1988, the Azeris responded with massacres of
innocent Armenians in Sumgait and later in Kirobavad and Baku where
the Soviet army interfered to stop the massacres. During these
massacres, some Armenians where burnt ali ve, after which the Azeris
used to dance over the charred bodies. These were scenes reminiscent
to the genocide of the Armenian in Western Armenia from 1915 to 1923.
In 1988 that Azeri forces started the forced evacuation of the
Armenian population of Shahumian north of Nagorno-Karabakh in 1988,
whilst in 1991 the Azeri Ministry of Interior Forces (OMON) forcibly
evacuated the Armenian population of a few dozen villages of southern
Hadrut area of Nagorno-Karabagh. The report misses to point out that
Nagorno-Karabakh was completely blockaded by the Azeris, with no links
(neither aerial, nor land) to the outside world from 1988 to 1992. Its
population had to face hunger and the cold harsh prolonged winters of
those years.
The report also misses to point out in contradiction to a few Islamic
monuments which are relati vely new constructions, there are thousands
of Christian Armenian monuments (many of them ancient) in and around
Nagorno-Karabakh.
Euro news should not sacrifice the truth for the benefit of `balanced
reporting’. The story of Armenian over the centuries has been that of
a retracting country with settlers forcibly settling its areas. On the
other the story of the Turkic Tatar tribes (such as that of the modern
day Azeris) was that of an ever expanding settlements. This had to
stop somewhere and it stopped in Nagorno-Karabakh.

We urge all Armenians to go to the Euro news web site at

and protest the airing of the aforementioned report.
Contact The Chairman of The Armenian National Committee Cyprus Hagop
Manougian on [email protected]

www.euronews.net/2010/02/01/forgotten-victims-of
www.euronews.net/services/feedback/

23 Armenian chess players in European tournaments

Aysor, Armenia
March 6 2010

23 Armenian chess players in European tournaments

Today in Rieca city of Croatia launches European tournament for men
and women. On the tournament will take part 18 representatives of
Armenia, Vladimir Hakobyan, Gabriel Sargsyan, Arman Pashikyan, Tigran
L. Petrosyan, Zaven Andriasyan, Hrant Melkumyan, Artashes Minasyan,
Avetik Grigoryan, Samvel Ter-Sahakyan, Robert Hovhannisyan, Davit
Petrosyan, Vahe Baghdasaryan, Vladimir Poghosyan, Lilit Lazarian,
Elina Danielyan, Lilit Galoyan, Nelly Aghinyan and Anahit Kharatyan.

There will be also chess players from Diaspora, Sergey Movsisyan
(Slovakia), Davit Harutyunyan (Georgia), Sergey Grigoryants (Russia),
Elmira Skripchenko (France) and Yevgenya Dolukhanova (Ukraine).

BAKU: Use of invented facts for political purposes is incorrect

Trend, Azerbaijan
March 5 2010

Turkish MP: Use of invented facts for political purposes is incorrect

05.03.2010 15:25
Azerbaijan, Baku, March 5 / Trend News R.Hafizoglu /

It is wrong to use fictional facts for political purposes and the
adoption of a resolution recognizing the so-called Armenian genocide
is the wrong step from the U.S. Congress towards such an important
ally like Turkey, Turkish MP and Azerbaijan-Turkey Inter-Parliamentary
Friendship Group Co-chair Mustafa Kabakchi said.

U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs adopted Thursday a resolution
recognizing the so-called Armenian genocide with 23 votes to 22.

Armenia claims that the Ottoman Empire committed genocide against
Armenians living in Anatolia in 1915. Making greater efforts to
promote the issue internationally, Armenians have achieved its
recognition by parliaments of some countries.

"This decision [the adoption of the resolution] does not matter for
Turkey because the U.S. Congress and historians do not have any
official documents that prove that the 1915 events were genocide," he
told Trend News over the phone.

The problem should be solved not by politicians, but by the study of
historical sources, he said.

Kabakchi regarded as wrong the use of fictional facts for political
purposes, given that the Turkish policy is not dependent on external
pressure.

"The U.S. Congress and the government should understand that Turkey
has already passed the stage when its policy was dictated by pressure
from external forces," the MP said.

Prior to the discussions, the U.S. President Barack Obama advised the
Congress not to adopt the resolution, CNN Turk reported.

Meanwhile the U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in a telephone
conversation with the chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs of
the U.S. Congress said that the adoption of resolution jeopardizes the
Armenian-Turkish protocols.

Turkish MPs called the committee’s decision "a blow to U.S.-Turkish
relations," adding that Turkey may waive the protocols signed with
Armenia or amend them, as the Armenian Constitutional Court did.

U.S.-Turkish relations have reached a higher level and the U.S. should
not risk the progress made in resolving Armenian-Turkish relations,
Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said March 4.

Turkish and Armenian Foreign Ministers Ahmet Davutoglu and Edward
Nalbandian signed the Ankara-Yerevan protocols in Zurich Oct. 10.

Diplomatic relations between Armenia and Turkey have been frozen due
to Armenia’s claims of an alleged genocide and its occupation of
Azerbaijani lands. The border between them has been closed since 1993.

NKR President expressed condolences to Sergei Bagapsh

news.am, Armenia
March 5 2010

NKR President expressed condolences to Sergei Bagapsh

16:26 / 03/05/2010 Nagorno-Karabakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan
sent a condolence letter to his Abkhazian counterpart Sergei Bagapsh
for death of country’s first president Vladislav Ardzinba.

`Abkhazia and its people suffered a great loss with the death of the
first Abkhazian President Vladislav Ardzinba.

Ardzinba was one of the originators of the national-liberation
movement of Abkhazia and headed the republic at a most crucial period
of its history. Under his governance, Abkhazia overcame all the
hardships with dignity, embarked firmly on the path of further
strengthening of its statehood.

Ardzinba is widely known far beyond Abkhazia. He enjoyed deep respect
and warm feeling in Artsakh.

On the behalf of the people and the authorities of Nagorno-Karabakh
Republic I express my condolences and support to You and to the
fraternal people of Abkhazia in connection with this irretrievable
loss,’ reads the letter, Central Information Department at NKR
President Office informed NEWS.am.

ANKARA: Turkey criticises Obama admin as weak during Armenia vote

, Turkey
March 5 2010

Turkey criticises Obama admin as weak during Armenia vote

Davutoglu said Obama Administration did not throw enough of weight
around the issue.

Friday, 05 March 2010 14:41

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Friday that the adoption
of the Armenian resolution in the U.S House Committee on Foreign
Affairs showed that the Obama Administration did not throw enough of
weight around the issue.

The Committee on Foreign Affairs of the U.S. House of Representatives
adopted a resolution Thursday with 23 votes against 22, calling on
U.S. President Barack Obama to recognise the tragic events of 1915
–which took place shortly before the fall of the Ottoman Empire– as
Genocide.

Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu called on President Barack Obama’s
administration to block the resolution. He said it should have done
more to stop it being passed by the House of Representatives Foreign
Affairs Committee.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton had spoken with the
committee’s chairman, Democratic Rep. Howard Berman,shortly before the
voting warning that such a vote would jeopardize reconciliation talks
between Turkey and Armenia.

The adoption of the resolution stirred wide reaction in Turkey which
strongly rejects the genocide allegations and regards the events as
civil strife in wartime which claimed lives of many Turks and
Armenians.

"Do more"

Davutoglu told an exclusive press conference Friday that the Obama
administration’s late intervention showed it did not put enough weight
around the issue.

He said adoption of the resolution not only risked slowing down of the
recent rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia but completely
jeopardised the process, urging the U.S. administration to exert more
efforts to stop such attempts.

Davutoglu said Turkey made great contributions to the peaceful vision
of the Obama administration noting that these should not be sacrificed
for domestic political ends.

He said those who argued that the adoption of the resolution would
pressurize Turkish Parliament to adopt the protocols were dead wrong,
adding that Turkey did not make foreign policy decisions under
pressure.

Davutoglu callled on the the U.S. House of Representatives to review
their position on this issue noting that their reckless resolution
hampered a historic peace between Turkey and Armenia and harmed the
Turkey-U.S. relations.

"We expect the US administration to make more efficient efforts from
now on" to stop the resolution from advancing to a full House vote, he
said.

"We hope Turkish-US ties will not be put to a new test … otherwise,
the prospect that we will face will not be a positive one," he said.

Davutoglu said Turkey summoned its ambassador to U.S. Namık Tan to
Ankara to discuss t Turkey’s possibble reaction, and steps to be taken
in Turkey’s relation’s with the U.S.

He said they would also discuss the issue with the President, the
cabinet and the opposition, adding that the issue was a matter of
national honour for Turkey.

Agencies

www.worldbulletin.net

Turkey pulls envoy after ‘genocide’ vote

United Press International UPI
March 5 2010

Turkey pulls envoy after ‘genocide’ vote
Published: March. 5, 2010 at 9:41 AM

ANKARA, Turkey, March 5 (UPI) — Turkey recalled its U.S. ambassador
after a House committee approved a resolution that uses "genocide" to
describe the mass deaths of Armenians in World War I.

The House Committee on Foreign Affairs narrowly approved a non-binding
resolution 23-22 Thursday, formally calling on President Barack Obama
to characterize the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Armenians
during World War I as genocide, the online Christian Science Monitor
reported Friday.

The vote proceeded despite pleas against it from the White House and
State Department, and sparked a withering response from Turkish Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

"We condemn this resolution accusing Turkey of a crime that it had not
committed," Erdogan’s office said in a statement. "Our ambassador to
Washington, Namik Tan, was recalled tonight (Thursday) to Ankara for
consultations after the development."

Ankara said the resolution’s passage could fracture relations with
Washington and jeopardize the delicate reconciliation process between
Turkey and Armenia.

"Turkish-U.S. relations are experiencing their most successful period
in history," Erdogan said Tuesday. "I hope that they will not be
damaged by such initiatives."

Since the resolution passed, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi must decide
whether to bring it to the floor, the online publication said.

Armenians said Ottoman Turks systematically killed up to 1.5 million
Armenians during the war. Turkey has denied the genocide claim, saying
the number of Armenians killed was much lower and resulted from
violence that affected a number of groups at the time.

Turks From Bulgaria: Recent Developments

TURKS FROM BULGARIA: RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
Haykaram Nahapetyan

amp;nid=2363
04 March 2010

On November 11 in front of the entrance of Bulgarian National
Television the leader of "The Party of Bulgarian Men" Rozen Markov set
himself on fire to protest against broadcasting news in Turkish on
that channel. Markov’s act attracted the attention of international
press, different media agencies, newspapers, TV channels (including
Armenian). This act once more put on the agenda the issue of the
Bulgarian Turks. The community which made a good progress and, being
isolated at some extend in the Soviet period, activated fast during
"perestroika" and since 1990 has taken a strong and stable place in
the political system of Bulgaria. The party "Movement for Rights and
Freedoms" established by Bulgarian Turks had been a part of coalition
government in 2002-2009. The number of Bulgarian Turks in Bulgaria
(which population is 8 million) is about 800 thousand. Despite the 10%
index, the party of Bulgarian Turks depending on the results of the
elections has 30-38 of 240 mandates of the Bulgarian parliament. I.e.

in the proportional correlation the Turkish presence in the legislative
body is bigger that on its territory. This unprecedented success
of the Turkish party is conditioned by two key factors: firstly,
the votes of the whole Turkish population of country go to one party,
meanwhile the votes of the Bulgarians and many other ethnic groups are
divided between dozens of parties, and in a consequence the Turkish
party secures comparatively higher result. The second reason is the
behind-the-scenes support of the state. Particularly, during the
parliamentary elections in 2005 Turks who have double citizenship
were brought by buses from Turkey to Bulgaria. They took part in the
elections at their polling stations thus trying to secure the victory
of the "Movement for Rights and Freedoms" party candidates. Ankara
also initiated such an attempt during the parliamentary elections on
5 June, 2009, but when the bus column going to Bulgaria from Turkey
approached the frontier post "Capitan Andreno" it was met by about
200 Bulgarian demonstrators. The participants of that demonstration,
which was arranged on the initiative of Bulgarian nationalist "Ataka"
party, demonstrated against the interference of Ankara, which was
becoming traditional, into the parliamentary elections in Bulgaria. The
demonstrators chanted "Turks go back to Anatolia", "Turks, get out",
"We don’t need janissaries here" and others. When the activists of
"Ataka" tried to pelt the "Turkish special mission" with bottles and
other things the police interfered and the encounter took place. The
leader of "Ataka" Volen Siderov stated that "Turkish state sponsors
the dispatch of Turks (citizens of Bulgaria) from Turkey to Bulgaria".

By the way on this incident’s example one can sum up all the
developments regarding Turkish community in Bulgaria for recent years:
while political and social activity of the Turkish side continues,
gradually the inner tension becomes more vivid. The most politically
active power resisting the movement is the aforementioned "Ataka". The
name of the party in Bulgarian, just like in Russian, means "attack",
and has distinct anti-Turkish orientation. The name of the party
symbolizes "the attack against Turkish expansion". At the parliamentary
elections "Ataka" usually wins about 20 mandates thus taking 3rd-4th
places. "Ataka" run in parliamentary elections with a number of sharp
anti-Turkish" slogans, one of which was "There is no place for Turkey
in the EU". "If we just seat and do not act the way the Bulgarian
patriots have to, then one fine day they will, undoubtedly, occupy
our country", – said Volen Siderov during the electoral campaign.

The following indicator also speaks about the activity of Bulgarian
Turks and the resistance being formed in the country: according to
Reuters Agency for the recent 19 years 323 mosques have been built in
Bulgaria and the means for a part of those mosques were raised through
the donations by privates (Turks) or different Turkish structures.

Generally, the number of mosques in Bulgaria approaches to 2000. At the
same time for recent years the attacks on the mosques have become more
frequent: for the recent 3 years there have been about 100 attacks on
the Turkish mosques in Bulgaria. In 2008 it was banned to wear hijab
in the universities. The Reuters quotes the Turkish public figure
Mustafa Yumer saying that "the anxiety is growing inside the Turkish
community" as connected with, as he said "the activity of the radical
right parties".

Let us mention that the activity of the Turkish party and resistance
movement in Bulgaria influences also the issue of the recognition of
the Armenian Genocide in Bulgaria. The legislative body of Bulgaria
has already twice put forward and rejected the decision condemning the
Armenian Genocide – in May 2006 and in January 2008. This, in fact,
is the unique case when the document connected with the Armenian
Genocide is rejected. For the last 10 years there has been no such
a case when the document condemning the Armenian Genocide has been
put forward and rejected by voting. The initiator of the recognition
of the Armenian Genocide in the parliament was "Ataka" party. At the
same time when on 25 April, 2007 the deputy of the parliament from "The
National Movement Simeon II" Ruben Krikoryan offered to hold a moment
of silence for the victims of the Armenian Genocide all the members
of Turkish party walked out in protest. By the way, at that time the
Turkish party formed a political coalition with Socialist Party and
"The National Movement Simeon II". Speaking about that incident the
leader of "Ataka" said: "In the ruling coalition there is party which
protects the interests of Turkey. The representatives of that party do
not respect the memory of 1.5 million Armenians". And the deputy from
"Bulgarian National Union" Boyko Vatev stated that it was time for
Bulgaria to recognize the Armenian Genocide and to consider the mass
killings of the Bulgarians by the Ottoman army in 1903 in Bulgarian
Ilinden settlement as the genocide.

Summarizing the theme of the Turkish political activity in Bulgaria
it can be concluded that different events directed to restrict the
activity of Turkish party and to restrain the attempts of Ankara to
control the Bulgarian Turks and this, of course, will be accompanied
by the growing anxiety and protest of Turkish party. It is not
excluded that the Turkish activists may turn to the European Court or
international court instances to protect their rights. The Armenian
issue will also play its role in this process. By the joint efforts of
the Armenian community and supporting parties, particularly "Ataka",
for the recent 3 years the process of the recognition of the Armenian
Genocide on local levels has been initiated. The Armenian Genocide
has already been recognized in more than 10 Bulgarian cities: Varna,
Stara Zagora, Ruse, Batak, Silistra, Vidin, Plovdiv and others.

http://noravank.am/en/?page=analitics&