Oskanian Condemns Turkey-Armenia Protocols

OSKANIAN CONDEMNS TURKEY-ARMENIA PROTOCOLS

ian-condemns-turkey-armenia-protocols/
Sep 22, 2009

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)-Former Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian condemned the
Turkey-Armenia protocols on Tuesday, subjecting Armenia’s fence-mending
agreements with Turkey to harsh criticism and saying that Yerevan
is giving the Turks "everything they have wanted for 17 years" and
gaining very little in return.

In an emotional speech, Oskanian echoed the arguments of the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation and other vocal opponents of the deal. He
rejected government assurances that it calls for an unconditional
normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations.

"The document on diplomatic relations with Turkey that we are to sign
should lay the groundwork for long-term good-neighborly relations,"
he said. "It should enable the two parties to sit down and frankly
talk to each other about both the past and the future. But the
existing document does not allow for that. In fact, it precludes
such discussions."

Like other critics, Oskanian singled out two controversial provisions
of the Turkish-Armenian protocols on the establishment of diplomatic
relations and reopening of the border between the two countries. One
of them envisages the creation of a joint panel of experts that would
transform the political debate of the Armenia genocide into a historic
one by questioning its veracity.

The idea of such a study was first floated by Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan in a 2005 letter to then President Robert
Kocharian. The latter effectively turned down the offer, saying that
this and other issues of mutual concern should instead be tackled by
a Turkish-Armenian inter-governmental commission.

The creation of such a commission is envisaged by one of the protocols
that are expected to be signed by the two governments next month. One
of its seven "sub-commissions" is to conduct an "impartial scientific
examination of historical documents and archives."

Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian and other allies of President
Serzh Sarkisian have said that the sub-commission would not seek to
determine whether the Armenian massacres constituted a genocide. But
Ankara has made no secret of its plans to use the very existence of
such a body to keep more countries from recognizing the genocide.

Oskanian also vehemently objected to another protocol provision that
obliges Armenia to recognize its existing border with Turkey. "With one
sentence, we completely cede our historical rights. We even close the
possibility, no matter how formal, of restoring historical justice,"
he said in remarks reflecting the ARF’s position on the issue.

According to US President Woodrow Wilson’s arbitration award in the
Sevres Treaty of 1920, Armenia has a legal right to the formerly
Armenian-populated territories in what is now eastern Turkey. The
Kocharian administration, in which Oskanian served for ten years,
avoided explicitly recognizing a 1921 treaty that set the current
Turkish-Armenian frontier.

Speaking during an event organized by his Civilitas Foundation
think-tank, Oskanian linked the perceived alarming developments
in Yerevan’s dealings with Ankara to what he described as a lack
of democracy in Armenia. "Unfortunately, our country is very far
from being a democratic country," he said. "And yet that’s what our
future and security depend on. We have not made serious investments
in strengthening our democratic institutions."

Below is an abridged version of Oskanian’s speech:

We are facing a critical historic and political decision as a country
and as a people and Civilitas believes in the importance of public
debate. But in the case of these protocols, the debate is going off in
the wrong direction. Not only are we presented with a fait accompli,
but they’re also telling us nothing is changeable, and those documents
have no preconditions.

Reading these protocols one unwillingly comes to the following
conclusion: That these documents were prepared, somewhere, with
Turkey’s participation, and imposed on the Armenian side, or the
Armenian side really did negotiate this document having fully
convinced itself that Armenia’s future development and survival is
indeed completely linked to the opening of this border.

Those are the only two possible explanations. Otherwise, it’s not
possible to understand the logic of these documents that unequivocally
give Turkey what it has wanted for 18 years. Let’s not fool ourselves,
let’s not mislead our people, let’s not trample on our own dignity,
and let’s call things by their name.

For a moment, let’s assume that the border will indeed open. We will,
as a nation, have to recognize that the border is being opened in
exchange for important concessions of history and national honor,
and of our sense of who we are and how we view our role and place
in this region. We will have conceded our equal place in our future
relations with Turkey.

At the base of this document is a defeatist attitude. It reminds me
of the mood in 1997, when we were being told Armenia has no hope of
further development, that it can’t be a stable, fully independent state
if the Nagorno Karabakh conflict is not quickly resolved. The next 10
years came to disprove this. Despite the many problems and faults of
that period, with the border still closed, there was in fact serious
economic improvement. Our economy saw double-digit growth thanks
to old and new economic reforms and their continuation. The country
became more stable, with a new sense of unity, however fragile and
incomplete, and with broader Diaspora inclusion.

Today, Armenia’s situation is again very difficult. We have an
inexplicable 18.4% decline in growth, when the average world decline
is two to three percent. Diaspora and Armenia have never been so
distant from each other. Our society has never been so polarized. Our
people have never felt so hopeless about our country’s future. Under
these conditions, old sentiments have emerged again, telling us that
Armenia can never become a fully independent state and cannot develop
economically because of the closed border and the unresolved Nagorno
Karabakh conflict.

Today, since we’ve already gone down this road, I can say with even
greater confidence, that that’s not the case.

We must have trust in our own resources, in our people, in our
country, in our future. If we successfully completed first generation
economic reforms, we must move on to the second, third, fourth, fifth
generations. These hold huge potential for our prosperity. We have an
ever greater potential source: our unity and common sense of purpose.

Despite all this, there is also a new area where no one – not past
administrations and not this one either – has seriously and honestly
ventured. Very little has been done in the thorny but vital area
of political reform. Unfortunately, our state is not a democratic
state yet. But our whole future and security depend on that one
word. We have not invested in fortifying and consolidating our
democratic institutions, and now instead of going forward, we are
going backwards. Our people, any people, are creative when they are
free; but we have not created the conditions, the equal playing field,
an assured rule of law society that protects the freedoms that enable
prosperity. The closed border has not kept them out. Our succeeding
governments have not nourished the seeds that are here on our land.

Our problems are here, at home. The solutions, too, must be sought
here. No one says no to open borders or to an agreement on Nagorno
Karabakh. But we must do so in the right way, in a dignified way,
not with an imposed external solution, but a solution achieved from
positions of strength among equal partners.

Signing these documents will not solve our problems. On the contrary,
they will bring on entirely new setbacks and problems that can only
be tackled by a unified, free, hopeful society.

That is not to say protocols with Turkey should not be signed. Of
course they should. Even these two protocols, with all their major and
minor unacceptable, controversial, questionable provisions would be
acceptable, if at the very least, one sentence were removed, and a
few words changed.

But as currently formulated, they cannot be signed.

First, if we were to assume that Turkey, after signing the protocols,
will ratify them as well, we must ask ourselves, will the opening of
the Turkish border be worth the price we will pay? This is the price
they have been asking since 1991, when after the collapse of the
Soviet Union, Turkey recognized and established diplomatic relations
with all former soviet republics except Armenia. Since the beginning,
they’ve had two demands – that Armenia renounce any territorial claims,
and that Armenians renounce the international genocide recognition
campaign. A third demand was added in 1993 – that Armenians withdraw
from the territories surrounding Nagorno Karabakh.

Since that day, those three conditions have been consistently
repeated. Today, the first two are formalized in the protocol. It’s
there, black on white, and our government has apparently agreed to
meet those demands. The protocol is worded such that not only do we
agree to respect the territorial integrity of Turkey, but in the next
sentence, we consent to renounce our historic rights as well as even
the theoretical possibility of regaining historic justice.

Today there are more than 190 countries in the world, and there are
nearly that many territorial disputes among them. That means that
pairs of countries with normal relations with each other continue
to disagree over their borders. A fourth of those disputes are in
Europe. They have embassies, they trade, they have friendly relations,
but their diplomats continue to talk and argue, respectfully, over
their differing interpretations of history and territory. Those
countries have signed protocols and have diplomatic relations.

In our region, even with our friendly, brotherly Georgia,
Armenia and Georgia have not ‘recognized current existing
borders.’ Demarcation is just now ongoing between us. Neither have
Georgia and Azerbaijan. There, demarcation hasn’t even begun. But
there are diplomatic relations. Those other 190 countries have
agreed to respect each other’s territorial integrity, not their
current existing borders. That is the international practice. There
is a clear distinction in international relations between respecting
territorial integrity and recognizing current borders. Look, we often
say that we recognize Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity.

But we continue the sentence and point out that Nagorno Karabakh
has nothing to do with Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity since it’s
never been a part of independent Azerbaijan.

Today, we can recognize Turkey’s territorial integrity. But how we
continue that sentence is a right that no one can take from us or
our future generations.

A protocol to establish diplomatic relations between two states sets
the start for a long-term relationship during which two countries
will tackle and resolve many new and ongoing bilateral problems. When
the document that formalizes this relationship includes language that
transforms the relationship to an unequal one, extracting one-sided
concessions, one wonders about the future of such relations.

We want relations with Turkey, but we want them with a Turkey that
wants equal and reciprocal relations with Armenia. We want relations
with a Turkey that understands that the Europe to which we both aspire
is not a Europe without disputes, but a Europe where neighbors agree
to disagree while continuing to live neighborly and in dignity. We
deserve no less.

The same concerns exist with the protocol provision about a historical
subcommission and the ‘impartial scientific examination of the
historical records’. Our neighbor, the successor to a state which
committed Genocide, has not itself condemned this internationally
recognized crime, yet expects to use this protocol to formalize its
own unwillingness to confront history. Worse. Armenia’s government
has acquiesced and agreed to be dragged into another endless process
of denying and rewriting. Already, before the documents are even
signed, there is talk of Turkey’s asking countries to re-visit their
own statements of genocide recognition and condemnation. Turkey will
cite the protocol and proceed with its efforts to rewrite history.

Armenia and Armenians will expend energy and time to confirm historic
facts.

These are the pitfalls that await us if Turkey intends to ratify the
protocols. But what if this is all intended to show the world that
they are ready to proceed with open borders, while at the same time
their parliament withholds ratification until Azerbaijan is satisfied
with the Nagorno Karabakh resolution?

This is the fundamental danger. These are not empty fears, this is
not the product of an active imagination.

Prime Minister Erdogan and Foreign Minister Davutoglu remind us of this
condition daily. Their demands on Nagorno Karabakh are Azerbaijan’s
demands. Already, even before the protocols are signed, they continue
to speak of those conditions. During the last year, there has not been
an opportunity when Erdogan has spoken of Armenia-Turkey relations,
without mentioning a return of the territories surrounding Nagorno
Karabakh, and sometimes even return of Nagorno Karabakh itself. There
hasn’t been one opportunity when Erdogan in his bilateral meetings,
has not spoken about Nagorno Karabakh as an important agenda
item. Apparently, Turkey is not concerned that as a consequence of
such announcements, Armenia will withdraw from this process or from
signing the document. Thus, Turkey is going against the letter and
spirit of the document, by taking sides with one neighbor, at the
expense of another.

In other words, if the purpose of this document and this process is
to look to the future, that is not happening.

The only part about this that is surprising is that our leadership
either does not hear them, does not want to hear them, or wants to
believe they really mean something other than what they say.

For 15 years, Turkey has maintained the blockade, hoping for our
economic and political capitulation. It didn’t happen and will not
happen. Today, it is they who desperately need to come out of that
political corner in which they placed themselves, it is they who
need that border open, and they seem to have found a way to do it,
at our expense.

Today, they need to open the border. It is they who are under great
European pressure within their accession time frames. Today, they
need to open the border because they are the ones who have economic
issues at their eastern border that they need resolved. Today, they
need to open the border because they are the ones in fear of the
genocide recognition process that has been moving quickly and has
culminated in great US pressure. Finally, they need the border open
in order to reinforce their leadership role in this region.

Instead, our government has been making concessions, in their haste
to move this process forward. From the beginning, if they were not
farsighted enough to avoid being put in this position, now that this
situation has been created, they must find a way to change course.

They have no choice. We are at a crossroads in our history. We
have on the table the first bilateral document that the independent
sovereign Republic of Armenia intends to sign with the Republic of
Turkey. These documents not for and by third parties, as with the
countless historical documents of the past where Armenia is a subject
and not a party, but for the first time in history, a document in
which Armenia is signing on to its own perceived place in history.

I wanted to make clear the basis of my criticism: we must and should
move to normal relations with Turkey. But this document with these
formulations should not be signed. Indeed, no one is authorized to
sign this document with such formulations.

When people hear my criticism, sometimes they accuse me of jealousy. I
think they do this so that they don’t have to have to deal with the
substance of my criticism but instead, they trivialize it so they
can dismiss it.

Nevertheless, I want to confess, I am sometimes envious. But of Turkish
diplomacy. I would not dare to bring such a document to the table,
I wouldn’t sign it and I don’t envy the man who will soon do so.

http://www.asbarez.com/2009/09/22/oskan

ANKARA: Eurasian Filmmakers To Run For Golden Orange Prize

EURASIAN FILMMAKERS TO RUN FOR GOLDEN ORANGE PRIZE

Today’s Zaman
Sept 22 2009
Turkey

Twelve feature films from Eurasian filmmakers, including two from
Turkey, will be running for best film in the Altın Portakal (Golden
Orange) Film Festival’s international feature competition next month,
the fest’s organizers announced on Tuesday.

While the festival’s competitive section focuses exclusively on titles
from this part of the world, the non-competitive section will offer
films from five continents, the Antalya Foundation for Culture and Art
(AKSAV), which organizes the festival, said in a written statement.

Bulgarian screenwriter-director Kamen Kalev’s first full-length
feature, "Eastern Plays," an exploration of present-day Bulgaria
from the eyes of two siblings, which also features Turkish actresses
Saadet IÅ~_ıl Aksoy and Hatice Arslan in its cast, is one of the
significant contenders in the lineup along with another first-timer,
British director Peter Strickland’s "Katalin Varga," which won a
Silver Bear earlier this year at the Berlinale.

The Czech production "Anglicke Jahody" (English Strawberries) by
Vladimir Drha, which recounts the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia
in 1968; "Operacja Dunaj" (Operation Danube), the debut directorial
effort by Jacek Glomb; and "Bumaznyi Soldat" (Paper Soldier) by
Russia’s Alexey German Jr. are three films that look at near history,
also vying for the best film title.

Female filmmaker Pelin Esmer’s Ä°stanbul International Film Festival
winner "11’e 10 Kala" (10 to 11), which tells of an old man who lives
in a rundown apartment and his passion for collecting, and Abdullah
Oguz’s "Sıcak" (Kismet), which was adapted to the big screen from
Ä°brahim Altun’s novel "Ä°hanet" (Betrayal) and featured at the
Montreal World Film Festival earlier this month, are the two Turkish
titles in the running.

Another Montreal offering, Serbian director Goran RadovanoviÄ~G’s "The
Ambulance," will have its European premiere at the Golden Orange when
it will be offered at the international competition in Antalya next
month. Armenian filmmaker Harutyun Khachatryan’s docufiction "Sahman"
(Border), which takes on the tension between Azerbaijan and Armenia
following the collapse of the Soviet Union, is also featured.

Two films touching on the issue of refugees, Georgian Georgi
Ovashvili’s "Gagma Napiri" (The Other Bank) and French Bojena
Horackova’s "Ã~@ l’Est de moi" (East of Me) will also be vying for
prizes. The sole Italian film in the lineup is "Tutta colpa di Giuda"
(Freedom), directed by Davide Ferrario.

Turkey’s longest running and most prestigious film festival is
incorporating an international competition program in its main
lineup for the first time this year after ditching its sister event,
the Eurasia International Film Festival, due to a major revision on
the fest’s structure to cut unnecessary costs and also to raise the
festival’s global reputation.

The annual festival is set to open its doors to movie buffs and film
professionals from Oct. 10 to 17, screening 160 titles from Turkey
and overseas in its 46th year. Sixteen new Turkish titles, among
them eight first films, will be running in the festival’s national
competition, as announced by the organizers last week.

Lithuania’s President Congratulates Armenian Colleague On National H

LITHUANIA’S PRESIDENT CONGRATULATES ARMENIAN COLLEAGUE ON NATIONAL HOLIDAY

Baltic News Service
September 21, 2009 Monday 11:56 PM EET

Lithuania’s President Dalia Grybauskaite Monday sent congratulations
to her Armenian counterpart, Serzh Sargsyan, on Armenia’s national
holiday, the Independence Day and said the countries should seek
creation of a common future in unified Europe. The president wrote
in the letter that Armenia and Lithuania, as small countries, have
to deal with similar challenges and problems, and that even being
geographically distant, Lithuania and Armenia can and must seek
common action, the President’s Office said. "Having re-established
independence almost at the same time two decades ago, our two nations
have to join their endeavors today to create a common future within
unified Europe," reads the letter. Armenia declared independence
from the Soviet Union during a nation-wide referendum on Sept. 21
1991. Armenia, which traditionally maintains close relations with
Russia, was included in the European Union’s (EU) Eastern Partnership
program earlier this year.

Vilnius newsroom, +370 5 2058514, [email protected]

In The Classroom: Musically Learning Armenian

IN THE CLASSROOM: MUSICALLY LEARNING ARMENIAN

Glendale News Press
Sept 21 2009

Third-graders at Jefferson Elementary learn the language and culture
as part of district program.

The students in Hasmik Chobanyan’s third-grade Armenian-language class
at Jefferson Elementary School are often working on their assignments
one minute and singing and clapping the next.

The song the kids are singing is roughly translated to "Armenia,
My Father Land." Three students take the lead at the front of the
class and lead their classmates into it. Soon, the classroom takes
on a sort of party atmosphere.

All of the kids in this class are part of the Glendale Unified School
District’s intercultural education program, which has Foreign Language
Academies as one of its programs. The program’s aim is to teach
the kids to speak a higher-level, academic language, said Jefferson
Elementary Principal Greg Mooshagian.

"[The students receive] a high level of literacy in two languages,"
Mooshagian said. The program is beneficial to the school because it
is able to maintain a high population and high test scores, he added.

"Students are happy with the program," he said.

The program is several years old and offers instruction in Spanish,
German, Korean, Italian and Armenian at other schools throughout
the district. The program was awarded two rare grants by the
U.S. Department of Education to allow the program to offer education
in Spanish at Toll Middle School and Korean at another middle school
campus by 2013.

Students enrolled in the FLAG Armenian program are part of the
Heritage Language Magnet Program. All students are assessed before
enrolling in the program to determine their success level, due to the
rigorousness of the program and the requirement of having to learn
a different alphabet.

Instruction is also given in English, which occurs in the latter part
of the students’ day. The children in Chobanyan’s class learn through
storytelling, writing assignments, reading assignments and music —
all in Armenian. Students are given homework to do each night, are
given spelling tests each week and also work with their parents at
home. Students enroll in the program in kindergarten.

Overall, Chobanyan said, her kids are excited to learn the Armenian
language, history and culture.

Students are also able to connect with their heritage and maintain
their identity, she said.

Singing "Armenia, My Father Land" is just one example of that, she
added. Her goal is to give her students the ability to maintain ties
with Armenia and to contribute to its development.

"We have an oral expression period where they get to speak Armenian,
so they learn many new words," Chobanyan said.

KIDS TALK BACK

The Glendale News-Press visited Hasmik Chobanyan’s third-grade
Armenian-language class, offered as part of the Foreign Language
Academies program, Monday afternoon at Jefferson Elementary School,
where students were busy learning and improving their knowledge of
the language. We asked, "What is your favorite thing about being
enrolled in the Armenian-language class?"

"The best part is story time."

DAVID AKCHARIAN, 8

"I like stories, especially the one about the donkey."

ANTHONY GHADINI, 7

"I like everything. My instructor is really nice."

KRISTOPHER CODY AZIZKHANI, 8

"We have this reading book; it’s in Armenian. We read it. I also like
the story and the songs."

LISA GHARIBIAN, 8

Merkel welcomes Armenia-Turkey reconciliation

Information-Analytic Agency NEWS.am, Armenia
Sept 19 2009

Merkel welcomes Armenia-Turkey reconciliation

12:10 / 09/19/2009Armenia-Turkey normalization might tackle many
disputable issues between the two countries, Federal Chancellor of
Germany Angela Merkel told Hurriyet daily.

Merkel declared Germany welcomes Armenia-Turkey reconciliation, adding
that personally she please at hearing the countries decided to
establish diplomatic relations.

`It is always better to talk and debate rather than not talk at
all. Turkey has also made a bold decision concerning Kurdish issue,’
German Chancellor concluded.

ANKARA: Gov’t initiatives talk of town among diplomatic community

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Sept 20 2009

Gov’t initiatives the talk of the town among diplomatic community in
Ankara

Receptions and iftars (fast-breaking dinners) hosted in Ankara in the
last few weeks have been the venue for the typical conversations
between foreign diplomats and correspondents, with each side trying to
get background information from each other on either domestic or
foreign policy issues.

Yet, in the last few weeks, one thing was atypical about those
conversations; rather than sharing their information on certain
issues, they were this time sharing their curiosity about the eventual
fate of certain issues and processes.

Those issues are the government’s recent initiative on the resolution
of the Kurdish issue, and Armenia and Turkey’s declaration of their
desire for normalization of bilateral ties through parliamentary
approval of two protocols following an internal debate. On both
issues, the government and the main opposition parties, the Republican
People’s Party (CHP) and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), have
been engaged in a fierce battle while the government has been seeking
public consensus.

Numerous states and international organizations, meanwhile, have
already lent their support via written statements on the Armenian
issue. While apparently taking into consideration the fact that the
Kurdish issue has been considered an internal matter for Ankara, they
have lent their support to this process via individual remarks from
their politicians.

For foreign diplomats based in Ankara, it seems more complicated than
it is for their capital cities and headquarters, as they can feel the
anxiety in the capital in the literal sense. Still, remarks by some of
them, with whom Sunday’s Zaman had the chance to have background
conversations on these issues, indicate that they are both calmer and
more hopeful when compared to the anxiety experienced on the public
stage of the country.

`Democracy is messy’

A senior EU diplomat based in Ankara, speaking with Sunday’s Zaman on
condition of anonymity, described the government’s initiatives on both
the Armenian and Kurdish issues as the `most important issues at this
moment.’

`I think the fact that the government decided to face it in a positive
way is important. Another important point is once the Armenian issue
is faced in this way, it will get positive results. There will be a
positive reaction in Europe and the United States, so this can be seen
in favor of Turkey. The Kurdish issue is a delicate issue, and it is
also important that the government decided to face it. The negative
side is that if the government cannot approach it successfully, there
will be negative repercussions. It is important to go on and get some
positive results. Making progress regarding the Armenian issue is
actually easier,’ the EU diplomat said.

When reminded of the opposition parties’ unsupportive approaches, the
same diplomat said: `As far as it is understood there is no clear
explanation on what the government wants. It is important to know
better, of course, what the Kurdish issue consists of. For the
Armenian issue, it is clearer since there are protocols; yet the
Kurdish issue is less clear. I think the fact that it has been
launched is positive and important in itself, but some clarifications
would be better.’

After noting his country’s support of the Turkish government on these
issues, an Ankara-based Western diplomat first of all highlighted the
importance of dialogue on both the Armenian and Kurdish issues.

`We want to see dialogue in both the Armenian and Kurdish issues
because that’s what democracy tells us to do — maintaining
dialogue. Regarding the Kurdish issue, it is a matter of closing a sad
chapter and it will not be easy but it will be great, like in the
Northern Ireland case,’ the Western diplomat, speaking on condition of
anonymity, told Sunday’s Zaman, in an apparent analogy between the
outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and the Irish Republican Army
(IRA) in Northern Ireland.

When asked whether he had any concerns vis-Ã-vis the upcoming
course of affairs on both of the initiatives, the Western diplomat
replied that `concerns are all positive and supportive.’

The same diplomat also noted that he had no particular concerns on the
opposition’s stance, either. `Democracy is messy, like some wise men
say. The opening of this kind of public tradeoff is normal and is part
of the process. The government is, meanwhile, trying to hear and
handle these statements.’

Delivery time

Both of these issues are high on the agenda of the diplomatic
community because there have been many talks to date, and now it is
somehow time to deliver, another EU diplomat based in the Turkish
capital told Sunday’s Zaman.

`These kinds of processes take time, but sometimes you have to take
certain steps which will give new life and positive momentum to the
ongoing process. This is what Europeans hope to see. That’s why they
see the Armenian roadmap movement and dynamics concerning Armenia as
developments which make them hopeful,’ the same EU diplomat, speaking
on condition of anonymity, said.

`As for the process with the Kurds, that’s the same — there have been
nonsense years of confrontation. Now the government is approaching
stakeholders, the opposition, neighbors; all of this is seen as signs
of hope and optimism on a vital issue. Hope of a solution first of all
shows to a European observer that Turkish foreign policy is an active
one, exerting efforts to decrease tensions and taking constructive
steps to create stability. This is definitely something positive for a
country which aspires to become a member of the EU. Having in mind
that one day Turkey will be a member, it’s very good that Turkey will
have solved the issues with neighboring countries by that time; that’s
why EU figures are both excited and nervous,’ the diplomat said.

He also said he believed if similar initiatives had been launched in a
European country, it is likely that the opposition parties would try
to publicly support these initiatives, unlike what has been happening
in Turkey.

`The reluctance of the opposition to join in would at least not be
seen as a very constructive approach. These are important projects,
and just saying, `We don’t like it’ might not be good. Even the
military is going along with this initiative, although maybe
cautiously. There might be good reason to give a chance to maintaining
national consensus in order to give a strong message to the world.’

An irreversible process

Both the Armenian and Kurdish issues are, of course, the talk of the
town and a primary concern for every diplomat, a senior Middle Eastern
diplomat told Sunday’s Zaman, underlining the Kurdish initiative’s
significance as a major change in internal policy. According to him,
it’s a huge development regardless of what will happen in the end.

The same diplomat said foreign diplomats have also been following the
developments carefully because they are trying to estimate the
implications of these initiatives in the region.

`I believe there will be a huge external implication related to Syria
and Iraq as well as Turkey’s position regarding international
terrorism. We hope it will succeed, and that depends on a lot
factors. It seems as though the process is still ongoing, but details
of this process aren’t clear,’ he said, speaking on condition of
anonymity. `But the fact that the government has taken such a huge
step and decided to address such a big issue is very important for the
development of Turkey.’

The same diplomat avoided commenting on the opposition’s approach as
he said it’s an internal matter for Turkey while stressing that he was
confident that any breakthrough in Turkey’s relations with Armenia
will be welcomed in the Middle East region.

`The main fact of addressing these issues and starting a momentum is
50 percent of resolving the issue. Not ignoring or bypassing these
chronic issues is a very courageous step,’ he said.

Focusing on the Kurdish issue, the diplomat added: `The details differ
from one group to another, but my understanding is that it is an
ongoing development. We might witness unforeseen developments, either
positive or negative because there is no roadmap on the Kurdish
issue. The government is apparently in the process of making a
roadmap. The problem is a complicated one and it is not possible to
expect its resolution within a few months. Yet, as a diplomat, I
believe an irreversible process has started.’

20 September 2009, Sunday
EMÄ°NE KART ANKARA

Armenian President To Visit Armenian-Populated Communities

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT TO VISIT ARMENIAN-POPULATED COMMUNITIES

ARMENPRESS
SEPTEMBER 17, 2009
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS: Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan
received today Vice Speaker of the Great Britain’s House of Lords,
Baroness Caroline Cox.

Presidential press service told Armenpress that with the September
16 decree of the Armenian President Caroline Cox has been awarded
Order of Honor for her weighty contribution to the development and
consolidation of Armenian-British relations.

"This award is the gratitude of the Armenian people and assessment
to Your activity," the president said and added, "We will also be
delighted to host You in Armenia and are proud that we have such
a friend".

The leader of the country highly assessed the attention of the Baroness
Cox, her support and warmth and active work.

Caroline Cox said that any award is honoring but for her getting such
high award in Armenia is double honoring. She said she is visiting
Armenia for the 69th time and her each visit is singled out with new
impressions, changes and new progress.

Noting that during this days the most discussable issue is the
normalization process of Armenian-Turkish relations and in the coming
days discussions will be conducted in Armenia in different formats,
the Armenian President said that during the coming weeks he will visit
a number of Armenian-populated communities to listen to the opinion
of Diaspora Armenians. Serzh Sargsyan presented the protocols directed
toward normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations and noted that the
negotiations do not include any precondition. "This is very difficult,
painful but at the same time necessary process," he pointed out.

Caroline Cox was interested in the recent developments over Nagorno
Karabakh conflict regulation.

Armenia To Launch Talks On Turkey Deal Amid Protests

ARMENIA TO LAUNCH TALKS ON TURKEY DEAL AMID PROTESTS

Agence France Presse
September 15, 2009 Tuesday 6:34 PM GMT

Armenia said Tuesday it will launch political talks this week
on establishing ties with Turkey after decades of hostility, as
nationalist protesters began a hunger strike against reconciliation
efforts.

President Serzh Sarkisian will meet with leaders of Armenia’s political
parties on Thursday, his spokesman Samvel Farmanian told AFP, as part
of internal consultations agreed under a deal with Turkey.

"These consultations will be one of the important steps in the public
discussion on normalising Armenian-Turkish relations. As the president
has promised, these questions, which are of national importance,
are becoming the subject of a wide public discussion," he said.

Armenia and Turkey announced last month that they had agreed a
framework to establish diplomatic ties and re-open their border,
in what was internationally hailed as a major breakthrough.

The two countries said they would hold internal political consultations
for six weeks before submitting to their parliaments two protocols
on establishing diplomatic ties and developing bilateral relations.

About 50 protesters from the nationalist Armenian Revolutionary
Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) launched a sit-in and hunger strike
against the protocols outside the foreign ministry on Tuesday.

Chanting "No Concessions to the Turks!", protesters said they would
remain outside the ministry throughout the six weeks of consultations.

"These protocols must not be signed in their current form, changes
must be made," one of the party’s leaders, Gegam Manukian, told AFP.

Protesters said they were especially concerned that the deal calls
for the creation of an intergovernmental commission to examine the
two countries’ historical grievances.

Critics say the creation of such a commission calls into question
Armenians’ claims to have been victims of genocide under Ottoman Turks.

Ankara has long refused to establish diplomatic links with Yerevan
over the latter’s efforts to have World War I-era massacres of
Armenians by Ottoman Turks recognised as genocide — a label Turkey
strongly rejects.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin were systematically killed
between 1915 and 1917 as the Ottoman Empire, Turkey’s predecessor,
was falling apart.

Turkey also closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with
ally Azerbaijan over Yerevan’s backing of ethnic Armenian separatists
in the breakaway Nagorny Karabakh region.

BAKU: Richard Armitage: US Encourages Peaceful NK Settlement

RICHARD ARMITAGE US ENCOURAGES PEACEFUL GARABAGH SETTLEMENT

AssA-Irada
September 17, 2009 Thursday
Azerbaijan

The U.S., a co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group brokering settlement to
the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict, encourages resolution of the Upper
(Nagorno) Garabagh conflict, said former US Deputy Secretary of State
Richard Armitage in his address at the Azerbaijan Diplomatic Academy
(ADA). Armitage has been invited by Deputy Foreign Minister and Rector
of ADA Hafiz Pashayev to report on the Washingtons foreign policy. US
diplomat noted Obama Administration pays more attention to defense
in foreign policy as well as democracy and development. On the US
policy towards European and Asian states, Armitage said US-Azerbaijan
relationship is strategic. The United States places a particular
emphasis on Azerbaijan in the South Caucasus region. Azerbaijan has
a strategically important position in the region, contributing to the
Caucasus. Armitage noted Azerbaijan has developed much since his last
trip to Azerbaijan.

Orange Pledges $80US-Mil. Investment In Network Coverage In Armenia

ORANGE PLEDGES $80US-MIL. INVESTMENT IN NETWORK COVERAGE IN ARMENIA

World Market Research Centre
Global Insight
September 17, 2009

France Telecom’s Armenian unit, Orange Armenia, is to invest around
$80US million on services and coverage in the country in 2009, reports
ARKA. Company General-Director Bruno Duthoit is quoted as saying that
Orange Armenia intends to become an innovative mobile operator in
the country, and will be aided in this by parent group France Telecom.

Significance: Orange is due to launch operations in Armenia in the
fourth quarter of 2009 and has indicated that it plans to do so
as a competitive, low-cost operator, while also placing much focus
on mobile internet services (see Armenia: 10 June 2009: ). Mobile
penetration in Armenia was around 79% at the end of the first half
of 2009, indicating that there is limited room for organic subscriber
growth and therefore placing quite a task in front of Orange if it is
to make inroads. The market is currently led by MTS-owned Vivacell,
with around 81% of the market, while VimpelCom’s Armentel has 19%.