David Shahnazaryan: Armenia, Azerbaijan Swap Places

DAVID SHAHNAZARYAN: ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN SWAP PLACES

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.03.2010 15:03 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ A new situation emerged in Karabakh the process
lately, according to David Shahnazaryan, representatives of the
Armenian National Congress.

"It’s rather strange that the Armenian authorities somehow uphold
other negotiation formats while Azerbaijan behaves quite the opposite
way. Armenia and Azerbaijan seem to have swapped places. Baku is not in
a hurry to announce that Yerevan rejected revised Madrid Principles,"
Mr. Shahnazaryan told reporters on Wednesday.

At that, he emphasized that the resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict depends on Russia and the United States.

Commenting on the Armenian-Turkish rapprochement, he said it’s a
process where can’t be winners, losses are inevitable and termination
impossible.

Dwelling on Turkish Prime Minister’s recent statement on deportation
of 100 thousand illegal Armenian migrants, Mr. Shahnazaryan said it
was a well-thought-out move aimed to prevent Armenia from ratifying
the protocols on normalization of relations first.

Asked about international political situation he said Armenia is
in crisis.

Turkey To Restore Armenian Church Of Ottoman Empire Period

People’s Daily
53/6929520.html
March 24 2010
China

Turkey to restore Armenian church of Ottoman Empire period

A near 300-year-old Armenian church in the hometown of a famous
Turkish-Armenian journalist will be restored, the semi-official
Anatolia news agency reported Wednesday.

The restoration of the Tashoron Church, located in the Cavusoglu
neighborhood of East Turkey’s Malatya Province, will be carried out
with the support of the Malatya Municipality, said Latif Yildirim,
president of a local mosque foundation.

Yildirim said the church was constructed in the 18th century during
the reign of the Ottoman Empire and showed "a tolerant and libertarian
culture" in that period.

"People lived all together and practised their religious beliefs freely
in those times. This happens and should happen today as well," he said.

The Cavusoglu neighborhood is the birthplace of journalist Hrant Dink,
the editor-in-chief of the bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos who
was shot dead outside his newspaper’s offices in Istanbul in 2007,
the agency said.

Turkey and Armenia have seen tensions rise after a U.S. congressional
panel and the Swedish parliament passed non-binding resolutions that
recognize the killings of Armenians by Ottoman forces during the
World War I as genocide this month, drawing ire from Ankara.

Armenians claim that more than 1.5 million Armenians were killed
in a systematic genocide during the World War I, but the Turkish
government insists that the Armenians were victims of widespread
chaos and governmental breakdown as the Ottoman empire collapsed
before modern Turkey was created in 1923.

The two countries signed protocols to normalize relations last
October but the protocols needed to be ratified by the two countries’
parliaments before taking effect. Turkish authorities have warned the
row over the "genocide" claims could hamper the normalization process.

http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90777/908

Turkey’s Preconditions ‘Help’ Genocide Recognition, Says Sarkisian

TURKEY’S PRECONDITIONS ‘HELP’ GENOCIDE RECOGNITION, SAYS SARKISIAN

Asbarez
rkeys-preconditions-help-genocide-recognition-says -sarkisian/
Mar 23rd, 2010

DAMASCUS (RFE/RL)-Turkey’s reluctance to unconditionally normalize
relations with Armenia is only facilitating a broader international
recognition of the Armenian Genocide, Armenian President Serzh
Sarkisian suggested in a newspaper interview published on Tuesday.

Sarkisian spoke to the Syrian daily "Al Watan" during an official visit
to Syria that began on Monday. He was asked, in particular, to comment
on a resolution recognizing the 1915 genocide of Armenians by Ottoman
Turks that was adopted by a U.S. congressional committee on March 4.

"One thing is obvious to me," he replied. "The longer the process of
normalizing our relations [with Turkey] lasts, the larger the number
of states adopting such resolutions may become."

It was a clear reference to Ankara’s failure to ratify the
Turkish-Armenian normalization protocols signed in October. Turkish
leaders link the ratification with a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict that would satisfy Azerbaijan. They also say that the
genocide resolutions adopted by the U.S. House Foreign Affairs
Committee as well as Sweden’s parliament this month have further
complicated Turkish-Armenian reconciliation.

By contrast, Yerevan has welcomed both resolutions. "I don’t think
it’s right to attempt to link that [normalization] process with the
recognition of the Armenian Genocide by other countries," Sarkisian
told "Al Watan."

Sarkisian, who held talks with his Syrian counterpart Bashar al-Assad
in Damascus, is scheduled to visit the northeastern city of Deir
ez-Zor on Wednesday. The eponymous desert surrounding it was the
final destination point of hundreds of thousands of Ottoman Armenians
forced out of their homes in 1915-1918. The Armenian community in
Syria built there a memorial complex dedicated to them in 1990.

Speaking at a joint news conference with Sarkisian on Monday, Assad
offered Syria’s help in establishing cordial relations between Armenia
and Turkey for the sake of regional security and stability. "Syria
is ready to play a role… for the establishment of Turkish-Armenian
relations that can ensure normal stability and security in the region,"
he said, according to AFP news agency.

"I think… officials in Armenia have given us their full confidence,
which is why we are starting immediate steps, especially since
President Sarkissian encouraged us" to do so, he said. Assad also
praised Yerevan’s decision to normalize its relations with Turkey
despite "many difficulties."

http://www.asbarez.com/78584/tu

More Than Just An Erotic Thriller; Atom Egoyan’s Newest Effort Explo

MORE THAN JUST AN EROTIC THRILLER; ATOM EGOYAN’S NEWEST EFFORT EXPLORES THE NEEDINESS OF ITS MAIN CHARACTERS
by Michael D. Reid, Canwest News Service

The Vancouver Province (British Columbia)
March 22, 2010 Monday

For a guy reputed to be a "cerebral" filmmaker, Atom Egoyan has a
sense of humour some might find surprising.

It erupts over coffee in Victoria, where the director is taking a
breather before resuming a gruelling press tour for Chloe, his new
erotic drama that opens nationwide Friday.

Victoria-raised Egoyan, who turns 50 in July, laughs as he recalls
a surreal experience at the Guadalajara Film Festival. A screening
of Next of Kin, his 1984 drama about a troubled young man who
impersonates an Armenian couple’s long-lost son, was planned as part
of a retrospective, but the 1989 vigilante action flick of the same
name was featured by mistake.

"It seemed so incongruous. It said my first film was Next of Kin with
Patrick Swayze," he recalled, laughing. "They programmed that movie,
so anyone who saw it would have thought the rest of my career went
downhill from there."

Egoyan has grown accustomed to being misperceived, as when many assumed
his mournful 1993 drama Exotica was an exploitative sex flick because
much of its action was set in a Toronto strip club.

No wonder Egoyan is feeling some deja vu as Sony Pictures Classics
rolls out Chloe. His sleek, sexy and well-acted reinvention of
Anne Fontaine’s 2003 French film Nathalie focuses on the unsettling
relationship between Catherine (Julianne Moore), a wealthy middle-aged
gynecologist, and Chloe (Amanda Seyfried), the sexy young escort she
hires to seduce her husband (Liam Neeson) and test his fidelity.

Although Egoyan describes it as a drama about the erotic lives of
its needy protagonists, albeit with thriller ingredients, Chloe —
termed "a Sapphic Fatal Attraction" by London’s Daily Telegraph,
likely because of a sex scene between Catherine and Chloe — is being
marketed as an erotic thriller.

"It’s very difficult these days to market something as a drama," says
Egoyan, who was hired by Canadian producer Ivan Reitman. "There’s
the film and there’s the marketing of it, and what within the film
is a concession to how you have to sell it?"

Egoyan, who directed from a screenplay by Erin Cressida Wilson,
says Chloe is chiefly a study of a marriage.

"It’s about what happens in relationships after a long period of time.

How do you keep an erotic fantasy with someone you know so well? How
do you reinvent that?" says Egoyan, noting it isn’t a script he could
have written himself.

"I cannot write a story that goes from point A to point B," he says
matter-of-factly. "It’s just not in me."

Still, he managed to incorporate his own style and persuaded Reitman
to let him shoot in Toronto instead of San Francisco.

"One of the arguments I made to Ivan was Toronto, in fact, kind of
whores itself," he says. "It plays a prostitute to all these different
cities it pretends to be but is not, like Chicago or New York. So
it’s interesting that it’s set in a place that, in most people’s
imaginations, is not even on the map."

It was the dynamics of the women’s relationship that sold him, he says.

"It’s this clash of two women with competing structures and ways of
creating a fantasy about each other," he explains.

"For Chloe, she sleeps with these men in these rooms and feels somewhat
diminished by that, and suddenly she gets to tell what happens in
these rooms to a respectable, gorgeous older woman who listens to these
stories and endows them with a certain power. And for Catherine, this
person is a surrogate youthful object she obviously can’t be anymore."

While Egoyan is aware some might view the woman-on-woman sex scene
as gratuitous, he insists it isn’t.

"It’s not just about sexual pleasure. There are a lot of other things
they’re trying to traverse," he says. "What I’m interested in is what’s
going on in these women’s minds as they’re colliding into each other."

He says it helped that he got to work with a top-shelf cast.

"Working with Amanda was great," recalls Egoyan, who cast Seyfried
before Mamma Mia made her a star. "There was absolute trust and she
was great with Julie. They were very compatible."

After shooting Adoration and Chloe back to back, he admits he’s ready
for a break.

"I know from experience after Exotica this could be a year of just
meeting people, spending time in L.A. and treading water," says Egoyan,
who is once again inundated with offers to direct Hollywood screenplays
and adapt novels.

TBILISI: Baku Rejects Yerevan’s Proposal On Non-Use Of Force

BAKU REJECTS YEREVAN’S PROPOSAL ON NON-USE OF FORCE

The Messenger
March 23 2010
Georgia

Armenian President Sarkisian has suggested that a non-use of force
agreement could be signed between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Official
Baku however says that agreement to this proposal under the current
circumstances is unacceptable.

Official representative of the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry Elkhan
Poluhanov has stated that if the Armenian Head of State wants to
exclude the possibility of using force he should help remove the
reasons for using it by deoccupying Azeri territory. The representative
highlighted Azerbaijan’s actions are based on the principles of
international law, which states that any country can exercise its
right to restore its territorial integrity.

Netherlands’ Armenians To Organize Demonstration To Mark 95th Annive

NETHERLANDS’ ARMENIANS TO ORGANIZE DEMONSTRATION TO MARK 95TH ANNIVERSARY OF GENOCIDE

PanARMENIAN.Net
22.03.2010 16:27 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The 24 April Committee of FAON and the Hay
Tad Holland cooperating as "Joint Armenian Organisations of the
Netherlands" intend to organise a commemorative demonstration to mark
the 95th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

FAON calls on all other Armenian organisations and all Armenians in
the Netherlands for a massive demonstration to enforce claims for
recognition of the Armenian Genocide by Turkey and for implementation
of the Motion by Rouvoet by the Dutch government. This Motion has
been adopted unanimously by the Dutch Parliament in 2004.

The demonstration will take place in Het Plein square, The Hague,
The Netherlands on Tuesday, 20 April 2010.

"It is of utmost importance that we, as the Armenian community in
the Netherlands, give a strong signal to show our horror about the
Armenian Genocide and about the fact that after 95 years the Genocide
is still denied and trivialized in a repulsive way by Turkey and even
speaking about it in Turkey is still punishable.

Although there is an extensive recognition of the Armenian Genocide,
the international community does not effectively succeed to make clear
to Turkey that the pattern of denial and trivialisation is unacceptable
and to take the appropriate measures for preventing this practice.

This same attitude of the world made it possible that in 1915 the
Armenian Genocide could take place under the eyes of the world.

It is therefore important that we work together to commemorate this
95th anniversary. We call on everyone to participate in the joint
demonstration in The Hague, the city of international law," FAON
statement said.

The demonstration is intended to enforce the requirement that Turkey
recognizes the Armenian Genocide, implementation of the Rouvoet’s
Parliamentary Motion from 2004, which asks the Dutch government to
put constantly and expressly on the agenda the recognition of the
Armenian Genocide by Turkey and the need to establish a memorial in
The Hague, city of international law, for commemorating the victims
of the Armenian Genocide, as an example of how the international
community should not handle such disastrous events.

The Armenian Genocide (1915-23) was the deliberate and systematic
destruction of the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire during
and just after World War I. It was characterized by massacres, and
deportations involving forced marches under conditions designed to
lead to the death of the deportees, with the total number of deaths
reaching 1.5 million.

The majority of Armenian Diaspora communities were formed by the
Genocide survivors.

ISTANBUL: No comment from Turk ministers on Armenian ‘deportation’

Hurriyet, Turkey
March 19 2010

No comment from Turkish ministers on Armenian ‘deportation’

Friday, March 19, 2010
Yurdagül Å?imÅ?ek
Ankara: Radikal

Members of the Cabinet have remained mum on the prime minister’s
remarks about expelling undocumented Armenian workers in order not to
engage in a possible confrontation with him.

While the debate resonate over Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an’s
threat sending undocumented Armenians back amid tensions over
allegations that Armenians were victims of `genocide’ during the last
days of the Ottoman Empire, the deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç,
and ministers Hayati Yazıcı, Sadullah Ergin and Recep AkdaÄ? made no
comment on the issue.

Furthermore, for some members of the ruling Justice and Development
Party, or AKP, the prime minister’s remarks should not be considered
as promoting `racism and deportation’ but remarks to sustain the
`element of pressure.’

Zafer Ã`skül, the head of Parliament’s Investigating Committee on Human
Rights, reminded that there were many undocumented immigrants in
Turkey for different reasons. `It is not a solution to send them back.
If they go, they will come back. Most of them already do that.’

Ã`skül said a regulation is needed on undocumented workers in Turkey.
`Many since they cannot get a work permit, regularly have to do a
border crossing and come right back into Turkey. This undocumented
population needs a regulation. That is for sure. I see no difference
between an Armenian and a Moldavian citizen who comes to Turkey,’ he
said.

According to Ã`skül, it is a little far-fetched to say that ErdoÄ?an’s
approach is racist since Turkey is a home many Turkish-Armenian
citizens. `We are trying our best to sustain their inalienable civic
rights. When you say racism, you refer to a general approach against
those having a particular nationality. This is not the case here. This
is rather like a pressuring declaration to force the Armenian
government to solve the issues in their hands. But I refuse racism or
deportation.’

However, Ufuk Uras, Istanbul Member of Parliament of the pro-Kurdish
Peace and Democracy Party, or BDP, said that the prime minister had
crossed the line again.

`The Prime minister’s remarks reflect the deportation concept of the
21st century,’ he said. `While we consider similar remarks as racist
or xenophobic when directed to Turkish immigrants living in Europe, it
is unacceptable to talk in this manner about the immigrants in our
country,’ Uras said.

Annual American-Turkish Conference Cancelled

Annual American-Turkish Conference Cancelled

11:29 ¢ 20.03.10

The annual conference of the American-Turkish Council (ATC) will not
take place this year. The reason? The recent adoption of a US
congressional resolution (H.Res.252) which recognizes the Armenian
Genocide.

According to Turkish daily Milliyet, it’s already been 30 consecutive
years that ATC, one of the most important institutions symbolizing
American-Turkish relations, has been holding such conferences that are
always attended by high-ranking Turkish and American officials,
including prime ministers and officials from the defense and foreign
ministries.

This year, the ATC had planned to hold the conference from April 11-14
with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an expected to attend.

Turkish press considers the cancellation of the conference as a very
serious counter-response to the US administration, in retaliation for
approving a bill that recognizes the Armenian Genocide.

Tert.am

Daily Star Lebanon Slams Erdogan’s Threat To Deport Armenian Workers

DAILY STAR LEBANON SLAMS ERDOGAN’S THREAT TO DEPORT ARMENIAN WORKERS

PanARMENIAN.Net
19.03.2010 13:12 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has
laid down a dangerous and seemingly inexplicable threat, according
to Daily Star Lebanon.

As Shahan Kandaharian, Editor-in-Chief of Beirut-based Aztag newspaper
told PanARMENIAN.Net, that the newspaper accused Turkey of using
double standards.

"Turkey distinguished itself by criticizing the policies of a certain
state, Israel, against a certain stateless people, the Palestinians.

One interview to the BBC could destroy all of the credit amassed by
Erdogan and his government, and make him out to be a petty settler of
scores, not a statesman," the newspaper said. "For the region, Turkey
hasn’t been a shining beacon of free civil society and democracy,
but it’s served as a possible model for the future of Arab states:
civilian governments and a military that doesn’t directly hold the
reigns of power. How could Ergodan’s move possibly benefit anyone?"

"There are 170 thousand Armenians living in Turkey. 70 thousand of
them are Turkish citizens. If necessary, I will tell the remaining 100
thousand to leave. I can do so because they are not Turkish citizens
and I’m not obliged to keep them in my country," Erdogan said earlier
this week.

The fierce reaction of the Turkish PM came after the adoption of
the Armenian Genocide resolution, H.Res.252, by the US House Foreign
Affairs Committee on March 4 and passage of a resolution recognizing
the Genocide of Armenians, Assyrians, Chaldeans and Pontiac Greeks
by the Swedish parliament on March 11.

Gul Has Nothing To Say To Obama

GUL HAS NOTHING TO SAY TO OBAMA

news.am
March 19 2010
Armenia

I think that there are no 100.000 illegal Armenians in Turkey. These
people work here and help their families, Turkish President Abdullah
Gul said, commenting on Erdogan’s threats to deport Armenians.

"Prime Minister told that to emphasize Turkey’s positive stance. I
believe he meant that Turkey does not have hatred and enmity for them.

Human issues should be separated from the political ones. I know how
sensitive he is to human problems. Sometimes his words are taken
differently. Turkish people have no hostility and racism towards
people of other nations. We’ve always stated that U.S., Diaspora and
Caucasus are totally different issues. Status quo is not to anyone’s
benefit, that is why I said that we have to keep on working. Minsk
Group’s efforts are already tangible. It is very crucial that Russian
President Dmitry Medvedev is very decided about settling Caucasian
conflicts," Gul noted.

Asked by the journalist whether he will still speak to Barack Obama
further, Gul replied: "Once we have already spoken on the matter.

There is nothing more to say to Obama. We had an in-depth discussion
and explanation of the issue and said all. Now it’s their turn to
speak. Their decision has complicated Armenia-Turkey reconciliation.

In all events, Caucasian issues are ours too. The current situation
is not beneficial neither to Armenia, nor Turkey or Azerbaijan. We
will do our utmost for peace keeping in the Caucasus," Gul said.

Interestingly, Turkish President toughly met the adoption of Armenian
Genocide Resolution by the U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs.

Both Erdogan and Gul produced personal affronts to U.S. congressmen
accusing them of being unable to string two words together and even
more – they can’t locate Armenia on the world map.