ANKARA: From Where Should We Start The Armenian Issue?

FROM WHERE SHOULD WE START THE ARMENIAN ISSUE?
Selcuk Gultasli

Zaman Online, Turkey
May 31 2006

>From where should we start and what should we do regarding the
“genocide” issue, which has become a tool in the hands of the enemies
of Turks, Muslims and xenophobics, as Ara Sarafian, a British historian
of Armenian origin, aptly points out? Should we feel relieved over the
postponement of the French bill to punish the deniers of the Armenian
“genocide” or should we feel the need for a fresh look at 1915? I
support the second opinion.

It does not take long for people who live abroad to “crash” into the
dimensions of the Armenian issue. Everybody has certain memories that
he/she cannot forget and feels himself/herself “caught red-handed.” I
also have a story:

I was waiting for the green light several years ago. An old lady,
about 80 years old, glaring with her elegance asked in French: “Could
you please help me if you are getting across?” It is something very
common in Brussels. Europeans are getting alone as they get older.

Elderly ask the young to help them while they are counting money in
the market or crossing the road. I told the old lady that I would
help her with great pleasure and asked her if we could continue in
English. With a perfect English, she replied jokingly, “how happy I
am with such a handsome man” and asked me if I were English. When the
green light was on and we began our very short journey across the road,
I said, “No, I am Turkish.”

The old woman forcefully pulled her arm with incredible quickness
and shockingly said, “I am Armenian and you are our enemies.” I was
trying to figure out what she meant and mumbled, “I like Armenians as
I like all human beings. Why should we be enemies?” The old woman had
already walked several steps ahead, repeating her hatred for Turks,
which was enough to understand that it was impossible to continue
the talk. I told her I could take her wherever she wanted to go but
she refused politely.

As a rule, after such shocking incidents one starts to do further
reading about the events and what follows is the melting of your
mindset.

Leaving aside funny arguments such as, “It was the Armenians who
actually committed the genocide against us,” or “Armenians died
of an epidemic,” one has to accept that in 1915, Armenians, then
Ottoman citizens, were subjected to oppression and one has to show
respect for the loss of Armenian lives. Even Professor Guenter Lewy,
who has become a target for the Armenian Diaspora with the claim of
being pro-Turkish, put the Armenian death toll at 642,000. It is in
vain to fight the Armenian Diaspora without acknowledging the great
sorrow of Armenians; under these circumstances, it is impossible to
find even a single serious interlocutor in the West.

Acknowledging the suffering will provide an opportunity to utter few
meaningful words about the massacres by Armenian gangs, their siding
with the invading Russian army and the joy of the Western world while
Muslims were being forced out by a genocidal campaign from the Balkans
and above everything the heinous campaign by those who aim to clean
their conscious over Turkey but refuse to face their own history.

As one starts looking at the issue from a right point of view, one
has to break another taboo. It is the notion that Muslims, Kurds and
Alevis have vowed to destroy Turkey. I vividly remember the desperation
of diplomats when they listened to General Tuncer Kilinc, the former
Secretary-General of the National Security Council, when he begun his
speech by insulting women with headscarves. Although the general’s trip
to Brussels was meant to build unity, he only left ruins behind. If
statesmen themselves begin to categorize the Turks in Europe, then
tomorrow, you will not find anyone to defend the country and then you
will have to insult your own people time and again. There is dire need
for the kind of ambassadors who regard themselves as representatives of
all the people in Turkey, whether they are Muslims, Kurds or Alewites,
but definitely not the kind of people who transfer the headscarf ban
of President Ahmet Necdet Sezer to Europe.

As long as the parrot mindset gives answers to Muslims “Turkey is
secular, and will remain secular!” to Kurds “You are mountainous
Turks,” and to the Armenians “You died of typhus” there will be no
remedy to our woes. Just as we respect the dear remains of our people
who gave their blood in the Balkans, in the Caucasus and in Yemen,
we have to feel the suffering of the Armenians. Only the, we can
begin the fight against the genocide plot.

Andre: Taking The 8th Place Was An Achievement

ANDRE: TAKING THE 8TH PLACE WAS AN ACHIEVEMENT

ArmRadio.am
31.05.2006 17:21

“At our first entry at Eurovision we did more than we were expected
to,” said Andre, who was representing Armenia at Eurovision-2006.

“The Diaspora was backing me, but I had fans also among Turks,”
the singer said.

The 10 points given to Armenia by Turks were unexpected for Andre,
since he was anticipating 12 points. As for the Finnish “Lordi”
rock group, which became the winner of Eurovision, Andre said that
“Finland and Lithuania had cme to tease the Eurovision, but in the
end they found themselves in the top ten.”

How would Andre evaluate his performance at the Eurovision song
contest? ” There where shortcomings, but these were of technical
character. The microphone stuck between my lips when I was dancing,
and people thought I had forgotten the lyrics.”

According to the Head of Foreign Relations Office of the Public
Radio and Television Company of Armenia Diana Mnatsakanyan, all the
participants face technical difficulties.

“Eurovision is an unpredictable contest, you never know which genre
will be preferable next year. Nevertheless, the fact is that the
contest made everybody learn about Armenia. People loved my song and
me,” Andre concluded.

Fund For Armenian Relief Finishes Construction Work Implemented ByGr

FUND FOR ARMENIAN RELIEF FINISHES CONSTRUCTION WORK IMPLEMENTED BY GRANT OF U.S. AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT

Noyan Tapan
May 31 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 31, NOYAN TAPAN. The Fund for Armenian Relief finished
the contsruction program having been implemented by the 1.5 mln
dollars grant of the U.S. Agency for International Development since
2004. As Levon Lachikian, the FAR responsible for press informed
the Noyan Tapan correspondent, in general, construction works were
implemented in 2 boarding schools and 3 old-aged pensioners’ houses
of Armenia. Those are Yerevan boarding schools for children having
poor eyesight and poor ear, old-aged pesnioners’ houses of Yerevan,
of the village of Haghtanak and the Gyumri house-internat for invalids
and elderly people. L.Lachikian mentioned that the Yerevan special
school for children having poor eyesight and the Gyumri house-internat
were fundamentally restored, and the other isntitutions were partly
restored.

Ads Of Turkish Travel Agency Insult Christians

ADS OF TURKISH TRAVEL AGENCY INSULT CHRISTIANS

PanARMENIAN.Net
31.05.2006 13:20 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish travel agencies attract attention of tourists
with an advertisement that insults the Christian world. As reported
by the Yerkramas, the newspaper of Armenians of Russia, the monuments
of Christian culture are represented as sunken towns where mermaids
swim and dervishes perform ritual dances on Christ’s image. A group
of Armenian activists in Saint Petersburg has brought a suit against
one of Turkish travel agencies. On the background of the scandal that
burst out after caricatures of Prophet Mohammed it seems that some
Turkish forces are attempting to stir up inter-religious opposition.

National Assembly To Elect A New Chairman Tomorrow

NATIONAL ASSEMBLY TO ELECT A NEW CHAIRMAN TOMORROW

ArmRadio.am
31.05.2006 16:44

A special sitting was held today at the National Assembly. The agenda
included the issues of electing NA Chairman and Heads of two Standing
Committees.

The suggestion of candidacies and elections will be held
tomorrow. Chairman of the sitting, NA Vice-Speaker Tigran Torosyan
told the journalists that it is the person presiding over the sitting
that decides the order of the questions discussed and he found it
appropriate to hold the elections for the vacant positions on the
1st of June.

Today the Deputies adopted 12 draft laws and ratified eight
international agreements.

Black Boxes Can Be Deciphered

BLACK BOXES CAN BE DECIPHERED

Lragir.am
30 May 06

The News Armenia Agency reports that the state of black boxes of the
Armenian A320, which crashed on May 3 in Sochi, is satisfactory for
deciphering.

Armenian, Russian and French experts are involved in the deciphering
effort of the Interstate Aviation Committee. `Today the recorders of
the plane were opened. The memory devices have been separated and are
ready for processing. The voice and parameter recording devices are in
a satisfactory state and ready for deciphering,’ says the May 30 news
release of the agency.

Turkey: Circassian minority asserts its identity

AKI, Italy
May 29 2006

TURKEY: CIRCASSIAN MINORITY ASSERTS ITS IDENTITY

Istanbul, 29 May (AKI) – Long considered Turkey’s most integrated and
harmonious ethnic minority, the Circassians have recently started
claiming more community rights including own language schools and
want the international community to pressure Russia into recognising
what they say was a “genocide” carried out by Czarist troops in the
mid 1860s. The move coincides with the start of Turkey’s membership
talks with the European Union which has enshrined minority rights in
many of its policies.

According to estimates, some 120,000 Circassians live in Jordan,
45,000 in Syria, and 4,000 in Israel, but the bulk of the diaspora –
3.5 million – live in Turkey. This figure is four times more than the
population living in the Circassians’ traditional homeland in the
North Caucasus, a mountaneous region north of Georgia and Azerbaijan
consisting of several semi-autonomous republics in the Russian
Federation.

Circassians, who are mostly Sunni Muslim, annually commemorate May 21
in rememberance of the mass deportation of their compatriots
beginning on that day in 1864 following the end of the
Russian-Circassian War.

The war ended with the fall of Circassia and was followed by the
forced removal of between 1.2 and 1.5 million Circassians from their
lands. Up to 500,000 died of hunger and illness during the forced
exodus, a deathtoll that Circassian activists say formed part of a
genocidal plan by the Czarist troops to obliterate their nation.

“May 21” commemoration activities have steadily increased in recent
years in different parts of Turkey. The main event this year was an
international conference held in Istanbul last week and attended by
Circassian and Russian intellectuals to discuss the mass
deportations. Titled the International Caucasus Conference, the
gathering was organised by the Caucasus Foundation. Another major
event was a meeting in Kefken a town on the Black Sea coas where the
first Circassians, landed in Turkey after being deported. That
gathering was organised by the Caucasus Federation representing 51
Circassian associations

The recent upsurge in Circassian activism have led some observers to
associate it with attempts by Kurds in Turkey to assert their
autonomy and by Armenian lobbying the international community to
force Turkey to acknowledge as “genocide” the mass deaths of
Armenians during Ottoman rule between 1915-20.

“Circassians have begun realising their identity and painful history
in recent years. There were no such events five years ago,” says
Mehdi Nuzhet Cetinbas, honorary president of the Caucasus Foundation,
in an interview with Adnkronos International (AKI).

“We are discussing some possible initiatives on the recognition of
the Circassian ‘genocide’ by parliaments around the world. The
Turkish parliament hesitates recognising the Circassian genocide
because of Western pressure on [Ankara to] recognise the Armenian
‘genocide’.

“When the Duma (the lower house of Russia’s parliament) accepted a
proposal about Armenians last year, some Turkish deputies [by way of
retort] suggested recognising the Circassian genocide in return last
year, but it was impossible because of Turkey’s warm economic
relations with Russia,” Cetinbas told AKI.

Last year the Circassian Congress, a nongovernmental organisation
based in Maikop, capital of Adygea Republic (a north Caucasus
traditional home of Circassians), applied to the Duma and the
Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) to
recognise the Circassian genocide. The Russian parliament has to date
given no response so far.

Fehim Tastekin, the founder editor of the Agency Caucasus, a news
agency based in Russia’s Caucasus region, says that Moscow is
increasing the pressure on Circassian’s living in ethnic group’s
traditional regions.

“Russia has recently abolished local constitutions in Circassian
regions such as Adygea, Karachay-Cherkes and Kabardino-Balkaria.
According to new Russia legislation, if Circassians returning home
apply for citizenship, they will only be able to have Russian
citizenship and not Circassian. They will need to speak Russian and
show they have lived in Russian territory for at least five years.

“Also Circassian regions are losing their autonomy rights. Now they
can’t choose their president directly. The Kremlin appoints local
leaders in accordance with the new law,” Tastekin told AKI.

Asked whether Circassians living abroad are seeking land compensation
from Russia, Cetinbas replied: “For now this is not on our agenda. We
know Russia will not help on this point and international communities
will not give their support. But if parliaments recognise that the
genocide took place, this will mark a start that will allow us to
talk about more tangible means of compensation.”

“The Circassian diaspora wants to return home. The young generations
do not speak our language. To change this it is crucial that the
Turkish government supports the opening of Circassian language
schools. It is not enough to give permission for private language
courses to be held. We want positive discrimination because
Circassians see Turkey like their own homeland, and are co-founders
of the modern republic,” Cetinbas said.

While current diplomatic barriers continue to frustate Circassian
attempts for international recognition, Cetinbas remains confident
that circumstances will change in the future. “I hope all nations
will know about the Circassian’s tragedy,” he said.

php?cat=Trends&loid=8.0.303906484&par=0

http://www.adnki.com/index_2Level_English.

Official: Armenia soldier killed by Azerbaijani gunfire along border

Official: Armenian soldier killed by Azerbaijani gunfire along border

AP Worldstream; May 29, 2006

An Armenian soldier was killed by gunfire from Azerbaijan military
forces along the two countries’ northern border, an Armenian defense
official said Monday.

The 21-year-old soldier was shot Saturday evening near the town of
Noyemberyan, about 190 kilometers (120 miles) northeast of the
Armenian capital, Yerevan, and died en route to the hospital, Defense
Ministry spokesman Col. Seiran Shakhsuvaryan said.

Azerbaijani military officials could not be reached for comment.
Tensions between the two ex-Soviet republics remain high more than 12
years after open fighting over the disputed enclave of
Nagorno-Karabakh ended with a cease-fire. The enclave is inside
Azerbaijan, but populated mostly by ethnic Armenians, who have run it
since 1994.

Since the breakdown in February of talks between both nations’
presidents to resolve the enclave’s status, border clashes have grown
more frequent and the lack of resolution has hindered development
throughout the strategic Caucasus region.

Armenian officials said two soldiers have been killed since the
beginning of the year and six wounded by Azerbaijani gunfire.

Armenian Team Makes its First Place Firmer

A1+

ARMENIAN TEAM MAKES ITS FIRST PLACE FIRMER

[11:39 am] 30 May, 2006

The Armenian chess team celebrated its next victory in the 8th round
of the World Olympiad beating the team of Cuba 3:1. Vladimir Hakobyan
and Gabriel Sargsyan among the Armenian Grand Masters celebrated their
victory, and Levon Aronyan and Karen Asryan tied their meetings. After
these meetings Armenia firmed its first place by 24 additional points
as the Russian team tied with the Czech team 2:2.

At present the Russian and the Ukrainian teams are in the second place
with 22 points. The Ukrainian team beat the Sweden team 3:1. By the
way, Armenian Grand Master Gabriel Sargsyan gained 7 points from the 8
meetings he held, thus showing the best result in the current
Olympiad. Vladimir Hakobyan also displays excellent participation, and
he has already gained 6 points from the previous 7 rounds. Armenia
will meet the Ukrainian team in the 9th round. This will be the most
important meeting. Provided they win, Armenian chess players will have
a good opportunity to occupy the first place. The Russian team will
meet the French one in this round.

Armenian women team beat the Indian team 2:1 due to Lilit Lazarian
and Elina Danielyan. Siranoush Andreasyan lost the meeting this
time. At present the team is in the 9th place with 15.5 points. The
leader is the Russian team with its 19 points. The next rival of the
Armenian women team will be the German team.

Ex-Speaker: The More People Like Me Live In ROA, The More Developed

ARTUR BAGHDASARIAN:THE MORE PEOPLE LIKE ME LIVE IN ARMENIA, THE MORE
DEVELOPED ARMENIA WILL BE

Yerevan, May 25. ArmInfo.Even being among the authorities, “Orinats
Yerkir” party didn’t stop criticizing negative phenomenon existing in
the country and spared no efforts to annihilate them. Artur
Baghdasarian, leader of “Orinats Yerkir” party said this in the course
of the debates with Artashes Geghamian, leader of “National Unity”
party, over “Shant” TV.

Baghdasarian emphasized that his party accumulated great deal of
complaints from RA citizens and sent them to RA General Prosecutor’s
Office. “Being among the authorities, we could enjoy the power like
other parties and take advantage of the situation, but we didn’t do
that,” Baghdasarian said, asking what the “National Unity” party and
Artashes Geghamian did being among the opposition.

In response, Geghamian said that Baghdasarian’s duty of the second
official person of Armenia wasn’t mere criticizing the negative
phenomenon, but their annihilation. “I am no longer the second
official person of Armenia, I have resigned,” Baghdasarian said. “As
far as I know, when being the second official person, you were living
in prosperity,” Geghamian said. “At present, I also live in
prosperity,” Baghdasarian answered. “Beware, you may get rotten,”
Geghamian warned.