Turkish Parliament Not To Ratify Protocols: Former Turkish FM

TURKISH PARLIAMENT NOT TO RATIFY PROTOCOLS: FORMER TURKISH FM

news.am
Feb 22 2010
Armenia

Even if Turkish Premier tables Protocols’ ratification in the
parliament, MPs will not approve them until positive momentum in
Karabakh peace process is gained, former Turkish FM Yasar Yakis told
Azerbaijani Trend News.

"If Armenia hopes that Ankara will accept alterations to the Protocols
by RA Constitutional Court, no avail. Ankara will never admit them,"
Yakis said.

According to him, if Armenia has any claims to the Protocols it should
have declared of them earlier, during the discussion.

"If Turkish Parliament MPs say they will not ratify the documents
until Karabakh conflict is settled, neither premier nor foreign
minister or president can affect them," former FM underlined.

Speaking of OSCE Minsk Group efforts, Yakis stressed that presently
Washington is the most concerned party in the resolution of Karabakh
conflict, as protraction might affect negatively relations with U.S.

ally – Turkey.

In its turn Russia wishes to hold ground in the South Caucasus and has
no intention to disown its influence in the region. If Armenia solves
its problems with Turkey, there will be no need in Russia’s presence
in the South Caucasus and sooner or later Armenia will lean on U.S.,
Yakis reckons.

Production Volumes Of 156 Industrial Enterprises Of Armenia Grow Ove

PRODUCTION VOLUMES OF 156 INDUSTRIAL ENTERPRISES OF ARMENIA GROW OVER PAST YEAR

Noyan Tapan
Feb 23, 2010

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 23, NOYAN TAPAN. The results of monitoring conducted
by the RA Ministry of Economy show that production volumes of 156
industrial enterprises of Armenia grew in January 2010 compared to
the same period of 2009, Head of the ministry’s department of industry
Hayk Mirzoyan said at the February 23 press conference.

According to him, the growth was mainly due to 78% growth in
chemical industry – in particular, as a result of relaunching Nairit
Plant, as well as an increase in production of plastic items and
paint-and-lacquer materials. H. Mirzoyan said that in January of this
year a 23.6% growth was recorded in mining industry as well.

"Acnis At 15: The Power Of New Ideas"

"ACNIS AT 15: THE POWER OF NEW IDEAS"

rahos16917.html
18:23:08 – 22/02/2010

On February 19, the Armenian Center for National and International
Studies (ACNIS) hosted a special reception to release the new
ACNIS annual yearbook publication, entitled "ACNIS at 15: The
Power of New Ideas". The reception was attended by over 100 guests,
including members of the Armenian parliament and government officials,
representatives from international organizations and members of the
diplomatic community in Armenia, including Italian Ambassador Bruno
Scapini, British Ambassador Charles Lonsdale and Ambassador Sergey
Kapinos, the head of the OSCE Office in Yerevan.

Welcoming the guests, ACNIS Director Richard Giragosian explained that
the release of the "ACNIS at 15: The Power of New Ideas" yearbook
represented the Center’s mission to offer innovative research and
objective analysis on a wide range of critical issues in order
to raise the level of public awareness and to encourage greater
knowledge and debate within Armenian society. He added that the
yearbook also reflected the Center’s past fifteen years of objective
and professional analysis, which he stressed was rooted in a broader
effort to strengthen and deepen the formulation of public policy in
Armenia. The ACNIS director specifically pointed to the significance
of the name of the yearbook, highlighting that it was based on "the
power of new ideas" in order to contribute to the development of
critical thinking in Armenia.

Giragosian also expressed sadness, however, with the fact that the
reception coincided with the sixth anniversary of the tragic murder
of Armenian Army Lieutenant Gurgen Markarian, who was brutally killed
by an Azerbaijani soldier during a NATO language training course
in Budapest, Hungary. Commemorating the Armenian officer’s murder,
Giragosian explained that the tragic crime only affirmed the larger
reality of threats to Armenian security that he explained were not only
demonstrated by the murder but that are also confirmed by Azerbaijan’s
repeated threats of war and militant rhetoric directed against Armenia.

On behalf of the Center, Giragosian then welcomed the more than
100 guests and specifically thanked the representatives from the
embassies of France, Italy, Romania, Syria, the United Kingdom and
the United States, as well as from international organizations, such
as the Council of Europe, the European Union Delegation in Armenia,
the OSCE Office in Yerevan, the Red Cross, United Nations and the
US Agency for International Development (USAID). He also noted
the presence of officials from the Armenian ministries of defense,
finance, foreign affairs and justice, as well as Armenian Members
of Parliament Larisa Alaverdyan, Anahit Bakhshyan, Armen Martirosyan
and Stepan Safaryan from the "Heritage" Party.

Giragosian then introduced two prominent contributors to the Yearbook,
Dr. Tatoul Manasserian and ACNIS Senior Analyst Manvel Sargsian. Dr.

Manasserian, a Professor of Economics at Yerevan Sate University,
offered his congratulations to ACNIS for its decade and a half of
work and hailed the yearbook as the latest example of the Center’s
commitment to innovative and objective analysis. For his part, ACNIS
Senior Analyst Sargsian expressed his appreciation to the guests and
added that the new publication offered a diverse set of papers and
studies covering a broad range of domestic and foreign policy issues
with a national, regional and international focus.

In his closing remarks, ACNIS Director Giragosian reminded the guests
that the Center was created 15 years ago as a pioneering institutional
initiative by Raffi K. Hovannisian, Armenia’s first Minister of
Foreign Affairs, whose vision centered on the need for an objective and
independent strategic research institution or "think tank" in Armenia.

The nearly 500-page "ACNIS at 15: The Power of New Ideas" yearbook
offers a unique collection of two dozen essays and articles, in
Armenian, English and Russian, authored by leading Armenian and
international experts. The yearbook also includes a comprehensive
summary chronology of significant events in each of the countries of
the South Caucasus region since 1991, focusing on political, economic,
social and security-related developments in Armenia, Azerbaijan,
Georgia and Nagorno Karabagh, and offers the reader an accompanying
set of reference maps, documents and materials. The "ACNIS at 15: The
Power of New Ideas" yearbook is available by contacting the Center
and the electronic version can be readily downloaded from the ACNIS
website at

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/society-l
www.acnis.am/main.

AAA: Danny Tarkanian to Address Assembly in Florida

PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
February 22, 2010
Contact: Press Department
Email: [email protected]
Phone: (202) 393-3434

SPECIAL GUEST DANNY TARKANIAN TO ADDRESS ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY FLORIDA BANQUET

Annual Members Weekend March 5th & 6th

Washington, DC – The Armenian Assembly of America (Assembly) is
pleased to announce that Assembly Member Danny Tarkanian, a
businessman and attorney in Las Vegas, Nevada, and son of legendary
basketball coach Jerry Tarkanian, will be the Assembly’s Special Guest
and Featured Speaker on March 6th in Boynton Beach, Florida.

"Danny has been active locally and nationally on public policy issues,
and we look forward to hearing his perspective on the participation of
Armenian-Americans in the U.S. democratic process," stated Assembly
Executive Director Bryan Ardouny.

Since its founding in 1972, the Assembly has maintained its premier
role as a nonpartisan advocacy organization. With members across the
country, the Assembly is the largest Washington-based nationwide
organization promoting public understanding and awareness of Armenian
issues. Members, who contribute $100 and subscribe to the aims and
purposes of the Assembly, are afforded voting rights. The Annual
Members meeting taking place in Florida will serve as an opportunity
to reflect on the annual progress made and the areas in which to forge
ahead for the betterment of the Armenian people.

"I have traveled throughout my home state of Nevada and across the
country listening to the concerns of everyday Americans, and have over
the course of the last year had the good fortune to meet with so many
of my fellow Armenians," stated Danny Tarkanian. "I am proud to be a
member of the Armenian Assembly, which I consider to be a critical
nonpartisan voice working to strengthen the U.S.-Armenia relationship.
Over the years, the Assembly has exhibited the pioneering spirit that
reflects the aspirations and goals we all share and care so deeply
about," continued Tarkanian. "Together, I know we will succeed as we
continue to work toward universal affirmation of the Armenian
Genocide."

"We encourage all Assembly members, supporters and friends to attend
our weekend of activities," stated Assembly Board Member and Co-Chair
of Development, Lu Ann Ohanian. "There has never been a more important
time to be involved," added Ohanian.

For more information about the Annual Members Weekend, or to RSVP,
please contact Carol Norigian at 561-734-0133 or via email at
[email protected].

Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly of America is the largest
Washington-based nationwide organization promoting public
understanding and awareness of Armenian issues. The Assembly is a
501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership organization.

###

NR#2010-14

Washington Getting More Involved in Reconciliation Process

EURASIA INSIGHT
ARMENIA AND TURKEY: WASHINGTON GETTING MORE INVOLVED IN RECONCILIATION PROCESS
Joshua Kucera 2/19/10

The United States is stepping up its role in brokering reconciliation
between Armenia and Turkey, aiming to reinvigorate the stalled
process. The impending debate over a US Congressional resolution to
formally recognize the Armenian genocide, however, is shaping up as a
wild card in the delicate process.

Last October, at a ceremony in Switzerland, Armenia and Turkey signed
protocols to pave the way for the establishment of diplomatic
relations and the reopening of the border between the two countries.
[For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

Since then, the two sides have argued over the ratification of the
protocols by the two countries’ respective parliaments. [For
background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton played an unprecedented role in the
signing of the protocols, personally mediating between the two parties
to help resolve a last-minute dispute. [For background see the Eurasia
Insight archive].

On February 4, Clinton’s deputy, James Steinberg, went to Yerevan to
meet with Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan. The reconciliation
process topped his agenda of discussion points. The next day,
Steinberg met with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Turkish
Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu at a security conference in Munich to
discuss the same issue. "I very much hope that both Armenia and Turkey
will move forward. I don’t think delay is in anybody’s interests,"
Steinberg said in Yerevan.

Some political observers believe that heavy US involvement is needed
to break the current logjam. "The US role has been indispensable in
this process. If the United States doesn’t continually encourage the
parties, the likelihood of ratification is greatly diminished," said
David Phillips, former chair of the Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation
Commission and director of the Program on Conflict Prevention and
Peacebuilding at American University. Phillips added that the United
States had to go with "a full-court press that needs to engage both
Hillary Clinton and President [Barack] Obama, if we’re going to be
able to seal the deal."

A complicating factor will be the upcoming debate over the perennial
Congressional resolution on the Armenian genocide. Resolutions
recognizing the genocide are regularly brought up by legislators from
heavily Armenian-American districts, though the resolutions have
always failed, usually because of concerns that passage would alienate
Turkey, a close US ally. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
archive].

The newest version of the resolution was introduced last year, but no
action has yet been taken on it. In early February, Rep. Howard
Berman, the chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs,
announced that he will bring the resolution up for debate on March 4.

The move appears to be an attempt to spur Turkey to action on the
protocols. The belief among some in Washington is that Turkey will
want to appear helpful – and thus will ratify the protocols – in order
to convince members of Congress that Ankara is a valuable ally, said
Emil Sanamyan, the Washington-based editor of the newspaper Armenian
Reporter.

"Since it [the resolution] was introduced there was no progress at
all, because I think the Obama administration asked the Congressional
leadership, Nancy Pelosi and Howard Berman, not to touch the
resolution while there was progress being made [on the protocols].
Now, clearly, progress is not being made, the process is stalled and
lo and behold, the chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee schedules
a vote on it for early March," Sanamyan said. "It’s not so much
pressure from Armenian-American groups, but was made with a nod from
the State Department to use the resolution as leverage to get Turkey
to make progress on this process."

The State Department, which has traditionally opposed Armenian
genocide resolutions because of the potential to offend Turkey, has
been unusually reticent to criticize the resolution this time around,
said Elizabeth Chouldjian, spokeswoman for the Armenian National
Committee of America, an Armenian-American lobbying group. State
Department officials have not been lobbying members of Congress
against the resolution, as they have in the past, and when senior
State Department officials have been asked recently about the
resolution they have dodged the question, Chouldjian said.

"Under the Bush administration, that would have been the opportunity
for them to oppose the legislation," Chouldjian continued. "But here,
you have a dodging, working around the question, certainly not
opposing it."

If the State Department thinks the genocide resolution vote will make
Turkey more likely to ratify the reconciliation protocols, it is
miscalculating, said Soner Cagaptay, director of the Turkish Research
Program at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Because the
protocols are controversial now in Turkey, there is no domestic
political will to ratify them, something State Department Turkey
experts are well aware of, he said.

In addition, the United States has a diminishing amount of leverage
over Turkey, as Ankara increasingly is orienting its foreign policy
away from the West and toward the Middle East, Cagaptay said. "So
there’s not a lot the United States can do to make the Turks move
forward on this," he said.

A State Department spokesman, when queried about the genocide
resolution, said the department does not comment on pending
legislation before Congress. The White House did not respond to
requests for comment by press time.

Passage of the resolution would almost certainly dash any hope that
Turkey would ratify the protocols. "The Turkish-US relationship…
will suffer a tremendous blow in the wake of any vote in Congress
which would attempt to mischaracterize the historical facts of the
First World War, and the events of 1915," said one Turkish official,
speaking to EurasiaNet on condition of anonymity. "The ratification of
the protocols will be permanently derailed."

Pro-Turkish lobbying groups are using the delicate situation
surrounding the ratification of the protocols to convince members of
Congress to oppose the genocide resolution, said G’`-‘nay Evinch,
president of the Assembly of Turkish-American Associations. "A
resolution will cause everything to move into paralysis," he said.
"It’s time to push both sides toward ratification of the protocols.
And that can be done with positive reinforcement, rather than
negative."

But that is just a pretext, said Phillips, the American University
expert. "The Turks knew full well that the protocols wouldn’t deter
Armenians from seeking genocide recognition, so this confluence of
factors was predictable from the beginning," he said. "After gauging
the domestic political backlash, it appears that Ankara is looking for
an excuse to walk away from their commitments."

Some members of Congress who have previously supported the genocide
resolution are not supporting it now, citing the ongoing protocols
process, Sanamyan said. In addition, the United States is also likely
to soon start moving toward imposing new sanctions on Iran for
Tehran’s intransigence on its nuclear program, and Turkey’s
cooperation would be indispensable in that effort. And that debate in
Congress is likely to take place at the same time as the genocide
resolution debate.

Editor’s Note: Joshua Kucera is a Washington, DC,-based freelance
writer who specializes in security issues in Central Asia, the
Caucasus and the Middle East.

The LA Times and Armenian Coverage

The LA Times and Armenian Coverage

s-and-armenian-coverage/
By Garen Yegparian on Feb 19th, 2010

We were all pleased when the LA Times finally left the dark side by
terminating its use of the word `alleged’ every time it referred to
the Genocide. We were also pleased when the paper dumped Douglas
Frantz, a clearly biased, Turkophilic former editor. But is that it?
Is that all we want from the preeminent newspaper serving the region
with the second largest Armenian population outside of Armenia?

The LATimes covers our Christmas celebrations every January, but
that’s about it for coverage of local issues of Armenian interest.
Occasionally, Homenetmen’s Navasartian Games will elicit coverage. I
suppose thousands of people, largely kids, getting together
constructively don’t merit interest more than about once every
half-a-dozen years. Part of this is our fault. Communities smaller
than ours get more visibility. Why shouldn’t we be pushing more human
interest stories? Vartivar anyone? Wetting each other sanctioned by
one of the oldest churches around sure seems like an interesting story
angle, not to mention its origins back in pagan times. How about our
political activities? Or the social services and support our
organizations provide? We have to reach out to the media more.

But our shotcomings aren’t the whole story. The March 1, 2008 tragedy
got coverage, as did the scheme run by Armenian consular officials in
LA to enable some immigrants from Armenia to remain in the U.S.
illegally. Where is the `good news’ coverage of Armenia? I’m not
even sure now, but I think the Times covered the Armenia Fund Telethon
all of once. Forget about reporting what the money collected has
achieved!

Finally, while the ill-begotten soccer diplomacy and it’s even more
illegitimate offspring, the Protocols, were front and center, the
coverage has been skewed to toe establishment/state
department/pro-Turkey positions. A somewhat poor light was cast upon
the Armenian side in reporting on demonstrations when Turkey’s
president, Gul, went to Armenia in the summer of 2008. An October 4,
2009 news piece about protests against the protocols claiming that
`both sides’ opposed these documents leaves the impression that
`Armenians oppose’ them. Just two weeks ago `The truce in need of a
rescue’ sang the praises of the `opportunity’ presented by the
protocols. All of this had been preceded by Hugh Pope’s `Soccer-match
diplomacy’ from September 16, 2008. You don’t have to imagine how
this Turkophile’s commentary read. To be fair, he attempts to
palliate his pro-Turkey bent, but ultimately, he is true to his
Turkish friends.

Clearly we have a lot to do on the media front in general, and the
LATimes, in particular. Our previous successes (with the Times
itself, or more recently with KFI and the inappropriate `joke’ about
the Genocide) indicate that we can and know how to proceed. This is
an important arena, though not the only one, where ideas and mindsets
are formed. Let’s get our advocacy organizations on this. I suspect
other major newspapers need the same kind of attention from us, too.
All our communities have their work cut out for them.

http://www.asbarez.com/77680/the-la-time

Baku Obstructing NK Settlement Talks – Armenian FM

BAKU OBSTRUCTING NK SETTLEMENT TALKS – ARMENIAN FM

Interfax
Feb 17 2010
Russia

*** Azerbaijan is obstructing negotiations on ways to resolve the
conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh because it refuses to allow the self-
proclaimed republic to take part in the peace process, Armenian
Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian said.

"By objecting to Nagorno-Karabakh’s participation in the negotiating
process, Baku obstructs these talks because progress cannot be made
in them without Karabakh’s immediate involvement," Nalbandian said.

Azeri Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov said earlier that he saw
the future status of Nagorno-Karabakh as a part of Azerbaijan.

"What counts most is who is responsible for solving this issue.

This is a matter for the people of Nagorno-Karabakh. Certain parts
of the Madrid document, which were published immediately after the
statement made by the presidents of Russia, the U.S. and France in
L’Aquila, make this absolutely clear. If Azerbaijan is opposed to
this fundamental approach, it means that it is effectively obstructing
the negotiating process," the Armenian foreign minister said.

"As for measures to deal with the consequences of the conflict, it
is also necessary to bear in mind Azerbaijan’s occupation of three
districts and issues surrounding the return of refugees there. The
impact of the conflict must be tackled in parallel to measures aimed at
clarifying the reasons behind the conflict. All these issues should
be resolved through negotiations, on the basis of a mutual accord
and through peaceful methods," Nalbandian said.

Journalist Kemal Goktas: Police Knew About Dink Murder Plot

JOURNALIST KEMAL GOKTAS: POLICE KNEW ABOUT DINK MURDER PLOT

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
17.02.2010 13:30 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Kemal Goktas, a correspondent for Vatan daily in
Ankara, told an Istanbul court Tuesday that the Istanbul Police
Department knew about the plot to assassinate Turkish-Armenian
journalist, Agos newspaper editor Hrant Dink but did not take any
precautions.

In a hearing at Istanbul’s 2nd Court of First Instance, Goktas, who is
being tried for revealing secret documents and jeopardizing the state’s
police department, said that the Trabzon Police Department had informed
the Istanbul Police Department about the plans for Dink’s murder.

"Then Intelligence Chief Ramazan Akyurek and the Istanbul Police
Department filed a criminal complaint against me for publishing the
document. This document showed how Hrant Dink was going to be murdered
and [proved that] police knew it beforehand. It shows that a group
headed by Yasin Hayal plotted to kill Dink," Goktas said.

In his book titled "Hrant Dink’s Murder – Media, Judiciary and State",
Goktas had revealed how the Istanbul Police Department ignored warnings
from the Trabzon Police Department about Dink’s murder.

Goktas, who is facing a three-to-five-year prison sentence, also said
Akyurek did not take steps to prevent the murder.

Meanwhile, 19 police officers, including Akyurek, that were charged
with negligence in the investigation into the Dink assassination have
been cleared by a report drafted by Interior Ministry investigators,
Today’s Zaman reported.

Hrant Dink (September 15, 1954 – January 19, 2007) was a
Turkish-Armenian journalist, columnist and editor-in-chief of
Agos bilingual newspaper. Dink was best known for advocating
Turkish-Armenian reconciliation and human and minority rights in
Turkey. Charged under the notorious article 301 of the Turkish
Criminal Code, Dink stood a trial for insulting Turkishness. After
numerous death threats, Hrant Dink was assassinated in Istanbul in
January 2007, by Ogun Samast, a Turkish nationalist.

Problem Of Teghut May Be Included In National Assessment Report At R

PROBLEM OF TEGHUT MAY BE INCLUDED IN NATIONAL ASSESSMENT REPORT AT RIO-20

ArmInfo
2010-02-16 17:28:00

ArmInfo. The problem of development of the Teghut deposit may be
included in the National assessment report at Rio-20, said Chairwoman
of "For the sake of stable development" Association Karine Danielyan
at a press-conference at Henaran club, Tuesday.

According to her, besides Teghut, the report will also present the
situation on the decline in Sevan whitefish stock. Danielyan said that
the given problems will be reflected in the report in case she also
has an opportunity to work at them. "But even in the contrary case,
I will all the same exert all efforts for this",- she said. Danielyan
expressed hope that the governmental structures will be very active
in working at the national report. "This process should go on at the
highest level, and not only at the level of public organizations",-
stressed Danielyan. She recalled that the United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development (UNCED), also known as the Earth Summit,
took place in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. It aimed to work out the key
principles and coordinated steps to prevent an ecological, social and
economic crisis. Rio-10, or the Second Earth Summit dedicated to the
problems of stable development took place in Johannesburg in 2002.

Danielyan said that at Rio- 10 Armenia presented its first National
assessment report. Rio-20 is scheduled for 2012, and the issues of
preparation will be discussed at the international summit in Bali
this week. In particular, it will cover meetings of representatives
of public organizations from various countries of the world. It is
noteworthy that Danielyan herself and an expert from Croatia will
represent the European region.

Armenian party plans campaign against ratification of protocols

Interfax, Russia
Feb 12 2010

Armenian party plans campaign against ratification of protocols with Turkey

YEREVAN Feb 12

Armenia’s Dashnaktsutyun revolutionary federation plans to start
collecting the signatures of MPs who are opposed to the ratification
of protocols that establish diplomatic relations between Yerevan and
Ankara.

"In the near future, we will launch a signature collection campaign
among parliamentary deputies and via the Internet in order to prevent
the ratification of the protocols in their current form," Kiro
Manoyan, head of the Dashnaktsutyun Central Office for Political
Affairs, told journalists on Friday.

The Armenian and Turkish foreign ministers signed protocols on the
establishment of diplomatic relations and the development of bilateral
ties in Zurich on October 10, 2009. The documents need to be ratified
by the two countries’ parliaments.