Vartan Oskanian: I wanted to achieve the maximum for Armenia

Vartan Oskanian: I wanted to achieve the maximum for Armenia
06.06.2009 15:32 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ `Most important foreign policy legacy of the two
governments I were a part of was clearly our willingness to enter into
relations with Turkey with no pre-conditions,’ RA FM of 1998-2008,
Head of Civilitas Fund, Vartan Oskanian stated.
According to him, the history will show that the first administration
did what it could to secure Karabagh’s security during and after a
time of war.
`The other is our clear commitment to Europe. Although we haven’t done
enough I think to move towards European values and traditions, we have
stated clearly from the beginning that our view is toward Europe, that
is where we belong,’ Armenian politician noted.
The ex-FM emphasized that applying a complementary policy it means one
act among different countries.
`I wanted to achieve the maximum for Armenia. Not only did we have
little diplomatic or political experience, we also had limited
resources. So, if we only had 10 or later 20 embassies around the
world, it is difficult for us to communicate with the other 180
capitals around the world. The first thing international organizations
made possible was direct contact. It was during those annual or
semi-annual meetings that we could converse with ambassadors of those
other countries and make sure they understood our perspectives, our
policies, our positions. We also learned a very important lesson about
multilateralism, that is, if you want others to be interested in your
issues, your causes, your problems, you must be interested in
theirs. We cannot be a member of the world community and not be
concerned with global issues like weapons of mass destruction, climate
change, minority rights, migration, reforming international
institutions. If we’re not interested in those topics, if we don’t
have something to say about them, then we shouldn’t be surprised if
they leave the room when we start talking about self-determination or
genocide recognition or regional cooperation. International
organizations force you to become a member of the international
community,’ asbarez.com cited the Head of Civilitas Fund as saying.

Concerts Staged Within Year Of Bulgarian Culture In Armenia

CONCERTS STAGED WITHIN YEAR OF BULGARIAN CULTURE IN ARMENIA

BSANNA NEWS
June 5 2009
Ukraine

SOFIA, June 5. (BTA). The Naiden Kirov Folk Dance Ensemble of Rousse
and the Bistritsa Babi Folk Group staged a concert within the Year of
Bulgarian Culture in Armenia, the Culture Ministry’s Press Centre said.

A delegation, headed by Deputy Culture Minister Ivan Tokadjiev,
visited Armenia from May 29 to June 4 for the opening of the Year of
Bulgarian Culture. It is organized in accordance with the Protocol of
Intentions between the two countries’ culture ministries. The document
also envisages the holding of a Year of Armenian Culture in Bulgaria.

A cultural festival was another event on the calendar of the Year of
Bulgarian Culture. It included performances by the Sofia Soloists
Chamber Ensemble and Arabesk Ballet as well as the staging of an
exhibition: "Bulgarian Monasteries and Holy Places" Tokadjiev met
with Culture Minister Hasmik Poghosian in Yerevan.

The two discussed the programme of the upcoming Year of Armenian
Culture in Bulgaria and the progress of its preparation.

Harut Sassounian: German Scholar Exposes Turkish Propaganda About Je

GERMAN SCHOLAR EXPOSES TURKISH PROPAGANDA ABOUT JEWS
By Harut Sassounian

AZG Armenian Daily
05/06/2009

Armenian Genocide, Holocaust

For many years, the Turkish government and its hired propagandists have
claimed that Jews have been well treated in Turkey throughout history.

In recent years, as Turkey came under intense international pressure
to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide, Turkish officials decided to
present a more positive image of their country by forcing local Jewish
leaders to issue public statements claiming that their community has
lived in peace and prosperity for hundreds of years.

Turkey’s Jewish leaders obediently carried out the dictates of the
Turkish government in order to assure the safety of their community
and to safeguard their own business interests.

Very little research has been done, however, on the true conditions
of the Jewish community in the Ottoman Empire and the Republic
of Turkey. German scholar Corry Guttstadt recently filled that
gap by publishing a comprehensive study of 520 pages on Turkey’s
reprehensible actions during the Holocaust. The book’s title in German
is: "Die Turkei, die Juden und der Holocaust" (Turkey, the Jews and the
Holocaust). Based on archival materials located in several European
countries, she was able to document the tragic fate of Turkish Jewry
during the Holocaust.

In an interview conducted by Sonja Galler and posted on ,
Guttstadt explains why the Jewish community in Turkey dwindled from
150,000 strong during World War I to only 20,000 at the present time.

"To portray the Ottoman Empire as a ‘multicultural paradise’ is
absurd and ahistorical," Guttstadt says. "As non-Muslims, the Jews
were subject to countless constraints. Like the Christians, they had
to pay a poll tax and were obliged to behave in a submissive manner
towards Muslims."

Having witnessed the genocide of the Armenian people, Jews were
terrified that they might suffer the same fate. To ensure their safety
and survival, Jews did everything possible, including conversion to
Islam, to prove that they were loyal Turkish subjects.

"Most Jews initially regarded themselves as allies of the Kemalist
movement and looked to the new Republic with largely positive
expectations," Guttstadt explains. "These hopes were quickly dashed
because despite their attempt to adapt and their declarations of
loyalty, the Jews quickly became a target for the rigid nationalism
of the young Republic. One of the defining policies of the young
Republic was the ‘Turkification’ of state, economy, and society,"
Guttstadt says. As a result, Jews were "successively driven out of a
number of professions and economic sectors. This prompted many Jews
to emigrate" from Turkey.

In the period between the two world wars, there was increasing
intolerance in Turkey against Jews and other minorities. According to
Guttstadt, "Anti-Semitic tracts like the ‘Protocols of the Learned
Elders of Zion’ reached Turkey and were translated into Turkish in
the 1930’s. Following a visit to Germany, Cevat Rifat Atilhan, who
could be described as the father of Islamic anti-Semitism in Turkey,
started publishing the anti-Semitic newspaper ‘Milli Inkilap’ (National
Revolution) in Istanbul, which contained anti-Semitic caricatures that
had been lifted directly out of the Nazi newspaper, ‘Der Sturmer.’ Both
the ‘Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion’ and ‘Mein Kampf’ have
gone through umpteen new editions to this day. Nationalist measures
that affected not only Jews, but also Kurds, Armenians, and Greeks,
included forced settlement, the so-called ‘wealth tax’ — which led
to the confiscation of assets of those who were not in a position to
pay the arbitrarily fixed and frequently astronomical sums they were
required to pay — and forced labor in camps in eastern Anatolia."

Prior to World War II, close to 30,000 Turkish Jews fled to Europe
to escape unfair and sometimes brutal treatment at home. Little did
they know that an even more tragic fate awaited them. In 1942, Nazi
Germany asked Ankara to remove its Jewish citizens from territories
occupied by the German Reich, so they would not be rounded up along
with the rest of European Jewry. Ankara, however, refused to allow
their return by revoking their Turkish citizenship. As a result,
several thousand Turkish Jews perished after being dispatched to
German concentration camps.

Guttstadt also exposes the oft-repeated lie that Turkey provided a
safe haven to many European Jews during the Holocaust. She states
that some Turkish consuls in European countries, who intervened to
obtain the release of incarcerated Turkish Jews, did not always do so
"for purely humanitarian reasons," but "to line their pockets."

Corry Guttstadt’s revealing book should be translated and published
in several major languages in order to expose the Turkish government’s
racist and criminally negligent policies vis-a-vis its Jewish citizens
during the Holocaust.

www.Qantara.de

Armenian Figure Skaters Left For The U.S. To Prepare For Rating Comp

ARMENIAN FIGURE SKATERS LEFT FOR THE U.S. TO PREPARE FOR RATING COMPETITIONS IN GERMANY

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
04.06.2009

/PanARMENIA N.Net/ Armenian figure skaters Gegham Vardanyan and Ani
Vardanyan with manager of the Armenia’s national team of figure
skating Armen Asoyan left for Los Angeles, U.S. on June 2. They will
be coached by Rafael Haroutiunian, trainer of the fivefold world
champion Michelle Kwan by June 24.

Gegham and Ani will be preparing for the international rating
competition to be held in the German Oberstdorf between September 24
and 30. To receive a right to participate in the 2010 Winter Olympic
Games in Wangoover Armenian figure skaters must be among first six
in the rating competition.

According to Samvel Khachatryan, president of the Armenian Federation
of Figure Skating, the federation is looking for additional resources
to prolong the stay of the Armenian sportsmen in the U.S. "The
conditions in the U.S. to prepare for the international competitions
are perfect. Our figure skaters will be trained at the "Bears’ forest"
skating-rink, which is one of the best rinks in the United States,"
he said. Until now, all expenses related to the travel and training of
Armenian figure skaters in the U.S. were covered by National Olympic
Committee and its president Gagik Tsarukyan.

North Kurdistan Will Be Exporting Oil To The Turkish Mediterranean P

NORTH KURDISTAN WILL BE EXPORTING OIL TO THE TURKISH MEDITERRANEAN PORT OF CEYHAN

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
02.06.2009

/PanARMENIAN .Net/ Iraqi Kurds are set to begin crude oil exports via
Turkey today after overcoming a dispute with the Baghdad administration
over the distribution of Iraq’s oil wealth. "We consider the start of
the exports as a historic moment for us," Mehmet Okutan, the Turkish
project manager of the Taq Taq oil field, one of the two northern
Iraqi fields that will officially start pumping crude oil. Oil from
Taq Taq, along with Tawke, will be exported by the Kirkuk-Yumurtalýk
pipeline to the Turkish Mediterranean port of Ceyhan. It will be the
first time the semi-autonomous Kurdish region has exported oil. The
Kurds and the Iraqi central government have long been in dispute over
the management of oil fields. But a deal was worked out to allow the
Kurds to ship oil through the government’s northern pipeline, a major
breakthrough in the dispute. The start of oil exports is also a sign
of the growing trust in Kurds’ ties with Turkey. Ankara, in the past,
viewed Kurdish attempts to control oil reserves in the northern Iraq
as a step in direction of expanding their political influence in the
region, something that could also lead to an independent Kurdish
state. Now, Turkey’s Genel Enerji is jointly developing the Taq
Taq field with oil and gas company Addax Petroleum. Tawke is being
developed by Norway’s DNO International. Okutan told reporters on
Saturday that exports from Taq Taq will begin at about 40,000 barrels
per day (bpd) and increase to 60,000 bpd by October. "Starting Monday,
we will be able to produce 40,000 barrels per day from this facility,
but starting in October, at the latest November, we will be able to
produce 60,000 bpd," he said. Tawke is set to start pumping 60,000
bpd, Kurdish authorities say. Taq Taq’s output will initially travel
by truck and then be pumped into a pipeline to Turkey for export. The
oil will be sold by Iraq’s national State Oil Marketing Organization
(SOMO).

Baghdad has long insisted that the Kurds do not have the right to make
deals with private oil firms without its approval. It also opposes the
production-sharing agreements the Kurdish government has signed with
firms and there remains uncertainty over how the Kurdish administration
will pay Addax, Genel and DNO for the crude they pump. The oil feud
is part of a larger dispute between minority Kurds and majority Arabs
over resources, land and power in Iraq, which has held up the passage
of modern national oil legislation, NYTurkish.com reported.

ANKARA: Threatening E-Mail To Agos Newspaper

THREATENING E-MAIL TO AGOS NEWSPAPER

BIA Magazine
June 1 2009
Turkey

Assasinated Turkish-Armenian writer Hrant Dinks newspaper Agos receives
an e-mail threat signed as TIT. Newspapers lawyer Cetin says that
they filed a complaint about the threat and wont be intimidated by
such efforts.

Agos newspaper received an e-mail threat today. Founder of the
bilingual newspaper, Turkish-Armenian writer Hrant Dink was gunned
down by an extremist nationalist last Friday.

Lawyer of the newspaper Fethiye Cetin said they immediately filed a
complaint about the threat, which was signed as Turkish Revenge Brigade
(TÄ°T), a notorious clandestine group responsible for several killings
of leftist militants during 1980’s.

"This is their last efforts to intimidate us. We’ll do what’s necessary
and won’t tolerate such threats", said Cetin.

Reminding the hundreds of thousands who gathered for Hrant Dink’s
funeral yesterday, "We’ll overcome these obstacles in solidarity",
she said.

The e-mail message threatens of a bomb attack to the newspaper,
which continued receiving such threats even after Dink’s
assassination.

Armenia: Is President Sargsyan’s Amnesty Offer Politics Or PR?

ARMENIA: IS PRESIDENT SARGSYAN’S AMNESTY OFFER POLITICS OR PR?
Marianna Grigoryan

Eurasianet

May 29, 2009

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan’s recent announcement that he
is prepared to consider a prisoner amnesty has fueled debate about
his motivations. Some Armenians believe it is a tactical maneuver
designed to influence the outcome of Yerevan’s May 31 City Council
elections. Opposition politicians, meanwhile, suggest the president
is trying to burnish Armenia’s international human rights record.

In his May 28 statement, Sargsyan asked political parties and the
Public Council, a 36-member advisory body, to submit suggestions about
what form an amnesty should take. "I am ready to use my constitutional
right if the idea of granting new amnesties has taken hold in society,"
Sargsyan declared during a visit to Sardarapat battlefield, where
Armenian forces defeated Ottoman Turkey in 1918.

Opinion pollsters are not allowed to release surveys in the week
preceding the vote, but some analysts see the election as a critical
showdown between the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (RPA)
and ex-President Levon Ter-Petrosian’s Armenian National Congress
(ANC). The City Council vote offers voters their first opportunity
to express their political preferences since the highly contentious
and ultimately violent 2008 presidential election. [For background
see the Eurasia Insight archive].

The council vote is also the first that will determine who will be the
capital’s mayor. Previously the mayor was a presidential appointee. In
this election, the party that controls more than 40 percent of the
seats will see its candidate named as mayor.

"The major competition will again evolve between the opposition —
the ANC — and the authorities, the RPA," said independent political
analyst Yerevand Bozoian. Another analyst, Andranik Tevanian, head of
the PolitEconomy research center, seconded that view, though predicts
fresh support for the Prosperous Armenia Party, a member of Armenia’s
governing coalition, and the nationalist Armenian Revolutionary
Federation-Dashnaktsutiun, which recently left the coalition over
the government’s talks with Turkey. [For background see the Eurasia
Insight archive].

Republican Party of Armenia representatives deny that the president’s
statement was a "campaign trick." Sargsyan’s amnesty offer "is an
expression of his goodwill and has no connection with getting votes,"
commented Republican Party spokesperson Eduard Sharmazanov.

For now, analysts are refraining from predicting how either the
opposition or the RPA might benefit from a potential amnesty. One
senior Ter-Petrosian supporter believes that Sargsyan is now talking
amnesty as a sop to the international community; in particular, to
the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), which
has twice considered applying sanctions against Armenia in the wake
of the March 2008 crackdown on opposition protesters that led to
the death of 10 people and the imprisonment of scores of opposition
activists. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

PACE will again examine Armenia’s reform progress on June 5, five
days after the Yerevan council vote. "It’s somewhat unclear what the
authorities will exactly get in the upcoming elections by saying those
words, but, obviously, Serzh Sargsyan is trying to please the PACE
to gain more time," commented opposition activist Suren Sureniants.

International observer missions, including 15 observers from the
Council of Europe’s Congress of Regional and Local authorities, have
stated that they will closely monitor the Yerevan vote. They have
expressed a clear expectation that the conduct of the citywide election
should mark a considerable improvement over the handling of the 2008
presidential vote. [For background see the Eurasia insight archive].

Appeals for an amnesty have been repeatedly made by international
organizations — the latest coming in an April 30 PACE report. Until
now, however, Sargsyan has dodged questions about his intentions to
grant an amnesty. On April 10, for example, he said during a news
conference: "We’ll see when the time comes."

Analyst Bozoian believes that Sargsyan has now declared himself open
to the idea because he senses opposition support is waning. Attendance
at recent opposition rallies has fallen off considerably from earlier
gatherings. "I have the impression that the opposition is becoming
weaker and the authorities do not feel them to be that dangerous
anymore, so they will gradually release people, and will grant an
amnesty," Bozoian said.

Editor’s Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based
in Yerevan.

http://www.eurasianet.org

Preliminary Results

PRELIMINARY RESULTS

A1+
10:52 am | June 01, 2009

Official

The Central Election Commission of the Republic of Armenia publicized
the preliminary results of yesterday’s election. According to the
CEC 412 464 of eligible voters participated in the election for the
Yerevan City Council.

The picture of voter turnout in the 13 electoral districts is as
follows:

Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) -190 171 votes

Prosperous Party of Armenia (BHK) – 91 141 votes

Armenian National Congress (HAK) -69 871 votes

ARF-Dashnaktsutyun – 18 648 votes

Country of Law (OYK) – 20 959 votes

Labour Socialist Party of Armenia (HASK) – 8569 votes

Stuffed By Hurting Fingers

STUFFED BY HURTING FINGERS

A1+
01:44 am | June 01, 2009

Politics

Proxies at the Malatia-Sebastia district’s 8/24 polling station drew
up reports of "ballot stuffings".

According to the proxies, at around 6:30 p.m. 20-25 people intruded the
polling station, surrounded commission members and stuffed the ballots.

"Four to five boys turned my way, took out ballots and two of them
stuffed them in the boxes without letting the third boy stuff them. I
hurt my finger while this was going on. I closed the hole and my
fingers stayed under.

They left when I started to scream," ANC observer Narine Nahapetyan
told "A1+".

ARF proxy Valery Khachatryan also confirmed the stuffing, while
president of the commission Sveta Asatryan neither confirmed nor
denied.

"The proxy warned me that there were people gathered outside. I went
to warn law-enforcement officers to come. I came when I heard the
screaming, but didn’t see anything."

If This Opposition Lacked

IF THIS OPPOSITION LACKED

Lragir.Am
22:19:40 – 01/06/2009

The leader of the Armenian National Congress Levon Ter-Petrosyan
during the oppositional rally on June 1, presented Robert Kocharyan’s
and Serge Sargsyan’s ideas on a state.

He stated that the state of their dreams is one without opposition,
political parties, a state of obedient people. And as Ter-Petrosyan
stated they have been trying to establish this kind of state for 11
years, if they needed to rig elections they did it, if they needed
to take up violence against the voters, they did it, if they needed
to shoot the opositiona l supporters, they did it.

Levon Ter-Petrosyan stated that if this opposition lacked, the ARF
Dashnaktsutyun and the OYP could only dream to become a part of the
colaition. If this opposition lacked, Vazgen Manuyan could never
become the president of the Public Council.

Levon Ter-Petrosyan stated that the opposition is the material,
which enables the government to manoeuvre in the foreign policy, he
added that he had never seen any document to be presented to Serge
Sargsyan and the latter did not sign it. But he could get used of
the opposition and say that if he signs this or that document, while
being back to Armenia, the oposition will kill him.