ANKARA; The Dink assassination and neo-nationalism (ulusalcilik)

The New Anatolian, Turkey
Feb 17 2007

The Hrant Dink assassination and neo-nationalism (ulusalcilik) in
Turkey

Onder Aytac & Emre Uslu
17 February 2007
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Nationalism has been a powerful force in Turkish politics since the
founding of the republic. Lately, however, nationalist activists have
become unusually strident in their rhetoric, and they have coalesced
around various radical political platforms to seek the ousting of the
Justice and Development (AK) Party regime, either through the ballot
box, or by violent means.

As nationalist themes gain more prominence in Turkish political
discourse, a radical new nationalist movement has emerged: the
ulusalcilar, or neo-nationalists, whose influence appears to be
spreading to the highest levels of state and society. This movement
is not an organized group with an established doctrine. Its various
components have their philosophical differences. Nevertheless, we can
distinguish three fundamental elements in ulusalci thought: the
externalization of Islam from Turkish nationalism, uncompromising
anti-Westernism and ethnic exclusionism.

Although the nationalism adopted by the founders of the Turkish
Republic had a distinctly secular tone, it internalized Islam as
psychological glue to ensure that ethnically different populations
within the boundaries of the new Turkey remained united. Ulusalcilar
however, prioritize symbols of Turkish nationalism and the Turkish
race, and accord secondary importance to Kemalism and secularism.
They oppose leftist ideologies, broad applications of democracy, and
minority rights whenever the homogeneity of Turkish nationalism might
be threatened.

If orthodox nationalists have adopted anti-European and anti-American
positions on foreign policy issues, Turkey’s neo-nationalists
absolutely reject Westernization as an operating principle.

Achieving "honorable and equal" status in the "world society of
nations" requires shunning all formal association — political,
military, or economic — with the Western world, not merely the EU
and the "strategic partnership" with the U.S. A review of ulusalci
manifestos and policy statements reveals a common "Turkey for the
Turks" theme. Turkish natural resources must belong to the citizens
of Turkey, not to foreign capitalists. "Globalization" is a
particularly ugly word in the neo-nationalist vocabulary. For
neo-nationalists, the Kurds, whether in Turkey or Iraq, are agents of
American imperialism. Therefore, the usual formulae offered to
"solve" the Kurdish problem are without foundation.

Inevitably, the Bush administration’s unstinting support for Israel
has led fringe media commentators, including and some ulusalci
outlets, to charge that the U.S. government is "in the hands of the
Jews," and therefore, they suggest, Erdogan, as a handmaiden of U.S.
policy in the Middle East, is at the same time an agent of Zionism.

Why has ulusalcilik blossomed into such a potent political force
today?

The fundamental causes were, first, the overwhelming victory of the
Justice and Development (AK) Party in the 2002 general elections,
which enabled the AK Party to establish a single-party government;
and second, the AK Party government’s implementation of the fast
forward reformation process toward membership in the European Union.

Turkey’s state elites — the civil service, judiciary and military —
are rigidly secular. They have never trusted Erdogan, and believe
that he and the AK Party have a "secret agenda" to introduce elements
of Sharia into Turkey’s legal and constitutional system. Elitist
discontent lies more in Erdogan’s appointment of individuals loyal to
the AK Party to senior bureaucratic posts, occupied throughout
previous republican history by the secular establishment. Also, to
meet the EU’s Copenhagen criteria, AK Party legislation has reduced
the military’s influence in the National Security Council (MGK) and
eliminated military membership in the security courts and the Board
of Higher Education (YOK). Hence the disempowered civilian secular
elite view the military as allies in the struggle against Erdogan and
his presumed Islamist program.

In addition, the AK Party’s liberal economic policies have created a
thriving private sector and stimulated increased foreign investment.
Nationalists accuse the AK Party (as they did earlier governments led
by Turgut Ozal) of reviving the "capitulations" the West imposed on
the Ottoman Empire and violating Ataturk’s principle of etatism.

Furthermore, Turkish nationalists came late to an understanding that
the EU accession process involved the sacrifice of much of their
status and ideology. For the country to qualify for EU membership,
the AK Party regime, taking advantage of their overwhelming majority
in Parliament, swiftly passed a broad series of major reform
measures. Many of these enhanced individual freedoms, and thus
implicitly threatened the authority of the powerful state
bureaucracy, which had for so long served as the power base of
secular nationalism. That the reform legislation was being promoted
by a political party with an agenda far different from their own was
further cause for alarm.

Who are the ulusalcilar?

As stated, the neo-nationalists have no political party or
overarching command structure, but there are a number of activist
organizations that can be identified as ulusalci, based on their
members’ shared acceptance of the movement’s principles.

Activist neo-nationalist organizations include the purposefully named
Kuvaiye Milliye Hareketi (Nationalist Forces Movement) and the
Vatansever Kuvvetler Guc Birligi Hareketi (Patriotic Forces United
Movement, VKGB). The VKGB, led by senior retired military officers,
claims more than 100 branches in 46 cities and towns. The Kemalist
Thought Association (ADD), led by former Gendarmerie Commander Sener
Eruygur, has sought preeminence in the movement on doctrinal and
ideological matters. Its roster of founders includes an impressive
number of professors and PhD’s, and it claims a nationwide membership
of 4,852. Better known is the Buyuk Hukukcular Birligi (the Great
Union of Jurists) and its leader, Kemal Kerincsiz. It is Kerincsiz
and his organization that have been responsible for the numerous
lawsuits brought under the notorious Article 301 against Turkish
intellectuals and writers — most famously Nobel Prize-winner Orhan
Pamuk and Armenian-origin journalist Hrant Dink for "insulting
Turkishness."

The neo-nationalists boast an impressive array of media outlets. They
control one daily newspaper, Yeni Cag; several periodicals, among
them the bi-weekly Turk Solu and its youth magazine, Ileri; Yeni
Hayat; Turkeli, a publication of the VKGB, and the weekly Aydinlik,
the mouthpiece of the Turk Isci Partisi (Turkish Labor Party) and its
venerable Marxist leader Dogu Perincek, who has lately reinvented
himself as a staunch Kemalist. There are two neo-nationalist TV
channels: KanalTurk and Mesaj TV.

Additionally, Istanbul daily Cumhuriyet, favored by the older
Kemalist intelligentsia, frequently voices ulusalci themes.
Cumhuriyet was once the most respected newspaper in the country, but
through its venomous attacks against AK Party leaders and their
policies it has lost any claim to objectivity. Additionally, several
mainstream newspapers carry the columns of ulusalci pundits alongside
more orthodox commentators — among them Emin Colasan (Hurriyet) and
Melih Asik (Milliyet). (Yeni Cag’s lead columnist is the popular
hard-lining nationalist and former president of the TRNC, Rauf
Denktas.)

Turkish neo-nationalists have their own underground network,
involving both active and retired military officers, significant
elements of which were exposed in a series of startling revelations
in the middle of last year. Police investigations into last May’s
murder of a Court of Appeals judge revealed that the murderer had
been under the control of a neo-nationalist group of retired military
personnel and that the shooting was probably a "black" operation
intended to look like the work of religious reactionaries. Another
series of arrests revealed the existence of the Atabeyler Gang,
composed largely of low-ranking active Special Forces officers, who
possessed diagrams apparently intended to support assassination
attempts against Erdogan and his chief foreign policy advisor, Cuneyt
Zapsu. More worrisome still, a third clandestine outfit neutralized
by the police, the Sauna Gang, which specialized in blackmail and
extortion, included both ulusalci military and ex-military personnel
and members of the Turkish mafia.

The Hrant Dink assassination

Ulusalcilik provided the ideological context for last month’s
assassination of Armenian newspaper editor Hrant Dink; and the
lawsuit against Dink, brought under Article 301 by Kemal Kerincsiz,
head of the neo-nationalist Istanbul Lawyers Union, made him a likely
target of extremist violence. It appears the 17-year-old assassin,
Ogun Samast, was merely a member of a small gang of adolescents who
had gathered around a braggart with vague but strongly expressed
extremist and xenophobic views. Some believe this small, apparently
independent gang is representative of a new and nasty phenomenon.
They call themselves, nationalist, ulusalci or anti-imperialist, find
their like-minded friends through the Internet, and select their
targets. These people are horizontally organized, loosely connected
and more secretive than the traditional terror groups. Dink received
death threats from notorious neo-nationalist bullies, like retired
Col. Veli Kucuk, who allegedly is the leader of these ulusalci
mafia-rings, but there is no evidence that links these unsavory
elements to his murder.

Nationalist and ulusalci commentators have engaged in a shameless
campaign to gain propaganda capital from this heinous crime. Various
columnists have hinted darkly at the involvement of Western
intelligence services. Several saw the motivation for the
assassination in the likelihood that it would smooth the passage of
the Armenian "genocide" resolution through the U.S. Congress, and
Tercuman newspaper actually claimed that Samast was an ethnic
Armenian! Inevitably, some, including senior spokesmen of the
Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), explicitly blamed the CIA, Mossad,
or both. Meanwhile, a neo-nationalist columnist with an established
reputation for uncovering elaborate conspiracies on the basis of
minimal evidence linked the location of Samast’s gang in his native
Trabzon to a certain "U.S. Black Sea project." This project, the
author alleged, is intended to project American influence in areas
east of Turkey and involves, as a key element, securing Trabzon as an
American base. Of the leading ulusalcilar, only the man most
responsible for this dreadful affair, Kerincsiz, showed any
contrition, condemning, in a public statement shortly after the
crime, the use of violence to achieve political ends. Ulusalci
bellwether Turk Solu, however, in its editorial written by Gokce
Firat, placed the conspiracy closer to home, describing Dink’s
assassination as a propaganda ploy by Turkey’s "Kurdish-Islamist
fascist dictatorship" to maintain themselves in power. Firat,
demonstrating the ability to harbor two contradictory opinions at the
same time, is also cheered by the assassination. "Turkey has lost an
enemy!" he advised his readers, with evident happiness.

Killer-Queen der Herzen (in German)

Druckversion – Fight Night auf ProSieben: Killer-Queen der Herzen – Kultur –
SPIEGEL ONLINE – Nachrichten

SPIEGEL ONLINE – 17. Februar 2007, 10:16

URL: ,1518,4 66916,00.html

FIGHT NIGHT AUF PROSIEBEN

Killer-Queen der Herzen

Von Peter Luley

Was für eine Überraschung: Stefan Raab moderiert mit Regina Halmich eine
Box-Show – und es macht Spaß. Die Hamburgerin Susianna Kentikian wurde in
einem blutigen Kampf Weltmeisterin und warf aus allen Ringecken Luftküsse.
Selbstverständlich wolle man bei der freitäglichen "Fight Night" seriösen
Sport präsentieren – das wurde ProSieben-Unterhaltungschef Jobst Benthues
vor der Box-Nacht nicht müde zu betonen. Bei der Vorstellung des erstmals im
Sender-Portfolio auftauchenden Programmpunkts Boxen auf der
Jahres-Pressekonferenz Ende Januar in Hamburg konnte er sich kleine
Seitenhiebe auf die derzeitigen Senioren-Comebacks von Axel Schulz und Henry
Maske bei RTL nicht verkneifen.
Frauenboxen: Kentikian verprügelt tapfere Alvarez

Im Gegensatz dazu gehe es bei der vorerst auf drei Nächte angelegten
ProSieben-Kooperation mit dem Hamburger Profistall Spotlight um ein Podium
für junge Athleten mit Zukunft. Als Nachwuchsförderer wollen die Münchner
sich ein Stück vom publikumsträchtigen Box-Kuchen im Free-TV sichern, den
bislang ARD, ZDF, RTL, DSF und Eurosport unter sich aufteilen.

Gewisse Zweifel an der Ernsthaftigkeit des Unterfangens waren allerdings
angebracht. Schließlich waren als Moderatoren der Allzweck-Entertainer
Stefan Raab ("Schlag den Raab") und seine einstige Showkampf-Gegnerin Regina
Halmich gesetzt. Das Duell der beiden (bei dem die amtierende Weltmeisterin
des Verbandes WIBF dem Showmaster 2001 die Nase brach) hatte mit 55 Prozent
Marktanteil in der werberelevanten Zielgruppe den höchsten Wert der
Sendergeschichte erzielt.
Dazu hatte man mit dem ewigen Elton als Ringsprecher und
Michael-Buffer-Verschnitt sowie der kürzlich beim Bundesvision Song Contest
eingeführten Co-Moderatorin Johanna Klum als VIP-Befragerin die übliche
Raab-Entourage nominiert. Nicht unbedingt ein Ausweis für sportliche
Ambition.
Erneut im Ring: Raab und Halmich als Moderatoren

Was jedoch gestern ab 20.15 Uhr aus einem vergleichsweise intimen Kölner
Studio übertragen wurde, war annehmbar. Der ausnahmsweise feierlich in
Smoking und Fliege gewandete Raab ("Herzlich willkommen, mein Name ist
Waldemar Hartmann") nahm sich weitgehend zurück und schäkerte in gerade noch
erträglichem Maße über einen Revanchekampf mit der widerstrebenden Halmich.
Die demnächst rücktrittswillige 31-jährige Sportlerin ihrerseits meisterte
den Part an Raabs Seite halbwegs wacker ("Ich suche Gegner, keine Opfer,
Stefan") und tat die ersten Schritte in ihre künftige Medienkarriere.
Überdies war sie glaubwürdig als Patin ihrer designierten Nachfolgerin
Susianna Kentikian. Zwei Musik-Acts (Monrose und Manowar) auf der Strecke
von dreieinviertel Stunden waren nicht übertrieben, und Ringreporter Jan
Stecker rückte den Sportlern insgesamt nicht zu nah auf die Pelle.

Sportlich wurden drei Livekämpfe und eine Zusammenfassung geboten; zunächst
lieferten sich der von Fritz Sdunek trainierte Schweriner Mittelgewichtler
Sebastian Zbik, 24, und der aus Dänemark kommende Fawaz Nazir, 27, einen
engen, engagiert geführten 12-Runden-Kampf um die
WBO-Interkontinentalmeisterschaft, den der

Deutsche knapp nach Punkten gewann.

Babyface wollte kein "Fallobst" sein – und war es dennoch

Der altgediente Kommentator Matthias Preuß kommentierte so kundig wie
gedrosselt empathisch. Seine Einschätzungen von "ganz, ganz enge Kiste" bis
zu "etwas statisch, das letzte Risiko geht keiner ein" ließen sich allesamt
unterschreiben. Arg kurz gestaltete sich der zweite (Aufbau-)Kampf zwischen
dem Schwergewichtler Sebastian Köber, 27, aus Frankfurt/Oder und seinem
37-jährigen Gegner Zoltan Beres aus Ungarn: Bereits in der zweiten Runde
ging der Budapester mit dem vielsagenden Kampfnamen Babyface zu Boden, und
Köber wurde zum Sieger durch K.o. ausgerufen. So beklagenswert präsentierte
sich Beres, dass eilends versichert wurde, es handle sich bei ihm nicht um
"Fallobst", so etwas könne im Schwergewicht eben passieren.
Zum Höhepunkt kam es dann planmäßig ab 22.30 Uhr, mit dem als Hauptkampf
annoncierten Schlagabtausch zwischen der 19-jährigen in Hamburg lebenden
Armenierin Susianna Kentikian und der zehn Jahre älteren Venezolanerin
Carolina Alvarez. Entschlossen trieb die 1,53 Meter kleine Kämpferin mit dem
Kampfnamen Killer-Queen ihre Gegnerin vor sich her, bis der Ringrichter den
Kampf in der neunten Runde aus Rücksicht auf die stark aus der Nase blutende
Alvarez beendete.
Die Killer-Queen sprudelte über vor Danksagungen

Nicht nur dank ihrer imposanten Energieleistung, auch wegen ihrer in
gewisser Weise an "Rocky" und Eastwoods "Million Dollar Baby" gemahnenden
Biografie als Asylbewerberin, die sich ihre Aufenthaltsgenehmigung erst
erkämpfen musste, avancierte die frisch gebackende WBA-Weltmeisterin im
Fliegengewicht zur großen Gewinnerin des Abends. Spätestens, als sie nach
dem Kampf aus allen Ringecken Küsse ins Publikum warf, ihrem
Interviewpartner Stecker das Mikrofon aus der Hand nahm und es vor lauter
Danksagungen gar nicht mehr hergeben wollte, wurde sie zur Killer-Queen der
Herzen.
Ob der Sender mit seiner neuartigen Sport-und-Show-Kombination dauerhaft den
gewünschten Erfolg – einen zweistelligen Marktanteil in der Zielgruppe –
erreichen kann, wird sich zeigen müssen. Eine gewisse Kondition im Kampf ums
Publikumsinteresse dürfte angesichts der weitgehend unbekannten
Newcomer-Sportler schon gefordert sein.

Gestern jedenfalls hatte das Faustkampf-Spektakel gegen Karneval aus Mainz
(ARD, 7,16 Millionen Zuschauer) und "Wer wird Millionär" (RTL, 7,04
Millionen Zuschauer) keine Chance und blieb mit 1,3 Millionen Zuschauern (7
Prozent Marktanteil in der Zielgruppe) hinter den Erwartungen zurück.
Aber wem, wenn nicht den innovationsfreudigen Münchnern sollte man derzeit
einen solchen langen Atem zutrauen? Mit Kentikian hat man nun jedenfalls
schon so etwas wie einen ersten Star im Stall, mit dem es sicherlich ein
Wiedersehen geben wird.

© SPIEGEL ONLINE 2007
Alle Rechte vorbehalten
Vervielfältigung nur mit Genehmigung der SPIEGELnet GmbH

http://www.spiegel.de/kultur/gesellschaft/0

RA FM To Meet OSCE MG Co-Chairs In Paris

RA FM TO MEET OSCE MG CO-CHAIRS IN PARIS

PanARMENIAN.Net
14.02.2007 15:25 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On February 15, in Paris, Armenian Foreign
Minister Vartan Oskanian will meet with Co-chairs of the OSCE
Minsk Group Yuri Merzlyakov (Russia), Bernard Fassier (France) and
Matthew Bryza (U.S.) as well as with Personal Representative of OSCE
Chairman-in-Office Andrzej Kasprzyk.

As earlier a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter came to know from the Russian
Foreign Ministry’s working group on Nagorno Karabakh, the mediators
will hold regular consultations in the French capital. The organization
of a meeting of the Armenian and Azeri FMs in March will be also
considered.

NKR President Visit To Moscow

NKR PRESIDENT VISIT TO MOSCOW

Azat Artsakh Daily – Nagorno Karabakh Republic [NKR]
13-02-2007

On January 29 NKR President Arkady Ghukassian left for Moscow at
the invitation of the Russian Academy of Security, Defense and Law
Enforcement and the Academy of International Relations Studies. In
Moscow he was awarded real membership to these academies and got
certificates. We learned about this visit from the NKR president
press service after Arkady Ghukassian had returned.

Arkady Ghukassian was awarded the medal of Peter I Great for his
contribution to the friendship of Armenian and Russian peoples. During
the visit to Moscow the NKR president met with the local Armenian
community. Arrangements were made on launching big humanitarian and
business projects, including the reconstruction of the irrigation
system. The project costs about 15 million U.S. dollars, it will be
funded by Armenian businessmen of Moscow. Arkady Ghukassian also met
with the high-ranking Russian diplomatic circles. The current state
and the prospects of the Karabakh settlement were discussed.

Turkey’s Foreign Minister Backs Amendment To Law Curbing Free Speech

TURKEY’S FOREIGN MINISTER BACKS AMENDMENT TO LAW CURBING FREE SPEECH

The Associated Press
International Herald Tribune, France
Feb 12 2007

ANKARA, Turkey: Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul on Monday backed the
amendment of Turkey’s controversial article 301, used to prosecute
intellectuals including Nobel Prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk and
an ethnic Armenian journalist who was later shot dead.

"I want this article amended because it puts a shadow on Turkey’s
reform process," Gul said at a joint news conference with visiting
Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer.

"It is damaging Turkey’s image. It is portraying Turkey as a country
where hundreds of journalists and intellectuals are jailed for their
speeches. This is wrong."

Gul’s remarks came days after a group of trade unions and other
non-governmental organizations proposed a new wording to the article,
which makes insults to the Turkish state or its people a crime. The
groups said the new wording would set clearer limits to what
constitutes insult and what is legitimate criticism.

Some non-governmental organizations were demanding scrapping the law
completely, but Gul made clear the government favored amending it.

"We want everyone to freely express their thoughts as long they
don’t incite violence or amount to insult," Gul said. "These cannot
be allowed. They are not allowed anywhere else."

Nobel Prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk and murdered journalist
Hrant Dink were both prosecuted under the broad law criminalizing
the denigration of "Turkishness." Both had spoken out about the
mass killings of Armenians in the early 20th century. Numerous other
writers, journalists and academics have also been prosecuted.

Dink, the editor of the minority Agos newspaper, was shot dead outside
his Istanbul office on Jan. 19 and his murder revived a debate about
the law. Many said his prosecution under article 301 had made him a
target for ultranationalist groups.

The proposal by trade unions and non-governmental organizations would
replace the crime of "insulting Turkishness" with wording that would
translate as "openly abasing and deriding" Turkishness.

Newspapers, however, have criticized the proposed amendment, saying
it would not stop prosecutions because the interpretation of the law
is often left to prosecutors, most of whom are nationalists.

ANKARA: BuPress Roundup : Mutafyan Against Resolution

PRESS ROUNDUP : MUTAFYAN AGAINST RESOLUTION

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Feb 12 2007

Armenian Patriarch Mesrob II Mutafyan met with US Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State for European affairs Matt Bryza and talked about the
ethnic Armenian Hrant Dink’s murder and its aftermath as well as the
Armenian resolution waiting in the US congress. Mutafyan, commenting
on the possible passage of the Armenian resolution in the US Congress,
said, "Our patriarchate is against any attempt that will block the
way of dialogue between the Turkish and Armenian communities."

ANKARA: Turkish Chief Of Staff Warns Armenian Genocide Bill To Impac

TURKISH CHIEF OF STAFF WARNS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL TO IMPACT TIES WITH USA

Milliyet, Turkey
Feb 12 2007

[Report by Barkin Sik in New York: "Acceptance of Genocide Bill Will
Have Impact on Relations With United States"]

Complaining that to date Turkey has failed to explain to its
counterparts its views on the Armenian genocide allegations and
the Cyprus problem, Chief of Staff General Yasar Buyukanit said:
"We are unable to put ourselves across. Afterwards we suffer for
it. While we are in the right we end up having to defend ourselves
as if we are in the wrong."

Unlike previous chiefs of staff Gen Buyukanit flew to the United
States on a scheduled Turkish Airlines flight yesterday. He spoke
with Milliyet on the plane.

"What Happened In 1915?"

Saying that the Armenian Genocide Bill, which is about to be debated
in the US House of Representatives, had implications for both Turkish
and US national security, Buyukanit said that if the bill were passed
it would harm bilateral relations. Buyukanit continued:

"What happened in 1915? We are unable to put ourselves across.

Afterwards we suffer for it. Armenians who were our own citizens
rebelled against their own country together with the Russians. What
happened on Cyprus? The Greek Cypriots staged a coup. Turkey intervened
using its rights as a guarantor country. We have trouble in explaining
ourselves. We find ourselves on the defensive as if we were in the
wrong even when we are in the right. During my visit to the United
States I will get together with US lawmakers and explain all this
as best I can." When asked whether or not a similar embargo would be
applied to the United States as the one applied to France following
their genocide bill, Buyukanit replied:

"Diplomatic relations change from country to country. It is different
for the United States; it is different for France. Are Turkey’s
relations with the United States exactly the same as they are
with Libya? Diplomatic relations depend on balance. We went through
something similar with France before. The French had won the contract
for an intelligence satellite and the Israelis had lost. But we found
ourselves compelled to cancel the contract. What happened? They lost
the contract and we lost time. We reopened the bidding but we ought
to have a satellite up there now and we do not."

Activity of Baze Aimed at Reproduction of Kocharian’s Power -ANM Rep

ACTIVITY OF BAZE IS AIMED AT REPRODUCTION OF KOCHARIAN’S POWER, ANM
REPRESENTATIVE AFFIRMS

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 9, NOYAN TAPAN. "It is surprising that the ideology
of ruling Republican Party of Armenia is based on religious and other
values, about which RPA speaks most of all, instead of presenting a
concrete program. One forms an impression that RPA is a sectarian
organization." Karen Karapetian, leader of youth wing of Armenian
National Movement (ANM), declared this at the February 9 discussion at
the Hayeli (Mirror) club. In his words, the Armenian authorities which
are engaged in splitting the opposition strive for "corrupting" youth
organizations as in them like in main parties there is such phenomenon
as deserting. Besides, the authorities use some youth organizations
for their own purposes. Thus, in K. Karapetian’s words, the activity
of Baze youth organization is aimed at reproducing Robert Kocharian’s
power. Another participant of the discussion, leader of RPA youth wing
Karen Avagian assured that no young RPA member has left the party so
far: "We properly implement all party programs and consider that the
best way of realizing our programs is RPA’s coming to power."
K. Avagian also assured that RPA is ready for holding fair and honest
elections.

NDP To Run For NA with Bloc Consisting of Reps of Party & Public

NDP TO RUN FOR PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS BY BLOC CONSISTING OF
REPRESENTATIVES OF PARTY AND PUBLIC

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 9, NOYAN TAPAN. The National Democratic Party (NDP)
is going to run for the forthcoming parliamentary elections by a
separate list, by a bloc consisting of representatives of party and
public. NDP Chairman, RA MP Shavarsh Kocharian said this at the
February 9 press conference. At the same time, he said that he will
refuse to nominate his candidature by majoritarian system if the NDP
Board makes such a decision. In S. Kocharian’s words, the people is
very disappointed with electoral processes and does not believe in
holding of free elections. "The opinion is constantly striking root in
the people that the votes are bought, the elections will be falsified
all the same, and it is useless taking part in them," the MP
said. Nevertheless, in his words, these elections will be turning for
Armenia. "Holding of fair and unbiassed elections is an important and
necessary precondition for Armenia to take a deserving place in the
European family," S. Kocharian said. Honorable Future party Chairwoman
Lyudmila Haroutiunian said that the issue of their participation in
the elections has not been decided yet. In her words, if they decide
to take part in the elections, this will be only by a bloc. "Today
elephants have come into the fight and small parties have no chance no
matter how much they want to take part in parliamentary elections by
an individual list," L. Haroutiunian said. In her words, therefore,
these parties should unite.

TBILISI: Regional cooperation by rail

The Messenger, Georgia
Feb 9 2007

Regional cooperation by rail

"A new silk road", "A geopolitical revolution", was how President
Saakashvili described the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway project on
February 8. We can forgive the president his hyperbole, because
behind all the grandstanding, there is an undeniable reality: Turkey,
Georgia and Azerbaijan are sewn together by globally significant (at
least in political terms) oil and gas pipelines, and where
hydrocarbons currently flow, people and cargo are soon to follow.

What to most people just looks like a few miles of rail across a
rocky plateau is in fact a cornerstone of cooperation that, along
with the pipelines, cements a tripartite relationship that is a model
of mutual benefit. And what is more, this cooperation is remarkable
given the obstacles that stood in its way.

Turkey and Azerbaijan share close linguistic and cultural links,
indeed former Azeri president Abulfaz Elchibey used to like saying
that Turkey and Azerbaijan were "one nation, two states", so the fact
that they have become such close strategic partners is unsurprising.
But the regional partnership that has been forged with Georgia is
more so. Turkey, after all, is Georgia’s historical foe. For three
hundred years western Georgia struggled under the Ottoman Yoke, and
Georgian’s have long memories. Further, in the early nineties Turkey,
which has a large Abkhaz diaspora, was less than 100 percent on
Georgia’s territorial integrity, with Turkish vessels frequenting
Abkhazian ports to Georgia’s great chagrin.

Azerbaijan too, was not necessarily an obvious strategic partner for
Georgia. The excesses of Gamsakhurdia’s ultra-nationalist regime just
after the fall of the Soviet Union led to hundreds of ethnically
Azeri families being forced out of their homes in Kvemo Kartli.
Villages, rivers and hills had their names Georgianised. Even now,
Azreri’s are hugely underrepresented in government at a local and
national level, even in areas where they make up the large majority
of the population.

Georgians living in Azerbaijan, Ingilos, faced and continue to face
discrimination on ethnic and religious grounds, and accusations that
Georgian cultural monuments, including working monasteries, located
in Azerbaijan, are vandalised and/or neglected surface regularly.
Furthermore, while the close relationship between former president
Shevardnadze and Azerbaijan’s late Heydar Aliyev can in part be
explained by their long history, going back to the Central Committee
of the Communist Party, the chumminess of Saakashvili and Heydar’s
son and successor Ilham Aliyev was less predictable. After the Rose
Revolution many thought the new beacon of democracy would attempt to
shine its light towards its distinctly less democratic neighbour, but
in nothing was further from the truth. It is also remarkable that
Georgia has managed to maintain good relations with Azerbaijan and
its enemy Armenia at the same time, without choosing, or being
forced, to take sides.

In this context the cordial and mutually beneficial relations that
have developed among the three countries are something all can be
proud of, even if it isn’t quite a geopolitical revolution.