380 Thousand Tourists To Visit Armenia In 2006

380 THOUSAND TOURISTS TO VISIT ARMENIA IN 2006

Panorama.am
00:38 26/05/06

According to modest estimates, 380 thousand tourists will visit Armenia
by the end of 2006. Last year, their number totaled 318 thousand, in
2004- 262 thousand and in 2000- only 40,000, deputy minister on trade
and economic development Ara Petrosyan told reporters today during
the ceremonial opening of the 6th international exhibition on tourism.

In his words, tourism entered a new stage of development in Armenia
ensuring 20-25% rise per annum.

According to the deputy minister, one tourist spends $1000, including
airfare. Speaking on tariffs on tour agency services and hotels,
A. Petrossyan noted that 6 years ago the fees were considerably
higher. “New entities enter into market today and, as we all know,
the more entities, the lower the prices,” he said.

The international exhibition on tourism, which takes place in cinema
Moscow, will run until May 27.

American Union of Tourist Agencies, Armenian agency on tourism
development and the Ministry of Trade and Economic Development organize
the event.

“Vindictiveness And Rancour”

“VINDICTIVENESS AND RANCOUR”

A1+
[09:51 pm] 25 May, 2006

Which criteria did NCTR and Grigor Amalyan guide by while embattling
“A1+”. Let us present you the opinions of the representatives of the
RA political parties.

Stepan Demirchyan, leader of “Justice” faction, ” Once more the
administration of the country proved by this step that they are afraid
of having unbiased and impartial media.”

To tell the truth, I didn’t have any illusion, “With the
embattlement of “A1+” the procedure of the 2003 election frauds
initiated. At present we are on the threshold of new elections and
this administration cannot naturally allow the existence of even
free radio station. If they had a chance they would surely deprive
“Radio Free” of its broadcast license.”

Vahan Hovhannesyan, NA deputy, member of Republican Party, “The
contests are not always held impartially in Armenia. I cannot say
for sure whether this time the results of the competition are based
on the justice or not. I can say the same thing for each contest,
starting from constructive one and finishing with the journalistic
one. I didn’t follow the current of the competition. ”

Aghasi Arshakyan, member of “National Unity,” claims, “This act once
more testifies to the fact that we go ahead with vindictiveness and
rancour. It is the result of willfulness, compulsion of a haughty
man who guided by vindictiveness and rancour.”

AAA: Texas Rep. Kenny Marchant Joins Armenian Caucus

Armenian Assembly of America
1140 19th Street, NW, Suite 600
Washington, DC 20036
Phone: 202-393-3434
Fax: 202-638-4904
Email: [email protected]
Web:

PRESS RELEASE
May 25, 2006
CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
E-mail: [email protected]

TEXAS REP. KENNY MARCHANT JOINS ARMENIAN CAUCUS
Membership Reaches 158

Washington, DC – The Armenian Assembly welcomed the announcement today
that Congressman Kenny Marchant (R-TX) has joined the Congressional
Caucus on Armenian Issues, bringing the total membership to 158 to
date. Marchant is the first Republican from the Lone Star State to
join the Caucus.

“The Assembly appreciates Congressman Marchant’s expression of support
and decision to join the Armenian Caucus,” said Assembly Executive
Director Bryan Ardouny. “It is our hope that the Congressman will
coordinate with the Caucus Co-Chairs Representatives Joe Knollenberg
(R-MI) and Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ) to foster greater ties between
the United States and Armenia.”

Marchant, who is currently serving his first term in office,
represents the 24th Congressional District which encompasses portions
of Dallas, Denton, and Tarrant Counties. The Congressman serves on the
Transportation and Infrastructure, Education and Workforce, and
Government Reform Committees.

Prior to his election to the U.S. House of Representatives, Marchant
served nine terms as a Texas State Representative. During his tenure
in the state legislature, he served as Chairman of the Texas House
Committee on Financial Institutions, Chairman of the House State
Affairs Committee, and Chairman of the Texas House Republican Caucus.

The Armenian Caucus was formed in 1995 to provide a bipartisan forum
for legislators to discuss how the United States can better assist the
peoples of Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh. As a member of this
all-important body, Marchant joins Texas Representatives Lloyd Doggett
(D-TX) and Eddie B. Johnson (D-TX) in supporting Armenian-American
interests.

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

###

NR#2006-054

Photog raph available on the Assembly’s Web site at the following link:

/2006-054-1.jpg

Caption: Congressman Kenny Marchant (R-TX)

http://www.aaainc.org/images/press/2006-054
www.armenianassembly.org

Document Sent To Members Of The French National Assembly And FrenchC

DOCUMENT SENT TO MEMBERS OF THE FRENCH NATIONAL ASSEMBLY AND FRENCH CABINET MINISTERS

AZG Armenian Daily
25/05/2006

Laws against Genocide Denial: Potential Consequences for Human Rights

May 18, 2006: Today the French National Assembly was set to debate a
bill to criminalize the denial of the Armenian Genocide, but has now
postponed the debate to November. The Turkish ambassador to France was
temporarily recalled in protest of this bill. What are the implications
of the French law for Turkish-Armenian relations and freedom of speech?

The International Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies, of
which I am currently the chair, deals with genocide in a comparative
manner, including its causes, methods, aftermath and denial. Our
research, based on archival sources both in and outside Turkey,
confirms that over a million Armenians perished in an Ottoman
state-sponsored campaign between 1915 and 1923 as victims of genocide.

Kemal Ataturk, the founder the new Turkish Republic, also publicly
disapproved of the wrongs committed against the Armenians, calling
them “a shameful act,” but the true story of other founding fathers
of modern Turkey, many of whom had been intimately involved in the
Armenian Genocide as perpetrators, was suppressed.

This was despite the fact that the Ottoman government itself found
the leaders of the Young Turk party guilty in absentia of crimes
against the Armenians.

Ever since then, successive Turkish governments have denied what they
euphemistically called “the events of 1915.”

In this respect, I wrote to Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan on May
5, 2005, regarding his proposal for a joint group, consisting of
historians and other experts, to study “the events of 1915.” I found
this proposal insincere, given the Turkish state’s numerous attempts to
stifle open discussion of the Armenian Genocide, including prosecuting
over seventy scholars, writers, journalists and publishers on the
grounds that they were denigrating Turkey. In that letter, I made
the following points.

“…the two sides must listen to and hear each other. As part
of this process, a common body of knowledge needs to be created,
so that established facts can help alleviate the polarization of
opinions. This, in turn, will lead to the “peaceful and friendly
environment in which tolerance and mutual respect shall prevail.”

[Note, quote taken from P.M. Erdogan’s proposal.]

I then urged that his government take some simple steps to allow
for a free and open discussion within Turkish society, such as those
listed below.

1) Facilitate critical scholars educating society about the events of
1915 from different points of view and not only from the government’s
perspective.

2) Allow the broadcast of a series of lectures on this issue by
renowned Armenian, Turkish and/or third party scholars, who do not
necessarily reflect the government’s official position, through
Turkish television networks, without any censorship, and with the
accessibility to the public for questions.

3) Allow Turkish academics and intellectuals, whose point of view
challenges the official version of what happened in 1915, to express
their ideas through public lectures, publications, and translations of
Ottoman archival materials, without fear of persecution by the state.

I also asked the government to make it unequivocally and publicly
clear that Article 305 of the Penal Code should not criminalize ideas
which deviate from those of the state’s defined position, such as
the Armenian Genocide issue, and that individuals who say that the
Armenians suffered a genocide will not be persecuted by the state.

The proposed new legislation is intended to give force to the law
passed in 2001 officially recognizing the Genocide by providing
penalties for those engaged in its denial. One should question how
this law, if adopted, would facilitate dialogue between the Armenians
and Turks, which is a stated objective of the 2001 law, or between
the French and the Turks?

Does not this law inadvertently provide new opportunities for the
reactionary elements of Turkish state and society to radicalize the
masses against the French and the Armenians? By using the French law,
which limits freedom of speech as an example, would the Turkish state
not justify laws that promote its policy of denial and therefore make
it even harder to deviate from the official government position on
history? If so, how does that help Turkish civil society in gaining
any awareness on this issue? Does this law advance the language of
reconciliation or the language of conflict? Can such laws bring
a solution to the problem, or do they become part of the problem
themselves? Does using the penal code in France for any limitation
on the discussion of historical events endanger the prime function
of scholars, writers and journalists-to analyze, question, and
debate issues?

Would it not create a slippery slope that would allow the state to
sanction and impose dogmas as to how society should think? Finally, is
this not the very method of limiting freedom of speech that countries
like Turkey use, as the state attempts to control history in order
to control society?

Of course, we do need laws to protect against such problems as racism
and neo-Nazism, and there are legal limits to freedom of speech, such
as libel, fraud, defamation. Therefore, those who argue that freedom
of speech is not absolute are absolutely right. Some observers have
argued that you can not have a law criminalizing Holocaust denial and
not allow a similar law for denying the Armenian Genocide, which is
officially recognized as genocide in France.

The Holocaust denial policy grew out of two things: many European
countries were complicit in the death of the Jews, and punishing
denial of the Holocaust is seen as a form of atonement; and there
was a fear that neo-Nazi and other fascist groups would try to
vindicate themselves by eliminating the Holocaust, while maintaining
racism. Thus, the idea was that suppression of fascism was in part
a matter of suppressing denial of the Holocaust.

On the level of principle, one could argue either for or against
treating all denial of genocide as equal.

But there is the historical context of the Holocaust denial laws that
is different from Armenia, Rwanda, etc. At the same time, if only
the Holocaust cannot be legally denied, then some will take this to
mean that only the Holocaust was a genocide; others will feel that
the suffering of their people is being slighted.

But if we open this up and list all genocides and criminalize denial
of all of them, then our minds would be enormously constrained by
the State. Freedom of inquiry, expression, thought would be limited
in ways that are totally unnecessary and unintended.

Accordingly, are laws such as this a mistake and contrary to freedom
of speech? Some might argue that governments should eliminate all
cases of prosecution of denial, rather than extend the net.

We know Turkey already requires its students to write essays denying
the Armenian Genocide and uses its penal code to stifle human
rights. As recently as three days ago, an opposition deputy in the
Turkish Grand National Assembly presented a bill stipulating prison
terms of up to three years for those who claim that Turkey committed
genocide against Armenians in 1915. (This bill is not very different
from the current Turkish Penal Code article (301) that criminalizes
“denigrating Turkishness,” which is what claiming there was a genocide
of the Armenians apparently does.) If the bill passes, what would
happen to Turkish intellectuals like Taner Akcam, Murat Belge, Halil
Berktay, Hrant Dink, Fatma Muge Gocek, Orhan Pamuk, Ragip Zarakolu,
and others, who openly challenge the Turkish state’s definition of
the Armenian Genocide? Who then would dare attempt to educate Turkish
civil society? How then would Turkey ever have a chance to become
democratic? How then are the Armenian and Turkish people going to
have any kind of dialogue on this issue? If one supports such a law
in France limiting freedom of speech, then should one not also support
such a law in Turkey?

We must do all we can to overcome denial of genocide, by raising
awareness, employing scholarship, applying reason, and means other
than state sanction, to defend truth, justice and human rights. We
must demand that Turkey reform its penal code. The French, German and
other governments of Europe who were bystanders or even participants
in the crime should provide resources in order to bring the parties
together, and give incentives to solve the problem, not widen the
divide. Denial should be against the law only if it is in the context
of a hate or racist argument.

One wonders if these developments can contribute to the peaceful
solution of the problem. Rather than employ the language of conflict,
which exacerbates the problem, the parties should be more dispassionate
and rational, in order to be open to developing other means and
tools that will help with establishing dialogue, and hopefully lead
to normalization of relations.

France, for its part, has an option, as well. Instead of criminalizing
Armenian Genocide denial, which serves to stifle freedom of speech,
it could use its positive influence to support efforts within Turkey
for democratization there.

Freedom of speech and debate on the issue of the Armenian Genocide
in Turkey is the best hope for eliminating government control of this
history. By allowing such debate, Turkey can become open, democratic
and pluralistic. There is no guarantee that Turkey will follow suit,
but France, with its legacy of “freedom, equality and brotherhood,”
and as one of the world’s leaders in democracy and human rights,
must show the way by not itself imposing laws that penalize freedom
of speech on the Armenian Genocide or any historical event.

By Roger W. Smith, Professor Emeritus of Government, College of William
and Mary and Chairman, International Institute for Genocide and Human
Rights Studies.

ANKARA: FM:”We Hope Armenian Bill Won’t Be Passed By The French Parl

FM: “WE HOPE THE ARMENIAN BILL WON’T BE PASSED BY THE FRENCH PARLIAMENT”

Star
Turkish Press
May 22 2006

Press Review

A bill to criminalize denial of the so-called Armenian genocide
submitted by France’s Socialist Party is set today to be debated and
put to a vote by the French Parliament. Speaking at a weekly press
conference, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Namik Tan yesterday said
that Turkey’s expectations were clear, adding, “We hope that the
Armenian bill, which could seriously damage deep-rooted historical
relations between Turkey and France, won’t be approved by the French
Parliament.” Tan expressed Turkey’s satisfaction that the bill
aiming to introduce prison terms and fines for those who question
the Armenian genocide claims is opposed both by circles in the French
government and among the public. While declining to publicly comment
on announcements over the controversial issue in order not to attract
criticism from the Armenian lobby, French President Jacques Chirac,
the French Prime Ministry and the French Foreign Ministry are silently
lobbying to convince ruling Union for Popular Movement (UMP) deputies
to vote against the bill.

Anne Derse Stops Short Of Destruction Of Armenian Cemetery InNakhich

ANNE DERSE STOPS SHORT OF DESTRUCTION OF ARMENIAN CEMETERY IN NAKHICHEVAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
22.05.2006 18:20 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ U.S. Ambassador Designate to Azerbaijan Anne Derse
responded to concerns raised by Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) regarding
Azerbaijan’s destruction of the over millennia old Djulfa Armenian
cemetery in Nakhichevan, but refrained from pledging any concrete
commitment to investigate the matter, reported the Armenian National
Committee of America (ANCA).

Submitting a written response to questions by Sen. Boxer relayed
during her May 12th Senate Foreign Relations Committee confirmation
hearing, Derse noted that the Department of State is “urging the
relevant Azerbaijani authorities to investigate the allegations of
desecration of cultural monuments in Nakhichevan and take appropriate
measures to prevent any desecration of cultural monuments. Armenia and
Azerbaijan are both members of UNESCO (and OSCE), and Azerbaijan has
raised these issues in those organizations. We have encouraged Armenia
and Azerbaijan to work with UNESCO to investigate this incident. If
I am confirmed, and if such issues arise during my tenure, I will
communicate our concerns to the Government of Azerbaijan and pursue
appropriate activities in support of U.S. interests.”

Sen. Boxer had specifically asked if the Ambassador Designate would
“visit the cemetery site and commit [herself] to investigating the
demolition of this unique cemetery.”

“We want to thank Senator Boxer for raising Azerbaijan’s desecration
of the Djulfa cemetery with Ambassador Designate Derse,” said ANCA
Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “We were deeply troubled by the
silence of the U.S. Embassy on this issue during the tenure of her
predecessor, Reno Harnish, and remain hopeful that, despite her
evasive response, Anne Derse will prove a more vocal and effective
advocate for the core American values of tolerance and respect for
cultural heritage. She can start off on the right foot by personally
visiting Djulfa during her first month in office.”

In December of 2005, approximately 200 Azerbaijani forces were
videotaped using sledgehammers to demolish the Armenian cemetery in
Djulfa, a sacred site of the Armenian Apostolic Church. The cemetery
dates back to the 7th Century and once was home to as many as 10,000
khatchkars (intricately carved stone-crosses).

Azerbaijan Faces Iran Dilemma

AZERBAIJAN FACES IRAN DILEMMA
By Kenan Guluzade in Baku

Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
May 19 2006

Baku uncomfortable as its major ally confronts its southern neighbour.

As tension grows between Iran and the West over Iran’s nuclear
programme, agonised debate has begun in Azerbaijan about what stance
the country should take if the crisis escalates and it is called on
to join an anti-Iranian coalition.

Should it come to military action, many observers assume that the
United States would want to use Azerbaijani territory for its troops.

Former UN weapons inspector Scott Ritter was quoted by the Azerbaijani
information agency APA as saying that Azerbaijan would be a likely
base from which the US would launch military strikes.

The US government has already paid for a radar station to be built
in the south of the country, on the border with Iran.

However, Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliev has explicitly ruled out
joining any anti-Iranian coalition. Speaking on an official visit to
Washington on April 26, Aliev said, “Azerbaijan, of course, will not
be engaged in any kind of potential operations against Iran, and our
officials [have] made it very clear, including myself in the past…
it’s time to stop speculating on this issue.

“We have a bilateral agreement with Iran which clearly says that the
territories of our countries cannot be used for any danger towards
each other.”

The non-aggression pact between Iran and Azerbaijan was signed two
years ago in Tehran by the defence ministers of the two countries.

During a visit to Azerbaijan by Iranian defence minister Mostafa
Mohammad Najjar in April, the two sides discussed implementing the
agreement. The Iranian minister said a second agreement covering
military cooperation could be signed if necessary.

Many Azerbaijani experts warning that the risks entailed in getting
involved in any operation against Iran would be high.

Political analyst Zardusht Alizade says it could mean Baku losing
all hope of regaining Nagorny Karabakh. “We have always called for
a solution to the Karabakh problem which is within the framework
of international law,” he said. “If we take part in an anti-Iran
coalition, we will lose Karabakh. The US flouts international law
and wants other countries to support it in doing so.”

Noting that Azerbaijan has no serious quarrels with Iran and obtains
some of its electricity from that country, Alizade asked, “On what
grounds would we join some mythical anti-Iran coalition?”

Hikmet Hajizade, a former Azerbaijani ambassador to Moscow who is now
a political analyst with the opposition party Musavat, said Azerbaijan
would be hit hard by any imposition of sanctions against Iran and
trade would suffer. According to the Iranian embassy, trade between
the two countries came in at an estimated 450 million dollars last
year. Trading with Iran is the main source of income for people in
the south of the country.

Hajizade pointed out that if the crisis escalates, the Nakhichevan
Autonomous Republic, an exclave cut off from the rest of Azerbaijan
and whose border with Armenia is sealed, would be in particularly
deep trouble, as it gets all its gas and electricity from Iran.

He said that if it came to war, Azerbaijan would have to deal with
an influx of refugees from Iran – particularly ethnic Azerbaijanis –
and would itself be vulnerable to attack.

“It would not be at all hard to break the backbone of the economy:
all that would be required are several torpedoes… and two or three
medium-range missiles,” Hajizade said, speculating that offshore
oil platforms and the Sangachal terminal that supplies oil to the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline would be targeted.

Most Azerbaijanis, like the Iranian state, are Shia Muslims, and a
rise in tension could provoke an angry backlash from them. “There
are too few pro-Iranian Islamists in Azerbaijan to destabilise the
country, but there are enough of them to carry out various terrorist
and diversionary acts,” said Hajizade.

However, some experts argue that it would be dangerous for Azerbaijan
if Iran were to produce nuclear weapons, as the country – which
currently has better relations with Armenia – would become even
more powerful.

Parliamentary deputy Igbal Agazade argues that by supporting
Washington, Azerbaijan will be choosing the lesser of two evils,
and that it would be better to avert the Iranian threat and reap the
political rewards. Agazade said that as a result, Baku might receive
US support over the dispute over Karabakh and adjoining Armenian-held
regions close to Iran.

“Membership of the coalition will mean greater defence for Azerbaijan
against an Iranian threat, and will help in solving a potential
humanitarian crisis,” argued Agazade.

During a two-day visit to Baku, Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
refrained from expressing an opinion on the position Azerbaijan should
take in the current crisis, saying only that Iran is a peace-loving
state and that Baku and Tehran are friends.

Visits to Azerbaijan by Iranian officials and President Aliev’s trip
to the US give the impression that some serious horse-trading is
going on over the Iran crisis.

Azerbaijan’s position can be compared with that of Turkey, which is
similarly hesitant about strong action against Iran but reluctant to
offend the United States. Turkey saw its relations with Washington
deteriorate after it failed to offer support for the war in Iraq. As
the crisis over Iran develops, the Baku authorities will be mindful
of this experience.

Kenan Guluzade is deputy editor of Zerkalo newspaper in Baku.

WAC Expert Commission Discusses Problem Of Implementation OfResponsi

WAC EXPERT COMMISSION DISCUSSES PROBLEM OF IMPLEMENTATION OF RESPONSIBILITY FOR GENOCIDE ON BASIS OF LEGAL PROCEDURE

Noyan Tapan
May 18 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 18, NOYAN TAPAN. A regular session of the expert
commission on Genocide is being held in Yerevan within the framework of
the events organized by the World Armenian Congress (WAC). The expert
commission was created by WAC and includes well-known scientists
from Armenia, Russia, USA, FRG, Israel and Austria. The main point
of the commission’s agenda is the discussion of the issue about
the possibility of solution of the problem of recognition of the
Armenian Genocide by Turkey by means of the international justice
and as a consequence, the responsibility of the Turkish state. A
large document was submitted to the discussion of the experts, in
which various variants of implementation of responsibility for the
Armenian Genocide within the framework of the international justice are
minutely considered. It is the first time the problem of implementation
of responsibility for the Armenian Genocide on the basis of a legal
procedure or arbitration is discussed. The commission’s sitting will
last until May 19.

Ara Abrahamian Points To Necessity Of Active Work With Youth

ARA ABRAHAMIAN POINTS TO NECESSITY OF ACTIVE WORK WITH YOUTH

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
May 17 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 17, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Armenian President
has expressed readiness to provide all possible assistance to the work
of the World Armenian Congress. World Armenian Congress President Ara
Abrahamian declared this at the May 17 press conference in Yerevan. He
pointed to the active work of WAC in different directions, including
research and humanitarian ones.

At present the expert group created within the framework of WAC is
working at collecting documents relating to the Armenian Genocide for
the purpose of applying to the International Court with a lawsuit. A
preparatory work on organization of the third congress of the Armenians
of Western Armenia is also being done: the second analogous congress
was held in 1919. At the same time, according to Ara Abrahamian, in
contrast to the Union of Armenians of Russia that united the majority
of Armenian organizations of that country, during 2.5 years of its
existence WAC was not able to unite the Diasporan Armenians.

According to him, WAC had possibilities to open branches in many
countries but no corresponding conditions have been created for
this yet: there are problems inside many organizations and parties
in the Diaspora: “The Armenian communities in the U.S., in France
and in other countries are not ready for opening our branches, we
failed to work together”. He pointed to the necessity of more active
work with the youth: “The youth is our future and we should foster
the feeling of consolidation and unity in the young people, which we
lack”. As for WAC’s possible participation in the home political life
of Armenia Ara Abrahamian declared: “We cannot be indifferent to the
political situation in Armenia, we should take part in it as much as
the Armenian legislation permits this: participate but not intervene”.

Harper’s Comments Damaging To A Vital Ally

HARPER’S COMMENTS DAMAGING TO A VITAL ALLY
by Scott Taylor, Osprey News Network

Pembroke Observer (Ontario)
May 17, 2006 Wednesday
Final Edition

As this is obviously an incredibly sensitive issue for all of those
involved, I wish to state from the outset that I have close contact
and a good relationship with a number of senior Turkish officials.

Turkish intelligence officers successfully negotiated my release from
Iraqi insurgents in September 2004 and, having visited the Turkish
residency in Ottawa on numerous formal and informal occasions, I
consider Ambassador Aydemir Erman to be a personal friend. The fact
that Erman has temporarily been recalled to Ankara in protest over
comments made by Prime Minister Stephen Harper has therefore hit
close to home.

That being said, I honestly believe that the recent statement made by
Harper concerning the Armenian tragedy of 1915 was not only damaging
to Turkish-Canadian relations, but also completely unnecessary.

Two years ago, Bloc MP Madeleine Dalphond-Guiral brought forward
a bill condemning the mass deportation of Armenians from eastern
Anatolia during the First World War, which resulted in the death of
hundreds of thousands. According to the bill, it was a deliberate
genocide on the part of the Ottoman Empire.

While some may question why Canadian parliamentarians would spend their
time passing historical judgment on events that transpired 90 years
ago in the Middle East, Bill M-380 was actually passed on April 21,
2004 after a free vote in the House of Commons.

The Turkish government voiced its opposition to this ruling and offered
up its own version of events. While not denying that the Armenians
died in droves, the Turks pointed out that in 1915 eastern Anatolia
was being threatened by Czarist Russian troops, the Ottoman Empire
was crumbling on all sides, and Armenian nationalists chose to rise
up in open revolt. The forced relocation of the potentially hostile
Armenian population into northern Iraq and Syria was undertaken by
an Ottoman administration so cash-strapped and inept that some 80,000
Turkish troops died that same year on the Russian front from frostbite
and starvation.

The Armenians claim the resultant widespread death of their refugees
was a deliberate premeditated genocide, while the Turks maintain it
was a regrettable tragedy exacerbated by brutal wartime conditions.

Realizing that Bill M-380 was an impediment to Canadian-Turkish
relations, the cabinet of Liberal Prime Minister Paul Martin voted
against the motion and the bill was considered non-binding.

In the interim, the Turkish government has proposed a joint commission
of historians from Armenia and Turkey to attempt to thoroughly
re-examine the past to determine a ‘true’ account of the 1915
tragedy. Although modern Turkey was founded in 1923 from the ashes
of the Ottoman Empire, the actions of the former ruling Caliphate
leadership still impacts on the nationalist psyche of the Turks. For
this reason, Turkey has agreed to re-open the old archives and share
the documentation with the Armenians. Surprisingly, the Armenians
have yet to agree to participate in the study.

Nevertheless, on April 18 Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan forwarded a letter to Stephen Harper urging him to support
the new academic study. Instead, Harper used the first opportunity to
reaffirm his support of M-380 at a Winnipeg press conference the next
day. Somewhat prophetically, Erdogan had written warning Harper that
“the Armenian lobby has not given up its intention to create problems
in Turkish-Canadian relations.”

Although the prime minister’s official Web site only briefly
displayed Harper’s statement concerning M-380 before removing it,
Armenian-Canadian Web sites continue to post the comments. Turkey
responded by officially (temporarily) recalling Ambassador Erman and
formally withdrawing from a joint NATO fighter jet exercise at Cold
Lake, Alberta.

While these actions may seem harmless and petty, it must be remembered
that Turkey is a key NATO ally and a vital partner to the mission
in Afghanistan. More importantly, if Stephen Harper is anxious to
mend fences with the U.S. State Department, he should have first
consulted their position on the Armenian issue. The U.S. does not
insist on using the word “genocide” and they are prepared to wait
for the results of the new study.

As a secular Muslim democracy – that recognizes the state of Israel –
Turkey is the cornerstone to America’s Middle East policies. Thus,
maintaining good relations with Ankara is a high priority for the U.S.

Closer to home, the fanatical elements of the Armenian nationalists
have not always resorted to diplomatic measures to bring attention
to their cause here in Canada. In 1982, an Armenian assailant gunned
down the Turkish military attache, and in 1985 the Turkish ambassador
narrowly escaped being murdered when Armenian gunmen forced their
way into the official residence.

Historical records are all too often written by the victors at the
expense of the vanquished. However, in the case of the Ottomans and
Armenians, both sides lost that war and suffered terrible casualties.

Clarification of this tragedy needs to be addressed by historians
examining the facts, not politicians appeasing a lobby group.

Canada’s current relations with a vital ally and trading partner should
have taken precedence over passing judgment on a 90-year-old incident.

Scott Taylor is a member of the Osprey Writers Group and is publisher
and editor of Esprit de Corps Books & Magazine in Ottawa.