Turkey Signed Protocols Not With Armenia, But With U.S., Says Analys

TURKEY SIGNED PROTOCOLS NOT WITH ARMENIA, BUT WITH U.S., SAYS ANALYST

Tert
Nov 16 2009
Armenia

Neither Armenia nor Turkey is prepared to continue the already-begun
process, said political analyst Igor Muradyan, while speaking with
journalists today.

In Muradyan’s words, the Protocols in Zurich were signed not between
Armenia and Turkey, but between the U.S. and Turkey. According to
the analyst, the process of establishing relations between Armenia
and Turkey is not possible "without outside support."

Muradyan noted that the U.S. is no longer capable of supporting the
process. "Our region is closely connected with the U.S. strategy
carried out in Central Asia. Under those conditions, when the movers
and shakers and leadership of the U.S. have lost themselves, and
relations between NATO and Europe, in turn, take on an incomprehensible
character, the Caucasus will become a less important region for the
U.S.," highlighted the analyst.

"It turns out that, holding their hands, they brought Armenia
and Turkey to the negotiating table and left them their alone,"
said Muradyan, adding that Turkey is not receiving enough pressure
from the U.S. "But in this case, Turkey’s aim is to bring about its
international independence, since Turkey doesn’t intend to surrender
to U.S.’s control," announced Muradyan.

"This is the main situation of Armenian-Turkish negotiations," added
the analyst.

Preparatory Works Of Turning The Swan Lake Into The Skating Rink Are

PREPARATORY WORKS OF TURNING THE SWAN LAKE INTO THE SKATING RINK ARE IN PROCESS

ARMENPRESS
NOVEMBER 17, 2009
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS: Preparatory works of turning the Swan
Lake into the skating rink are in process. Head of the construction
and renovation department of the municipality Frunz Basentsyan told
Armenpress that it will start operating when the air temperature will
be +8 and lower.

Taking into consideration the climate of Armenia the skating rink
will start functioning in December. According to initial information,
the opening is planned for December 13 when the weather is favorable.

ANKARA: Azerbaijani-Armenian Ties Emotionally Charged, Says Caucasus

AZERBAIJANI-ARMENIAN TIES EMOTIONALLY CHARGED, SAYS CAUCASUS RESEARCHER

Hurriyet Daily News
Nov 15 2009
Turkey

A senior researcher at a Caucasus research center says Baku-Yerevan
ties are much more flawed than the relationship between Georgia and
Russia. He says that despite the August 2008 war, Georgians have a
favorable view of Russians but are skeptical of the Kremlin, while
in the case of Azerbaijan and Armenia, hostility is visible between
the two peoples, thus complicating an ultimate peace

Compared to the relationship between Georgia and Russia,
Azerbaijani-Armenian ties are more emotionally charged, thereby making
it difficult to build a lasting peace, according to the regional
director of the Caucasus Research Resource Center.

Hans Gutbrod told the Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review on the
sidelines of an international symposium in Tbilisi that while Georgians
were against the policies of the Kremlin, at least there was no enmity
toward Russians. In the case of Azerbaijan and Armenia, the situation
is far worse because of the hostility between the two peoples.

"The relationship between Azerbaijan and Armenia is much more flawed.

The Armenians do desire some sort of stabilization and improvement –
ideally based on the status quo – whereas the view in Azerbaijan is
very hostile," he said.

"That reflects the result of similar conflicts in many places: The
side that loses is particularly angry and emotionally charged about
the conflict. This is not surprising at all," he said.

Azerbaijan and Armenia dispute control of Nagorno-Karabakh, an Azeri
territory occupied by Yerevan in the 1990s. The status quo lingers
because no peace treaty has been signed between the two countries.

"I think it is important for both sides to realize the risks of
[continuing the status quo]," Gutbrod said.

Armenia must understand that it needs to develop a relationship with
Azerbaijan since the country will always remain a neighbor. Meanwhile,
he said, "The Azerbaijani leadership needs to make sure that they
can prepare their population for a peace that is mainly based on a
compromise. As we saw in the August war between Georgia and Russia,
a military solution is very difficult."

Georgians favorable toward Russia, skeptical of Kremlin

Georgia went to war in 2008 with Russia over another frozen conflict in
the breakaway region of South Ossetia, resulting in Russia unilaterally
recognizing the independence of both South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

"What we see is that Georgians generally have positive views of most
of its neighbors, including the Russians. [For example], when we asked
if they would approve or disapprove of a woman of Georgian nationality
marrying a Russian man along with a range of other nationalities, the
Russians remain the most positive, even after the war," said Gutbrod.

"I think that shows there is a close cultural proximity to Russia and
Russians. When it comes to the views of what the Kremlin does, however,
Georgians are very skeptical and there is not a lot of goodwill for
Russia. The Georgians are really still very favorable to Russia but,
at the same time, skeptical of the Kremlin," he said.

Azerbaijani public skeptical of Yerevan

Referring to the case of Armenia and Azerbaijan, Gutbrod said:
"We know that public opinion in Azerbaijan is very skeptical of any
deeper engagement with Armenia. I think in the short term that’s very
understandable and reflects the particular outcome of a conflict,
but if we take a broader view, ultimately Armenia is not going to go
away and will remain a neighbor to Azerbaijan."

Gutbrod said the process of normalizing ties between Turkey and
Armenia might positively impact the relationship between Armenia and
Azerbaijan. "The potential opportunity for Azerbaijan is if Armenians
realize this very long, difficult relationship with Turkey is one they
could restructure and bring to a positive stage, it might help them
rethink their relationship with Azerbaijan as well," he said. "We are
ultimately locked into this part of the world and we cannot choose
where we are going to live."

Border a question for Turkey, not for Caucasus

He said the opening of the border between Ankara and Yerevan would
actually offer opportunities in other frozen conflicts in the
Caucasus. Asked if the border could be opened before a solution to
the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute was found, he said: "That’s a question
primarily driven by Turkish politics and to what extent Turkey succeeds
in convincing Azerbaijan [that it’s] a viable step. That’s a question
for Ankara, not a question for the Caucasus."

First round of "Football for the sake of equal opportunity”

First round of "Football for the sake of equal opportunity” crowned
with plenty of goals
14.11.2009 14:24 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ November 13 ”Football for the sake of equal
opportunity" tournament started, which involves 9 teams. 4 matches
were played during the first day of the tournament.

Arevatsaghik” – ”Chorrord ishhanutyun”- 6:2

”Armenian Public TV” – ”Yerkir Media” – 2:10

"Tert.am” – ”Armenpress" – 11:0

"Shahmaty” -”Mediamax" – 2:6

ôhe participants relax on November 14. As Aram Manukyan told
PanARMENIAN.Net one of the organizers of the tournament, following
commands will play on November 15:

”Mediamaks” – ”Yerkir-media”

Tert.am” – ”Total Football”

"Shakhmaty” – ”Armenian Public TV”

Armenpress – Arevatsaghik.

Armenian FM Likely To Attend OSCE Foreign Ministers’ Summit Due In A

ARMENIAN FM LIKELY TO ATTEND OSCE FOREIGN MINISTERS’ SUMMIT DUE IN ATHENS

PanARMENIAN.Net
12.11.2009 18:16 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ FM Edward Nalbandyan will very probably leave
for Athens, Greece, to take part in OSCE Foreign Ministers’ Summit,
RA MFA Press secretary Tigran Balayan said.

Annual Summit of OSCE Foreign Ministers is due in Athens on December
1-2. Discussion will bring together Foreign Ministers from 56
member-states.

Spiegel: Nostalgia For The Ottomans: Disillusioned With Europe, Turk

NOSTALGIA FOR THE OTTOMANS: DISILLUSIONED WITH EUROPE, TURKEY LOOKS EAST

Der Spiegel
Nov 12 2009
Germany

As European opposition to EU membership for Turkey grows, Ankara is
looking to forge closer ties to its neighbors. Turkey wants to once
again become a leading power in the Middle East — but its relationship
with Israel may suffer as a result.

He was the last heir to the throne of the Ottoman Empire, a major
power that controlled large parts of Europe, North Africa and the
Middle East for centuries. But Prince Osman Ertugrul Osmanoglu was
a prince without a country, and he was stateless for much of his life.

When Turkish officers proclaimed the republic in 1924, they expelled
Osmanoglu and his entire family. It wasn’t until 2004 that the exiled
prince was granted Turkish citizenship.

The prince died in Istanbul on Sept. 23, at the age of 97, and the
republic that had once banished him became reconciled with Osmanoglu.

The guests at the funeral service included four cabinet ministers
from the conservative Islamic AKP government, a deputy minister,
several members of parliament, Istanbul’s governor and the city’s
chief of police. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan also sent his
condolences — privately. It was a rare show of republican appreciation
for Turkey’s Ottoman legacy.

Many Turks today believe that true greatness lies in the imperial
past — and that this past is no longer to be found exclusively
in the West. Europe, with its fondness for criticizing Turkey, is
increasingly become yesterday’s ideal. "Neo-Ottomanism" is in vogue
in Turkey, as evidenced by an exhibition at a new history museum that
opened in Istanbul at the beginning of the year, a museum commission by
Erdogan when he was still the mayor of Istanbul. An enormous panorama
painting at the museum depicts the Ottoman conquest of Istanbul in
1453, complete with a soundtrack of cannon thunder and war cries
piped through the loudspeakers.

Evoking Past Glories

This nostalgia for the Ottoman past is in keeping with an about-face
in politics that is becoming increasingly obvious. Turkish politicians
are now evoking — and glorifying — the Ottoman era as a time when
their country was still a respected hegemonic power in the Middle
East and Caucasus region. It is a role that Ankara wants to play
again today — perhaps one it is already playing.

Turkey has in fact turned its attention to the east once again,
opening up channels of communication and embarking on an approach to
diplomacy that goes beyond the usual friend vs. foe dichotomy. In
short, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu hopes to solve the
conflicts in the region with a "zero problems" policy. He intends to
act as a mediator whenever possible, and he hopes that by the end of
a reconciliation process with its neighbors, Turkey will emerge as the
strongest nation in the Middle East, both economically and politically.

The initiatives have been coming hard and fast. In early October,
the foreign ministers of Turkey and Armenia signed a protocol on the
establishment of diplomatic relations. However, the two archenemies
will have to first overcome substantial obstacles. Turkey’s "brother"
nation, Azerbaijan, is threatening to block the peace process unless
Armenia relinquishes control over Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian
enclave in Azerbaijan. Armenians living abroad, in particular, insist
that Ankara must first recognize the Armenian genocide during World
War I before the borders are opened. Despite these obstacles, Turkey
and Armenia want to continue negotiating.

Ankara has also recently begun talks with another difficult neighbor.

The de facto Kurdish state in northern Iraq — a safe haven for
Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) rebels and long the principal adversary
of the Turkish military — is worried about being left alone with
Shiite and Sunni Arabs in a disintegrating Iraq. Instead, Iraq’s
Kurds have sought to establish ties with Turkey.

Two weeks ago, Davutoglu flew to Arbil, the capital of the Kurdish
region, where he announced Turkey’s plans to open a consulate. A
journalist traveling with Davutoglu said she was astonished to see
a Turkish foreign minister sitting in a limousine flying a Kurdish
pennant, and that it upends everything that was official Turkish
policy in the past.

Opening the Border

So far, however, the neighbors with whom the Turks have formed their
closest ties are the Syrians.

In mid-October, Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Moallem met Davutoglu
and his large entourage at Oncupinar on the Turkish-Syrian border. The
two men cheerfully pushed aside a barrier marking the border, in a
scene meant to emulate the opening of the Hungarian-Austrian border
in September 1989.

In the late 1990s, the two countries were still on the verge of war,
because of Syria’s support for the PKK extremists. Today their armed
forces conduct joint maneuvers, while their foreign and defense
ministers meet as part of a "strategic cooperation council." As
journalist Zeynep Gurcanli wrote in the influential Turkish daily
Hurriyet, Turkey has never cooperated this closely with any other
country. Could Ankara’s current efforts eventually lead to a "Middle
Eastern Union" modeled after the European Union?

The end of the decades-long dispute between Turkey and Syria is
seen as a true success for Davutoglu — and for the Syrians, who are
overjoyed at the upgrading of their country after being ostracized in
the West. But Damascus is also pleased for another reason. At almost
exactly the same time as the Turkish-Syria rapprochement was happening,
Turkey’s relations with another country suddenly went into a nosedive.

For "technical reasons," as the Turkish government initially claimed,
Turkey decided to exclude Israel from its international military
exercise "Anatolian Eagle." Erdogan later explained the real reasons
for the decision: Ankara could not allow fighter jets that had also
been used in missions against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip to fly
over Turkish airspace. The Turks’ decision to conduct joint military
exercises with the Syrians while putting their often-cited "strategic
partnership" with Israel on ice shows how deep the shift in Ankara’s
foreign policy already is.

It also reflects a domestic idiosyncrasy: Because the conservative
Islamic AKP government has strengthened its positive relative to
the secular military, it can now conduct a more self-confident
foreign policy. It no longer needs to show so much respect for the
Turkish-Israeli alliance, which in reality was always a project of
the elite.

Part 2: Displays of Displeasure

However, Ankara’s spat with Israel had already begun before the Gaza
war that so outraged the Turkish public. The army, too, is upset
with Israel, says Haldun Solmazturk, a retired Turkish general,
because there have been no reliable agreements with the Israelis
for a long time, and because the Turks feel that the Israelis have
treated them condescendingly.

The Israelis’ Gaza offensive was the straw that broke the camel’s
back, triggering a display of displeasure with Israel from the Turkish
side. During the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland in early
2009, Erdogan vented his anger on Israeli President Shimon Peres. His
rant brought him fresh popularity at home and in the Arab world,
where he has since been called the "Conqueror of Davos."

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad now considers the Turkish prime
minister a good friend, and the feeling — to the West’s chagrin —
is mutual. The government in Tehran is being treated unfairly, Erdogan
said before his most recent state visit to the Islamic Republic. The
West, according to Erdogan, ought to give up its own nuclear weapons
because threatening Iran with sanctions.

Western diplomats could hardly believe their ears. Was the only
Muslim member of NATO siding with Tehran in the dispute over Iran’s
alleged nuclear ambitions? Wasn’t this — especially after Erdogan’s
anti-Israeli tirade — even more evidence that Europe had in fact
already lost Turkey, and that Ankara is looking to the east instead?

Erdogan’s chief foreign policy adviser, Ibrahim Kalin, finds such
charges peculiar. Even the West, he says, is not unfamiliar with the
concept of pragmatic, interest-based politics. "When the Americans
open up to Russia, it’s hailed as a new era in diplomacy," he says.

"But when Turkey opens up to Iran, people ask themselves whether we
are changing our axis." Meanwhile, Ahmadinejad paid a second visit to
Istanbul last Sunday, where he attended a summit of the Organization
of the Islamic Conference (OIC).

Another summit guest, Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, who has been
condemned by the international community over war crimes in Darfur,
did not attend, even though he had been expressly invited by the
Turks. "A Muslim cannot commit genocide," Erdogan had earlier said,
dumbfounding the West once again.

A Benefit for Europe

Turkish Minister for EU Affairs Egemen Bagis is nonetheless unwilling
to concede that Turkey is turning away from the West. He insists that
the successes of Ankara’s diplomacy with the East should be seen as
a benefit for Europe.

The West, says Bagis, consistently describes Turkey as a bridge
between East and West. But how, he asks, can a bridge stand on only
one strong pillar?

"The good news is that Turkey is not turning away from the West,"
says Burak Bekdil, a critic of Erdogan. "The bad news is that it
isn’t turning toward the West any more, either."

But should this come as a surprise? The French and Austrian governments
are firmly opposed to Turkey’s bid to join the EU.

Meanwhile in Germany the majority of people are disillusioned with
EU expansion.

In Germany’s conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU), the image
of the bridge is even seen as an expression of distance. If it were
to become a full-fledged EU member, says new Finance Minister Wolfgang
Schäuble, Turkey could no longer perform the function of a bridge.

After all, he said, a bridge doesn’t belong to either side.

Armenian National Congress Does Not Intend To Go Into Political Maxi

ARMENIAN NATIONAL CONGRESS DOES NOT INTEND TO GO INTO POLITICAL MAXIMALISM

ArmInfo
2009-11-11 18:55:00

ArmInfo. The Armenian National Congress comes out for both
normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations and the soonest settlement
of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, but both processes should be based on
the principles of mutual concessions and balance, the first president
of Armenia, leader of the oppositional Armenian National Congress
(ANC) Levon Ter-Petrosyan said at today’s meeting of ANC.

According to Levon Ter-Petrosyan, at the same time ANC resolutely comes
against creation of an Armenian-Turkish commission of historians. He
said creation of such a commission may not only cast doubt on
the fact of the Armenian Genocide, but hinder Armenian-Turkish
reconciliation. He added that in the Karabakh peace process ANC
admits no program, which doesn’t specify the factor of dislocation
of peacekeeping forces, the status of the Lachin corridor or
conditions of holding of a referendum. According to him, the only
way to neutralize the dangerous developments in the Armenian-Turkish
process and Karabakh conflict settlement is the change of power,
which, however, is impossible until all political forces realize this
and the considerable part of the society overcomes its indifference
to problems of national significance.

He added those who demand Serzh Sargsyan’s resignation are the
opposition, and those who don’t are supporters of the authorities no
matter how much they pretend that are concerned with the negative
consequences. "In the matter of change of power in Armenia and
restoration of the constitutional order we are ready to cooperate
with all the forces, including those who are not our team-mates,
except the foreign ones",- Ter-Petrosyan said. He added that slogans
like "not an inch of land", "no concessions" or "no reconciliation"
are not a political position and are fraught with a possible national
disaster no matter how distinct they sound. "And when such slogans are
not accompanied with the demand of change of power, they are false",-
the ANC leader said.

As regards normalization of the Armenian-Turkish relations, the ANC
leader said, the Turkey parliament will protract ratification of the
Armenian-Turkish Protocols or will ratify them with some reservations
trying to stimulate settlement of the Karabakh conflict. The Parliament
of Armenia will be pending and will try to return to the issue of the
Protocols only after Turkey ratifies them. The international community
will try to speed up the settlement of the Karabakh conflict, which
evidently meets the interests of Turkey.

Serzh Sargsyan will ask the mediators to suspend the Karabakh
conflict’s settlement pointing at the sharp opposition of Diaspora to
the given issue. The international community will display understanding
to Sargsyan’s explanation but will reject this request not to lose the
moment and to take advantage of his weakness. Quite on the contrary,
it will increase pressure on Armenia in the Karabakh issue. "The
parties interested will, probably, call on Armenia to ratify the
Protocols first because it will be uneasy for Turkey to protract
the ratification process after Armenia ratifies the Protocols,"
Ter-Petrosyan said. He believes that developments of the coming months
will be around the Karabakh process rather than the Armenian-Turkish
reconciliation. "Because, after all, the major condition of the
Armenian-Turkish reconciliation is not recognition of the Genocide,
but the Karabakh conflict’s settlement," he said. Levon Ter-Petrosyan
called the present situation extremely delicate and said he will
further act feeling his own responsibility and avoiding short-sighted
actions, political maximalism as well as reckoning with the state
interests. Unfortunately, he said, the authorities are not likely
to do the same. Quite on the contrary, they do not want to see the
important resources of strengthening Armenia’s positions via settlement
of domestic political problems and establishment of national accord,
Ter-Petrosyan said.

BAKU; Turkey-Armenia Deal To Benefit Azerbaijan: EU Envoy

TURKEY-ARMENIA DEAL TO BENEFIT AZERBAIJAN: EU ENVOY

AzerNews Weekly
Nov 10 2009
Azerbaijan

Turkey-Armenia relations have reached a point beyond which there may be
a breakthrough, the European Union Special Representative for the South
Caucasus, Peter Semneby, has said, adding that the agreement recently
reached by Ankara and Yerevan would, in fact, benefit Azerbaijan.

Semneby welcomed what he described as ice-breaking in Turkey-Armenia
talks. He told Russia’s Kommersant newspaper that the anticipated
opening of the Turkish-Armenian border will be the first step toward
overcoming the abnormal situation in the region whereby three of
the lengthiest frontiers of the South Caucasus – the ones between
Turkey and Armenia, Armenia and Azerbaijan, and Russia and Georgia –
remain shut.

"This current situation is an obstacle to normal development of the
region," said Semneby.

After decades of hostility, Turkey and Armenia signed protocols to
establish diplomatic relations and reopen their borders in Zurich
on October 10. However, the documents require ratification in both
countries’ parliaments. Moreover, Ankara has ruled out their approval
in the Grand National Assembly and the border opening before progress
is made in the Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh conflict that Azerbaijan,
Turkey, ally, faces with Armenia, which has been occupying a part of
Azerbaijan’s territory since the early 1990s.

According to Semneby, though a challenging situation has emerged with
the approval of the Turkey-Armenia protocols, this would comply with
both countries’ interests, as well as those of Azerbaijan.

"I am confident that in the long term, this also meets the interests
of Azerbaijan, because it is also interested in the opening of borders
in the region," the EU official said.

Semneby noted that the brief war fought by Russia and Georgia in August
2008 has shown that the South Caucasus states are vulnerable, and
this vulnerability could be eliminated only by solving the outstanding
problems. He also voiced confidence that Armenian leaders are of the
same opinion.

"The status quo on Garabagh does not meet Armenia’s interests, and
it cannot remain undefined forever," Semneby said.

According to him, mutual confidence should be strengthened in the
South Caucasus to surmount the challenges, which, in fact, requires
vigorous effort by third parties, such as the EU or Russia.

Semneby also said Russia’s recognition of Georgia’s rebel South
Ossetia and Abkhazia regions had set forth a precedent complicating
settlement of the Garabagh conflict.

"[But] the link between these conflicts should not be embellished.

Certainly, we deem Russia’s recognizing these territories as
problematic and unacceptable, and difficult discussions on the issue,
including those with Russia, are still ahead," Semneby said, adding
that the EU and Moscow share common priorities in other areas, and
differences over Georgia should not pose roadblocks to efforts aiming
to resolve other conflicts.*

VTB Bank (Armenia) To Increase Credit Portfolio Up To $200 Mln Till

VTB BANK (ARMENIA) TO INCREASE CREDIT PORTFOLIO UP TO $200 MLN TILL THE END OF 2009

ArmInfo
2009-11-11 12:21:00

ArmInfo. VTB Bank (Armenia) is going to increase its credit portfolio
up to $200 mln till the end of 2009, Director General of the bank,
Valeriy Ovsyannikov, told ArmInfo correspondent.

He also added that over the current year the bank drew special
attention to raising of the quality of the main indices. ‘I think
that the year of 2010 will become crucial for the bank as we are
going to increase the volumes and occupy the leading positions’, –
Ovsyannikov said.

According to the Ranking of Armenian commercial bank prepared by
ArmInfo, as of 1 June of the current year the credit portfolio of
the VTB Bank (Armenia) amounted to $187.6 mln and the bank occupied
the 3-rd place in the banking system of Armenia. To note, the Russian
VTB Bank is the owner of the VTB Bank (Armenia).

Stop The Killing Save Darfur

STOP THE KILLING SAVE DARFUR
by Tina Armour

Sacramento Press
6/Stop_the_killing_save_Darfur
Nov 10 2009
CA

Storyline: Fundraisers Community Tags: business consciousness culture
darfur politics No high resolution image exists…

A diverse group of people came together Sunday to generate awareness
about genocides occurring around the world.

The Sacramento Committee on Conscience held a showing of "The Devil
Came on Horseback," a documentary on the genocide being committed by
the Janjeweed in Darfur, and "Screamers," a documentary capturing the
struggles dating back to the Armenian genocide and going all the way
up until the present Darfur genocide.

After the film, the committee held a panel to discuss the issues of
hate in Sacramento and how people can help to stop the trends.

"It starts with bullies in school and then people with that mentality
end up running a government," said Vice Mayor Lauren Hammond.

Hillary Hodge, representative of Equality Action Now, explained events
of violence and hate that have directly affected the gay community.

"The heinous act against Matthew Shepard about a decade ago really
hit home, when they[Aaron McKinney and Russell Henderson] tied him
to a fence and beat him until his life left his body," Hodge said.

Richard Kazanjian, representative for the Sacramento Chapter of the
Armenian National Committee fought back tears as he explained the
effects of the Armenian genocide.

"The Armenian genocide is the stain on our culture. My family was
directly impacted. This event has changed every Armenian’s life,"
Kazanjian said.

Efren Gutierrez, representative of Chicano Consortium Sacramento
explained his experiences with hate as a person of mixed race.

"I am Mestizo, half native[Mexican] and half European. The greatest
tragedy is not being considered by your own people," Gutierrez said.

Barry Broad, representative of the Jewish Community Relations Council
brought to light the mistakes that everyone has made with unintentional
discrimination.

"The worst words you can hear is ‘you people’ and then you know
something bad is going to happen," Broad said.

NAACP member James Sweeney, offered his solutions to the hate problems
around the world.

"We need to manifest the direct antithesis of hate, which is love,
but I think people are more afraid of love than hate," Sweeney said.

So far the US government has passed 17 bills regarding Darfur,
but without implementing them the situation will not change. The
bills have been passed to show that America does recognize what is
happening in Darfur and to let the world know that the actions have
been formally classified as genocide under its legal definition of:
intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial
or religious group by killing members of the group; causing serious
bodily or mental harm to members of the group; deliberately inflicting
on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical
destruction in whole or in part; imposing measures intended to prevent
births within the group; or forcibly transferring children of the
group to another group, but no forceful action hs been taken against
the Janjeweed. . Almost half a million people have been killed and
2.5 million have been displaced because of this genocide.

For more information on the genocide in Darfur and ways to help,
visit the Sacramento Committee on Conscience website.

http://www.sacramentopress.com/headline/1745