FISK: Prisoners In Their Own Fortresses

Prisoners In Their Own Fortresses
By Robert Fisk

CounterCurrents.org, India

04 April, 2005
The Independent

I drove Pat and Alice Carey up the coast of Lebanon this week to look
at some castles. Pat is a builder from County Wicklow, brave enough
to take a holiday with his wife in Beirut when all others are thinking
of running away. But I wanted to know what he thought of 12th-century
construction work.

How did he rate a Crusader keep? The most beautiful of Lebanon’s
castles is the smallest, a dinky-toy palisade on an outcrop of rock
near the village of Batroun. You have to climb a set of well-polished
steps – no hand-rails, for this is Lebanon – up the sheer side
of Mseilha castle and then clamber over doorsills into the dark,
damp interior.

So we padded around the battlements for half an hour. “Strongly made
or they wouldn’t be still here,” Pat remarked. “But you wouldn’t
find any company ready to put up the insurance. And in winter, it
must have been very, very cold.”

And after some minutes, he looked at me with some intensity. “It’s
like being in a prison,” he said.

And he was right. The only view of the outside world was through
the archers’ loopholes in the walls. Inside was darkness. The bright
world outside was cut off by the castle defences. I could just see the
splashing river to the south of the castle and, on the distant horizon,
a mountainside. That was all the defenders – Crusaders or Mamlukes –
would have seen. It was the only contact they had with the land they
were occupying.

Up at Tripoli is Lebanon’s biggest keep, the massive Castle of
St Gilles that still towers ominously over the port city with its
delicate minarets and mass of concrete hovels. Two shell holes –
remnants of Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war – have been smashed into
the walls, but the interior of the castle is a world of its own;
a world, that is, of stables and eating halls and dungeons. It was
empty – the tourists have almost all fled Lebanon – and we felt the
oppressive isolation of this terrible place.

Pat knew his Crusader castles. “When you besieged them, the only way to
get inside was by pushing timber under the foundations and setting fire
to the wood. When they turned to ash, the walls came tumbling down. The
defenders didn’t throw boiling oil from the ramparts. They threw sand
on to the attackers. The sand would get inside their armour and start
to burn them until they were in too much pain to fight. But it’s the
same thing here in Tripoli as in the little castle. You can hardly
see the city through the arrow slits. It’s another – bigger – prison.”

And so I sat on the cold stone floor and stared through a loophole
and, sure enough, I could see only a single minaret and a few square
metres of roadway. I was in darkness. Just as the Crusaders who built
this fortress must have been in darkness.

Indeed, Raymond de Saint-Gilles spent years besieging the city,
looking down in anger from his great fortress, built on the “Pilgrim’s
Mountain”, at the stout burghers of Tripoli who were constantly
re-supplied by boat from Egypt. Raymond himself died in the castle,
facing the city he dreamed of capturing but could not live to enter.

And of course, far to the east, in the ancient land of Mesopotamia,
there stand today equally stout if less aesthetic barricades around
another great occupying army. The castles of the Americans are made
of pre-stressed concrete and steel but they serve the same purpose
and doom those who built them to live in prisons.

>>From the “Green Zone” in the centre of Baghdad, the US authorities
and their Iraqi satellites can see little of the city and country
they claim to govern. Sleeping around the gloomy republican palace
of Saddam Hussein, they can stare over the parapets or peek through
the machine-gun embrasures on the perimeter wall – but that is as
much as most will ever see of Iraq.

The Tigris river is almost as invisible as that stream sloshing past
the castle of Mseilha. The British embassy inside the “Green Zone”
flies its diplomats into Baghdad airport, airlifts them by helicopter
into the fortress – and there they sit until recalled to London.

Indeed, the Crusaders in Lebanon – men with thunderous names like
Tancred and Bohemond and Baldwin – used a system of control remarkably
similar to the US Marines and the 82nd Airborne. They positioned
their castles at a day’s ride – or a day’s sailing down the coast in
the case of Lebanon – from each other, venturing forth only to travel
between their keeps.

And then out of the east, from Syria and also from the Caliphate
of Baghdad and from Persia came the “hashashin”, the “Assassins” –
the Crusaders brought the word back to Europe – who turned the Shia
faith into an extremist doctrine, regarding assassination of their
enemies as a religious duty.

Anyone who doubts the relevance of these “foreign fighters” to
present-day Iraq should read the history of ancient Tripoli by that
redoubtable Lebanese-Armenian historian Nina Jidejian, which covers
the period of the Assassins and was published at the height of the
Lebanese civil war.

“It was believed that the terrorists partook of hashish to induce
ecstatic visions of paradise before setting out to perform their
sacred duty and to face martyrdom…” she writes. “The arrival of the
Crusaders had added to .. latent discontent and created a favourable
terrain for their . activities.” Ouch.

One of the Assassins’ first victims was the Count of Montferrat,
leader of the Third Crusade who had besieged Acre in 1191 – “Saint
Jean d’Acre” to the Christians – and who met his death at the hands
of men sent by the Persian “terrorist” leader, Hassan-i Sabbah. The
Assassins treated Saladin’s Muslim army with equal scorn – they made
two attempts to murder him – and within 100 years had set up their
own castles around Tripoli. They established a “mother fortress”
from which – and here I quote a 13th-century Arab geographer – “the
Assassins chosen are sent out thence to all countries and lands to
slay kings and great men”.

And so it is not so hard, in the dank hallways of the Castle of St
Gilles to see the folly of America’s occupation of Iraq. Cut off from
the people they rule, squeezed into their fortresses, under constant
attack from “foreign fighters”, the Crusaders’ dreams were destroyed.

Sitting behind that loophole in the castle at Tripoli, I could
even see new meaning in Osama bin Laden’s constant reference to the
Americans as “the Crusader armies”. The Crusades, too, were founded
on a neo-conservative theology. The knights were going to protect the
Christians of the Holy Land; they were going to “liberate” Jerusalem –
“Mission Accomplished” – and ended up taking the spoils of the Levant,
creating petty kingdoms which they claimed to control, living fearfully
behind their stone defences. Their Arab opponents of the time did
indeed possess a weapon of mass destruction for the Crusaders. It
was called Islam.

“You can see why the Crusaders couldn’t last here,” Pat said as we
walked out of the huge gateway of the Castle of Saint Gilles. “I
wonder if they even knew who they were fighting.”

I just resisted asking him if he’d come along on my next trip to
Baghdad, so I could hear part two of the builder’s wisdom.

Copyright: The Independent

Georgia’s Armenians Demand Official Status for Armenian Language

RIA Novosti, Russia
2005-04-03 12:07

GEORGIA’S ARMENIANS DEMAND OFFICIAL STATUS FOR ARMENIAN LANGUAGE IN 2
DISTRICTS WITH ARMENIAN POPULATION

TBILISI, April 3 (RIA Novosti) – The United Javakhk civil association
demands that the Georgian authorities grant an official status to the
Armenian language in the Akhalkaki and Ninotsminda districts of Georgia,
according to a press release issued by this organization, reports the
Novosti-Georgia agency.

The press release points out that the United Javakhk had earlier demanded
that the Georgian authorities should officially recognize the fact of
genocide committed against Armenian people by the Ottoman Empire in 1915,
authorize teaching Armenia’s history in Armenian schools in Georgia, sponsor
excursions to Armenia for pupils of Armenian schools in Georgia, and adopt a
law on protection of ethnic minorities’ rights.

“To date, these demands have not drawn a positive response from the Georgian
authorities,” the press release says. The document points out that the
United Javakhk is set to resort to all constitutional methods of political
dialogue to attain the above goals.

“On March 31, a massive rally attended by thousands of people took place in
Akhalakaki despite numerous obstacles caused by the Georgian authorities and
local police,” the document asserts. The authors of the document allege that
the rally brought together about 9,000 people. The demonstrators protested
against the authorities’ plan to pull out the Russian military base from
Akhalakaki. Leaders of the United Javakhk told the audience about the
results attained after the previous rally, which took place on March 13.
Among other things, they said, the authorities opened a passport office in
Akhalakaki, and promised to study the feasibility of teaching Armenia’s
history in Armenian schools in Georgia.

The United Javakhk also turned to Garegin II, Catholicos of All Armenians,
with a request to grant the status of a diocese to the Javakheti district
hosting Georgia’s Armenian diaspora. Finally, the organization applied to
the Armenian Government with a request to contribute to the region’s
economic development.

First Annual Report on HR and Basic Freedoms in Armenia Issued

FIRST ANNUAL REPORT ON HUMAN RIGHTS AND BASIC FREEDOMS IN ARMENIA
ISSUED

YEREVAN, APRIL 1, ARMENPRESS: The office of the Armenian human
rights defender said in a statement today that ombudswoman Larissa
Alaverdian has submitted the 2004 annual report on human rights
practices in Armenia to president Kocharian and parliament chairman
Arthur Baghdasarian.

The statement says the report contains a range of assessments,
conclusions and proposals, based on applications the office received
from citizens and on studies and observations the office conducted at
its own initiative.

It said much of the studies were prompted by high-profile instances
of human rights violations, highlighted by non-governmental
organizations, media, international organizations and government
bodies.

“Being the first such report it does not claim to reflect all
possible manifestations of human rights violation instances in the
country,” the statement says, adding also that some of its assessments
may not coincide with assessments of some segments of the population.

Analysis: Turkish penal reform woes

Analysis: Turkish penal reform woes
By Jonny Dymond

BBC correspondent in Istanbul
01 April 05

Turkey has again postponed the introduction of a revamped penal code –
just hours before it was due to come into force. The two-month delay
is all strangely redolent of the first parliamentary passage of the
code.

Last September and October all seemed set fair for the passing of a
new penal code to top off the extraordinary process of legislative
reform that Turkey has put itself through over the past four years.

The code was to be passed just before the European Commission issued
its final report on Turkey’s fitness for entry into the EU – and the
new code was crucially important because the old one was so badly
riddled with sexual discrimination.

But then the new code hit a huge snag. Within it was a clause
proposing the criminalisation of adultery – and a row broke out.

Opposition

The government’s critics accused it of backwardness and Islamism.

The EU made clear its displeasure.

And then, just as the measure was about to go to parliament, the
entire code was pulled. Surgery took place.

The revised code made no mention of criminalising adultery. Instead it
looked – and looks – like a thoroughly modernising measure.

Most dramatic are the changes made to the law as far as violence
against women are concerned.

Rape within marriage has been made a crime. Leniency for rapists who
marry their victims has been abolished. The difference between women
and girls in sexual assault cases has been abolished.

Provocation is no longer a defence in “honour killings” – the murder
of women accused of illicit affairs by their relatives.

Attacks on women that were once handled as attacks on the family or as
creating disorder in society, will now be treated as attacks on
individuals.

Discrimination outlawed

The statute of limitations for major corruption cases, especially
involving government and business, has been abolished.

PENAL CODE REFORM
Assaults on women will be more heavily punished
Rape in marriage recognised
Life terms for perpetrators of “honour killings”
Jail terms for the sexual molestation of children, trafficking of human
organs and the pollution of the environment
Tougher measures against perpetrators of torture
Corruption in government to be tackled
Proposal to criminalise adultery dropped

All laws will have to be in accordance with the international
agreements that Turkey is party to. Discrimination on religious,
ethnic and sexual grounds has been made a crime.

Privacy has been protected – the police will be punished for entering
homes without good reason, the interception of telephone calls and the
gathering of personal information restricted.

And heavy penalties have been introduced for environmental
destruction.

At the time there was some muttering about problems with the code –
that it was not clear in some areas and insufficiently progressive in
others.

But by and large it was welcomed as the sort of thing that would keep
the EU happy.

And it did. The Commission pronounced itself satisfied that Turkey had
met the criteria for memebership negotiations to start. And the member
states duly declared in mid-December that those negotiations would
open in October this year.

With a few months to ponder, it now looks as if the doubters had a
point.

Media anxiety

It is the media that are protesting now. They say that several clauses
are so vaguely worded that they are left open to legal action from
some of Turkey’s rather zealous prosecutors.

In particular they point to a clause which bans publication of
material that might be contrary to Turkey’s “fundamental national
interest”.

An explanation of what this fundamental national interest might be
gives the example of “propaganda” promoting the withdrawal of Turkish
troops from northern Cyprus or acknowledgment of the heavily disputed
“genocide” of Armenians during World War I.

There are other problems too.

The old press law forbade criticism of certain state institutions; the
new penal code has a clause, albeit rewritten, that does much the same
thing.

And journalists believe that a clause on obscenity could be used
against them in ways which it is impossible to foresee.

For a couple of weeks now journalists have been demonstrating, arguing
and lobbying. Late last week Amnesty International weighed in,
expressing its concern. The government indicated some sympathy but
only now has made its move.

So this postponement looks – though it is never good to be too
confident about anything in Turkey’s legislative process – as if it is
just that: a delay in implementation whilst the government and
parliament work out what to do with what many now say is a hastily and
badly drafted piece of media regulation.

Alarm bells may have been set ringing by the announcement of
postponement. The EU has said that it will monitor Turkey’s human
rights situation all through the membership application process.

But this does not look like a step back. Instead it looks more like
the government taking time to reconsider, and perhaps acknowledge the
shortcomings of its original legislation.

Tbilisi’s energy crisis at an end?

Messenger.ge, Georgia

Friday, April 1, 2005, #059 (0833)

Tbilisi’s energy crisis at an end?

RAO UES says Georgian capital will be fully supplied with electricity from
Thursday; rejects attempts to create ‘mistrust’
By Christina Tashkevich

RAO UES, which owns Tbilisi electricity distributor Telasi, announced on
Wednesday that despite the fact that the Kavkasioni transmission line is
still down, Tbilisi would be fully supplied with electricity as of March 31.

“This was made possible by the coordinated efforts of Russian and Georgian
power engineering specialists,” said member of RAO UES’ executive board
Andrei Trapeznikov in a company statement.

Georgia has been mostly in darkness for the last two weeks, with the regions
receiving virtually no electricity and only parts of the capital being
supplied on a regular basis.

The crisis was triggered by avalanches in early March which damaged the
Kavkasioni high-voltage transmission line supplying Georgia with
Russian-imported electricity. The unexpected loss of imported electricity
meant the water resources in Georgia’s hydroelectric stations, including
Enguri, were exhausted faster than expected, a situation exacerbated by the
recent cold weather.

While work on repairing Kavkasioni continues, RAO UES says engineers from
both Russia and Georgia have been busy trying to maximize the potential of
other energy sources, and that their efforts mean the whole of Tbilisi will
now be supplied with electricity 24 hours a day.

According to Telasi, the Alaverdi line is fully operational and is being
maximally exploited, importing 160 megawatts of electricity from Armenia.
The Salkhino line importing electricity from Russia via Abkhazia has also
been connected during the crisis.

The company supplying Tbilisi with energy reports further that the ninth
block of Gardabani electric plant is working and producing 200 megawatts,
while the recently rehabilitated third block is generating 100 megawatts.
Meanwhile, it reports, Enguri hydroelectric station is managing to produce
260 megawatts despite the low water level.

“Specialists from the local electricity distribution company Telasi point
out that as long as the work of generation and network equipment proceeds
without accidents, they will be able to provide the city with energy at full
capacity,” said Trapeznikov.

According to RAO UES, the restoration of the electricity supply from Russia
to Georgia in full capacity via Kavkasioni line will be achieved in a very
short period.

He promised that the entities within the RAO UES holding company will do
“everything possible to provide a reliable energy supply to Tbilisi.”

However, Trapeznikov stated that stability cannot be achieved in Georgia’s
energy system without serious technical re-equipment – the essential
investment necessary to build new electricity lines connecting Georgia with
Russia and to rehabilitate Enguri.

“RAO UES is ready to participate in these projects,” he says in the letter.

Last week Minister of Energy Nika Gilauri stated that the government will
make a final decision on the Enguri rehabilitation issue soon, adding that
in the meantime the government would work according to a plan to provide
Georgia with 24-hour electricity supply as of October 2006. The government
will presumably make a decision regarding the rehabilitation of Enguri this
week.

The statement comes on the heels of comments by President Saakashvili on
Tuesday that Georgia would never have reliable electricity as long as it was
solely dependent on Russia.

In its statement, RAO-UES stated they fully reject “any attempts to take
advantage of the problems existing in the energy supply to Georgian
consumers in a bid to produce an atmosphere of mutual distrust between the
peoples of Russia and Georgia.”

BAKU: Azeri TV reports Armenian truce violations

Azeri TV reports Armenian truce violations

ANS TV, Baku
31 Mar 05

[Presenter] The Armenian armed forces continue to fire intensively on
the positions of the Azerbaijani armed forces. The enemy has been
mostly active in the direction of Tartar and Agdam [Districts] for
three weeks now. Sahin Rzayev of the ANS Karabakh bureau reports more
on the situation on the front line today. Hello, Sahin. We can hear
you.

[Correspondent, on the phone] Hello, Aytan. The Armenian armed forces
was mostly active in the direction of Agdam District today. Our three
villages came under fire in this part of the front four times. Mostly
the villages of Ciraqli, Orta Qislaq and Miraselli of Agdam District
and our positions in these villages came under fire. The village of
Ciraqli and the positions of the Azerbaijani army came under fire from
the Armenian-occupied village of Qarvand and the area called flower
production farm in two directions from about 1320 to 1350 [0820 to
0850 gmt]. The Armenian gunshots mostly hit the houses in the vicinity
of the village. The village of Ciraqli came under fire today for half
an hour from about 0500 [0000 gmt].

At the same time, the village of Miraselli and our positions in that
village came under fire from the occupied village of Qarvand from 0035
[1935 gmt]. The exchange of fire continued with short intervals till
about 0500 [0000 gmt] in the morning. The village of Orta Qislaq and
our positions in the village came under the enemy fire with short
intervals from about 0300 to 0600 [2200 to 0100 gmt]. Mostly assault
rifles and machine guns were used. Even though there is relative
silence on the front line, we can hear sporadic gunshots.

[Presenter] Thanks, Sahin.

Switzerland Calls on Ankara To Study Statements On Armenian Genocide

AZG Armenian Daily #057, 01/04/2005

Armenian Genocide

SWITZERLAND CALLS FOR ANKARA TO STUDY STATEMENTS ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

The foreign ministers of Turkey and Switzerland officially met in 2001 for
the last time. The Turkish side refused to hold the meeting envisaged in the
October of 2003, as the Swiss Vaud Canton Parliament recognized the Armenian
Genocide. The Lower Hose of the Swiss Parliament also recognized the
Armenian Genocide in the December of the same year.

Turkish Daily News informed that Micheline Calmy Rey, Swiss foreign
minister, who recently visited Ankara met with Ahmed Sezer, Turkish
President, and Abdullah Gul, Turkish foreign minister. The Swiss foreign
minister called for Ankara to thoroughly study the statements about the
massacres of a million and 500 thousand of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire
during the World War I.

“We believe it is very important that each country should make a very
profound historical investigation of its history, especially, when there is
such a painful issue,” Micheline Calmy Rey said after the meeting with
Abdullah Gul. Turkish foreign minister stated that the accusations of the
genocide are mere unacceptable statements made by the representatives of
Armenian Diaspora that try to spoil the relations of Turkey with other
countries.

Roberto Balzaretti, adviser of Swiss foreign minister, announced that it was
envisaged to discuss issues of human rights, the national minorities, as
well as the economic relations between the countries. He added that the
Swiss foreign minister will hardly discuss the issue of the Armenian
Genocide’s recognition.

Stefan Cristophsen, chairman of Switzerland-Armenia NGO, informed in the
interview to Tan newspaper that the main aim of the Swiss foreign minister’s
visit to Turkey is to make pressure over Turkey concerning the Armenian
Cause.

By Ruzan Poghosian

VTB Boss Denies Talks To Sell Stock West

RIA Novosti, Russia
2005-03-30 22:57

VTB BOSS
DENIES TALKS TO SELL STOCK WEST

MOSCOW, March 30 (RIA Novosti) – The Vneshtorgbank, or VTB, is not currently
engaged in stock negotiations with Western bidders, Andrei Kostin, bank
president, said to a news conference. The EBRD-European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development-and the International Finance Corporation
were previously expected to purchase a block each.

VTB-EBRD talks were suspended this month, and no encouragement to resume
them has come from the federal Cabinet for now, said Mr. Kostin.

The appearance of new holders is no cure-all. Sufficient capital is what
matters most. “The VTB is efficient enough as it is,” he remarked. More than
99 per cent VTB stock is government-held for today.

Even if a resolution is made to privatize the bank through public share
placement, that will not be done overnight. “The matter has not gotten on a
practical footing for now, and will not, in the near future,” stressed the
VTB president.

The VTB is engaged in reverse transactions-to buy Central Bank stock in
Russia’s overseas banks. These deals may come to a successful end within the
year, he added.

The National Banking Council determined, toward last year’s end, to sell
Central Bank-held stock of such banks to the VTB. The Vneshtorgbank has for
now met in talks with the host countries’ supervisory agencies. Germany’s
and Singapore agencies did not demand the deals coordinated with them, so
the acquisitions will be quite quick, said Mr. Kostin.

As for the UK and France, an understanding has been made with those
countries to submit all necessary papers before April’s end, so as to obtain
an authorization within next summer, and finish the deals before this year
ends.

Mr. Kostin views the CIS market as top priority in VTB activities outside
Russia. The VTB has every chance to dominate it-that is what makes the
post-Soviet market so attractive. Last but not least, the VTB sees every
support from other Commonwealth countries’ top.

Last year and at this year’s start, the VTB purchased control blocks of the
Armenian Savings Bank and the United Georgian Bank. It also registered a
Ukrainian-based affiliate, January last, and now intends to purchase another
bank in Ukraine.

The Vneshtorgbank also has prospects to establish an affiliated bank in
Angola, where a Russian diamond-mining company is doing well. “We’ll be
following our clients,” remarked the bank president.

As for starting East European branches, the VTB is not nursing any such
plans. “I don’t quite see what we can do in Eastern Europe, and we have no
intentions for the region,” he said.

Armenian minister urges mutual compromises on Karabakh problem

Armenian minister urges mutual compromises on Karabakh problem

Noyan Tapan news agency
30 Mar 05

Yerevan, 30 March: The resolution of the Karabakh problem is possible
only by peaceful means and on the basis of mutual compromises, the
secretary of the National Security Council under the Armenian
president and defence minister, Serzh Sarkisyan, said on 30 March.

Listing the compromises Armenia could make, the minister said that
Armenia regards as a fundamental compromise the fact that it has still
not recognized Karabakh’s independence, although Karabakh has been
established legally and has existed as an independent democratic state
for many years. “This is a demonstration of good will within the OSCE
Minsk Group with the aim of supporting the peace process,” the
minister said.

Recalling the provision of the 25 January resolution of the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe [PACE] that a region
can break away from a state and become independent only on the basis
of the will of the people living on that territory, Sarkisyan said
that as a second concession, Armenia might agree to conduct a second
referendum in the Nagornyy Karabakh Republic [NKR], which will be
organized by the OSCE under the aegis of the UN.

The third concession is that the Armenian side can start negotiations
regarding the security zone around Karabakh, the minister said. “I am
not in favour of returning the territories that make up the security
zone without taking into account the security of the NKR population,”
he said.

He said that certain concessions can be made at the negotiating table
provided that Azerbaijan clearly guarantees that it will not resume
the war, which will be confirmed by guarantees from influential
international organizations and states.

[Passage omitted: Reported details of the speech]

Visite de Calmy-Rey en Turquie Une occasion de “tourner la page”

Schweizerische Depeschenagentur AG (SDA)
SDA – Service de base français
29 mars 2005

Visite de Micheline Calmy-Rey en Turquie Une occasion de “tourner la
page”, pour Ankara Encadré

Ankara (ats) Le voyage de Micheline Calmy-Rey en Turquie permettra de
“tourner la page” sur les “malentendus” qui grèvent les relations
entre les deux pays depuis 2003, estime l’ambassadeur turc à Berne.
La cheffe de la diplomatie suisse pourra voir la situation réelle
dans le pays, selon lui.

L’ambassadeur Alev Kiliç souhaite une meilleure “compréhension
mutuelle”, qui permette de “prévenir d’éventuels malentendus futurs”.
Il pense que les rencontres agendées donneront “un nouvel essor” aux
procédures de consultation mises en place en 2001 entre les
ministères des affaires étrangères des deux pays.

Pour lui, la communauté turque vivant en Suisse, qui est “intégrée”,
joue un rôle de “pont” à cet égard. Un déplacement en Turquie de la
cheffe du Département fédéral des affaires étrangères (DFAE), prévu
en 2003, avait été annulé après que le Grand conseil vaudois avait
reconnu le génocide arménien.

“Réparer les liens”

Au deuxième jour de son voyage, Mme Calmy-Rey a prévu de se rendre à
Diyarbakir, dans le sud-est kurde. “J’espère que la visite de la
conseillère fédérale dans ces villes sera bénéfique et constructive
dans le sens qu’elle lui permettra de percevoir des réalités et des
développements du pays”, relève M. Kiliç.

Mardi, la presse turque évoquait elle aussi la visite de Mme
Calmy-Rey. Le quotidien de langue anglaise “Turkish daily news”
notait que ce voyage devait “réparer les liens endommagés par la
reconnaissance parlementaire suisse du soi-disant génocide arménien”.

Le journal affirmait également qu’Ankara demandrait à la Suisse de
désigner le parti des travailleurs kurdes (PKK) comme une
organisation terroriste.

“Paradis de l’investissement”

Le quotidien de gauche “Cumhuriyet” relevait pour sa part que le
“refroidissement” dans les relations helvético-turques avait pu être
surmonté lors du passage du premier ministre Recep Tayyip Erdogan au
Forum économique de Davos en janvier 2005. Il avait “approuvé” la
visite de Mme Calmy-Rey dans son pays à cette occasion.

Le quotidien rappelle en outre que la Suisse a fourni le cadre pour
la signature, à l’issue de la première guerre mondiale, de l’accord
de Lausanne, fondateur de l’indépendance turque. De même, le code
civil turc est calqué sur celui de la Suisse.

“Paradis de l’investissement”, la Suisse figure aussi au sixième rang
des investisseurs étrangers en Turquie, souligne le journal. Enfin,
“Cumhuriyet” estime que Mme Calmy-Rey “ressent la nécessité” de se
rendre mercredi dans le sud-est kurde pour donner un gage aux quelque
40 000 ressortissants turcs d’origine kurde qui résident sur sol
helvétique.