Armenian-Turkish Talks Held In Yerevan

ARMENIAN-TURKISH TALKS HELD IN YEREVAN

news.am
April 7 2010
Armenia

Today, RA Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian received Turkish
Prime Minister’s Special Envoy and Turkish Foreign Ministry Deputy
Undersecretary Feridun Sinirlioglu.

The sides discussed the issues related to the Armenia-Turkey
normalization process, RA Foreign Office Press Service informed
NEWS.am.

Nalbandian confirmed the stance of Armenian side concordant to the
spirit of international position to go ahead without preconditions,
ratifying and implementing the Armenia-Turkey Protocols.

Armenian Parliament Deprives Itself Of Right To Reservations

ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT DEPRIVES ITSELF OF RIGHT TO RESERVATIONS

PanARMENIAN.Net –
April 7, 2010 – 19:58 AMT 14:58 GMT

On April 7, Armenia’s parliament rejected the draft law submitted
by the ARF Dashnaktsutyun parliamentary group on making changes in
the RA Law on International Treaties and amending the RA National
Assembly’s regulations.

The legislative initiative of the ARF Dashnaktsutyun foresaw the
following: the parliament shall have the right to reservations during
ratification of international treaties, the right to withdrawal from
an agreement, if it contradicts the country’s interests, as well
as the parliament shall have the right to initiate a suspension or
termination of an international agreement.

Turkey To Restore Armenian Church In Western Province

TURKEY TO RESTORE ARMENIAN CHURCH IN WESTERN PROVINCE

People’s Daily Online
April 7 2010
China

Turkey is going to restore a 129- year-old Armenian church in the
Sivrihisar town of the western Eskisehir province, the semi-official
Anatolia news agency reported Wednesday.

Mayor of Sivrihisar Fikret Arslan was quoted as saying that they
wanted to restore many historical buildings in the town, including
the Surp Yerortutyun Church, constructed in 1881, and an Armenian bath.

The restoration of the church will be sponsored by the Turkish
Ministry of Culture and Tourism and the church will be turned into
a home of culture.

Turkey and Armenia have seen tensions rise after a U.S. congressional
panel and the Swedish parliament passed in March nonbinding resolutions
which recognize the killings of Armenians by Ottoman forces during
the World War I as genocide, drawing ire from Ankara.

On Tuesday, Turkish ambassador to the United States Namik Tan, who had
come back home following the row, left for the United States, saying,
"our interlocutors understood the message we wanted to give. We have
received satisfactory answers. It is time to return to my office."

Turkey’s PM Asks For A Meeting With Armenia’s President In Washingto

TURKEY’S PM ASKS FOR A MEETING WITH ARMENIA’S PRESIDENT IN WASHINGTON

armradio.am
07.04.2010 17:24

At the request of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
President Serzh Sargsyan today received his special envoy Feridun
Sinirlioglu.

The envoy presented to Serzh Sargsyan the written message of Turkish
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and the oral messages of the
Turkish President and the Foreign Minister.

President Sargsyan said Armenia expects Turkey to take practical steps
that would guarantee decisive progress in the process of normalization
of the Armenian-Turkish relations without preconditions.

Feridun Sinirlioglu reiterated Turkey’s willingness to ensure progress
in the process of normalization of the Armenian Turkish relations.

Through his envoy the Prime Minister of Turkey asked Serzh Sargsyan
for a bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the Global Nuclear Security
Summit in Washington.

President Of Armenia: The Most Vital Issue Is The Implementation By

PRESIDENT OF ARMENIA: THE MOST VITAL ISSUE IS THE IMPLEMENTATION BY THE PEOPLE OF NAGORNO KARABAKH OF ITS RIGHT TO SELF-DETERMINATION.

ArmInfo
2010-04-06 10:34:00

ArmInfo. The joint Armenian-Turkish commission of historians to study
the facts of the past cannot work impartially if in Turkey people are
persecuted and tried for a criminal offence if they use the very term
Genocide, President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan said in an interview
with the German Der Spiegel.

Here is the full text of the interview.

Der Spiegel: In his interview with Der Spiegel, speaking about the
Genocide which had taken place during World War I, Turkish Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan stated that "there can be no talk of
genocide." Why cannot your neighboring country come to terms with
its own past?

Sargsyan: Recently another statement was made that the Turks couldn’t
have possibly committed the Genocide and the Turkish history is "bright
and clear as the sun". The Turks are opposed to the definition of
the event as Genocide. However, Ankara is not the one to decide on
this issue.

Der Spiegel: Now Erdogan is even threatening to expel thousands of
Armenians illegally residing in Turkey.

Sargsyan: Unacceptable statements such as that one stir up in our
nation the memories of the Genocide. Unfortunately, such statements
articulated by the Turkish politicians come as no surprise to me.

Der Spiegel: How should the international community respond?

Sargsyan: The international community must respond resolutely. The
US, Europe, as well as Germany, all those countries that have been
involved in this process of Armenian-Turkish rapprochement should
unequivocally state their position. Had all the states recognized
the Armenian Genocide by now, the Turks wouldn’t talk that way. It is
however inspiring that many young people in Turkey stood up against
that statement. A new generation is growing in Turkey and the political
leadership of that country should reckon with its opinion.

Der Spiegel: Turkey accuses you of maintaining a tough position on
setting up a bilateral commission of historians. Why do you oppose
the creation of such a commission?

Sargsyan: How can such a commission work impartially if in Turkey
people are persecuted and tried for a criminal offence if they use
the very term Genocide? For Ankara it is important to protract the
process of decision-making indefinitely so that when parliaments or
governments of other countries undertake the adoption of a resolution
on the Genocide recognition, they can say, "don’t meddle in, these
issues are being sorted out by our historians." Creation of such a
commission would have meant casting doubt on the veracity of the
Genocide perpetrated against our people. It is unacceptable. Had
Turkey admitted its guilt, the creation of the commission would have
been justified. In that case the scholars could have studied jointly
the causes triggering that tragedy.

Der Spiegel: The Genocide took place 95 years ago. Why its recognition
is so important for Armenia?

Sargsyan: It is a matter of historical justice and it is also a matter
of our national security. The best way to prevent the repetition of
such horrendous events is to condemn them unambiguously.

Der Spiegel: From the windows of your office one can see the symbol of
Armenia Mount Ararat. Today, it is on the other side of the border –
unreachable. Turkey is afraid of territorial and retribution claims.

Do you want Ararat back?

Sargsyan: Nobody can take it away from us: Ararat is in our hearts. In
every Armenian home, in every corner of the world you will find the
image of Mount Ararat. I believe that the time will come when Ararat
instead of being the symbol of divide will become the symbol of
common understanding between our two nations. However, I would like
to clarify the following: no official in Armenia has ever presented
any territorial claims to Turkey. The Turks ascribe such claims to
us themselves, probably since they have a sense of guilt?

Der Spiegel: Your borders with Turkey and Azerbaijan are closed; Iran
and Georgia are difficult neighbors. Won’t it be a better trade-off
to get a breakthrough in that isolation instead of quarrelling
indefinitely with Turkey about the Genocide?

Sargsyan: We don’t link the Genocide recognition to the opening
of borders. And it is not our fault that the rapprochement is not
getting through.

Der Spiegel: Turkey wants to link the opening of the border with the
progress in the Nagorno Karabakh conflict resolution. The Armenians
held up in the war unleashed on that territory towards which Azerbaijan
have been laying claims since the break up of the Soviet Union.

Sargsyan: Turkey constantly wants us to make concessions, but it is
impossible. The most vital issue is the implementation by the people
of Nagorno Karabakh of its right to self-determination. If Azerbaijan
recognizes the independence of Nagorno Karabakh, I believe the issue
can be solved in a matter of hours. Unfortunately, they still believe
that they should bring Nagorno Karabakh back, while returning Nagorno
Karabakh back under the control of Azerbaijan would mean that before
long Nagorno Karabakh will be rid of all its Armenian population.

Der Spiegel: What kind of solution would you propose?

Sargsyan: Why the republics of the former Yugoslavia had been able
to become independent? Why, then, should Nagorno Karabakh be denied
the same rights? Is it just because Azerbaijan has got some oil and
gas and a patron like Turkey? We cannot consider it fair.

Armenia Working To Harmonize Its Legislation For Mutual Recognition

ARMENIA WORKING TO HARMONIZE ITS LEGISLATION FOR MUTUAL RECOGNITION OF GOLD ITEMS HALLMARKS WITH IRAN AND RUSSIA

ARKA
Apr 6, 2010

YEREVAN, April 6, /ARKA/. Gagik Kocharian, head of a ministry of
economy department in charge of trade and market efficiency, said
the ministry is working to harmonize national legislation for mutual
recognition of gold items hallmarks with Iran and Russia.

He said apart from revising the national legislation some other
measures will have to be implemented that will allow to certify
Armenia-produced jewelry in line with international standards. He
said reciprocal recognition of hallmarks is expected to facilitate
the process of export of Armenian jewelry and goldsmith produces.

‘The process has begun but having in mind the risks of this sector,
it may protract,’ he said.

According to the National Statistical Service of Armenia, production
of jewelry and goldsmith items last year slashed by 16.1 percent
from 2008 to 733.8 kg. According to the ministry of economy, export
of jewelry and gold items in 2009 shrank to $10.7 million from $22.6
million in 2008.

A Broad Field Of Activities To Be Held By The FIDH In The Region

A BROAD FIELD OF ACTIVITIES TO BE HELD BY THE FIDH IN THE REGION

Aysor
April 6 2010
Armenia

It is the first time that Forum of the International Federation of
Human Rights (FIDH) kicks off in Yerevan. On the Forum which will last
for 3 days representatives from around 300 countries will participate.

FIDH Chairman Souhayr Belhassen on the meeting with the journalists
mentioned that he is happy to be present in Armenia as Armenia is an
important country for FIDH.

"This region is inhabited with people who have for a long time lived
in Stalin era. In this concern a wide field of activities is opened
for FIDH. It is our duty to accompany Armenia and the whole region,"
Belhassen mentioned adding that for example in his country, in Tunis,
it is impossible to hold such kind of Forum.

According to the FIDH chairman the institute of human rights protection
is comparably stable, and the organization is aimed at making Armenia
to have a progress.

The subject of the Forum is "Justice, the new challenges" and the
main questions to be discussed at the forum are what kind of justice
and what kind of progress can be in the former Soviet countries.

"The center of all our concerns is the issue of the human rights in
this and all the Soviet countries," Belhassen said.

Artak Kirakosyan, the representative of the Civic Society Institute
noticed that the forum would be senseless if the problem of the human
rights in Armenia was not discussed.

"This was the most important issue for us, to make it heard form the
highest tribunes and the lips of the most prominent people, as the
field of justice in Armenia is one of the most crippling fields,"
he said.

On the conference will participate the first woman judge of Iran,
Shirin Ebadin, who mentioned in her opening speech holding such kind
of Forum in her country would be simply impossible, reminding the
fact that many journalists in Iran are imprisoned.

Turkey Keeps Genocide Controversy Alive

TURKEY KEEPS GENOCIDE CONTROVERSY ALIVE

AOL News –
April 6 2010

(April 6) — Earlier this year, the House Foreign Affairs
Committee narrowly passed a resolution to officially label Turkey’s
state-orchestrated murder of 1.5 million Armenians, which began
95 years ago this month, a genocide — a move that in turn led the
Turkish government to recall its ambassador from Washington.

Then, in March, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan threatened
to expel 100,000 Armenians living in Turkey illegally if foreign
governments continued to agitate for the genocide designation for the
mass killing (earning a filleting from Christopher Hitchens in Slate).

It wasn’t Erdogan’s first such fulmination, but it also is in keeping
with long-standing Turkish policy when it comes to discussing the
deliberate Ottoman destruction of Armenians during and immediately
following World War I.

So why can’t Turkey own up to its bloody past?

"Fear of rewriting history is the main fear of modern Turkey," says
Hayk Demoyan, director of the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute in
Armenia’s capital of Yerevan.

Indeed, the founding of modern Turkey and the state’s campaign against
Armenia go hand in hand. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, Turkey’s revered
"founding father," who secularized the country, is implicated in
the killings of Armenians, Demoyan says. "It is a fear of facing
historical reality and causing a total collapse of the ideological
axis that modern republican Turkey was formed around. Turks get
panicked when you compare Ataturk’s legacy to Lenin."

Instead, Turkey and various pro-Turkey groups have consistently
maintained that the Armenian death toll has been exaggerated, and
that while hundreds of thousands may have died, it was because of
starvation and disease — not at the hands of Turkish troops.

Increasingly, this account has been challenged by both foreign
governments and dissenters within Turkey itself.

"The country’s best-known novelist, Orhan Pamuk, was dragged before
a court in 2005 for acknowledging Turkey’s role in the destruction
of Armenia," Hitchens writes. "Had he not been the winner of a Nobel
Prize, it might have gone very hard for him, as it has for prominent
and brave intellectuals like Murat Belge. Turkish-Armenian editor
Hrant Dink, also prosecuted under a state law forbidding discussion
of the past, was shot down in the street by an assassin who was later
photographed in the company of beaming, compliant policemen."

Turkey’s continued denials come at a high cost, most notably
endangering its entrance into the European Union. But even if Turkey’s
ideological foundations are as fragile as Demoyan contends, many
nations have had to confront their unsavory pasts, to own up to them
and make amends (even if only symbolically) in order to move forward.

Germany’s done so for its Nazi past. Australia apologized to its
Aborigine population. Congress has apologized for slavery and the
mistreatment of Native Americans. Such measures may do little,
but they are at the very least an acknowledgment of wrongdoing,
and part of a growing process that Turkey, to its own detriment,
refuses to engage in.

eeps-armenian-genocide-controversy-alive/19428230

http://www.aolnews.com/world/article/turkey-k

Plainte en vertu de l’article 301 contre avocat turc reconnaissant

Une plainte en vertu de l’article 301 contre l’avocat turc
reconnaissant le génocide arménien
TURQUIE

dimanche 4 avril 2010, par Stéphane/armenews

Un avocat turc est poursuivi en justice en vertu de l’article 301 du
code pénal turc pour avoir soumis une plainte devant une cour d’Ankara
afin de faire reconnaître le génocide arménien a annoncé jeudi le
journal turc Zaman.

L’avocat d’Istanbul Serhat Kamil Zor a déposé avec des procureurs
contre Bendal Celil Ezman, l’accusant d’offenser la nation turque, de
calomnier des corps de l’état et actions étant en conflit avec les
devoirs d’un avocat professionnel.

L’article 301 est un article controversé du code pénal turc qui
sanctionne le fait d’insulter la Turquie, la nation turque, ou des
établissements du gouvernement turc. Il est entré en vigueur le 1er
juin 2005 et a été employé contre le prix Nobel de littérature Ohran
Pamuk et le journaliste assassiné Hrant Dink.

Dans sa réclamation, Kamil Zor a déclaré qu’il est né dans un village
dans la province Erzurum, notant il y a beaucoup de lieux avec des
noms arméniens et grecs. De plus, il a revendiqué que pendant
l’invasion russe les arméniens ont massacré des Turcs.

La plainte d’Ezman invite l’état turc à reconnaître le crime contre
l’humanité commis par le gouvernement ottoman pendant la Première
guerre mondiale, condamner son cerveau Talat Pasha et rebaptiser
toutes les rues qui ont été nommées en son honneur.

One more cafe in the center of Yerevan ‘swallows’ almost 20 trees

One more cafe in the center of Yerevan ‘swallows’ almost 20 trees

2010-04-02 15:38:00

ArmInfo. Representatives of government agencies, NGOs and the National
Academy of Sciences of Armenia met at the NAS today in order to
discuss the problem of cutting of trees in the center of Yerevan for
one more cafe construction project.

Coordinator of Ecological Programs of the Association of Consumers of
Armenia Ashot Mirzoyan said that the cafe is being built in the garden
near the National Library and Agrarian University. For this purpose,
the owners of the project have cut almost 20 trees. "We are concerned
that the care is being built near Hambartsumyan Monument: for the
moment it is all surrounded by pits," Mirzoyan said.

Mar 18 the Association sent a letter to Mayor of Yerevan Gagik
Beglaryan urging him to stop the construction and to plant new trees.

"We have reminded him that last year he promised to care for Yerevan’s
green areas and to respond to any instance of tree cutting. However,
we have not received any response so far," Mirzoyan said.

The objective of the discussion was to draw public attention to this
problem. "10 NGOs have already joined us. We hope that scientists will
also support our cause," Mirzoyan said