Armenia, Turkey FMs Elaborating Package of Proposals for Ties

FOREIGN MINISTERS OF ARMENIA AND TURKEY ARE ELABORATING PACKAGE OF
PROPOSALS FOR NORMALIZATION OF BILATERAL RELATIONS, TURKISH MEDIA INFORM

YEREVAN, APRIL 23. ARMINFO. The foreign ministers of Armenia and
Turkey are elaborating confidentially a package of proposals on
increase of the level of mutual confidence between Armenia and Turkey,
which consists of 10 points. Turkish newspaper Milliyet informs.

According to the resource, the document supposes implementation of
regular air flights between Armenia and Turkey and elaboration of
joint travel projects. The document also envisions to implement
cooperation in protection of monuments of culture, The authors of the
document consider necessary to ensure exchange of bilateral
information. They also propose to establish cooperation between
parliament members, scientists and nongovernmental organizations of
the two countries. According to the resource, confidential meetings of
representatives of foreign political offices of Armenia and Turkey are
held in a neutral territory and pursue aim to work out and sign a
protocol on overcome of historical problems and establishment of
diplomatic relations. At the same time, to sin this protocol Turkey
has laid four claims, the newspaper writes. So, Ankara requires from
Yerevan an official statement on that Armenia does not have
territorial claims against Turkey, official recognition of the Kars
Treaty, removal from the foreign political agenda of Armenia the issue
of the Genocide. Ankara also requires to withdraw the armed forces of
Nagorny Karabakh from the territories under the control of the
Armenian side.

Eccidio Armeni: Comunita’ denuncia silenzio israele

ANSA Notiziario Generale in Italiano
April 23, 2005

ECCIDIO ARMENI: COMUNITA’ DENUNCIA SILENZIO ISRAELE / ANSA ;
EBREI INDIFFERENTI, DICE STORICO ARMENO DI GERUSALEMME

ROMA

(di Elisa Pinna)

(ANSA) – ROMA, 23 APR – Ogni anno, il 24 aprile, una triste
processione attraversa il quartiere armeno nella citta’ vecchia
di Gerusalemme: e’ composta da tutta la comunita’ armena locale,
circa 1500 persone, la meta’ dei quali discendenti di
sopravvissuti e profughi dell’olocausto compiuto dai turchi, in
cui persero la vita piu’ di un milione di armeni.

Mai pero’, in tutti questi anni, un rappresentante della
Knesset o della politica israeliana ha partecipato alla
“giornata della memoria” armena, che ricorda quella terribile
notte del 1915 in cui la polizia turca avvio’ il massacro,
uccidendo e imprigionando l’intellighentsia armena, giornalisti,
scrittori, avvocati, preti. Da parte ebraica – denunciano gli
armeni di Gerusalemme – vi e’ indifferenza se non ostilita’.

“Vi e’ tra gli ebrei un sentimento impalpabile – spiega
all’Ansa lo storico della comunita’ armena, George Hintlian – la
preoccupazione non detta che il riconoscimento del genocidio
armeno tolga qualcosa all’unicita’ e all’orrore della Shoah”.

“Il genocidio armeno e’ certo differente dall’olocausto
ebraico – prosegue Hintlian – ma ci sono molte somiglianze.
Entrambi sono stati pianificati, premeditati. Entrambi hanno
voluto cancellare un popolo. L’olocausto armeno e’ stato
ignorato e dimenticato. Forse, se se ne fosse conservata la
memoria, non ci sarebbe stata Auschwitz. Hitler, preparando la
soluzione finale, sembra che abbia zittito un generale
riluttante con queste parole:’chi ricorda oggi il destino degli
armeni?'”. “Gia’- commenta con amarezza lo storico armeno –
chi lo ricorda, persino da parte degli ebrei, che pure
dovrebbero essere il popolo piu’ solidale? ”

Hintlian racconta di aver visto piu’ volte studenti ebrei
ultra-ortodossi strappare, in pieno giorno, manifesti che
invitano alla giornata della memoria armena. Una volta fermo’ un
ragazzo di una scuola rabbinica e gli chiese perche lo faceva.
“Perche ci sono donne mezze nude che mi offendono – fu la
risposta. E poi – aggiunse – perche non dice il vero”.

Nella piccola cittadella armena di Gerusalemme, vi e’ un
museo di due stanze dedicato all’olocausto del 1915-18. Vecchie
foto scolorite mostrano orribili mucchi di corpi, simili a
quelli che appaiono sulle immagini di Yad Vaschem, il memoriale
di Israele dall’altra parte della citta’. Donne abusate da
soldati turchi, ufficiali che sorridono orgogliosi con in mano
teste mozze di armeni. (ANSA).

CTV.ca: What Happened?

CTV.ca

What Happened?

CTV.ca News

In 1913, The Committee of Union and Progress, a party that stood for
Turkish nationalism and reform, seized power of the Ottoman Empire.

Popularly known as the Young Turks, party members aligned themselves
with the Germans in the years leading up to the First World War.

The multi-ethnic territory was in trouble — by 1850, it was being
called The sick man of Europe.

Its final years were characterized by revolts and local authorities
opposing the central government while the empire went to war with both
Russia and Great Britain.

The once-expansive territory that stretched from the gates of Vienna
to Yemen was threatened by Balkan states that were trying to expand
their territory at the expense of Ottoman lands.

In fact, when rulers ordered the mass deportation of all Armenians
living on Ottoman soil in 1915, they cited fears that Armenian
nationalists were siding with Russian troops who invaded eastern
Turkey.

After Young Turks officials resigned in 1918, the continuing massacres
were perpetrated by the Turkish Nationalists who shared a common
xenophobic ideology with the Young Turks.

By the time the Turkish state replaced the Empire in 1923, the
majority of the 2 million Armenians who had been living on Ottoman
soil at the time had been wiped out.

Forcibly removed from their homes in eastern Anatolia, now eastern
Turkey, most of the deportees died en route to Syria. The rest fled,
changed their surnames, or were converted to Islam.

In spite of nations such as Great Britain, France, and Russia warning
Ottoman rulers that they would be held responsible for their actions,
foreign powers did not intervene.

Armenians, and several Western historians, say that up to 1.5 million
perished at the hands of the Turkeys nationalist government between
the years of 1915 and 1923 in a deliberate attempt to wipe out the
population in a campaign of exile.

But Turkish officials dispute the numbers, saying they are inflated,
and that the victims died in a climate of war.

Eyewitness accounts

When the Turkish authorities gave the orders for these deportations,
they were merely giving the death warrant to a whole race; they
understood this well, and, in their conversations with me they made no
particular attempt to conceal the fact, Henry Morgenthau, the
U.S. ambassador to Turkey between the years of 1913 to 1916, said in a
statement.

Whatever crimes the most perverted instincts of the human mind can
devise, and whatever refinements of persecution and injustice the most
debased imagination can conceive, became the daily misfortunes of this
devoted people, said Morgenthau.

Similar statements were made by historian Arnold Toynbee, who worked
for the British Foreign Office during the war.

The first to be butchered were the old men and boys all the males that
were to be found in the convoy except the infants in arms but the
women were massacred also. It depended on the whim of the moment
whether a Kurd cut a woman down or carried her away into the hills, he
said.

When they were carried away their babies were left on the ground or
dashed against the stones. But while the convoy dwindled, the remnant
had always to march on. The cruelty of the gendarmes towards the
victims grew greater as their physical sufferings grew more intense;
the gendarmes seemed impatient to make a hasty end of their
task. Women who lagged behind were bayoneted on the road or pushed
over precipices, or over bridges. The passage of rivers, and
especially of the Euphrates, was always an occasion of wholesale
murder, he wrote.

Meanwhile, other notable leaders recognized the events that left
scores dead.

British Prime Minister Winston Churchill said: In 1915, the Turkish
government began and ruthlessly carried out the infamous general
massacre and deportation of Armenians in Asia Minor.

As genocide historians continue their research, more evidence
surfaces, says one scholar.

There is so much evidence and its a matter of different kinds of
evidence, Roger W. Smith, past president of the International
Association of Genocide Scholars told CTV.ca.

More recently, several genocide scholars have begun to look at the
archives of the Germans and Austrians who were allied with Turkey
during the First World War.

One, these documents were temporary; two, they were not meant for
publication; three, they were produced by people who were in alliance
with Turkey, and those things can be very damning, said Smith, a
pioneer in the field of genocide studies and Professor Emeritus of
Government at the College of William and Mary in Virginia, U.S.

There are also documents detailing the replacement of those local
governors and officials who refused to carry out the massacres.

These arent just documents here or there, there is this convergence of
evidenceThere are also the facts themselves that if the object was to
relocate people, how did they do such a terrible job, such that almost
everybody died? Smith said.

There are a lot of different kinds of evidence, and they all move in
the same direction.

In a 2000 article for The Independent, British journalist Robert Fisk
chronicled his findings when he set out to look for evidence of mass
murder in 1993.

His search took him to a site in northern Syria, which a 101-year-old
Armenian woman pointed out, saying it was where her family had been
slain.

The more I dug into the hillside next to the Habur river, the more
skulls slid from the earth, bright white at first then, gradually,
collapsing into paste as the cold, wet air reached the calcium for the
first time since their mass murder. The teeth were unblemished —
these were mostly young people — and the bones I later found
stretched behind them were strong. Backbones, femurs, joints, a few of
them laced with the remains of some kind of cord. There were dozens of
skeletons here. The more I dug away with my car keys, the more eye
sockets peered at me out of the clay. It was a place of horror.

Denial then and now

Several scholars affirm that the genocide meets the definition of the
United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the
Crime of Genocide. Under the Convention, genocide is defined as an act
committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national,
ethnical, racial or religious group regardless of whether it was
committed in the time of war or not.

Despite numerous foreign eyewitness accounts, academic affirmations,
photos, and documents bolstering the facts, Turkey has long upheld a
position of denial.

Ninety years after the genocide, the denial is steadfast among the
Turks as is the remembrance among the Armenians. Every year on April
24, 1915, Armenians worldwide remember the genocide, marking the date
when the first Armenian intellectuals were rounded up and killed by
Turks in Constantinople.

Still, the issue of genocide remains a sore point that keeps
Turkish-Armenian diplomatic relations from moving forward.

First of all, the Turkish position is that we do not accept the label
genocide to the events, Fazli Corman, counsellor of the Turkish
Embassy in Ottawa told CTV.ca.

In the case of the Turkish position, we do not accept the label of
genocide to the tragic events that (occurred) in Anatolia during the
First World War. We generally accept that Armenians as well as Turks
suffered during these great events, Corman said.

Denial can involve several elements, Smith said.

First, Turkish officials deny the numbers. They argue that 1.5 million
Armenians did not die and that the death toll is closer to 300,000,
maybe 600,000 at a stretch. They claim that thousands of Turks were
killed in civil battles when the Armenians, supported by their
Christian Russian allies, rose against their Ottoman rulers.

Another Turkish assertion denies responsibility for the deaths,
alleging that the hundreds of thousands of victims died of thirst and
starvation.

Meanwhile, another commonly held position is that the victims died in
the hands of overzealous officials and criminals who were released
prematurely from jails in a climate of lawlessness.

Indeed, in the post-war Ottoman government, tribunals convened in 1919
to hear testimony on the massacres and the Young Turks party was found
guilty.

Still, the modern Turkish nation denied that the 1915-1923 massacres
deserved recognition as genocide.

This denial is likely borne of two different roots, Smith explained.

One is political, Turkey is afraid that there will be demands made,
not so much for money, in a sense of reparations, but of restitution
of demands for land, returning of assets, Smith said.

But I actually think that its more the image, the psychological and
moral (image). Its the feeling that We are not that kind of people and
we dont want to be put in the camps of the Nazis.

The first large-scale genocide

But its important to acknowledge this bloody stain on the worlds
tapestry, to prevent it from happening again, Smith said.

It was the first large-scale genocide, but it was met with almost no
punishment meted out to anyone, he said.

The Armenian genocide was really the prototype, the pattern that a lot
of 20th century genocides have taken, Smith said, noting that the
nationalistic fervour, the primitive killing techniques and the
massacres within strict territorial boundaries are reminiscent for
what was to come in Bosnia and Rwanda decades later.

One of the implications is that would-be perpetrators can draw their
own kind of lessons (from the genocide), they can say All you have to
do is do the deed, deny you did it, and the world will forget about
it.

But the world wont forget. Just when it seems the genocide issue may
die, the embers are stoked again by Armenian descendants who lobby for
legal and political recognition.

When French legislators recognized the Armenian genocide in 2001,
Turkey cancelled millions of dollars worth of defence contracts.

Canada was one of the latest of several countries to recognize the
genocide in a 2004 private members bill in the House of Commons.

Other countries include: Switzerland, France, Argentina, Russia, and a
majority of U.S. state governments.

And in 1985, the United Nations Sub-Commission on Prevention of
Discrimination and Protection of Minorities listed cases of genocide
in the 20th century, among those the Ottoman massacre of Armenians in
1915-1916.

Meanwhile, organizations such as the International Center for
Transitional Justice and the Association of Genocide Scholars have
also recognized the massacre as genocide. And in a public notice in
The New York Times in 2000, 126 holocaust scholars, including Nobel
Laureate for Peace Elie Wiesel, recognized the incontestable fact of
the Armenian genocide and urged Western democracies to officially
recognize it.

Lone Turkish voices of dissent

In the past few years, a few lone Turkish voices who have joined
international critics in condemnation.

All hell broke loose in Turkey earlier this year when bestselling
novelist Orhan Pamuk acknowledged the genocide in an interview with a
Swiss newspaper.

Thirty thousand Kurds and a million Armenians were killed in
Turkey. Almost no one dares speak but me, and the nationalists hate me
for that, he said. His statement set off a whirlwind of reaction in
which he was denounced as a liar and vilified by the press.

Still, another professor at Sabanci University, Halil Berktay,
supported Pamuk and said: In 1915-16 about 800,000 or one million
Armenians were killed for sure.

Although Corman agreed that Armenians had suffered in a tragic turn of
events that came as the Ottoman Empire began to collapse, he said he
could not call it genocide.

But when asked if the issue is one of semantics, Corman agreed that
this could be part of the problem.

In Turkey this issue is as sensitive as it is for Armenians, and the
general perception among the Turkish population is that they would not
accept the label of genocide because that brings to the mind of Nazi
holocaust. Once you use the term, it brings all this imagery, and we
are not able to conceive that what happened in Anatolia is more or
less what happened in Germany, Corman said.

Even with the historical evidence in hand, Corman is unconvinced that
there was a deliberate intent to wipe out an entire people.

Of course the blame is not to be only directed to the government,
because that government was in the process of dying or collapsing, he
said.

It was in the last years of its existence and they were not able to
have the public security or safety in the region at the time,and there
was a lawlessness at the time that they took to relocate the
Armenians.

But the (relocation) decision went bad because they couldnt execute it
in the way that they designed or wanted because their authority
declined, Corman said.

Even with the benefit of nine decades of hindsight, the issue is still
not black and white. It might never be.

Corman says he has read the sources and the eyewitness accounts. Now,
his idea about who is right, who is wrong, is now more complicated,
its not as simple.

What needs to be done, Corman says, is to challenge the full set of
assumptions that both sides have as they approach the issue.

We dont try to harm Armenians feelings or try to justify, so that all
the suffering that the Armenians went through is condemnable, Corman
said.

This should be condemned by everybody, including Turks — but what we
say is that please do not try to show or portray Turks as the evil
that suddenly decided to bloodily get rid of the Armenians from their
country.

CR: Rothman – In observance Of The 90th Anniversary of The Genocide

[Congressional Record: April 22, 2005 (Extensions)]
[Page E737]
>From the Congressional Record Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:cr22ap05-22]

IN OBSERVANCE OF THE 90TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

______

HON. STEVEN R. ROTHMAN

of new jersey

in the house of representatives

Thursday, April 21, 2005

Mr. ROTHMAN. Mr. Speaker, this Sunday, April 24, 2005 is the 90th
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, the systematic and planned
extermination of an entire ethnic group by the Ottoman Empire, and the
first act of genocide in the 20th Century. I join my colleagues and the
Armenian-American community in my district, the 9th Congressional
District of New Jersey, and with people of goodwill throughout the
world, in solemn observance and acknowledgement of the deaths of 1.5
million Armenians during the years 1915-1923.
Countless Armenian families were torn apart forever by these gruesome
acts of violence–acts that have been seared into the memories of the
courageous individuals who survived. Survivors have vowed to never let
their children, grand-children, and great-grandchildren, or others in
the world, forget this past. Unfortunately, there is still a denial on
the part of many people around the world about the actual occurrence of
a genocide in Armenia. I stand steadfast with my Armenian friends in
support of an acknowledgement of the horrors that were inflicted upon
their families, and I continue to urge the recognition of the Armenian
Genocide.
This year, the number “ninety” serves as a reminder that too many
years have passed without proper recognition, and it serves as a
motivational tool to continue to educate the world about the Armenian
Genocide. In past years on the day of the anniversary, my Armenian-
American constituents from St. Leon Armenian Apostolic Church in Fair
Lawn, St. Vartanantz Armenian Apostolic Church in Ridgefield, and St.
Thomas Armenian Apostolic Church in Tenafly would participate in solemn
services held in memory of the martyrs of the Armenian Genocide at
their individual churches. This year, however, the number “ninety”
will unify Armenian-Americans as all members of the Armenian Apostolic
churches on the East Coast will convene in Times Square in New York
City to stand together and have their voices heard.
This anniversary also provides us with an opportunity to pledge that
such a slaughter should never take place again. I am sickened and
dismayed by the atrocities that we continue to see today in the Sudan,
as well as others that we have seen in the 20th century, such as the
Holocaust and the ethnic cleansing campaigns in Cambodia, Kosovo and
Rwanda. All of these events should be recognized for what they are:
Genocide.
As a Jewish-American, I stand united with Armenians who continue to
fight for recognition of the Armenian Genocide so the world will never
forget the first crime against humanity in the 20th Century. I am
hopeful that this 90th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide will bring
with it the recognition that is deserved, and help us in our
obligations as global citizens to protect the basic human rights of all
people. We owe it to our ancestors, our families, and humanity to be
committed to preventing genocide in the future, no matter when, where,
or to whom it occurs.

Armentel and K-Telecom Not To Sign Agreement This Week

ARMENTEL AND K-TELECOM NOT TO SIGN AGREEMENT THIS WEEK

A1plus
| 18:52:58 | 19-04-2005 | Social |

General Director of ArmenTel Company Vasilis Fetsis stated today that
the agreement on combining the networks between ArmenTel and K-Telecom
will be signed not this week but within the next two. Actually
he refuted the information that thanks to Minister of Transport
and Communications the parties have come to final agreement. «The
regulating body can force us to adopt resolutions not profitable for
both sides we ourselves fail to come to an agreement», he said.

Vasilis Fetsis db not provide any concrete information of the
agreements achieved with Director of K-Telecom Ralf Yerikyan. In
response to all the questions he reiterated, «I am not empowered to
answer question of behalf of the other party». To note the questions
for most part referred to the new tariffs or their possible reduction
as well as the terms of appearance of competitor at the market.

Vasilis Festis did not rule a possibility of rendering a joint press
conference to answer all the questions the society is interested in.

–Boundary_(ID_CagBoT1/cqVTEaVDC+pVRw)–

Beirut: Armenians to mark ‘the Great Slaughter’ with low-key events

Daily Star – Lebanon
April 23 2005

Armenians to mark ‘the Great Slaughter’ with low-key events
History, Memory, identity to be marked on Sunday

By James Fitz-Morris
Special to The Daily Star

BEIRUT: Armenians across Lebanon will attend special church services
and other commemorative events Sunday to mark Mets Eghern – the Great
Slaughter. This year is the 90th anniversary of the arrest of close
to 200 Armenian community leaders – an event Armenians say was the
beginning of an organized campaign to drive their people out of the
region and left more than one million dead.

In Armenia, a weeklong series of events will be capped off with a
massive march, which organizers say will draw thousands of diaspora
Armenians.

In Lebanon, however, due to the current political climate, Armenian
community leaders have opted for low-key events to mark the anniversary
and no major demonstrations.

Instead, Armenians will honor the anniversary by thinking about their
links to the land of their parents, grandparents and great-grandparents
– and the lives they have made for themselves in their new homelands.

“If someone asks me if I am Armenian or Lebanese, I say to them,
‘Are you Arab or are you Lebanese?’ They are both, just as I am both
Armenian and Lebanese. I see no problem with that,” says Ari, whose
grandparents were among tens of thousands of Armenians who came to
Lebanon in the early 1920s.

He adds: “Like in the United States, people are all of many different
origins, but are all the same nationality.”

Houry Jerejian, chairperson of the Lebanon-based Armenian Educational
Benevolent Union (AEBU), says: “We, as a community of diaspora,
want to keep Armenians Armenian.”

Ari, who declined to give his family name, says he gave his child
an Armenian name – adding if he has another, he or she will also be
given an Armenian name.

According to Ari, “the issue isn’t about being narrow minded, it’s
about safeguarding one’s identity.”

AEBU supports efforts to provide education for underprivileged children
and low-cost health-care services for the community at large.

However, the community does a lot of work to support not only one
another here in Lebanon, but those back in Armenia as well.

“We do a lot of work, especially after the earthquake (in Armenia in
1995),” says Jerejian. “Among the many projects we helped to build
a factory that makes artificial limbs.”

There are an estimated five million to six million Armenians living
abroad – compared to the close to three million living in Armenia.

The Armenian diaspora has funded such projects as the construction of
a new airport, the revival of cultural institutions such as museums
and an orchestra and opened factories to create jobs.

Many in the community also make frequent trips back to Armenia,
including Ari who says he has helped in economic development projects
back in the land of his grandparents – but he says he is unsure if
he would move back there permanently.

“It depends on the circumstances,” he says. “I can’t say that I will
definitely go back, but I can’t say that I will definitely stay.
Everybody has to decide for themselves.”

Armenians maintain that up to 1.5 million of their people were
massacred between 1915 and 1917, an atrocity commonly known as the
Armenian Genocide.

At the time, the Ottoman Empire – Turkey’s predecessor – was heading
toward collapse as the World War I was raging.

Turkey maintains no such genocide took place, admitting there were
massacres but saying they occurred on both sides during a bloody war.

Most countries and international humanitarian organizations have
recognized the Armenian genocide – including Lebanon.

Vartan Oskanian closing address at Ultimate Crime, Ultimate….

VARTAN OSKANIAN CLOSING ADDRESS AT ULTIMATE CRIME, ULTIMATE CHALLENGE CONFERENCE

Armenpress

YEREVAN, APRIL 22, ARMENPRESS: On behalf of the National Commission,
I wish to publicly express our sincere appreciation to everyone who has
participated in this conference. I want to thank the Zoryan Institute
for their professional and organizational counsel. I especially wish
to thank the scholars, writers, professors – all with serious work
and time commitments – who traveled to Armenia to be here with us at
this time, this year. The symbolism is not lost on anyone. We are
here 90 years later calling for recognition and prevention so that
in 2015 we can gather together only for remembrance.

Over these two days, each of our speakers has found various eloquent
ways of saying the following:

Genocide is the ultimate crime against humanity. It is the extreme
abuse of power. It is a betrayal of the responsibility of custody
by the very people entrusted with insuring the security of their
own population. The human rights challenge facing all of us is to
be able to recognize that a government has the capacity for such
immorality and inhumanity, and that particular governments have indeed
committed genocide. There is no national history in a vacuum. No nation
can escape its history entirely, it can only transcend it. But to
transcend, one must confront history, both internally and in relation
to others. And those others, too, must also jointly confront theirs.

In other words, Armenia and Turkey must confront their histories.
Individually and together. Armenia believes Turkey must put excuses
aside and enter into normal relations with a neighbor that is neither
going to go away nor forget its history.

We are not the only neighbors in the world who have had, and who
continue to have, a troubled relationship. Troubled memories, a
tortured past, recriminations, unsettled accounts and the enduring
wounds of victimhood, plague the national consciousness of peoples on
many borders. In our case, some distance between our two countries
might have allowed us to put distance between our past and our
future. But we have no such luxury. There is no space, no cushion,
between us. We live right here, close by, reminded at all times of
the great loss that we incurred. Yet it is because we live right next
door that we must be willing and prepared to transcend the past.

But we can only do so if the demons of the past have been
rejected by our neighbor, too. You notice, I didn’t say ‘by
the perpetrator.’ Armenians are able to distinguish between the
perpetrators and today’s government of Turkey. Two-thirds of the
Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire were massacred or deported
between 1915 and 1918. Today’s Republic of Turkey must be able to
condemn these acts for what they are. The evidence is overwhelming,
clear, unavoidable.

Armenians were one of the largest minorities of the Ottoman
Empire. Where did they go? Is it possible that all our grandmothers
and grandfathers colluded and created stories? Where are the
descendants of the Armenians who built the hundreds of churches and
monasteries whose ruins still stand in Turkey? Is US Ambassador Henry
Morgenthau’s account of the atrocities that he witnessed a lie? Why
was a military tribunal convened at the end of World War I, and why did
it find Ottoman Turkish leaders guilty of ordering the mass murder of
Armenians? How does one explain the thousands and thousands of pages
in the official records of a dozen countries documenting the plans
to exterminate the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire? If
it wasn’t genocide and they were simply ‘war time deportations’ of
so-called rebellious Armenian populations near the eastern border with
the Russian Empire, as Turkish apologists sometimes claim, why were
the homes of Armenians in the western cities looted and burned? Why
were the Armenians of the seacoast towns of Smyrna and Constantinople
deported? Boatloads of people were dumped in the sea – is that what
deportation is all about? Could rounding up scores of intellectuals
on a single night and killing them be anything but premeditation?

When a government plans to do away with its own population to solve a
political problem – that’s genocide. At the turn of the 20th century,
the Ottoman Empire was shrinking, it was losing its hold over its
subjects along the periphery of the empire. For fear that in Anatolia,
too, the Armenian minority would agitate for greater rights and invite
foreign powers to exert pressure, the Ottoman leadership used the cover
of World War I to attempt to wipe out the Armenians, beginning with
the leadership, following with the men, and finally deporting women,
children and the elderly.

This fits neatly into the definition of genocide: The perpetrator did
cause a multitude of deaths; these persons did belong to a particular
national, ethnical, racial or religious group. The perpetrator intended
to and in fact did destroy, in whole or in part, that national,
ethnical, racial or religious group, and this destruction followed a
consistent pattern. In fact, US Ambassador Henry Morgenthau called
what he witnessed, the Murder of a Nation. Others called it ‘race
murder’. They did so because there was no term Genocide yet. When the
word was finally coined in 1944 by Raphael Lemkin, it was done with
clear reference to genocidal acts prior to that date, the Armenian
Genocide included. There is no doubt that if the word genocide had
existed in 1915, every one of the hundreds of articles in the NY times
or elsewhere, would have used the term. Look how frequently the word
‘genocide’ is used today to describe events and cases where the scale
and depth of the atrocities are incomparable.

Armenians continue to live with the memory of suffering unrelieved
by strong condemnation and unequivocal recognition.

On the contrary, Turkey spends untold amounts to deny, dismiss, distort
history. Not just money, either. Today, their continued insistence on
rejecting and rewriting history costs them credibility and time. One
does not knock on Europe’s door by blindfolding historians and gagging
writers. Especially when the subject at hand is one as grave and
consequential as genocide. The Turkish parliament’s recent call to
revisit, review, revise the documents gathered by Arnold Toynbee and
James Bryce for the British Blue Book series brought the revisionist
efforts to a new low. Turkey has moved on from trying to rewrite its
own history to thinking it can convince others to rewrite theirs. This
only frustrates the process, exacerbates the emotions and refuels the
fury. Worse, such cynical moves embolden those who do not believe in
reconciliation, understanding its great risks and costs.

Elie Wiesel has said that denial of genocide is the final stage of
genocide because it “strives to shape history in order to demonize
the victims and rehabilitate the perpetrators.” That is what Turkey –
not the people but the government – is trying to do. Today’s Turks do
not bear the guilt of the perpetrators, unless they choose to defend
and identify with them. Armenians and Turks, together with the rest
of the modern world, can reject the actions and denounce the crimes
of the Ottoman Empire.

Turkey must also de-link history from politics. The excuses about
what might follow genocide recognition are just that – excuses. Why
are they surprised that Ararat is on our state seal? Armenians have
lived on these lands for thousands of years, and Armenia’s borders
have changed a great deal over the millennia. That’s a historical
fact. The Armenian kingdom stretched from sea to sea. That’s a
historical fact. The last change came at the beginning of the 20th
century. That, too, is a historical fact. By the provisions of the
Treaty of Sevres, the territory of Armenia was ten times what it is
today. That is a historical fact as is the fact that Turkey defied
the treaty which had been signed by its own government, and by force,
created a new de facto situation, which led to the signing of another
agreement, without the same signatories. This new agreement delineated,
more or less, today’s borders. That too is historical fact.

But it is a political reality that both Turkey and Armenia exist today
in the international community with their current borders. It is a
political reality that we are neighbors and we will live alongside
each other. It is a political reality that Armenia is not a security
threat to Turkey. And finally, it is a reality that it is today’s
Armenia that calls for the establishment of diplomatic relations with
today’s Turkey.

For these reasons, anything beyond genocide recognition has not been
and is not on Armenia’s foreign policy agenda.

Yesterday I was being interviewed by a Turkish television crew. I was
surprised at the amount of misinformation that they had. They were
surprised that the Armenian-Turkish border is open from the Armenian
side, that it is Turkey that keeps it closed. They were surprised that
Armenia has no pre-conditions for establishing diplomatic relations
with Turkey. They were highly surprised that even the recognition of
Genocide is not a precondition. They were also surprised that the
Kars Treaty has not been denounced or revoked by the Government of
Armenia. Now I’m surprised that official Turkish propaganda has taken
over and blurred the views of many.

There’s another misunderstanding. By default, people assume that we’re
opposed to Turkey’s membership in the EU. They’re wrong on this one
too. Of course we would like to see Turkey become an EU member. Of
course we’d like to see that Turkey meets all European standards. We’d
like to see that Turkey resemble Belgium, Italy and others. We’d like
to see Turkey become an EU member so that our borders will be open,
so that our compatriots and Turkish scholars will speak more freely
about Genocide. We would like to see Turkey as a member so that our
churches and properties will be protected and restored.

Armenia believes that, at exactly this time, when Turkey is having
to reconsider human and civil rights, freedom of expression and
religion, it must be encouraged, and persuaded, to acknowledge its
past. Such encouragement and persuasion must come from both outside –
and more importantly, as Hrant Dink stressed yesterday – from within
Turkish society.

Turkish writers and politicians have begun that difficult process of
introspection and study. Some are doing so publicly and with great
transparency. We can only assume that Europe will expect that a Turkey
which is serious about EU membership, which is indeed able to juggle
the complex relationships that EU membership entails, will have to
come to terms with its past.

In this context, it is essential that the international community
doesn’t bend the rules, doesn’t turn a blind eye, doesn’t lower its
standards, but instead consistently extends its hand, its example,
its own history of transcending, in order for Armenians and Turks,
Europeans all, to move on to making new history.

Romanian Parliament Considers Expedient Official Recognition OfArmen

ROMANIAN PARLIAMENT CONSIDERS EXPEDIENT OFFICIAL RECOGNITION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

YEREVAN, APRIL 21. ARMINFO. Complying with the international human,
democratic and legal principles and following the example of many
European countries the Romanian parliament considers it expedient to
officially recognize the Armenian Genocide.

Such a statement was made by Romanian Senator Varujan Voskanyan
during the Apr 18 Genocide related hearing of the Upper Chamber of the
Romanian Parliament, reports Armenia’s state commission for organizing
events to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

Voskanyan is member of the coalition National Democratic Party
of Romania.

Aniversario de las masacres turcas

Aniversario de las masacres turcas

La Rioja, España
jueves 21 de abril de 2005

Armenia conmemora este fin de semana los 90 años de las masacres
perpetradas por los turcos otomanos durante la I Guerra Mundial con
ceremonias que pedirán el reconocimiento de este trágico episodio que
frena la normalización de las relaciones entre ambos países vecinos.
/ EFE

–Boundary_(ID_FdeC/v5FCgooJay091BGZg)–

Choice of name hints at anti-war stance

Choice of name hints at anti-war stance
By DUNCAN CAMPBELL

The Guardian – United Kingdom
Apr 20, 2005

The choice of the name Benedict by the new Pope could be symbolic of
his desire to emphasise the importance of Europe in his papacy as St
Benedict is the patron saint of Europe.

The previous holder of the name, Pope Benedict XV, was strongly
associated with seeking a peaceful solution to the first world war.

St Benedict of Nursia is known as the founder of western monasticism
in the sixth century and started the monastery of Monte Cassino. He is
the patron of many aspects of life, including farm workers, architects
and monks but, most significantly perhaps, of Europe.

“He [the new Pope] is very concerned about the state of Christianity
in Europe and that might be one of his reasons for choosing the
name,” Simon Caldwell, news editor of the Catholic Herald, said last
night. The most recent Pope Benedict had been a champion of Catholic
missions, he said.

Some commentators saw the choice as linking with Benedict XV’s first
world war efforts and a possible attempt to continue his immediate
predecessor’s anti-war stance.

In 1917, Benedict XV issued a peace proposal which urged that for
“the material force of arms should be substituted the moral force
of law”. He called for a just solution to territorial disputes,
“notably those relating to Armenia, the Balkan states, and the
territories composing the ancient kingdom of Poland”.

He was also famous for not seeing Catholicism as removed from the rest
of the Christian church and one of his sayings was that “Christianity
is my family and Catholicism is my name.”

Pope Benedict XV sought peaceful solution to first world war