Is Turkey European?

Manila Standard Today, Philippines
March 27 2007

Is Turkey European?

By Antonio C. Abaya

The average educated, urbanized middle-class Turk most likely
believes that Turkey is European and should be admitted into the
European Union, even if the average rural dirt farmer in Anatolia
probably couldn’t care less if it is or isn’t.

The average European, rural or urban, most likely believes that
Turkey is not European and should not be admitted into the European
Union, even if some European leaders – principally the United Kingdom
‘s Tony Blair, following the lead of the Americans – want Turkey to be
admitted into the EU.

This is the central issue that dominates the debates within the
European Union as it celebrates its 50th anniversary this month.

If the matter were put to a Europe-wide referendum, the NO vote would
win by a resounding majority.

This is so because there is a growing Islamophobia that has been
gathering steam in Europe, all the way from the British Isles to
generally neutral Switzerland to the teeming cities of Central and
Eastern Europe, even to the usually tolerant Scandinavian countries.

Rightly or wrongly, Islam is associated with terrorism, with a
medieval attitude toward women, with a tendency toward union of
Church and State, with obscurantist religious beliefs and practices
that are clearly out of synch with the generally secular way of life
in nominally Christian Europe. Islamic culture clashes with European
culture on all major interfaces: political values, social values,
religious values.

With its population of more than 70 million, 99.8 percent of whom are
Muslims, Turkey is seen by Europeans as a square peg in a round hole,
a nation that will never integrate successfully into the European way
of life.

If Turkey were to be admitted into the European Union, Europeans see
a mass migration of Turks into Europe in search of a better life.
This fear is well grounded. Turkey’s per capita gross domestic
product is only $8,200, way below that of new EU member Poland
($13,300), and way, way below those of original (and `poorest’) EU
members Portugal ($,19,300) and Greece ($22,200). While the presence
of Polish migrants is tolerated by Western Europeans, since they are
culturally akin, that of Muslim Turks would be resented.

Oppositors point to the millions of Turks who were allowed into
Germany in the 1970s and 1980s as gaestarbeiter or guest workers for
Germany’s wirtschaftwunder or economic miracle, most of whom have
stayed permanently and sired further generations of square pegs.
Similar situations exist in France and Spain, where former colonials
from North and Black Africa, mostly Muslims, populate the ghettoes,
unable to integrate even after decades of residency.

Aside from resistance on the grounds of religious, political and
cultural values, there is also the matter of geography. Where does
one draw the line? Only 3 percent of Turkey ‘s land mass is in
Europe, the remaining 97 percent is in Asia.

If Turkey is to be admitted into the EU, why not Israel,
which – culturally – is more European than Turkey ever will be? And why
not Syria, Lebanon and Iraq, which together with Israel and Turkey
played key roles in the birth and spread of Christianity? And why not
Armenia and Georgia , which are 95 percent and 84 percent,
respectively, Christian? And why not the Philippines, which is 91
percent Christian and can claim to be a granddaughter of European
civilization?

And why not predominantly Muslim Morocco, which has actually applied
(and been rejected) for membership in the EU? Middle-class Moroccans
think they are Europeans just because they speak French and drink
French wines.

In the West, only the British and the American leaders support
Turkish membership in the EU. Both the outgoing French President
Jacques Chirac and the current German kanzler Angela Merkel (who is
the sitting president of the EU) are opposed to it.

The kind interpretation would be that Blair and US President George
W. Bush want to reward the Turks for their steadfast support of North
Atlantic Treaty Organization during the Cold War against the Soviet
Union when Turkey was a scimitar poised against the Soviets’ soft
underbelly.

A cynical interpretation would be that Bush and his lapdog Blair want
to punish the French and the Germans for their refusal to join the
Coalition of the Willing in Iraq, by having their borders threatened
by millions of Muslims from Turkey.

An amusing map of what Europe will be in 2015 has been going around
the Internet since last year and I wrote about it in my article
`Europe in 2015′ (Feb. 12, 2006).

In this map, which reflects Europeans’ fears – only half in jest, I
surmise – of being overwhelmed by their fast-growing Muslim
communities, while their own populations are actually decreasing.

According to this 2015 map, Russia has been overwhelmed by the Muslim
Chechens and has been renamed Greater Chechnya.

Germany has been renamed New Turkey. Bosnia and Herzegovina is now
the Bosnian Sultanate. And Belgium has been reborn as Belgistan.

The Netherlands, former Master of the Moluccas, is now known as
Euro-Indonesia. Italy, together with Sardinia and Sicily, has joined
with Muslim Albania (their major source of illegal immigrants) into
the Albanian Federation.

France, trying to head off the Muslim challenge with a ban on head
scarves, has given up and has become the Islamic Republic of New
Algeria. Spain recovers the ancient glory of the Caliphate of Granada
with its new name: the Moorish Emirate of Iberia.

Most amusing of all, the British Isles are renamed North Pakistan,
while the resort islands of Majorca and Minorca in the Balearics,
favorite haunts of British tourists, are the new and vastly
diminished British Isles.

The author/s forgot to rename Turkey. How about the New Ottoman
Empire? Inshallah.

Abaya_mar27_2007

http://www.manilastandardtoday.com/?page=antonio

FDA recalls Armenian mineral water

People’s Daily Online, China
March 25 2007

FDA recalls Armenian mineral water

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Saturday recalled five
brands of imported Armenian mineral water which allegedly contains
excessive arsenic.

FDA officials said a bottled water has measured up to 674 times the
permissible level of arsenic.

FDA said it sampled half-liter bottles of the various brands and
discovered they exceeded by far the maximum allowable arsenic level
of 10 micrograms per liter.

FDA found arsenic levels ranging between 454-674 micrograms per liter
of arsenic in the Armenian water. The five brands are distributed by
a company in Los Angeles.

Although the water contains up to 674 times the federal maximum
levels of arsenic, the FDA said that it does not expect people to be
killed by poison in their mineral water.

FDA officials said they are worried that long-term exposure to
arsenic is a known cause of increased cancers among humans who
consume non-lethal doses of the element.

The agency said persons suffering from arsenic poisoning would
experience nausea, abdominal pain and vomiting before the arsenic
level increased to fatal levels in their blood. No such illnesses
have been reported yet, the FDA said.

"There is little chance that someone would become seriously ill after
consuming the recalled products over a brief period of time ( days to
weeks)," said a FDA statement.

The water is marketed under several labels, including:

— "Jermuk Natural Mineral Water Fortified with Gas From The Spring";

— "Jermuk 1951 Natural Mineral Water";

— "Jermuk Sodium Calcium Bicarbonate and Sulphate Mineral Water ";
and

— "Jermuk, Natural Mineral Water Sparkling."

The suspect water has been bottled by several companies, including
Kradjian Importing of Glendale, Importers Direct Wholesale Company of
Los Angeles, Zetlian Bakery of Pico Rivera, and Arnaz & Nelli Inc. of
North Hollywood.

The FDA said all of those brands are imported and distributed by
Andreas Andreasen, the North Hollywood firm that first began
recalling its own product last week.

Source: Xinhua

Armenian TV changes programming after premier’s death

Armenian TV changes programming after premier’s death

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
25 Mar 07

Armenian Public TV was observed on 25 March to interrupt normal
programming in connection with the death of Prime Minister Andranik
Margaryan. At 1035 gmt a pop concert was interrupted, giving way to a
classical music quartet. At 1048 gmt the TV carried a four-minute
unscheduled news bulletin announcing the death of Margaryan.

The television said that President Robert Kocharyan had called an
emergency sitting of the government in connection with the death of
the prime minister.

The TV went on to show a Soviet-era historical feature film.

Examination of Court Action Against Hrant Dink Postponed

EXAMINATION OF COURT ACTION AGAINST HRANT DINK POSTPONED

ISTANBUL, MARCH 23, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Turkish court
postponed examination of the court action brought against Hrant Dink,
Arat Dink and Sargis Serovbian by the Shishli Prosecutor’s Office
according to Article 301 of the Criminal Code of Turkey. The next
court sitting will take place on June 14.

As Marmara states, the first sitting on the case took place on
September 22, 2006, but was postponed because of charge of the court.

To recap, Agos newspaper editor-in-chief Hrant Dink was killed on
January 19, 2007, from a Turk nationalist’s shot.

To also recap, the reason for bringing a court action was the
interview given by Hrant Dink to the Reuters agency where Dink said:
"Yes, I call those events a genocide. The people which lived on those
lands for four thousand years, was annihilated after the 1915 events."
Just this statement was considered one insulting Turkishness what is
considered criminally punishable in Turkey.

BAKU: Bryza voices progress on a set of principles governing NK

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
March 23 2007

Matthew Bryza voices progress on a set of principles governing
Karabakh settlement

"While Azerbaijan has a long way to go on political reform,
Azerbaijan could potentially become the world’s first secular
democracy with a majority Shiite Muslim population," said U.S. Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs, OSCE
Minsk Group American co-chair Matthew Bryza.

Touching on the Nagorno Karabakh conflict between Azerbaijan and
Armenia, he said considerable progress has been made on a set of
principles governing a settlement, and he hopes for renewed momentum
after parliamentary elections in Armenia in May.

"We anticipate that right after the Armenian elections on May 12, the
both presidents will come back together. And we hope, we hope then,
that they’ll get close to finalizing the document. I don’t want to
say they’re going to finalize it, because it’s not fair to back them
into a corner. There are still some differences between them," he
added.

Internationally recognized territories of Azerbaijan – an enclave
Nagorno Karabakh, and some other adjacent regions were occupied by
Armenia in early 1990s. The so-called Minsk Group of the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) was set up to seek a
negotiated peaceful solution between the two countries to the
dispute. The parties have not settled the conflict for years despite
regular meetings. APA

Pakistan: Chirac, Bush and Musharraf: overstaying their welcome?

Daily Times, Pakistan
March 23 2007

EDITORIAL: Chirac, Bush and Musharraf: overstaying their welcome?

President Jacques Chirac of France has retired from politics after
two terms in office. The ambience in which he leaves says he did not
live up to his promises, that he spoke big words but was half-cocked
and ambivalent when it came to implementing them. In France,
presidents are elected for six-year terms, and he had his two terms,
meaning that the French people still thought he could do something
for them after a lacklustre first term. But he leaves France at the
bottom of the economic heap among the big six who conceived the idea
of Europe as a super-state at Rome fifty years ago.

In 2003 when Mr Chirac opposed President Bush’s planned invasion of
Iraq, his popular rating was over 60 percent; today it is less than
half that because France has malfunctioned economically and the
population is scared stiff of the high rate of unemployment and the
social unrest it has brought in its wake. In foreign policy, though,
he formed the opposite pole in Europe to President Bush and reached
out to President Vladimir Putin of Russia to check the US at the
global level.

The good side of Mr Chirac will, alas, be clouded by his failure to
take the tough decisions on the French economy. He is a connoisseur
of the non-Western world and is a collector of no mean stature of
third world artefacts. It is a commentary on his enduring ambiguity
that while the French government passed new laws against Turkey (via
punishing those who deny the massacre of the Armenians by the Turks)
he stood for the inclusion of Turkey in the European Union. His
sympathy for the Arabs went hand in hand with his intense dislike of
those who hate the Jews in France. It was his knowledge of the Arab
world that inclined him to oppose Mr Bush’s adventure in Iraq. And he
was soon proved right.

We must understand President Chirac’s ambivalence closely to
understand another president in Pakistan whose lack of clear
direction has brought him to the end of his tether. Was Chirac from
the Left? Yes, once he was. Was he a centrist? He was that too. Did
he favour economic reform in France to wean its people away from
dirigisme or a high-spending, high-taxing state? Yes, he wanted that.
Was he in favour of following the more successful model of the United
Kingdom with low-taxation and low unemployment? No, he thought
Britain’s laissez-faire was not for France. He said reform was
unavoidable; but he also said all was already in perfect equilibrium
and needed little change.

Mr Chirac was 30 years in government in one ministerial capacity or
the other; he was prime minister under a declining earlier president;
he was once the mayor of Paris too. What was the secret of his
electoral success? A constantly flexible approach that gave him space
for movement but satisfied no one completely. His ideological
incoherence and his political opportunism became his trademark
towards the end. An earlier president, Valéry Giscard d’Estaing, has
written that Mr Chirac betrayed his own partyman to support him in
1974, but then ditched him in 1981 to make Mr François Mitterrand
oust him from the presidency.

It seems that this decade is not of the presidents. Neither Mr Putin
in Russia nor Mr Bush in the United States is the ideal ruler. In one
case, the unpopularity is being concealed behind strong-arm
governance and nationalism; and in the other, the people have already
expressed a negative view electorally in 2006. The other president in
trouble is President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan who chose to be
ideologically incoherent just like Mr Chirac and has ended up, after
seven years in power, being constitutionally incoherent too. That was
not how it started.

President Musharraf kicked off very upbeat and in step with the
aspirations of a nation tired of war and economic downturn under
elected governments. He was also a relatively liberal ruler and
promised to bring solace to a civil society increasingly bullied by
extremists empowered by the state earlier. But the dualism was
manifest quite early in his governance. He declared himself a
`moderate’ who was determined to bring the country back to its normal
state. But in the same breath he ruled out any cooperation with the
liberal mainstream political parties to give himself a leg-up in an
environment that was beginning to challenge his legitimacy.

General Musharraf’s efforts to relieve the hunted minorities were
undermined by persisting duality. He wanted to please everyone. He
thought he could rule in tandem with a party that did not believe in
his liberal worldview and ended up dividing it ideologically.
Although he vowed he was a transitional figure he never sought to put
together a national government of a liberal orientation that could
ease him out of his heavy responsibility through proper
representation and also relieve foreign pressures on Islamabad. The
result was that most of his undertakings floundered just like Mr
Chirac’s, starting with Kalabagh Dam and ending with Balochistan.

President Musharraf lifted the economy from its trough but he could
never establish law and order long enough to attract domestic or
foreign investments. He fought extremism but it actually increased on
his watch and Pakistan was reduced to a killing field of sectarian
violence as never before. People who welcomed him to power never
wanted him to become besieged as he is today. Now they wonder at the
admixture of courage and ambivalence in his person and want him to
come out of his trance.

Mr Chirac is gone, Mr Bush will go in 2008. Both are embedded in the
systems created for them by their constitutions. Both belong to
countries with great economic potential and consequent political
flexibility. In the case of Pakistan, the future is uncertain once
again. If the ten-year trough should strike again, unfortunately
another leader will be accused of not using his window of opportunity
wisely. *

%5C03%5C23%5Cstory_23-3-2007_pg3_1

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page07

Director of Observatory Says the Staff Gets Insufficient Funding

Panorama.am

18:33 23/03/2007

DIRECTOR OF OBSERVATORY SAYS THE STAFF GETS INSUFFICIENT FUNDING

Haik Harutunyan, director of Biurakan observatory sadly remarked that
government delegations do not visit the site whereas in the past all
state and government delegations, which came to Armenia, by all means
made a tour in the observatory.

Harutunyan said the observatory has 100 employees but the state
releases funds only 73.5 positions. `You cannot attract an employee
with 20 000 Armenian drams in salary,’ the director mentioned.

To cover financial insufficiencies, the observatory is establishing
ties with foreign countries. It has links with France, Italy and
Russia and cooperation with Germany is now under
consideration. Harutunyan said a conference with European countries is
expected in August 20-25, this year, with the participation of
representatives from Iran, India, Japan, China and USA.

Source: Panorama.am

Serge Sargsyan to pay an official visit to China

Serge Sargsyan to pay an official visit to China

ArmRadio.am
23.03.2007 17:47

On March 26 the delegation headed by Secretary of the Presidential
Council on National Security, RA Defense Minister Serge Sargsyan will
leave for the Peoples’ Republic of China on an official visit.

In the framework of the visit meetings will senior state and military
officials are expected. A visit to the military-educational
establishments and military units of China are also envisaged.

On March 29 the delegation will return to Yerevan.

Russian FM to focus on broad range of multifaceted ties with Armenia

ITAR-TASS News Agency, Russia
March 21, 2007 Wednesday 04:45 PM EST

Russia’s FM to focus on broad range of multifaceted ties with Armenia

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov will make an official visit to
Yerevan on April 3-4 to discuss a broad range of bilateral and
international issues, Armenian Foreign Minister Vartain Oskanian told
a news conference here on Wednesday.

“Bilateral relations that are multifaceted and embrace security,
economy, culture, and education will be at the top of the visit’s
agenda,” Oskanian said, stressing, “The Karabakh problem will
undoubtedly be among the themes at the upcoming talks.”

The parties are going to discuss all events that occurred in the
region recently, specifically in terms of energy and transport
security, Oskanian said.

While visiting Armenia, Russian foreign ministers usually pay
specific attention to “global problems that are related to the
situation in Armenia or the region,” in particular Palestine,
Kosovo, NATO enlargement, and the U.N. and OSCE reforms, the minister
said.

Criminal Action With Signs Of Assault And Battery Is Brought Against

CRIMINAL ACTION WITH SIGNS OF ASSAULT AND BATTERY IS BROUGHT AGAINST FORMER DEPUTY CHAIRMAN OF CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT UNION HAYK BABUKHANIAN

Noyan Tapan
Mar 22 2007

YEREVAN, MARCH 22, NOYAN TAPAN. A criminal action was brought
against former Deputy Chairman of the Constitutional Right Union
(CRU) Hayk Babukhanian, on the fact of insulting party Chairman Hrant
Khachatrian. Hrant Khachatrian stated about it in the interview with
the Noyan Tapan correspondent.

In H. Khachatrian’s words. during a press conference taken place in
February H. Babukhanian made statements containing slander and insult
addressed to him, what gave basis for the CRU Chairman addresses to
the RA Prosecutor General with a request to bring a criminal action
with signs of slander and insult.

Hrant Khachatrian stated that he gave an explanation about his claim at
the Yerevan city department of the Police, presented materials proving
his application. As Noyan Tapan was informed by the Information and
Public Relations Department of the RA Police, the "signature on not
leaving" precautionary measures were chosen towards H. Babukhanian.

Hrant Khachatrian abstained from giving any information about the case,
reasoning that he gave a signature not to make pubic the examination
materials.