Turks Frustrated Over Tough Bid To Join EU

TURKS FRUSTRATED OVER TOUGH BID TO JOIN EU
By Tom Hundley
Tribune foreign correspondent

Chicago Tribune, IL
Dec 8 2006

Many experts say shunning the modernizing Muslim democracy would send
negative signal

ISTANBUL — The last few weeks have been a roller coaster ride for
Turkey’s European Union aspirations.

The next day, the European Commission, the EU’s executive body,
announced that it would recommend suspending accession talks with
Turkey because of Ankara’s long-standing refusal to open its ports
and airports to Greek Cyprus, an EU member since 2004.

On Wednesday, Turkey offered to open one port and one airport to the
Greek Cypriots, but only if the Greek Cypriots agreed to the same
for the Turkish portion of the divided island. The EU said it would
study the offer.

Next week’s EU summit in Brussels could produce what EU enlargement
Commissioner Olli Rehn gloomily described as the slow-motion "train
wreck" of Turkey’s hopes to join the club–bad news not only for
Turkey and the EU, but also for the United States, which has been an
energetic cheerleader for Turkey’s inclusion.

Many international relations experts believe that failure to find
a way to integrate a modernizing Muslim democracy into the EU would
send a negative signal to moderates across the Islamic world and to
the 15 million Muslims already living within the EU. It also could
encourage Turkey to reconsider its Western orientation and seek
alliances elsewhere, most likely with Russia or Iran.

Former U.S. diplomat Richard Holbrooke recently likened Turkey’s
importance to that of West Germany during the Cold War, calling it a
"frontline state" that the West could ill afford to abandon.

Invited to join in 1999

The EU extended an invitation to Turkey in 1999. The process was
expected to take 10 to 15 years, and few would deny that Turkey already
has made huge progress toward meeting the EU’s membership criteria.

But Sept. 11 happened, followed by terrorist attacks in Madrid
and London. Those events widened the gulf between the West and the
Islamic world.

The EU’s self-confidence took a hit in 2005 when voters in France and
the Netherlands rejected a new EU constitution. In the minds of many
voters, the question of Turkey’s membership had become conflated with
fears about immigration.

Polls show that only about 1 in 3 EU residents supports Turkey’s
membership bid.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair says that excluding Turkey would
be a "serious mistake." But Blair, who steps down next year, does
not have to face worried voters.

Nicholas Sarkozy and Segolene Royal, the expected pairing in France’s
presidential elections next spring, do. Sarkozy kicked off his
candidacy by declaring that "Turkey’s place is not in the EU" and
challenging Royal to match that. Royal responded that she shared the
view of the French public.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose country is home to 3 million
Turks, favors a "privileged relationship" for Turkey, not full
membership.

At times it seems that European politicians are doing everything they
can to poke a sharp stick in Turkey’s eye. In October, the French
National Assembly passed a bill making it a criminal offense to deny
the 1915 Armenian genocide.

Linking Turkey’s membership to a resolution of the Cyprus dispute,
and in effect giving the Greek Cypriots blackball power over Turkey’s
application, also seems provocative.

In 2004, when UN Secretary General Kofi Annan brokered a deal on the
Cyprus question, Ankara worked hard to persuade Turkish Cypriots to
support it. They did, but Greek Cypriots turned it down. The Greek
side of the divided island got into the EU anyway.

"Why is the side that said `no’ in the EU, while the side that said
`yes’ is being punished?" asked Nazlan Ertan, an Ankara journalist.

Feeling unwanted and disrespected, Turks have started to turn their
backs on the EU.

A recent German Marshall Fund survey found that the percentage of Turks
who saw EU membership as a good thing had fallen from 74 percent in
2004 to 54 percent today.

Among young, self-aware Turks, there appears to be a growing sense that
the cultural gap between Turkey and Europe may be too wide to bridge.

"Economically and strategically, we are important to Europe, but
culturally we are very different," said Merve Yildirim, an English
literature student at Istanbul’s Bogazici University.

"The Ottoman Empire has a long history, and our traditions are
different from the Christian world, especially in eastern Turkey,"
she said. "Improving living standards for these people [in eastern
Turkey] would be a good thing, but in some ways these are Christianized
standards, and imposing them could be dangerous."

Others, usually a bit older, remain deeply influenced by the secular,
pro-Western outlook of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, modern Turkey’s
founder. Soban Kotukoglu, a merchant in Istanbul’s bazaar, said he
no longer believes the EU is crucial to Turkey’s economic success
but that it would be disastrous if Turkey slipped out of the West’s
orbit. He doesn’t trust Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ruling
Justice and Development party, which has Islamist roots.

"They have two faces," he said, "the one they show to the West
and another one which they keep hidden, and which is much more
fundamentalist."

Turkey, straddling Europe and Asia, often seems to be looking in two
directions at once.

This month Christmas lights that would put Macy’s to shame are
twinkling in the shopping malls of Turkey’s major cities. Turkey is
99 percent Muslim, but the Christmas custom has spread rapidly in
the last decade or so. Turks say they are celebrating the New Year.

Head scarves are banned in schools, universities and government
offices–the result of the country’s rigorously enforced
secularism–but Islamic swimwear, covering females from head to toe,
made gains at the beach last summer.

Turkey produced a Nobel laureate in literature in 2006, Orhan Pamuk,
but earlier, when he spoke publicly of Turkey’s mistreatment of
Armenians and Kurds, right-wing nationalists tried to prosecute him
for "insulting Turkishness." The case was a reminder that Turkey still
has a way to go in the human-rights department, but Meliha Altunisik,
a political scientist at Ankara’s Middle East Technical University,
said the EU accession process had helped consolidate many reforms.

"We have to admit that the EU anchor has been good for Turkey’s
democracy. It has really transformed the Turkish state," she said.

Ertan, the journalist, doesn’t think this week’s summit will produce
the slow-motion train wreck predicted by Rehn and others but merely
a slow train.

"The danger with a slow train," she said, "is that it might get slower
and slower until it finally just stops."

Turkish Government Didn’t Inform General Staff About Opening Port Fo

TURKISH GOVERNMENT DIDN’T INFORM GENERAL STAFF ABOUT OPENING PORT FOR CYPRUS

PanARMENIAN.Net
08.12.2006 16:52 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Turkish government with Prime Minister Erdogan
at the head has advanced an initiative on Cyprus without informing the
army commanders about the decision. General Staff Chief Yasar Buyukanit
learned about it from a TV report, says The Hurriyet newspaper.

According to General Buyukanit, the initiative is ‘a retreat from
the official policy of the Turkish state.’ He voiced surprise that
‘the issue has become a subject of discussion,’ reports Deutsche Welle.

It’s worth mentioning that according to the Turkish Constitution the
government cannot take any decision on home or foreign policy without
consent of the General Staff.

29th Annual AGBU S. American Games Gather Hundreds of Enthusiasts

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
Fax: 212.319.6507
Email: [email protected]
Website:

Friday, December 8, 2006

29th Annual AGBU South American Games Gather Hundreds of Enthusiasts in
Montevideo / Montevideo Youth Group Also Celebrates 60th Anniversary

Commemorating both AGBU’s Centennial and the 60th Anniversary of AGBU
Montevideo’s Liga de Jóvenes [youth group], the local Chapter
attracted hundreds of sporting enthusiasts from July 12-16, 2006, for
the highly anticipated AGBU 29th South American Olympic Games. A winter
tradition that aims to unite the continent’s young Armenians, the event
is hosted annually in Buenos Aires, Cordoba, Montevideo or São Paolo.

The Inaugural Ceremony for the Games was held on July 12 in the Misak
Kouyoumdjian Gymnasium of the local Alex Manoogian Center. Among the
opening’s guests were Under-Secretary of the Uruguayan Ministry of Sport
and Tourism, Lilian Kechichian; Cordoba Chapter Chairman, Ricardo
Erezian; Buenos Aires Chapter General Secretary, Antonio Sarafian;
Representative of the São Paolo Chapter’s Executive Council, Monica
Nalbandian; Archbishop Hagop Kelendjian; and Father Obed Boyadjian, who
gave the invocation for the commencement of the event; and members of
the current Montevideo Chapter Committee. Pairing athletics with
culture, the ceremony also included performances by a marching band and
a dance troupe consisting of students from the Montevideo AGBU Nubarian
Manoogian School, along with an electrifying roller-blading number by
the Chapter’s youth group, and the Olympiad torch lighting.

Following a warm welcome by Masters of Ceremony, Pablo Karslian and
Valeria Momdjian, Lilian Kechichian addressed the young athletes on
behalf of the national Ministry of Tourism and Sports, and then passed
the podium to Karine Keussayan, a representative of the Montevideo Liga.
To lead off the competitions, the final event of the evening was a
soccer match between Montevideo and São Paolo, with the home team
coming out ahead of their Brazilian counterparts – winning 8-3.

The competition continued the next morning with men’s ping-pong and
chess, followed by women’s ping-pong and a heated backgammon
competition. Track-and-field activities started off the afternoon, along
with team sports, such as junior and senior indoor soccer, volleyball
and basketball, at the Misak Kouyoumdjian Gymnasium. As in the past, the
Games attracted a capacity audience, and fostered a feeling of
camaraderie among the participants and spectators alike.

On the evening of July 14, a sold-out show, entitled The Sounds of Your
Music, was held in the Crystal Room of the Uruguayan capital’s Manoogian
Center. The AGBU Grung Choir, directed by Maestro Alvaro Hagopian and
consisting of over 30 members, kicked off the evening. Other highlights
included a kamancha performance by Nshte Boyadjian, and a finale by the
Armenian rock band, Los Garabedutiun. The festivities continued in the
same venue the following evening with the closing dinner gala.

The Games concluded on Sunday, July 16, with a farewell luncheon and
trophy ceremony. Each athlete also received a commemorative medal for
his/her participation in the 29th Annual AGBU South American Games.

The Montevideo Youth Group continued the celebration of its 60th
Anniversary with a dinner banquet on November 17, 2006, at the local
Center. Organized by the Chapter’s youth, the evening was attended by
hundreds of supporters, members and former Liga Chairmen. To enhance the
festive occasion, the current youth group members staged a surprise
cultural program, which included a theatrical skit and tango performance
depicting the early years and evolvement of AGBU Liga de Jóvenes in
Uruguay’s capital.

Founded in 1906, AGBU has played a pivotal role in preserving and
promoting the Armenian identity and heritage for a century.
Headquartered in New York City with an annual budget of $34 million,
AGBU is today’s largest Armenian non-profit, annually serving 400,000
Armenians in 37 countries through educational, cultural and humanitarian
programs.

For more information on AGBU Montevideo, please visit ,
email [email protected], or call the AGBU Alex Manoogian Center,
located in Montevideo, Uruguay at +598.2209.8810.

For more information on AGBU and its worldwide programs, please visit

www.agbu.org
www.ugab.org.uy
www.agbu.org.

Defence Minister Building Up Image For Armenian Presidential Bid – P

DEFENCE MINISTER BUILDING UP IMAGE FOR ARMENIAN PRESIDENTIAL BID – PAPER

Haykakan Zhamanak, Armenia
Dec 6 2006

"Why has Serzh Sarkisyan become so active?"

The hyper-activeness of Defence Minister Serzh Sarkisyan is the
most discussed topic in the domestic political life of Armenia. Such
activeness seems to be premature in the context of a parliamentary
election that will be held on 12 May 2007.

Many people are searching for some other meaning and conclude that the
defence minister is preparing for an event which will happen earlier
than 12 May, an extraordinary event. We were witnesses of such an event
in Russia when President Yeltsin tendered his resignation and yielded
the rudder to prime minister Putin [on 31 December 1999]. This was
done to ensure Putin’s victory at the presidential election as none
of the potential rivals was ready for the early poll.

If we take this scenario in Armenia, it will turn out that – in
order to remodel his power base – Kocharyan is going to tender his
resignation and make Serzh Sarkisyan the president, with all the
remaining contenders not being ready for a presidential election. But
is such a scenario possible in Armenia? It is possible theoretically
but actually there are numerous difficulties.

The Karabakh conflict is the first of them. Today Kocharyan is trying
to show that he is ready to settle the conflict but resignation by him
would amount to ducking out and the world community would not allow
this. That is to say that unless the Karabakh conflict is settled,
Kocharyan has to stay in post till the end of his term.

Moreover, if the incumbent president were to drop out, it would be more
difficult to turn Sarkisyan into the president, because Kocharyan’s
premature departure might seem to many forces a good chance to get
rid of his partner.

A scenario for unilateral actions may be the next option. This might
involve Sarkisyan starting an attack without coordinating it with
Kocharyan. We mean a coup d’etat. The basis of such a prospect may
be the fact that Sarkisyan sees Kocharyan supporting the Prospering
Armenia party so much, and this situation is outside the framework of
the scenario whereby the defence minister would become president. And
Sarkisyan, assuming the impossibility of stopping the process in an
ordinary way, would seize power. This option is even more impossible
as Sarkisyan’s prospect to make himself a civil political activist
would be in vain and he would find himself in the role of an ordinary
putschist.

So why then has Serzh Sarkisyan become so active? The point is that
the incumbent defence minister understood that – despite having
access to much money and many skinheads – he needs public support in
modern politics. And at present he is simply trying to find points
of reconciliation with the public: somebody has told him that his
public image is very negative and his team is trying to correct this
mistake. We think there is no basis to look for another meaning in
all of this.

Liturgy Dedicated To Memory Of 1988 Spitak Earthquake Victims To Be

lituRGY DEDICATED TO MEMORY OF 1988 SPITAK EARTHQUAKE VICTIMS TO BE
CELEBRATED AT AKHALKALAK SURB KHACH CHURCH

Eternal Liturgy dedicated to memory of the 1988 Spitak earthquake
victims is celebrated at the Akhalkalak Surb Khach Church on
December 7. The requiem recemony will be held at the end of the Surb
Liturgy. Javakh-Info states about it. The Samtskhe-Javakh General
Eparchic Vicariate calls on Armenians of Javakhk to take part on
December 7 in the Surb Liturgy to honour with their presence and
prayer memory of innocent victims.

RA NA Honours With One Miinute Silence Memory Of Victims Of 1988 Tra

RA NA HONOURS WITH ONE MIINUTE SILENCE MEMORY OF VICTIMS OF 1988 TRAGIC EARTHQUAKE

Noyan Tapan
Dec 07 2006

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 7, NOYAN TAPAN. On December 7, the day of the 18th
anniversary of the Spitak earthquake, the RA National Assembly deputies
honoured with one-minute silence the memory of the earthquake victims
at the beginning of the plenary sitting. NA Speaker Tigran Torosian
thanked those present for creating the possibility to continue work
of the Parliament. The December 7 sitting of the previous year did not
take place because of absence of quorum, as many of deputies left for
the disaster zone to take part in the memory events. The NA Speaker
stated that votes of the issues discussed on the previous day and to
be discussed on December 7, most probably, will be implemented at the
special sitting to be convened soon, as the regular plenary sittings
of the autumn session finish today.

Christian Democratic Union Party Head Supports Mutual Concessions In

CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATIC UNION PARTY HEAD SUPPORTS MUTUAL CONCESSIONS IN KARABAKH CONFLICT SETTLEMENT

Panorama.am
15:52 05/12/06

Khosrov Harutunyan, leader of Christian Democratic Union party,
believes it is impossible to keep to the status quo in Karabakh
conflict regulation.

In a press conference at Pastark Club he said the conflict settlement
has approached to its best end during this year and hoped that 2006
will be decisive in that regard.

Harutunyan believes USA and EU are more interested in Karabakh conflict
settlement than Russia. He thinks USA and EU have increased their
role in the region.

The deputy also said Russia gives priority to conflicts of Abkhazia
and South Osia than to Nagorno Karabakh.

Harutunyan support mutuals concessions because he believes they mean
conflict settlement. He said mutual concessions do not mean victory
of one and defeat of another.

Gegharqouniq Has A New 12.5-Km Road

GEGHARQOUNIQ HAS A NEW 12.5-KM ROAD

A1+
[01:57 pm] 04 December, 2006

On December 2 the new inter-community 12.5-km highway
Gavar-Gegharqouniq was opened with the presence of Minister of
Agriculture David Loqyan.

The Minister congratulated the residents of Hatsarat, Gandzak,
Saroukhan, Lanjakhbyur and Gegharqouniq communities mentioning
that this part of the road is at the center of attention of the
Government. The asphalting work started in May of the current year.

About 1 million 300 thousand USD has been invested.

According to Gavar mayor Gourgen Martirosyan, the budget of the city
has allotted 10 million AMD for the purpose and will allot another
seven million in 2007.

During the meeting with the residents Minister of Agriculture David
Loqyan answered their questions and said that in 2007 about 50 projects
will be realized in the region.

Armenian Culture Exhibition Opens At Hermitage

ARMENIAN CULTURE EXHIBITION OPENS AT HERMITAGE

Noyan Tapan
Dec 04 2006

SAINT PETERSBURG, DECEMBER 4, NOYAN TAPAN. RA Prime Minister Andranik
Margarian, who visited Saint Petersburg on the occasion of closure of
Year of Armenia in Russia, took part in the opening of an exhibition
under the title Armenian Culture on December 2 at Hermitage. Noyan
Tapan was informed about it from RA government Information and Public
Relations Department. This exhibition that opened at Hermitage after
repairs of exhibition-halls and will be constantly renewed includes
I-XIX centuries. Hellenistic culture in Armenia is presented with an
exclusive graceful historic sample, which is a gift from the Armenian
government to Hermitage: this is the capital of the heathen temple of
Garni. The exhibition widely presents the art and culture of medieval
Armenia, especially its miniature painting. The Hermitage displays
include ancient Armenian manuscripts created not only in Armenia,
but also beyond its bounds.

The exhibition also includes the Cilician Armenia. XVII-XIX centuries’
Armenian silversmiths’ samples of fine taste – church and consumer
accessories, make a considerable part. Khachkars (cross-stones)
are also widely displayed.

Hermitage Director Mikhail Piotrovski, RA Minister of Culture and Youth
Affairs Hasmik Poghosian and Head of RF Culture and Cinematography
Federal Agency Mikhail Shvidkoy in their speeches attached importance
to this valuable exhibition as one more evidence of Armenian-Russian
friendship and cooperation. After the exhibition’s opening, RA Minister
of Culture and Youth Affairs and Head of RF Culture and Cinematography
Federal Agency signed a cooperation program for 2007-2009.

Robert Kocharyan Will Continue To Have Great Influence

ROBERT KOCHARYAN WILL CONTINUE TO HAVE GREAT INFLUENCE

Lragir, Armenia
Dec 4 2006

Garnik Isagulyan, adviser to the president of Armenia, reasserted
December 4 at the Friday Club his statement made several months ago
that Robert Kocharyan will continue to have great influence on the
political sphere of Armenia. Garnik Isagulyan did not specify the
status with which Robert Kocharyan is going to exercise influence.

One may think that Isagulyan does not know the answer. However, he
also declines to answer the questions on his own future and the future
of the National Security Party he leads. For instance, the reporters
wanted to know whom Isagulyan and his party are going to support,
the Republican Party or the Bargavach Hayastan Party. "I think we have
already decided with whom we are going to be. You will learn it when
it is time," only said Garnik Isagulyan, avoiding definite answers.

On the other hand, his definite answers are not important because
they often have nothing to do with the reality. For instance, in his
previous news conference in October Garnik Isagulyan forecast that
the political processes would not be passionate, there would be some
activity in November which would diminish by New Year. November did
not appear to differ from October or September, and since Garnik
Isagulyan also makes strategic and political forecasts for the
president of Armenia, we considered it necessary to find out why his
forecast on activity in November did not come true. The answer is
interesting in the sense if his forecasts for the president are as
precise. Of course, Garnik Isagulyan disagreed that he had forecast
activity in November. He even said he had forecast activity after
November. And generally he advised not to have great expectations,
"It is pointless to speak about hot autumns and springs, and the
greatest activity is now." And those who think otherwise are mistaken.