Armenian Genocide Survivors Tell Their Personal Stories At New York

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE SURVIVORS TELL THEIR PERSONAL STORIES AT NEW YORK ARMENIAN HOME
by Taleen Babayan

-23-armenian-genocide-survivors-tell-their-persona l-stories-at-new-york-armenian-home
Tuesday March 23, 2010

New York – Three Armenian Genocide survivors recounted their stories
of survival at the New York Armenian Home in Flushing, Queens on
Sunday afternoon March 21.

While almost a century has passed, Charlotte Kechejian, Oronik
Eminian and Arsalo Dadir, residents of the Armenian Home, vividly
remembered their tragic past and told their stories to various
reporters representing the New York Times, NY1 television channel,
Queens Gazette and Queens Tribune.

Born in Nikhda in 1912, 97 year-old Charlotte Kechejian credited her
mother in helping her survive the death marches through the Der Zor
desert during the Armenian Genocide. Barely six years old, Kechejian’s
father was killed during the genocide. "I asked my mother if my father
had left because I had done something wrong," recalled Kechejian,
an only child. She remembers walking endlessly through the desert,
thirsty for water and hungry for food. "My mother kept saying that
we just had to walk a little more, but that ‘little more’ never ended."

At the age of 10, Kechejian and her mother moved to New York with the
help of an uncle who had already settled in the US. She spoke highly
of her mother’s strength to move to a new country barely speaking
English and earn a living for her family as a seamstress. Her mother,
who insisted her daughter earn her high school diploma, eventually
opened her own grocery store on 33rd street in Manhattan, and with
her daughter’s permission remarried.

"We went through a lot," said Kechejian, "but we’re still alive."

While many survivors’ only scars are emotional, this is not true for
97 year-old Onorik Eminian, who repeatedly pointed to the scar on her
forehead, the result of being hit on the head with a rifle butt by a
Turkish soldier. Eminian, born in Izmir, witnessed the death of her
parents, sister and two brothers who were tortured and then killed
by the Turks.

At the age of eight, the Red Cross placed her in an orphanage and
she later made her way to Greece and then to the U.S. in 1930 with
her grandmother. She lived in Astoria until she moved to the New York
Armenian Home a few years ago.

Born in Shabin Karahisar in 1913, Arsaloys Dadir’s father was killed
by the Young Turks when he was 25 years old. Her uncle, a doctor,
was one of the 300 martyrs killed on April 24, 1915 when Armenian
leaders, including members of the Turkish Parliament were rounded up
and murdered.

Dadir remembers hundreds of bodies piled on top of each other.

Luckily, her mother, grandmother and great-grandmother were able to
seek refuge with a wealthy Turkish family. Despite her own family’s
wealth, they lost all of their money and land during the genocide. The
family eventually moved to Constantinople, where Dadir married and
raised two children, moving to the U.S. later in life.

All three survivors are scheduled to be present in Times Square for
the 95th Armenian Genocide Commemoration in Times Square, organized
by the Mid-Atlantic Chapters of the Knights and Daughters of Vartan,
which will take place on Sunday, April 25 from 2-4 pm.

http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2010-03

ANKARA: Ireland Aware It Should Stay Away From ‘Genocide’ Debates

IRELAND AWARE IT SHOULD STAY AWAY FROM ‘GENOCIDE’ DEBATES

Today’s Zaman
March 24 2010
Turkey

Underlining the historical aspect of friendly relations between the
Irish and Turkish nations, Visiting Irish President Mary McAleese
stated on Tuesday that her country is very well aware that third
parties should not interfere in discussions related to historical
grievances of nations, such as the killings of Anatolian Armenians
during World War I.

McAleese arrived in Turkey late on Monday for a five-day official
visit, the first presidential visit between the two countries. At a
joint press conference with her Turkish counterpart, Abdullah Gul,
following talks at the Cankaya presidential palace, the visiting
president was asked about her stance regarding the Armenian allegations
that the early 20th century atrocities against Anatolian Armenians
amounted to genocide.

"Beyond everything, the Irish know — more than all other people who
live on this planet — what it means to have our memories of history
shattered. People may voice different views regarding incidents which
took place in history. Therefore, as a country which knows this,
Ireland is one of the main countries which know to stay out of these
kinds of debates," McAleese was quoted as saying by the Anatolia news
agency in response.

McAleese noted that the Irish understand the grief over those lost,
as well as the importance of the healing process and the preservation
of memories, adding that Ireland supports all efforts to this end
and encourages friendship, in an apparent reference to the ongoing
normalization efforts between estranged neighbors Armenia and Turkey.

Turkey rejects Armenian claims of genocide at the hands of the Ottoman
Empire and says Turks and Armenians were both killed as Armenians
revolted against the Ottoman Empire in collaboration with the Russian
army for an Armenian state in eastern Anatolia.

The issue is hot on the agenda nowadays as Turkey recalled its
ambassador to Washington and canceled senior-level contacts with
the US following a March 4 vote by the US House Committee on Foreign
Affairs vote recognizing the situation as genocide.

Only a week after the US vote, the Swedish Parliament endorsed a
similar resolution, prompting Turkey to withdraw its ambassador to
Sweden and cancel a scheduled visit by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan.

The Turkish government resents the US administration for not doing
enough to block the vote out of a belief that this could pressure
Ankara to ratify two protocols pending in Parliament to normalize
ties with Armenia. Turkey wants a clear and solid message that the
administration is opposed to such congressional moves.

McAleese, meanwhile, reaffirmed her country’s firm support of
Turkey’s bid to become a full European Union member. "Ireland has
always supported Turkey’s full membership in the EU right from the
beginning," she said.

The EU suspended accession talks on eight out of 35 chapters in 2006
due to Turkey’s refusal to open its ports and airports to traffic
from Greek Cyprus. France, which opposes Turkish accession to the EU,
is unilaterally blocking talks on five chapters which it says are
directly related to accession. Greek Cyprus, for its part, announced
in December that it would veto the opening of talks on five other
chapters due to the continued failure of Turkey to open its ports
and airports to its ships and planes.

Turkey says it will not open its ports and airports unless the EU
keeps its 2004 promise to allow trade with Turkish Cypriots.

"We know from our own experiences that becoming an EU member is a very
tough process. We know that it will not be easy but we wish the best
for you," McAleese said, noting that this process offered a vision
worth fighting for.

For his part, Gul thanked the Irish president for her country’s
strong support of Turkey’s EU bid, while expressing confidence in
the continuation of this support.

Both presidents noted in their remarks that bilateral relations between
the two nations date back to the Ottoman era. Historic documents reveal
that in 1847, Ottoman Sultan Abdulmecit I sent aid of 1,000 pounds
to Ireland, which was under British administration and suffering from
a famine at that time.

Later in the day, McAleese met with Erdogan and attended a meeting
between Irish and Turkish delegations hosted at Parliament by its
speaker, Mehmet Ali Å~^ahin.

Today, McAleese is expected to travel to the Gallipoli peninsula,
where she will lay a wreath at the main Turkish memorial before
travelling to the Helles Memorial, the V-Beach Cemetery and Anzac Cove,
The Irish Times reported.

"The president will then attend a commemoration at Green Hill
cemetery. She will also unveil a memorial plaque to the Irish soldiers
who fought and died in the 1915 Gallipoli campaign," the daily said,
noting that nearly 4,000 Irishmen were killed, including those serving
in the 10th (Irish) Division as well as in the ANZAC forces from
Australia and New Zealand.

DAMASCUS: Mrs. Al-Assad, Mrs. Sargsyan Visit Cancer Unit

MRS. AL-ASSAD, MRS. SARGSYAN VISIT CANCER UNIT

SANA – Syrian Arab News Agency
.htm
March 23 2010

Mrs. Asma al-Assad and wife of the Armenian President Mrs. Rita
Sargsyan visited on Monday the first Specialized Unit for the diagnosis
and treatment of childhood cancer in Syria (BASMA) at al-Baironi
University Hospital in Damascus.

Mrs. al-Assad and Mrs. Sargsyan toured the Unit’s pavilions equipped
to accommodate 16 children, in addition to the small measures room,
an activity room for children and a daily clinic.

Mrs. Sargsyan admired BASMA’s qualitative and free-of-charge services
and its equipment that provide a comfortable environment for children.

She stressed the important role of the Unit in upgrading the conditions
of children with cancer. Mrs. Asmaa inaugurated the first Specialized
Unit for the diagnosis and treatment of childhood cancer in Syria
(BASMA) at al-Baironi Hospital in Damascus on September 15th, 2009.

The Unit is the first of its kind in the health sector in Syria,
representing an official and legal partnership between a civil sector
and a state sector.

http://www.sana.sy/eng/21/2010/03/23/279315

International Finance Corporation To Assist Reforms In Armenia

INTERNATIONAL FINANCE CORPORATION TO ASSIST REFORMS IN ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
March 24, 2010

YEREVAN, MARCH 24, NOYAN TAPAN. The reforms in business and inspection
sectors, as envisaged by the Armenian government’s program of measures
on improvement of the business environment, were discussed at the
March 24 meeting of Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan and the
International Finance Corporation (IFC) Director for Central and
Eastern Europe Snezhana Stoiljkovic.

T. Sargsyan attached special importance to the use of international
experience through provision of advice. As a priority direction of
cooperation, he pointed out the IFC’s participation in the financing of
high and information technology sector, as well as in the introduction
of corporate management culture. T. Sargsyan considered as perspective
the involvement of IFC in venture funds being established in Armenia,
stressing the necessity to work out forms of such participation.

The RA Government Information and PR Department reported that the
interlocutors discussed a number of problems related to energy sector,
the processing of agricultural products, the creation of free economic
zones, the attraction of private capital to the All-Armenian Bank,
etc. The sides considered it important to launch new initiatives on
overcoming the consequences of the global economic crisis.

Yerevan School Students Familiarize Themselves With Mobile Connectio

YEREVAN SCHOOL STUDENTS FAMILIARIZE THEMSELVES WITH MOBILE CONNECTION PRINCIPLES

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
23.03.2010 20:34 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ VivaCell-MTS, "Mobile TeleSystems" OJSC subsidiary
provided N44 Kanaker-Zeytun administrative district school students
with an opportunity to enhance their knowledge about mobile
communication and get involved with the operation from a closer angle.

VivaCell-MTS General Manager Ralph Yirikian answered questions on
mobile communication services for the students during their visit to
the headquarters of the Company.

"Unawareness is a serious obstacle for the mankind. Take full advantage
of the opportunity to enrich your knowledge. Challenges of the time
can be tamed, when there is awareness. VivaCell-MTS has been guided by
the commitment to continuously support education from the very first
day of its activities. That is a model of civilized management that
provides efficiency of work. The readiness to appear with innovations
is the result of it," Ralph Yirikian stated.

Following the discussion, students had a tour around VivaCell-MTS
headquarters, familiarizing themselves with the principles of more
efficient and open management.

DAMASCUS: Armenian President Arrives In Damascus Monday, Pushing Coo

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT ARRIVES IN DAMASCUS MONDAY, PUSHING COOPERATION WITH SYRIA FORWARDS

SANA – Syrian Arab News Agency
March 22 2010

President Serzh Sargsyan of Armenia and his wife, Mrs. Rita Sargsyan
are to visit Syria tomorrow, March 22nd, 2010.

President Bashar al-Assad is to hold talks with the visiting president,
related to bilateral relations between both friendly Countries,
and to the latest developments of conditions in the Middle East and
Caucasus Regions.

During his visit to Armenia in June 2009, President al-Assad discussed
with President Sargsyan developing relations in all fields where the
two sides underlined joint will to develop these relations to make
them the main link that connects the Middle East and the Caucasus.

The two countries signed two agreements on cooperation in the field
of investments and environment.

The Armenian President underlined his country’s desire to expand
cooperation with Syria and boost it in the political, economic,
trade and scientific fields.

In an interview with Syrian al-Watan newspaper ahead of his visit to
Syria Monday, President Sargsyan said that the official institutional
relation between the two countries seeks to establish the legal
frame which allows institutions and businessmen to consolidate that
cooperation.

"Friendship relations between Syria and Armenia are embodied through
activity of leaderships in both countries, the Armenian President
said, referring to scores of cooperation projects in fields of energy,
environment, education, construction agriculture and irrigation.

He pointed out to President al-Assad’s vision on connecting the fourth
seas, considering that cooperation between regional countries is the
best way for prosperity and progress. On the Middle East situation,
the Armenian President underlined support to the Palestinian people’s
right in self-determination.

ANKARA: Report: Bulgaria, Turkey To Establish Strategic Cooperation

REPORT: BULGARIA, TURKEY TO ESTABLISH STRATEGIC COOPERATION COUNCIL

Today’s Zaman
March 22 2010
Turkey

Bulgaria and Turkey have agreed to establish a high-level strategic
cooperation council similar to those Ankara has formed with Iraq and
Syria, news reports said.

Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu’s announcement came while speaking
with a group of journalists late on Friday on board a plane en route
from Plovdiv to Turkey as he wrapped up an official visit to Bulgaria.

Turkey has also offered to establish similar mechanisms with Greece
and Russia.

Meanwhile, in an interview with Bulgarian media, Davutoglu once more
disputed suggestions that he is a promoter of "Neo-Ottomanism." "As you
probably know, the foreign policy of Turkey is based on the principle
of ‘zero problems’ with its neighbors. To a great extent this policy
of regional cooperation, peace and prosperity is pursued on the Balkan
Peninsula and has been very fruitful, particularly when it comes to
Bulgaria. Of course, the shared cultural values and common historical
interests of the two countries are a catalyst in this process. The
alliance of civilizations is another initiative of Turkey aimed
at securing peace and wellbeing in the world. In accordance with
the key principle of ‘Peace in the Motherland, peace in the world’
formulated by the great Turkish leader [Mustafa] Kemal Ataturk, the
initiatives I mentioned are not aimed at achieving superiority either
in the region or in the world. Our objectives are peace, cooperation
and prosperity for all countries," he said.

Days after this visit, the Bulgarian parliament is expected to vote
on a resolution recognizing the World War I-era killings of Anatolian
Armenians as genocide, news reports said, noting that the vote was
likely to take place this week.

Armenia shows signs of past beset by man-made and natural disasters

Washignton Post
March 19 2010

Armenia shows signs of a past beset by man-made and natural disasters

By Tyler Guthrie
Special to The Washington Post
Sunday, March 21, 2010

The bus stopped at the Armenian-Georgian border, and as the only
American on board, I was ushered past soldiers lazily holding assault
rifles to a shed where my passport was checked. A shirtless border
guard who had been cooking soup moments before quickly printed a $15
entry visa from an HP LaserJet but flatly refused Georgian lari as
payment. Luckily, I was able to bum enough drams from a stranger on
the bus to Gyumri, Armenia’s second-largest city, to cover the cost.

Rumors of an Asian brandy so good that the French once bestowed upon
it the appellation "Cognac" had brought me to this podunk border
crossing in the middle of the Southern Caucasus. In the land between
continents, I was taking a side trip from Turkey and Georgia to visit
Armenia and the famed Yerevan Brandy Co., purveyors of a "diplomatic
brandy" that had reportedly kept Stalin and Churchill talking through
the early days of the Cold War.

After waiting 20 minutes while our driver finished a game of
backgammon, we were finally back on the road, watching sexy music
videos on an old television set suspended from the ceiling. Karni, the
woman who’d lent me the money for my visa, offered me apple slices,
pastries and gum — gifts I was happy to accept on that long, slow
rural road. The bus took us past soft rolling hills, ancient churches
and an endless stream of garbage thrown from the windows of passing
cars. After decades of communism and the Brezhnevian stagnation of the
1970s, conservation of resources is considered important here, but
waste management is not.

* * *

Arrived in Gyumri, I found a large, drab city that must have been
beautiful once. Most of the buildings of note date from the Russian
imperial period, but their beauty has been worn away by time and a
lack of fresh coats of paint. While the skies above the city center
were denim and the clouds were among the most stunning I’d ever seen,
everything around me seemed to be a shade of gray. Desperate for a bit
of local color, I went exploring before meeting some American aid
workers for dinner.

The first modern Armenian republic ended its short two-year life in
1920 in Gyumri after its defeat in the Turkish-Armenian War and its
subsequent reannexation by Soviet Russia. Much of the city was
destroyed in 1988 by the Spitak earthquake, which claimed 25,000 lives
and leveled large sections of downtown. More than 20 years later,
collapsed apartment blocks and broken buildings throughout the city
are still waiting to be noticed.

On a nearby hill, the Soviet-era monument known as Mother Armenia
looks out over the city, promising peace through strength, but most
residents don’t pay much attention to her anymore. After checking out
a few pretty churches and the most dangerous power-relay station I’d
ever seen, I hailed a cab and rode out to the Marmashen Monastery of
the Armenian Apostolic Church, not far from town. On the way, we
passed a large, bustling Russian army base and a long stretch of
forgotten apartment buildings — a graveyard of concrete and rusted
steel beams along the main road.

The monastery’s main church, built 1,000 years ago, is surprisingly
well preserved, considering the state of Gyumri. The cab driver and I
walked around the complex as he took me to a stream feeding into a
small gorge that cut its way through the valley. With carelessly
dumped household garbage strewn at his feet, he smiled and said,
"Ochen krasivaya, da?" ("Very beautiful, yes?") Then he tossed his
cigarette butt into the water, just one more piece of someone else’s
problem.

That night I heard the good and the bad about living in Armenia from
the aid workers. Like many of its neighbors, they told me, Armenia is
a conservative, religious nation that’s sometimes difficult to
understand. Though innately hospitable, the people can seem
standoffish at first, or downright depressed. The country is still
struggling to overcome high unemployment and corruption as it attempts
to find its way out of a Soviet breakdown nearly two decades old.
That, a fierce regional grudge with Azerbaijan and a disagreement of
genocidal proportions with Turkey have shrouded the populace in a
sense of malaise.

We were eating surprisingly good, farm-fresh fish at the hard-to-find
Fish Farm outside town. The Americans were interested to hear that I
was on a quest to taste Armenia’s famous brandy. "Counterfeit bottles
of that stuff are almost more common here than counterfeit bills,"
said Scott, the aid worker I was staying with. For the next several
hours, we drank mediocre beer and talked about mundane things. One
common experience my companions drew my attention to: local youths’
habit of dubbing every American "Johnny."

* * *

The next morning, I set off for Yerevan. Karni, my new friend from the
bus, met me at the transit station and insisted on giving me bars of
Russian chocolate before saying goodbye. A taxi driver smooth-talked
me into sharing a ride with a young soldier wearing a crisp new
uniform; we rode the two hours to the capital in complete silence.
When we got there, the first teenager I saw came up to me shouting,
"Hey, Johnny, Johnny, Johnny!" The giveaway must have been my being
tall, pale and stupid enough to lug around a brightly colored,
60-pound backpack.

A far cry from Gyumri, Yerevan is a modern city of more than a million
people, a third of the country’s population. Posh stores occupy
tree-lined streets in the central core where the absurdly wealthy have
built high-rise apartments that the average Armenian could pay off in
just under 500 years. More money is spent than made here, as many
Armenians rely on family members who work abroad for their daily
bread.

There are three major sides to Yerevan, each with its own charm. One
is poor but proud, another culturally rich and a joy to discover,
while the third is flashy but flat and filled with gold chains and
fancy, pay-as-you-go cellphones for show. Because accommodations in
Yerevan can range from moderately inexpensive to exorbitant, I walked
north past high-class restaurants and a block of empty luxury
apartments to Opera Square and the Anahit Stepanyan Guest House, which
occupies the top floor of a beautiful 1950s Soviet apartment building
that formerly housed the city’s artists. Stuffed with toiletries on
every shelf, the two dorm rooms and shared lounge sport wonderful
abstract art created by the owner’s father.

After a shower and a quick visit to a bunkerlike spice market
downtown, I decided to pay my respects at the city’s Genocide Memorial
before lifting a glass to Armenia herself. Just west of the city
center is the memorial called Tsitsernakaberd, dedicated to those who
died while being deported from what is now Turkish territory in the
dissolution of the Ottoman Empire in 1915. Armenia claims it lost 1.5
million people in a deliberate act of genocide; Turkey insists that
the number of deaths was far fewer and the result of civil war and
unrest.

But the Armenians know what they know. The first thing you see at the
memorial is a 144-foot-tall granite stele, split in two. Symbolizing
the dispersion and ultimate survival of the Armenian people, it rises
from the hill next to a 12-sided basalt sanctuary that guards an
eternal flame. Nearby is a museum housing documents and pictures from
many nations that speak for the Armenian dead and bear witness to what
happened. Moved, I walked around a bit, lost in thought, before
realizing that I was late for another tour — the tour I’d come for —
a mile away.

With Mount Ararat (Armenia’s national symbol, but now in Turkey)
looming in the distance, I ran the wrong way around the Yerevan Brandy
Co. before I found the front door. Ten minutes after my scheduled
appointment, an attractive tour guide peeled me off a now sweat-sticky
sofa and led me through a small museum, a distillation room and a
large open space that houses barrels of brandy that have been
presented as gifts to various heads of state. She pointed out those
designated for former Russian presidents Boris Yeltsin and Vladimir
Putin, as well as others. The barrels remain with the company until
the brandy has reached the age selected by the recipient; then the
barrel may be picked up by the owner or his descendants. Armenian
brandy was Churchill’s favorite, and it’s said that Stalin sent him up
to 400 bottles a year. We walked past a 100-year-old bottle of
seven-year brandy, the guide explaining that brandy doesn’t age after
bottling, as it’s only the barrel that imparts any flavor.
Interestingly, the age of a brandy is an average of what is used in
that particular blend.

My tour of the factory ended happily in a wood-paneled tasting room
with three glasses of brandy — a 3-, a 10- and a 20-year. As I sipped
and tried to evaluate the distinctive qualities of each, my guide told
me about the Paris International Exhibition of 1900. That was when an
early brandy made by the company won the Grand Prix in the City of
Light, and the right, at the time, to be called a Cognac. Since then,
history has been tough on Armenia, but its brandy has always found a
home on the poshest Russian shelves. Today, owned by Pernod Ricard,
the Yerevan Brandy Co. is again reaching beyond the former Soviet
Union and proving that its product is a world-class brandy.

And perhaps one day again, a Cognac.

ent/article/2010/03/18/AR2010031804929.html

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/cont

ISTANBUL: Fate of the protocols

Hurriyet, Turkey
March 19 2010

Fate of the protocols

Friday, March 19, 2010
SAMÄ° KOHEN

Despite the insistence of the opposition, Foreign Minister Ahmet
DavutoÄ?lu announced during the Parliamentary Foreign Relations
Commission that the protocols signed with Armenia will not be
withdrawn.

This is a sign that: 1) The government is determined to pursue these
protocols aimed at the normalization of bilateral relations between
Armenia and Turkey despite all odds. 2) This determination is not
affected by the fact that the Unites States House of Representatives
Foreign Affairs Committee and the Swedish Parliament passed the
genocide resolutions, or at least at this stage. In other words,
Turkey is not throwing the protocols away as a reaction.

This is a smart act, I believe. If Ankara had withdrawn the protocols,
it could’ve angered the international community from the United States
to Russia, all of whom ask Turkey to implement the protocols.
Therefore, Turkey could’ve been the guilty party for missing such a
great historic opportunity. And of course, the Armenian Diaspora
conducting the genocide campaign could’ve been delighted with that.

Another negative result of such a possible move could’ve been that
Turkey would have lost all trump cards in hand to play in the solution
of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, for
which Turkey plays the mediator. Ankara has tied the approval of the
protocols to some kind of progress on the Karabakh issue. In order to
reach a decision in favor of Azerbaijan, Turkish diplomacy has pushed
the Minsk Group for more active involvement. If the protocols are
withdrawn from the Turkish Parliament, and if the process comes to an
end even before a start, a solution to the Karabakh question will be
history.

There is hope¦

What could be the benefit if the protocols remain on Parliament’s
agenda? What could decide the fate of these protocols?

Top Foreign Ministry officials held a briefing the other day in
Istanbul. We see through the information provided that Ankara is both
prudent and optimistic.

Such optimism stems from the fact that the Minsk Group, the U.S. and
Russia in particular, have exerted a great deal on efforts for the
solution of the Karabakh conflict and pressuring Armenia to withdraw
from the territories occupied. We see signs of progress recently. A
new form of agreement seems to have shaped up based on the Madrid
Criteria determined in 2007. The Azerbaijani Foreign Minister
announced progress in the subject¦

Since the Turkish government has made a solution on the Karabakh issue
binding for the approval of the protocols, what could we expect from
the efforts of the Minsk Group? Officials have made important
explanations: Expected progress on the Karabakh question is a
`framework agreement;’ in other words, a new agreement draft based on
the Madrid Criteria.

What I understand is this: After the protocols’ signature ceremony,
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an had many times said, `If there is
no solution on the Karabakh conflict, there would be no implementation
of these protocols’ upon heavy pressures by Azerbaijan. The Karabakh
question is quite complex and it could take some time to decide the
final status of Karabakh. But what is meant is the Armenian withdrawal
from seven occupied Azeri regions. This is not at all an easy process.
Yet there is progress¦

No timeline

When could we expect a result from such a framework agreement?
Officials say it is impossible to utter a specific timeline. I think
expecting a conclusion within a few weeks is too optimistic. But the
process needs to be kept alive and Yerevan needs to be pressured.

If you put away the Zurich protocols, two parallel processes come to a
block: There would be no progress for the solution of the Karabakh
conflict, and no normalization in relations with Armenia and between
Yerevan and Baku.

Therefore, it is critical to keep the protocols on the agenda.

* Mr. Sami Kohen is a columnist for the daily Milliyet in which this
piece appeared Friday. It was translated into English by the Daily
News staff.

Senior Russian, Armenian security officials meet

Interfax, Russia
March 18 2010

Senior Russian, Armenian security officials meet

The secretaries of the Russian and Armenian security councils
discussed regional and international security issues and signed a
cooperation plan for 2010-11 at a meeting.

"The world is changing dynamically, new threats arise, and, of course,
they must be reacted to. Coordination of positions is important,"
Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev said at the
meeting, held in Moscow.

Patrushev said the program for the current visit to Moscow by his
Armenian counterpart, Artur Bagdasarian, included meetings with
Russian Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov, Federal Drug Control
Service head Viktor Ivanov, Border Guard Service head Vladimir
Pronichev, and General Secretary of the Collective Security Treaty
Organization Nikolai Bordyuzha.

"The range of issues that we have discussed are strategic in
character," said Bagdasarian. "We want to strengthen our cooperation
and partnership in every way and continue consultations on security
issues." Bagdasarian described Armenia and Russia as "allies and
strategic partners."