TBILISI: Russia Is Indebted To Turkey

RUSSIA IS INDEBTED TO TURKEY

The Messenger
March 3 2010
Georgia

In answer to questions from Russian news agency Regnum the Director
General of the Turkish information agency Jihan, Abdul Hamid Bilichi,
has said that Russia is indebted to Turkey for its conduct during the
war in Georgia in August 2008. Turkey did not bow to US pressure and
allow American warships to enter the Black Sea, and later presented
certain models for regulating the situation in the Caucasus, both of
which actions helped Russia.

Bilichi said that Russia should now help Turkey with certain foreign
policy problems in return. It should help with Armenia, as the key
to the regulation of the Karabakh problem is in Moscow, Bilichi said.

BAKU: Turkish Parliament May Ratify Zurich Protocols With Additional

TURKISH PARLIAMENT MAY RATIFY ZURICH PROTOCOLS WITH ADDITIONAL COMMENTS

APA
March 4 2010
Azerbaijan

Ankara. Mayis Alizadeh – APA. Though the protocols on the normalization
of the relations between Turkey and Armenia signed in Zurich, October
10, 2009, have been brought to the agenda of the Turkish parliament,
it will be ratified only with the additional comments of Turkey,
sources in the parliament told APA’s Turkey bureau.

Turkey prefers this variant as the Armenian Constitutional Court
confirmed the protocols with additional comments. Ankara plans to
put forward the following comments:

1) Establishment of the commission of historians from the two countries
for investigating the "genocide" claims must remain on the agenda; 2)
Armenia must recognize the existing borders of Turkey in accordance
with the Kars and Moscow treaties and give up its territorial claims 3)
Concrete steps must be taken to release Nagorno Karabakh

According to the sources, the ruling Justice and Development Party
(AKP) fears that some parliamentarians representing the party may
vote against the protocols. Therefore, ratification of the Zurich
protocols with additional comments may make it easier for AKP.

Patriarch Of Moscow And All Russia Kirill I To Visit Armenia

PATRIARCH OF MOSCOW AND ALL RUSSIA KIRILL I TO VISIT ARMENIA

Aysor
March 3 2010
Armenia

Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia Kirill I at the invitation of
Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II will pay an official visit to
Armenia on March 16-18, a spokesperson to the Holy Echmiadzin said.

Within the framework of the visit, the parties will sign the
Echmiadzin-Sergiev Posad Twinning Agreement. Their Holinesses are
reported to lay a wreath at the Memorial to Russian Soldiers of
Russian-Persian War of 1826-1828.

Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia Kirill I will attend the Memorial
to Victims of the 1915 Genocide of Armenians, Russian St Virgin Church
in Yerevan, and will meet with Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan.

The "Freedom and Responsibility" book by Patriarch, translated into
Armenian, will be presented at the Yerevan State University.

BAKU: Azerbaijani Basketball Players And Their Parents Against Trip

AZERBAIJANI BASKETBALL PLAYERS AND THEIR PARENTS AGAINST TRIP TO YEREVAN
Elmir Aliyev

News.az
March 2 2010
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan’s female basketball team rejected to participation in
Division C in European championship to be held in Yerevan this summer.

Executive director of the Azerbaijan Basketball Federation Rustam
Rustamov told News.Az that the opinions of the basketball players
and their parents were taken into account while taking the decision.

"The thing is that in November of last year when we appealed for
participation in the European championship, we did not know where it
will be held", said the Federation official. "This January FIBA-Europe
has decided to hold the contest in Yerevan. Taking into account
the fact that this is a female team and considering the wishes of
the basketball players and their parents, it was decided to reject
participation in the contest in the hostile country".

Armenian servicemen join security forces at Afghan Kunduz Airport

Interfax, Russia
Feb 27 2010

Armenian servicemen join security forces at Afghan Kunduz Airport

MOSCEVAN Feb 27

Armenia’s decision to send a military contingent to Afghanistan will
not influence its relations with allies within the Collective Security
Treaty Organization (CSTO), the organization’s General Secretary
Nikolai Bordyuzha said on Saturday.

"If Armenia takes a decision to send its contingent to Afghanistan, it
means that it has its reasons to do so. But this will not affect its
relations with allies within the CSTO in any way," Bordyuzha said.

A spokesman for Armenia’s Defense Ministry told Interfax that Armenian
servicemen had joined efforts to provide security at Afghanistan’s
Kunduz Airport.

The Armenian military contingent, which includes 36 infantry soldiers,
three officers and one military doctor, is part of Germany’s military
unit, which reports to NATO’s northern regional command. It attended a
three-week training program in Germany before leaving for Afghanistan.
Armenian servicemen will be rotated once every six months.

Armenian servicemen have been participating in the peacekeeping
mission as part of a Greek battalion in Kosovo since February 2004,
the ministry spokesman said.

An Armenian peacekeeping contingent also took part in the Iraq mission
over the period between January 2005 and October 2008 as a member of
the Polish-led North-South multinational division, he said.

Former Ambassador Rouben Shougarian of Wellesley to present new book

Wellesley Townsman – MA
Feb 27 2010

Former Ambassador Rouben Shougarian of Wellesley to present new book
at Armenian Library and Museum of America

By Staff reports
GateHouse News Service
Posted Feb 26, 2010 @ 04:26 PM

Wellesley ‘ Former Ambassador Rouben Shougarian, a Wellesley resident,
will be presenting his new book, `West of Eden, East of the
Chessboard: Four Philosophical Looks Upon the Unknown’ (Gomidas
Institute; $22) at the Armenian Library and Museum of America (ALMA)
in Watertown on March 3 at 7:30 p.m.

Shougarian was the first Armenian Ambassador to the United States
(1993-1999), Deputy Foreign Minister of the Republic of Armenia
(1999-2005) and Ambassador to Italy, Spain and Portugal (2005-2008).
He currently teaches at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at
Tufts University in Massachusetts.

`West of Eden’ examines freedom, war and nationalism through the lens
of vampire novels by Anne Rice, Donald Rumsfeld’s poetry (yes, the
former U.S. Defense Secretary is a poet, too), James Joyce’s `Ulysses’
and the Book of Genesis.

snow/x1570102683/Former-Ambassador-Rouben-Shougari an-of-Wellesley-to-present-new-book-at-Armenian-Li brary-and-Museum-of-America

http://www.wickedlocal.com/wellesley/new

General Andranik Ozanyan Remembered On His 145th Birth Anniversary

GENERAL ANDRANIK OZANYAN REMEMBERED ON HIS 145TH BIRTH ANNIVERSARY

PanARMENIAN.Net
26.02.2010 15:48 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "I ran out of time to complete my work," wrote the
legendary General Andranik, admired to this day for his brave deeds
in national liberation movement.

Andranik Ozanyan was born on February 25, 1865 in the town of
Shapin-Garahisar, West Armenia.

In the mid 1890s, when the government of Turkish tyrant Abdul Hamid was
carrying out a public policy to forcefully assimilate Armenians into
the Turkish mainstream, Andranik Ozanyan, as a member of an Armenian
volunteer force, lead by the famous Armenian guerilla leader Agbyur
Serob, took active part in the battles of Taron and Sassoon.

Later on, in November of 1901, Andranik Ozanyan, leading a numerically
small military detachment, scored a large victory against the Turkish
troops and Kurdish mob, by breaking through the siege of Msho Arakelots
monastery and escaping potential capture. His bravery, shown at the
battle, earned him the reputation of an "elusive fighter".

In 1904, after leading a series of battles in Vaspurakan (Akhtamar and
Van), Andranik Ozanyan, along with his military detachment, moved to
Iran, and from there, onto Southern Caucasus. In the first Balkan war
(1912-1913), the Armenian military detachment of Andranik Ozanyan,
along with another Armenian military detachment, lead by General
Garegin Njdeh, fought courageously against the Turkish troops, as part
of the Bulgarian army. In 1914, during World War I, Andranik Ozanyan
was appointed as the commander of the First Voluntary Armenian Regiment
that fought against the Turks in the Caucasus as part of the Russian
army. During the war, General Andranik scored 20 victorious battles,
and played an important role in the battles of Dilman (1915), Zevan,
and Bitlis. During those battles, Andranik’s talents as a great
general were manifested.

In 1918, Andranik was appointed as the commander of Erzrum’s Armenian
defense forces. During an overwhelming Turkish counter-offensive,
Andranik Ozanyan retreated toward the Sarikamish-Kars-Alexandropol
direction, with his forces and thousands of Armenian refugees. They
reached Nakhichevan in June. In the face of prevailing disagreements
with the first Armenian National Government about the way they
conducted their affairs, Andranik disassembled his military unit in
April 1919, giving up all his military stock to the Catholicos of
All Armenians, and going overseas to America.

On August 31 of 1927, legendary General Andranik Ozanyan passed
away in Fresno, California. His body was transported to France, and
buried in the French Pere Lachaise cemetery, until the year 2000. The
government of the second independent Armenian Republic decided to
relocate General Andranik’s remains to Armenia, where he received an
honorable military reburial at the Yerablur Armenian National Cemetery.

Open Letter Of The Forum Of Armenian Associations Of Europe To Congr

OPEN LETTER OF THE FORUM OF ARMENIAN ASSOCIATIONS OF EUROPE TO CONGRESSMEN OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Noyan Tapan
Feb 26, 2010

Your Honors, Congressmen of the United States of America

The Presidency of the Forum of Armenian Associations of Europe had
written last April to HE Mr. Barack Obama, The President of the United
States of America, with the following request.

HE Mr. Barack Obama The President of the United States of America

April 15, 2009

Your Excellency, Mr. President,

In the name of the representatives of the Armenian communities in
Europe please allow us to express our deepest and utmost gratitude
for your stance on the Armenian Genocide during your pre-election
campaign. We feel confident that your continuous efforts will
contribute to the adoption of the resultant resolution on the
recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the US Congress.

Honorable President, Armenian communities have hitherto contributed
to the adoption of similar resolutions by the Parliaments of a number
of European countries in faith that this will aid to the development
of Turkish-Armenian relations and their neighborly cooperation. By
helping Turkey to reconcile with its past and enhance working relations
with its neighboring country, we will naturally contribute to the
development of Turkey’s democracy and create an opportunity for it
to earn its right for its future integration into the European Union.

The adoption of the resolution recognizing and condemning the
Armenian Genocide by the United States will greatly contribute to this
historical process and will help the Turkish authorities to ‘cross
Rubicon’ and rid itself of the heavy burden inherited from its past.

Honorable President,

We eagerly await your speech on April 24 in faith and hope and we
express our admiration and deepest gratitude for your newly initiated
efforts.

This letter was signed by a number of notable figures in Europe,
among others,

Ashot Grigorian – President of Forum of Armenian Associations
of Europe, (Slovakia) Marios Garoyian – President of the House of
Representatives, Republic of Cyprus Charles Aznavour – Singer, Public
Activist (France) Hilda Tchoboian – President of European-Armenian
Federation for Justice and Democracy (France) Sergey Khachatrya –
Violinist (Germany) Arthur Abraham – World Champion in Boxing (Germany)
Levon Aronian – Chess Grandmaster (Germany)

Honorable Congressmen, We turn to you for your support on an
issue that has been the cause of much suffering to the Armenian
Diaspora worldwide. Turkey’s ignorance of the Armenian Genocide,
its falsification of justice, its sinning against the truth can no
longer be tolerated and we ask you to recognize the Armenian Genocide
in honor of historical truth and morality. We are convinced that
recognition of the Armenian Genocide will make Turkey honor the
international opinion, and more importantly, it will help towards
building a sustainable relationship between Armenia and Turkey.

Yours faithfully,

Dr. Ashot Grigorian President, Forum of Armenian Associations of Europe

World Bank To Give Loans Of Million And Million For Additional Finan

WORLD BANK TO GIVE LOANS OF MILLION AND MILLION FOR ADDITIONAL FINANCING OF ARMENIAN PROJECTS

Noyan Tapan
Feb 26, 2010

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 26, NOYAN TAPAN. The World Bank’s Board of
Executive Directors approved a 7 million-dollar loan for second
additional financing of Armenian Social Investment Fund project and
a 5 million-dollar loan for additional financing of Social Protection
Administration project, Head of WB Yerevan Office Aristomene Varudakis
announced at the February 26 press conference.

He said the two projects aim to assist the Armenian government with
improvement of social conditions of the Armenian population. The
first project will help raise the standard of living of the poor and
vulnerable groups, carry out repairs of infrastructure, schools,
kindergartens, drinking water pipes, and rehabilitate community
centers and primary care clinics. It was mentioned that the project
is mostly envisaged for rural areas and its implementation will help
create jobs – by preliminary estimates, 200 jobs a year.

Speaking about the second project, A. Varudakis said that its purpose
is to expand work on improving the provision of social services. The
main target group of the project are job seekers: youth, unemployed
citizens of rural areas, poor and vulnerable families, current and
future pensioners, disabled persons. The additional financing will
enable to repair regional offices delivering social services and
implement reforms of the pension system.

In the words of A. Varudakis, they believe that the steps being taken
by the Armenian government will lead to greater diversification of
the economy. He added that some steps have already been taken in that
direction, in particular, work on promotion of the tourism and health
care sectors; besides, the government is taking other measures such
as improvement of the investment environment, fighting corruption,
and strengthening tax and customs administration.

Senior Military Officers Arrested In Turkey

SENIOR MILITARY OFFICERS ARRESTED IN TURKEY
By Justus Leicht

World Socialist Web Site
k-f26.shtml
Feb 26 2010

The arrest of a number of senior officers has brought the
long-festering conflict between the government and the military in
Turkey to a new climax. The arrests take place against a background
of growing social discontent and tensions with the United States
and Israel.

On Monday, anti-terrorist units of the Turkish police arrested nearly
50 active and retired members of the military. They are accused of
belonging to a right-wing underground organisation called Ergenekon
and of having made coup plans against the Islamist AKP (Justice and
Development Party) government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

So far, there has been no public comment from the government about the
arrests, carried out by acting Chief of Staff Ilker Basbug. However,
the Turkish media is openly discussing Basbug’s dismissal, something
unheard of in Turkey.

Among those arrested are senior military figures, including General
Ibrahim Firtina, chief commander of the air force from 2003 to 2005;
Ozden Ornek, commander of the navy from 2003 to 2005; Ergin Saygun,
former commander of the 1st Army (which is stationed in the city of
Istanbul); and Cetin Dogan, another ex-commander of the 1st Army.

According to the Hurriyet newspaper, in 2007 Saygun was a member of
the delegation accompanying Prime Minister Erdogan to Washington. He
agreed with Washington on the need for greater intelligence cooperation
against the Kurdish nationalist PKK in northern Iraq.

Saygun was tasked with coordinating this collaboration.

Former Lieutenant General Engin Alan, who was also arrested, commanded
the special forces of the Turkish army. He was head of the special
teams that kidnapped PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan in Kenya in 1999 and
abducted him to Turkey, where he is serving a life sentence. Another of
those detained, ex-general Suha Tanyeli, was head of Sarem, a think
tank of the General Staff.

Other active and retired officers were also arrested. Their homes were
searched, along with the Mehmetcik Foundation, which is related to
the military. Including earlier arrests, and with the exception of
Chief of Staff Hilmi Ozkok, all of those arrested for alleged coup
attempts were commanders in the Turkish army between 2003 and 2004.

At that time, there were several coup plans, which were prepared
under pseudonyms such as "Fair-haired girl," "Moonlight," "Cage"
and "Sledgehammer." The media reported about the latter scenario in
January of this year. It consisted of planned provocations, including
the killing of politicians and journalists, and a bomb attack on
a mosque during Friday prayers, which were meant to undermine the
Erdogan government and pave the way for a military coup.

It is worth noting that all the alleged coup plans were developed
in the period just preceding the Iraq war, when Turkey’s relations
with the United States deteriorated sharply in a very short time. The
invasion was opposed almost unanimously by the Turkish population,
but the US still wanted to invade Iraq through Turkey.

Erdogan, the army leadership, big business and much of the media
wanted to allow Washington to use Turkish bases. In return, the Turkish
Army was to be permitted to invade the predominantly Kurdish northern
Iraq. However, parliament refused to sanction this, with a significant
proportion of AKP deputies voting against their own government.

The US administration took offence that Turkey was obstructing them
on the "northern front" and instead collaborated with the Kurdish
nationalists in northern Iraq. Then-US Deputy Defence Secretary
Paul Wolfowitz openly attacked the Turkish military because it
had not imposed the will of the United States against the elected
representatives in parliament. It is quite conceivable that a part
of the Turkish army understood this as tacit support for a coup.

The US, however, has been virtually silent on the action against
the generals. Washington has said that it has no concerns about
the arrests, but that everything should proceed lawfully and
transparently. This is a sign of how much relations have improved
with the AKP.

The current wave of arrests was preceded by sharp clashes between
the government and judiciary. In January, the Constitutional Court
unanimously overturned a judicial reform adopted by parliament in
July 2009 that allowed members of the Turkish military to be tried
in civilian courts.

In February, Sanal Osman, attorney general of the northeastern city
of Erzurum, had his colleague, Ilhan Cihanger, from the neighbouring
city of Erzincan arrested. Osman and three colleagues from the Supreme
Judicial Council in Ankara were then suspended from duty, against the
dissenting vote of the AKP justice minister. Osman is threatened with
proceedings for abuse of office.

State Prosecutor Cihanger is alleged to have participated in plans to
overthrow the Erdogan government along with those in the Ergenekon
trial. In Kemalist circles, however, it is said that Cihanger had
merely investigated Islamic sects for conducting illegal courses
on the Koran. In response to these investigations, the influential
Islamic organisation, Fethullah Gulen, is said to have sought the
backing of the AKP government. This interpretation of events views
the suspension of Osman as an attempt to hinder the investigation in
the Ergenekon proceedings.

It has also been reported that Attorney General Abdurrahman Yalcinkaya,
who dragged the AKP before the Constitutional Court two years ago,
was preparing a new order banning the ruling party. In 2008, a move to
ban the AKP nearly succeeded. Now, Yalcinkaya will investigate charges
that the ruling party has put the judiciary "under pressure." The AKP
has responded to these reports with the announcement that it may call
a snap election.

Whether the AKP will really call early elections is doubtful, however.

The popularity of the Erdogan government has dropped considerably
in recent months; many of its political projects have failed or are
about to fail.

A visible expression of social discontent is the strike by workers
of the former state tobacco company TEKEL against the consequences
of privatisation, which has been ongoing since December 2009. The
workforce is threatened with massive pay cuts and the loss of
contractually agreed benefits.

On February 4, hundreds of thousands of workers throughout the country
participated in a solidarity strike. The sympathy of working people
for the protesters could not be broken by false government claims that
the PKK and even the devil himself were influencing the strike–an
attempt to implicate TEKEL workers in terrorism and foment religious
backwardness and chauvinism against them.

The solidarity of working people shows that the right-wing,
market-oriented policies of Erdogan have lost support. These policies
aim to attract foreign capital through privatisation and deregulation,
to supposedly create economic growth. This strategy has undermined
by the economic crisis, especially in the export-oriented industries,
which have suffered heavy losses.

The "democratic initiative" of the government, which sought to
appease the Kurdish conflict with a handful of concessions, has also
not achieved its aims. Hardly a week goes by without new protests by
Kurdish demonstrators. The AKP did nothing to prevent the banning of
the legal Kurdish party DTP last year, even though its parliamentary
majority meant the AKP could have amended the law governing political
parties. Instead, it has come to terms with right-wing nationalist
forces.

The same goes for reconciliation with Armenia, which has been strongly
supported by the United States. Protocols signed in October, providing
for the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border and the establishment
of diplomatic relations, have so far not been ratified by either side.

In Turkey, nationalists are demanding Armenia must first withdraw
from Nagorno-Karabakh, which lies inside Azerbaijani territory.

Also in Armenia, there is a massive nationalist opposition against
Turkey, which wants to make recognition of the genocide of 1915 by
Ankara a condition for establishing relations.

Finally, the US is putting pressure on Turkey to take a tougher stance
against Iran. Ankara has been trying without success to mediate
the nuclear dispute with its neighbor. Washington, by contrast,
is employing threats and sanctions against Tehran.

Relations between Turkey and Israel have been strained for months,
and the recent visit to Turkey by Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak
in January brought no significant changes.

While admirers of the AKP have celebrated the arrest of the officers
as a "great moment" and "a part of the epic struggle between democrats
and non-democrats" (Suddeutsche Zeitung), the arrests in fact indicate
the extent of the crisis of the ruling elite. Pressure from workers
and Kurds at home, combined with the aggressive expansion of the US war
drive, are exacerbating tensions between the government and its police
apparatus on the one side and the army and the judiciary on the other.

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2010/feb2010/tur