Turkish Premiere Says Border To Open After Karabakh Settlement

TURKISH PREMIERE SAYS BORDER TO OPEN AFTER KARABAKH SETTLEMENT

Yerkir
19.04.2010 13:21
Yerevan

Yerevan (Yerkir) – Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
has told Turkish media that Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan had
proposed not to link process of settlement to the Karabakh conflict
with process of the Armenia-Turkey reconciliation and issue of border’s
opening with Armenia.

"And I responded to this by a short question, I asked him what was the
reason for closing the border in 1993? I reminded him that the border
was closed because of occupation of the Azerbaijani territories, and
until this reason is eliminated, the Armenia-Turkey documents will
not be adopted by Turkey’s Parliament," 1NewsAgency quoted Erdogan
as saying.

Erdogan said that in order to ratify the protocols on normalisation of
relations with Armenia, it’s necessary that all the political forces
of Turkey to reach a consensus view on the issue.

"I think if the Karabakh issues to be solved, then neither problem
will rise in the process of opening of the Armenia-Turkey border. So
the Minsk Group should activate its work. I discussed the issue in
Washington with Presidents Obama of the Unites States and Medvedev
of Russia as well as with Sarcozy during my visit to Paris. However,
they can’t reach results in the process for 20 years," said Erdogan.

Hranush Hakobyan: The Cultural Genocide Was A State-Run Policy

HRANUSH HAKOBYAN: THE CULTURAL GENOCIDE WAS A STATE-RUN POLICY
Sona Hakobyan

"Radiolur"
20.04.2010 14:45

April 24th will mark the 95th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

Almost a century has passed, but the pain is so deep and the loss is so
great that the wounds have not yet been healed, Armenian Minister of
Diaspora Hranush Hakobyan said, speaking at the scientific conference
on Cultural Genocide.

"It’s possible to restore the material losses, while the religious
and cultural losses cannot be brought back,"she added.

Speaking about cultural genocide, Minister Hakobyan assured that it
was a state-run policy. "In other words, it was cultural vandalism,
the perpetrators of which should be punished," she said.

"The policy continues into today and a proof of this is the consistent
destruction of Armenian cultural values in Turkey," said Hayk Demoyan,
Director of the Armenian Genocide Museum Institute (AGMI).

The conference on Cultural Genocide has been organized by the AGMI and
the Ministry of Diaspora as part of the series of events dedicated
to the 95th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. The conference
aims to discuss the continuing policy of the mass destruction of the
Armenian cultural heritage in the Ottoman Empire and on the territory
of the modern Turkish Republic, as well as to present its ideological,
political and cultural motivations and its consequences for human
civilization.

Davutoglu Responds To Galust Sahakyan

DAVUTOGLU RESPONDS TO GALUST SAHAKYAN

Tert.am
19.04.10

The opening of Armenia-Turkey border without the ratification of the
Armenia-Turkey Protocols is not included in the political agenda of
Ankara, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said after a meeting
with the Iraqi Vice-President Tariq Hashim in Ankara and before his
visit to Baku.

"In that way Mr Sargsyan [meaning Sahakyan] has expressed his hopes
and expectations. No such issue of opening the Armenia-Turkey border
without the ratification of the Protocols is included in Turkey’s
agenda," Turkish Anadolu news agency quotes Davutoglu as saying in
reference to the recent viewpoints expressed by Galust Sahakyan,
the Deputy President of the Republican Party of Armenia.

On April 15 Galust Sahakyan said that the Armenia-Turkey rapprochement
is not limited to the ratification of the Protocols.

"The border may open before the Protocols are ratified," Sahakyan
had said, adding that it was his version of the current situation.

ANKARA: Davutoglu To Depart For Baku Soon After Washington Talks

DAVUTOGLU TO DEPART FOR BAKU SOON AFTER WASHINGTON TALKS

Today’s Zaman
April 19 2010
Turkey

Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu is scheduled to depart for Baku
today in an apparent bid to underline the importance attached by
Ankara to Azerbaijan’s national interests vis-a-vis Turkey’s ongoing
normalization efforts with the two countries’ joint neighbor, Armenia.

Speaking to reporters in Washington on Thursday after accompanying
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to US President Barack Obama’s
nuclear security summit and Davutoglu’s bilateral talks with US
officials after the summit, the foreign minister said he will have
a thorough exchange of views with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev
concerning the Turkish side’s meetings in Washington. Davutoglu was
apparently referring to Erdogan’s meeting with Armenian President
Serzh Sarksyan and his meeting with Armenian Foreign Minister Edward
Nalbandian in particular.

Only days before his talks with Sarksyan and Obama and before
Davutoglu’s meeting with Nalbandian in Washington, Erdogan sent
Ambassador Feridun Sinirlioglu, a Foreign Ministry undersecretary,
on consecutive visits first to Yerevan and then to Baku as his
special envoy.

In a bid to highlight Ankara’s determination to keep Baku informed
regarding every step of Turkey’s normalization process with Armenia,
Davutoglu on Thursday stressed that he would travel to Azerbaijan
soon after wrapping up his visit to Brazil – – which took place on
Friday and Saturday – – "Not even spending time with [my] family,"
and added, "That’s to say, we won’t let even one day pass."

Elaborate state funeral for Poland’s first couple

Elaborate state funeral for Poland’s first couple
By VANESSA GERA (AP)
18/04/10

KRAKOW, Poland – An elaborate state funeral for Poland’s President
Lech Kaczynski and his wife, Maria, began Sunday bereft of many world
leaders whose travel plans were paralyzed by the plume of volcanic ash
that has covered Europe.

The couple’s bodies were flown from Warsaw to Krakow early Sunday for
the tradition-laden ceremony and burial in the nearby Wawel Cathedral,
the final resting place for Poland’s kings, poets and statesmen,
including Gen. Wladyslaw Sikorski, the exiled World War II leader who
perished in a mysterious plane crash off Gibraltar in 1943.

President Barack Obama, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German
Chancellor Angela Merkel were among the leaders who canceled at the
last minute because of the expanding volcanic ash cloud, dangerous to
airplane engines, that has enveloped Europe and closed nearly all of
the continent’s airports since late Thursday.

"All the French people will be, in their thoughts, with the Polish
people" on Sunday, Sarkozy said in a letter sent to acting president
Bronislaw Komorowski expressing his regret for being unable to attend.

The volcanic ash did not deter everyone. The leaders of Baltic and
Balkan states, came by car for the stately event.

Polish police estimated the number of mourners in and around Krakow at
nearly 150,000.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev flew by plane from Moscow for the
funeral. His presence was further sign of the warming ties between the
two countries, which had been strained for centuries, and recently
because of communism and the 1940 Katyn massacre.

Krakow Archbishop Stanislaw Dziwisz acknowledged those ties in remarks
to the congregation, noting that the tragedy had given rise "to many
layers of good between the people and nations."

"The sympathy and help we have received from Russian brothers has
breathed new life into a hope for closer relations and reconciliation
between our two Slavic nations," Dziwisz said. "I direct these words
to the President of Russia."

Despite the dearth of global dignitaries, no one said the funeral
should be postponed.

"I wouldn’t move the funeral," said Bartek Kargol who was among
thousands of people waiting for the event Krakow. "This event is for
our president."

Christian Stoltner, a German student, said Poles need their time to mourn.

"One cannot do anything about the fact that there are ashes around
now," he said. "The date was set and momentum was built and slowly
it’s time to find closure."

The funeral Mass was held at St. Mary’s Basilica, a 13th-century
red-brick Gothic church set on a vast market square in Krakow’s Old
Town.

Inside, scores of Poland’s political elite were seated in the ancient
pews, shoulder to shoulder with leaders from Estonia, Belarus,
Armenia, Latvia, Lithuania and Ukraine.

The Mass was led by Dziwisz. The Kaczynskis’ daughter, Marta, and the
president’s twin brother, Jaroslaw, sat in the front row as Mozart’s
Requiem was played.

After the Mass, the bodies of the first couple were to be carried in a
funeral procession across the picturesque Renaissance old town and up
the Wawel hill, the historic seat of kings where a fortress wall
encircles a castle and 1,000-year-old cathedral overlooking the
Vistula River.

The funeral was eight days after the Polish Air Force Tupolev 154
crashed on approach to Smolensk, Russia, killing the first couple and
94 others.

After an all-night vigil at St. John’s Cathedral in Warsaw, the bodies
of the couple were driven slowly through Warsaw past places linked to
Kaczynski’s life, including city hall, where he served as mayor of
Warsaw, and a museum he championed on the Warsaw Uprising of 1944.

They were then flown by military transport to Krakow, below the
volcanic ash plume. As their funeral cortege made its way to St.
Mary’s, thousands of mourners lined the streets and many tossed
bouqets of flowers on the hearses.

Ahead of the Mass, scores of people flocked to a memorial at the base
of Wawel hill to pay tribute to those who died, leaving flowers and
candles.

Pictures of Kaczynski and his wife, as well as other victims, could be
seen amid candles and flowers left by mourners who came to pay their
respects.

Last Saturday’s crash – which investigators in Russia and Poland have
said was likely because of human error – plunged the country into a
deep grief not seen since the death of Pope John Paul II five years
ago.

The plane went down in heavy fog after clipping a birch tree on
approach to Smolensk, Russia. Those aboard had planned to attend a
memorial for thousands of Polish army officers executed in 1940 by
Josef Stalin’s secret police.

The first couple will be laid to rest together in a honey-hued
sarcophagus made from Turkish alabaster in a crypt of the cathedral
and it will be open to mourners after the ceremonies Sunday.

The decision to bury Kaczynski at Wawel sparked protests in recent
days, with people saying that despite the national tragedy he still
does not belong in the company of some of the nation’s most august
figures.

Karolina Rajchel, 19, a student who traveled five hours from Wroclaw,
said she had not supported every step that Kaczynski took, but called
the protests "out of place" in light of his death.

"Kaczynski had good and bad qualities but now you shouldn’t say
anything bad about the dead," she said. "I am here to honor the
president as well as all those who died."

Among those buried there are Jozef Pilsudski; Romantic-era poet Adam
Mickiewicz; and Tadeusz Kosciuszko, a hero of the American Revolution
and of Poland’s 1794 uprising against Russia’s occupation.

AP Television News Producer Theodora Tongas and Associated Press
Writer Marta Kucharska contributed to this report.

Karmir Blur may be provided with a new museum building

Karmir Blur may be provided with a new museum building

2010-04-17 17:59:00

ArmInfo. Karmir Blur may be provided with a new museum building

Director of Erebouni Reserve Museum Gagik Gyurjyan said at today’s
press conference that the projects on fencing the historical monument,
construction of a parking area and a new museum building have already
been worked out. Gyurjyan said that though the key problem of
construction waste disposal is still unresolved, one managed to gain
considerable results in 2009. In particular, the Karmir Blur area
adjoining the urban cemetery was fenced thereby putting an end to
appearance of new graves in the territory of historical settlement. In
addition, the illegal gardens in the Karmir Blur area became an object
of investigation of the Prosecutor’s Office and City Hall of Yerevan.
As a result, penalty worth 400 thsd AMD was imposed on 6 citizens
each.

By the way, Erebouni and the historical settlement of Shengavit are
also a sweet spot for those who want to launch illegal construction.
Gyurjyan said that over the recent period 4 illegal buildings were
dismantled in the Erebouni territory. It is noteworthy that
representatives of not state structures, but public organizations are
very active in settlement of some problems related to Erebouni
Reserve. It was the NGOs that efficiently responded to the problems of
Shengavit, first and foremost, disrepair of the wood building of the
museum, lack of heating, lack of constant water and sewerage.

In 1936 an Urart cuneiform with the name of King Rusa, Son of Argishti
II (7th century B.C.) was found at Karmir Blur. Regular archaeological
excavations were held here from 1939 till 1970, as a result, a citadel
was discovered on the hill, and the ruins of Teyshebaini were
discovered around the hill. The citadel was destroyed by the local
tribes, who were trying to throw off the Urart yoke, as well as by
Scythians, who joined them. Archaeologists discovered 97 cups, 11
bronze shields and other bronze articles. 20 cups and a figurine of a
winged bull are now at Hermitage, St.Petersburg.

Culture Min supports holding public hearings in ‘Moskva’ Cinema

Armenian culture minister supports the idea of holding public hearings
on open-air hall of ‘Moskva’ Cinema

2010-04-17 17:41:00

ArmInfo. Armenian Culture Minister Hasmik Poghosyan supports the idea
of holding public hearings on the problem of the open-air hall of
"Moskva" Cinema.

"In the current situation, when the society takes this problem very
much to heart, the most correct decision is to hear all parties’
opinions. It is not ruled out that the parties will manage to come to
a single solution",- she said to ArmInfo correspondent.

To recall, in accordance with the governmental decision dated 25 Feb
2010, the territory of the open-air hall of "Moskva" Cinema will be
provided to the Mother See of Holy Echmiadzin for construction of a
church, which will resemble the Sourb Poghos-Petros (St.Paul-Peter)
Church destroyed over the Soviet times. The given decision has caused
a wide public response. In particular, over 23 thsd people signed an
open letter addressed to Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, thereby
appealing to the president to cancel the governmental decision. The
letter says that the open-air hall was excluded from the list of the
monuments protected by the state with obvious violation of the law and
without preliminary consultation with specialists. In addition, the
cultural organization "Hayas" (Australia) has initiated collection of
signatures under a petition with a similar content. The internet
community has also expressed its opinion – over 6 thsd users of the
popular Facebook social network have come out against construction of
a church in the place of the open-air hall of "Moskva" Cinema.

Haim Oron To Initiate Debate On Armenian Genocide In Knesset April 2

HAIM ORON TO INITIATE DEBATE ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN KNESSET APRIL 28

PanARMENIAN.Net
April 16, 2010 – 16:19 AMT 11:19 GMT

Chairman of Meretz bloc and member of the Israeli Knesset Haim Oron,
who is the main supporter of the Armenian Genocide recognition, will
submit a debate on the issue on April 28. However, according to him,
his expectations are more than skeptical.

As April 24, when this date is commemorated worldwide, is Saturday,
Oron is going to offer this delicate issue for a discussion on April
28, after the parliamentary vacation.

"I stay in touch with Armenian organizations, but this year the
government will bury this issue sooner than last time," Izsrus portal
quoted Oron as saying. "Currently Yerevan and Ankara are in a process
of negotiations, and many people do not recommend interfering. I do
not see any connection between the events which happened 95 years ago
and current geopolitics of the region, but these are the realities."

After the appointment of Ze’ev Elkin of Likud party to the post of
chairman of the coalition, Oron has lost his ally in the struggle
for the Armenian Genocide recognition. "Earlier, he was the leader of
Israel-Armenia parliamentary friendship group, however, now we shall
wait to see what pressure will be exerted on him by the coalition
fellows. I will talk to him soon… Despite sharp cooling in the
Turkish-Israeli relations and many people’s desire to do a bad turn
to Turkey, I have skeptical expectations," said Oron.

ANKARA: The Anatolian Diaspora

THE ANATOLIAN DIASPORA

Hurriyet
April 16 2010
Turkey

On the sidelines of the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington,
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan looked for a remedy on the
fate of the normalization protocols Turkey signed with Armenia last
fall. Well, since he is the main cause of the problem when it comes
to the current situation regarding the protocols, he is supposed to
find the solution. But this is not an easy task for him as first and
foremost he needs to change his references.

I have underlined before: The notions and concepts regarding the
Armenian question and those used by Turkish politicians should be
reassessed thoroughly. One of these notions is the "Armenian diaspora"
of which sizable numbers are settled in the United States.

Next week is the 95th anniversary of an event in which 200 leading
figures of the Ottoman-Armenian community were seized in Istanbul
and deported. April 24, 1915, is the symbolic day of the removal
of Armenians from these lands and the formation of a diaspora by
the survivors.

The word "diaspora" has a negative connotation in Turkish so much that
it cannot be used, for instance, for over a million Turkish-descent
Germans who have become a genuine diaspora in Germany after being
granted naturalization and citizenship rights. The diaspora, in
official language, is the name of a group which is known as the
eternal enemy of Turkey.

With Turkey’s brand-new Armenian policy, the diaspora is treated
like a center of mischief causing trouble for "poor" Armenia and
"reasonable" Turkish Armenians living in Turkey. For instance,
the reason behind Erdogan’s threat to deport Armenians from Armenia
who try to earn their bread in Turkey is the approval of "genocide"
bills that are forced by the diaspora in the United States and Sweden.

He does this without questioning a second how approximately 10,000
Armenian-descent Swedes could have had this bill passed – just like
in Lithuania, Poland and Slovakia where hardly any meaningful Armenian
community lives.

This "evil" diaspora is, in fact, perceived as the unique obstacle
in front of Armenia who is looking for peace with Turkey. Turkey’s
Armenian policy is based on this black-and-white world.

Grandchildren of our countrymen

This notion now needs a re-formatting. First of all, we have to know
that the most effective and most bitter members of the diaspora who
speak up the most are the grandchildren of Armenians who survived the
deportation a century ago or who were saved by their compassionate
neighbors from the massacres.

If not assimilated, these people speak Western Armenian and sometimes
Turkish. They mostly live in Armenia, France, North and South America
and the Middle East. The total Armenian population in the world is
around 9 million, one-third of which lives in Armenia. The biggest
group outside Armenia is composed of 2 million who are in Russia.

Armenians of Anatolian origin form the other big group with 2 million
people.

The integration of Armenians in their new home countries was far
from easy. Let’s not forget that they were overwhelmingly Anatolian
peasants. But they rapidly adapted to the countries to which they
moved.

There were different waves of migration. Around 1915, during and
after, Armenians were forcefully removed from Anatolia, most of whom
lost their lives. During the establishment period of the Republic,
there were left only 300,000 Armenians in Turkey. Today, the Armenian
population in Turkey is estimated to be about 50,000-60,000. Following
the Grand Catastrophe, the Turkish government found it possibly
inappropriate for them to remain in Anatolia.

As an example of the incentive for the remaining Armenians to leave,
the Armenian church which remained in the Black Sea province of Ordu
was demolished in 1927 by the order of the government of the time
and the Armenian congregation had to immigrate. As a matter of fact,
immigration continued all through the republican era though it ramped
up in difficult periods.

In the aftermath of the 1915, Armenians of Anatolia left with their
institutions whereas properties remained behind. Figures for the
institutions are as follows: There were 2,500 churches and 2,000
schools before 1915; today there are only 43 churches and 18 schools.

The Ottoman Armenian political parties Dashnak, Hınchak, Ramvagar,
as well as the Kozan (Sis) Patriarchate still exist today but out of
Turkey. Their differences of opinion remain as well.

For instance, not all Armenians think alike when it comes to the
protocols. The Armenian General Benevolent Union, or AGBU, in service
since 1906 and established in Ottoman lands with branches all over
the world, is one of them. The AGBU Executive Board published a
communiqué on Sept. 14, 2009, in support of the protocols. The
communiqué was saying that the implementation of the protocols is
a remarkable moment in the history of Armenia, the Armenian World
and Turkish-Armenian relations. After that, together with the AGBU,
three leading Armenian groups in the U.S., the Armenian Western and
Eastern Dioceses, the Armenian Assembly of America and the Knights
of Vartan, announced their support to the Armenian government in a
joint statement published on Oct. 1, 2009.

Today, the Anatolian Armenian diaspora speaks out and speaks
differently from the first generation who survived. They are also
curious and have various expectations. Some want to visit the graveyard
of their ancestors, some want to find the location of their properties,
and some are after their relatives who had to convert to Islam. Some
celebrate cheerfully in Los Angeles the championship of their favorite
Turkish football team yet some demand the return of their ownership
rights. Some hate Turks and some have broken the taboo and travel to
Turkey. But most are thinking about Turkey and look for justice.

It is totally unrealistic for Turkey’s Armenian policy to overlook the
Anatolian Diaspora in the search for normalization and a solution. We
know that the minister of foreign affairs, Ahmet Davutoglu, is becoming
aware of that fact. Maybe one day, a Turkish prime minister during
a visit to U.S. will meet also with representatives of Anatolian
Armenian diaspora there to listen.

Turkey’s Two Issues Have Failed, Says Hakob Chakrian

TURKEY’S TWO ISSUES HAVE FAILED, SAYS HAKOB CHAKRIAN

Aysor
April 16 2010
Armenia

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan’s meetings in Washington were
important and successful, told journalists turkologist Hakob Chakrian.

He pointed that in contrary, Turkish Prime Minister’s positions at the
nuclear summit were unsuccessful so far as Turkish side’s two issues —
to force Armenia to make concessions in the process of international
recognition of the 1915 Genocide and in the process of settlement to
the Karabakh conflict — failed.

"Armenia’s President has openly told Erdogan that Armenia won’t
accept preconditions, related to issue of Karabakh in the name of
Armenia-Turkey relations," said Hakob Chakrian pointing that now
Turkey must take steps.

Chakrian also referred to the process of ratification for protocols:
"The protocols can be ratified by Armenia first," he said. "However,
if even so, then it wouldn’t be a wrong step; in this case Turkey
will become responsible for the process," he added.