BAKU: French Ambassador: "I Do Not Think French Parliament To Adopt

FRENCH AMBASSADOR: "I DO NOT THINK FRENCH PARLIAMENT TO ADOPT THE BILL ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE"

Today, Azerbaijan
Oct 11 2006

France extraordinary and plenipotentiary ambassador to Azerbaijan
Bernard Amaudric du Chaffaut held a press conference on discussion
of false Armenian genocide in France parliament.

He said he does not believe that the parliament will accept the bill.

"This bill was suggested by Socialist Party. If the National Assembly
adopts the bill it will be presented to the Senate. The Senate
may adopt ore refuse it. The president cannot override veto to the
decision of the Senate. If National Assembly does not adopt the bill
the problem will end. Turkey and France Foreign Ministers talked over
the phone today. They discussed bilateral relations," he said.

The Ambassador also said that there exists a law for punishing
those who deny Armenian genocide in France, but it was not applied
to anybody.

He also touched upon France Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy’s
statement on the problem, APA reports.

"Sarkozy said this not as the government representative, but as
party leader. I do not want to comment on his statement. As concerns
Minsk Group French co-chair’s activity, I would like to say that the
co-chair represents neither the parliament nor the opposition. He
tries to solve Nagorno Garabagh conflict," the Ambassador said.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/31303.html

Greece’s OTE Declines Rumors ArmenTel Sale Completed

GREECE’S OTE DECLINES RUMORS ARMENTEL SALE COMPLETED

Cellular-News, UK
Oct 11 2006

MOSCOW, Oct 11 (Prime-Tass) — Greece’s Hellenic Telecommunications
Organization (OTE) has denied rumors in the media that it has picked
a tender winner for its 90% stake in ArmenTel, the incumbent telecoms
operator in Armenia, OTE said in a statement Wednesday.

OTE said that the tender has not been yet completed and the company
would make an official announcement in due time.

On Monday Armenian news agency Arminfo reported, citing a source,
that a consortium from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) including
telecom company Etisalat and investment fund Istithmar, had won the
tender for the 90% stake in ArmenTel with an offer of US$600 million.

Besides Etisalat and Istithmar, Russian companies AFK Sistema and
VimpelCom have also bid for ArmenTel, as well as a consortium of VTEL
Holdings and Knightsbridge Associates, OTE said earlier.

ArmenTel has a monopoly on fixed-line and long-distance services in
Armenia. The company also had a monopoly on mobile services until
mid-2005. ArmenTel’s fixed-line subscriber base stood at about 600,000
users and its mobile subscriber base at about 330,000 users, as of
mid 2006. Armenia’s population amounts to about 3.2 million people.

ANKARA: French Ruling Party To Abstain From Armenian Bill Vote

FRENCH RULING PARTY TO ABSTAIN FROM ARMENIAN BILL VOTE
By Cihan News Agency

Zaman Online, Turkey
Oct 11 2006

The French ruling Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) has condemned
Socialist Party (PS) for a bill that was tabled by PS, declaring that
the UMP would absent itself from the vote.

French Foreign Ministry spokesman Jean-Baptiste Mattei stated that
the bill, which penalizes those who deny the alleged Armenian genocide
during World War I, was unnecessary according to their point of view.

The UMP, however, agreed to support draft resolution of Patrick
Devedjian, Deputy Minister of Interior, on the controversial Armenian
bill. Devedjian had proposed that historians should be exempted
from punishment.

The draft bill, which was originally brought before the French
parliament in May, is to be debated again on Thursday.

For further information please visit

http://www.cihannews.com

Royal Says Turkey Must Recognise Armenian Genocide

ROYAL SAYS TURKEY MUST RECOGNISE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
By Kerstin Gehmlich

Reuters, UK
Oct 11 2006

PARIS, Oct 11 (Reuters) – Turkey has to recognise Armenians suffered
genocide at the hands of Ottoman Turks if it wants to enter the
European Union, French Socialist presidential frontrunner Segolene
Royal said on Wednesday.

Royal, who heads opinion polls to become the leftist party’s candidate
for next year’s presidential poll, did not say whether she personally
supported Turkey’s EU membership, saying the French people would
decide the issue in a referendum.

"If Turkey should one day confirm its candidacy and enter Europe,
it is obvious that it must recognise the Armenian genocide," Royal
told a press conference.

Royal was speaking just a day before the French parliament was to
vote on a bill that will impose prison terms on anyone who denies
the 1915 genocide of Armenians took place.

The bill, proposed by Royal’s Socialist party, has strained relations
between Paris and Ankara, with Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan
telling France to examine its own colonial past.

Ankara denies that some 1.5 million Armenians perished in a systematic
genocide last century, saying large numbers of both Christian Armenians
and Muslim Turks died in a partisan conflict raging at that time.

Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said he hoped France, "a country
of freedoms", would not become "a country where people are jailed
for expressing views and releasing documents".

"If this bill is passed, Turkey will not lose anything but France
will lose Turkey and it will no longer remain as France that boasts
the values I mentioned," Gul told reporters.

The European Commission has criticised the French bill, saying it
undermines its efforts to persuade Turkey to increase freedom of
expression by scrapping article 301 of the penal code used against
Turkish intellectuals and writers.

NO LECTURING

Turkey began EU entry talks last October and France is especially
cool on taking in the large, mainly Muslim nation.

Royal said France had also found it painful to deal with darker
chapters of its past.

"It’s not easy for certain countries to recognise a number of actions
or episodes that are totally counter to the respect of human dignity,"
she said.

Asked whether she personally supported Turkey’s entry into the EU,
Royal said the French people would decide this issue in a referendum.

Royal’s likely conservative competitor for the 2007 poll, Interior
Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, is a long-standing opponent of Turkey’s
EU entry.

Some deputies in Sarkozy’s UMP party say there is no need for the
controversial bill, but the mood has toughened since President Jacques
Chirac visited Armenia last month and said Turkey should recognise
the genocide before joining the EU.

UMP party officials expect around 60 of their 362 parliamentarians
to back the motion, with most of the rest likely to skip the debate,
handing victory to the Socialists.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Javakheti Armenians Urged To Show Restraint

JAVAKHETI ARMENIANS URGED TO SHOW RESTRAINT
By Hovannes Shoghikian

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Oct 11 2006

The head of an organization uniting natives of Georgia’s restive
Javakheti province living in Armenia on Wednesday condemned a local
Armenian nationalist group that staged violent protests against the
alleged falsification of local election results.

The group called United Javakhk rallied hundreds of supporters in the
regional town of Akhalkalaki and briefly seized a local government
building on Monday, saying that they were robbed of victory in the
polls held across Georgia last Thursday. Their official results showed
the National Movement Party of President Mikhail Saakashvili winning
the majority of votes in most parts of the country, including the
Armenian-populated Javakheti. Observers from the Organization for
Security and Cooperation said the vote was "conducted with general
respect for fundamental freedoms."

The leaders of United Javakhk, who demand greater autonomy for
Javakheti, ran for the Akhalkalaki district council on the ticket of
Industry Will Save Georgia, a Tbilisi-based major opposition party.

They claim to have won 70 percent of the vote.

Maksim Mahtesian, the ethnic Armenian chairman of the district
election commission, denied the allegations on Tuesday, insisting
that vote irregularities were not serious enough to affect the
election outcome. "The situation here is calm now," he told RFE/RL
from Akhalkalaki.

In Yerevan, the head of the Javakhk Compatriots’ Union, Shirak
Torosian, denounced the United Javakhk actions as "treason." "We
are calling on all forces in Javakheti to show prudence, put aside
personal, factional interests and not serve third forces," he told
a news conference.

Torosian also urged Javakheti Armenian activists to drop their demands
for the impoverished region to be given the status of an autonomy. The
Georgian government and the international community associate the word
"autonomy" with separatism these days, he said.

Incidentally, another Akhalkalaki-based Armenian group demanding
autonomy, Virk, reportedly teamed up with Saakashvili’s party
to contest the polls and won several council seats. According to
Mahtesian, 27 of the 32 newly elected members of the legislative
council are ethnic Armenians.

Sarkisian Seeks Closer Military Ties With Britain

SARKISIAN SEEKS CLOSER MILITARY TIES WITH BRITAIN
By Emil Danielyan

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Oct 11 2006

Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian called for the deepening of defense
and security ties between Armenia and Britain during talks with a
visiting senior British official on Wednesday.

Meeting with British Minister for Europe Geoff Hoon, Sarkisian
suggested that the two countries draw up "long-term programs of
military cooperation." A statement by the Armenian Defense Ministry
cited him as saying that such programs are needed for achieving
"tangible results" in the ongoing bilateral activities in the areas
of international peace-keeping, military training and defense reforms.

The statement said Hoon, who served as Britain’s defense secretary
from 1999-2005, welcomed the idea and expressed his readiness to help
to solve "problems arising during the deepening of [British-Armenian]
cooperation." It did not give further details, saying only that the
two men also discussed the unresolved Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and
other challenges to regional security.

Hoon arrived in Yerevan on Tuesday and left it later on Wednesday as
part of his tour of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia. The low-key visit
involved no talks with President Robert Kocharian, with Hoon meeting
only with Sarkisian and Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian. The latter’s
press office did not immediately release any statements on the meeting.

Sarkisian’s calls for closer British-Armenian military ties came amid
Yerevan’s growing cooperation with NATO and the U.S. military in
particular under an "individual partnership action plan" which was
launched late last year. Sarkisian has repeatedly stated that that
cooperation is now an increasingly important elements of Armenia’s
national security doctrine that continues to be anchored in a military
alliance with Russia.

"Days Of Armenia In Siberia" Opened In Krasnoyarsk

"DAYS OF ARMENIA IN SIBERIA" OPENED IN KRASNOYARSK

Siberian News Online, Russia
Oct 10 2006

"Days of Armenia in Siberia" opened in Krasnoyarsk in International
Exhibition Business Center "Siberia" today.

Vyacheslav Rychkov, a deputy-mayor, the head of the department of
food policy, commerce and services, Valery Sergienko, a State Duma
deputy, Sarkis Muradyan, the chairman of the Board of Directors of
CJSC Sibagropromstroy, participated in the exhibition opening.

Armenian delegation was headed by Arsen Grigoryan, the governor of
Gegarkunik Region of the Republic of Armenia.

On behalf of Armenian government Arsen Grigoryan thanked the exhibition
organizers and residents of Krasnoyarsk Territory for an opportunity
of holding the presentation.

‘Krasnoyarsk Territory governor Alexander Khloponin expressed his
confidence in his letter to Armenian President Robert Kocharyan
that the exhibition would help to enlarge commercial and economic
cooperation between Krasnoyarsk Territory and the Republic of
Armenia. Our countries take special places in the world society, and
fact prove that Armenia and Russia are interested in cooperation:
trade turnover between Armenia and Russia constituted $107 million
in 2000, and it increased up to $353 million by the end of 2005,’
Grigoryan said.

After the opening visitors were able to see an exhibition of Armenian
food and industrial goods. The expositions showed decorative goods,
national souvenirs made of stone and ceramics, shoes, textile,
equipment, a wide range of beverages, including alcohol.

It is worth reminding that Armenian businessmen are going to have
meetings with the regional businessmen, participate in a panel
discussion with members of Central Siberian Commerce and Industrial
Chamber, The Union of Industrialists and Businessmen of Krasnoyarsk
Territory and the Union of Commodity Manufacturers and Consumers.

Apart from that, Krasnoyarsk audience will enjoy a cultural program
prepared by the guests from Armenia. Famous Armenian singers and
musicians will give two concerts, one in IEBS Siberia, the second one –
in the Big Concert Hall of the philharmonic society.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Russian-Armenian Days Will Be Held In Krasnoyarsk Every Year

RUSSIAN-ARMENIAN DAYS WILL BE HELD IN KRASNOYARSK EVERY YEAR

Siberian News Online, Russia
Oct 10 2006

Russian-Armenian days may be held in Krasnoyarsk every year, as
Sarkis Muradyan, director of International Exhibition Business Center
"Siberia", stated.

‘Russia and Armenia have always had warm relations, and we hope that
goods of high quality only made in Armenia will be sold in Krasnoyarsk
thanks to such exhibitions in Krasnoyarsk Territory. We plan to hold
Russian-Armenian exhibitions at least once a year,’ he said.

It is worth reminding that Armenian businessmen are going to have
meetings with the regional businessmen, participate in a panel
discussion with members of Central Siberian Commerce and Industrial
Chamber, The Union of Industrialists and Businessmen of Krasnoyarsk
Territory and the Union of Commodity Manufacturers and Consumers.

Apart from that, Krasnoyarsk audience will enjoy a cultural program
prepared by the guests from Armenia. Famous Armenian singers and
musicians will give two concerts, one in IEBS Siberia, the second one –
in the Big Concert Hall of the philharmonic society.

BAKU: Basescu: "I Am Visiting Azerbaijan Not With The Aim Of Discuss

BASESCU: "I AM VISITING AZERBAIJAN NOT WITH THE AIM OF DISCUSSING PROBLEMS, AS THERE ARE NONE"

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Oct 10 2006

President of Romania Trajan Besescu’s exclusive interview to APA

– How do you appreciate the current relations between Azerbaijan
and Romania and what is your expectation for the forthcoming visit
to Azerbaijan?

– Romania and Azerbaijan have very good ties, covering all the fields
of bilateral cooperation, be they political, diplomatic, economic,
military or cultural. Of course, I believe there are many other issues
that our countries can cooperate on, such as bringing the bilateral
relations to the level of the political ones; however, the general
look is satisfactory.

My official visit to Baku is a sign of friendship from Romania, as
a neighbor country, to the Republic of Azerbaijan and its inhabitants.

I am visiting the Capital of Azerbaijan not with the aim of discussing
problems, as there are none, but to make the Baku authorities and
President Aliyev a political offer, in the spirit of friendship and
total openness: we would like to encourage Azerbaijan’s rapprochement
to the European and Euro-Atlantic structures, to support the
democratization internal efforts, the peaceful solving of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, according to international law principles
and norms, and also, generally, to offer a token of our wish and
political will of strengthening the bilateral ties at all levels.

– Presidents of Romania and Azerbaijan have to date signed some 20
documents within various official visits. Do you intend to sign any
documents during this visit?

– During my official visit, various documents will be signed, among
which: The Amending Protocol of the Agreement between the Government
of Romania and the Government of Republic of Azerbaijan on mutual
promotion and protection of investments; The Amending Protocol of
the Agreement between the Government of Romania and the Government
of Republic of Azerbaijan on trade and economic relations and
technical and scientific cooperation; Cooperation Memorandum between
the Public Finance Ministry Romanian and Tax Ministry of Azerbaijan;
The Joint Political Statement that I will sign together with President
Aliyev. This statement is extremely significant for the reiteration of
our mutual political will of consolidating ties between our countries.

– Azerbaijan signed an agreement in the sphere of energy with Ukraine
which envisages transferring the Caspian oil through Odessa-Brodi
pipeline. But, Romania proposed delivery of the Caspian oil to
Constanta port. Will this offer be in agenda again?

– With regard to hydrocarbons transport from the Caspian area
to Europe, we salute the commissioning of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
pipeline, and soon, of the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum gas-duct, that Romania
will benefit from, as well.

In relation to the Odessa-Brodi pipeline route and not only, I will
always plead for using the transport or transit capacities of the
Constanta port. Romania can be an entrance gate for Caspian gas and
oil into Europe and can be used as a transit country to Western Europe.

Otherwise, Europe energy’s security is an extremely important issue,
against the background of a significant increase of energy resources
demand; as an oil and natural gas importer, Romania is interested
in finding new import sources and alternative routes of hydrocarbons
transport.

Moreover, we are interested in identifying ways for ensuring the
feasability of Nabucco project. Azerbaijan can play an important part
as a secure transit country and supplier for this pipeline.

– Besides energy, in what spheres is Azerbaijan attractive for Romania?

– In our opinion, all fields are or can be interesting, in view
of cooperation between states that are, both, on an upwards track
of economic development. Romania is particularly interested in
strengthening our economic ties, as our trade exchange volume is quite
high – over 120 Million Dollars in 2005. The balance is unfavorable
to Romania; therefore, we would like to identify ways to increase our
export to Azerbaijan. Moreover, our interest also covers transport
cooperation; the first steps have already been made, in relation
to Black Sea and Danube merchandise transport from and to Caucasus
and Europe.

In my opinion, economic ties between our countries are in full
expansion. I believe that the Romanian part needs to make serious
efforts in order to re-establish the commercial balance, with a view
to increasing the exports to Azerbaijan. Moreover, I believe the
trade exchange volume – around 120 million dollars, is far below
the potential of our economies, that are going through a period of
significant increase. I am certain that the competent authorities
will find the ways of diversifying and strengthen the economic ties.

After its EU accession, Romania could become more interesting for
the Azeri business people, as an entrance gate for merchandise to
the European space.

– Azerbaijan and Romania enjoy military cooperation. Does Romania,
as a NATO state, intend to enlarge this cooperation?

– Firstly, I would like to congratulate Republic of Azerbaijan for
engaging in the Individual Action Plan with NATO. With regard to
your question, we would like to express our full availability to
support you in enforcing the plan, by sharing our experience in
preparing for the NATO accession. There already is a significant
legal frame in the field (cooperation agreement between the defense
ministries, agreement on cooperation in the military education field,
agreement on technical-military cooperation, agreement on protection
of mutually delivered military information); this framework and IPAP
will contribute to the strengthening of cooperation.

– Romania is one of the countries interested in GUAM. When can
Romania’s integration to GUAM come true?

– Romania’s interest for eastern neighborhood evolution is a natural
attitude of a state that is interested in supporting the objective
of the Euro-Atlantic cooperation that it is part of: expanding the
area of stability, security and prosperity, beyond EU and NATO borders.

This year, we saluted the transformation of GUAM into an international
organization – Organization for Democratization and Economic
Development – GUAM.

I believe that the regional structure ODED-GUAM is particularly
important for fighting the new threats to European security.

Cooperation between Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan and Republic of
Moldova in fields such as enhancing the security climate, creating a
free-trade area, cooperation in the field of hydrocarbons transport
and transit, based on projects such as TRACECA and INOGATE is extremely
important.

I would like to salute the interest of GUAM states for the frozen
conflicts that are sources of instability for the region and
burning points with a high potential of spreading the insecurity
beyond their borders. There is a need for energetic measures and
joint cooperation plans of fighting these threats. To this end, I
would like to congratulate the GUAM member states for their recent UN
General Assembly initiative of promoting a resolution on the so-called
~Dfrozen conflicts" that have been fairly enough called ~Dprotracted
conflicts". I would like to remind you that Romania has been one of
the supporters of the resolution project.

I do not believe that we should consider the possibility of Romania’s
accession to GUAM. However, given that the GUAM region is adjacent
to the geographical space that Romania is part of , I can say that
we will involve actively in view of substantiating an efficient
cooperation between GUAM member-states, as we have already proven
within the UN framework.

– Romania is one step far from the EU membership. How do you value
Azerbaijan’s perspectives for accession to this organization? How
can you help Azerbaijan in this way?

– Firstly, I would like to congratulate the Republic of Azerbaijan’s
leadership, and to personally congratulate President Aliyev for the
official recognition of Azerbaijan’s European aspirations by the
European Commission. Moreover, I am expressing my hope that EU and
Azerbaijan negotiations on the Individual Action Plan, part of the
European Neighborhood Policy, will be concluded during the term of
Finnish chairmanship.

We believe the development of structural cooperation ties between EU
and Azerbaijan, part of the New European Neighborhood Policy (ENP),
and Romania’s status of a future EU member-state can complement and
strengthen the bilateral ties between Romania and Azerbaijan.

We are expressing our full availability to share the know-how that we
acquired in the period of pre-adhesion to Euro-Atlantic and European
structures. We are expressing our availability to initiate contacts at
the level of competent ministries. I am certain that, upon the wish
expressed by the Baku authorities, the Romanian part will respond
efficiently, presenting a concrete offer concerning the training of
young specialists.

– How did you Moldova find the referendum in Transdnistria?

– Besides officially disapproving the conflict, Romania reiterated the
support for strengthening the sovereignty and territorial integrity
of Republic of Moldova, as fundamental principles in solving the
Transdnistria conflicts and multilaterally supported Republic of
Moldova’s efforts to obtain a public disapproval of the referendum.

I would like to underline that the referendum is illegal, according
to international law and Republic of Moldova constitutional law and,
subsequently, its results have no political or legal relevance.

I believe that the referendum has strict political purposes,
particularly, undermining the international community efforts for
solving the conflict and resumption of the 5+2 negotiations. To this
end, I believe that Tiraspol’s propensity for unilateral measures
(as this is not the first referendum organized by them) has to be
unanimously and firmly disapproved by the international community.

Genocide Bill Threatens Turkish-French Ties

GENOCIDE BILL THREATENS TURKISH-FRENCH TIES
By Hande Culpan

Independent Online, South Africa
Oct 10 2006

Turkish-French ties appeared headed for trouble on Tuesday over
a controversial bill on the World War I massacres of Armenians as
Ankara threatened to bar French companies from lucrative projects
and boycott French goods if the draft is adopted.

The bill, scheduled for debate before the French National Assembly
on Thursday, calls for one year in prison and a 45 000 euro (57 000
dollar) fine for anyone who denies that Armenians were the victims of
a genocide under the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor of modern Turkey.

Drawn up by the Socialist opposition, the draft was first submitted
in May, but the debate ran out of time after filibustering from the
ruling UMP party bloc.

Turkish officials believe the bill stands a good chance of being voted
on Thursday – as a gesture to France’s large Armenian community ahead
of legislative elections in 2007 – as many lawmakers opposed to the
bill will be away in their constituencies.

Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul warned at the weekend that French firms
would be barred from major tenders, including one for the planned
construction of the country’s first nuclear power plant, if the bill
is accepted.

"We will be absolutely unable to (co-operate) in big tenders," Gul
told the popular daily Hurriyet.

"The French will lose Turkey," Gul also said in remarks to the Yeni
Safak newspaper.

The Ankara Chamber of Commerce, which groups some 3 200 businesses,
threatened to boycott French goods and the Consumers’ Union, a
non-governmental consumer rights group, joined the chorus on Monday.

Turkey sidelined French companies from public tenders "If the bill
is adopted, we will call for the boycott of one French product every
week starting from October 12. We will increase the number of French
goods and services to be boycotted until the law is annulled," the
group’s leader Bulent Deniz said in a written statement.

In 2001, Turkey sidelined French companies from public tenders and
cancelled projects awarded to French firms when the parliament adopted
a resolution recognising the Armenian massacres as genocide.

At stake now is a flourishing trade between the two countries that
totalled 8,2-billion euros (10-billion dollars) in 2005.

About 250 French firms are active in Turkey, providing employment
for about 65 000 people.

France also plays a leading role in foreign direct investment in
Turkey, with 2,1-billion dollars (1,6-billion euors) in 2005 and
328-million dollars (260-million euros) in the first seven months
of 2006.

Many commentators warned on Monday that ending economic ties with
France would also have a bruising affect on Turkey, which sees foreign
investment as vital to its recovery from two severe financial crises.

"The ‘punishment’ to be imposed on France in case the bill is passed
will be a double-edged sword and inflict as much damage on us as on
France," one columnist wrote in the mass-circulation Hurriyet.

Turkey could also opt for political measures against France, such as
keeping bilateral contacts at a minimum and at the lowest diplomatic
level, and even cancelling bilateral visits.

A senior lawmaker has already warned that the Turkish parliament may
retaliate with a law branding the killings of Algerians under French
colonial rule as genocide and introducing prison terms for those who
deny it.

The Armenian massacres are one of most controversial episodes in
Turkish history and open debate on the issue has only recently begun
in Turkey, often sending nationalist sentiment into frenzy.

Armenians claim up to 1,5-million of their kin were slaughtered in
orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917.

Turkey categorically rejects the genocide label, arguing that 300
000 Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when
Armenians rose for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with
invading Russian troops as the Ottoman Empire fell apart.