Allure Of Islam Signals A Shift Within Turkey

ALLURE OF ISLAM SIGNALS A SHIFT WITHIN TURKEY
By Sabrina Tavernise

The New York Times
November 28, 2006 Tuesday
Late Edition – Final

Sebnem Arsu contributed reporting from Ankara, and Ian Fisher from
Rome. Sabrina Pacifici contributed research.

A short 24 hours before a visit by Pope Benedict XVI to this Muslim
country, its prime minister finally agreed to meet him publicly. The
venue: the airport, on the Turkish leader’s way out of town.

The elaborate, last-minute choreography pointed to the deep divide
that has festered within Turkish society since the foundation of the
modern state. Should Turkey face eastward, toward its Muslim neighbors,
or westward, toward Europe?

In the past five years, Muslims here have repeatedly felt betrayed
by the West. The United States began holding Muslims without charge
at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba; it invaded Iraq and abused prisoners at Abu
Ghraib. Turkey’s hopes of entering the European Union have dimmed.

The pope made a speech citing criticism of Islam.

Turkey — a democratic Muslim country with a rigidly secular state —
is at a pivot point. It is trying to navigate between the forces that
want to pull it closer to Islam and the institutions that safeguard
its secularism. Turkey’s pro-Islamic government is constrained by
rules dictating secularism established by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk,
Turkey’s revered founder.

The extremes jostle on Istanbul’s streets, where miniskirts mix with
tightly tied head scarves and lingerie boutiques stand unapologetically
next to mosques.

"There are two Turkeys within Turkey right now," said Binnaz Toprak,
a professor of political science at Bogazici University.

The pope’s visit, which begins Tuesday, falls squarely on that fault
line, and highlights a slow but steady shift: Turkey is feeling its
Muslim identity more and more. The trend worries secular Turkish
politicians, who believe the state’s central tenet is under threat.

In late October, a senior officer of Turkey’s army — which ousted a
government it saw as overly Islamic in 1997 — issued a rare warning
to that effect.

Others say the threat is overstated, but acknowledge that Turks do
feel pushed eastward by pressures on their country from America and
Europe. A poll by the Pew Foundation in June found that 53 percent
of Turks have positive views of Iran, while public opinion of Europe
and the United States has slipped sharply.

"Many people in Turkey have lost hopes in joining Europe and they are
looking for other horizons," said Onur Oymen, an opposition politician
whose party is staunchly secular.

It has been more than 80 years since religion was ripped out of
the heart of the new Turkish state, which was assembled from the
remains of the Ottoman Empire, the political and economic center of
the Muslim world for centuries. But the portion of Turks who identify
themselves by their religion has increased to 46 percent this year,
from 36 percent seven years ago, according to a survey of 1,500
people in 23 cities conducted by the Turkish Economic and Social
Studies Foundation, an independent research organization based in
Istanbul. That is a trend that has emerged in countries throughout
the Muslim world since Sept. 11, 2001.

"I’m here as a Muslim," said Fatma Eksioglu, who was sitting on
the grass next to her sister in downtown Istanbul on Sunday at a
demonstration of about 20,000 people opposing the pope’s visit. She
did not belong to the Islamic party that organized the gathering,
she said, adding, "When it comes to Islam, we are one."

But in a paradox that goes to the heart of modern Turkey, a stronger
Muslim identity does not mean that, as in Iraq, fundamentalism is
on the rise, or even that more Turks want more religion in their
government. Indeed, the number of Turks in favor of imposing Shariah
law declined to 9 percent from 21 percent, according to the survey,
which was released last week.

Perhaps the most powerful factor pushing Turks toward the east has
been a series of bitter setbacks in talks on admission to the European
Union. To try to win membership, the Turkish government enacted a
series of rigorous reforms to bring the country in line with European
standards, including some unprecedented in the Muslim world, like a
law against marital rape.

But the admission talks have stalled. And while the official reason
involves the longstanding Greek-Turkish dispute over Cyprus, most
Turks say they believe the real reason is a deep suspicion of their
country’s religion.

Indeed, in 2002, Valery Giscard d’Estaing, the former French
president, said Turkey’s admission to the union would mean "the end
of Europe." Nicholas Sarkozy, the French presidential hopeful, has
made his opposition to Turkish membership a campaign issue. Even the
pope, when he was still a cardinal in Germany, said publicly that he
did not think Turkey fit into Europe because it was Muslim. That talk
has begun to grate on Turks.

"It hurts me that the E.U. expects Turkey to be something it’s not,"
said Nilgun Yun, a stylish 26-year-old eating a chocolate muffin in
a downtown Istanbul cafe on Sunday.

Her position, shared by many of her friends, was simple: "Accept me
as I am. We are Muslim, and we will remain Muslim. That’s not going
to change."

Mr. Oyman, the Turkish opposition politician, said criticism of
his country was tougher than ever. "You cannot believe how they
accuse Turkey on Cyprus and other issues," he said in a telephone
interview from Brussels, where he was attending a meeting of European
parliamentarians. "Our European friends are playing a very shortsighted
game."

The shift has begun to affect trade. While Europe is still Turkey’s
largest trading partner, business with other neighbors, including
Syria, Iraq and Iran, has picked up substantially in recent years,
said Omer Bolat, the head of one of the country’s largest business
associations, whose members are mostly pro-Islamic. He put the growth
at about 30 percent from just 3 percent in 2000.

"It is risky for a country with respect to foreign policy to have
dependence on one partner and market," he said in English, sitting in a
sleek conference room overlooking a bustling trade fair that showcased
Turkish goods. "Now Turkey is opening its muscles, its horizons."

The policies of the Bush administration have deeply worried Muslims,
he said, before rushing off to speak to the Pakistani ambassador,
who had arrived at the fair.

"The United States used to be paradigm of freedom and rights," he
said. "But since the Republican period, the U.S. policies have been
so detrimental in Muslim eyes."

In just four years, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has managed
to get inflation down to historical lows and growth rates to all-time
highs. The growing prosperity has eased the integration of religious
Turks into the country’s secular society, which is still suspicious
of advocates of Islam, as well as of Mr. Erdogan.

"This group of people that was more religious has relaxed,"
said Ms. Toprak, the professor. "They are now visible. They go to
restaurants they would never have gone; they go to posh shopping
malls."

"It was a struggle to get a piece of the pie," she said. "Now they
have one."

Even so, the increased religiosity, or at least identification with
religion, could eventually present a serious problem for Turkish
society. There are already rumblings. A killing of a judge whose court
had ruled that a nursery school teacher could not wear a head scarf,
even away from school, alarmed Turkey’s secularists. Gen.

Yasar Buyukanit, head of the Turkish Army, has referred to a rising
threat of fundamentalism on at least four occasions since he took up
his position in late August.

Mr. Erdogan’s closely watched government had attempted to limit liquor
consumption in public places, but later backed down. It also tried
to make adultery a crime, but relented.

Some Turkish officials play down the possibility of real damage to
secularism, but say that European suspicion does Turkey no good.

The delay with Europe, for instance, "fans up the disappointment,
the disillusionment," said Namik Tan, the spokesman for Turkey’s
Foreign Ministry. "People say, ‘Why are they doing this?’ "

That is why public officials, including Mr. Erdogan, have shrunk from
the visit by the pope, who symbolizes, in the eyes of Turks, a disdain
for Islam and the unfair exclusivity of the Western club. A cartoon
in a Turkish newspaper last weekend showed two public officials belly
laughing at the bad luck of those Turkish officials obliged to meet
him. (The senior official appointed to be his formal guide has the
portfolio of youth and sport.)

But the pope is coming, and the meetings are happening. Despite growing
pains, a neglected Kurdish minority in the south, a thin skin for
any reference to the Armenian genocide, and failure to scrap a law
that makes insulting Turkishness a crime, Turkey stands out as lively
democracy in a larger Middle East riddled with restrictions, and its
acceptance by the West is a test case for others, officials said.

Muslim countries, Mr. Tan points out, are watching.

"Turkey is a beacon for those countries," he said. "Don’t forget,
if we fail, then the whole dream will fail."

Tigran Torosyan Received The Chairman Of The France-Armenia Deputy F

TIGRAN TOROSYAN RECEIVED THE CHAIRMAN OF THE FRANCE-ARMENIA DEPUTY FRIENDSHIP GROUP

Public Radio, Armenia
Nov 28 2006

November 28 Armenian Parliament Speaker Tigran Torosyan received the
Chairman of the France-Armenia Deputy Friendship Group of the French
National Assembly Francois Rochebloine, member of the Group Alen Muan
Bursan and Secretary Jean Pierre Delanouaya.

Greeting the guests, the Parliament Speaker thanked for the efforts
for the sake of Armenia and the friendship between the two peoples,
as well as for the great assistance the French Parliament demonstrates
towards sensitive issues for Armenians, particularly the adoption of
the bill penalizing the negation of the Armenian Genocide.

The Chairman of the France-Armenia Deputy Friendship Group Francois
Rochebloine, who is paying his 15th visit to Armenia, emphasized the
great progress Armenia has registered ever since 1990s in all fields.

At the request of the guest, Tigran Torosyan presented Armenia’s
position on the settlement of the Karabakh issue and Turkey. The
Speaker noted that a favorable situation has been created: for
many years the principles of territorial integrity and the right
for self-determination were contradicting each other, now the
Minsk Group Co-Chairs are proposing a formula, where these two
principles are combined. Turning to the relations with Turkey,
Tigran Torosyan mentioned that Armenia stands for normal relations
without any preconditions. Turkey, however, sets preconditions, which
is unacceptable. Mr. Torosyan said that for a country aspiring to EU
membership having closed borders is inadmissable. It is not consistent
with any European principle or standard.

During the meeting reference was made also to the issues of cooperation
of Armenian and French delegations to PACE.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Over 600 People Moved From Armenia To Karabakh In 2006

OVER 600 PEOPLE MOVED FROM ARMENIA TO KARABAKH IN 2006

Mediamax News Agency, Armenia
Nov 28 2006

Yerevan, 28 November: About 240 families or more than 600 people
have moved from Armenia to the Nagornyy Karabakh republic [NKR]
for permanent residency from the beginning of 2006.

The majority of the migrants are refugees of Karabakh from Azerbaijan,
the chief of the NKR government’s department for migration, refugees
and resettlement, Pavel Nadzharyan, told Mediamax.

These people are provided with accommodation within the framework of
the government programme that has been implemented since 2003.

About 1bn drams [2.28 m dollars] has been allocated from the NKR
state budget for providing accommodation to migrants and refugees,
the sum is 200m drams more than that allocated in 2005.

The state provides a [migrant] family with accommodation and a plot
of land, a one-off grant to the tune of 20,000 drams [46 dollars]
per person and a loan for purchasing livestock, seeds and diesel oil.

Armenian Leader Leaves For Minsk To Attend CIS Summit

ARMENIAN LEADER LEAVES FOR MINSK TO ATTEND CIS SUMMIT

Public TV, Armenia
Nov 28 2006

Armenian President Robert Kocharyan left for Minsk today to take part
in a summit of the CIS Council of Heads of State.

The Armenian president’s meeting with Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham
Aliyev in Minsk is also planned. The agreement to hold such a meeting
was reached during the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs’ visit to the region
last week.

Moldovan, Armenian, Kazakh Presidents Arrive In Belarus For CIS Summ

MOLDOVAN, ARMENIAN, KAZAKH PRESIDENTS ARRIVE IN BELARUS FOR CIS SUMMIT

Belapan news agency, Minsk, Belarus
Nov 28 2006

Minsk, 28 November: The presidents of Moldova, Armenia and Kazakhstan,
Vladimir Voronin, Robert Kocharyan and Nursultan Nazarbayev,
have arrived in Minsk for participation in a CIS summit, official
information sources have reported.

The arrival of Uzbek President Islom Karimov and Russian President
Vladimir Putin is expected within minutes.

A session of the Council of CIS Heads of State is to open at 1200
[1000 gmt] at the National Library.

BAKU: Azeri Pundit Pessimistic About High-Level Talks With Armenia

AZERI PUNDIT PESSIMISTIC ABOUT HIGH-LEVEL TALKS WITH ARMENIA

Day.az, Azerbaijan
Nov 28 2006

Well-known political expert Rasim Musabayov has granted an exclusive
interview to Day.az.

[Correspondent] What do you expect from the forthcoming Minsk meeting
between the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia, Ilham Aliyev and
Robert Kocharyan?

[Musabayov] There is a minimal possibility that some document will be
signed after the meeting. There is not even a hint that the foreign
ministers have agreed on the text of such a document. On the contrary,
the statements that Ilham Aliyev and Robert Kocharyan made before
the meeting in Minsk do not inspire optimism and show that it will
be difficult to bring the positions of the sides closer.

Therefore, it would be good if the presidents appear in front of
journalists together after the meeting to say that the negotiations
were useful. And it should be regarded as success if there is a
statement that they managed to bring their positions on disputable
issues closer and that the foreign ministers of the two states were
instructed to hold an additional round of negotiations bearing in
mind the progress achieved during the presidents’ meeting.

[Passage omitted: on Russia’s relations with Georgia and other
countries]

[Correspondent] What kind of policy do you think is Azerbaijan
pursuing now?

[Musabayov] A prudent one, and this is justified by the situation.

Unlike Georgia and Ukraine, Azerbaijan is not only under pressure
from Moscow, but also has quite problem relations with neighbouring
Iran and a frozen war with Armenia.

Therefore, the republic’s leadership has to manoeuvre, balance and try
not to irritate Moscow even more with its open pro-Western orientation.

But we should not forget where our strategic pipelines go as well
as the fact that we have the leading Western energy company BP as a
partner and that fraternal Turkey, our only real strategic partner,
is a member state of NATO. All this defines Azerbaijan’s pro-Western
orientation.

We should honour our commitments step by step within the framework of
Azerbaijan’s Individual Partnership Action Plan [IPAP] with NATO and
the Azerbaijan-EU Action Plan. As for political decisions and making
them public, the time will come for them.

Turquie Le Silence Des Chretiens

TURQUIE LE SILENCE DES CHRETIENS
par Sophie Shihab correspondante a Istanbul

Le Monde, France
28 novembre 2006 mardi

Armeniens, Syriaques ou Grecs, quelques dizaines de milliers de
non-musulmans, issus de communautes orthodoxes, ont reussi a survivre
en se taisant. Aujourd’hui, ils espèrent

Comme tous ses camarades, la jeune Sinem Goksu, dont le nom
parfaitement turc cache une origine syriaque, suivait les cours
de religion – uniquement d’islam sunnite – obligatoires dans la
Turquie " laïque ". " C’etait lors de l’examen de fin du primaire
", raconte la jeune fille devenue, a 24 ans, cadre dans une societe
de telecommunications. " J’ai brusquement entendu un garcon crier :
"Sinem est chretienne ! Sinem est chretienne !" Ce garcon rendait leurs
cartes aux elèves, après l’examen. En voyant la religion inscrite sur
la mienne, il sauta sur les tables en l’agitant comme un fou… J’ai
pleure, et mon amie, pour me proteger, a dit aux autres : "Ce n’est
pas grave, elle va devenir musulmane !" " Sinem se souvient qu’elle
avait alors acquiesce… Reflexe de prudence d’une enfant, seule
chretienne de sa classe. La case " religion " existe a ce jour sur
les cartes d’identite, meme si, depuis deux ans – processus europeen
oblige -, les Turcs ne sont plus obliges de la remplir. " A l’ecole,
precise Sinem, je me sentais differente, mais je n’en parlais jamais,
sans doute parce que mes parents n’en parlaient pas ; les massacres
et tout ca, ce n’est pas notre histoire familiale. "

Après les Armeniens, les Syriaques sont la deuxième minorite non
musulmane de Turquie, avec quelque 25 000 personnes. Mais ils auraient
ete dix fois plus nombreux avant 1914… Un mystère que Zeki Demir,
un charge de communication de leur Eglise, refuse d’expliquer.

" Le passe, vous en parlez beaucoup mieux en Europe ", esquive-t-il.

Les Syriaques emigres parlent en effet de leur " genocide ",
contemporain de celui des Armeniens. Mais les Syriaques d’Istanbul, "
bien integres et plus modernes que les emigres ", dit Sinem, prefèrent
se taire. " Ce sont les gens de Tor Abdine, notre region d’origine au
sud-est de la Turquie, qui peuvent vous en parler. Mais je doute qu’ils
le fassent au telephone, car ils sont sur ecoute ", precise Zeki Demir.

Dans les collines autour de Mardin, jadis, a 80 % chretiennes, il ne
reste plus que deux ou trois villages a population syriaque. Et l’on
y parle moins des massacres de 1915 que des assassinats plus recents,
cause d’une emigration qui s’est acceleree ces dernières decennies. "
Quand nous allons au marche, nous croisons un de ces assassins, un
Kurde au service de certaines forces de l’Etat qui veulent tous nous
chasser ", confiait, en 2005, un des piliers de cette communaute
decimee, dont des rescapes s’accrochent a leur terre et parlent
toujours une forme d’arameen, la langue du Christ.

Sinem, nee a Istanbul, n’a jamais ete dans le Tor Abdin. Elle frequente
l’eglise – le seul endroit où les Syriaques peuvent se retrouver, car
ils n’ont pas le droit d’avoir des ecoles communautaires. Mais elle
craint de ne pas y trouver de mari. Les garcons syriaques, dit-elle,
" font moins d’etudes que les filles, car ils peuvent travailler avec
leurs pères orfèvres ", occupation majoritaire des Syriaques. Elle
tient pourtant a epouser un chretien.

" Pour que – ses – parents ne soient pas trop tristes. "

C’est sans doute pourquoi, dans le cafe branche d’Istanbul où
Sinem retrouve ses amis, les chretiens sont aussi nombreux que les
musulmans, qui forment pourtant plus de 98 % de la population. Et
tous semblent d’accord pour ne pas trop parler du passe. " Je suis
content pour les Armeniens de France, qui ont reussi a imposer leur
point de vue sur le genocide, qui leur sert d’identite ", dit Arek,
tout juste rentre de quatre ans d’etudes a Paris. " Mais ce n’est pas
mon histoire. Je dirais que nous, les 50 000 Armeniens de Turquie,
avec nos trente eglises et notre dizaine d’ecoles, nous sommes les
mieux lotis. Nous avons surtout la chance d’etre encore a Istanbul,
un lieu historique pour les Armeniens, et nous devons la cultiver.

Car, si les Turcs avaient voulu, ils auraient pu nous tuer tous… "

Raffi Hermonn, lui, est journaliste. Il est revenu en janvier d’un "
exil " de vingt-cinq ans, en France et en Armenie. Qualifie d’agent
turc par les nationalistes armeniens et d’espion armenien par les
nationalistes turcs, Raffi a passe ces annees a briser les tabous qui
separent les deux peuples. Une tâche qu’il poursuit desormais dans sa
Turquie natale, au sein de l’Association turque des droits de l’homme
(IHD). Dans le discours qu’il a prononce, debut novembre, devant son
congrès, il a ose se declarer " armenien, et donc representant de la
memoire, de la conscience et des reves, bons et mauvais, de ce pays
". Tout en saluant les Kurdes, Syriaques, Juifs, Grecs et autres
minoritaires qui devront jouir de leurs pleins droits " sous le
parapluie commun " de la culture turque.

Ces mots, encore sacrilèges a l’aune de l’ideologie kemaliste, ont
fait forte impression sur une association en crise, formee d’anciens
gauchistes et de nationalistes kurdes, traditionnellement retifs a de
tels propos. Mais ceux-ci ont vote pour lui a plus de 80 %. Succès
qui l’a consacre premier cadre " non musulman " de l’IHD. Signe,
estime-t-il, de l’amelioration du climat general en Turquie.

" Le plus etonnant, raconte Raffi, fut de voir 36 de ses membres
kurdes et turcs venir m’avouer après le congrès qu’ils avaient aussi
des origines armeniennes – une grand-mère pour trente-quatre d’entre
eux. Meme au sein de l’IHD, ils n’osaient pas le dire publiquement.

Par la force de l’habitude, disaient-ils, mais ils se promettaient
de ne plus le cacher. " Ces " grands-mères " etaient les femmes et
fillettes armeniennes qui avaient ete soustraites aux massacres de
1915 par des familles turques et elevees comme musulmanes. Depuis
quelques annees, certains de leurs descendants n’hesitent plus a en
parler, et des livres sont parus sur le sujet. Mais, vu l’ampleur du
phenomène, beaucoup reste a faire.

La peur reste un sentiment commun dans les familles armeniennes.

Certaines n’ont pas appris leur langue a leurs enfants pour les
proteger, les rendre invisibles. Mais M. Hermonn voit la chose
autrement : " En ce moment, en tant que chretien, on vit des choses
très interessantes en Turquie. On sent toujours le danger, mais
il est garni de tant de beaute, de folklore, d’histoires… Et
d’erotisme aussi, qu’il ne faut pas oublier… " Coupant court a
sa tirade lyrique, Raffi avoue qu’il est parfois qualifie ici de "
Don Quichotte ", puis cite un proverbe qui veut que les situations
sans solution soient " resolues par les fous ".

Ces " fous " seraient deja des centaines en Turquie, si l’on compte
les minoritaires chretiens qui n’ont pas hesite, fin septembre,
a signer une lettre ouverte courageuse : elle denoncait la facon
dont l’Etat turc les instrumentalise en s’en tenant a la lettre du
traite de Lausanne. Ce traite de 1923 accorde des droits religieux et
educatifs aux seules " minorites non musulmanes " reconnues par Ankara,
c’est-a-dire aux Armeniens, aux Juifs et aux Grecs. Mais le traite
precise que les memes droits doivent etre appliques aux musulmans qui
vivent en Grèce, ce qui fut rarement le cas. Ce principe obsolète de
reciprocite sert donc de pretexte aux manquements d’Ankara vis-a-vis
de ses propres minoritaires.

Consideres ainsi comme des etrangers, voire comme des " ennemis
de l’interieur ", les Turcs grecs – qui sont appeles " Roums ",
c’est-a-dire Romains au sens de Byzantins – ont parfois ete victimes de
pogroms. Certaines fonctions administratives et certains metiers leur
ont ete interdits. Aujourd’hui, cette communaute roum ne compte plus
que quelques milliers de membres, alors que ses traces architecturales
emplissent la ville – eglises, lycees et immeubles divers de plus en
plus vides, que l’Etat a saisis a tour de bras après la montee des
tensions sur Chypre en 1974.

Mais certains refusent de considerer ce declin comme ineluctable. Tel
Dimitri Frangopoulo, qui a dirige pendant quarante ans le principal
lycee grec de la ville et fut un des organisateurs d’une première
conference sur les Roums, cet ete, a Istanbul, en presence de membres
de cette communaute venus d’une dizaine de pays. " Je ne leur ai jamais
reproche d’etre partis, ils ont assez souffert ici, mais j’ai toujours
defendu l’idee qu’un noyau roum devait se maintenir ici coûte que coûte
", dit-il. " Car nul ne sait de quoi l’avenir est fait. Et parce que
les choses s’ameliorent deja, avec la volonte turque d’entrer dans
l’Union europeenne ", precise cet enseignant dont les petits-fils
frequentent son ancien etablissement.

Une loi sur les fondations appartenant aux minorites, passee en
novembre, interdit toujours aux enfants de citoyens etrangers de
frequenter les ecoles des minorites religieuses. Ce qui menace
celles-ci de fermeture et touche particulièrement les enfants des
dizaines de milliers de ressortissants de l’ex-Armenie sovietique
qui travaillent, illegalement, en Turquie.

" Mais cela ira mieux petit a petit, après les elections en
Turquie, si le parti au pouvoir, l’AKP, qui nous a beaucoup aides
pour notre conference, parvient a s’y maintenir ", veut esperer
Dimitri Frangopoulo. Un Don Quichotte, lui aussi ? " Non, estime
Raffi Hermonn. Il a raison de tabler sur l’AKP, qui est plus liberal
qu’islamiste, et en tout cas bien moins nationaliste que l’opposition
dite laïque et republicaine, ce que les Occidentaux ne veulent pas
voir. " C’est en effet le principal parti d’opposition qui a durci la
loi sur les fondations. Son chef, Deniz Baïkal, n’a-t-il pas repete
au Parlement, cette annee encore, qu’en " Turquie, où il n’y a pas
de minorites, tout le monde est turc et musulman " ?

–Boundary_(ID_9lQzYobgfXdzTi4FON42gg)–

Armenian Politician Urges Opposition Forces To Close Ranks

ARMENIAN POLITICIAN URGES OPPOSITION FORCES TO CLOSE RANKS

Mediamax News Agency, Armenia
Nov 28 2006

Yerevan, 28 November: The leader of the National Democratic Union
[NDU], Vazgen Manukyan, today called on Armenia’s opposition parties
"to close ranks and set up a civil front around the idea of building
a state of free citizens".

Vazgen Manukyan, who held the posts of Armenian prime minister and
defence minister in the early 1990s, said that individual political
forces will not be able to achieve desired changes, Mediamax reported.

Moreover, the governance system of the country needs radical reforms
today and "[Armenian President] Robert Kocharyan’s departure from
power will not improve the situation", he believes.

The NDU leader is convinced that the people does not trust the
incumbent authorities which "are ready for new falsifications to
preserve their positions".

Vazgen Manukyan also spoke out in favour of adopting a new Armenian
constitution which he said will make it possible to form an independent
and transparent judiciary system.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ICG: Specific Steps Will Hardly Be Taken At Kocharian-Aliyev Meeting

ICG: SPECIFIC STEPS WILL HARDLY BE TAKEN AT KOCHARIAN-ALIYEV MEETING

PanARMENIAN.Net
28.11.2006 13:54 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The International Crisis Group (ICG) does not
intend to publish new reports on Nagorno Karabakh, because no changes
have occurred in the situation, stated ICG South Caucasus Project
Director Sabine Freizer. She said that the Group will prepare a report
concerning the situation in the region in 2007.

As for the meeting of the Azerbaijani and Armenian Presidents to be
held within the Summit of CIS Head of States in Minsk Sabine Freizer
said she does not believe important decision will be taken on the
settlement of the NK conflict. "Presidents Aliyev and Kocharian are
not resolute in compromising. They have not prepared the society for
the possible compromises.

If the matter comes to agreeing over the principles, the presidents
will have to explain the essence of agreement elements and the
necessity of compromise to the public," she said, reports APA.

Turkish Ex-Ambassador To Baku: OSCE MG Insufficiently Active

TURKISH EX-AMBASSADOR TO BAKU: OSCE MG INSUFFICIENTLY ACTIVE

PanARMENIAN.Net
28.11.2006 14:23 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Inaction is observed in settlement of the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict lately. It causes anxiety. The Nagorno Karabakh
conflict awaits for its settlement for many years," former Turkish
Ambassador to Baku and Washington, Head of the Eurasian Center for
Strategic Research (ECSR) Faruk Logoglu said.

"The problem does not diminish, but expands. Minsk group co-chairing
countries need to bring new dynamism to the case. I think neither
Armenia, nor Azerbaijan benefits from inaction," he remarked. The
ECSR leader believes that the Minsk Group was not active enough
in settlement of the conflict. Faruk Logoglu said that in its time
Turkey tried to take active part in the OSCE Minsk Group. "However,
our country is fraternal to Azerbaijan and due to the known attitude
of Armenia towards us, the MG sometimes listened to us, but sometimes
did not. Turkey only confided to the information after US, France
and Russia’s seized the initiative," he said, reports APA.