A class in war and peace

Merrick Herald, NY
March 8 2007

A class in war and peace

By Scott Brinton

Renowned cellist Lutz Rath spluttered a five-minute series of
nonsensical consonants and vowels as he stood hunched over the
lectern in Calhoun High School’s auditorium last Thursday.

The roughly 100 students before him, in grades 10 to 12, were
laughing hysterically, particularly when Rath raised his tightly
clenched fist and bellowed with greater oomph.

With his flamboyant gestures and quasi-militaristic intonation, Rath
could have been Adolf Hitler. And that was precisely the effect he
was going for.

Rath was performing excerpts from Dada artist Kurt Schwitters’s
"Ursonata," a 40-minute "sound poem" that makes no sense. The 1924
piece, which is nothing more than babble, is intended to be humorous.
At the same time, it perfectly mimics the hateful, bellicose rants of
the fascists like Hitler, said Rath, who was born in 1945 in Germany
during an Allied air raid.

Rath was one of five musicians from the Long Island Philharmonic who
came to Calhoun to perform "Forbidden Music: Music from the
Holocaust." The 45-minute show ran through a handful of works by
artists and composers who were banned in Germany during the Nazi era,
including Schwitters, Viktor Ullman and Gideon Klein.

The quintet finished with the "Terezin Ghetto Requiem." Written by
Czech composer Sylvie Bodorová in 1954, the piece incorporates Jewish
Hebrew psalms and Latin Catholic liturgy in paying homage to the
victims of Terezin, a walled city in Czechoslovakia that the Nazis
turned into a concentration camp.

The Calhoun students were mesmerized. They came from 10th-grade
global studies classes and the Voices of the Past course, a yearlong
elective developed by Calhoun social studies teacher David Goldberg
and English teacher Julie Beth Walz in 2005. The class examines past
genocides, including the Holocaust, with an eye toward protecting
human rights in the future. Goldberg arranged for the Long Island
Philharmonic performance, with a grant from the Nassau Board of
Cooperative Educational Services.

Goldberg, who is in a social-studies education doctorate program at
Columbia University’s Teachers College, said Voices of the Past aims
to show students the horrors of genocide and war to help them
understand that the world can be a very dangerous place, and that
they must stay abreast of current events to ensure that human rights
are preserved across the globe.

To prevent future genocides, Goldberg said the "solutions are
awareness and political pressure. Those are the forces that have
changed history."

Walz, who earned her master’s in English education from Columbia,
said, "Every kid at Calhoun High School should take this class. It’s
life skills. It’s one of those real-world courses."
Walz believes the course imbues students with a greater sense of
empathy. She tells them that they need to inform an adult if they see
bullying, noting that all genocides have begun with smaller violent
acts that eventually led to widespread slaughter.
Lorraine Lupinskie-Huvane, Calhoun’s social studies chairwoman, said
the Holocaust and other genocides are taught in global studies
classes, but she said Voices of the Past, which is open to students
in grades 10 to 12, looks at issues of human rights with far greater
depth. "The opportunities that the teachers can provide through this
course aren’t necessarily what they can get through their other
classes," she said.

In addition to the Holocaust, Voices of the Past examines:

n The Armenian genocide, in which an estimated 800,000 Armenians died
at the hands of the Ottoman Turkish government during World War I.

n The Rwandan genocide, in which nearly a million members of the
Tutsi and moderate Hutu tribes were butchered by extremist Hutu
militias in 1994.

n The Darfur genocide, in which 400,000 civilians have been killed by
the Sudanese government since 2003 in an ongoing conflict between
Sudanese military forces and two rebel groups in Darfur.

Voices students meet daily. One day they study with Goldberg and the
next with Walz. Goldberg focuses on the history of genocide, while
Walz looks at the feelings of individuals caught in war through poems
and newspaper articles. Goldberg said the course goes beyond textbook
study with hands-on learning experiences such as the "Forbidden
Music" concert. He added that a Holocaust survivor and Rwandan
genocide survivor recently spoke in his class.
The course also looks at efforts to achieve world peace. On Feb. 28,
seven students telephoned a U.S. Peace Corps volunteer stationed in
Zambia, in southeast Africa. The Peace Corps paid for the conference
call through its Coverdell World Wise Schools Program, for which
Goldberg applied to participate.

Gregg Hayward, an agricultural and environmental education Peace
Corps volunteer from New Hampshire, spoke about the challenges that
he faces living in a remote village in a developing nation. He also
encouraged students to learn about other cultures. "Keep your eyes
open," Hayward told them as they sat in a circle around a
speakerphone in a small social studies office on Calhoun’s second
floor. "The one thing no one can take from you is your education.
Keep getting educated, and always be open to being educated by other
people. You open your own doors."

Students said the course has changed their global outlook. Senior
Kristen Rudkoski said, "I sort of thought I knew what was going on in
the world." But now Rudkoski realizes she has much to learn.
"Children are the future, and we’re going off to college soon," she
said. "We need to be aware of what’s going on in the world."

Senior Brittany Onorato said the visit by the Holocaust and Rwandan
genocide survivors, in particular, affected her. "They explained
their stories, their struggle, how they overcame their struggle,"
Onorato said. "It really opens your eyes to what happened. You could
see the emotion in their faces."

And junior Kathryn Perafan described Voices of the Past as a
"life-changing" course. "It makes me feel I need to do more to help
out other people," she said.

Soccer: Pyunik feel heat from chasing pack

uefa.com, Switzerland
March 8 2007

Pyunik feel heat from chasing pack

Thursday, 8 March 2007
by Khachik Chakhoyan
from Yerevan

The new football season in Armenia is one of the most eagerly
anticipated in years, with FC Pyunik’s monopoly on the crown set to
be challenged.

Curtain raiser
The campaign gets underway on 21 March with the first round of the
Armenian Cup, but it is the fight for the league title that is
causing real interest. Pyunik’s main rivals for the crown will be FC
Banants and FC Ararat Yerevan, as well as five-times Armenian Cup
winners FC MIKA. However, the surprise packages may well be FC
Gandzasar Kapan and FC Shirak, who have aspirations of making the
top-three after seeing six of their former players return to the
club. FC Kilikia and FC Ulis Yerevan have set their ambitions a bit
lower, while newcomers FC Lernayin Artsakh could represent the dark
horses.

New recruits
With Pyunik set to place an emphasis on youth this season, MIKA could
be the team who provide the greatest threat to their hopes of a
seventh successive title. They have bolstered their squad by signing
Brazilians Akleison and Tales, while goalkeeper Feliks Hakobyan gave
them a major boost by extended his contract by three more years.

Strength in depth
Ararat believe they need to strengthen their defence to mount a
challenge and they are scouring the market in Serbia and F.Y.R.
Macedonia to fortify their rearguard. Rivals Banants have largely
opted to sign local talent but they need to find a replacement for
Aram Hakobyan who left for Ukrainian side FC Illychivets Mariupil.
The arrival of Ugandan striker Eugene Sepuya and Egishe Melikyan
should help their chances, though.

Bright future
With all but three teams stating their intention of blooding their
youngsters this season and with all clubs reporting greater financial
stability, the future of football in Armenia looks to be unusually
bright.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

What awaits Azerbaijan in a clash between US & Iran?

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
March 7, 2007 Wednesday

WHAT AWAITS AZERBAIJAN IN A CLASH BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND
IRAN?;
Experts refuse to hazard a guess

by H. Gasym

AZERBAIJANI EXPERTS REFUSE TO SPECULATE ON THE EFFECT THE AMERICAN
WAR ON IRAN WILL HAVE ON THE SITUATION WITH THE CASPIAN SEA STATUS
AND NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT RESOLUTION; The Azerbaijanis do not
know what to expect from the American invasion of Iran.

The possibility of a war between the United States and Iran is the
talk of the day. For some reason, practically nobody is speaking of
what military action of the Americans, Azerbaijan’s strategic
partners, may mean for Azerbaijan itself. Will it help the status of
the Caspian Sea or the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict?
Or will it advance the Armenian-American rapprochement? Traditionally
enough, officials of the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry decline
comments and refuse to speculate. Hazar Ibragim, Chief of the Foreign
Ministry’s Directorate of Information Policy and Press, only says
that the Foreign Ministry does not want another conflict in the
region.

Milli Mejlis deputy, Jamil Gasanly, points out that the potential of
negotiations with Iran is not yet exhausted.

Neither does Gasanly expect the installation of a new regime in
Tehran to have any effect on the Armenian-American relations which
are already fairly close. "Armenia is ahead of all other counties in
the southern part of the Caucasus in US aid programs," the lawmaker
said.

Political scientist Fikret Sadyhov thinks that the Americans’
appearance in Iran will lead to the installation of a democratic
government. "But not even that will facilitate solutions to the
problems of the Caspian status or Karabakh conflict resolution,"
Sadyhov shrugged. "The Americans display dual standards in the
Karabakh conflict resolution and force their will on us. Some changes
in the US foreign policy are nevertheless possible, and relations
between Azerbaijan and Iran may be somewhat corrected. It may have
positive results, but I’m not sure that the problems will be solved
any time soon."

Speaking of the future of Armenian-American relations, Sadyhov
recalled that Washington regularly issues statements on supporting
Azerbaijani territorial integrity, but these are only words, nothing
more. "All the same, I do not expect any serious changes in
Armenian-American relations," he said.

Source: Ekho (Baku), March 2, 2007, EV

Government to slash internet fees

TeleGeography, DC
March 8 2007

Government to slash internet fees

The government of Armenia yesterday approved a dramatic cut in the
state duties levied on companies providing web access services in a
bid to boost internet uptake. Under local telecoms laws, Armenian
ISPs are required to pay standard taxes plus an annual fixed fee for
using the PSTN of state-run PTO ArmenTel. Smaller service providers
have long argued that the annual fee of up to USD8,500 is prohibitive
and is stilting competition in the market. In response to the
complaints the government proposes a drastic reduction in the fee
through a change to the current legislation.

RWB: Police negligence and nationalist tensions at centre of probe

Reporters without borders (press release), France
March 8 2007

Police negligence and nationalist tensions at centre of probe in
Hrant Dink’s murder

The Turkish government and authorities must do everything possible to
shed light on the 19 January murder of Hrant Dink, the editor of the
Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos, and bring all those responsible to
trial, Reporters Without Borders reiterated today following the
emergence of new evidence of police negligence in the case.

`This murder must not remain unpunished,’ the press freedom
organisation said. `Justice must be done. We continue to be concerned
about the constant threats to Agos. We hope the proposal to amend
article 301 on Turkish identity will be carried out as soon as
possible and that there will be serious political debate about the
question of press freedom.’

The daily newspaper Milliyet published an article on 27 February
about the negligence of the Istanbul police as regards Dink’s
protection. It included a list of sites for protection which the
Istanbul security directorate drew up after the French parliament
passed a law last year making denial of the Armenian genocide a
crime. Although Agos was 12th on the list, the police had felt there
was no need to protect Dink. The day after his murder, the prefect of
the Istanbul police even said at a news conference that he had not
requested police protection.

Dink’s wife Rakel, his daughters Sera and Delal and his son Arat went
to testify at the Istanbul prosecutor’s office on 13 February. One of
the family’s lawyers, Bahri Beln, said they filed a complaint against
those who did not take the necessary measures to protect him.

A total of 28 people have been detained in several cities of Turkey
since Dink’s murder and eight of them have been placed in custody,
but there are still many murky aspects to the case. Yasil Hayal, the
murder’s alleged instigator, retracted his statement after learning
that Erhan Tuncel, an ultra-nationalist and student at the Karadeniz
(Black Sea) University, was a police informer.

During his second interrogation in Kandira prison in the city of
Kocaeli, Hayal told a prosecutor that the aim of his first statement
was to protect Tuncel, who was, he said, the `real instigator.’
Tuncel had informed the police several times a year ago of a plan to
murder Dink.

As the investigation continues, Agos continues to be the target of
threats. Ten people were arrested in Kayseri, in the centre of the
country, on 12 February for sending email messages threatening the
newspaper. Computer material was seized but the suspects were
released.

The debate about article 301 continues to grow in the run-up to
parliamentary elections in November and the presidential election in
May. After a meeting of senior representatives of the ruling Justice
and Development Party (AKP), its deputy president, Faruk Celik, said:
`We want this matter finished with once and for all. But the article
will not be abolished. It will be amended or maintained as it is.’

At Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s request to `get article 301
out of the news,’ members of his government and party met on 19
February to discuss a possible amendment, but failed to come up with
any concrete proposal. Foreign minister Abdullah Gül has come out in
favour of amending article 301, which, if left as it is, could
threaten Turkey’s hopes of joining the European Union. But the nature
of the possible amendment is still not known. Various proposals by
human rights groups that are part of the Common Platform on Human
Rights (IHOP) and by the Association of Turkish Journalists (TGC)
have not been accepted. The TGC has said it favours replacing the
expression `Turkish identity’ in the article by `Turkish people’ with
the aim of shifting its applicability to matters taking place on
Turkish soil.

The shock of Dink’s murder continues to shake Turkish society while
the gulf between ultra-nationalists and pro-Armenians deepens.

Shortly after a mass in Dink’s honour at the Armenian church of St
Mary of Kumkapi, on the European side of Istanbul, on 3 March, two
youths fired shots in the air to scare the people who had gathered in
the adjoining gardens. Identified thanks to security cameras at the
entrance to the church, Volkan Karaova and Yilmaz Murat Ozalp were
arrested in possession of a revolver and blanks by Istanbul
anti-terrorist police.

The Turkish press has reported that the Istanbul prosecutor’s office
ordered that they be held for an additional two days for further
questioning. The police took Karaova into custody three months ago
after he fired at a Greek church in Istanbul’s Eminonu district

le=21244

http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_artic

ANKARA: Like a Middle Ages witch hunt

Turkish Daily News, Turkey
March 8 2007

Turkish press scanner
Thursday, March 8, 2007

Like a Middle Ages witch hunt – Bugün:

In an articled published in the daily Bugün yesterday, Turkish
Labor Party Leader Doðu Perinçek took the stand during his trial in
the Swiss city of Lausanne for saying so-called Armenian genocide was
an imperialist lie.

Perinçek said the case resembles a Middle Ages witch hunt and is an
indicator of the collapse of Western civilization. Famous U.S.
history professor Justin McCharty is attending the Perinçek trials as
a special witness.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Anand draws with Aronian, inches closer towards title

Indiatimes, India
March 8 2007

Anand draws with Aronian, inches closer towards title

PTI

RSS Feeds| SMS SPO to 8888 for latest updates

LINARES (Spain), Mar 8: Title contender Viswanathan Anand shunned
risks and played out a safe draw with defending champion Levon
Aronian of Armenia to retain his slender half point lead after the
12th round of the Morelia-Linares Chess tournament underway here.

With just two rounds to go in the category-20 event, the Indian ace
took his tally to 7.5 points out of a possible 12 and will now meet
Hungarian Peter Leko and Vassily Ivanchuk of Ukraine in the last two
rounds.

On the other hand, 16-year-old Magnus Carlsen of Norway continued
with his impressive run and remained on the heels of Anand after
splitting point with top seed Veselin Topalov of Bulgaria. Carlsen
took his tally to an impressive seven points and remained in sole
second spot.

The other two games of the day ended decisively with Russian Peter
Svidler accounting for an out-of-sort Leko and Ivanchuk going down
rather tamely against another Russia Alexander Morozevich.

As things stand, Svidler moved to sole third spot after the victory
with 6.5 points and maintained the tag of being the only unbeaten
player in the tournament while Aronian was pushed to fourth spot on
six points. Topalov, Ivanchuk and Morozevich share the fifth spot
having 5.5 points apiece while Leko, after his dismal show, is now
firmly in the cellar on 4.5 points.

In the remaining two rounds, Anand’s main contender will be Carlsen
only as the Norwegian boy-wonder has to meet Svidler and Leko in
final outings here.

Svidler is hard to put down in current form while against Leko and
Carlsen will play with black pieces in the tie. In all likelihood,
one point from the remaining two games should be enough for Anand to
grab the title.

Today is the final rest day of the marathon event and the battle
resumes on Friday for the final leg now.

Anand played out a theoretically equal Anti Marshall to draw with
Aronian who played black. The routine opening moves were blitzed out
in quick time and the players signed peace in just 23 moves in this
shortest game of the day.

Svidler was the pick of day as he put an end to his all-draws with an
emphatic victory over Leko who suffered his third loss in the event.

The Sicilian Najdorf by the Russian came good as black as Leko went
haywire in the middle game to allow a dangerous attack.

Svidler wrapped the issue in just 36 moves.

Morozevich also won with black against Ivanchuk from a Scotch opening
game. The age-old variation opted by Ivanchuk allowed enough counter
play for Morozevich to get the complexities he was looking for and
the ensuing tactical manoeuvres ensured his bounce back from the last
spot.

Carlsen drew with Topalov from a Symmetrical English opening. Playing
white Topalov could not get much out of the opening against his well
prepared opponent and it took just 25 moves for both to decide to
split the point.

Parings, Round 13: Aronian v Ivanchuk; Carlsen v Svidler; Morozevich
v Topalov; Anand v Leko.

ANKARA: Turkey stops US Senate measure, for now

Turkish Daily News
March 8 2007

Turkey stops US Senate measure, for now
Thursday, March 8, 2007

Senator objects to language on Armenian genocide, prompting delay of
at least two weeks

ÜMÝT ENGÝNSOY
WASHINGTON – Turkish Daily News

Acting on concerns by Ankara and the Washington administration over
a reference to the "Armenian genocide" in a proposed congressional
resolution on Turkey, a senior Republican senator has moved to
temporarily stop the passage at a Senate panel of themeasure, which
urges the Turks, among other things, to establish normal relations
with Armenia.

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee was scheduled on Tuesday to
vote on the resolution introduced by Sen. Joe Biden, the committee’s
Democratic chairman. However, after opposition by Richard Lugar, the
panel’s ranking Republican senator, it was delayed for at least two
weeks.

The non-binding measure condemns Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
Dink’s murder and calls on Turkey to abolish a penal code article
blamed for restricting freedom of expression and to launch
diplomatic, political and trade ties with Armenia. Turkey indeed
prefers if the resolution does not pass the Senate at all, but is
particularly concerned over a reference to the Armenian genocide in
the measure’s background section. Ankara fears that a Senate approval
of the original text may act as a precedent for future congressional
action.

Although President George W. Bush’s administration, which has
strongly condemned Dink’s assassination, would like to see Turkey
repeal the Turkish Penal Code’s (TCK) controversial Article 301 and
set up good relations with Armenia, it also shares Ankara’s worries
over the resolution’s reference to the Armenian genocide. Therefore,
the administration is seeking to persuade the panel’s senators to
drop that reference, diplomats said. As a result, Sen Lugar, who is
generally known for his support for Turkey, raised an objection to
the resolution’s language when the measure came to the Tuesday vote.
According to committee rules, Biden said that the vote would be
delayed until the panel’s next business meeting, which may take place
in two or three weeks’ time. Lugar and Biden are expected to sit
together and seek to agree on a joint text before that gathering. The
measure, if passed by the panel, will move to the Senate floor.

Turkish diplomats were apparently relieved by the temporary delay.
"We really appreciate Sen. Lugar’s very responsible move," said one
diplomat. U.S. Armenians voiced dismay over the delay, but said they
would continue to actively pursue the original resolution’s passage.
"We are troubled that Senator Lugar – apparently acting at the
request of the administration – has delayed the U.S. Senate’s tribute
to the life and memory of Hrant Dink," said Aram Hamparian, executive
director of the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA),
according to an ANCA statement. "We look forward to the panel, at the
next opportunity, rejecting any efforts to block or water down this
measure, and passing it in the form it was introduced," he said."It
is unfortunate that the committee deferred action on this important
resolution," said Democratic Sen. Chris Dodd, a member of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, according to ANCA.

Dink, editor of the Turkish-Armenian daily Agos, was shot dead in
front of his office in Istanbul on Jan. 19. A teenager, who has
confessed to killing Dink, and a group of ultranationalists have been
arrested for the crime. Dink received a suspended six-month sentence
under Article 301 in 2005 for insulting "Turkish identity." Turkey’s
government says it is working to amend Article 301, but that the
legislation will not be abolished altogether. Turkey officially
recognized Armenia when the latter gained its independence from the
former Soviet Union in 1991. But Ankara refuses to establish
diplomatic ties with Yerevan and open the border, saying Armenia has
been keeping the Nagorno-Karabakh region inside Azerbaijan and
another 20 percent of Azeri territory under its occupation.

The most important Armenian-related resolution pending in Congress
is a measure introduced in the House of Representatives in late
January, calling on the recognition of World War I-era killings of
Armenians during the Ottoman Empire as genocide. It may enter the
House agenda in late March or April.

ANKARA: The best Turkey can hope…

Turkish Daily News
March 8 2007

The best Turkey can hope…
Thursday, March 8, 2007

The best we can hope for during the year 2007 is damage control
rather than constructive policies

Cengiz ÇANDAR

Turkey is increasingly turning inwards. Despite the
intense diplomatic activity in the Middle East that it is also
considered a major trouble, its increasingly inward looking posture
is a fact and it will remain to be so for the rest of the whole year.
2007 is a very crucial election year for Turkey. We are only two
months away from knowing who will be the heir to Kemal Atatürk at the
most venerable post in the Turkish political system, the post of the
president, for the next seven years. There will be no time for
sobering. The presidential election will be followed by an intense
campaign for the parliamentary elections due to be held in fall.
Until the last month of the year, we will be unable to know what kind
of a government Turkey will have, possibly, for the next five years.
That is not the ideal climactic period for bold initiatives in the
area of foreign policy, and the politicians would tend to respond to
the appeals of populism more than anytime else. The overall Turkish
political climate is intoxicated by a heavy dose of ultra-nationalism
that no political party or personality could ignore during a quixotic
election period. Tayyip Erdoðan, above all, is not an exception as he
has strong aspirations for the presidential post, nor Abdullah Gül,
the likelier next prime minister, in the case Erdoðan climbs up to
the highest post in Turkish political hierarchy. The immediate victim
to Turkish domestic agenda and political priorities would be the
option of Turkey’s rapproachment with the Iraqi Kurdish leadership.
The issue is already a controversial one and the Iraqi Kurdish
leaders, particularly of Massoud Barzani’s latest statements were not
helpful at all for Erdoðan and Gül to initiate a dialogue with him.
The best we can hope during the year 2007 is damage control rather
than a constructive Turkish-Iraqi Kurdish relationship. Such a
constructive relationship, seemingly, has to await the first months
of 2008, just like the Turkish-EU relations would be in the waiting
lounge until then.

Iran and Saudi Arabia: That realism dictated by the domestic
political environment in Turkey may not be corresponding to the new
parameters of the Realpolitik that seems to dominate the region
during the year. Iran and Saudi Arabia are emerging as the major
regional powers over a vacuum that Turkey’s inaction would leave
behind. Despite its high-profile diplomacy in the Middle East in the
preceding months – during which we have seen a continous flow of
heads of states, prime ministers and foreign ministers flowing into
Turkey, and while Erdogan and Gül were undertaking initiatives
ranging from starting a dialogue with Hamas to participating the Arab
League summits, from talking to every party in Lebanon to shuttling
between the odds, Tehran and Jerusalem – Turkish diplomacy could not
deliver anything to the extent that the latecomer and a generally
prudent Saudi diplomacy did during the last weeks. Lebanese daily The
Daily Star, in its editorial, was generous to Turkey though, in the
following lines: `It has been instructive in recent weeks to watch
three major local powers – Iran, Turkey and Saudi Arabia – each in
its own way step up and assert both interests ant its capacity to
positively influence others in the region. The noteworthy aspect here
is that Saudi Arabia, Iran and Turkey have opted for engagement, calm
discussions and multilateral coordination as their preferred means of
action – in sharp contrast with the Anglo-American-Israeli tendency
to shoot or change regimes first, and then sit down to chat.’
Notwithstanding with this praise, when it comes to a problem that it
is a direct party, Turkey does not act much in contrast with that
Anglo-American-Israeli tendency. It is not quintessentially eager for
engagement with Iraqi Kurdish authorities opting for calm discussions
when it comes to discuss how to tackle the PKK presence in northern
Iraq and what to do in resolving a potential conflict on Kirkuk or to
probe the possibility of a multilateral coordination. For
multilateral coordination, the United States, whose participation is
a sine qua non, will, instead, be the focal point of Turkish anger,
if the Armenian Genocide Resolution comes to the floor of the
Congress. Under such adverse circumstances, some of which is its own
making, what Turkish diplomacy could hope for the best is to host the
international meeting on Iraq, next month in Istanbul. And, of
course, the damage control for the rest of the year in an extremely
volatile region where damage might prove uncontrollable.

Armenian genocide denial on trial – in Switzerland

World War 4 Report, NY
March 8 2007

Armenian genocide denial on trial – in Switzerland

A disturbing consensus seems to be emerging in Europe that the best
reaction to genocide denial is to ban it. In addition to the many
European laws against denying the Nazi Holocaust, Bosnia is now
considering such a law for its own more recent genocide. And now
Switzerland is prosecuting a Turkish writer for denying the 1915
Armenian genocide. From the Turkish daily Hurriyet, March 8:

In Lausanne, Dogu Perincek goes on trail for denying Armenian
genocide claims
A delegation of 160 people, included former President of Northern
Cyprus, Rauf Denktas, has gone to Switzerland to show support for the
head of Turkey’s Workers’ Party, Dogu Perincek, who is on trial there
for publicly denying Armenian allegations of genocide.

Perincek, who is being tried in Lausanne, was joined in court by a
large group of academicians, historians, retired military officials,
and politicians from Turkey, who left Istanbul on a specially
chartered Turkish Airlines flight for Geneva. Speaking prior to
departure at Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport, Denktas told reporters
"Thousands of our Armenian siblings live here under good conditions.
Workers come from Armenia to make a living here, and do so. So
friendship between Turkey and Armenia is necessary on both sides. But
friendship cannot be based on lies and slander."

The general leader of the Turkish Workers’ Party, Dogu Perincek is on
trial in Switzerland for calling Armenian allegations of genocide in
Turkey "an imperialist lie" during a 2005 demonstration in Lausanne.
Reports say Perincek left Turkey for his trial in Lausanne carrying
90 kilos worth of Russian and Armenian documents with him.

Now which is more disturbing, the fact that Perincek is being
prosecuted, or that he is getting all this support from the Turkish
establishment? And what is with this "Turkish Workers’ Party"?
Answers.com indicates there was a party of this name 30 years ago
which was banned because of a supposed link to "Kurdish separatism."
Could this be the same or a related entity? Given the unfortunate
Kurdish-Armenian rivalry which the Turkish state has been able to
exploit to its advantage, it’s not impossible…

http://www.ww4report.com/node/3312