The Ripple Effects Of A Political Murder

THE RIPPLE EFFECTS OF A POLITICAL MURDER

EurActiv.com, Belgium
March 5 2007

In this Centre for Economic and Foreign Policy Studies (EDAM) bulletin
article, Sinan Ulgen, EDAM chairman, comments on the assassination
of Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant Dink.

The author argues that the assassination of Dink has been "a watershed
event for Turkey", which caused a "public outpouring of sorrow and
sadness". However, he also thinks that this event should be seen as
an "opportunity to make a stand against the rise of a dangerous form
of nationalism".

Ulgen goes on to explain that the current form of nationalism found
in Turkey "is not only on the increase but is also changing course"
to a "more aggressive soul".

Among the reasons for this he sees the rise of political Islam,
but also the Turkish judiciary’s interpretation of article 301 of
the Turkish penal code, which "limiting the freedom of expression".

Nevertheless, Ulgen says that democratic forces in Turkey have become
aware of the problem and are engaging in a "long-standing struggle
to enhance the respect for liberal democratic values".

The author also points out that the EU’s raising of the bar for
Turkish membership and "anti-Turkish" rhetoric by some European
leaders actually "undermine the confidence of the Turkish population
in reaching this goal".

Ulgen concludes by urging "the time has come for Turks to strive to
eradicate this ugly face of nationalism", even though support from
their American and European allies might be uncertain.

BAKU: Infrastructure Rehabilitation In Armenia-Occupied Azeri Lands

INFRASTRUCTURE REHABILITATION IN ARMENIA-OCCUPIED AZERI LANDS NEEDS $60BN

Today, Azerbaijan
March 5 2007

Prime Minister Artur Rasizade has met with Kori Udovicki, Assistant
Secretary-General and UNDP Director of the Regional Bureau for Europe
and Commonwealth of Independent States.

Underscoring UNDP contribution to the various spheres of the economy
of Azerbaijan, Artur Rasizade expressed hope for further expansion
of the relations.

He briefed the guest about the Nagorno Karabakh Conflict between
Azerbaijan and Armenia, saying rehabilitation of the residential
areas, infrastructure, industry and social facilities in Azerbaijan’s
territories under Armenian occupation requires US $60 billion,
APA reports.

Kori Udovicki highly appreciated Azerbaijan’s stance to settle
the conflict in a peaceful way, saying the conflict needs a quick
solution. Kori Udovicki added that UNDP will render all assistance
to Azerbaijani refuges and internally displaced people on the scope
of the Government-submitted Repatriation Program.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/37383.html

ANKARA: Poison In Armenian Blood And Making Politics Through Dink’s

POISON IN ARMENIAN BLOOD AND MAKING POLITICS THROUGH DINK’S DEATH
Sedat Laciner
Translated By Hasan Selim Ozertem (USAK)

Journal of Turkish Weekly
March 5 2007

Unfortunately, Turkish-Armenian relations are being controlled by the
discussions about Turks and Armenians who died nearly a century ago
instead of being related with the living people of the two societies.

In time, the past has become more important and Armenian issue has
been turned into an ‘Armenian Issue Industry’. Many people from the
Armenian Diaspora owe their reputation and authority to this problem
and gain income from the conflict between Turks and Armenians.

Armenia, which was established in 1991, unfortunately has contracted
this disease. Currently, no one can ask questions to Kocharyan about
the economy, democratization, the Karabakh issue or any other current
or vital Armenian problems, but ‘genocide’. Whenever he is in trouble,
Mr. Kocharyan always repeats the Armenian claims against Turkey; not
only when he is in the country but also when he is in abroad. Before
anybody to be able to ask questions about the Azeri territories
under Armenian occupation for more than a decade, he says that
"Turks massacred us in 1915 and now they may do the very same thing
again." When they ask about the democratization and the economic
growth of the country his answer is ready again "We are besieged by
the Turks that is why our country cannot develop."

Lately, the hottest issue among the radicals in Armenia and the
Armenian Diaspora is Hrant Dink’s murder. Dink was an Istanbul Armenian
and an intellectual. For several times, I had the opportunity to
meet him face to face and the ones who know the matter deeply will
admit how superficial it would be to relate Dink’s death with the
Armenian issue. This is a job of the gangs, who call themselves
‘deep state’ and are against the democratization and the EU process
in Turkey. Besides, most of the victims of the assassinations are of
the Turkish origin. As a matter of fact that Dink is the only Armenian
victim in political murders in the Republican history.

Another regrettable dimension is that those, who Hrant Dink had fought
against all of his life, is trying to make politics through Dink’s
death. The some of the radicals in Armenian diaspora try to abuse
his death to deepen the Turkish-Armenian problem although Dink made
all possible efforts to close both peoples when he was alive.

The Diaspora blamed Dink of being a betrayer and a servant of Turkey.

In 2004, on the last week of November an international meeting was
held in Marseille, in France. In this meeting, the tension increased
between Turkey’s Armenians and the radicals of the Armenian Diaspora.

Being humiliated by the Armenian Diaspora, Etyen Mahcupyan and Hrant
Dink blamed the radicals in the Diaspora of making politics through
the corpses and not wanting a resolution in Armenian issue. Mahcupyan
and Dink advocated that Turkey’s EU membership would be a key factor
for the resolution of the Armenian issue and they claimed that the
Diaspora had not changed and was afraid of any step that would be
taken by Turkey.[1] Mahcupyan summarizes the meeting as follows:

"I said that "You are resisting against Turkey trying to become a
member of the EU; which means that in fact, you are resisting against
the Armenian genocide to be recognized." They got angry. I continued
as "You would be relieved if no Armenians had left in Turkey since it
would only be your voice to be heard. You still prefer to make politics
through the corpse. However, the politics should be made through the
live people." And I added that "The Armenians in Turkey are aware of
everything." Up to now, it was impossible to hear the voice of Turkey’s
Armenians in international meetings. Due to this fact, it was being
perceived that there was a monolithic, a total Armenian opinion. In
this meeting, the rigid and sick attitude of the Armenian Diaspora
was revealed once again. Since the resistance of the Diaspora on
Turkey’s membership to the EU not only contradicts with the interests
of Armenia but also against the interests of Armenians in Turkey."[2]

Dink, being one of Turkish Armenians and the chief editor of the AGOS
weekly newspaper, attended to the meeting and blamed the Armenian
Diaspora of failing to change[3];

"Change is something that draws everyone behind it and becomes
determinative. In fact, this is the most important blessing of the
humankind. The ones, who say that some people cannot change – which
Diaspora claims that Turkey has not change – are in a big mistake.

However, the world and Turkey is changing and the Diaspora should
participate in this and support Turkey’s change and democratization
process. Today, the Diaspora should ask itself what is the meaning
of the carried on campaigns against Turkey’s EU membership by the
Armenian Diaspora in Europe, particularly by the Diaspora in France.

Because this membership process definitely changes Turkey and if
the "Armenian Genocide" problem to be resolved, this would be in
the framework of this process. Accordingly, blocking this process,
in a way means blocking the resolution and preventing Turkish people
to question their history and to see the truths. The Diaspora should
primarily think about the future of the Armenian world. And the future
of this world is closely related with the security and the future
of Armenia. The aimed objective should particularly be this and the
Diaspora should reorganize all of its demands in this context. Thus,
nowadays it is the common sense that the Diaspora needs the most."

His criticisms on Diaspora do not stop here. Mr. Dink stated that
the Diaspora had built the Armenian identity on Turkish hostility and
he defined this situation as "the poison in the Armenian blood". In
accordance with Dink’s opinion, Armenians by building their identity
on Turkish opposition was only poisoning themselves and neglecting
the most important parts of the Armenian identity. He was insisting
that Armenian identity should have been built on Armenia and the
Turkish hostility "should be replaced with the noble ties that
would be established with Armenia". In fact, he promoted the whole
relations with Armenia only for the possibility of evolution of a
new approach. While being accused as a betrayer Dink took the risk
of being not-wanted-man not only in Turkey but also among Armenians.

Dink was accusing the Diaspora of "making politics through the corpse"
in Marseille Conference. Unfortunately, the Diaspora insists on this
habit and now they are making politics through the Dink’s corpse.

By the way, it should be noted that the ‘Armenian Issue Industry’
on the Armenian side creates a similar industry here in Turkey and
this would result in the problems to become permanent and never to
be resolved.

5 March 2007

[email protected]

———————— ————————————————– ——

[1] Sefa Kaplan, ‘Rahatýz Diye Uzulmeyin’, (Do Not Be Disturbed Because
We are in Comfort), Hurriyet, 30 Kasým 2004; ‘Diasporaya Saðduyu
Daveti’, (Common Sense Call for the Diaspora), Agos, 26 Kasým 2004.

[2] Sefa Kaplan, ‘Rahatýz Diye Uzulmeyin’ (Do Not Be Disturbed Because
We are in Comfort), Hurriyet, 30 Kasým 2004.

[3] ‘Diasporaya Saðduyu Daveti’ (Common Sense Call for the Diaspora)
, Agos, 26 Kasým 2004.

–Boundary_(ID_6uQuKmh9V4V3BrtzlnQ54g)–

BAKU: Kona: Turkey And Azerbaijan Should Conclude Security Agreement

KONA: TURKEY AND AZERBAIJAN SHOULD CONCLUDE SECURITY AGREEMENT

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
March 5 2007

"Armenia’s aggressive actions should be always brought to
discussion. France and members of the European Union support Armenia.

It does not seem real that Armenia will release the occupied
Azerbaijani territories, we can even say that Armenia can deepen its
aggressive policy," Gamze Kona, professor of Turkish Military Academy,
told the APA’s Turkey bureau.

Gamze Kona, the author of the books on regional security in Turkish and
English said that "great states" do not condemn Armenia’s aggressive
policy.

"Armenia can maneuver in broad sphere. Alongside with OSCE Minsk
Group, Turkey should strengthen the intergovernmental relations and
support Azerbaijan. It does not seem convincing that several states
will impose sanction on Armenia. Turkey should strengthen pressure
on Armenia and simultaneously help Azerbaijan," she said.

Gamze Kona said that Turkey and Azerbaijan should conclude security
agreements.

"Armenia and Russia signed treaty on military cooperation 4-5 years
ago. Such a treaty was signed between Greece and the southern part
of Cyprus. "Caucasus security treaty" was brought to discussion in
the reign of Suleyman Demirel and five times underwent changes. This
treaty was not signed, as Armenia and Russia did not want it. These
countries avoid Turkey’s and Azerbaijan’s resistance. I consider that
Turkey and Azerbaijan should immediately conclude security agreement.

Turkey should stand for ensuring Azerbaijan’s security. As Azerbaijan
has oil, great states will try to protect their interests in your
country. The name of the treaty to be signed between Azerbaijan and
Turkey is not so important, its’ signing is very important. Why have
Armenia and Russia signed such an agreement but Turkey and Azerbaijan
have not concluded it yet? Azerbaijan’s security is important for
the security of Turkey, Middle East and Caucasus," she said.

BAKU: Nazim Ibrahimov: Action Strategy Of Diaspora Organizations Wil

NAZIM IBRAHIMOV: ACTION STRATEGY OF DIASPORA ORGANIZATIONS WILL BE ADOPTED IN FORUM OF AZERBAIJANI AND TURKISH DIASPORAS

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
March 5 2007

"Preparation to the forum of Azerbaijani and Turkish Diasporas to be
held on March 9 in Baku is already completed. A part of the delegations
had already come to Azerbaijan. The opening ceremony of the forum will
be held in the Palace named after Heydar Aliyev and conference part in
"Park INN" hotel.

Over 500 representatives from 48 countries will partake in the
conference," the chief of the State committee working with Azerbaijani
Living Abroad Nazim Ibrahimov told the APA.

He said that Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, Turkish Premier
Rajab Tayyip Erdogan, President of Turkish Republic of Northern
Cyprus Mehmet Ali Talat, Deputy Chairman of Lithuania Parliament,
Director General of National Relations Department, National Relations
Minister of Estonia, representatives of parliaments of Germany,
Belgium, Bulgaria will attend the forum. He said that the forum is
expected to adopt some documents about Nagorno Karabakh conflict,
false Armenian genocide and strategy plan of Diaspora organizations.

"The action strategy of Azerbaijani and Turkish Diaspora organizations
will include the information about history of Diaspora organizations
and further steps. This document has been worked out at the
participation of the representatives of both countries," he said.

Ibrahimov also said that coordination council of Azerbaijani and
Turkish Diaspora organizations will be established in the forum. He
said that organization will have great role in coordination the work
of the Diaspora organizations. Ibrahimov noted that Congress II of
European Azerbaijanis will be held in Baku a day after the forum.

"Changes in the structure of the organization are expected to happen
in the congress. According to the regulation the institution should
elect president and vise-president," he said.

Boxing: Darchinyan: Small But Perfectly Formed

DARCHINYAN: SMALL BUT PERFECTLY FORMED

ITV.com, UK
March 5 2007

Andy Warhol once famously predicted that ‘In the future, everybody
will be famous for 15 minutes’.

Vic Darchinyan would probably settle for half of that.

The Australia-based Armenian stretched his unbeaten pro record to
28-0 by stopping grizzled Mexican Victor Burgos at the weekend.

It was another exciting performance by Darchinyan, who really should
be a household name by now given his tremendous power and crowd
pleasing style.

The reason he isn’t has nothing to do with his menacing persona, a
boxing skills deficiency or because of any fault of his promotional
team.

It’s because of his size.

Put simply Darchinyan is a little man striving for recognition in an
industry where, rightly or wrongly, big is beautiful.

If the heavyweight division is the Premiership then flyweight,
where Vic currently plies his trade is, in terms of pulling power,
the Unibond League.

And that’s a real tragedy because a fighter like Darchinyan should
be cherished.

He punches like nobody’s business, has a chin like a concrete breeze
block and is only concerned with testing himself against the best
out there.

His promoter Garyy Shaw reckons that if boxing had more fighters like
the IBF champ it wouldn’t be in the sad state it is in now and it’s
difficult to disagree.

The man they call ‘Raging Bull’ didn’t turn pro until he was 24,
but he’s not wasted much time since.

Less than four years after turning over he knocked out the previously
unbeaten Colombian Irene Pacheco to claim the IBF belt.

He has made six successful defences since, winning them all inside
the distance.

If he was three stone heavier he would be known around the world but
as things stand he has to be content with the occasional autograph
request while out and about in Sydney, where he now lives.

Listening to him speak ahead of the Burgos fight and in interviews
immediately after you get the impression that Darchinyan is not
motivated by money and truly believes that boxing is a sport and not
a business.

He wants to test himself against the best out there and for that he
should be applauded.

The best fight out there now would be to move up to super-flyweight
and get it on with Jorge Arce.

Arce is everything Darchinyan isn’t.

A flash, personable Mexican who has his own chat show and who came
into the ring for his last fight on a horse!

However one thing both men do have in common is the ability to fight
and a contest between the two would be guaranteed mayhem, though boxing
politics means that the fight won’t be happening anytime soon (Shaw and
Arce’s promoter Bob Arum are currently involved in a legal wrangle).

Arce said in his post-fight interview that he wants to move up some
three divisions, box new super-bantamweight boss Rafael Marquez,
beat him and then mix it with Filipino buzzsaw Manny Pacquiao.

Such talk may be a tad over-ambitious, but his attitude is so
refreshing and there are several overpaid, overhyped heavyweights
out there who would do well to take a leaf out of little Vic’s book.

As the old saying goes, ‘It’s not the size of the dog in the fight,
it’s the size of the fight in the dog’.

,14442,6243_1959298,00.html

http://www.itv-boxing.com/News/Story_Page/0

Mourning An Armenian-Turkish Editor

MOURNING AN ARMENIAN-TURKISH EDITOR
By James Vaznis, Globe Staff

Boston Globe, MA
March 5 2007

Both sides of debate reflect on his legacy

WATERTOWN — As the nearly century-old debate rages half a world away
about whether Turks committed genocide against Armenians, members of
both cultures came together yesterday to commemorate what some see
as the latest casualty of the conflict.

Hrant Dink, an Armenian-Turkish editor, was slain in Istanbul in
January. His newspaper columns had long demanded respect and improved
conditions for Armenians and recognition of the deep and tortured
history of Armenians in Turkey. Dink was gunned down in broad daylight
Jan. 19 on a sidewalk outside his office — allegedly by a teenage boy.

Hundreds of Armenian-Americans — and some Turkish-Americans —
gathered yesterday for a commemoration known as a Karsunk, the
traditional end of the mourning period of a person’s death and an
opportunity to reflect on a person’s legacy.

Many expressed optimism that Dink’s death will enable Armenians to
gain worldwide recognition of a genocide they say Turks began against
their people in 1915 , resulting in the deaths of an estimated 1.3
million Armenians.

"His legacy is for Armenians to live side by side with Turks without
retribution," said Tamar Barkhordarian, a nurse from Watertown. "He
risked his life for freedom of speech."

His death prompted tens of thousands people, including empathetic
Turks, to walk in silence through the streets of Istanbul on the day
of his funeral.

"He had the guts and courage to speak about human rights and to speak
about the injustice that has been done to the Armenian ancestry of
Turkey," said Apo Torosyan, an artist from Peabody. "He knew his life
was in danger by speaking out."

Some Armenian-Americans declined to be interviewed for this story
in fear that Turkish government officials would punish relatives who
live in the country.

But in a show of support, some Turkish-Americans and Turks turned
out for the commemoration.

"Everybody was horrified by his murder," said Gunduz Vassaf, a former
psychology professor who was born in Boston, and later added, "It’s
a conscience of a nation bleeding, and it led to this outpouring."

During a service yesterday at the orthodox St. James Armenian Apostolic
Church, mourners compared Dink to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and
said a prayer in Dink’s honor. Then, well-wishers attended a luncheon
in a gymnasium next door, nibbling on sandwiches and some Armenian
dishes, such as grape leaves stuffed with rice and onions.

A few Armenian-Americans circulated a flier asking people to call
members of the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee and urge them
to pass legislation condemning Dink’s murder as well as pushing for
the Turkish government to repeal a law that hinders free speech,
especially in talking about the Armenian genocide.

The gymnasium was adorned with pictures of Dink, candlelight vigils
in his honor, and even of his body covered with a white sheet on a
sidewalk after he was killed.

After the luncheon, state Representative Rachel Kaprielian said
in an interview that Dink was a person who comes around "once in a
blue moon."

"He was a person whose values were more important than his own life,"
she said. "He knew for many years his life was in danger for saying
what he knew was the truth."

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Students "Disciplined" At Universities

STUDENTS "DISCIPLINED" AT UNIVERSITIES
Emine Ozcan

BÝA, Turkey
March 5 2007

University Administrations Collaborate With Public Prosecutors To
Oppress Dissident Students By Constant Inquisitions And Disciplinary
Penalties, Says Eliacýk From The New Students’ Union Initiative.

Recently,33 Students Sentenced To 3,9 Years In Edirne.

BÝA (Istanbul) – These Practices Are Simply Pristine And Totally
Unlawful, Says Kývanc Eliacýk From The New Students’ Union Initiative,
Commenting On The Increasing Number Of Administrative Inquisitions
Towards Dissident Students At Universities Around The Country.

University Administrations Continue Decreeing Disciplinary Penalties
Towards Students Who Are Involved In Political Activities.

In Karadeniz (Black Sea) Technical University (KTU) Numerous Students
Have Been Rusticated Ranging From A Week Up To A Year.

"Protestation Without Permission", "Chanting Slogans", "Participating
In Press Conference" Are Grounds According To The University Rectorate
For Disciplinary Action.

In The Last Four Months 72 Inquisitions Had Been Placed And Seven
Students Who Reacted Against The Yearly Tuition Had Been Punished.

Furthermore, Trabzon Public Prosecutor’s office filed cases against
the students demanding penalties up to five years in prison.

Prosecution and rectorate collaborate

On another accounts, Edirne public Prosecutor’s office filed
accusations against Trakya University students who participated in
a march protesting the murder of Turkish-Armenian writer Hrant Dink.

In recent days, 33 students of the university who organized an
alternative spring festival last year have been sentenced to 3,9
years imprisonment.

Lastly, several students who participated in a protest against
the Supreme Institution of Education (YOK) -which was established
following the military coup in 1980 and seen as its oppressing
prolongation at higher education- Canakkale University of March 18
received notification of administrative inquisitions.

YOK regulations

Spokesperson of the Initiative and international relations expert
at the Confederation Revolutionary Workers’ Unions (DÝSK), Kývanc
Eliacýk notes that the inquisitions are used to intimidate politically
active students.

"Their right to organization and freedom of speech are constantly
violated. Disciplinary penalties and worse still the imprisonments
keep students from using such rights"

Reminding that there’s no crime defined as "protest without permission"
in the Turkish Penal Code, Eliacýk says the YOK Disciplinary
Regulations are used vigorously to oppress students.

Special security forces shouldn’t be present at university campuses,
he added.

2579.htm

–Boundary_(ID_rh6bGy/wnjWhgC24b+ycsA)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.bianet.org/2006/11/01_eng/news9

Boxing: Darchinyan’s Prayer For Ailing Opponent

DARCHINYAN’S PRAYER FOR AILING OPPONENT

The West Australian, Australia
March 5 2007

A concerned Vic Darchinyan cancelled celebrations after his successful
IBF and IBO flyweight titles defences against Victor Burgos, as the
stricken Mexican boxer underwent surgery to remove a blood clot from
his brain.

Former IBF junior flyweight champion Burgos was in a medically-induced
coma with his wife Claudia, other family and friends at his bedside
in a Los Angeles hospital.

Darchinyan and his supporters prayed for Burgos and the Australian
boxer wanted to visit him in hospital before flying home to Sydney,
but was told it wasn’t possible.

"I tried to go to the hospital, I caught up with promoter Gary Shaw
and all his workers, they told me we cannot go, that they we’re not
allowed," Darchinyan said.

"Only tomorrow Gary Shaw can go and it’s going to be too late, my
flight is a few hours from here."

Burgos was carried from the ring on a stretcher after their fight was
stopped in the 12th round in a bout which improved the power-punching
Darchinyan’s record to 28-0 (22 KOs).

Darchinyan knocked Burgos down with a powerful body blow in the second
round but the Mexican fought on until the fight was halted when his
legs wobbled after he’d taken a series of punches.

A statement from Burgos’ promotion company Don King Productions said
medically induced coma was a common technique used after head trauma
to reduce harmful brain swelling.

The release said doctors reported Burgos had shown certain signs of
movement in the intensive care unit "that could only be described
as positive".

Sydney-based Darchinyan praised Burgos for his courage and said he
hoped the 32-year old fighter would make a full recovery.

While he is renowned for predicting a knockout win before every
fight, Darchinyan took no pleasure from his latest win and dominant
performance.

"Of course I was unhappy, I wish he’s going to be alright," Darchinyan
said.

"I wanted to knock him out and for him to get up and go to his corner
on his legs, I don’t like what happened in the ring.

"They took him to hospital still in a very bad condition.

"I give him a lot of credit, he’s a tough guy."

While he spent time with some of his Armenian supporters at a
restaurant today before leaving for Australia, Darchinyan told them
he didn’t want to celebrate his win given the circumstances.

"Yesterday and today cannot be a celebration, I told them I don’t
want it," Darchinyan said.

"We mentioned the guy’s (Burgos) name and everyone prayed for him
and wished him good luck."

Although Darchinyan said before the fight it would probably be his
last at flyweight, he revealed there was the possibility he could
have one more bout in the division.

While the other flyweight champions have avoided Darchinyan, he could
fight Japan’s unbeaten former WBA light flyweight champion Koki Kameda,
who has moved up to a division.

"If he’s going to fight me, I’ll stay in the weight division, if not
I want to move up," Darchinyan said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Stumbling Over Political And Historical Themes

STUMBLING OVER POLITICAL AND HISTORICAL THEMES
By Stefan Steinberg

World Socialist Web Site, MI
March 5 2007

The increasing commercialisation of major modern film festivals obliges
a festival director and his staff to strike a balance between a number
of competing interests. Large corporations, which invest considerable
sums of money in the festival, are keen to secure advantages from
product placement, and also have an interest in seeing that films
critical of their activities are not prominently presented. The
cooperation of international television stations and media outlets
requires that the festival staff ensure that a sufficient number
of stars tread the red carpet. Under such conditions, the room to
present artistically engaging cinema becomes increasingly limited.

In previous years, the director of the Berlin Film Festival, Dieter
Kosslick, has won some support from the media as well as cinema circles
for his readiness to incorporate a broad mix of themes and film genres
in his festival selection. This year, banal and thoroughly uncritical
documentaries about fashion tsars Karl Lagerfeld and Christian Dior
seemed to be an evident sop in the direction of one of the festival’s
main sponsors, the French-based cosmetic multinational, L’Oreal.

Perhaps adversely influenced by some criticisms of last year’s festival
as too solemn and politically minded, Kosslick has also introduced a
new category aimed at the food gourmet and the world of gastronomic
consumption-"Eat, Drink, See Movies." "After 25 years in the film
business," Kosslick observes, "I know one thing for certain: without
good food, nothing happens."

One might unhappily conclude that his activities in the film world have
increasingly drawn him into the sort of social circles that can only
enjoy a film when the wine is right. In any event, under conditions
where the consequences of war and the brutality of everyday life
in every social sphere are increasingly apparent, a number of the
selected films at this year’s Berlinale left a thoroughly bad taste
in the mouth.

The main competition selection at this year’s festival was an eclectic
collection of films, combining serious social and historical issues
with appalling commercial contributions such as Zack Snyder’s 300,
based on the comics of Frank Miller (Sin City), which apparently seeks
to relativise and aestheticise a cinematic bloodbath by situating the
action-the battle of Thermopylae between Greek and Persian forces-in
the year 480 BC.

Goodbye Bafana (director Bille August) is an unconvincing and at times
cliched English-Xhosa co-production dealing with the imprisonment
of the South African leader Nelson Mandela, based on the memoirs
of his white prison guard of 20 years. The political content of
Mandela’s brand of African nationalism is uncritically treated,
and we are left merely with the idealised portrait of a man whose
personal characteristics and convictions are enough to melt the heart
of his jailer.

I Served the King of England, by veteran Czech filmmaker Jiri Menzel,
deals with the German annexation of Czechoslovakia in 1938. Four
decades ago, Menzel won an Oscar for his film Closely Observed Trains
(1966) and ran into problems with Czech Stalinist censorship, which
disrupted his film career for a time.

Working from scripts written by his favourite novelist Bohumil Hrabal,
Menzel has refined a whimsical and comic style of filmmaking that
continuously seeks to demonstrate the link between passing, accidental
human foible and momentous historic events-a sort of catastrophe
theory of history. His films, which have had their charms, appeal
in the end to those who see no basis for society apart from eternal
universal values such as love and respect for one’s neighbours,
winning him praise from a number of critics for his humanism.

Menzel’s latest film (also based on a Hrabal novel) reveals clearly
that such an approach is inadequate when the filmmaker (and novelist)
takes up complex historical issues. The film relates in flashback the
adventures of an apprentice waiter in Prague during the first half of
the last century. While the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia is dealt
with at some length in the film, remarkably the postwar domination
of the county by a Stalinist regime imposed by Moscow and all the
complex issues bound up with that are given just two minutes’ space.

Through a series of random events, the film’s hero, Jan Dite, becomes
a millionaire and after the Second World War owns a castle-the war
has been good to him. Two local members of the Communist Party pay
a visit and inform him that the new regime has decided to penalise
wealth. They ask Jan Dite how rich he is….. "I have 10 million,"
Dite responds. "Then you will be imprisoned for 10 years," the two
Stalinist officials reply-one year in jail for every million.

In the next and final scene of the film, the elderly Dite resides
towards the end of his life in a humble cottage. He is now a free
man. He has lost all his money, but a decade in a Stalinist prison has
had a beneficial affect and taught him that there are more important
things in life than wealth and privilege. He is now happy with his lot.

Menzel’s film-the work of a director who had his own problems
with the stifling straitjacket of Stalinist so-called "socialist
realism"-entirely sidesteps the history of postwar Czechoslovakia!

This suggests something about the enormous backlog of unresolved
historical questions and problems that beset filmmakers in the Czech
Republic and the other eastern European countries.

In his latest film, The Walker (shown out of competition), US director
Paul Schrader returns to a recurring theme in his films-the plight of
the social outsider. Schrader’s film American Gigolo (1980) focused
on a male escort whose job was to bring some relief into the lives
of the bored wives of rich influential husbands. He takes up the
story again in The Walker. The garish, ostentatious and tiresome
concentration on cars, furnishings and Gere’s physical attributes
in American Gigolo-accessories at the beck and call of the nouveau
riche in Los Angeles in the 1980s-has given way to the polished wood
of stately homes in Washington.

A striking feature of the film is the inclusion of references to modern
US political life. The plot revolves around the attempt to cover
up a murder, which in turn is linked to a confusing web of business
corruption and political intrigue, reaching into the highest levels
of the American state.

Having teased and amused a foursome of bored and frustrated wives
and widows at their weekly round of bridge, Carter Page III (Woody
Harrelson) is able to concentrate on his own private life and
visits his boyfriend-the young conceptual artist Emek. The latter
lives in a flat decorated with photos, blow-ups and reproductions
of Abu Ghraib prisoners. The backdrop to every scene in Emek’s flat
is imagery of US-sponsored torture and suppression. At one point,
Carter kisses his lover through the barbed-wire curtain that Emek
hangs in his flat! In other scenes, as Carter passes through a room,
the television is flickering, inevitably with the latest news of
atrocities and bombings from Iraq.

Entangled in a murder through one of his clients, Carter becomes
increasingly aware of the political ramifications of the affair and
at one point acknowledges, with resignation, his disenchantment with
American political values. He admits his mistake in thinking that
"in America it is the people who elect a president." Schrader and most
of his cast, judging by their comments in interviews surrounding the
film’s release, are intensely uneasy about the direction of American
politics.

At the same time, Schrader is unable to make a convincing film out of
such a mix. The director’s snapshots of the Iraq war and Abu Ghraib
are confrontational and blunt, but the intrigue at the heart of
the film remains vague and remote. The transformation of Carter (his
favourite quote: "I am not naïve, I am superficial!") from a parasitic
and fawning attachment of idle rich women into quasi-detective and
scourge of the Washington establishment is unconvincing. Having
long ago rejected any confidence in the mass of the population as a
force for progressive change, Schrader presents us with an unlikely
individual prepared to stand up to the depravities of the Washington
business-political machine.

Harrelson’s Carter Page excels when it comes to cynical broadsides
aimed at the superficiality of official bourgeois Washington and
its mores, and revels in his toiletry as he prepares himself for
his soirees with rich wives and widows, but all that constitutes
an inadequate basis for a character standing up to the political
corruption in Washington and weakens the impact of the rather
harder-hitting film one suspects Schrader hoped to make.

The Lark Farm

The Lark Farm by the Taviani brothers, veterans of Italian cinema, is
one of a handful of film works that examines the 1915 genocide of the
Armenians by Turkish forces. Some years ago, the Canadian-Armenian
director Atom Egoyan made a scrappy and unsatisfactory attempt,
Ararat, to tell the story of the massacre of Armenians from a variety
of standpoints, including through the modern-day eyes of relatives
of some of those who lost their lives. This time, Paolo and Vittorio
Taviani (Padre Padrone, 1977; Notte di San Lorenzo [The Night of San
Lorenzo], 1982) have sought to recreate the events of the period by
concentrating on the fate of one Armenian family.

The film’s screenplay is based on a novel by Antonia Arslan-a
literature professor now living in Italy-and deals with the history
of Arslan’s family, a respectable middle-class Armenian family living
in a provincial Turkish city. The Lark Farm opens with scenes from the
everyday life of the Arslans in 1915. This is a liberal household doing
its best to encourage good relations with its Turkish neighbours-and
not without success. Following the death of the family patriarch, even
Turkish Colonel Arkan (Andre Dussollier) comes to pay his respects
to the deceased.

The Tavianis make clear in their film that the massacre was not a
product of Turkish society as a whole, but the result of a deliberate
strategy by Young Turk officers to whip up chauvinism and scapegoat
the Armenian minority as the enemy inside Turkey itself, at a time
when a combination of foreign powers was seeking to carry out the
final breakup of the Ottoman Empire.

We witness the stormy scenes as Young Turk officers meet to decide
the new strategy and the rebellion by one of the officers present
who has fallen in love and seeks to protect a young Armenian attached
to the Arslan household. The terror begins with Young Turk officers
threatening to denounce their superiors (such as Colonel Arkan)
as traitors to the fatherland, if they refuse to participate in
the slaughter.

In a series of scenes, the film depicts the bestial methods employed
by the Turkish troops. First, men and boys are butchered, and then,
women and surviving children are herded into the desert to die along
the way-either of hunger or butchered by troops in the deserts of
eastern Anatolia.

The motives of the Taviani brothers in making the film are entirely
honourable. They make clear that a primary aim of their film was to
set straight the historical record on a crime that continues to be
denied by Turkish authorities and nationalists. The brothers are keen
that their film be shown in Turkey and have demonstrated considerable
personal courage in making The Lark Farm under conditions where Turkish
and Armenian journalists and writers continue to face persecution
from chauvinist forces for addressing the issue.

Following the recent murder of the Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant
Dink, Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk has been forced to flee abroad.

Nevertheless, the film remains unsatisfactory in a number of
respects. Although the camera always turns away at the decisive moment,
the immediate preamble and consequences of appalling acts of violence
are shown on a number of occasions. At a certain point, they become
difficult to tolerate and also lose their impact. The barbarity
of the methods employed by the Young Turks and their followers is
documented, but cinema offers possibilities of presenting violence
in a more subtle and telling fashion-which often stays longer with
the viewer than the spilling of large quantities of blood.

As if to compensate in some fashion for the many scenes of Turkish
brutality, the Tavianis go to considerable and finally dramatically
unconvincing lengths to demonstrate that some Turks involved in
the deportation operation were reluctant to carry out their orders
and slaughter innocent women, children and babies. So we witness the
barely credible blossoming of a relationship between a Turkish soldier,
Youseff, and the last surviving daughter of the Arslan family, Nunik,
during the ardours of the death march through the desert. When Nunik
confronts her own death-burning at the stake-Youseff intervenes;
he decapitates Nunik to save her from being burned alive.

One senses that the moral indignation that the Tavianis quite rightly
feel with regard to the subject matter of their film has overridden
other, more critical faculties, which they have put to good use
in their past work. To the extent it is shown, The Lark Farm will
inevitably re-ignite a polemic over the events of 1915, but a better,
more satisfactory cinematic treatment of the fate of the Armenian
minority still needs to be undertaken.

2007/ber1-m05.shtml

–Boundary_(ID_wZzbVmgFSVuhH/ IpjZ/JvQ)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2007/mar