New Times leader rules out a possible foreign interference with the

New Times leader rules out a possible foreign interference with the
parliamentary election in Armenia

Arminfo
2007-04-21 18:00:00

Aram Karapetyan, a political expert and the leader of the oppositionist
New Times party, rules out a possible foreign interference with the
course of the parliamentary election in Armenia.

At today’s press-conference at the Azdak club, A.Karapetyan referred
to the April 20 statement made by Stanislav Chernyavsky, the Director
of the CIS International Institute of Monitoring Democracy Development
and a member of the observation mission of the CIS Interparliamentary
Assembly. To remind, yesterday S.Chernyavsky said: "We can’t be
completely objective when estimating the election in Armenia, as
we are interested in consolidation of stability and progress in
the country". Commenting upon the Russian observer’s statement at
ArmInfo correspondent’s request, A.Karapetyan pointed out that it
means the international observers will approve the choice of the
people. At the same time, he pointed out the fact that the foreign
diplomats accredited in Armenia, as well as the heads of international
organizations’ missions seem to dissociate from the parliamentary
election, preferring either to keep silence or to leave the country
for the election period.

As for the Russian high-ranking officials’ visits to Armenia that have
recently become too frequent, A.Karapetyan thinks that one shouldn’t
qualify these visits as Moscow’s attempts to support the Republican
Party of Armenia and Armenian Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan. "Russia
is interested not in Armenia but the whole region, and it is a weak
PR action to show this as a support," he said.

Dr. Lusine Sahakyan to present "The results of forceful islamization

JOINT PRESS RELEASE
"Ararat Foundation", California
"Ararat" Center for Strategic Research, Yerevan
3115 Foothill Blvd., M-173
La Crescenta, CA 91214
Tel: 818-581-6144
e-mail: [email protected]
e-mail: [email protected]

April 21, 2007

"The results of forceful islamization of the Armenians in the Ottoman
Empire"

Dear friends:

You are cordially invited to a lecture and book presentation by Dr.
Lusine Sahakyan, on Sunday, April 22, 2007 at 5:30 p.m., at Glendale
Central Library, 222 E. Harvard St., Glendale, California.

Dr. Lusine Sahakyan is an Assistant Professor and Vice-Chair of
Turkish Studies as well as Academic Council Secretary of the Faculty
of Oriental Studies at Yerevan State University (YSU). Dr. Sahakyan
lectures Contemporary Turkish, the History of Turkish Literature,
Turkish Historiography and History of Contemporary Turkey. In 2002, she
defended the Ph.D. dissertation on the toponyms and demography of the
provinces of Baberd, Sper and Derjan in the Ottoman "Tahrir-Defters"
of the 16’th century.

Dr. Sahakyan is the author of a number of scholarly articles which
sum up the results of historical toponyms and demography of Armenia,
the distortion of historical facts in Turkish scholarly circles as well
as the forceful islamization of the population of historical Armenia.

The event is open to the public. The admission is free.

The Mission of "Ararat Foundation": The primary objective of "Ararat
Foundation" would be step by step formation and development of an
Armenian school of strategic thought ("Ararat" Center for Strategic
Research). This would be an independent institution dedicated to
promoting understanding and resolution of Armenia’s security problems
through a program of research, information and outreach.

To contact "Ararat" Center for Strategic Research, please visit
or e-mail us at [email protected]

http://www.ararat-center.org

Minister Oskanian Participates in Black Sea Economic Cooperation Min

MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
Telephone: +37410. 544041 ext 202
Fax: +37410. 562543
Email: [email protected]

Minist er Oskanian Participates in
the XVI Meeting of BSEC Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs

On April 19, Foreign Minister Oskanian attended the meeting of the Black
Sea Economic Cooperation Council of Foreign Ministers, held in Belgrade.

The Foreign Ministers of Greece, Russia, Romania, Turkey, Azerbaijan, as
well as high-ranking representatives of Albania, Bulgaria, Georgia,
Moldova and Ukraine also took part in the meeting. The Foreign Minister of
Serbia opened the Ministerial Meeting and the participants heard a
welcoming speech from Serbian President Boris Tadic.

At the conclusion of the meeting, the Belgrade Declaration was signed, as
was a Memorandum of Understanding on the Coordinated Development of the
Black Sea Ring Highway and the Motorways of the Sea in the Black Sea
Region.

The presidency of BSEC has now been passed from Serbia to Turkey for the
next six months. The BSEC Summit, devoted to the 15th Anniversary of BSEC,
will be held on 25 June in Istanbul.

The complete text of Minister Oskanian’s speech appears below:

STATEMENT BY H.E. VARTAN OSKANIAN
MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS
AT THE BSEC XVI MINISTERIAL MEETING
Belgrade, Serbia
April 19, 2007

Mr. Chairman, I join my colleagues in thanking the Government and people
of Serbia for their hospitality, and I would like to congratulate the
Chairman-in-Office on the successful conclusion of a fruitful term.

The Summit being planned for June will mark this organization’s 15 years.
Anniversaries are by definition significant, since they mark the
recurrence of an event of historic importance. This anniversary marks the
beginning of a visionary effort — to turn neighbors into partners, and
thus turn geography into history.
For 15 years, a dozen of us have come together at various governmental
levels to build bridges across the Black Sea, from west to east and from
south to north. The Black Sea Economic cooperation was conceived to
provide concrete opportunities for cooperation, integration and support,
to provide benefits for all, from a limitless pool of potential, or I
should say, a limitless sea of potential. The need that was clear 15 years
ago has only become more acute today, especially as we consider deepening
our relations with the EU.
Mr. Chairman,

The specific efforts aimed at broadening interaction between BSEC and the
EU and
institutionalizing such interaction will be remembered as one of the
significant outputs of this period. You have engaged all BSEC
institutions so that they can help formulate the structure for such
cooperation.

A Black Sea dimension within EU policy will formalize the premise that was
at the heart of the establishment of this organization – that as Europe
grows and changes, the promise of economic cooperation within and around
Europe will grow, and the countries of the Black Sea must be prepared to
contribute to and benefit from such developments.

If today, we are signing the Belgrade Declaration, it is because we
recognize, reaffirm, and emphasize that which our heads of state and
government signed in June 1992 – that there are economic disparities
amongst our members, that there are political hesitancies caused by
historical and other experiences, and finally, that none of these are
reason to avoid cooperation. On the contrary, they are the rationale and
motivation for enabling, encouraging, supporting cooperation – albeit
slowly and in stages.
And we have done that. From the Black Sea Trade and Development Bank to
the International Center for Black Sea Studies, we have built successful,
functioning mechanisms for multilateral cooperation.
Despite differences among states, BSEC and its institutions have already
proven their viability. The BSEC tries to be the place where
environmental, economic, social and even political differences are
mitigated, keeping in view the future, and not the competitive, sometimes
adversarial past.
None of us, here, in the Black Sea Economic Cooperation are here by
invitation. We are here because we are here, in this neighborhood, in this
region. And, here, in this region, we have transport systems that need to
be united, not divided, energy systems that need to be shared not
isolated, banking systems that need resources added, not subtracted,
education systems that need to be broadened, not secluded, societies that
need to be inclusive, not exclusive.

To accomplish this, it is our shared purpose and overlapping interests
that must prevail over our sometimes deep-seated differences. As we plan
to upgrade and refurbish water systems, we cannot allow existing rail
lines to sit idle. As we work to ensure proper conditions for capital
flow, we cannot prevent people flow. As we develop projects to share
agricultural know-how, we cannot block trade across borders.

Mr. Chairman,

This organization got its start because there was a vision. It continued
to operate because those around the Black Sea needed that vision, and
those outside the Black Sea region wanted to believe in the promise of
that vision. We wouldn’t need an organization such as this one if every
country in the Black Sea area cooperated and shared. We need this
organization precisely because this is a complex region with a variety of
economic, social, historic and political experiences that require special
conditions. That is why we are today launching the Black Sea Ring Highway
Caravan as a symbol of the importance of communication networks.

Yet, the success and effectiveness of this organization will be measured
not by the quantity of its projects, but by the audacity of their intent.

As we congratulate Turkey on assuming the Chairmanship, we note that it
will carry the same challenges that lay on their shoulders at the time of
the creation of this organization – to be not just the geographical anchor
for cooperation in and around the Black Sea, but also the political
rudder.

We wish them well and stand prepared to work with them to that end.

Thank you.

www.armeniaforeignministry.am

Events mark somber anniversary

Albany Times Union, NY
April 21 2007

Events mark somber anniversary

Memorials worldwide to pay tribute to the nearly 1.5 million
Armenians killed in Turkey during World War I

By JENNIFER PATTERSON, Staff writer

WATERVLIET — The Rev. Bedros Kadehjian is somber and reflective when
he talks about the Armenian genocide.

Nearing the end of his first month at St. Peter Armenian Apostolic
Church, the assistant pastor is anticipating the annual commemoration
of Armenian Genocide Day, which marks the 92nd anniversary of the
beginning of what has come to be known as the first genocide of the
20th century.

Memorials worldwide will pay tribute to the nearly 1.5 million
Armenians killed in Turkey during World War I, when the Young Turk
political faction sought to create a new Turkish state extending into
Central Asia.

The ideology of Pan Turkism viewed the Armenian minority as an
obstacle to be removed by any means necessary, Kadehjian said.

"The Armenian genocide was a holocaust in itself, a premeditated,
systematic plan to eliminate the male Armenian population and deport
women and children out of Turkey," Kadehjian said. "The fact that
Turkish authors are now coming out and admitting the country’s role"
after nearly a century is significant, even though many have been
punished.

One such writer was Hrant Dink, former editor in chief of the
bilingual Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos and a prominent member of
the Armenian minority in Turkey.

Dink was best known for his work on Turkish-Armenian reconciliation,
and human and minority rights in Turkey. On Jan. 19, he was
assassinated in Istanbul allegedly by an ultra-nationalist Turk.
Almost 100,000 mourners walked in protest at his funeral.

"He was killed for his beliefs, and for discussing the Armenian
genocide, which is forbidden under article 301 in Turkey," said
Lucille Sarkissian of Guilderland, whose mother was a survivor. "I,
like all the other people waiting for acknowledgment by the Turkish
government, am hoping that it will come soon to resolve this issue
and allow us to move on."

The massacre began on April 24, 1915, when several hundred Armenian
community leaders and intellectuals in Constantinople (modern-day
Istanbul) were arrested, sent east and put to death.

For years, adult and teenage men were separated from deportation
caravans and killed. Women and children were driven for months over
mountains and desert, raped, tortured and left for dead, Kadehjian
said. By 1923, most of the Armenian population in Turkey had been
uprooted from its homeland.

"It’s important to remember what happened and those that were lost,
especially since Turkey continues to deny what happened to this day,"
Kadehjian said. "Our commemoration is open to anyone wanting to
reflect on the past and look toward a better future."

Patterson can be reached at 454-5340 or by e-mail at
[email protected].

Paying tribute

Armenian Genocide Day Observance What: Film "The Trail of Soghomon
Tehlirian" and panel discussion

When: 6:30 p.m. Tuesday

Where: Troy City Hall

Info: 331-8559

Commemoration in Words and Music

Speakers: Revs. Stepanos Doudoukjian and Bedros Shetilian, Mayors
Harry Tutunjian of Troy and Robert Carlson of Watervliet

Performers: Armenian Men’s Choral Ensemble and Armenian students.
When: 1:30 p.m. Sunday, April 29

Where: St. Peter Armenian Apostolic Church, 100 Troy-Schenectady Road

Information: 274-3673

On April 24, the world must remember victims of Armenian genocide

Albany Times Union, NY
April 21 2007

On April 24, the world must remember victims of Armenian genocide

First published: Saturday, April 21, 2007

As all Armenian-Americans are aware, April 24 will mark the 92nd
anniversary of the Armenian genocide that was perpetrated by the
Ottoman Turks on April 24, 1915.

To this day, the Turkish government continues to deny that a genocide
ever took place, and has taken great steps to threaten any body of
people who would dare assert otherwise.

As a matter of fact, within the past two weeks, the United Nations was
forced to dismantle an exhibit on the Rwandan genocide and postponed
its scheduled opening by Secretary- General Ban Ki-moon, after the
Turkish mission objected to references to the Armenian genocide in
Turkey at the time of World War I.

Even after Armen Martirosyan, the Armenian ambassador, agreed to
allow the words "in Turkey" to be deleted, the Turkish government
was adamant in its position.

The Turkish government, and the world in general, need to be reminded
that in the years 1919-1920, the Turks themselves initiated a series
of court-martials in Constantinople, aimed at bringing the perpetrators
of the Armenian genocide to justice.

According to noted Armenian historian Peter Balakian, "The trials
represent a milestone in the history of war-crimes tribunals."

Although they were truncated in the end by political pressures,
and directed by Turkey’s domestic laws rather than an international
tribunal, the Constantinople trials were an antecedent to the Nuremberg
Trials following World War II.

The leaders of the Armenian genocide — Mehmet Talaat, Ismail Enver,
and Ahmed Jemal — were found guilty of first-degree murder by the
court and sentenced to death in absentia, since they had fled the
country.

Hopefully, one day in the near future, the Turkish government will
confess to the crimes against humanity that were perpetrated by the
Ottoman leaders on April 24, 1915, leading to the massacres of 1
1/2 million Armenians. Those massacres left my parents’ generation
a generation of orphans, and my generation one without grandparents.

Hopefully, the European Union will remain steadfast in its position
that acceptance of Turkey into that body must be preceded by a public
admission that a genocide did, in fact, take place.

In the meantime, the Armenian genocide, which Balakian referred to as
the "template" for future genocides of the 20th century, must never
be forgotten.

RALPH ENOKIAN Albany

ANKARA: Massacre stuns land of the apricot

Turkish Daily News , Turkey
April 21 2007

Massacre stuns land of the apricot
Saturday, April 21, 2007

TAYLAN BÝLGÝC
MALATYA – Turkish Daily News

The mourning starts on the way to Malatya, the scene of the horrific
slaying of three Christians on Wednesday. Alternatively, you can
describe this eastern city, surpassing 400,000 in population, as
"the first city of the west for east Anatolians, and the first
city of east Anatolia for the West." Historically belonging to the
Upper Mesopotamia, Malatya has been a mosaic of different cultures,
ethnicities and religions for centuries. Its people are kind,
hospitable and warm. But the massacre stands there, its wounds still
bleeding. How did it come to this? In the words of Rakel Dink, the
wife of the late Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, how did
these lands turn children into killers? Thinking of an answer that
makes sense a day after the killings, I wait at a crowded lounge
of the Istanbul Ataturk Airport for the gates to open. A sob,
and then crying. Seven adults and a child, forming a circle, are
praying for their loved ones. Here are those "heinous" Protestant
missionaries, who, according to some, are intent on converting Turkey
to Christianity, or dividing it. I offer my condolences. "We are,
at most, 4,000 people, most of them children," says Fikret Bocek,
the pastor of the Izmir Protestant Church. "How can we threaten the
state or the country?" Last year, one of their churches in Odemiþ,
Ýzmir, was bombed by Molotov cocktails, he says. "After the bombing
they took our people into custody and closed down the church."

Prison mates:

Ercan Þengul – the Izmir representative of the Zirve Publishing House,
the target of the assailants – talks of his days in prison. He is
very close to Necati Aydýn, 35, one of the victims. In fact, they were
put in jail together after the gendarmerie arrested them on March 1,
2000, on grounds that they defamed Islam. In a crowded cell, together
with 32 other detainees, they had to sleep on makeshift beds on a
concrete floor. Three villagers gave false testimonies against them,
Þengul claims. "First the accusation was defaming religion.

Then they said we "forcibly" sold Bibles. After that, the charge was
dropped and we were set free." Þengul and Aydýn had applied to the
European Court of Human Rights against the authorities, but Aydýn
did not live long enough to see the result, expected to be announced
over the next few months. "I am myself a Turk, but I have never seen
such racism and discrimination in any country," says Pastor Bocek. He
complains of an article, published in one of the conservative dailies,
that the three victims "were carrying fake IDs." Suddenly, a young man
joins the conversation. "Why doesn’t it make headlines when hundreds
of Muslims in Iraq are killed every day?" he asks, not bothering to
even offer a half-hearted condolence. The pastor stays silent. This
argument on Iraq is one that I will hear a lot in Malatya.

Conspiracy theories:

Malatya Erhac Airport, a military airport that is also open to civilian
flights, welcomes us with a poster celebrating the 162th anniversary
of the Turkish Police Forces. "Our Duty Is Your Safety," says the
poster. Must be quite ironic for those who died. I help an elderly
local carry her luggage and she offers me a ride to the city with her
relatives waiting outside. Leaving the mourners, I join them. The
frost last week has ruined nearly half of the apricot product, the
pride of Malatya, complains Mustafa Gezek, on the way to the city
center. Gezek, 38, is an apricot trader. He is of Kurdish origin,
but also a Turkish nationalist.

A gray wolf, to be precise, one of the ex-members of the
ultranationalist organization in Malatya, which also bred Mehmet Ali
Aðca and Oral Celik, the purported assassins of journalist Abdi Ýpekci,
killed Feb. 1, 1979. The world knows Aðca as the man who tried to
kill Pope Jean Paul II on May 13, 1981. Gezek, named "Misto the Kurd"
by his friends, condemns the murders. I inform him about the upcoming
demonstration of various leftist groups against the crime. His voice
rises. "Those who make the kids kill people and those who tell those
leftists to demonstrate against it are the same," he claims. Onur
Keklik, a student in his 20s, also condemns the killings, but then
offers the "Iraqi argument." As a political leader, he likes Devlet
Bahceli, the leader of the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP). "Are
you also a Kurd?" I ask. "No. But my father is," he answers, somehow
refusing the bloodline. He says there are two types of Kurds: those
who say they are Kurdish "because they support the PKK" and those
who say so "just because they speak the language." As I wait at the
city center for my colleague Bulent Kutluturk, who has come to be
the owner of a local newspaper, Yenigun (The New Day) years after
he left Istanbul for his beloved Malatya, I spoke to Aytac Bozkurt,
a supermarket worker. "We had no problems whatsoever with Christians,"
he says. "Some claim it is the state that did this. I can’t understand
what is going on in this city. What do you say?"

An unheeded warning:

Kutluturk is proud that he did his job as a journalist: his newspaper
had warned the authorities back in February 2005 that the Zirve
Publishing House was under threat. Thursday’s issue of Yenigun is a
reminder of that old story to its readers. Joining forces, we go to
the house of the bereaved family of Necati Aydýn. It is located in
the "Alevi section" of the city, perhaps in an attempt to act freely
under the tolerance of the Alevi sect. The same can be said of the
publishing house, as Zirve is sandwiched between the Cem Vakfý,
an Alevi foundation, and the Chamber of Mechanical Engineers, an
organization known for its democratic political stance, at the Aðbaba
office building. Malatya is loosely divided among sectarian lines,
with the south mainly Alevi and the north mainly Sunni. Alevis are
also concentrated at the west and Sunnis in the east. Still, it is
not that simple. The Cavuþoðlu district, which was home to around
10,000 Armenians back in the ’60s, is in the northwest. Hrant Dink was
also raised here, and last year, when he came to attend the Arguvan
Folk Songs Festival, took interest in re-opening the Armenian Church
there. Now only a handful of Armenian families live in the city.

Escaping death:

Protestants from all over the country are in Aydýn’s house, grieving
and trying to decide what to do. Gokhan Talas, who discovered that
the murderers were inside the publication house on Wednesday, and his
wife, Ozge, are also there. So is Ihsan Ozbek, the chief pastor of
the "Salvation Church," the man who appears frequently on television
nowadays. Talas escaped certain death because he did not do what Uður
Yuksel, 32, did. The assailants, entering the small apartment, had tied
up Tillman Geske, 46, and Necati Aydýn on that bloody morning. Then
Yuksel went to the place and when the door was not opened, tried to
get inside as opposed to going to the police. The murderers then took
him in at knifepoint.

Talas did the same sometime after Yuksel, but when there was no
reply from inside, phoned him. When Yuksel, with a trembling voice,
said they were meeting at the Altýn Kayýsý (Golden Apricot) Hotel,
he immediately called the police. But it was too late. "Everything
happened in, like, an hour and a half," he said. Ercan Þengul points
to the political climate that resulted in the murders. "Starting from
the beginning of the 2000s, Malatya was singled out," he says.

"They claimed we brought 90,000 Bibles to the city. That was
actually the figure for all Turkey and all Malatya got out of that
was three-four parcels." The killers are being used by some other
forces, as every sign shows this was a planned murder, he adds. They,
like everyone I spoke to in the city, also say their community had no
problems whatsoever with the local Muslim population, and treated each
other with respect. Everybody has the right to speak their thoughts
and express their beliefs, says Fevzi Dua, 33, a taxi driver. "The
Christians never disturbed us," he adds. His colleague, Ayhan Kayýþ,
agrees wholeheartedly. But the new generation seems to walk on another
path. Students, aged 13 or 14, have said the victims "deserved more,"
and that they "should have been ripped apart," in classrooms, says
Ali Karataþ, 33, a teacher. "They justify the massacre by saying that
the murderers did it for the nation and for Islam," he adds.

A different perspective:

Hasan Kýrteke, 56, offers a perspective. He notes that in the ’60s,
Malatya was a place where the socialist Turkish Workers’ Party (TÝP)
succeeded in sending a politician to Parliament and its votes were
just short of sending a second one. Those were the days of the great
peasant demonstrations. "The state launched a systematic campaign
to disperse this democratic climate," claims Kýrteke, who spent 16
years in jail for his political activities. "Starting from the ’70s,
Alevis and Sunnis were pitted against each other. After the Sept. 12,
1980 military coup, the city was indoctrinated with religious bigotry
by the generals." A wave of migration started during the same years,
from villages to the city center, he adds, and those who came were
indoctrinated by the ultranationalists and Islamists. "The state
has been working on this for 30 years," Kýrteke concludes. "Here is
the result."

Malatya ‘singled out’:

We leave for the demonstration of various democratic parties and
organizations, led by the local chapter of the Human Rights Association
(ÝHD). The crowd, not more than 300, shouting slogans such as "The
people of Malatya are not killers" and "Long live the brotherhood of
peoples," starts from the ÝHD building and marches toward the crime
scene. People around watch them in silence. After the Jan. 19 murder
of Hrant Dink, thousands of people marched here.

"In Hrant’s case, his political thoughts were the determinant," says
Þenel Karataþ, the President of ÝHD Malatya, offering an explanation
for the discrepancy. "Here the issue is religious identity. Thus
there is some sort of an abstention today." "It is as if they have
singled out a city in each region," she adds. "Trabzon, Malatya and
who knows where else tomorrow. This massacre is the fruit of the seeds
of nationalism. But it is not inherent in the people of Malatya. It
was imposed from the top. We are experiencing the dire reflections
of the general political climate in Turkey." Tillman Geske’s wife,
Susanne, demanded from the governor that her husband be buried
here. As the governor told her that this is not possible as there
is no Christian cemetery here, she turned to the ÝHD. Karataþ has
received her application for help on Thursday evening, and says they
will do their best. As I write this, Geske’s body was being taken to
the Kiltepe Armenian Cemetery for burial.

Cover-up on the way?:

The Golden Apricot, where Protestants are going to meet, is our
next stop. We manage to squeeze into their meeting at a time when
Pastor Behnan Konutgan from Istanbul is making a speech on the
"success" of their evangelic action. He talks of the Protestant
conversion activities in northern Iraq and Iran, and for the first
time, I get a glimpse of what may be disturbing and provocative for
the Muslims in these lands. Then, they pray for the souls of their
"three martyrs." After the meeting everyone starts watching the news
from the giant screen at the hall. The attackers, under custody, have
claimed that Emre GunAydýn, their supposed leader, slit the throats
of the three. He is also the man who tried to escape by jumping
from the third floor and is now in critical condition. Interesting
coincidence: Dink’s murderer, under the age of 18, will probably
get away with a few years in prison, while the "declared murderer"
of the three Protestants is now struggling at a hospital. The air
seems ripe for another cover-up of those hands that pull the strings,
which might well lead to more of the same…

–Boundary_(ID_7R7kJJmZ7iDbySh3pH/V/Q)–

ANKARA: Not many satisfied with race hate law

Turkish Daily News , Turkey
April 21 2007

Not many satisfied with race hate law
Saturday, April 21, 2007

The EU justice ministers’ agreement to criminalize incitement to
racial hatred and xenophobia on Thursday in Luxembourg after long
and fractious negotiations, which took nearly six years left many
parties across Europe dissatisfied with the outcome and shed light
on major differences between member states, wrote the Guardian and
Financial Times.

According to the British daily Guardian, anti-racism campaigners,
Jewish groups and the EU term president Germany were disappointed with
the fact that the law does not ban Holocaust denial and Nazi symbols
as such. The European Jewish Congress expressed its uneasiness about
the law by emphasizing Europe’s special historic responsibility to
combat anti-Semitism, which was not included in the final version of
the draft. The draft has also made apparent the difference between
European countries such as Germany, Austria and France, which already
have laws banning denial of the Holocaust and Britain, Ireland and
the Nordic countries that resisted such a measure in the past so as
not to compromise academic or artistic freedom unless it specifically
incites racial hatred.

The business daily Financial Times reported on the other hand that
the Armenians were also displeased with the law since the events
of 1915 in the Ottoman Empire during World War One, which Armenians
insist should be recognized as genocide were not included in the text
of the law. Laurent Leylekian, the executive director of the European
Armenian Federation expressed fierce criticism and said the law showed
"a great amount of hypocrisy". "Excluding Armenia’s suffering would
be a moral failure," he said.

According to the FT, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania as well as the
eastern European states were also unhappy with the ultimate wording
of the law that does not contain any special reference to the Stalin
and communist era crimes. ISTANBUL-Turkish Daily News

ANKARA: The banality of the murders of three Christians in Turkey

The banality of the murders of three Christians in Turkey
Saturday, April 21, 2007

Turkish Daily News , Turkey
April 21 2007

We will continue to pray in our churches for our nation, but our
nation will continue to see us as enemies. And sooner or later,
‘birileri’ who loves their country will attack us again. As our bodies
will lay there on the ground, their abis, in the most banal fashion,
will declare that birileri is trying to destroy Turkey

Ziya Meral

You have to learn one key element that forms the mental template, which
rules Turkish politics and society, if you wish to understand what is
happening and where we are coming from. It is not only the melancholy
of a lost glory that we have inherited from the Ottoman Empire, but
also a deep rooted "some people" syndrome. This syndrome began with
the bitter experience of the European powers and non-Muslim minorities
during the fall of the Empire. They sought to go on their own ways or
tried to invade and colonize what we today call Turkey. Since then,
every non-Muslim is viewed as a potential traitor and conspirator
that seek to divide our country under the leadership of the Western
powers. Within this mindset, today’s powerful and secured Turkish
Republic is under the same imminent inner and outer threat, which the
Ottoman Empire was under before and after WWI. Step into a bookstore,
read a Turkish newspaper, listen to the political and media elites,
you will see that this is a reified truth that is internalized widely
as "common sense" and is beyond any doubt.

Always ‘birileri’ divides our nation:

The international community, non-Muslim minorities and various NGOs
and intellectuals in Turkey have been asking for the free exercise of
the most basic rights of religious minorities, that are protected not
only by the Turkish Constitution and Penal Code, but as well as all of
the international covenants Turkey is a party to. Yet, this request has
always been interpreted by the politicians and wider public through the
lenses of some people syndrome. "Birileri", or some people, are trying
to strengthen minorities in order to divide our nation. These birileri
are not only trying to use the Human Rights argument to pressure Turkey
and make her look "bad" in the eyes of the world, they are also the
ones behind the persecution of minorities. When the Roman Catholic
priest Andrea Santore was killed in Trabzon by a 16-year-old boy on 5
February 2006, majority of politicians and commentators declared that
birileri were trying to hinder Turkey’s EU accession. When a Protestant
church in Odemis was attacked with Molotov Cocktails on 4 November
2006, it was birileri who were trying to embarrass Turkey. Not so
surprisingly, the local authorities ordered the church to shut down
its activities following the attack, because birileri had darker
aims than just worshipping their God. When a Protestant church in
Samsun was stoned and threatened in January 2007, it was birileri
again who were trying to put Turkey in a hot spot. When Hrant Dink
was murdered this year, it was not the plain fact that birileri who
"loved their country" killed him, but some other birileri whose main
occupation were to corner Turkey on the Armenian question.

Gendarme hunt on missionaries:

This "sensitivity" for the welfare of our country showed itself all
through out 2006 and 2007. Turkish media reported with a great zeal
that two Turkish Christian missionaries, Hakan and Turan were caught
with a splendid Gendarme operation and taken to courts on 11 October
2006 as if propagating one’s beliefs are crimes in Turkey.

Apparently, these Turkish Christians, whom I know personally,
were offering sex with younger girls and money to few innocent
unemployed Turkish lads and threatening them with guns. Through out
this aggressive activity "to convert" the lads, they have also not
forgotten to insult Turkishness, Prophet Muhammad and the Turkish
Armed Forces. Their fate still awaits a conclusion by the court.

All these years, Turkish media gave sensational accounts of 100 US
Dollars being placed in the Bibles to lure Muslims. No court ever
found a Christian or a church guilty on any of these charges or found
the traces of generously distributed dollars, but the urban myth still
continued. The State, which runs an effective apparatus that controls
media did nothing to stop these wild accusations. On the contrary
officials have echoed the same ‘common sense’ that these people have
one agenda and that is to divide our country. So it should come as no
surprise to you when Necati, Uður and Tilman were killed brutally by
5 young nationalist and slightly religious men, AKP MPs for Malatya,
where the murders took place, have declared that birileri were trying
to stir up Turkey right before the Presidential elections. Beneath
all of the superficial condemnations of the murder, which is often
limited to the first opening sentence, the rest of all of the comments
point to good old dull international conspiracy theories.

The Elders of Zion replaced:

The human face of this national neurosis is the death of human beings,
who have nothing to do with any of the perceived national threats. The
dark side of our worldview is just human, all too human, nothing fancy
and enchanting like the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, or the myth
of birileri. As long as the media and politicians keep using Christians
in the country as scape goats to the mundane failures of local politics
and identity confusions in a global age, we will have more murders and
attacks, that’s certain.The mental template that was born out of the
sad experiences of the past has paralyzed us completely. We are now
failing to understand the present on its own terms and to move to a
brighter future. Historical malady has removed the plastic energy we
need to mold and renew ourselves as modern day Turks. It gave birth
to an incapacity to mourn genuinely the death of two Turkish and one
German human being by a bunch of kids who took the words of their abis
(older brothers) seriously, to an incapacity to see that we have a
significant problem of Non-Muslim minorities and that our perceptions
of our country as a tolerant junction "where civilizations meet"
is only believed by the marketing gurus of the tourism industry.

Not for saving the face:

I am a Turkish Christian and have known Necati personally for years. I
attended the same church with him. He was a genuine man, who loved
his country and people. However, neither Necati and Uður nor any
of us are allowed to love our country or even serve her. Somehow,
our personal love for Jesus is incompatible with being a Turk and
a Patriot. Somehow, no matter who we really are and what we really
believe, what is important is what the officials and media have named
us; Traitors! The Turkish State has a legal responsibility towards
her vulnerable minorities. The improvements and grandeur public
declarations of sorrow by the politicians should not be done only with
the fear of the EU or to save the "face" of our nation, but because
our State cares for her children and citizens. The State has a moral
responsibility to do so! Even when the international watchdogs are
not looking, even when the legal provisions are not in place, even
before someone asks for protection, our country should be there for
us. Our democracy and the national soul is only strong to the extent
of her protection, respect and integration of her weakest members!

This will happen again

My heart bleeds as I write these sentences not just because of
the death of beloved ones, but because as I read the comments and
reactions to their murder, waves of fear and helplessness fills every
single cell in this body of mine. I know, just like the other events,
this too will be forgotten as the country is fixed on the Presidential
elections. The myths that are allowed to be "truths" will still remain
in the minds of people. We will continue to pray in our churches for
our nation, but our nation will continue to see us as enemies and
sooner or later, birileri who loves their country or are angry with
the West will attack us again, as if we are foreign Embassies. And
our deaths will never be tantalizing stories of international actors,
historical battles and colonial intentions. We will die in the most
banal ways; a depraved youngling seeking to assert his identity and
be an active agent in a confusing age, finding encouragement from
the careless statements of his writer, politician and religious abis,
will find a kitchen knife or a gun, then use it. As our bodies will
lay there on the ground, those abis, in the most banal fashion, will
declare that birileri is trying to destroy Turkey, all along failing
to notice that those birileri are so difficult to find because they
are the very ones who are speaking!

…~E..

Ziya Meral, a Turkish convert to Protestant Christianity, is a
theologian and writer

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BAKU: Azerbaijanis to hold anti-Armenia rallies in New York and Wash

Azerbaijanis to hold anti-Armenia rallies in New York and Washington

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
April 21 2007

[ 21 Apr 2007 12:21 ]

More than 5 thousand US Azerbaijanis are to hold anti-Armenian rallies
in the Times Square, the centre of New York, Azerbaijani Representation
to UN told APA.

Another mass rally of Azerbaijanis is planned to hold outside the
White House in Washington on April 22. The participants will shout
slogans "End lying!" in protest against the recognition of so called
‘Armenian genocide’.

Azeri protesters will remind of Armenian massacres committed against
Azerbaijanis in different periods and expose Armenian propaganda
aimed at the diverting public opinion from atrocities organized by
Armenian invaders in Azerbaijan. /APA/

In Azerbaijan, embattled editor jailed for libel and insult

In Azerbaijan, embattled editor jailed for libel and insult

Nieuwsbank , Netherlands
from Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
April 21 2007

New York, April 20, 2007 –The Committee to Protect Journalists
condemns today’s imprisonment in Baku of Eynulla Fatullayev, editor
of the independent Russian-language weekly Realny Azerbaijan and the
Azeri-language daily Gundalik Azarbaycan.

The Yasamal District Court convicted Fatullayev on charges of libeling
and insulting Azerbaijanis in an Internet posting that was attributed
to the editor. But Fatullayev, who is known for his critical reporting
on government affairs, said he never made the comment and that the
case had been manufactured to silence him.

Under Article 147.2 of Azerbaijan’s penal code, Fatullayev was ordered
to serve 18 months, according to the news agency Turan. He was jailed
immediately after the court hearing, becoming the fifth journalist
behind bars in Azerbaijan.

"The jailing of Eynulla Fatullayev is part of a pattern of increasing
repression of independent media in Azerbaijan, often through
politically motivated defamation cases," CPJ Executive Director Joel
Simon said. "It is outrageous that he should be imprisoned for a
statement he says he never made. He should be freed immediately."

Tatyana Chaladze, head of the Azeri Center for Protection of Refugees
and Displaced Persons, filed civil lawsuit in February and a criminal
complaint in April against Fatullayev. Chaladze cited a remark
attributed to the editor that said Azerbaijanis were responsible
for the 1992 massacre of residents of the Nagorno-Karabakh town of
Khodjali, according to local press reports. The statement was a
"deliberate effort to defame Khodjali residents and veterans of
the Karabakh war," the independent daily Zerkalo quoted Chaladze as
saying. The Yasamal District Court ruled in favor of Chaladze’s civil
claim on April 6, ordering Fatullayev to pay damages of 10,000 manats
(US$11,600), Turan reported.

The remark was first published on the Web site Aztricolor, although
the precise posting date was unclear. In a March interview with CPJ,
Fatullayev said he never made the Khodjali statement, which was later
posted on other Web sites. After the statement was circulated widely
on the Internet, unidentified protesters, up to 80 at a time, started
picketing the offices of Realny Azerbaijan and Gundalik Azarbaycan,
he said. The protesters would come in buses to the papers’ premises
and protest for 30 to 40 minutes at a time, throwing eggs and stones
while shouting for Fatullayev’s expulsion, according to local press
reports. Dozens of police officers, Fatullayev told CPJ, stood by. He
said he believed authorities were behind the protests and had used the
trumped-up case to prevent him from reporting on government corruption
and the unsolved murder of former colleague Elmar Huseynov.

Realny Azerbaijan is the successor of the opposition weekly Monitor,
which was shut down after the March 2005 contract-style assassination
of Huseynov. Like its predecessor, Realny Azerbaijan is known for
its critical reporting.

On March 6, four days after he reported that high-ranking Azeri
officials ordered Huseynov’s killing, Fatullayev received a death
threat, but authorities did not investigate it or provide him with
personal protection.

Fatullayev told CPJ in March that his position on the Karabakh
conflict was outlined in a 2005 article headlined "The Karabakh
Diary." Fatullayev, then an investigative reporter with the Monitor,
traveled to Nagorno-Karabakh in February 2005 to interview leaders
of the region’s unrecognized government. He received threats from
Azerbaijani nationalists who opposed his trip. His piece said that
constructive dialogue is the only way to alleviate tensions between
Armenia and Azerbaijan.

The territorial conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over
Nagorno-Karabakh broke out during the first years of the Soviet Union’s
collapse. Inter-ethnic fighting escalated when Nagorno-Karabakh’s
parliament voted to form the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR) in
December 1991. (NKR is not recognized internationally.) A ceasefire
was negotiated in 1994, but the territorial dispute lingers today.

According to official statistics, 613 people were killed in Khodjali
on the night of February 25-26, 1992, when heavily armed Armenian
forces stormed and captured the town.

© 2007 Committee to Protect Journalists. E-mail:
[email protected]

–Boundary_(ID_joZCpOOXquC09 D8wH5VhRg)–

www.cpj.org