Turkish Intellectuals Apologise For Armenian Genocide

TURKISH INTELLECTUALS APOLOGISE FOR ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

EurActiv
Dec 18 2008
Belgium

An initiative by Turkish intellectuals to close a painful chapter
of the region’s history by apologising for the mass killings of
Armenians by the Turkish army in 1915 has irked the authorities in
Ankara. The apology, made through an online petition, triggered a
wave of counter-initiatives on the Facebook social website.

More than 13,000 people, mostly Turks, have signed an online petition
initiated by a group of Turkish intellectuals, who issued an apology
on the Internet for the World War I massacres of Armenians by the
Ottoman army.

Hundreds of thousands of Armenians died during forced removals from
what is now Eastern Turkey, but Turkey denies this was "genocide".

Stopping short of using the word "genocide", the petition, entitled
‘I apologise’, reads:

"My conscience does not accept the insensitivity showed to and the
denial of the Great Catastrophe that the Ottoman Armenians were
subjected to in 1915. I reject this injustice and for my share,
I empathise with the feelings and pain of my Armenian brothers. I
apologise to them."

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the initiative made
no sense.

"They [the intellectuals] must have committed genocide because they are
apologising. The Turkish Republic has no such problem," Erdogan stated.

Several Turkish diplomats and lawmakers condemned the apology and
hundreds of Turks joined groups that popped up on Facebook with titles
such as "I am not apologising". A foreign ministry spokesperson denied
that the counterstatements were organised by the authorities.

President Abdullah Gul refrained from directly criticising the
petition, saying the initiative was proof that everything could be
openly discussed in Turkey.

Turkish-Armenian writer Hrant Dink was killed last year after
openly saying that the events of 1915 were genocide. Before that,
Dink was tried for "insulting Turkishness" under controversial
legislation condemned by the EU. Orhan Pamuk, the novelist and 2006
winner of the Nobel prize for literature, was tried under similar
circumstances. Pamuk said in 2005 that a million Armenians were killed
in 1915, but nobody in Turkey dared to talk about it.

Beginning To Crack The Code Of ‘Junk DNA’

BEGINNING TO CRACK THE CODE OF ‘JUNK DNA’
By Faye Flam

Philadelphia Inquirer
/20081218_Beginning_to_crack_the_code_of__junk_DNA _.html
Dec 18 2008
PA

To scientists, it was a mystery. Most of the genetic material we
carry in our cells seemed to have no purpose.

It seemed so useless, some called it "junk DNA."

Weirder still, geneticists noticed that some of the junk has a life
of its own, copying itself, viruslike, and jumping around the DNA.

This phenomenon had never been documented in humans until geneticist
Haig Kazazian started studying boys with the blood-clotting disorder
hemophilia.

Over years of painstaking research, Kazazian, now at the University
of Pennsylvania, found that these straying bits of DNA can land in
important genes like so much molecular debris – leading to a few cases
of hemophilia, muscular dystrophy, and several other genetic disorders.

For his lifetime of achievements, he was given one of the highest
honors in his field last month: the Allen Award from the American
Society of Human Genetics.

Kazazian, 71, has no plans to slow down. He is investigating whether
this type of self-replicating junk DNA holds more power over human
illness than has previously been imagined. It might influence our risk
for cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, and other common conditions.

"The one thing that drew me to Haig is his intellectual curiosity
and his fearlessness," said geneticist John Moran, who studied under
Kazazian at Johns Hopkins University before becoming a professor at
the University of Michigan. "He took the field in a new direction –
he really was one of the pioneers."

Johns Hopkins genetics professor Aravinda Chakravarti said that while
geneticists looked at mice or fruit flies in search of clues to human
disease, Kazazian also worked the other way, starting by unraveling
mysterious medical cases to better understand how human DNA works.

Oddly, humans appear to carry much more DNA than we need. If you
stretched out the DNA in just one cell, it would extend six feet –
spelling out a four-letter code three billion letters long.

In a vast sea Only 1 or 2 percent of all that is made up of genes –
sequences that spell out recipes for a host of biological molecules
known as proteins.

These genes are embedded in all of this other DNA like islands in a
vast sea.

About a third of the other 98 percent of our DNA is made of "introns"
– stretches of code that are spliced out when it’s time to transcribe
the genes into proteins. The rest is the stuff formerly called junk.

If there are messages written there, they are not altogether
accessible. If the coherent 2 percent read like Harry Potter,
the so-called junk DNA could be the more opaque stretches of James
Joyce’s Ulysses.

Kazazian didn’t set out initially to investigate any of this. When
launching his genetics career in the 1960s, he wanted to work on
combating inherited diseases, such as hemophilia, muscular dystrophy
and thalassemia, a form of anemia.

In high school and college, he imagined that he would become a
doctor. That was the profession his father said he would have followed
had his family not been imprisoned in a Turkish concentration camp
in 1915 – along with thousands of other Armenians living in Turkey.

New vistas Kazazian’s father was 14 at the time. Both of his parents,
all of his siblings, and his grandmother died in Turkey. In the early
1920s, he came to the United States and became a rug merchant. Medicine
would have to wait until the next generation.

But Kazazian switched from medicine to genetics in the 1960s, inspired
by the new vistas of knowledge the field was opening up.

In 1969, he joined the faculty at Johns Hopkins, where he began
studying genetic diseases. He and other geneticists at the time were
finding that dozens of different errors in the same gene could lead
to the same disease.

He expected something similar when he started studying hemophilia,
which is caused by various defects in a gene called factor VIII,
carried on the X chromosome.

People with hemophilia often suffer bleeding into their joints,
Kazazian said. And even a simple dental visit can leave them with
profuse bleeding. Doctors eventually learned to treat the disease by
giving patients factor VIII from donated blood.

But in the 1980s, HIV invaded the blood supply, and soon AIDS began
to tear through the hemophiliac population.

Kazazian had come across three genetically unusual cases – boys with
hemophilia whose factor VIII gene was disabled by an invading piece
of stray DNA.

The invading DNA belonged to a specific category of the junk DNA
called a transposable element. These had been observed in plants,
where they had the power to act like a virus, copying themselves and
jumping to new parts of the genetic code.

Most human transposable elements belong to a family called line1
elements. In total, Kazazian said, we carry about 500,000 of them,
making up a whopping 17 percent of human DNA, a major portion of the
so-called junk. Most of these are inert, having lost their ability
to cut and paste themselves to new locations.

But a few are still capable of jumping around and causing trouble.

How had these line1 elements gotten into the boys’ factor VIII genes?

To figure it out, Kazazian was able to identify some unique stretches
of code in the line1 sequence affecting one of the boys.

Using what is called a genetic probe, he was able to find the same
sequence in a line1 element in the boy’s mother, but it was in a
different place, on Chromosome 22. (Human chromosomes are all assigned
a number except the sex chromosomes, which are labeled X and Y.)

In her case, it caused no problem. Kazazian said he suspected that the
line1 element jumped from her Chromosome 22 to the X chromosome either
in the mother’s egg cell or during an early stage in the development
of the embryo that became the boy.

The boy was 10 years old when Kazazian made the discovery. His case
was tragic, Kazazian said. During his teens he showed promise as an
actor, snagging a major role in the movie Lost in Yonkers. But as a
teenager, he acquired HIV from his treatment and died at 21.

Kazazian traced another hemophilia case to a jumping line1 element
and went on to find line1 elements lurking behind a case of muscular
dystrophy.

In 1994, he came to the University of Pennsylvania to head the genetics
department. He stepped down as director in 2006 but still retains an
active research agenda, supervising a coterie of scientists working
on line1 elements in animals and humans.

He is intrigued now by the possibility that active line1 elements may
copy themselves and invade DNA during human development, introducing
genetic variation within the same person’s DNA.

He said there were some tantalizing hints that in brain cells, this
process could spawn variations in personality and temperament. In
other parts of the body, it could leave some cells more vulnerable
than others to cancer.

Kazazian said he was sure that his life had been channeled in part
by his father’s ordeal in Turkey. "I always knew he had wanted to
become a doctor," he said. "I think he would have preferred that I
go into medical practice . . . but eventually he realized I had to
do my own thing."

http://www.philly.com/inquirer/front_page

BAKU: Turkish MP From Opposition Claims That Abdullah Gul’s Mother I

TURKISH MP FROM OPPOSITION CLAIMS THAT ABDULLAH GUL’S MOTHER IS ARMENIAN

Azeri Press Agency
Dec 18 2008
Azerbaijan

Ankara – APA. Armenian apology campaign launched by a group of
scientists, writers, artists, journalists and representatives of
nongovernmental organizations was discussed at the meeting of Foreign
Relations Commission of Turkish parliament on December 17.

APA reports quoting Turkish media that parliamentarians from opposition
parties Republican People’s Party (CHP) and National Movement Party
(MHP) offered to make a statement condemning the persons supporting the
campaign. Pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP) objected to it.

Following the discussions, decision was made on the parliamentarians’
condemning the apology campaign by collecting signatures
individually. Member of MHP, parliamentarian Janan Aritman called
the organizers of the campaign betrayers.

"The false scientists signing it should apology to Turkey," he said.

Aritman also criticized President Abdullah Gul’s attitude towards
the campaign. Saying that Abdullah Gul was encouraged by his visit
to Armenia, Aritman dropped a hint that the president’s mother was
Armenian.

"We see that the president supports this campaign. Abdullah Gul should
be the president of the whole Turkish nation, not of his ethnic
origin. Investigate the ethnic origin of the president’s mother,
and you will see," he said.

Some claim in Turkey that Abdullah Gul’s mother was born to an
Armenian-origin family from Kayseri and father was an Arab moved
to Kayseri.

BAKU: Azerbaijani Embassy In Egypt Publishes Book On Nagorno Karabak

AZERBAIJANI EMBASSY IN EGYPT PUBLISHES BOOK ON NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT BY GERMAN RESEARCHER IN ARABIC

Azeri Press Agency
Dec 18 2008
Azerbaijan

Baku. Viktoriya Dementyeva – APA. Book "The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
between Armenia and Azerbaijan. A Brief Historical Outline" by German
writer and publicist Johannes Raun published in Germany a year ago
has been translated into Arabic and published on the initiative of
Azerbaijani embassy in Egypt aiming to inform the Arabic community
of Armenia’s military aggression against Azerbaijan and historical
truths about the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. The embassy told APA
that the presentation of the book had been held in Cairo. The embassy
realized the initiative taking into account that publication of the
book reflecting neutral position of a foreign researcher on Nagorno
Karabakh conflict will be met with interest by the Arabic community
and officials and scholars of 22 Arabic countries.

The books gives copious information about the occupation of 20 percent
of Azerbaijani territories by Armenia, the genocide committed by
Armenian Armed Forces against the Azerbaijani civilians in Khojaly
on February 26, 1992, displacement of hundreds of thousands of
Azerbaijanis from the occupied territories.

The book writes that early in the 20th century Armenians, specially
"Dashnaksyutun" Party persecuted and committed terror not only against
Azerbaijanis, but it also against other nations living in Azerbaijan,
as well as Germans.

The copies of the book were presented to a number of Egyptian
officials, governmental and non-governmental organizations, scientific,
educational and cultural institutions, investigation and research
centers, libraries, foreign embassies and representations of
international and regional organizations in Cairo.

According to the treaty signed between Azerbaijani embassy in Egypt
and the country’s famous "Al-Ahram" agency, 1500 copies of the book
are presented to book-centers in all provinces of Egypt.

BAKU: Item On Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict To Be Included Into Final Do

ITEM ON NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT TO BE INCLUDED INTO FINAL DOCUMENT OF MEETING OF COORDINATION COUNCIL OF WORLD AZERBAIJANIS: STATE COMMITTEE

Trend News Agency
Dec 18 2008
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan, Baku, Dec. 18 /TrendNews, J.Babayeva/ A statement will
adopted at the end of Baku meeting of the Coordination Council of World
Azerbaijanis and it will comprise realities of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict.

"An item on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict will be included in a final
document of the meeting to draw attention of the world community to
this conflict," Valeh Hajiyev, the first deputy chairman of the State
Committee for Diaspora, told journalists on Dec. 18.

The Baku meeting targets to united diaspora organizations for the
benefit of the Azerbaijani nation, he said.

On Dec. 18, Baku is hosting a meeting of the Coordination Council of
Azerbaijanis on the topic of Azerbaijan – Gate of East. The meeting
has been timed to the Solidarity Day of World Azerbaijanis, marked
annually on Dec. 31.

The Coordination Council was established at the first Congress of
World Azerbaijanis on Nov. 9 and 10 in 2001 and comprises 109 people,
as well as 45 of them live abroad.

Results of activity for period since the second congress of World
Azerbaijanis will be summed up, as well as targets and tasks for
future will be determined during the meeting.

BAKU: Armenia Not Fulfills PACE Resolutions: Vice-President

ARMENIA NOT FULFILLS PACE RESOLUTIONS: VICE-PRESIDENT

Trend
Dec 18 2008
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan, Baku, Dec. 17 /TrendNews, I.Alizade/ The Vice-President
of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) urges
the organization to take serious measures against Armenia, which does
not fulfill its Resolutions.

"Armenia does not fulfill the PACE Resolutions," Samad Seyidov, the
Vice-President of the PACE and the head of the Azerbaijani Delegation
to the organization, told TrendNews on Dec. 17.

The presidential elections were held in Armenia on Feb.19. The Central
Election Commission (CEC) announced the victory of Serzh Sarkisyan,
the Premier nominated as a candidate from the authorities, with 52.25%
of votes. Disagreeing with these results, supporters of ex-president
Levon Ter-Petrosyan, the main candidate from the opposition, began
holding continuous actions. Peaceable demonstrations were broken
up violently in the early hours of March 2. About eight people were
killed and 131 were injured.

The PACE adopted the Resolutions 1609 and 1620 on Armenia. The
Resolutions comprises discharge of political prisoners, unbiased
investigation of the developments and punishment of law enforcement
bodies using violence against peace protesters without any reason.

The PACE Monitoring Committee will discuss a situation in Armenia at
a meeting in Paris on Dec. 17.

Seyidov believes that discussions on Armenia will be more serious at
the PACE:

" Armenia openly refuses to fulfill the PACE Resolutions. At the
same time, the current state and developments in Armenia prevents
to fulfill the PACE Resolutions. The PACE will specially discuss
political prisoner problem in Armenia."

Measures to be taken on Armenia will be specified after discussions
at the Jan. session of the Monitoring Committee and the PACE, he said.

"There is a special attitude toward Armenia because of some forces at
the PACE and this country is preserved. However, at present facts on
this country are too serious that it is impossible to hide them. It is
the third PACE session that an issue on Armenia is being discussed,"
the Vice-President said.

Thousand Oaks Ends Link With Sister City Spitak

THOUSAND OAK ENDS LINK WITH SISTER CITY SPITAK

Thousand Oaks Acorn
ity/025.html
Dec 18 2008
USA

The Sister City Committee Executive Board recently decided to dissolve
the organization after many years of assistance to the city of Spitak,
Armenia. The committee will contribute the remaining budget of more
than $5,000 to the Spitak school children for food, clothes and
financial assistance.

This year marks the 20th anniversary of the earthquake that destroyed
several towns and more than 300 villages in Armenia. About 25,000
people died; 140,000 were injured, and more than a million were
left homeless.

Because of the great need after the earthquake, the Sister City
Committee was founded by filmmaker J. Michael Hagopian, local resident
Armenians and nonArmenians. The committee has sponsored fundraising
events and contributed toward the financial assistance to the people
of Spitak.

First committee president Francis Prince was instrumental in raising
funds to rebuild an apartment complex for the homeless. The committee
has also sent medical and school supplies and supported the local
fire station and building projects.

Treasurer Don Goodrow has visited Spitak numerous times and has been
a generous contributor.

Other past presidents include Ray Garcia, Sark Keochekian, Araxie
Wright and Alan Roubik.

http://www.toacorn.com/news/2008/1218/commun

BAKU: Chairman Of Armenian Industrialists And Entrepreneurs Union: "

CHAIRMAN OF ARMENIAN INDUSTRIALISTS AND ENTREPRENEURS UNION: "ARMENIA MUST BE READY FOR SERIOUS COOPERATION FIRST WITH TURKEY AND THEN WITH AZERBAIJAN"

Today.Az
s/politics/49656.html
Dec 18 2008
Azerbaijan

"Serious integration is possible between the two countries in case
the Armenian-Turkish border opens", considers chairman of the Armenian
Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs Arsen Kazaryan.

Speaking on the Armenian Public Television, he noted that "opening
of borders will not lead to "swallowing" of country’s economy by
Turkey and on the contrary there will be a sound competition and an
opportunity for rapid development".

He said it is necessary to involve popular diplomacy, business
diplomacy and so on.

According to him, today the Turkish market accounts for 35,000
Armenian citizens and the trade turnover between the countries reaches
$100,000,000.

"This is the most available market for Armenia in conditions of closed
borders and official embargo", noted he.

Speaking about the future relations in the region, the chairman noted
that "finally we will reach serious economic, cultural and political
cooperation between our peoples, including Azerbaijanis, Armenians,
Turks, Georgians and Kurds on the territory of historical Anatolia".

"Merely it is necessary to wait for the political thought of our
Turkish colleguas to get mature and for the established image to be
destroyed in Turkey. We, Armenians, have taken our step, proven by
the initiative of the Armenian president to invite Turkish President
Gul for a football match", said Kazaryan.

He voiced hope that "in the near future the relations between the two
countries will be solved – borders will open and Armenia must be ready
for serious cooperation and implementation of economic programs with
neighbor countries, primarily Turkey and in the future with Azerbaijan,
when relations go softer".

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.today.az/new

ANKARA: Turkish Opposition MPs Condemn Armenian Apology Campaign

TURKISH OPPOSITION MPS CONDEMN ARMENIAN APOLOGY CAMPAIGN

Dec 18 2008
Turkey

MPs from Turkey’s Main Opposition party, CHP, condemned Wednesday
the campaign launched to apologize from Armenians for the incidents
of 1915.

Parliamentarians of Republican’s People’s Party (CHP) who hold seats
at the foreign relations committee of the Turkish Parliament, released
a communique saying that Turkey had nothing to apologize for regarding
1915 incidents.

The Internet campaign coincides with a diplomatic rapprochement
between Turkey and Armenia to end almost 100 years of hostility.

"The claim that Turkey committed a crime in those years, requiring
an apology has no legal or historical foundation. If there is someone
who needs to apologize, it is the Armenian side, who attacked Turkish
soldiers and killed hundreds of thousands of Turkish citizens while
siding with and supporting a foreign country on an attempt to invade
Ottoman territory," said the communique.

Turkey accepts that many Armenians were killed during the waning
years of the Ottoman state, but strongly denies Armenian claims it
was genocide, saying that Armenians also killed Muslim Turks.

The apology describes the events as a great catastrophe.

The Parliamentarians also said the Armenians also needed to apologize
for massacring thousands of Azerbaijani citizens, invading Azerbaijani
territory and forcing one million of its citizens to exile.

They also said Armenians needed to apologize for not prosecuting and
punishing ASALA terrorists who assassinated Turkish diplomats.

"While these facts remain, the attempt to apologize from Armenians
has been rather an act violating the homage we owe to our history
and ancestors, and one that hurts the honour of the Turkish Nation,"
said the communique.

Organisers said the initiative, posted on the Internet along with a
non-binding petition to gather signatures, was meant to allow Turks
to offer a personal apology and to end an official silence.

President Abdullah Gul became the first Turkish leader to visit
Armenia in September as Turkey has sought to improve ties. Several
meetings between Turkish and Armenian officials have followed and
the two countries have expressed hopes of restoring full diplomatic
relations soon.

www.worldbulletin.net

ANKARA: Turkish-Armenian Border May Open In 2009

TURKISH-ARMENIAN BORDER MAY OPEN IN 2009
By Hasan Kanbolat

Today’s Zaman
Dec 18 2008
Turkey

The Arpacay River in Anı forms the border between Armenia (R) and
Turkey, closed since 1993 as a consequence of Armenia’s unresolved
conflict with Turkish ally Azerbaijan.

Positive steps followed the rapprochement process between Turkey
and Armenia initiated by President Abdullah Gul, who paid a visit to
Yerevan on Sept. 6 to watch a soccer game.

Secret meetings are being held between the parties in Europe. Armenian
Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian, who arrived in İstanbul on
Nov. 24 as the term president of the Organization of the Black Sea
Economic Cooperation (BSEC), announced that Armenian President Serzh
Sarksyan will pay a visit to Turkey in October 2009. Nalbandian added
that they were supportive of the normalization of relations without
any preconditions and that they were asking for the opening of the
border on the same terms.

The total length of the Turkish-Armenian border is 325
kilometers. There are two closed gates along this line: the Alican
land border gate and the Akyaka Railway border gate. The first is
located in the village of Alican in Igdır province, while the latter
is in Akyaka in Kars. The former name of Akyaka is Kızılcakcak;
for this reason, the former name of the Akyaka Railway border gate
is the Kızılcakcak gate. This gate, 66 kilometers from Kars,
is publicly known as Dogu Kapı, whereas Armenians call it Ahuryan
gate. In addition to a railway, the gate also includes a byroad.

In the aftermath of the Azeri-Armenian war, which lasted until 1994,
40,000 people had to leave Nagorno-Karabakh and 700,000 left seven
other provinces of Azerbaijan because of the Armenian invasion. As a
result, 13 percent of Azerbaijani people had to survive as migrants
within their own country, 20 percent of which was occupied by Armenian
forces. Thus, Turkey closed its border with Armenia in April 1993
and its air space in 1994. However, it is not accurate to attribute
these moves to Armenian aggression alone. Armenia asserts that the
1920 Treaty of Alexandropol and 1921 Treaty of Kars, which set the
borderline between Armenia and Turkey, are no longer valid. Armenian
also defined Turkey’s eastern territories as western Armenia in its
declaration of independence proclaimed on Aug. 23, 1990. In addition,
the official coat of arms of the Armenian state, as thoroughly
depicted in the second paragraph of Article 13 of the Armenian
constitution, includes Mount Ararat, a part of Turkey. Yerevan also
avoids recognition of Turkey’s territorial integrity.

Why were bold steps taken as late as September 2008 to normalize the
bilateral relations between the two countries despite these thorny
issues? Could the primary reason for this be the European attempt to
relieve Georgia, which has been alienated in the Southern Caucasus
in the aftermath of the war in August? Is it because the West wanted
to take Armenia on its side? The Euro-Atlantic world is resolute
in improving its relations with Armenia, a predominantly Christian
country, after Georgia. Armenian intellectuals also want their country
to be integrated into the West. They ask for a smooth transition
from the system inherited from the Soviet era to a Western-style
parliamentary democracy and institutionalization of a democratic
order where human rights and a free market economy are the dominant
factors. Armenian intellectuals are particularly uneasy about the
ownership of Armenian industries by Russian capital and the heavy
presence of Russian military in the country.

According to the Euro-Atlantic world and Armenian intellectuals,
Armenia’s integration with the West and the democratic world will
be possible if it establishes normal relations with Turkey, which
is ruled by democracy. In addition, according to unofficial figures,
the foreign trade volume between the two countries has increased from
$30 million in 1997 to $250 million in 2008. Considering the current
foreign trade volume of Turkey with Azerbaijan and Georgia and the
current state of Armenian economy, it is obvious that the existing
figures with respect to foreign trade volume between Armenia and Turkey
will not become any better even if the borders are opened. For these
reasons, opening the border gates is a political rather than economic
issue. It is a project that will enable Armenia’s democratization
and its integration with the West.

Armenia will maintain term presidency in BSEC for six months. If
Yerevan is able to take bold steps vis-a-vis Turkey during this period,
Turkey may proceed with opening the closed border gates in 2009. And
if Armenia offers a plausible plan of withdrawal from occupied
Azerbaijani territories and declares that it recognizes Turkey’s
territorial integrity, Turkey will be ready to take reciprocal
steps and moves. Initiation of border trade and establishment of
low-level diplomatic relations may follow the opening of the border
gates. However, if Moscow takes action and pursues new policies
vis-a-vis Armenia and Azerbaijan, the Euro-Atlantic world may be
disappointed. Moreover, considering the rapprochement between Turkey
and Armenia, the Baku administration may take action to mobilize
actors of Turkish domestic politics in an attempt to disrupt Turkey’s
improved relations with Armenia.

In conclusion, it is not logical or meaningful for the Turkish,
Armenian and Azerbaijani people, who have been living together
for thousands of years, to disrupt their common future because
of the relatively insignificant issues that have emerged in recent
decades. The Southern Caucasus needs permanent stability; and peoples
there need peace and welfare.

–Boundary_(ID_sk9QoyIbNNbeFSU95VsBAA)–