Former Turkish Armed Forces Member Collected Dossiers On Turkey’s Ar

FORMER TURKISH ARMED FORCES MEMBER COLLECTED DOSSIERS ON TURKEY’S ARMENIAN COMMUNITY

Tert
Nov 20 2009
Armenia

The investigation into an alleged illegal network known as Ergenekon
has revealed that a civilian who was formerly employed by the Turkish
Armed Forces (TSK) had collected detailed information on Turkey’s
ethnic Armenian population, reports Turkish news source Today’s Zaman.

Ergenekon investigators found that Fatma Cengiz, who is currently
a suspect in the case against Ergenekon, collected various dossiers
regarding the Armenian community in Turkey. The file included a list
of subscribers to the bilingual Armenian weekly Agos.

In addition, there were lists of names and members of Armenian
foundations and churches, which were classified as "active" or not,
as well as the balance sheets of Agos.

According to sources, Cengiz also tracked the names of academics,
writers and journalists who participated in a two-day academic
conference held on September 24-25, 2005, at Istanbul Bilgi University
titled "Ottoman Armenians during the Decline of the Empire: Issues
of Scientific Responsibility and Democracy." The conference openly
disputed the official Turkish account of the Armenian massacres.

In the files allegedly belonging to Cengiz, who is also known as Asena
Ozturk, there are several famous names, with notes next to their names:
Halil Berktay, "professor, he had publicly said that Armenians were
massacred"; Kazım Akıncı, "secret Armenian, he applied to a court
to change his religion after Dink"; Ece Temelkuran, "she said that
if something happens to her the prime minister is responsible for it,
she is a graduate of the Ankara Faculty of Law"; Herkul Milas, "he is
not an Armenian"; Sevan NiÅ~_anyan, "writer at Taraf, maybe from Agos,
needed to be investigated"; Markar Esayan, "Taraf writer, information
regarding him will come together with Etyen Mahcupyan"; Aytac İlhan,
"he might be a student in Igdır, he should be investigated, he had
applied to change his religion"; Baskın Oran, Adalet Agaoglu and
Elif Å~^afak.

Investigators have also found a PowerPoint presentation which was
allegedly prepared by Cengiz, who signed it as Asena Ozturk. In that
presentation, pictures of Å~^ahin and Korkut Eken, a former officer of
the TSK Special Operations, are placed side by side. There is also a
photograph of former Chief of General Staff Gen. YaÅ~_ar Buyukanıt,
in addition to the expression "Everything is for the country,"
written in blood on a background of weapons and the Turkish flag.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Baku Expects Yerevan To Change Its Position At Karabakh Settlement T

BAKU EXPECTS YEREVAN TO CHANGE ITS POSITION AT KARABAKH SETTLEMENT TALKS

Interfax
Nov 19 2009
Russia

Azerbaijan expects a change in the Armenian position at the upcoming
Karabakh settlement summit, Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign Minister Araz
Azimov told the media on Thursday.

"First of all, we expect a detailed discussion. Secondly, we expect
a change in the position our opponent expressed at the previous
meetings," he said.

"If there is no change, it is hardly possible to discuss any progress,"
Azimov said.

The Azerbaijani position is absolutely clear, he said. "We want
to resolve the problem within our territorial integrity. We voiced
that position from the very start. I can say that the international
community wholly supports this stance," he said.

The Azerbaijani position is based on international legal norms,
Azimov said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Turkey Cannot Mediate Karabakh Settlement – Armenian Minister

TURKEY CANNOT MEDIATE KARABAKH SETTLEMENT – ARMENIAN MINISTER

Interfax
Nov 19 2009
Russia

Turkey cannot co-chair the OSCE Minsk Group settling the Karabakh
problem, Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian said at the
national parliament on Wednesday.

"Turkey’s affiliation to the OSCE Minsk Group as the fourth co-
chairman is ruled out. That would require consent of Armenia and
Karabakh," he said.

"Turkey may try, but neither Armenia nor Karabakh nor current Minsk
Group co-chairman will allow that to happen," Nalbandian said.

Armenia Should Change Its Position: Deputy FM

ARMENIA SHOULD CHANGE ITS POSITION: DEPUTY FM

Trend
Nov 19 2009
Azerbaijan

The Armenian and Azerbaijani presidents will meet in the coming days.

Azerbaijan expects to discuss major issues and changes in Armenia’s
position since the last meeting, Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov
said in at press conference today.

"Azerbaijan leaves room for compromise," he said. "We are now standing
on the middle of a bridge and we expect Armenia will have also traveled
part of the way. One can not talk about progress on the issue without
compromises from the Armenian side."

Azerbaijan’s position is clear – "resolving the conflict within its
territorial integrity," Azimov added.

"This position is supported by the international community, which
is based on international principles and norms and there cannot be a
matter of double standards," he said. "Although Armenia talks about
willingness for a peaceful settlement, we see no action."

Baku sees no compliance with international principles and standards
in Armenia’s position, the deputy foreign minister said.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
armed forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and 7 surrounding districts.

Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The
co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia, France, and the U.S. –
are currently holding the peace negotiations.

According to Azimov, the liberation of the occupied Azerbaijani
territories is a major component of the negotiations between the
parties.

Nagorno-Karabakh and seven occupied districts are an integral part of
Azerbaijan and this is not a matter of discussion, the deputy minister
said. According to Azimov, the release of the seven districts has
always been a key principle of Azerbaijan’s position.

"Armenia has only two options – either the conflict will not be
resolved or the status of Nagorno-Karabakh will be determined after
Azerbaijani refugees return to the occupied territories," he said.

According to the official, "until everything is agreed, nothing is
agreed." Although discussions will continue, everything has a limit,
he said.

BAKU: Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict Resolution And Turkey-Armenia Rappro

NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT RESOLUTION AND TURKEY-ARMENIA RAPPROCHEMENT HAVE NO FORMAL RELATION: CE COMMITTEE OF MINISTERS NEW CHAIRMAN

Trend
Nov 19 2009
Azerbaijan

There is no formal relation between resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict and Turkey-Armenia rapprochement, Committee of Ministers of
the Council of Europe Chairman and Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline
Calmy-Rey told Trend News today. Calmy-Rey was commenting on the
non-ratification of the Turkish-Armenian protocols.

The Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers Ahmet Davutoglu and Edward
Nalbandian signed the Ankara-Yerevan protocols in Zurich Oct. 10.

Turkey and Armenia in talks mediated by Switzerland reached an
agreement to launch "domestic political consultations" Aug. 31 to
sign the "Protocol on the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations and
Protocol on the Development of Bilateral Relations," the Turkish
Foreign Ministry reported.

Diplomatic relations between Armenia and Turkey were broken due
to Armenian claims of an alleged genocide and its occupation of
Azerbaijani lands. Their border closed in 1993.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
armed forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and 7 surrounding districts.

Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The
co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia, France, and the U.S. –
are currently holding the peace negotiations.

Following the signing of the protocols Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Erdogan said Turkey will not take steps contradicting Azerbaijan’s
interests.

Calmy-Rey also said the two countries should ratify the Turkish and
Armenian protocols in the rapprochement process.

"We hope both Turkey and Armenia will ratify the protocols soon," the
minister said, noting that the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict resolution
and Turkey-Armenia rapprochement have no formal relation.

According to official, the processes are connected, yet independent
at the same time.

"The OSCE Minsk Group is engaged in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The
other process deals with the normalization of Turkey-Armenia relations
with Swiss mediation," she said.

The minister expressed hope in the prompt ratification of the
protocols.

"We hope the ratification process will be held soon. The processes
are not connected. Of course, progress on one issue will positively
impact the second affair," the minister added.

The chairmanship of Council of Europe’s Committee of Ministers was
handed over from Slovenia to Switzerland Nov.18. After the ceremony,
Council of Europe Secretary General Thorbjorn Jagland, Slovenian
Foreign Minister Samuel Zbogar and new Council of Europe Committee of
Ministers Chairman Micheline Calmy-Rey held a joint press conference.

A History Of Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years

A HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY: THE FIRST THREE THOUSAND YEARS
by Alec Ryrie

The Times Higher Education Supplement
November 19, 2009

A History of Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years. By Diarmaid
MacCulloch. Allen Lane, 1,184pp, 35.00. ISBN 9780713998696.

Published 24 September 2009

You might be forgiven for expecting a 1,000-page book to be a
little self- indulgent. Not this one. The prose is taut and tart,
sometimes to the point of breathlessness; and it is an astonishing
feat of compression. After all, this book aspires to be a global,
comprehensive account of perhaps the most diverse, long-lived,
pervasive and powerful movement in human history.

That diversity is the book’s most important theme. Although all the
usual suspects are here, from Constantine I to John Wesley to John Paul
II, MacCulloch has little patience with Eurocentric (or Latin-centric)
visions of Christian history. The Eastern Orthodox churches are
fully covered; so too (and this is a particular preoccupation) are
the bodies cast out by the deeper schism of the 5th century – the
Monophysite ("Miaphysite") churches of Armenia, Egypt and Ethiopia,
and the Nestorian ("Dyophysite") churches whose scattered presence
once reached deep into China.

The great future of non-Latin Christianity has largely faded, but
MacCulloch reminds us of its lost power and promise, as well as other
teasing, forgotten religious possibilities, such as the failed scheme
for joint Anglo-Moroccan colonies in North America. He positively
celebrates the riot of religious pluralism in the modern world, and
is inclusive of squabbling Christian offspring such as Quakerism,
Unitarianism, Mormonism and even atheism ("the ultimate form of
Protestant dissent").

And a family is what Christianity is: tied together by history,
descent and relationship, not by shared beliefs, hence the three
millennia of MacCulloch’s subtitle. Christian culture is the child of
a mixed marriage between Greek and Jewish culture, and he begins with
that vital prehistory. The family historian’s advantage, of course,
is the ability to spot recurrent patterns in the genes. Music is a
particular theme here, whose beat has so often quickened the blood
of Christians and whose wordlessness can take over when the intellect
is overwhelmed or repulsed.

There is always violence, too, the product of diversity and passion:
citing the story of Cain and Abel, MacCulloch notes that the Bible’s
first act of worship is immediately followed by its first murder. And
there are wonderful parallels and synchronicities, too (for example,
the similarity of The Book of Mormon to The Lord of the Rings).

But if this is not a family united by its beliefs, it is supremely a
family in which belief matters. MacCulloch will not let his readers get
away without engaging seriously with theology and recognising that it
is serious. The three-way schism of the 5th century, for example, was
over the nature, or natures, of Jesus Christ as both God and human. It
is hard for modern imaginations to credit that rival theories about
this could matter so much, but as we follow the stories it becomes
clear that those different theories produced radically different ways
of seeing the world. It also becomes clear that all of us in the Latin
West are heirs to that struggle, whether we like it or not. Likewise,
MacCulloch argues that one of the oddities of modern Christianity
(of all kinds) is its this- worldliness and indifference to doctrinal
abstraction.

And so, despite all the globalisation and context, one giant still
dominates the book. We meet Augustine of Hippo only on page 301, but
thereafter he is inescapable: his insights and extraordinary reading
of the Bible continue to tower over Latin Christianity to the present.

Most of the key convulsions of the Western Church begin with someone
rereading or rediscovering Augustine.

Inevitably, in common with Augustine’s massive works, this will be
a book for dipping into as much as for full immersion. Tasters will
miss the bigger picture, but there is plenty for them. MacCulloch
writes with great moral seriousness, but also with a waspish wit (Ivan
the Terrible’s fear for his own soul was "intense and justified")
and a sense of mischief that he occasionally lets off the leash (as
in his argument that early Christians probably smelled worse than
most Romans).

Beneath these vignettes is a grander story of repeated rise, fall and
rise again – a cycle that, as his subtitle indicates, he expects to
continue. The decline into doubt and pluralism in the post-medieval
West is explained with particular power and traced ultimately to
the brutal expulsion of Spain’s Jews in 1492 (an event that becomes,
with bitter irony, the foundation of later Western liberties).

Christianity’s rise is a deeper mystery. Eurocentric histories have
sometimes dismissed it as a fluke, the product of one Roman emperor’s
idiosyncratic conversion. MacCulloch explodes that by showing how
often Constantine’s story has been paralleled elsewhere, from Syrian
kings beyond Rome’s frontiers before Constantine’s time, through
Ethelbert of Kent to (he wonders?) modern China. What is it that made,
and makes, the Christian Gospel so astonishingly appealing? Perhaps
history cannot tell us.

Alec Ryrie is professor of the history of Christianity, Durham
University.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Peace Talks Imply Pullout Of Armenian Troops, Aliyev

PEACE TALKS IMPLY PULLOUT OF ARMENIAN TROOPS, PRESIDENT ILHAM ALIYEV

State Telegraph Agency of the Republic of Azerbaijan
November 19, 2009 Thursday

The talks already imply withdrawal of Armenian troops from all
seven districts. At the same time, Azerbaijanis` returning to
Nagorno-Karabakh has already become a subject of talks although it was
out of question before, President Ilham Aliyev said at an inauguration
of the 9-storey building for IDPs.

The Head of State said there is some hope left. Armenia chose the
delaying tactics but it does not give anything to them. Their main
goal is to settle Armenians in our lands but they do not have enough
human resources to do it. Armenia`s population fell. The population
comes to 1,700,000 there today. As time goes by, they will not be
able to defend the frontline.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Russian MFA Spokesman Response To Media Query Regarding "Association

RUSSIAN MFA SPOKESMAN ANDREI NESTERENKO RESPONSE TO MEDIA QUERY REGARDING "ASSOCIATION" BETWEEN PROCESSES OF NAGORNO KARABAKH SETTLEMENT AND NORMALIZATION OF ARMENIAN-TURKISH RELATIONS

States News Service
November 19, 2009 Thursday
MOSCOW, Russia

The following information was released by the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs of the Russian Federation:

Moscow has taken note that some Armenian media have raised a fuss
about the remarks made by the Russian MFA Spokesman on November 17.

They allege that Moscow has changed its position and now links the
processes of the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement and Armenian-Turkish
rapprochement. This is a misunderstanding. Foreign Minister Sergey
Lavrov has repeatedly clarified Russia’s point of view. It remains
unchanged. These are two different processes.

We have a positive attitude to the bilateral documents signed by
Armenia and Turkey, which determine their subsequent actions towards
comprehensive normalization of state relations.

We believe that the establishment of good neighborly relations between
Armenia and Turkey should objectively contribute to further steps to
promote peace and security in Transcaucasia.

As to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, despite continuing disagreements,
the parties have managed to achieve some definite progress in agreeing
on the basic principles for its settlement.

We see our role in facilitating this process, the search by the
parties for mutually acceptable solutions to the key issues, but
without the imposition on the conflict participants of any recipes from
outside. At the same time we believe that the primary responsibility
for the final choice should lie with the Azerbaijanis and Armenians
themselves. Russia will be ready to support the solution option which
will suit all parties involved, and if a compromise agreement is
reached – to act as guarantor of the settlement. Clearly, a viable
solution will be the one that will enable returning stability and
tranquility in Transcaucasia and in the post-conflict period help to
maintain the historically established geopolitical balance of forces
there and is not likely to transform the region into an arena of
international political and military rivalry.

New Lions To Be Brought To The Dehiwala Zoo Soon

NEW LIONS TO BE BROUGHT TO THE DEHIWALA ZOO SOON

Daily Mirror
November 19, 2009 Thursday
Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka, Nov. 19 — A group of new lions are to be brought from
Armenia and China to Sri Lanka, as the current Lions in the Dehiwala
Zoo are to be transported to the Hambanthota Safari park when it’s
completed, Duminda Jayaratne, Director General of the Zoo told Daily
Mirror Online.

He further added that there was an excess of Lions in the Dehiwala
Zoo at the moment. Published by HT Syndication with permission from
Daily Mirror Sri Lanka.

BAKU: Topical: Another Scandalous Visit To Karabakh By Turkish Journ

TOPICAL: ANOTHER SCANDALOUS VISIT TO KARABAKH BY TURKISH JOURNALISTS

Yeni Musavat
Nov 17 2009
Azerbaijan

Has a correspondent of Aksam newspaper described Nagornyy Karabakh an
`Armenian land for one hundred per cent?’

In parallel with the signing of the protocols between Armenia and
Turkey, the media has also been given the go-ahead to contribute to
a rapprochement between the two societies.

Over the recent months, correspondents of Turkey’s leading mass
media outlets are being sent to Armenia and Nagornyy Karabakh one
after another. And as a result of these trips, there appear reports
on Armenians living in miserable conditions, their eagerness for
the opening of the borders with Turkey very much and readiness for
reconciliation.

According to Armenian sources, another Turkish newspaper sent its
correspondent to Nagornyy Karabakh. This time, it is said that Nagehan
Alci and a cameraman of Aksam newspaper were sent to the occupied
Azerbaijani region to prepare reports.

Moreover, the Turkish journalist in an interview with Nagornyy
Karabakh’s "public television" allegedly claimed that this region "is
one hundred per cent an Armenian land". A report carried by Novosti
Armenia news agency said. Although it was impossible to verify to
what extent this report was true, it added that Nagehan Alci in the
interview said that public opinion in Turkey was not properly formed:
"Nagornyy Karabakh is one hundred per cent an Armenian land. We have
realized that you Armenians are resolute against making concession
over this land."

The journalist said that it was her wish to see Nagornyy Karabakh with
her own eyes: "Therefore, I appealed to our editor-in-chief to this end
and got a positive answer." The journalist said that the territorial
dispute around Nagornyy Karabakh also interests Turkey very closely:
"What we have seen here has dispelled our suspicions about the future
and the past of Karabakh. We talked to both officials and ordinary
people. I am pleased to see Stepanakert (Xankandi editorial office)
and would like to be back here again."

The journalists said that people in Azerbaijan would probably not
be happy about their visit to Nagornyy Karabakh: "We knew this
in advance. It is possible that they would declare us persona non
gratae in Azerbaijan, however, I do not want to disappoint anyone in
Azerbaijan and Armenia. I am a journalist and my profession requires
that I visit everywhere."

Alci said that she would pay visits to Susa and other villages to meet
Armenian refugees and get interested in their living conditions. Upon
my return home, I shall write unbiased articles, she said.

We should note that prior to this, Turkish NTV channel caused
diplomatic tension between Ankara and Baku with a clip shot in Nagornyy
Karabakh. The channel’s crew went to Xankandi without agreeing it
with the Azerbaijani side and met the head of the separatist regime
and other officials and introduced Bako Sahakyan as a "president".

The clip contained other moments running against Azerbaijan’s
territorial integrity and sovereignty. Official Baku sent a diplomatic
note to Ankara over this clip and the issue was raised at talks
between the foreign ministers of the two countries.

Although the Turkish Foreign Ministry in a verbal statement said
that the clip did not reflect official Ankara’s position, no official
response was sent to Baku’s diplomatic note. It is assumed that the
visit of Aksam newspaper correspondent to Nagornyy Karabakh and her
statement would provoke similar tension.

Over the recent time, the media outlets in particular those connected
with the AKP government carry frequent reports from Armenia where
Armenians are depicted as supporters of peace in public opinion.