On Road To Membership, EU Wants More Political, Human Rights Reform

ON ROAD TO MEMBERSHIP, EU WANTS MORE POLITICAL, HUMAN RIGHTS REFORM IN TURKEY

armradio.am
14.10.2009 18:11

The European Union told Turkey on Wednesday to speed up reforms to
boost its chances of joining the bloc and made a special appeal to
protect the freedom of expression of Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk.

The European Commission’s annual progress report on Turkish membership
said Ankara has improved its handling of human rights issues and the
Kurdish minority. But it said that overall, a lot more work needed
to be done for membership.

The report did not yet take on board Turkey’s recent moves to end a
century of enmity with neighboring Armenia, a new momentum which has
been welcomed around the world and which EU Enlargement Commissioner
Olli Rehn also highlighted.

"I’m encouraged by the historic steps Turkey and Armenia have just
taken toward normalizing their relations. This process should now lead
to full normalization as soon as possible," Rehn said in a statement,
AP reported.

Sardarapat: Armenian Response To Armenian Question

SARDARAPAT: ARMENIAN RESPONSE TO ARMENIAN QUESTION

Aysor.am
Wednesday, October 14

The newly created Sardarapat Movement intends to raise a new
democratic wave aimed at current threat resistance, announced at
today’s press-conference the initiative group’s representatives:
hero of the Artsakh War Zhirayr Sefilian, National Assembly deputy
Vardan Khachatryan, and producer Tigran Khzmalyan.

"Today the relations with Armenia’s chief ally – Diaspora – are
threatened. We believe that only a single and well-knit Armenians
can resist world pressure," said Vardan Khachatryan.

According to Tigran Khzmalyan the processes threaten national security.

"Current political recourses and a very weak society are not enough to
provide Armenian Response to Armenian Question," he said, mentioning
that signed in Zurich protocols also mean a new stage of Armenian
Question in world policy, so a new risk of continuing Genocide appears.

"This is similar to the situation during Sardarapat, so this requires
same response."

Zhirayr Sefilian said that Sardarapat Movement is aimed not at
aftermath but at eliminating the causes and forming a moral authority’s
body. The establishment of Sardarapat Movement is underway.

"Our chief goal is to create and to see Armenia land where morality and
justice rule, to create a spiritual-orientated Armenia," said war hero.

The State Is Like The Battle Of Sardarapat

THE STATE IS LIKE THE BATTLE OF SARDARAPAT

3/sardarapat
06:29 pm | October 13, 2009

Politics

The only way to get out of the current state in the country is to
restore the spirit that our people had during the Battle of Sardarapat,
say Jirair Sefilyan, Vardan Khachatryan and Tigran Khzmalyan who
declared the creation of the new "Sardarapat" movement.

According to Vardan Khachatryan, the people have lost their
resistance and proof of that was the signing of the Turkish-Armenian
protocols. Tigran Khzmalyan evaluated the current situation by one
word-"Sardarapat". "We are seeing the emergence of the danger the
Armenian Genocide in progress. The great powers that stay silent or
continue their policies with indifference become part of that crime."

Sefilyan is certain that the protocols would never have been signed if
our authorities were not that weak. "The Turkish-Armenian protocols
are the result of March 1. What we have today is the effect of the
degenerated situation in the country. Our movement is going to be
aimed at eliminating the causes. Jirair Sefilyan underlined that the
creation of the new movement doesn’t imply that he and his "Armenian
Volunteers" Union is going to leave the Armenian National Congress.

"We will not leave the camp headed by Ter-Petrosyan. He has done a
lot, but why are we demanding so much from one person? We will never
break the unity of the tens of thousands of people. Everyone must do
all that they can."

As far as the viewpoint according to which the "Sardarapat" movement
is turning into the repetition of the ARF protests, Sefilyan sees
nothing in common. He only brought up one example to prove that the
ARF is not sincere.

"If the ARF was aimed at putting an end to Serzh Sargsyan’s treacherous
acts, the most civilized way would be to collect the signatures of
one million people and put them on Sargsyan’s table. In that case,
Serzh Sargsyan would have resigned and would not put on a show abroad."

The "Sardarapat" movement is open for all those who are concerned with
the current state in the country. Sefilyan promised to keep everyone
updated about each step to be taken by the movement.

No mood for concessions in Artsakh

Commander of the Shushi squadron Jirair Sefilyan is certain that there
are no moods for concessions in Artsakh. "Even the political elite
of the NKR will not dare to make any concessions," said Sefilyan to
"A1+". He has no doubt that Serzh Sargsyan will the people of Artsakh
will stand up to fight if Serzh Sargsyan makes any attempt to take
any such action.

http://a1plus.am/en/politics/2009/10/1

U.S. Embassy Presents American Documentary Showcase

U.S. EMBASSY PRESENTS AMERICAN DOCUMENTARY SHOWCASE

os15539.html
14:17:53 – 14/10/2009

The U.S. Embassy is pleased to announce that it will present an
American Documentary Showcase, featuring director David Hoffman and
documentary film expert Sandra Ruch, from October 14- 20, 2009, in
Yerevan. The Showcase will officially open on October 16 and will
continue until the end of November.

>From the first American feature-length documentary, Nanook of the
North, released in 1922, until today, documentary films describe
not only the human condition, but also contemporary events,
and record social and cultural phenomena. This Showcase offers a
broad, diversified look at life in the United States and American
values as seen by American documentary filmmakers. The Showcase also
demonstrates the role documentary films play in fostering understanding
and cooperation.

The American Documentary Showcase will include film screenings
at the National Gallery and the Moscow Movie Theater, with the
official opening on October 16, featuring David Hoffman’s film,
‘Sputnik Mania.’ The film screenings are open to the public and free
of charge. Hoffman and Ruch will also meet with local directors, host
workshops, and hold two master classes for film students. Additional
information, including information about master classes and a
full movie schedule, can be found on the U.S. Embassy website at
.The American Documentary Showcase is
sponsored by the U.S. Embassy, the U.S. State Department Bureau of
Educational and Cultural Affairs, Art Film Gallery, and the National
Gallery of Armenia. The program is part of an international tour.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/society-lrah
http://armenia.usembassy.gov/

Serzh Sargsyan Visit To Turkey Fourth On Presidential Level

SERZH SARGSYAN VISIT TO TURKEY FOURTH ON PRESIDENTIAL LEVEL

Panorama.am
15:29 14/10/2009

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan is due to leave for Turkey today,
October 14 to watch Turkey-Armenia football match in the Turkish city
of Bursa.

Armenian President’s visit, at the invitation of the Turkish President
Abdullah Gul is actually a response visit to the one Gul paid to
Armenia last year.

However, Abdullah Gul arrival in Yerevan was historical in the view
it was the first visit of a Turkish leader to Armenia, whereas Serzh
Sargsyan visit has precedents. This is the fourth time in the history
of Independent Armenia when the President of the Republic of Armenia
for this reason or that pays a visit to Turkey.

The first two visits to Turkey were paid by Armenia’s First President,
particularly in June, 1992 to attend the Black Sea Economic Cooperation
Organization summit and in April, 1993 to attend the burial ceremony
of the Turkish President Turgut Ozal. The third visit was paid by
Armenia’s second President Robert Kocharyan in November, 1999 to
attend the OSCE summit in Istanbul.

Thus, Serzh Sargsyan’s visit to Bursa is fourth on the Presidential
level.

This is the final match of the Armenian National Football team in
the frames of the World Cup 2010 qualifying tour, to play against
Turkey’s team in Bursa Ataturk stadium.

By now the two teams have had only one meeting. The match was due in
Yerevan, September, 6, 2008, when Turkey’s team scored 2:0 against
Armenians.

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan had invited his Turkish counterpart
to Yerevan to watch the football match. The invitation was accepted
and the Armenian-Turkish normalization process followed, which came
to be known among the international public as "football diplomacy".

Currently the process has reached a significant stage since Armenia and
Turkey signed Protocols on establishing diplomatic relations in Zurich
last week. Though the Armenian President had received the invitation
to visit Turkey last September, it was only several days ago, October
12 when the President announced he will accept the invitation.

Ankara: PM Thanks Baykal But Asks Him Not To Give Messages Through M

PM THANKS BAYKAL BUT ASKS HIM NOT TO GIVE MESSAGES THROUGH MEDIA

Hurriyet Daily News
Tuesday, October 13, 2009

ANKARA – Daily News Parliament Bureau

Prime Minister Erdogan responds to CHP leader Deniz Baykal’s letter. AA
photo

Prime Minister Erdogan responds to CHP leader Deniz Baykal’s letter. AA
photo

Correspondence between leaders of the ruling party and the main
opposition is likely to produce a key meeting next week regarding
the ongoing efforts to solve the Kurdish question and end terrorism.

The prime minister also made a statement about Republican People’s
Party, or CHP, leader Deniz Baykal’s letter inviting him to a
face-to-face meeting on the condition that it be aired on television.

"To me it’s a positive step. We’ll elaborate (the invitation for a
meeting)," Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Tuesday at his
party’s parliamentary group meeting. Addressing Baykal’s six-page
letter, the prime minister said: "I am currently not in the position
to evaluate the content of this letter. We’ll do it when we meet. But
I have said I do not want to say anything about the content of the
letter to the media. I hope Mr. Baykal will agree," Erdogan said.

In the letter, Baykal addressed a 2007 meeting held with Erdogan
and former Chief of General Staff Gen. YaÅ~_ar Buyukanıt. The prime
minister alluded to a comparison made by Baykal.

"I believe the comparison is wrong," Erdogan said, adding that meetings
between prime ministers and generals are often misunderstood. "The
new meeting will be different. Each of us will make statements after
the meeting," he said.

Erdogan said Parliament would discuss the matter further in an
open session in the coming weeks. "We are not talking behind closed
doors. We will share any developments with the public. We do not want
to run the process secretly," he said.

Baykal, in his address to parliamentary lawmakers Tuesday afternoon,
described the meeting as historical and crucial. "I am aware of this
fact. I wish the pr istakes to his face. I will disclose all of what
you have on your mind," Baykal said.

Recalling that he had expressed his concerns in his letter sent to
Erdogan, Baykal denied that "the meeting will be the one in which
Erdogan informs the main opposition about the motives of the move. Why
do you hide your road map from the public? The CHP will not help you
disguise your road map," he said.

Baykal said his condition for the meeting was that it "was not the
sort of reunion that could be kept secret from the people. We’ll
kindly welcome Mr. Prime Minister and we’ll show all our respect to
him at our headquarters."

Bahceli slams CHP

The correspondence between Erdogan and Baykal seems to have disturbed
the Nationalist Movement Party, or MHP, which has been most vocal
against the government-led Kurdish initiative. "Mr. Baykal is about
to become the Prime Minister’s co-pilot on his journey to destroy the
unity of the country. The troika of destruction will be established
with Mr. Baykal’s participation in the process," MHP leader Devlet
Bahceli said in an address to his party.

"Recording the meeting will not save Mr. Baykal," he said.

On the other hand, the leader of the pro-Kurdish Democratic Society
Party, or DTP, repeated his call to Baykal to fully back the Kurdish
initiative. "We want Baykal to leave his fear-based policies behind,"
he said in Parliament. Turk also said it was the right time to consider
submitting essential constitutional amendments for consideration
by referendum. "We need a comprehensive amendment to this current
Constitution. That’s the only way to make the country more democratic,"
he said.

PM calls for softer rhetoric

Criticizing the Nationalist Movement Party, or MHP, for the language
it used against the ruling party, the prime minister asked all parties
to embrace "a more contributive approach in the new legislative year."

"Let’s make this legislative year a year of dialogue, democratic
maturity, and good relations. A democratic soci uld have dialogue
and consensus. It must tolerate different opinions. You cannot shake
clenched fists," he said.

Erdogan said some people continue to benefit from the ongoing
terrorism in the country and that it is an issue that is hindering the
government’s efforts to solve the problem. "We have begun a journey to
stop what is happening regarding terrorism. We will succeed. Though
terror has its own economy, new democratic initiatives will disrupt
it."

Armenian move slammed as well

The signing of the historical protocols with Armenia was also on the
agenda of the opposition parties.

"Wouldn’t we be at a different point today if the Minsk Group
had spent the same amount of energy on solving Nagorno-Karabakh
as it did on trying to open the border between Turkey and
Armenia?" Baykal said. Criticizing the government for putting the
ball in Parliament’s court, he said: "It’s far from sincere. Did you
sign the protocols? Yes, you did, so why are you now changing your
course?" asked the main opposition leader.

Bahceli, for his part, reiterated that his party would never support
such a move until the problems with Azerbaijan are solved by an
Armenian withdrawal from occupied Azerbaijani territories.

The Big Question: Is the bitter divide between coming to an end?

The Big Question: Is the bitter divide between Turkey and Armenia
coming to an end?
By Marcus Tanner

The Independent
Monday, 12 October

Why are we asking this now?

Because Turkey and Armenia finally signed an agreement on Saturday to
restore diplomatic ties, which Turkey broke off in 1993, and reopen the
border, which Turkey closed that same year. The accord will hopefully bury
the hatchet – or at least part of the hatchet – between two bitterly
estranged neighbours.

Estranged by what?

Accusations of genocide, principally. Armenia says Ottoman-era Turks carried
out a mass slaughter of Armenians in the First World War in what is now
eastern Turkey. They insist the authorities planned and organised the
slaughter, that at least 1.5 million perished and that this constitutes
genocide. Turks disagree passionately, although Ankara’s position has
oscillated between flat denial and cagey admission that a number of people
died in eastern Turkey in a series of disorganised tit-for-tat killings in
which Turks were victims as well as aggressors.

And the dispute is now resolved?

Not quite, though the signing in Switzerland was a breakthrough of sorts.
Under the terms of the accord, both countries have agreed to appoint experts
to a joint commission that will examine the facts and – a long shot – come
up with an agreed version about what happened. And in the meantime Turkish
nationalists are outraged. Until recently Turkish writers who even edged
towards admitting a slaughter of Armenians occurred in the First World War
risked imprisonment for insulting the state. The Nobel Prize-winning author
Orhan Pamuk was prosecuted for precisely this crime in 2005 although the
Justice Ministry refused to let a trial proceed, following an embarrassing
international outcry.

The accord has also upset Armenian nationalists – especially the powerful
diaspora living in France, the US, Lebanon and elsewhere. They’ve staged
large protests. Their position is that the only thing Turkey should do is
admit guilt. They fear that the accord will undermine Armenia’s diplomatic
campaign to persuade countries around the world to officially recognise the
events of 1915-19 as genocide.

What brought the two sides together?

In Turkey the policy of simply silencing debate about what happened to the
Armenians is breaking down as more and more writers and intellectuals
question the official line. The persistence of the dispute with Armenia is
also damaging Turkey’s hopes of joining the EU, partly because pro-Armenian
sentiment is strong in some key states like France. In any case, the EU is
unlikely to accept Turkey as a member while it has a "frozen conflict" with
its eastern neighbour and while its frontier with Armenia remains shut.

What can Armenia get out of this?

A good deal, economically. Armenia is small, mountainous, infertile and
landlocked. Blockaded by Turkey on one side and by Turkey’s ally,
Azerbaijan, on the other, its people have paid a high price for the dispute
with Turkey. Poverty is widespread, the electricity supply is erratic, even
in the capital, and many people have emigrated. Armenia has shown it can
survive the Turkish blockade, thanks partly to the annual flow of
remittances and other forms of aid that the wealthy diaspora sends back
"home". But the country cannot flourish until relations with Turkey become
are normalised. If relations really improved, Armenians might also be able
to visit the many ruined Armenian churches and cathedrals in eastern Turkey,
not to mention Mount Ararat, the symbol of Armenia, which also remains out
of reach, just over the border.

What about the US in all this?

Hillary Clinton’s presence in Switzerland at the weekend, urging the two
sides to hurry up and sign the accord, was evidence of the importance that
the US attaches to the dispute.

The US is in a dilemma over Armenia. As a senator, Barack Obama vocally
supported the Armenian cause and pledged to publicly describe the events of
1915-19 as "genocide" if elected president. The main Armenian lobby groups
in the US then urged their supporters to vote for Obama. Once in the White
House, he started fudging the issue. Ideally Obama would like to square his
earlier pro-Armenian commitments with the reality that Turkey is a far more
important player than Armenia. If the two sides wind down the dispute
themselves, of course, it helps Obama get out of a tight spot.

How does Azerbaijan come into the dispute?

This is where it gets complicated. The main reason why Turkey closed the
border with Armenia is not because Armenians accuse Turks of genocide. It is
because in 1993 Armenia invaded its own eastern neighbour, Azerbaijan, on
behalf of the embattled and besieged Armenian enclave of Nagorny Karabakh,
which had proclaimed independence from Azerbaijan.

The Turks, who see the Muslim Azerbaijanis as "kith and kin", were furious.
The Armenians were equally furious, seeing Azerbaijan’s attempt to crush the
Armenian enclave militarily as a drive to "complete the Armenian genocide".

The question of whether the enclave’s independence should be recognised, or
whether it should become part of Armenia, or be returned to Azerbaijan’s
control, remains unresolved. It is yet another of the region’s frozen
disputes – much like the one between Georgia and Abkhazia. Azerbaijan
officials meanwhile are disappointed by the accord. Their official
standpoint has always been that Turkey must not reopen the border with
Armenia until Armenia has agreed to the return of Nagorny Karabakh to
Azerbaijan’s rule.

Who cares about what Azerbaijan thinks?

Lots of people, in fact – not just their "Turkish brothers". Azerbaijan sits
on one of the world’s largest oil reserves in the Caspian Sea and as Europe
is desperate to reduce its dependence on Russia as a supplier of energy, it
has a strategic interest in Azerbaijan. The EU sees it as a crucial source
of oil for the Nabucco pipeline. This is supposed to start transporting oil
from Turkey to western Europe by about 2014, bypassing Russia.

So Russia has a stake?

Very much so, although the Kremlin’s attitude to Armenia’s disputes is
somewhat sphinx-like. As an island of pro-Russian sentiment in the Caucasus,
Armenia is important to Moscow and at times Russia enjoys posing as an older
brother. It does not want Armenia to go the way of neighbouring Georgia and
become a pro-American bastion. Russian public opinion also favours Christian
Armenia over Muslim Azerbaijan – a factor of which the populist Kremlin
leadership must take account. At the same time, the Kremlin doesn’t want to
alienate Azerbaijan, which was also part of the old USSR, or Turkey. It will
encourage Armenia-Turkey rapprochement.

What happens next?

The signing of the accord is a milestone in the story of Armenian-Turkish
relations but not the end of the story by any means. The two parliaments in
Yerevan and Ankara must ratify the accord and a "yes" vote is not guaranteed
in either assembly. As for the joint commission to examine what happened in
the First World War, the question of who joins it and what it does will be
enormously controversial. It may never get off the ground. But even if it
doesn’t, the reopening of the border between these two countries is an event
of more than regional significance. Whatever reservations are felt on either
side, the accord has to be good news.

Is the accord going to end decades of hatred?

Yes

*Whatever the Armenian diaspora says, growing numbers of people in Armenia
want to trade and travel.

*Historians on both sides of the frontier are increasingly determined to
query ‘official’ versions of history.

*Turkey knows it cannot advance its EU hopes while relations with its
eastern neighbour are frozen.

No

*Nationalists in both countries are determined to prevent reconciliation and
will lobby their two parliaments.

*Even if the two assemblies do ratify the agreement, it will do very little
to undo decades of mutual animosity.

*By raising hopes that cannot be satisfied, the accord, paradoxically, may
end up making matters worse.

Turkish Parliament To Discuss The Protocols On September 21

TURKISH PARLIAMENT TO DISCUSS THE PROTOCOLS ON SEPTEMBER 21

armradio.am
13.10.2009 17:26

The signed Armenian-Turkish protocols will be put on Turkish
Parliament’s agenda next week, press speaker of Turkey’s Government
announced.

"On 21 October, the Foreign Ministry will hand the document of
protocols to parliament, making correspondent statements," "CNN Turk"
reports referring to the official source.

It has been reported that Turkey’s FM Ahmet Davutoglu negotiated with
Azerbaijan’s side before signing the protocols and is going to pay
a mission to Baku next week.

"Signing those documents is Turkey’s decision. Hence, Turkey expresses
honest and serious will to normalize ties with Armenia. It’s
important for Turkey to establish peace in Caucasus and that the
existing conflicts are solved based on international norms," Turkish
official said.

Youth Creativity Festival Gather Students From 10 CIS Countries In N

YOUTH CREATIVITY FESTIVAL GATHER STUDENTS FROM 10 CIS COUNTRIES IN NALCHIK

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
13.10.2009 15:39 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The II International Festival of Youth Creativity of
the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) "Commonwealth of talents
– 2009" opened in the capital of Kabardino-Balkaria republic. The
festival is organized with support of the Interstate Fund for
Humanitarian Cooperation of CIS countries. As the press office of
the fund reports, more than 200 young talents from 9 CIS countries:
Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan,
Uzbekistan, Ukraine and Georgia are participating in the festival.

During the festival, which will last five days, contests, competitions,
concerts, Elbrus climbing will be organized. As part of the Festival
scientific conference "CIS: Year of Youth and Youth in the Year of
Science and Innovation" , exhibitions of scientific-educational,
innovation and social projects the CIS youth will be held.

Georgia: After Decades In Exile, Meskhetian Turks Return To Lost Hom

GEORGIA: AFTER DECADES IN EXILE, MESKHETIAN TURKS RETURN TO LOST HOMELAND

Eurasia Insight
ticles/eav100909.shtml
10/09/09

Roughly 65 years ago, Osman, a 90-year-old Meskhetian Turk, lost
his home in Georgia to Stalin’s dictat. Now, after a lifetime in
Central Asia, Osman, along with hundreds of other Meskhetian Turks,
is trying to come home again.

Even after Stalin’s death in 1953, Meskhetians, a Muslim people who
speak a Turkish dialect, were allowed to live anywhere in the Soviet
Union except for Georgia itself. With the collapse of the Soviet
Union in 1991, a few hundred Meskhetians started to trickle back,
in search of their roots. Instead, they found problems.

Many Christian Georgians termed the Meskhetians’ return to their
native Samtskhe-Javakheti region in southern Georgia "the Turks’
second great invasion" – a reference to Ottoman Turkey’s takeover of
Samtskhe-Javakheti in the 16th century. That prejudice still lingers.

Despite it, a few thousand Meskhetians now live in Georgia. The
Georgian government says that it has laid the groundwork for more to
return this year.

Osman’s village of Abastumani in Samtskhe-Javakheti is one of
the few places where these exiles have returned to their truly
ancestral land. The ruins of the house where Osman was born lie just
a stone’s throw away from his current dwelling. But as Osman and other
Meskhetians are learning, the divide that keeps Meskhetians strangers
in their own land is wide, and it remains difficult to bridge the gap.

Editor’s Note: Temo Bardzimashvili is a freelance photojournalist
based in Tbilisi.

http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insightb/ar