Turkish Journalists Accused Of Conspiracy Freed Pending Trial

TURKISH JOURNALISTS ACCUSED OF CONSPIRACY FREED PENDING TRIAL

EuroNews

March 13 2012
France

Freedom of the media in Turkey is in the spotlight again over the
cases against four journalists accused of conspiracy to overthrow
the government. They have been released pending trial. A further six
defendants, mostly journalists, remain in detention.

Nedim Sener, who spent a year in prison, says he was jailed because
of an investigation he conducted into the high profile murder of
Turkish-Armenian journalist, Hrant Dink.

Speaking just after his release he said: “I’m paying for my research.

It was the sole aim of this attack on journalists.”

The defendants are accused of belonging to ‘Ergenekon’, an alleged
ultra-nationalist group accused by prosecutors of being behind
multiple conspiracies against Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan’s AK
Party government.

The case has been widely criticised by the US and the EU. Almost
100 journalists are in jail in Turkey – one of the highest rates
worldwide, although not all are being prosecuted for what they have
written or broadcast.

http://www.euronews.com/2012/03/13/turkish-journalists-accused-of-conspiracy-freed-pending-trial/

Azerbaijan On Iran: Straight Talk Or Doubletalk?

AZERBAIJAN ON IRAN: STRAIGHT TALK OR DOUBLETALK?

Giorgi Lomsadze

EurasiaNet.org
March 13 2012
NY

Fed up with all the media’s alleged tension-mongering, Iranian
Ambassador to Azerbaijan Mahammadbagir Bahrami instructed journalists
the other day to report only the good news about Iranian-Azerbaijani
ties, strained though they may be. “[C]over the news conducive to
the improvement of bilateral relations only,” he said at a March 9
Azerbaijan-Iran-Turkey meeting.

Granted, the get-together in the Azerbaijani exclave of
Nakhchivan, precariously wedged between the three neighbors and the
Azerbaijani-Turkish bete noire, Armenia, indeed marked a change of
tone between Baku and Tehran.

Coming after a story about Israeli intelligence allegedly using
Azerbaijan like one big pair of binoculars on Iran, and reports of
alleged Iranian terror plots against Israeli targets in Azerbaijan,
this sudden change of tone is prompting South Caucasus watchers to
try and peek through the closed doors of the Nakhchivan meeting.

Repeating an earlier line, Azerbaijan said that its territory can
never be used as a launch pad for a strike against Iran. “Our brothers
live there,” explained senior Azerbaijani presidential administration
official Ali Hasanov, referring to the millions of ethnic Azeris in
Iran. Post-meeting, Baku also made clear that if someone needs to
worry about Azerbaijan’s new Israeli guns – a purchase that enraged
Tehran – that should be Armenia (more details at The Bug Pit).

But, while a change of tone, the routine, in many ways, is old hat
for this neck of the woods. Like other small countries, countries
in the South Caucasus have long ago learned to try and pursue their
own interests (with varying degrees of success) while telling larger
foreign powers what they want to hear.

Azerbaijan may have spoken out in the past against supposed Iranian
dirty tricks on its territory, but the Israeli story, the most
sensational of its charges, was characterized more by a lack of
official commentary from Baku than by tell-all interviews with CNN
or the BBC. Quite plainly, Azerbaijan, which shares deep historical
and cultural ties with Iran, its southern neighbor, knows with whom
it has to deal, and behaves accordingly.

And, more than anything, Azerbaijani officials, politicians and
analysts alike say they know that an Israeli or other strike against
Iran could cause big trouble for Azerbaijan — be it an influx of
ethnic Azeri refugees, concerns about the security of Caspian Sea
energy installations or what have you.

Sardar Jalaloglu, the chairman of one tiny Azerbaijani opposition
party, the Democratic Party of Azerbaijan, sees another concern. “If
Azerbaijan gets dragged into military action (in any form) , it may
become the nearest target for Iran, and that will cause domestic
dissatisfaction with the Azerbaijani government,” Jalaloglu claimed,
in comments quoted by Russia’s Iran.ru, a news site run by a former
chairman of the Russian Federation Chamber of Commerce and Industry’s
Iranian Business Council.

Goodness knows, Baku wouldn’t want to see that.

And so Hasanov alleged that no tensions whatsoever exist between
the two countries — last month’s Azerbaijani charges of lies,
“fabrication and libel” notwithstanding. And that any earlier angry
messages from Tehran were just an attempt to make sure that if the
big fight happens, Iran’s neighbors will stay out of it.

If so, at least where Azerbaijan is concerned, looks like mission
accomplished.

Armenia Defense Ministry Confirms Soldier Shot At Azerbaijan Border

ARMENIA DEFENSE MINISTRY CONFIRMS SOLDIER SHOT AT AZERBAIJAN BORDER

epress.am
03.15.2012

Armenia’s Ministry of Defense has confirmed news published by local
daily Aravot that at around 4:30 pm on Mar. 14, at the defense
positions near the village of Berkaber in the Armenian province
of Tavush, serviceman Sevak Aslikyan tied from a shot fired by an
Azerbaijani sniper.

According to preliminary information, Aslikyan was shot in the head
from a shot fired from the direction of Azerbaijan’s Armed Forces. A
criminal investigation is underway.

According to Aravot, the victim was a resident of Vanadzor.

Menendez And Kirk Set To Launch Renewed Drive For US Senate Recognit

MENENDEZ AND KIRK SET TO LAUNCH RENEWED DRIVE FOR US SENATE RECOGNITION OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

11:45 . 15/03

Senators Bob Menendez, fresh off blocking the flawed nomination of
Matt Bryza to a full term as Ambassador to Azerbaijan, and Mark Kirk,
who came to the Senate last year after serving as Co-Chairman of the
Armenian Caucus in the U.S. House, are set to introduce the Armenian
Genocide Resolution, reported the Armenian National Committee of
America (ANCA).

The two Senators are currently collecting original cosponsors for
the genocide-prevention measure, which will, upon introduction, be
referred to the Foreign Relations Committee, chaired by John Kerry
(D-MA). The resolution is being introduced during a closely contested
election year, amid increasingly strained relations between Turkey
and many of its former friends on Capitol Hill.

Armenian Americans and anti-genocide activists are encouraged
to contact their Senators to become original cosponsors
of this legislation by sending a free ANCA WebMail at:

“We extend our thanks to Senators Menendez and Kirk for their
leadership in putting America on the right side of this human rights
issue,” said Aram Hamparian, Executive Director of the ANCA. “We look
forward to supporting their efforts to ensure that our leaders – in
the White House and Congress – reject Turkey’s gag-rule on American
recognition of the Armenian Genocide. No one – ally or adversary –
deserves a veto on U.S. human rights policy.”

Parallel to this effort, Reps. Robert Dold (R-IL) and Adam Schiff
(D-CA) have offered a nearly identical measure, S.Res.304, in the U.S.

House, and Senators Scott Brown (R-MA), Dianne Feinstein (D-CA),
and Mark Kirk have introduced S.Res.392, the Senate version of a
religious freedom measure that was adopted last December, in the
U.S. House calling upon Turkey to return stolen Christian church
properties to their rightful owners.

http://www.yerkirmedia.am/?act=news&lan=en&id=5823
http://www.anca.org/action_alerts/action_disp.php?aaid=61096916

9th Circuit Court Ignored Genocide Convention In Genocide Ruling, Sa

9TH CIRCUIT COURT IGNORED GENOCIDE CONVENTION IN GENOCIDE RULING, SAYS EXPERT

asbarez
Wednesday, March 14th, 2012

The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals

>From The Jurist

The US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, sitting en banc,
in the case of Movsesian v. Victoria Versicherung AG seems not
to have considered the significance of the UN Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide when it recently
declared unconstitutional a California statute that had authorized
the filing of state lawsuits over unpaid insurance claims brought by
the descendants of victims of the 1915-1921 massacres of Armenians
by the Ottoman Empire. The law had specifically designated that the
claims could be brought for policies that had been issued to “Armenian
genocide victims,” so long as the defendant insurer also happens to
be doing business in California. The law also eliminated any statute
of limitation barriers to such claims. The en banc court held that
this California statute intruded on territory reserved to the federal
government’s exclusive power to conduct and regulate foreign affairs.

Stan Goldman The court concluded that by labeling the massacres
as having been “genocide” and providing a legal remedy for it,
the State of California had entered a politically charged area that
amounted to establishing a particular foreign policy for the state. In
authorizing California state courts as a forum for such lawsuits,
a political message was being sent that could have a direct impact
upon foreign relations and might adversely affect the power of the
federal government to deal with these problems. The court’s opinion
acknowledged that the concerns of the Turkish government played a
part in the decision.

Was the court correct; or did the Ninth Circuit fail to consider the
consequence of the US being a signatory to the Genocide Convention?

The US having signed the convention presents significant issues with
respect to genocide in general and the genocide of the Armenians
in particular.

First, with respect to the general concept of genocide it must be
remembered that the international convention the US has joined not
only obligates all signatories to intervene when acts of genocide are
taking place, it also gives them the right of prosecution regardless of
where the acts had occurred. By federal law this right of prosecution
may be pursued in the US by either a federal or state court. Thus,
so long as the state has jurisdiction over the individual defendants,
federal law has ceded to the states a right and power to bring criminal
proceedings against any perpetrator of genocide committed anywhere
and at any time in the past.

If the early twentieth century massacre of the Armenians by the Turks
falls within the international convention’s legal definition of having
been “genocide,” then if any Turkish perpetrators were still alive
today, California would have the federally granted legal authority to
prosecute them irrespective of the Turkish government’s objections. In
other words, assuming we are in fact dealing with genocide, the Ninth
Circuit decision has created the anomaly that the State of California
may criminally prosecute those guilty of past genocides but may not
permit civil remedies against them. How could a lawsuit against an
insurance carrier (that may not be a Turkish company) doing business
in California, be said to have more of a direct impact upon foreign
relations so as to potentially adversely affect the power of the
federal government than would a criminal prosecution of a Turkish
soldier in a California state court for genocidal crimes?

We are led to the preliminary question of whether there was in fact
“genocide” perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire (the predecessor state to
present day Turkey) against the Armenians. To understand how obvious
and clear it is that the massacre of the Armenians falls within the
international definition of genocide, all we need do is to look at
the history of the Genocide Convention itself.

That history actually began in 1944 when Raphael Lemkin, a Polish
Jewish Holocaust survivor and professor of law, sought to connect
what he likely believed to be the greatest crimes of the twentieth
century: the destruction of European Jewry and the 1915-1921 Turkish
massacre of Armenia. He created the word “genocide” to describe and
connect these two all-but-unfathomable tragedies in his seminal work,
Axis Rule in Occupied Europe. It combined the Greek word “genos”
for family or tribe and the Latin word “cide” for killing. His
writings soon became a resource for the prosecutions at the Nuremberg
Trials. In 1948, thanks to his relentless efforts, the UN General
Assembly approved the first step required in order to add genocide
to the list of international crimes. Lemkin then spent the next three
years traveling from country to country lobbying for ratification of
the Genocide Convention, which first took effect in 1951.

Today, attorneys involved in the prosecution and defense of those
charged with genocidal crimes comb the papers of Raphael Lemkin in
search of legislative intent in hope of supporting whatever legal
position they may be taking. So complete was his authorship of this
rule that to this day commentators as diverse as Samantha Powers,
senior director for multilateral affairs at the National Security
Council in the Obama administration, and international correspondent
Christiane Amanpour refer to the genocide treaty simply as “Lemkin’s
Law.” When the US adopted the convention as the law of the land,
it also adopted a legislative history that includes the definition
and origin of “genocide.”

Though it is remotely possible to engage in a futile intellectual
exercise as to whether certain other attempts at man-made extinction
(such as the mass murders in Bosnia, Rwanda or Darfur) legally qualify
as genocides, there can be no such debate under international treaty
for the massacres of the Armenians or with respect to the Holocaust
of the Jews. To claim that neither are legally genocide would be like
arguing that slavery is not governed by the Thirteenth Amendment. You
cannot eliminate from the definition of a term the very thing the
word was created to describe.

Thus, the actual genocide treaty to which the US is a party was
authored by the man who created the word “genocide” specifically to
refer to the massacre of the Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman
Empire and the slaughter of the Jews at the hands of the Nazis and
their allies. If a perpetrator of those massacres were still alive
and present in California they could be criminally prosecuted in
California state courts. What then of potential civil consequences
arising out of such legally acknowledged genocide?

Consider civil actions involving Jewish victims of the Holocaust. Let
us assume that the Art Loss Registry discovers that a large and
influential Austrian Corporation has in one of its American offices a
valuable painting looted by the Nazis from the home of Sigmund Freud
as the elderly Jewish psychiatrist fled his Vienna in 1938. Freud’s
American-born legal heirs file a civil claim in a US state court in
an effort to retrieve ownership of the stolen art work. The Austrian
government, however, maintains that it would be an embarrassment
to one of its country’s major companies and thus could affect that
foreign nation’s relations with the US if the lawsuit were allowed
to proceed. Are we now to simply conclude that Austria’s objection
to a suit against one of its nation’s private corporations thereby
disables US courts from attempting to retrieve property in spite of
all American laws to the contrary?

Though it must be admitted that more recent administrations have been
hesitant to support symbolic reiterations designating the atrocities
against the Armenians as genocide, this does not change the fact that
the recognition of genocide of the Armenians is as an intrinsic part
of our having agreed to the Genocide Convention as is the recognition
of the German Holocaust of the Jews. Federal law already authorizes
the prosecution of perpetrators, including foreign nationals, of
genocidal crimes. This would be true even if they were Ottoman soldiers
or officials still alive today and captured within the territory of
California. How then can Turkish annoyance and objection be grounds
to invalidate a civil remedy against private companies in order to
obtain some minimal form of restitution for as yet uncompensated losses
arising out of this genocide? Yet, according to the Ninth Circuit,
no civil remedy can exist.

Much has changed in the near century since the massacres of the
Armenians. As it is now Istanbul and not Constantinople, so too the
Ottoman Empire morphed an age ago into the modern Republic of Turkey.

History, however, is immutable. Though the actual perpetrators of those
early twentieth century crimes against humanity may no longer be within
any signatory to the Genocide Conventions’ criminal jurisdiction, civil
claims still remain unsettled. Is it the role of US federal courts to
add unnecessary road blocks in the path of the victim’s efforts to
achieve a small modicum of long overdue restitution? This could not
have been the intent of the US when it signed the Genocide Convention.

Stan Goldman is a Professor of Law at Loyola Law School, Los
Angeles, where he is Director of the Center for the Study of Law &
Genocide. He filed an amicus brief in the Movsesian case on behalf of
the plaintiffs, and he appeared as second chair at an Ninth Circuit
panel that reviewed the case.

Visite Officielle De Travail A Berne Du Ministre Armenien Des Affair

VISITE OFFICIELLE DE TRAVAIL A BERNE DU MINISTRE ARMENIEN DES AFFAIRES ETRANGERES EDWARD NALBANDIAN
Stephane

armenews.com
jeudi 15 mars 2012

Le conseiller federal Didier Burkhalter, chef du Departement federal
des affaires etrangères (DFAE), a recu son homologue armenien Edward
Nalbandian dans le cadre d’une visite officielle de travail a la maison
de Watteville a Berne. Les entretiens ont ete l’occasion de faire le
point sur diverses questions bilaterales, telles que la cooperation
technique et humanitaire. Plusieurs thèmes d’ordre regional ont aussi
figure au menu des discussions. La Suisse et l’Armenie, qui celebreront
les 20 ans de l’etablissement de leurs relations diplomatiques en avril
2012, entretiennent des liens qui se sont intensifiees ces dernières
annees. La première rencontre entre le conseiller federal Didier
Burkhalter et son homologue armenien Edward Nalbandian intervient
en effet près d’un an après la visite de l’ancienne presidente de la
Confederation Micheline Calmy-Rey en Armenie, le 30 mars 2011, visite
qui avait ete marquee par l’inauguration de l’ambassade de Suisse a
Erevan. Le 3 mai 2011, le president armenien Serge Sarkissian avait
effectue une visite de reciprocite en Suisse.

Au cours de leur echange, M. Burkhalter et M. Nalbandian ont aborde un
certain nombre de questions ayant trait aux relations bilaterales. Sur
le plan de la cooperation economique, ils ont releve qu’il existait
un potentiel encore inexploite malgre un cadre legal favorable. En
matière de cooperation au developpement, la participation active du
gouvernement armenien dans le developpement et le suivi des projets
mis en place par la Direction du developpement et de la cooperation
(DDC) a ete saluee.

Le ministre suisse des affaires etrangères et son homologue ont aussi
evoque des questions d’ordre regional. Il a notamment ete question de
l’engagement de la Suisse dans le cadre des efforts de paix deployes
dans le Caucase du Sud.

Enfin, M. Burkhalter a informe son homologue sur la presidence
successive que la Suisse (2014) et la Serbie (2015) exerceront a la
tete de l’Organisation pour la securite et la cooperation en Europe
(OSCE). Il a rappele que la Suisse considerait que le conflit du
Haut-Karabakh ne pouvait etre resolu que par la voie pacifique. Dans
cette optique, elle suit avec beaucoup d’interet les efforts de
mediation deployes par le Groupe de Minsk de l’OSCE en vue d’un
règlement de ce conflit.

Israel Enjoint A Ses Ressortissants De Ne Pas Se Rendre En Turquie

ISRAEL ENJOINT A SES RESSORTISSANTS DE NE PAS SE RENDRE EN TURQUIE
Ara

armenews.com
mercredi 14 mars 2012

JERUSALEM, 13 mars 2012 (AFP) – Israël a enjoint mardi a ses
ressortissants de ne pas se rendre en Turquie, de crainte d’attentats,
selon le Bureau de lutte antiterroriste.

“Des agents terroristes ont l’intention de perpetrer des attentats
contre des objectifs israeliens ou juifs en Turquie dans les jours
qui viennent”, a averti le bureau dans un communique.

“Nous recommandons donc d’eviter les visites en Turquie”, precise
le communique.

Le dernier avertissement du bureau de lutte antiterroriste israelien
relatif a la Turquie remonte aux tensions entre les deux pays qui
ont suivi l’abordage sanglant d’une flottille, par les commandos
israeliens en mai 2010, au large de Gaza. Le mois dernier, de s
diplomates israeliens ont ete la cible d’attentats a New Delhi et a
Tbilissi. L’epouse d’un diplomate a ete blessee dans l’explosion de sa
voiture dans la capitale indienne et quatre autres personnes blessees.

Un engin explosif similaire a ete desamorce dans la capitale
georgienne.

Israël a attribue les deux attentats a l’Iran. Teheran a dementi
toute implication.

Patrick Fiori Annonce En Concert A Erevan Le 31 Mars

PATRICK FIORI ANNONCE EN CONCERT A EREVAN LE 31 MARS
Krikor Amirzayan

armenews.com
mercredi 14 mars 2012

Le chanteur Patrick Fiori est annonce le 31 mars a Erevan où il
se produira au club ” Mezzo “. Selon le gerant des lieux, Kevork
Markarian, le prix des billets sera de 20 000 a 100 000 drams. Patrick
Fiori devrait y chanter ses meilleurs succès ainsi que ses chansons
liees a l’Armenie dont ” Montagnes d’Armenie “. Le dernier concert
de Patrick Fiori en Armenie etait en 2004 a Erevan où le chanteur
etait accompagne de Noune Yessayan.

Mystery Super PAC May Have Violated Election Law

MYSTERY SUPER PAC MAY HAVE VIOLATED ELECTION LAW
By Gregory Korte and Fredreka Schouten

USA TODAY

Updated 4d 10h ago

WASHINGTON – Four days before Ohio’s primary election, Democratic
voters in the 2nd Congressional District received a blitz of automated
telephone calls supporting William R. Smith, a candidate who didn’t
campaign, raised no money and gave no media interviews before the
election.

On election night, Smith won by 59 votes against a well-known, better
funded and harder working candidate who had the endorsement of major
Democratic groups.

So who gets credit for helping Smith secure the Democratic nomination
to Congress? No one knows.

The “Victory Ohio Super PAC” claimed credit for the “robocalls,”
but it is not registered with the Federal Election Commission and
hasn’t disclosed any contributions or spending to federal regulators.

Campaign-finance experts say the group probably has violated federal
election law. Under federal rules, groups must report last-minute
activity to the FEC if they spend more than $1,000 on automated calls,
mailings or advertising that directly advocate the election or defeat
of a federal candidate. Such spending must be reported within 24 hours.

“This activity does require disclosure,” said Kenneth Gross, a former
Federal Election Commission official and a leading campaign-finance
lawyer in Washington.

Smith now faces Cincinnati podiatrist and Army Reserve Lt. Col. Brad
Wenstrup, who pulled off an upset of his own against four-term Rep.
Jean Schmidt.

Wenstrup got a boost from conservative anti-tax groups and a legally
registered super PAC, the Campaign for Primary Accountability, which
is working to defeat congressional incumbents in several states. The
group reported spending $66,836 against Schmidt in the week before
the election.

A 61-year-old former postal worker from the small town of Waverly,
Smith says he made less than $15,000 last year driving a truck. His
reasons for running are a “long complicated story,” he said.

His issues: the mistreatment of veterans by the Department of Veterans
Affairs, tighter regulation of the mortgage industry, and federal
rules on how long truckers can drive before they have to rest. All,
he said, are informed by his family’s own experiences.

“If you had to produce a prototype for the absolute common man,
that’s what you get. He drives a truck. He lives with his mother,” said
Blaine Beekman, a Pike County commissioner who helped circulate Smith’s
nominating petitions. “People call him the ‘mystery candidate.’ He’s
really the impossible candidate.”

Victory Ohio “clearly exists somewhere, because it spent a lot
of money,” Beekman said. But he said he has no idea who it could
be. “To be frank with you, there’s no one in Pike County that would
have the money to do these things. We have the highest unemployment
rate in Ohio.”

Smith defeated David Krikorian, a three-time candidate who ran with
the endorsement of major Democratic groups in the district.

Krikorian’s campaign spent $64,356, according to the FEC, though he
said only about $5,000 of that was for the current election cycle.

Krikorian has a longstanding feud with Schmidt over her support from
Turkish causes. Krikorian, an ethnic Armenian, has accused Schmidt
of denying the Armenian genocide during and after World War I, and
their battles escalated into a $6.8 million libel suit by Schmidt
still pending in Ohio courts.

Her legal fees – about $500,000 – were paid by Turkish interests,
which led to a House Ethics Committee investigation because she
failed to disclose the source. The committee ordered her to repay
the money but didn’t sanction her because the panel concluded she did
“not knowingly” violate ethics rules that prevent such gift-giving.

One version of the robocall took aim at Krikorian: “William Smith has
an opponent that describes himself as a Reagan conservative. … Please
don’t make a mistake and embarrass the party. Vote for William Smith,
the real Democrat for Congress.”

The recorded call ended with the disclosure, “This has been paid for
by the Victory Ohio Super PAC.” Neither the FEC nor Ohio’s Secretary
of State have any record of such a group. A call receipient’s caller ID
system generated a non-working phone number from the Cleveland suburbs.

“Honestly, the more I think about this, the more mysterious it
becomes. Something is fishy,” said Clermont County Democratic Chairman
David Lane.

“Robocalls are pretty cheap, but they did enough of them I have a
hard time believing they spent less than $1,000,” said Caleb Faux,
the director of the Hamilton County Democratic Party who, like Lane,
has never met Smith. ” Who are they, what is their motivation, where
did their money come from?”

Republicans agree. “If a Republican did it, I don’t know about it,”
said Alex Triantafilou, the GOP chairman in Hamilton County. “Somebody
should put a stop to it. That kind of thing should not occur in
politics. Transparency is crucial. I hope someone fully investigates
it.”

Paul Ryan, a lawyer with the Campaign Legal Center watchdog group,
said the group broke the rules if it spent more than $1,000.

“Ohio voters seemingly had no information about who was trying to
influence their election with last-minute robocalls,” Ryan said. “Ohio
voters deserve that information.”

Smith told USA TODAY that he’s as surprised as anyone that he won,
but he credits the robocalls – and perhaps his prayers. In only his
second media interview, he said he doesn’t know the source of the
help but suspects Republicans who “were looking at my inactivity and
my access to no funding” and figured he was less of a threat to the
Republican nominee.

“Whatever the source of that is, I’ll take it,” he said.

http://www.usatoday.com/news/politics/story/2012-03-09/william-smith-ohio-super-PAC/53439752/1

Turkey May Be Kept Accountable For Dersim Genocide

TURKEY MAY BE KEPT ACCOUNTABLE FOR DERSIM GENOCIDE

PanARMENIAN.Net
March 13, 2012 – 21:11 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Secret materials on 1937-1938 massacres on Tunceli
Province of Turkey, earlier known as Dersim are being discussed in
the country’s parliament. The military operation of the Turkish army
claimed lives of fifteen thousand people, mostly Armenians and Kurds.

Events in current Tunceli Province of Turkey are known as “Dersim
process”. In 1937 Turkish central authorities clashed with local
clans. The confrontation further developed into an uprising that was
severely suppressed by the troops.

Commission to investigate Dersim necessitated submission of collected
documents to Turkish Parliament, which has set a special committee.

Prime Ministers’ administration was the first to react to the demand.

About two thousand documents were submitted that may shed light on the
fate of 15 thousand people that survived the military confrontation
in 1937 and were forced out of Dersim.

Commission to investigate Dersim process expedited the activity.

Subcommittee that first of all collects documents from Presidential
administration, Ministry of the Inferior, Ministry of Culture
and General staff, requested for archival materials on 1937-1938
massacres. Servicemen pledged to send the necessary data as soon as
they find them in the archives.

The President’s administration has 103 documents on Dersim massacres.

One of the documents sent to Ministry of Interior dated June 15, 1938
for Fevzi Cakmak, renders leaving 14 local inhabitants in the region
inadmissible. It says that 12485 people were transformed at the time
the document appeared. Archives convey records of negotiations between
the leader of the uprising in Dersim Sayid Riza and the authorities.