Turkish FM to attend unveiling of Altikat memorial kept secret from

Turkish FM to attend unveiling of Altikat memorial kept secret from
Armenian community

14:08 19/09/2012 » Society

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu will help unveil a Canadian
memorial to honor Col. Atilla Altikat, who was killed in Ottawa in
1982 by ASALA, Hurriyet Daily News reported.

DavutoÄ?lu will pay a two-day working visit to Canada today and
tomorrow at the invitation of his Canadian counterpart, John Baird,
Turkish Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

In addition to meeting Baird, Davutoglu will also `attend the opening
ceremony of the memorial which was built in honor of late Col. Atilla
Altıkat,’ the statement said. Ministry officials said the memorial
would be opened on the second day of the visit.

The Turkish Embassy secretly erected the monument at the intersection
of two major roads in Ottawa, Canada’s capital.

Rafet Akgunay, Turkish ambassador to Canada, approached the government
of Canada, the city of Ottawa, and the National Capital Commission
(NCC) for permission to erect a monument in Canada’s capital. The
application, lobbying and permission were undertaken secretly so as
`to prevent possible interventions by the Armenian lobby,’ Hurriyet
Daily News said.

After receiving permission, Akgunay commissioned Turkish sculptor
Necmettin Yagri to create the monument. Six months later, he approved
Yagri’s concept. It took another six months for the semi-circular
steel-and-wood monument to be built. It’s a huge, semi-circular
structure, measuring six metres. The pieces [40 crates] were flown to
Canada in July by the Turkish Airlines gratis and were assembled on
site, under white tarp, by Turkish workers.

Source: Panorama.am

From: Baghdasarian

No ceasefire violation observed in Hadrut monitoring

No ceasefire violation observed in Hadrut monitoring

12:58, 19 September, 2012

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 19, ARMENPRESS: In accordance with the preliminary
agreement acquired with Nagorno Karakh Republic authorities OSCE
mission conducted regular monitoring along the entire line of contact
with Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijani armed forces in Hadrut
direction. As Nagorno Karabakh Republic Foreign Affair Ministry
information department told Armenpress, from the positions of the NKR
Defense Army, the monitoring was conducted by field assistants of the
personal Representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office Khristo
Khristov (Bulgaria) and William Prior (Great Britain). On the
opposite side, the group comprised Irjie Aberle (Czech Republic) and
OSCE office coordinator Peter Keen( Great Britain). The observation
was launched in accordance with the scheduled timetable, no violation
of the cease-fire was observed during the monitoring. The monitors
were accompanied by Nakorno Karabakh Republic Foreign and Defense
Ministries representatives.

From: Baghdasarian

Sargsyan’s any action will be linked to 2013 elections

Armenian President’s any action will be linked to 2013 elections –
political technologist

news.am
September 19, 2012 | 02:50

YEREVAN. – Now, everyone will look for a temporal connection in
Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan’s any new speech or action,
political technologist Karen Kocharyan told Armenian News-NEWS.am,
reflecting on the President’s meeting held at the Government on
September 15.

`Naturally, even if the President were to visit a kindergarten now,
everyone would see this in that context,’ he noted, considering next
year’s presidential elections.

In response to the query as to whether or not such mechanism could be
used as a means to apply pressure on the `members of other parties’ in
any state department, Kocharyan stated that this would hardly be the
case, since primarily the ruling Republican Party representatives were
attending the meeting.

From: Baghdasarian

Manifestation azérie à Paris : un échec cuisant

AZERBAÏDJAN-HAUT KARABAKH-FRANCE-ARMÉNIE
Manifestation azérie à Paris : un échec cuisant

A 17h, lundi 18 septembre, relégués à 200 mètres de l’ambassade
d’Arménie par le service d’ordre, les manifestants azerbaïdjanais et
turcs n’ont pu pénétrer rue Viète, bloquée par cinq véhicules de la
Police natonale.

Sous une forêt de drapeaux azéris, ils étaient environ 150, venus par
cars d’Allemagne et des Pays-bas, scandant des slogans hostiles,
notamment à l’adresse du président Sarkissian.

Il suffit de lire les divers slogans peints ou imprimés sur des
banderoles, pour se faire une idée de la violence véhiculée dans les
esprits. C”est un échec cuisant pour le pouvoir azéri qui pouvait
s’attendre à mieux alors que le président dictateur était reçu par la
présidence de la République française.

Aucun heurt n’a été à déplorer.

Jean Eckian + photos

mercredi 19 septembre 2012,
Jean Eckian ©armenews.com

From: Baghdasarian

Aliev à Paris : Grande colère de la communauté arménienne

FRANCE-AZERBAÏDJAN
Aliev à Paris : Grande colère de la communauté arménienne

Trois heures après avoir été reçu par le Président Hollande, et une
heure après le début de la manifestation azérie près de l’ambassade
d’Arménie à Paris, les oreilles du Président dictateur Ilham Aliev ont
dû lui siffler, tant la colère qui s’est dégagée de la manifestation
organisée par le CCAF devant l’ambassade d’Azerbaïdjan fut intense.

Ils étaient environ 900 à s’être massés sur le trottoir de l’avenue
d’Iena faisant face à l’ambassade, soigneusement gardée par une
dizaine de policiers, lorsqu’une une fausse alerte au colis piégé vint
perturber le rassemblement quelques instants.

Tandis que des slogans fusaient, tels « Aliev fasciste, hors de France
! » et « Safarov en prison ! », ou encore « Le Karabagh est à nous pas
à Bakou ! », une unanimité dans les discours de François Rochebloine,
Valérie Boyer, René Rouquet, Ara Toranian (CCAF), Yériché Gorizian
(Nor Seround Ayf France), Harout Mardirossian (CDCA), Mourad Papazian
(CCAf) et Hratch Varjabédian (BFCA) s’est élevée pour condamner
solennellement l’attitude « inacceptable » de l’Azerbaïdjan et de son
président dans l’affaire Ramil Safarov, accueilli en héros dans son
pays, alors qu’il a été condamné à perpétuité par la justice hongroise
pour un crime sans nom, tant il était ignoble.

Pour François Rochebloine (député de la Loire), Il s’agit là d’un «
crime de l’Azerbaïdjan contre l’Arménie », alors que pour René Rouquet
(Député-maire du Val de Marne) « Aliev a créé une situation
irresponsable dans le Caucase. Une violation de la justice
internationale ».

Valérie Boyer (députée des Bouches du Rhône) a quant à elle, a mis
l’accent sur le génocide culturel perpétré par l’Azerbaïdjan sur la
patrimoine arménien, relevant que François Hollande avait déploré le
matin même la destruction de monuments soufis par des extrémistes. «
Une dictature qui pille son propre pays » a martelé Yériché Gorizian,
tandis que les deux co-président du CCAF, Ara Toranian et Mourad
Papazian, rejoints par Hratch Varjabédian (BFCA), à l’unisson avec les
précédentes interventions, ont fait part de leur « incompréhension »
quant à la réception d’Aliev par la présidence de la République 18
jours après la grce accordée à Safarov par Aliev, alors que les
organisations arméniennes n’ont toujours pas été reçues sur la
question de la négation du génocide des arméniens. « L’Azerbaïdjan, un
État noir qui ne blanchira pas ! » a conclu Mourad Papazian, qui, par
ailleurs assure que le processus d’un nouveau texte anti-négationniste
ira à son terme.

Pour Harout Mardirossian « il faut faire appliquer le droit à
l’auto-détermination du peuple du Haut-Karabagh ». « Le Haut-Karabagh
doit devenir indépendant », a-t-il dit, ajoutant qu’« Aliev est
l’assassin de son peuple ». Dans l’assemblée des français d’origine
arménienne réunis autour d’un podium improvisé, on pouvait entendre à
mi-voix « C’est une honte pour la France d’avoir reçu un tel dictateur
», et « une insulte au droit international et à notre peuple ».

Dans la matinée, la présidence de la République a appelé l’Azerbaïdjan
à prendre les mesures nécessaires pour rétablir un climat de confiance
avec l’Arménie dans le cadre du conflit du Haut-Karabagh.

A déplorer, encore une fois, la non présence des médias français,
hormis l’AFP et RFI, à propos d’une affaire inqualifiable dont les
retentissements à venir pourraient être de nature à enflammer toute
une région.

Parmi les personnalités présentes, on notait la présence de Mgr Norvan
Zakarian, les pasteurs Joël Mickaëlian et Gilbert Léonian, Philippe
Kaltenlbach (Sénateur-maire de Clamart), François Pupponi
(Député-maire de Sarcelles), l’historien Claude Mutafian, Loris
Toufanian (Nor Seround), le cinéaste Robert Kéchichian, l’auteur,
cinéaste Raffi Shart, la chanteuse Liz Sarian…

Jean Eckian + Photos

Claude Mutafian
Tania Babanazarian – Yériché Gorizian
François Rochebloine
Valérie Boyer
Ara Toranian
Harout Mardirossian
René Rouquet – François Pupponi
Philippe Kaltenbach
Yériché Gorizian
Hratch Varjabédian
Mourad Papazian

mercredi 19 septembre 2012,
Jean Eckian ©armenews.com

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=82708

Will senior Armenian MP be granted permit to US?

168 Zham: Will senior Armenian MP be granted permit to US?

tert.am
09:44 – 20.09.12

The paper says it has contacted the US Embassy in Yerevan to find out
whether the ex-nature protection minister, who now chairs a
parliamentary committee, will be given a permit to the United States
in connection a federal Court ruling over the Global Gold Mining case.

It comes after the Southern District Court of New York ordered Vardan
Ayvazyan, the head of the National Assembly’s Committee on Economic
Affairs, to pay $37.5 million in damages to the company for the loss
of one of its licenses in Armenia.

`We do not have specific procedures for considering separate cases,
but final decisions are made after the submission of visa applications
and an interview,’ an employee of the Embassy was quoted as telling
the paper.

Asked whether a US court ruling can affect an Armenian citizen, the
embassy representative said they cannot give any comment as to the
legal conclusion of US courts.

From: Baghdasarian

BAKU: Azeri leader, French energy companies discuss cooperation

APA, Azerbaijan
Sept 18 2012

Azeri leader, French energy companies discuss cooperation

The Azerbaijani president has met senior officials of major French
energy companies to discuss prospects for cooperation, Baku-based APA
news agency reported on 17 September.

During his visit to France, which started on 17 September, President
Ilham Aliyev met officials of France’s GDF Suez, Technip and Total
companies to discuss their “successful work” in Azerbaijan’s oil and
gas sector.

At the meetings, the sides also touched on cooperation in the
exploration of Azerbaijan’s Abseron and Sah Daniz gas fields, the
implementation of other projects, and the Azerbaijani population’s
supply with international-standard drinking water.

In the meantime, Baku-based Turan news agency reported that the
president’s visit to France is taking place amid protests by members
of the local Armenian, Turkish and Azerbaijani diasporas.

The Armenians staged a picket outside the Azerbaijani embassy in
protest against the release by Baku of Ramil Safarov, the pardoned
Azerbaijani officer convicted of killing an Armenian counterpart in
Hungary.

In response to this picket, the Azerbaijani and Turkish diaspora
members staged a demonstration outside the Armenian embassy to protest
against this country’s “aggression” against Azerbaijan, Turan said.

[Translated from Azeri]

From: Baghdasarian

BAKU: Resolution of NK conflict to be priority issue at presidents’

Trend News Agency, Baku, Azerbaijan
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News
September 18, 2012 Tuesday

Top official: Resolution of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict to be priority
issue during Azerbaijani and French presidents’ meeting

by E. Mehdiyev, Trend News Agency, Baku, Azerbaijan

Sept. 18–The resolution of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict will be a
priority issue at the upcoming meeting of Azerbaijani and French
presidents, Azerbaijani Presidential Administration Social and
Political Department Head Ali Hasanov said, commenting on the current
visit of Azerbaijani President to France.

Hasanov noted that the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict remains a priority
during all the visits and meetings of Azerbaijani President with other
countries’ presidents.

“France is a co-chair country of the OSCE Minsk Group, and during the
meeting with this country’s president, the Nagorno-Karabakh problem,
as well as situation and prospects of conflict regulation, processes
happening around the conflict, Azerbaijan’s position and OSCE Minsk
group’s activity and future steps will be discussed,” Hasanov said.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev is on a working visit in France since Monday.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan.

Armenian armed forces have occupied 20 per cent of Azerbaijan since
1992, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven 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 peace negotiations.

Armenia has not yet implemented the U.N. Security Council’s four
resolutions on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh and the
surrounding regions.

From: Baghdasarian

BAKU: FM: Unlike Armenia, Azerbaijan is safe place for multi-ethnic

Trend, Azerbaijan
Sept 19 2012

Foreign Ministry: Unlike Armenia, Azerbaijan is safe place for
multi-ethnic population and visitors

Azerbaijan, Baku, Sept.19 / Trend, E.Tariverdiyeva /

Provocative and untrue statements of Armenian Foreign Minister Edward
Nalbandian, who uses primitive tricks in his expressions to blacken
Azerbaijan, cast doubt on his professional skills as a diplomat,
Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry Spokesman Elman Abdullayev told Trend by
commenting on Nalbandian’s recent statements.

At a joint press conference with UK Minister for Europe David
Lidington Nalbandian has expressed concern that Azerbaijan threatens
security of the Nagorno-Karabakh residents.

“Representative of Armenia, on the instructions of whose leadership
their snipers shoot at innocent people, women and organize terror
attacks against children, has no moral right to make idle accusations
against Azerbaijan,” Abdullayev said.

He said as in the Soviet time, today Azerbaijan is also proud of its
multiethnic culture and tolerance.

In the international arena, Azerbaijan has always been initiator of
events on intercultural and interethnic dialogue, Abdullayev said.

“Unlike Armenia, Azerbaijan has always been a safe place for its
multi-ethnic population and for visitors,” Abdullayev said.

Thus, according to Abdullayev, after terrible ethnic cleansing
committed by Armenian leadership, and after expulsion of other
nationalities, namely Armenia became a mono-ethnic country, and that
fact speaks for itself.

“How the minister of the country, government of which constantly
repeat that the Azerbaijanis and Armenians are incompatible and that
the genocide in Khojaly was a demonstration of what Armenia is ready
to do to achieve its goals, can speak about the security,” Abdullayev
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 per cent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven 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 peace negotiations.

Armenia has not yet implemented the U.N. Security Council’s four
resolutions on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh and the
surrounding regions.

From: Baghdasarian

ISTANBUL: Recollections of an orphaned Armenian girl challenging off

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Sept 19 2012

Recollections of an orphaned Armenian girl challenging official history

by Alin Ozinian

19 September 2012 / ,

When the first guests of the `Climbing the Mountain’ project —
theater artist Arsine Khanjian and lawyer Fethiye Cetin — appeared on
stage in Yerevan, their faces reflected not only the sadnesses of the
past, but also the pride of being able to speak.

A joint project by the Armenian Civilitas Foundation and the Anatolian
Cultural Center from Turkey, `Climbing the Mountain’ arrived in
Yerevan after appearances in Berlin and İstanbul.

Çetin, who wrote the book `Anneannem’ (My Grandmother), and was the
family lawyer for the Dink family in the Hrant Dink case, told Yerevan
residents all about Turkey, her personal struggles, people like
herself and, most significantly, her own grandmother. `On the day when
she first began recalling to us what had happened, her eyes became
fixed on one point in the room as she spoke, and her hand moved over
and over as though cleaning some spot of dirt off her skirt that we
couldn’t see, over and over, repeating the same thing, let those days
be gone, never to return again.’

Young HeranuÅ?, whose name was later changed to Seher, was forcibly
removed from her mother’s arms by soldiers and raised as a Muslim
girl. She was married off, had children and later grandchildren. Seher
buried the memories of HeranuÅ? very deep, but talked about the latter
with one of her grandchildren — Çetin. Çetin said, `I have often
thought, and still ponder, why it is she told me. She had other
grandchildren, other children. … I had been accepted to law school,
had always talked loudly about how I would do whatever it took to
honor the law; I was full of opposition, a protestor, and a woman, and
she chose me.’

So saying, Çetin also notes she observed methods that her grandmother
developed in order to be able to live with this pain. She recalls:
`She was not able to talk about what had happened, and it was so
difficult to live with the pain, so the first thing she would do would
be to talk for hours in a closed-off room with other women like
herself. We never knew what they were talking about in there, but now
I understand they were remembering the past, and trying to find some
peace. This was their secret. In the last years of her life, she
developed a different strategy, she admitted everything, she no longer
wished to carry around the pain and the secret. She wanted to be rid
of it, to leave this world without it.’

History collapsing before your eyes

Çetin notes, `When they recounted the truth of the past, it was always
to other women, to female grandchildren, as only other women could
really understand the pain, and besides, any men who were told would
probably press these elderly women with questions like, `Where was the
gold buried?” She also asserts that in listening to these individual
memories from the past, the officially acknowledged history begins to
collapse before your very eyes. Khanjiyan played a main role in
`Ararat,’ a film not granted screening permission in Turkey. She was
born in Lebanon, and says that at first, she had not intended to go to
either Berlin or İstanbul to prove anything to anyone. `I know
history, and what I wanted was not to convince others or be persuaded
myself, but rather to talk, to talk with people on all sides of this
issue. I always felt the denial, and my life was spent with the weight
of knowing I wanted to illuminate this topic, and then during a
meeting in Berlin, I realized something. When the meeting was over, a
man in a suit came and tried to persuade Fethiye, in fact he argued
with Fethiye, and later I learned he had come from the Turkish
Embassy. I realized then that Turkey had begun to argue within itself,
that some things had begun to change there.’

Khanjiyan had always lived with the dream of climbing a `mountain.’
She explains: `I say `mountain’ because for me there is just one
mountain, and that is Ararat. And for us, it is making a pilgrimage,
being able to climb the mountain. When we got to Ararat, I went and
walked around the streets, and someone who realized I was Armenian
came up to me and said, `My grandmother was also Armenian,’ which
surprised me, but then another person came and said something similar,
and another, and another. And when more than 10 people had said
similar things to me, I couldn’t stand it any more, and asked, `All
right, but are you yourself Armenian?’ to which the response was a
sharp `No.’ So I said, `All right, but then why are you telling me,
and have you ever thought about why it is that your grandmother and
not your grandfather was Armenian?”

At the end of the meeting, Salpi Ghazarian, the director of the
Civilitas Foundation, who is also a grandchild of Western Armenians,
was no longer able to hide tears as he said to Çetin: `I also tried to
find a way to return to Fethiye, to be able to return to those days. I
tried to relieve some of the pain of our elders, looked for some sort
of path or bridge, but was unable to find it. ¦ How did you do it,
what did you do? Did you never become afraid in a country where being
a Turk is considered such an honor?’

Çetin replied: `I was both Armenian and Turkish, with one side of me
victim, the other side perpetrator. In fact, we were all perpetrators,
perhaps no blood on our hands, but we hid things, we remained silent,
we systematically denied. Anyone who was at all involved in these
events, even those who might have carried off just one small glass to
their home from Armenian houses that were looted, all of these people
were partners in this. But this is not a role I wanted, I did not want
to leave this load on my shoulders for later generations.

`After hearing my grandmother’s story, I looked around me at all the
other stories I was hearing, and realized they didn’t fit with the
official history, and that what my grandmother had told me confirmed
all I was seeing around me. They wish to see the traces of history
erased from those lands, because the politics of denial carries on. In
the town of Pali in the province of ElazıÄ?, there is the village of
Havav, the KaÄ?tsrahayatsk monastery. There are churches on the
outskirts of the mountains here. My grandmother lived here until she
was 9 years old. The past was wonderful in the villages here, but now
there are just dried up fountains. Stones were carried away from these
fountains, everything was overturned, there were digs to look for
gold. There were a few arches left in these fountains, but their water
had long dried up.

`I tried to restore these fountains. This was to be a different sort
of restoration. This was to be an activity of commemoration, with
Turks and Kurds working to try and fix the mistakes of the past,
seeing just how these structures were destroyed. We began restoring
the fountains in 2009. Last year, I stayed there for four months.
People came from Armenia to help. We lived and worked together for a
while. We cried and laughed together. In the end, we finished up the
restoration, and now water flows from the fountains.

`We did all of this for the people who were chased out of those
villages, and for those who lost their lives in massacres there. So
that the grandchildren of those people could return, and quench their
thirst with water from those fountains. I went and found the traces of
my grandmother’s former home. We planted trees, and named them after
the youth, after ourselves. As we planted the trees, we kept hitting
old stones from former walls with our shovels. I knew that some of
these stones were from the walls of the home where my grandmother
would play as a child, but still, we kept digging. It was as though
pain were springing forth from the ground. But we kept on digging.’

Çetin describes all this, underscoring that fear was not a factor for
her. She states: `What was the worst that could happen? I could be
killed. But living under this heavy load or losing my life, I did not
see a difference. No one had the courage to strike against me for
telling the story of my grandmother’s life. When you tell a personal
story, no one else can deny it.’

Staying alive — as Armenians

The basic goal of Armenians, who spread out in all directions
following the events of 1915, was to stay alive, but as Armenians. In
countries that welcomed them, they built schools and churches.
Protecting their Armenian status was to protect their language, their
history, their memories and their religion. Syria and Lebanon became
the most important countries in terms of allowing the Armenian
identity to live on. And so while Armenians were able to survive the
start of the 20th century, there was a mourning they were undergoing,
as well as the pride of still being alive. They knew about Armenians
who had survived by changing their religion, but as they saw it, these
were people who had ultimately denied their own roots to stay alive.
But what they didn’t think about at all was those very young children,
the vast majority of whom were girls, who were literally forced to
change their religion, and who could barely remember their own names
when they were taken from their parents. Perhaps Çetin’s mother was
one of the lucky ones; she had been nine when she was taken, and was
thus able to remember her family’s past.

Hidden truths and the pain of living with secrets cause heaviness,
even embarrassment. Saying `Actually, I am Armenian’ in a country
where being Turkish elicits such great praise is very difficult. It is
especially difficult if the truth has been hidden for so long. But
there are women who take this task upon themselves, overcoming the
difficulty by telling the truth after so many long years. The truth is
whispered in our ears, memorized. History is thus illuminated through
a series of personal recollections and hidden memories.

But what can an orphaned girl forced to keep her secret, a girl whose
only tool in hand is the kitchen, really do? What can a girl who is
not even able to tell her own offspring `I am Armenian,’ a girl unable
to say `But that is not really my name,’ tell her own children? One
way to deal with this all has been kitchen politics; making dishes
with strange names, or even Easter breads, thus raising question marks
in their own children’s minds. And when the grandchildren of these
women finally understand the real meaning behind phrases heard from
their grandmothers, such as, `Don’t be afraid of those in the
graveyards, run instead from the living,’ or, `May those days be gone
and never come again,’ everything will be different from then onwards
for those grandchildren. They are now grandchildren destined to
question the `history’ taught in schools, and to realize that the
history taught elsewhere as belonging to the state is in fact the
history of the childhoods and of their grandparents. And perhaps, as
Çetin has done, they will research and learn much more about their
history.

*Alin Ozinian is an independent analyst.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.todayszaman.com/news-292860-recollections-of-an-orphaned-armenian-girl-challenging-official-history-by-alin-ozinian.html