Armenian Youth Marches For 3000 Miles Recognition Of The Crime Commi

ARMENIAN YOUTH MARCHES FOR 3000 MILES RECOGNITION OF THE CRIME COMMITTED AGAINST HUMANITY
By Gohar Gevorgian

AZG Armenian Daily
18/10/2006

On June 27, at the initiative of "The United Armenian Students"
organization, the youth of California began a march that was to
stretch for 3000 miles. The procession was entitled "For the Sake
of Humanity" and lasted for already 3,5 months. The initiative is
aimed to inform the people about the crimes committed against the
humanity and make the government settle the issue. The young people
are carrying posters that condemn the genocides. They hope to reach
from Los Angeles to Washington in November. They expect to meet with
the US Government there.

In the information rendered to "Azg," the organizers of the procession
state that in the course of the procession they meet with congressmen
and senators, hold various arrangements and political meetings
dedicated to not only the Armenian genocide but also about all of
the crimes committed against the genocide. The initiators of the
arrangement aim to achieve the state recognition of these crimes.

Another important goal of the program is to show the undeniable
connection between the genocides to the American society and
its government. The students from a number of California based
universities, collages and educational institutions participate in the
procession. They believe that recognition of genocides will help avert
new crimes. Albrik Zohrabian, who has taken photos of the procession,
said this in the telephone conversation with "Azg."

OSCE Representative Urges French Senate To Reject Criminalization Of

OSCE REPRESENTATIVE URGES FRENCH SENATE TO REJECT CRIMINALIZATION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE DENIAL

Organization for Security and Co-Operation in Europe (OSCE)

Oct 17 2006

VIENNA, 17 October 2006 – The OSCE Representative on Freedom of the
Media, Miklos Haraszti, expressed his concern today about the French
National Assembly’s adoption in a first reading of an amendment that
aims to criminalize the denial that the 1915 killings of Armenians
in Turkey was genocide.

In a letter sent to the President of the French Senate, Christian
Poncelet, the Representative asked the Senate members to reject the
amendment when it reaches the Senate in its capacity as second chamber.

"I acknowledge the humanitarian intentions of those members of
the Assembly who support this proposal. However, the adoption of
the amendment raises serious concerns with regard to international
standards of freedom of expression," wrote Haraszti.

"It is in the name of these same standards that I continue to call upon
Turkey to remove Article 301 of the Penal Code, ‘Insulting Turkish
identity’, which prosecutors in Turkey repeatedly use in the context
of the Armenian genocide debate."

France recognized the genocide in the 19 January 2001 Law. The proposed
amendment would introduce a punishment for denial amounting to one
year’s imprisonment and a fine of EUR 45,000.

"Both the fact of criminalization of statements, and the severity
of the sanctions would infringe upon editorial freedom in France,"
added Haraszti. "The adoption of the amendment by France, a nation
with a long-standing tradition of freedom of expression, could set
a dangerous precedent for other nations of the OSCE."

http://www.osce.org/

EU Criticizes French Bill On Mass Killings

EU CRITICIZES FRENCH BILL ON MASS KILLINGS

Chinadaily.com.cn
October 14, 2006 Saturday

The European Union on Friday condemned a French bill that would make
it a crime to deny that the World War I-era killings of Armenians in
Turkey were genocide, describing it as counterproductive at a critical
stage in Turkey’s EU entry talks.

"We don’t think that this decision at this moment is helpful
in the context of the European Union’s relations with Turkey,"
European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said. "This is not
the best way to contribute to something we think is important." On
Thursday, French lawmakers in a 106-19 vote approved a bill that would
criminalize denying that the mass killings of Armenians amounted to
genocide. Turkey denounced the French lawmakers’ decision, saying it
would harm bilateral relations.

EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn said the bill, "instead
of opening up the debate, would rather close it down, and thus
have a negative impact." "We don’t achieve real dialogue and real
reconciliation by ultimatums, but by dialogue. Therefore, this law
is counterproductive," Rehn told reporters.

Rehn said it came at a bad time as the 25-member bloc was trying to
avoid "a train crash" in negotiations with the predominantly Muslim
nation.

"The real issue now is to avoid a train crash because of a slowing
down of the reform process (in Turkey) and because of Turkey not yet
meeting its obligations" in EU entry requirements, Rehn said.

Barroso said "the very sensitive issue" of Armenia should be made by
"Turkish society itself." "Frankly, we don’t think it is helpful that
another parliament outside takes a legislative action on a matter of
historical interpretation and analysis," he said.

The Armenia genocide issue has become intertwined with ongoing debate
in France and across Europe about whether to admit Turkey into the
EU. France is home to hundreds of thousands of people whose families
came from Armenia.

France has already recognized the 1915-19 killings of up to 1.5
million Armenians as genocide. Under Thursday’s bill, those who
contest it was genocide would risk up to a year in prison and fines
of up to US$56,000.

Rehn appealed to Greek and Turkish Cypriots to help smooth Turkey’s
talks.

"I trust that both communities on the island, all the parties and
especially all the EU member states will fully support (efforts)
to unblock the current stalemate on Cyprus," Rehn said.

Azerbaijan wages active internet war against Armenia & NK

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Oct 13 2006

AZERBAOIJAN WAGES ACTIVE INTERNET WAR AGAINST ARMENIA AND NAGORNO
KARABAKH, ROSBALT REPRESENTATIVE SAYS

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 13, NOYAN TAPAN. "Since the start of the Karabakh
conflict, Azerbaijan has conducted an Internet propaganda at the
state level against Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh." Samvel
Martirosian, Armenian representative of the Rosbalt news agency,
stated this at the October 13 seminar "Information War in the
Internet and Armenia" held at "Noravank" scientific and education
foundation. According to him, Azerbaijan is quite efficient in its
war against Armenia in terms of information websites and resources,
often resorting to misinformation.

Thus, according to S. Martirosian, DAY.az site spreading
misinformation is currently considered to be the main and most
frequently visited Internet site in the South Caucasus. It provides
information about the region, and even the Armenian mass media uses
information available at this site. "It is noteworthy that after
registering key words related to Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh in the
Internet, Azerbaijani information resources become availabale first
of all," S. Martirosian noted.

According to him, Azerbaijan also uses hacker methods in its
information war against Armenia in order to damage Armenia’s Internet
resources temporarily or permanently, with the Armenian side trying
to counteract.

In his opinion, taking all this into consideration, it is important
for Armenia to ensure information security in this field. S.
Martirosian said that shortcomings of Internet propaganda are in
certain cases related to insufficient development of the Internet and
especially Internet resources, to that fact that Armenian mass media
are not fully informed, etc. The successful work of Armenian Internet
resources in some cases is due, in his words, to efforts of
enthusiasts.

Nobelist Pamuk Reflects on East and West in Novels

Bloomberg
Oct 13 2006

Nobelist Pamuk Reflects on East and West in Novels (Correct)

By Hephzibah Anderson

(Corrects Turkey’s position on genocide in World War I in last
paragraph.)

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) — As cheers greet the naming of Orhan Pamuk as
literature’s newest Nobel laureate, his political bravery shouldn’t
eclipse his intellectual credentials.

By comparison with the work of those in whose pantheon he now finds
himself, the Turkish author’s oeuvre might indeed seem slim. Last
year’s winner, Harold Pinter, has to his name 29 plays, 24
screenplays, and assorted volumes of prose and poetry. When German
author Gunter Grass won in 1999, his output in English translation
alone topped 20 works of fact and fiction. And by the time the
prolific V.S. Naipaul was summoned to Stockholm in 2001, he could
show off 14 books about him.

Pamuk, 54, has written seven novels, two works of non- fiction and a
screenplay, of which half-a-dozen are currently available in English.
These encompass a whodunit, a family saga and a haunting political
thriller. Though they unfold against disparate temporal backdrops
spanning more than five centuries, it is the urgent contemporaneity
of Pamuk’s themes that unites them.

In particular, he is preoccupied with the meeting of East and West,
suggesting that it’s an encounter still more complicated than we
imagine.

Born in Istanbul in 1952, Pamuk was alert to the Western influences
affecting his traditional Ottoman home. He draws on this
autobiographical material in his first novel, “Cevdet Bey and His
Sons,” which was published in 1982 and tells the story of one family
over three generations.

Civil Strife

A second novel, “The House of Silence,” appeared the following
year, using five narrative perspectives to capture simmering civil
strife at a Turkish seaside resort in 1980.

His third novel, “The White Castle,” appeared in 1985 and five
years later became his first to be translated into English. Set in
17th-century Istanbul, it is an allegorical tale depicting a slave
and a scholar who find themselves through each other’s life stories,
underscoring a notion of unstable identity that becomes a recurring
motif in his work. It’s especially prominent in his next novel, “The
Black Book” (Turkish 1990, English 1994), whose central character
swaps identity with his missing wife’s half-brother.

“The New Life” (Turkish 1994, English 1997) centers on a miraculous
book with the power to change forever the life of any person who
reads it, but it was Pamuk’s sixth novel that gave him his
breakthrough in the U.S. and the U.K. “My Name is Red” (Turkish
1998, English 2001) is an exhilarating detective story set in a time
of violent fundamentalism — Istanbul in the late 1590s. Like “The
New Life,” it has a book at its heart, this time a highly
controversial tome commissioned in secret by the sultan.

Risky Enterprise

Though its text celebrates the glories of his realm, the sultan has
requested figurative, European-style illustrations, and it’s these
that make the book such a risky enterprise. When one of the chosen
artists disappears, a suspenseful tale of love and deception
develops, as much a philosophical mystery as a whodunit.

The novel went on to win the 2003 International IMPAC Dublin Literary
Award, currently worth 100,000 euros ($125,325).

In 2002, Pamuk followed “My Name is Red” with “Snow” (English
2004), a thriller set during the 1990s, whose poet protagonist finds
himself caught up in a military coup in a Turkish border town. Begun
before Sept. 11, it’s Pamuk’s most overtly political novel to date,
and dramatizes the conflict between Islamists and the secular forces
of Westernization.

Maze-Like City

Throughout his career, Pamuk’s native Istanbul has been more than a
backdrop. A place he revisits time and again in his fiction, it is a
character and a muse, and in 2003 he paid it homage in a non-fiction
love letter, “Istanbul: Memories and the City” (English 2005).

He sees this maze-like city and its rich, tumultuous history as being
defined by “huzun,” a Turkish word signifying a profound sense of
spiritual loss and melancholy longing. The portrait that emerges is
deeply personal, and he braids Istanbul’s history with vignettes from
his own, permitting glimpses of his parents’ troubled marriage, his
eccentric grandmother, and his early literary stirrings.

Narrating His Country

Reviewing “Snow” in the New York Times Book Review, Margaret Atwood
suggested that Pamuk was engaged in a “longtime project: narrating
his country into being.” If this truly is his ultimate aim, he is
likely to find himself spending more time in the political limelight.

This will not be easy. His willingness to state that Turkey
persecuted the Armenians during World War I provoked anger in a
country that refuses to admit any genocide during World War I and
charged him with insulting the nation. These charges were dropped in
January, but the issue simmers among others involving Islam’s role in
modern life. Yet if any artist can pull off the trick of being
political and imaginative, it’s likely to be Pamuk.

France’s Armenian genocide bill hurts Turkish EU bid

Toronto Star
Oct 13 2006

France’s Armenian genocide bill hurts Turkish EU bid
Oct. 13, 2006. 01:00 AM
SANDRO CONTENTA
EUROPEAN BUREAU

LONDON – A French bill making it a crime to deny that Armenians
suffered genocide at the hands of Ottoman Turks is being widely
described as a blow to Turkey’s chances of joining the European
Union.

The bill – also denounced by critics as an attack on free speech –
was approved by France’s lower house of parliament yesterday. But
either the Senate or President Jacques Chirac is expected to block it
from becoming law.

Still, the vote caused a political storm, not least because some
interpreted it as a bid by leading candidates in the presidential
election next year to exploit anti-Turkey feelings in France.

France’s Armenian community, one of the largest in Europe at an
estimated 500,000, had pushed hard for the bill. It sets the same
penalty as a French law that makes denial of the Nazi genocide of
Jews a crime – a one-year prison term and a 45,000 euro ($64,000)
fine.

"Does a genocide committed in World War I have less value than a
genocide committed in World War II? Obviously not," Philippe Pomezec,
an MP with the ruling Union for a Popular Movement (UMP), said during
the parliamentary debate in Paris. Turkey denies the premise of the
bill, that some 1.5 million Armenians, most of them Christians, were
systematically massacred or starved to death during the
disintegration of the Ottoman empire in 1915.

It argues that thousands of Turks and Armenians died during
inter-ethnic violence when Russia invaded the empire’s eastern
provinces in World War I. Modern Turkey, an officially secular state
with a largely Muslim population of 70 million, was established in
1923.

The bill passed the same day that Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk won
the Nobel Prize for literature.

Pamuk was recently charged with "insulting Turkishness" after telling
a Swiss newspaper that no one in Turkey dared mention the Armenian
massacre. The charges were dropped during the trial.

To some defenders of free speech, France’s bid to criminalize denial
of the massacre was no different than Turkey’s attempts to punish
those who mention it.

"Voltaire must be spinning in his grave," said Andrew Duff, a British
member of the European Parliament, referring to the 17th century
French philosopher and civil libertarian.

France’s centre-right government didn’t support the bill – proposed
by the opposition Socialist party – but allowed its UMP members to
vote freely. The government promised to block the bill in the Senate,
but Turkey said the damage had been done.

"French-Turkish relations … have been dealt a severe blow today as
a result of the irresponsible false claims of French politicians who
do not see the political consequences of their actions," the Turkish
Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

Turkish analysts said the vote exposes the depth of anti-Turkey
feeling in France, a founding member of the European Union.

They predicted a backlash in Turkey that boosts nationalist sentiment
and weakens support for the legal reforms necessary to join the
25-nation EU.

The possible entry of the first Muslim nation into what is now an
exclusively Christian club raises anxieties in a number of European
countries, even though negotiations between Turkey and the EU are
expected to last at least a decade.

Orhan Pamuk, Prix Nobel de =?unknown?q?litt=E9rature_et?= embarras p

Le Devoir
Orhan Pamuk, Prix Nobel de littérature et embarras pour la Turquie
Jean-François Nadeau
Édition du vendredi 13 octobre 2006
Mots clés : Turquie (pays), Livre, orhan pamuk, prix nobel,
littérature
L’écrivain Orhan Pamuk, 54 ans, est le lauréat du prix Nobel de
littérature 2006. Cible politique du régime turc pour sa défense
des causes arménienne et kurde, il est plus que jamais source de
fierté littéraire mais aussi d’embarras pour son pays. Un procès
pour ses affirmations au sujet du génocide arménien lui a été
intenté cette année dans son propre pays, ce qui lui a valu l’appui
de la communauté intellectuelle internationale, comme l’expliquaient
Georges Leroux et Christian Nadeau dans les pages littéraires du
Devoir en janvier dernier.

L’écrivain Orhan Pamuk, Prix Nobel de littérature 2006

Pamuk a été qualifié de renégat par ses détracteurs en
Turquie pour ses déclarations sur des sujets longtemps restés
tabous. «Un million d’Arméniens et 30 000 Kurdes ont été
tués sur ces terres, mais personne d’autre que moi n’ose le dire»,
avait-il affirmé en février 2005 dans un hebdomadaire suisse.

La justice turque le tient à l’oeil depuis un moment sous prétexte
d’«insulte ouverte à la nation turque», un crime passible de six
mois à trois ans de prison. Mais les poursuites formelles ont été
abandonnées début 2006.

Pamuk a reçu plusieurs menaces de mort. Dans une province de l’ouest
de la Turquie, le préfet d’Isparta a même donné l’ordre de
brûler ses livres. L’injonction a ensuite été retirée sous la
pression du gouvernement, plus que jamais désireux de ne pas ternir
son image avant le lancement de négociations d’adhésion à l’Union
européenne.

«Je soutiens la candidature de la Turquie à l’adhésion à l’Union
européenne […] mais je ne peux pas dire à ces adversaires de la
Turquie : "Ce n’est pas vos affaires s’ils me jugent ou pas." Du coup,
je me sens coincé au milieu. C’est un fardeau», a déclaré Pamuk,
qui se considère d’abord comme écrivain sans intentions politiques,
bien que ses livres ne manquent pas de secouer certaines conceptions
établies de sa société.
À l’extérieur de son pays, Orhan Pamuk accumule les prix
littéraires. En octobre 2005, il a reçu le prestigieux prix de la
Paix des libraires allemands et le prix Médicis français du roman
étranger. En 2004, le New York Times lui avait accordé son attention
pour «le meilleur livre étranger de l’année». Dans son oeuvre,
traduite en une vingtaine de langues à ce jour, il traite des conflits
d’une société écartelée entre Orient et Occident.

L’oeuvre elle-même ?
Le caractère tout à fait sulfureux de cette vie d’écrivain
suffit-il à en faire un Prix Nobel ? Plusieurs attendaient plutôt
cette année le couronnement par l’Académie Nobel de l’Américain
Philip Roth ou du Mexicain Carlos Fuentes, voire de l’Israélien Amos
Oz. D’autres noms ont aussi circulé, y compris celui de Pamuk, qui
n’était pourtant pas donné favori de prime abord.

Le lauréat de cette année, dont la valeur est indéniable, semble
néanmoins avoir beaucoup profité des conditions sociopolitiques qui
entourent les discussions sur l’avenir de son pays au sein de l’Union
européenne. En dépit des controverses qu’il suscite, Pamuk, cheveux
grisonnants et portant des lunettes, souvent habillé d’un simple
t-shirt et d’une veste, n’intervient que rarement sur la scène
publique, préférant le désordre enfumé de son bureau aux
projecteurs des plateaux de télévision. À Istanbul, l’appartement
où il écrit ses livres lui offre une vue sur un pont enjambant le
Bosphore, lien entre l’Europe et l’Asie.

Né le 7 juin 1952 dans une famille francophile aisée d’Istanbul,
Orhan Pamuk a abandonné des études en architecture à l’ge de 23
ans pour s’enfermer dans son appartement et se consacrer à la
littérature. Sept ans plus tard était publié son premier roman,
Cevdet Bey et ses fils.

L’irritation de ses détracteurs est montée d’un cran après son
refus, en 1998, d’accepter le titre d’«artiste d’État». Il était
alors déjà devenu l’écrivain le plus prisé en Turquie avec des
ventes records. Son sixième roman, Mon nom est Rouge, une réflexion
sur la confrontation entre l’Orient et l’Occident à travers l’Empire
ottoman de la fin du XVIe siècle, allait lui assurer une
célébrité internationale.

Publié en 1990, Le Livre noir, un des romans les plus lus en Turquie,
décrit la recherche effrénée d’une femme par un homme pendant une
semaine dans un Istanbul enneigé, boueux et ambigu.

Neige (2002), publié en français l’année dernière chez
Gallimard, constitue un plaidoyer pour la laïcité tout autant qu’une
réflexion sur l’identité de la société turque et la nature du
fanatisme religieux. Orhan Pamuk a aussi publié La Maison du silence
(1983), Le Chteau blanc (1985), La Vie nouvelle (1994) et Istanbul
(2003).

Grand, dégingandé, nerveux, parlant vite et fort, Orhan Pamuk fut le
premier écrivain dans le monde musulman à condamner ouvertement la
fatwa de 1989 contre Salman Rushdie et prit position pour son collègue
turc Yasar Kemal quand celui-ci fut appelé en justice en 1995.

L’Académie suédoise a indiqué dans ses attendus avoir décerné
le prix à un auteur «qui, à la recherche de l’me mélancolique
de sa ville natale, a trouvé de nouvelles images spirituelles pour le
combat et l’entrelacement des cultures». L’Académie suédoise
affirme en outre que l’écrivain «est connu dans son pays comme un
auteur contestataire, bien qu’il se considère comme écrivain
littéraire sans intentions politiques».

Le lauréat a déclaré à un quotidien suédois être «très
heureux et honoré», ajoutant qu’il allait pour le moment tenter de
se «remettre de ce choc» qui lui vaut dix millions de couronnes
suédoises, soit l’équivalent d’environ 1,5 million $CAN.

Le Devoir et l’Agence France-Presse

France Warned Over Armenian Law

FRANCE WARNED OVER ARMENIAN LAW
by Geoff Meade, PA Europe editor, Brussels

Press Association Newsfile
October 11, 2006 Wednesday 6:47 PM BST

France risks sabotaging Turkish EU membership by criminalising denial
of the Armenian holocaust, a Euro-MP warned tonight.

Labour’s Richard Howitt said if a French Parliament vote backs the
plan tomorrow, it will send the wrong signal to the Turkish Government,
which is under EU pressure to open up freedom of speech.

"While the EU is encouraging Turkey to promote freedom of expression,
especially on this issue, the French are sending entirely the wrong
signal by closing down debate within their own country.

"There is a huge gulf between what some French Parliamentarians are
trying to do and promoting real understanding of the tragedies of
history. They should not be playing political football with what is
an incredibly sensitive issue within Turkish society."

The Turkish Government denies the systematic genocide by the Ottoman
Turks in 1915 of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians, but recognition
of the atrocity has not been made a pre-condition of joining the EU.

But Mr Howitt echoed European Commission fears that if France cracks
down on genocide denial, it will effectively impose such a condition,
while undoing progress so far in getting Ankara to relax its current
general restrictions on free expression.

"The EU must remain resolute in its commitment to Turkish accession,
abiding by the promises it has already made to the Turkish
government. Anything other than a full and honest engagement in this
process by all member states will only increase Turkish fears of
bad faith.

"The upcoming vote in the French Parliament risks becoming a
precondition upon the Turkish government" said Mr Howitt.

The new French law, if adopted tomorrow, would make it an offence
triggering a jail sentence to deny the fact of the Armenian genocide.

Only last month French President Chirac said in Armenia that Turkey
should recognise the genocide before being allowed to join the EU –
adding to strains between Paris and Ankara.

French in Turkey ‘genocide’ row

French in Turkey ‘genocide’ row

Reuters
October 12, 2006

By Crispian Balmer

PARIS (Reuters) – Ignoring Turkish protests, the French lower house of
parliament overwhelmingly approved a bill on Thursday making it a crime to
deny Armenians suffered genocide in 1915 at the hands of the Ottoman Turks.

French businesses fear a Turkish backlash because of the legislation, which
has highlighted broader anxieties about Turkish efforts to secure European
Union membership.

The bill still needs the approval of both the upper house Senate and the
French president to become law, but Turkey has already warned that
Thursday’s vote would damage ties between the two NATO allies.

Turkey denies accusations of a genocide of some 1.5 million Armenians during
the disintegration of the Ottoman Empire in World War One, arguing that
Armenian deaths were a part of general partisan fighting in which both sides
suffered.

However, France’s Armenian community, which is up to 500,000-strong and one
of the largest in Europe, had pushed hard for the bill and found cross-party
support in parliament.

Thursday’s motion was carried by 106 votes to 19.

The legislation establishes a one-year prison term and 45,000 euro ($56,570)
fine for anyone denying the genocide — exactly the same sanctions as those
imposed for denying the Nazi genocide of Jews during World War Two.

The French government did not support the motion, saying it was up to
historians and not parliament to judge the past, but the ruling Union for a
Popular Movement (UMP) gave its lawmakers a free hand in the vote, ensuring
it would pass.

"Does a genocide committed in the World War One have less value than a
genocide committed in World War Two. Obviously not," UMP deputy Philippe
Pomezec said during the debate.

EU FEARS

However, some Turks think French politicians have more on their minds than
20th century history and suspect they are using the bill to further
complicate Ankara’s already uphill struggle to join the European Union.

The majority of French people are opposed to Turkey joining the 25-nation
bloc and fears over its potential membership was given as one of the reasons
why France voted last year to reject the EU constitution.

"(This vote) can only worsen prospects for EU accession and will move the
Turkish population even further away from pro-EU sentiment," said Lars
Christensen with Danske Bank in Denmark.

"We have long been optimistic that Turkey will become an EU member, but
we’re moving in the wrong direction, which will really affect markets," he
added.

Both outgoing President Chirac and Socialist presidential frontrunner
Segolene Royal say Turkey must acknowledge the genocide before joining the
EU, while conservative frontrunner Nicolas Sarkozy is opposed to its EU
entry under any conditions.

But government ministers fear that the Armenia vote will have an immediate
impact on trade with Turkey, with French exports to Turkey worth
4.66billion euros ($5.85 billion) in 2005.

"Liberty, Equality, Stupidity," Turkish daily Hurriyet said in a headline on
Thursday, reflecting widespread Turkish anger and irritation over the vote.

Copyright 2006 Reuters.

Armenian Genocide and Dutch Parliamentary Elections

Armenian lobby is strong

Het Parool (Dutch Daily Newspaper)
7 October 2006

By Addie Schulte

Never before the Armenian Genocide got as much attention in the Dutch
politics as in the previous weeks. A small lobby with many branches in
Binnenhof had unexpected success. ?I think that the Netherlands has spared
herself a big deal of misery¹.

It started a month ago with a letter to CDA (Christian Democrat Party) and a
press release. The Federation of Armenian Organisations in the Netherlands
(FAON) and its 24 April Committee asked if candidate Member of Parliament
Ayhan Tonca distances himself from his earlier denial of the Armenian
Genocide.

³Tonca were a straight denier², says Inge Drost, spokeswoman of the Armenian
organisations. The Armenian lobby did not get a direct answer to the letter
to CDA. But after the attention paid by media, the matter gained momentum,
which seems still to continue.

That was quite different when the Armenians achieved a first success in The
Hague. In December 2004 the Parliament unanimously adopted a motion,
submitted by the chairman of Christian Union faction André Rouvoet and
signed by other factions, wherein the government is asked to bring the
recognition of the Armenian Genocide under the attention of the Turkish
government. A topical subject, because the Parliament was discussing the
starting of negotiations for the accession of Turkey to the European Union.

We insisted for many years on this matter. But with this motion the
recognition was not a requirement for the accession of Turkey. Last year Mr.
Rouvoet tried to achieve this point in a debate with foreign affairs
minister Ben Bot. Mr. Bot refused, because according to him it was
implicitly clear that Turkey would have to recognise the genocide. ³Mr.
Rouvoet said: ?Let¹s take this¹,² according to Mrs. Drost.

But in the minutes of the report there was nothing mentioned on this matter.
Mrs. Drost continued to insist. ³I have asked Rouvoet to inquire about this
statement in a plenary debate once more². These debates are recorded
textually. Mrs. Drost: ³But then the answers were quite different.²

It is not surprising that Mr. Rouvoet repeatedly raised the Armenian matter
and thereby received quite broad support. He is a member of the Recommending
Committee of 24 April Committee just like the Parliament Members Harry van
Bommel (SP), Kathleen Ferrier (CDA), Farah Karimi (Green-Left), Cees van der
Staaij (SGP), PvdA senator Ed van Thijn and former MP Leen van Dijke
(Christian Union).

The small Christian political parties have been therefore well represented.
The majority of Armenians are Christians. The 24 April Committee was also
particularly involved with the bill concerning the punishment of the
Genocide denial in some cases submitted by the Christian Union faction.

In fact it concerns a historical question, and the struggle for its
recognition is not political, says Mrs. Drost. ³But the policy of denial is
guided by Ankara². ³Turkey is doing a rearguard action: almost all
historians recognise the Genocide. But we cannot just pass over, because
Turkey wants to become a member of the European Union. That is unthinkable
without recognition of the Genocide.²

The Turkish embassy plays enormous role in this matter, according to her.
Mrs. Drost does not accept the criticism that the Dutch candidates of
Turkish origin are sharply followed. ³We have not damaged someone
unnecessarily. We asked clarity and we have mainly succeeded to get that. I
think that the Netherlands has spared herself a big deal of misery. A
Turkish problem is imported here. Some people are connected with hundreds of
ties to Ankara. Many people do not want believe that the Dutch policy was
already influenced, even before the motion of Mr. Rouvoet. The Members of
Parliament Fatma Koser Kaya (D66), Nebahat Albayrak (PvdA) and Fadime Örgü
(VVD) have given then an interview wherein the Turkish point of view was
presented².

Following Tonca also other Dutch candidates of Turkish origin came in the
sight. Particularly Mrs. Albayrak owes that to herself with her statements
in the newspaper Trouw, Mrs. Drost thinks. ³We could unfortunately not
neglect her judgments. Unfortunately, because it concerns persons.²

According to her many people did not understand that the statements of Mrs.
Albayrak are very close to those of negationists. ³The position of Mrs.
Albayrak is still not clear. It is, however, remarkable that Albayrak now
shows victim behaviour.²