Putin: no problems between Russia and Armenia

Putin: no problems between Russia and Armenia

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.01.2007 18:36 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Russia and Armenia experience no sharp problems,
Russian President Vladimir Putin said at a joint news conference
with RA leader Robert Kocharian. "There is no single unsettled issue,
no complicated problem under discussion between Russia and Armenia,"
he said. According to President Putin, Russia and Armenia demonstrate
a serious approach towards energy and transport issues in 2007;
the commodity turnover tends to grow, reports Interfax.

Vladimir Putin voiced hope that Robert Kocharian’s visit will convey
an extra impulse to the development of bilateral relations.

Ligabo deeply concerned over the murder of Hrant Dink

Kuwait News Agency, Kuwait
Jan 24 2007

Ligabo deeply concerned over the murder of Hrant Dink

MDA-TURKEY-JOURNALIST
Ligabo deeply concerned over the murder of Hrant Dink

GENEVA, Jan 24 (KUNA) — The Special Rapporteur on the promotion and
protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression, Ambeyi
Ligabo, expressed his deep concern over the murder of Hrant Dink, a
respected journalist and intellectual, known for his critical work on
a specific period of the history of Turkey.

In his forthcoming report to the fourth session of the Human Rights
Council, the Special Rapporteur stresses that the exercise of freedom
of speech should always be guaranteed for the consideration of
historical events.

Most unfortunately, he adds, extreme polarization of views, in
conjunction with a perverted sense of national identity, has again
inspired the accomplishment of an ominous act, which has curtailed
the practicability of debating, in a tolerant and open manner, a
subject of wide general interest.

Ligabo adds that safety of media workers remains one of the core
issues to ensure the full exercise of the right to freedom of
expression, a key component of all democratic societies.

Governments and state institutions, he adds, have the primary
responsibility of ensuring the safety and security of citizens,
including journalists and other media professionals.

In this connection, the Special Rapporteur is encouraged by the
prompt reaction of the Government of Turkey, and hopes that
investigations will shed light on all aspects of this heinous
crime.(end) hn.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

The Canadian Government, the Canada-Armenia Parliamentary Friendship

Armenian National Committee of Canada
130 Albert St., Suite 1007
Ottawa, ON
KIP 5G4
Tel. (613) 235-2622 Fax (613) 238-2622
E-mail:[email protected]

ww w.anccanada.org

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

January 23, 2007

Contact: Kevork Manguelian

Tel. (613) 235-2622

The Canadian Government, the Canada-Armenia Parliamentary Friendship Group
and the National Ethnic Press and Media Council of Canada Condemn the Murder
of Journalist Hrant Dink

Ottawa- The Canadian Government and the Chair of Canada-Armenia
Parliamentary Friendship Group have condemned the murder of the
Armenian-Turkish Journalist Hrant Dink in Turkey last week.

The Hon. Jason Kenney, Secretary of State, Multiculturalism and Canadian
Identity, in a statement issued today extended his "heartfelt sympathy" to
the Dink family and to "believers in freedom and democracy."

The Secretary of State called Dink’s assassination a "barbaric hate crime,"
and said he hoped justice would be eventually served. Mr. Kenney described
Dink as a courageous and principled journalist particularly "in his writings
regarding the Armenian Genocide."

On behalf of the Canada-Armenia Parliamentary Friendship Group (CAPFG), Gary
Goodyear (MP-Cambridge) issued a statement expressing his "shock and deep
sadness for the tragic murder of Turkish journalist Hrant Dink." He
described Dink’s murder as "an act which assaults the basic principles of
free expression and democracy."

According to the CAPFG president, Dink was silenced because "his offence was
to seek dialogue and reconciliation between Turks and Armenians by
recognizing the Armenian Genocide of 1915."

To mourn the assassination of Dink, the National Ethnic Press and Media
Council of Canada (NEPMCC) also issued a statement condemning the murder and
expressed "the horror of its members for the barbaric murder of journalist
Hrant Dink." The president of the council, Thomas Saras called on the
"United Nations to investigate the circumstances of Dink’s murder," and
asked "the European Union and all the nations of the world to disassociate
themselves from the fascist establishment in Ankara."

Jean Meguerditchian, President of the Armenian National Committee of Canada
(ANCC), expressed "The Canadian-Armenian community’s appreciation to the
Hon. Jason Kenney, Mr. Gary Goodyear and Mr. Saras for their solidarity and
compassion during these difficult and somber times for the Dink family, the
Armenian people and Dink’s righteous Turkish colleagues."

Aris Babikian, Executive Director of the ANCC called "on the Turkish
Government to uphold Mr. Dink legacy and to reconcile with the Armenian
people by recognizing the Armenian Genocide and eliminate Article 301 from
its penal code, and reform its school system to teach Turkish pupils the
historical fact of the Armenian Genocide"

-30-

Texts of the Statements

CANADA

Hon. Jason Kenney, PC, MP

Secretary of State (Multiculturalism and Canadian Identity)

For Immediate Release

January 23, 2007

Statement by the Hon. Jason Kenney, PC, MP.

I would like to extend my heartfelt sympathy to the Dink family and
believers in freedom and democracy as we grieve the loss of Armenian
journalist, Hrant Dink.

I condemn this barbaric hate crime and hope justice will be served for those
who are responsible for Mr. Dink’s assassination.

Mr. Dink was a well known voice around the world on Armenian affairs as a
courageous and principled journalist, particularly in his writings regarding
the Armenian genocide. Mr. Dink’s work to promote tolerance has benefited
countless lives. I fully support the Armenian people as they continue the
work Hrant accomplished throughout his life.

Freedom of speech and respect for diversity must be adhered to so that we
can all live in peace and harmony.

May God bless his Soul

"Asdvadz Hokin Loosavore"

-30-

Office of Jason Kenney, PC, MP

Secretary of State (Multiculturalism and Canadian Identity)

————————————- ———————————–

For Immediate Release
January 24, 2007

Statement by Gary Goodyear, Chair

Canada-Armenia Parliamentary Friendship Group

On behalf of the Canada-Armenia Parliamentary Friendship Group, I would like
to express my shock and deep sadness for the tragic murder of Turkish
journalist Hrant Dink.

This murder is an act which assaults the basic principles of free expression
and democracy.

Mr. Dink was a prominent voice for the Armenian population in Turkey. He
was editor of the bilingual Turkish-Armenian Agos newspaper and his offence
was to seek dialogue and reconciliation between Turks and Armenians by
recognizing the Armenian Genocide of 1915.

Mr. Dink spent his life trying to rid his country and his two peoples of the
denial dividing them. It is our hope that justice will be served and that
we can draw a lesson from this unimaginable event in order to heal pains of
past actions and pave the way for a peaceful future through truth and
reconciliation.

-30-

——————- ————————————————– —-

NATIONAL ETHNIC PRESS AND MEDIA COUNCIL OF CANADA

Conseil national de la presse et des medias ethniques du Canada

Canada’s Other Voices

Office of the President

The killing of Hrant Dink another act of barbarism in Turkey

The murder of the journalist underscores that the country has

no common values with the European societies.

Toronto–The National Ethnic Press and Media Council of Canada (NEPMCC)
expresses the horror of its members for the barbaric murder of journalist
Hrant Dink, editor-in-chief of Agos, the Istanbul-based Turkish-Armenian
weekly. The council cites the murder is an example of Turkey’s barbaric
mentality and culture, and its resistance to the principles of free
expression and the rights of the minorities living under Turkish
administration.

The NPEMCC condemns, in the strongest terms, the assassination of one of
Turkey’s few free voices and asks the United Nations to investigate the
circumstances of Dink’s murder. It also urges the European Union and all the
nations of the world to disassociate themselves from the fascist
establishment in Ankara. It further recommends that EU terminate
negotiations with Turkey aimed at the membership of Turkey into the European
family of states until the rights of all citizens of Turkey are respected
and the voice of political dissidents is respected.

Thomas S. Saras

President, NEPMCC

-30-

——————————————– —————————–

The ANCC is the largest and the most influential Canadian-Armenian
grassroots political organization. Working in coordination with a network of
offices, chapters, and supporters throughout Canada and affiliated
organizations around the world, the ANCC actively advances the concerns of
the Canadian-Armenian community on a broad range of issues.

Regional Chapters

Montréal – Laval – Ottawa – Toronto – Hamilton – Cambridge – St.
Catharines – Windsor – Vancouver

–Boundary_(ID_XwgAsYwwuo5wTgKRkwNJpg)- –

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: ARTICLE: 1915-2007

24 Jan 07

ARTICLE: 1915-2007
by Ahmet Altan
gazetem.net
in English and Turkish original

"1915-2007" by Ahmet Altan

Nothing much has changed it seems.

They were murdered in 1915 as well…

They are being murdered in 2007 too…

What was being said about that massacre at the beginning of last
century.

"They killed us, and we killed them back."

What are we going to say about the murder of Hrant then?

That "Hrant killed us, and we killed Hrant back?"

Now that is not what we say, is it?

We say "traitors killed Hrant."

We do not see the murderers of Hrant as one of "us."

Why is it that "we" are the ones who ninety years ago killed
hundreds of thousands of people, without forsaking children, women,
elderly and babies, who decimated the Armenians, but we are not the
ones who killed Hrant?

What is the difference between the two?

The difference is that this time we saw the murder, that we have an
idea about the intentions of the murderer.

This time they did not "tell us" how the murder was
committed, we personally witnessed it ourselves.

If those who in this country "write" the history of 1915 had
also written the murder of Hrant, the children in this country
would have said fifty years later that "Hrant had killed us, and
we killed Hrant back."

The truth would have changed shape in the hands of the liars.

We did not kill Hrant.

Most probably some people who have ferreted their way into the state
had Hrant killed.

Their intention was for the world to react negatively to Turkey,
which would have escalated nationalism within the country in
response, leading to a break off from Europe.

In 1915 as well, "we" did not kill the Armenians.

Those poor people were not killed by "the ones ferreted inside the
state," but directly by the state itself.

A great massacre that was organized by the Unionists in government
was actualized.

The Armenians who were killed were Ottoman subjects.

They were a part of the Ottoman nation.

A part of the nation was utterly destroyed by the state.

"We" are the nation.

The ones who were killed were a part of "us."

Since each Turk who lives in this country see themselves not as a
"part of the nation" but rather a "part of the
state," however, they also own this massacre executed by the
state.

"They killed us, we killed them," they say.

Now that is a lie.

The Ottoman state, under the government of the Unionists killed, in
an organized manner, with the planning of the intelligence unit
entitled Special Organization (TeÅ~_kilat-ı Mahsusa), a "part
of us."

The murdered Armenians are a part of "us."

It is actually our duty to ask them to account for that murdered part
of us.

"We" ought to face this state and ask them "are you a
continuation of the Ottoman state," ask them "why do you own
up to the murder committed by a state you destroyed," ask them
"why don’t you yourself seek accountability for this
destruction by the state of a part of its nation and instead leave
this task to others."

Because "we" did not ask this, one of "us," Hrant
Dink, has now been murdered.

On top of it all, he, while still mourning for his ancestors, wanted
Turkey not to be trapped solely within the term "genocide,"
not to have the entire debate forced into a single word; he wanted
Turkey to be permiited to become democratized through uniting with
the world .

He was declared "an enemy of the Turks."

Hrant was no one’s enemy, he was not someone who could have been
a foe.

He was a friend.

And he was a friend to everyone.

Why is it that in this country those who are "for murders and
massacres" are accepted as a Turk while "those for
friendship, peace, justice and humanity" are regarded as foe.

Why is it that those who strive to equate the word "Turk"
with "death" are regarded as a "Turk"?

Are those who try to have an entire tribe declared as
"murderers" truly the friends of the Turks?

The Turkish populace owns up to the crimes of the old and new
"state" because it cannot grasp that it is the
"nation."

As it cannot grasp that it itself is the nation, it identifies
itself with the murderers instead and says "us."

My heart could never bear to have the sorrowful deaths of those
hundreds of thousands of people, the bloody tragedy that was
experienced to be lost within the vortex created by the term
"genocide."

Yet because we have not been able to move beyond that word, people
like Hrant are still being killed.

I think that now, in order to prevent new murders, iin order to stop
this country from being dragged to a dead end, it is up to us to move
beyond that word.

The Ottoman state killed hundreds of thousands of people solely
because they were "Armenians."

And today a hidden force kills Hrant for "being an
Armenian."

What are we going to call it if a person is being killed solely
because of their race or their religion?

It is up to "us," to this nation to ask for an accounting of
those who were killed.

Hrant’s death hurt you all deeply.

If you had witnessed what had happened in 1915, you would have been
likewise deeply hurt.

And you would not have said "they killed us, we kiled them."

You would have been ashamed.

Just as you wanted Hrant’s murderers to be found, you would have
wanted the murderers of those Armenians found as well.

With his death, Hrant made us remember that we are a nation, that we
should not identify ourselves with the murderers.

Then let us do what befits being a nation.

Who killed Hrant?

Who killed the Armenians in 1915?

They do not have to account for their actions to "others,"
they have to account to "us."

For we are the ones who have died.

The ones who died are a part of us.

–Boundary_(ID_IFR7XrGOICprnWTtz+sTdw)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.gazetem.net/ahmetaltan.asp

BAKU: Co-chairs to release joint statement after Yerevan negotiation

Co-chairs to release joint statement after Yerevan negotiations

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Jan 24 2007

[ 24 Jan. 2007 15:16 ]

The co-chairs of OSCE Minsk Group Yuri Merzlyakov (Russia), Bernard
Fasie (France), Metyu Bryza (USA) and personal representative of
OSCE Chairman-in-Office Andrzey Kasprzyk will visit Yerevan today,
Russian co-chair Yuri Merzlyakov told the APA.

He said that during their meeting with President Ilham Aliyev they
discussed the present stage of negotiations on Nagorno Karabakh, but
he did not bring up any details. He also added that the co-chairs will
release joint statement after their meeting with Armenian President
Robert Kocharyan.

It should be noted that after the meeting with Azerbaijani President,
the co-chairs had business dinner with Foreign Minister Elmar
Mammadyarov and held informal negotiations. /APA/

Sydney: Armenian protest over murder

Armenian protest over murder
January 25, 2007 12:00am

Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia
Jan 24 2007

MORE than 500 members of Sydney’s Armenian community rallied outside
the city’s Turkish consulate yesterday in protest at the murder of
outspoken journalist Hrant Dink.

Mr Dink, 52, was shot outside his newspaper office in Istanbul on
Friday.

Many believe he was a target because of his criticism of the Turkish
Government over its continued refusal to acknowledge the Armenian
genocide at the end of World War I.

Up to 600 Sydney-based Armenians gathered outside the Turkish
consulate to express their anger at Mr Dink’s death, said Armenian
National Committee of Australia president Tro Kortian.

Protesters called on the Turkish Government to punish the teenager
who confessed to Mr Dink’s murder, and also urged it to acknowledge
the Armenian genocide.

Dr Kortian said it had been a peaceful rally.

"The purpose was to convey the community’s collective indignation as
well as to add the community’s voice to the international
condemnation regarding the assassination of Hrant Dink," he said.

Dr Kortian said the Turkish Government’s continuing denial of the
genocide was feeding an atmosphere of intolerance and racial hatred.

Consular officials refused to accept a letter from a delegation of
protesters, but Dr Kortian said he was confident the message had been
heard.

Speeches in Armenian and English, and a tribute to Mr Dink’s life and
work featured in the one-hour protest.

Between 25,000 and 30,000 Armenians live in Sydney.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

TDN: The Anatomy of a Pre-announced Murder

The Anatomy of a Pre-announced murder
By CENGIZ AKTAR

l.php?ed=cengiz_aktar

Turkish Daily News
Tuesday, January 23, 2007

At first, clergyman and representative of Sunni Islam, Religious
Affairs Directorate head Ali Bardakoglu was very worried that Turkey’s
"image was damaged." The chief of general staff said that the bullet
was actually fired at Turkey. The minister of justice, the architect
of Article 301, according to which Hrant Dink was tried, said that
the murder was a "well-calculated provocation." The prime minister
clarified the situation with "dirty hands have chosen our country."

Friday night, in a salvo and as if in agreement, members of both the
state and politicians said over and over again that Turkey was being
attacked via this murder. Statements from both people and men of
importance were textbook maxims originating from the reflex to protect
the state. They were strong words that remind us, in our country,
that the state needs to be protected before the individual. As if Dink
was guilty of being murdered and thereby of disadvantaging the state…

Making-a-big-deal-out-of-nothing specialists repeatedly stated that
the murder was a provocation. It was implied by both members of the
state and politicians that the secret aim of this murder was to ease
the path for Armenian genocide plans, expected to pass in the U.S.

Congress. In other words, it was implied that the murder was carried
out by focal points who will benefit from disadvantaging Turkey –
Armenians, French, Americans, Argentineans, Swiss – in short, all
those countries that declared it genocide, and all those that did
not. But insistently not the Turks. So, Dink, who received regular
life threats from all over Turkey, who was claimed as a target by
many internal focal points, and who was the target of much antagonism
by the rampant nationalists, was killed by one of the above foreign
forces? Or is it that the worst trick on Turkey is being pulled by
Turks again? Or is it that the Turk’s worst enemy is itself?

Right after the murder, it was discussed whether or not the cause was
negligence. If there has been such a threat that could so gravely
hurt the country, what measures has the state taken to prevent
it? In the aftermath of the controversy as to whether Sabiha Gokcen
was Armenian or not, the state has implied, during a meeting at
the governor’s office that "the nationalist spirits have surged,
if you keep talking, they may not be controlled." So what has the
state done to prevent such a provocation? Nothing! So, at the end
of the day, it could not protect itself, "the almighty state," just
as it could not protect Dink’s life. As a result of this reasoning,
has not the state been negligent in taking care of its well-being,
just as it has been in protecting a citizen’s life?

We have not heard anything from either the members of state or
politicians about the gruesome situation the country is in or
the reality of increasing ethnic nationalism with a religious
theme. Armenian, Greek, Kurdish, Jewish, Assyrian, Alevi, women,
disabled, leftist, liberal, homosexual … Who will protect
the right of life for those where insulting anyone except
for "Sunni-Muslim-Turkish-man-who thinks like the state" goes
unpunished? It is not clear how society, all minorities, and anyone who
thinks dissimilar will be protected against this deep-water wave. On
the contrary, a nightmarish Article 301 rises against all those who
think differently.

The political sphere has not yet explained how it intends to tame
the nationalist greed that has come unhinged during a period of
election. No politician has voiced the desire to annul Article 301
with this as the aim. Or is it the political world that entices the
lynching mood that we are in? Could it be that the reason for using
only themes of protection and national injury in Turkey is to cover
the embarrassment, while Germany says of the murder "we are appalled
by this murder," and the United States calls it "worrying"?

Dink was the conscience of realities that were not talked about for
centuries. Even though I became aware of the Armenian issue a long
time ago, every time we talked, I learned something new about this
big Anatolian drama. Whole Armenian villages that were converted en
masse after 1915, tribes that took over Kurdish attributes, Armenian
brides, fortunes created with Armenian properties…

Writers who talk about the Armenian issue are marginalized, while
journalists are slain here. It is true that the bullet was fired at
Turkey. But it was also fired at a Turkey that was trying to make
pace with itself by a Turkey that is sure of its taboos and dogmas.

… Dink said, "We were candidates to turn the hell he is living
in, into a heaven." He is now in heaven himself, without having
the opportunity to make this place heavenly. Turkey without Dink is
left as an incomplete Turkey that will have a harder time resolving
its problems.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.turkishdailynews.com.tr/editoria

TDN: I was not a friend of Hrant Dink

I WAS NOT A FRIEND OF HRANT DINK

Monday, January 22, 2007

Turkish Daily News
php?ed=ariana_ferentinou

I did not know that Hrant Dink had so many friends in Turkey. Close
friends that now, after his untimely death would cry so loud through
their columns about the loss of such a man of ‘immense courage,
professional integrity, outspokenness, kindness, friendliness, etc.’

Ariana Ferentinou

"When I heard it, I felt so bad, I threw up twice. I could not
sleep. All night I had nightmares about trains passing over me loudly,"
my Rum journalist friend on the other end of the line was trying
to describe his reactions after hearing the news of Hrant Dink’s
assassination last Friday.

He was a friend of his, a family friend. He knew the family, the wife,
the daughters; he had appeared with him many times on discussion
panels over – what else? – the rights of minorities in Turkey. He
had heard – as all of us did – the criticism hurled against him by
Armenian patriarchate circles for raising his voice too loud, for
rocking the boat too much. "He was, after all, doing nothing more than
defending the legal rights of his community," said my friend, and in
his broken voice I could clearly read his deeper message: "He was,
after all defending the rights of his community, as we all are, too."

I did not know that Hrant Dink had so many friends in Turkey. Close
friends that now, after his untimely death would cry so loud through
their columns about the loss of such a man of "immense courage,
professional integrity, outspokenness, kindness, friendliness,
etc." And I did notice that many of today’s friend’s were nowhere to be
seen when Dink was tried for "insulting Turkishness," while being very
keen in stirring up their Turkish readers and viewers against anybody
who would dare to bring up the issue of "Armenian genocide," here or
abroad. Furthermore, I noticed that no famous Turkish intellectuals
who benefited from the "Armenian genocide" debate in Europe and the
United States came out to count themselves as "Hrant’s friends."

I was not a friend of Hrant Dink and I am not a member of the minority
of the Rums who have felt the chilling fear of a politically motivated
racial killing at their doorstep.

But I am worried about how history can be abused as a tool of the
present. And how our modern technological world can facilitate the
misuse of historical memory and the overemphasis on feelings at the
expense of a rational, scientific, historical assessment. In other
words, how a neighborhood Internet café can be a more dangerous
medium than any method of dissemination of knowledge we knew before.

I was not Hrant Dink’s friend, I am not a member of a historical
ethnic minority in modern Turkey. But I do wish that his death would
provoke an attitude of temperate objectivity against the misuse of
history for the small benefit of the present.

The problem is that I have lived long enough in this country to be
skeptical enough to know that I am asking too much.

–Boundary_(ID_JczBu0nS/O1WX+cAjsvk3g)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.turkishdailynews.com.tr/editorial.

Negotiations in "Constructive Atmosphere"

A1+

NEGOTIATIONS IN "CONSTRUCTIVE ATMOSPHERE"
[07:35 pm] 23 January, 2007

On January 23 the Foreign Ministers of Armenia and
Azerbaijan, Vartan Oskanian and Elmar Mammadyarov met
in Moscow under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk group
Co-Chairs.

The key issues of the meeting were the consideration
of the principles of the conflict settlement and the
details of the document.

The negotiations waere held in "constructive
atmosphere". The sides agreed upon the next meeting.

The meeting of the FMs will be followed by the visit
of the OSCE Minsk group Co-Chairs to the region
scheduled on January 24.

RA Foreign Ministry has revealed no more details of
the meeting.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Financial Hardship Starts for Orinats Yerkir

Panorama.am

19:08 23/01/2007

FINANCIAL HARDSHIP STARTS FOR ORINATS YERKIR

According to reliable sources, Arthur Baghdasaryan,
leader of Orinats Yerkir party, has called a meeting
at the European Regional Academy telling the faculty
members that they will not be paid until next summer.
Baghdasaryan said those who do not agree may leave
now.

The faculty is considering two possibilities: either
Baghdasaryan is "pressed" by tax institutes or he uses
the money for the parliamentary elections.

Albert Keshishyan, the administrative director of the
academy admitted that Baghdasaryan, had, in fact,
called a meeting but said he had not spoken about
salaries.

Keshishyan said the assembly discussed issues on board
of directors.

Source: Panorama.am

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress