Armenian foreign minister welcomes German parliament’s genocide bill

Armenian foreign minister welcomes German parliament’s genocide bill

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
17 Jun 05

[Presenter] The German parliament has adopted a draft resolution
condemning the Armenian genocide. The document was unanimously adopted
without discussion and voting. The document notes that a number of
countries and international organizations and independent historians
have described the events of 1915 as genocide. The Bundestag’s
decision is tantamount to recognizing the Armenian genocide of 1915,
the Armenian ambassador to Germany, Garine Gazinyan, has said.

At the request of “Aylur”, Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan,
who is attending a summit in Brussels, has commented on the draft
resolution condemning the Armenian genocide.

[Oskanyan from Brussels by telephone] This is an important step in
the sphere of recognizing the Armenian genocide. Although it does
not describe the 1915 events as genocide, I think this document is
a positive change for recognizing the Armenian genocide because the
German parliament used the term extermination of Armenians in this
document. The importance of this resolution is also that Germany
acknowledges its responsibility for the 1915 events and calls on
Turkey to answer for its history.

Turkey rapped over massacres

Turkey rapped over massacres: German parliamentary motion critical of refusal to recognize killing of Armenians
By Friederike Peters

Windsor Star (Ontario)
June 17, 2005 Friday
Final Edition

Germany’s lower house of parliament Thursday approved a motion
criticizing Turkey for failing to recognize that the Turkish Ottoman
Empire was involved in the massacres of hundreds of thousands of
Armenians in 1915.

The extent of the massacres and deportations of Armenians is still
being played down or denied by the modern Turkish government,
contradicting the idea of reconciliation promoted by the European
Union, according to the motion, which was submitted by all
parliamentary groups. It stopped short of describing the killings
as genocide.

“The lower house of parliament regrets that an extensive discussion
of events in the then Ottoman Empire still is not possible and that
academics and writers who want to look into this part of Turkish
history are being prosecuted and defamed,” the motion said.

Turkey denies allegations that the Ottoman Empire’s treatment of its
Armenian subjects in 1915 was a planned genocide, arguing that an
Armenian rebellion caused clashes and the resulting deaths.

The European Union, with which Turkey is due to start membership talks
Oct. 3, has said the dispute with Armenia clouds Turkey’s bid to join.

“It’s not possible to accept the notion of ‘genocide’ without relying
on documents and information,” Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan said at a news conference in Beirut, Lebanon today.

“We are proud of our history. Therefore we cannot stand by while this
issue is being used as a political tool, as free political capital
by lobby groups.”

Turkey should take responsibility for the deaths because the evidence
of genocide is “abundantly documented,” the Purdue University,
Indiana-based International Association of Genocide Scholars said in
a letter to Erdogan on April 6.

During a visit to Turkey on May 4, German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder
urged the Armenian government to accept a proposal by Turkey that
scholars from both countries study the genocide claims.

More than one million Armenians died in massacres, on death marches
through the Syrian desert or in camps, the German motion said.

Acknowledging the former injustice would help normalize the
relationship between Armenia and Turkey and stabilize the Caucasus
region, it said.

The lawmakers said Turkey is showing some positive signs that it
is beginning to address the issue, such as an invitation to Turks
of Armenian origin by the Turkish National Assembly to talk about
the crimes, an exchange of documents between Turkish and Armenian
historians and Erdogan opening the first Armenian museum in Istanbul.

Still, they criticized the cancellation by the Turkish Justice
Ministry of a conference on the subject by Turkish academics that
had been due to take place in May.

– The motion also expressed regret that the German government of
the time didn’t act to prevent the killings even though it was aware
of what was happening. Germany and Turkey were allies in the First
World War.

What’s the Turkish for genocide?

What’s the Turkish for genocide?
Ben Macintyre

The Times, UK
June 18 2005

HISTORIANS HAVE become the moral accountants of our time, poring over
the archives to establish, as nearly as possible, the unpaid debts
still owed by the present to the past.

In China there have been violent demonstrations demanding Japan’s
penitence for its wartime aggression. In Mississippi, an elderly white
man and reputed Klansman has gone on trial accused of murdering civil
rights workers more than four decades ago. The Argentine Supreme Court
this week opened the way for a full inquiry into the crimes of the
“dirty war” between 1976 and 1983. Even France, for so long in denial,
has begun to address the unquiet ghosts of Vichy and Algeria.

The process of historical self-examination is neither simple nor
easy. In the wrong hands, history becomes a weapon of recrimination
and revenge, intercepted by bigots who would use old battles to stoke
new ones. Yet historical introspection is crucial to democracy. The
fledgeling South African democracy bravely sought to cauterise a
traumatic past through the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. The
Bloody Sunday inquiry may have been expensive and lengthy – seven
years, £155 million and 1,700 witness statements – but it was a
necessary step towards freeing Northern Ireland from the locked grip
of competing histories. Postwar Germany has confronted its demons in
a conscious and continuing act of national catharsis.

The alternative is self-delusion. Treat the past as self-serving myth
and it forms a canker of moral equivocation.

Amid the debate over Turkish membership of the EU, there is one matter
that has hardly been raised, and that is Turkey’s bitter and blinkered
refusal to make peace with its past.

In Turkish history, no event is more divisive and explosive than
the “Armenian question”, the long-disputed massacre of hundreds of
thousands of Armenians during the First World War. Armenia claims that,
as the Ottoman Empire crumbled in 1915, Turkish soldiers and Kurdish
tribesmen were unleashed in a deliberate act of genocide that killed
1.5 million Armenians.

Turkey has refused steadfastly to accept that version of events,
declaring that the Armenian death toll was far lower, and that the
dead perished mainly through civil war, hunger and disease. This, the
Turks insist, was not a systematic slaughter, but a bitter partisan and
ethnic conflict in which Armenians sided with the invading Russians
against Ottoman rule, leading to the deaths of at least 350,000
Turkish Muslims.

This month, historians at Bosphorus University scheduled a conference
to debate the tragic events of 1915-1916. Turkish nationalists reacted
with fury. Cemil Cicek, the Justice Minister, described the planned
conference as “treacherous” and accused the historians of “preparing
to stab Turkey in the back”. With government pressure mounting, and
nationalist students threatening to converge on the university campus,
the conference organisers buckled. The event was cancelled.

The argument, which continues to poison relations between Turkey and
Armenia and destabilise the region, boils down to a single, intensely
emotive word. As Caroline Finkel writes in her excellent forthcoming
book Osman’s Dream: The Story of the Ottoman Empire 1300-1923: “The
Armenian question today has come to focus exclusively on whether the
massacres constituted genocide . . . and all other aspects of this
acutely sensitive matter tend to be scrutinised for their value in
clarifying this central point.” But clarity is impossible in a debate
that evokes such violent emotions. The Turkish Foreign Minister has
dismissed the term genocide as “pure slander”, and when the celebrated
Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk dared to declare this year that a million
Armenians had been murdered in Turkey, he received three lawsuits for
“damaging the State” and a volley of death threats.

To complicate matters further, much of the killing in 1915 appears to
be have been carried out by Turkish secret societies, whose records
have disappeared and whose relationship to the Ottoman authorities is
unclear. Turks point out that there is no official document ordering
the killing of Armenians. Armenians allege that the archives have
been purged.

The parliaments of 17 countries, including France and Russia, have
already passed resolutions recognising the Armenian genocide. Britain
and America have held back, wary of angering a powerful and important
ally. But staying silent is not the act of a friend, and it is hard
to see how Turkey can join the EU – an organisation founded on a
determination to avoid repeating the mistakes of history – without
first acknowledging its own bloody past.

The precise numbers of dead, and the meaning of the term genocide,
can be debated for ever, but of this there is no doubt: hundreds of
thousands of innocent Armenians perished as a consequence of Turkish
actions. Most historians outside Turkey now agree that what happened
after 1915 constituted “ethnic cleansing”, for which the Ottoman
Government was ultimately responsible. Acknowledging this, while
genuinely encouraging the widest and most dispassionate debate on
the subject, would establish Turkey’s commitment to freedom of speech
and democratic ideals in the run-up to accession talks in October.

So far, British officials have side-stepped the issue, insisting that
the Armenian question is a matter for historians. As a country with
its own ghosts, Britain has a responsibility to encourage Turkey to
see it own history beyond confining notions of treachery or loyalty.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish Prime Minister, while reiterating
his belief that the genocide never happened, has called for a joint
commission to look into the Turkish archives.

But a far more emphatic demonstration of openness would be to revive
the conference at Bosphorus University and open it to the widest
possible range of scholarly opinion.

“Who today, after all, remembers the annihiliation of the Armenians?”

Thus spake Adolf Hitler, reassuring his generals that the Jewish
Holocaust would be forgotten in the glow of Nazi victory. Ninety years
after the killing, the Armenians remember one way, and the Turks
another. The passage of time has calcified these rival histories,
but Turkey’s desire to enter the EU represents an opportunity for
genuine historical reconciliation. The Armenian question may yet be
answered, if Turkey can be persuaded to ask it.

Join the Debate Send your e-mails to [email protected]

,,1068-1658993,00.html

–Boundary_(ID_kzRK59ZhZeDtkgqc+eNmmg)–

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0

ANKARA: In Lebanon, Erdogan Pushes for Mideast Democratization

The New Anatolian, Turkey
June 17 2005

In Lebanon, Erdogan Pushes for Mideast Democratization
The New Anatolian / Beirut

In Lebanon yesterday, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan worked
to keep his promise to U.S. President George W. Bush by pushing for
further democratization in the Middle East.

Erdogan promised Bush, during their meeting in Washington last week,
to encourage democratization in the Middle East and to become a “key
player” in the Greater Middle East Initiative (GME). His Lebanon
visit is his first following his meetings in the U.S.

During his talks with Lebanese counterpart Najib Mikati, Erdogan
said that in this globalized and increasingly democratized world,
it is apparent that Middle Eastern states need to reform. “Turkey
and Lebanon are good examples forother regional states in this
democratization process,” Erdogan added.

Armenian protesters waiting for PM

Erdogan was met by Armenians protesting his visit at his arrival
in Lebanon on Wednesday. Demonstrators burned the Turkish flag and
called on Lebanon to recognize the so-called Armenian genocide claims.

Shortly before his arrival in Beirut, some 1,500 Armenians demonstrated
in the northern Beirut district of Bourj Hammoud against Turkey’s
refusal to recognize the Armenians’ claims of genocide.

Lebanese protesters burned a Turkish flag and closed their shops for
an hour in Bourj Hammoud, which has a large Armenian community. Some
100,000 Armenians live in Lebanon.

A newly elected Armenian member of Parliament, Hagob Pakradounian,
recently said that Lebanon must follow 18 other countries in officially
recognizing the so-called Armenian genocide claims.

Nato Sec. Gen. appreciates cooperation with Armenia

NATO SEC. GEN. APPRECIATES COOPERATION WITH ARMENIA

Pan Armenian News
16.06.2005 09:21

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian met
with NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer in Brussels, reported
the Press Service of the Armenian Foreign Ministry. Having appreciated
the cooperation in Armenia in diverse aspects, Mr. Scheffer said he
was sure that the Individual Partnership Action Plan will provide new
opportunities for further cooperation. As the instance of the NATO
Sec. Gen. V. Oskanian acquainted him with the prospects of settlement
of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, as well as presented issues relating
to regional developments and security. Today the Armenian FM met with
European Union External Relations and European Neighborhood Policy
Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner, passing the package of preliminary
proposals of the Armenian party on the EU-Armenian Program of Actions
within the EU Wider Europe: New Neighbors Program. In the course
of the meeting the parties discussed opportunities of EU-Armenia
cooperation within the EU New Neighborhood policy. Besides, the
parties touched upon issues of relations of Armenia with neighboring
countries and the Nagorno Karabakh settlement. Within the framework
of the visit to Brussels V. Oskanian met with EU Council Secretary
General, EU Commissioner for Foreign Policy and Security Javier
Solana. The parties discussed the process of settlement of the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict, prospects of regional cooperation, including the
problem of opening the Armenian-Turkish border, regional economic and
transport initiatives under the aegis of the EU, as well as questions
referring to the working out of the Armenia-EU Program of Actions
within the EU New Neighborhood Policy. A wide range of issues was
also discussed in the course of a meeting the Armenian FM had with
European Commission External Relations Deputy Director-General Michael
Leigh. The interlocutors specifically exchanged views over the working
out of the Armenia-EU Program of Actions within the EU New Neighborhood
Policy and common European processes. June 17 V. Oskanian will leave
for Paris, where he will meet with Azeri FM Elmar Mamedyarov.

ANKARA: Turkish foreign minister tells US envoy of determination”to

Turkish foreign minister tells US envoy of determination “to
consolidate” ties

Anatolia news agency
16 Jun 05

Ankara, 16 June: The 229th anniversary of independence of the United
States was marked at a reception hosted by US Ambassador to Turkey
Eric Edelman on Thursday [16 June].

Speaking at the reception, Edelman said that 229 years had elapsed
since approval of the Declaration of Independence on 4 July 1776
including the foundation principles reading, “we hold the truths
to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are
endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among
these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, that to secure
these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their
just powers from the consent of the governed, that whenever any form
of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of
the people to alter or to abolish it”.

Recalling that former President Abraham Lincoln had objected to slavery
since it had been violation of those rights, Edelman said that rights
and freedoms could not be taken under guarantee anywhere in the world
unless rights of an individual were ensured everywhere.

Stressing that the United States faced one of the worst foreign
threats of its history on 11 September 2001, Edelman said that US
President George W. Bush, in response to that threat, included social,
political and economic factors in the defence.

Describing Turkey as a “source of inspiration”, Edelman said that
“Mustafa Kemal Ataturk had created a modern Turkey from the ashes
of the Ottoman Empire with similar principles”. Turkey’s vision
and achievements were worthy of appreciation; support of the United
States to the democracy in Turkey would continue to be one of the
basic principles of the US foreign policy, he stressed. Emphasizing
that Turkey-the United States relations could not be evaluated on
the basis of only political interests, Edelman said that the common
values of the two countries enriched and revived the alliance.
Edelman added that the United States would continue attributing
importance to friendly relations with Turkey, relying on opinions of
Turkey, and needing assistance of Turkey in the struggle for freedom.

Meanwhile, Turkish Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Abdullah
Gul said that Turkey-the United States relations were based on common
values such as democracy, rule of law and human rights.

“Global threats of the 21st century such as proliferation of weapons
of mass destruction and terrorism have made the strategic partnership
between Turkey and the United States more important. We consider our
relations with the United States one of priorities of our foreign
policy. Those relations have gained new dimensions as a result of
global developments. We are determined to further consolidate our
relations,” he said.

Gul thanked Edelman for all his contributions to the bilateral
relations between Turkey and the United States.

Turkish State Minister Besir Atalay, State Minister Mehmet Aydin,
Justice Minister Cemil Cicek, General Staff Deputy Chief Gen Ilker
Basbug, National Security Council (NSC) Secretary-General Yigit
Alpogan, Ministry of Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Ali Tuygan,
Turkey’s Special Envoy to Iraq Osman Koruturk, Motherland Party
(ANAP) leader Erkan Mumcu and a number of guests were in attendance
at the reception.

Armenian Korfball Gets Global Air Time

Armenian Korfball Gets Global Air Time
Thursday, 16 June 2005

International Korfball Federation, Belgium
June 16 2005

TV programme Good Morning Armenians, which has a world-wide audience
and is broadcasted by Armenian TV, aired on June 14th a special
interview with the chairman of the Korfball Federation of Armenia
(KFA) – Rob van Geenhuizen, KFA secretary – Arman Alaberkian and the
p.r. member Satenik Avetisian. The one hour programme was devoted
solely to korfball.

Topics discussed included the origin of korfball, unique playing
aspects of the sport, suitability to mixed gender participation, the
rules, World Championships, the global development of the sport as well
as its domestic growth within Armenia. Between question and answer
segments, highlights of international games involving the Armenian
national team, including some beautifully completed attacking plays,
were shown.

After the programme everybody was very satisfied and many Armenians
around the World will have learnt much about our sport. This
programme was the culminating point of the p.r. covering of Korfball
in Armenia. All the tournaments (youth and seniors) have been shown
on the sport news segments of Armenian television and two sports
newspapers have paid close attention to the sport. One newspaper went
so far as to publish a full page article with three photographs.

“We are waiting for the time when we could organise a big international
tournament. The final will definitely be broadcast worldwide and the
other games will be covered by television stations and newspapers”,
KFA President Rob van Geenhuizen was quoted as saying. The recent
publicity on the Good Morning Armenians programme has been followed
by many telephone calls from people who have only just seen korfball
for the first time in their lives as a result of the programme. Calls
came from as far afield as Washington D.C.

Armenia is a country with a global Diaspora and it is likely that
hundreds of thousand Armenians around the world will have seen the
feature introducing korfball.

Poll fails to confirm Erdogan’s words: US not well liked in Turkey

Poll fails to confirm Erdogan’s words: US not well liked in Turkey

Hürriyetim

15.06.2005

The results from a poll taken in May of this year contrast sharply
with Prime Minister Erdogan’s characterization of anti-Americanism
in Turkey as belonging to “small, marginal groups.” The poll, taken
by the Sonar group, was carried out in Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir,
and involved 1,305 citizens from differing socio-economic and
socio-demographic groups in those cities.

Erdogan: Anti-American groups in Turkey ‘marginal and small’

On his recent trip to the US, Prime Minister compared anti-American
feelings in Turkey to anti-Turkish demonstrations in the US, saying “In
the US, small groups of 40-50 Armenians protest Turkey. When shown on
television, it looks as though every Armenian in the US is protesting
against Turkey. But actually, these are small, marginal groups. The
anti-American sentiment in Turkey is like this. There is no problem
between the people of Turkey and the people of America.” Results from
the recent Sonar poll however paint a completely different picture.

One questions posed to citizens in the Sonar poll was “Aside from
Turkey and Turkic republics, which country do you feel is closest
to you?”

Germany, Pakistan, and Japan the favorites in this poll

Germany came in first by far, with 20.15% of the respondents. Next
came Pakistan, with 6.21%. In third place was Japan, with 5.14%.

While 4.60% of the poll participants said that they felt closest
to an Arab country, only 3.84% of the respondents picked the US as
the country to which they felt the closest. Interestingly, following
the US came Greece, with 3.53%, then Iran with 2.2%, and then Italy,
with 2.07%.

Perhaps most important to note is that a full 25.98% of respondents
said that outside of Turkey, they didn’t feel close to any country
at all.

–Boundary_(ID_0a2plVjOXA82mB4od1E+7A)–

BAKU: Azeri leader vows to preserve stability, continue development

Azeri leader vows to preserve stability, continue development

Azad Azarbaycan TV, Baku
15 Jun 05

[Presenter] The New Azerbaijan Party held a street march from the
20 January underground station to Qalaba Square on the occasion of
Salvation Day today. The march, which was joined by more than 50,000
people, ended with a rally on Qalaba Square. The chairman of the New
Azerbaijan Party and Azerbaijani president, Ilham Aliyev, who joined
the demonstration, said the work being done by the organization he
is leading would ensure stability and development of the country.

[Correspondent over video of thousands of people gathered on Qalaba
Square] The New Azerbaijan Party held a street march from the 20
January underground station to Qalaba Square on the occasion of the
12th anniversary of Salvation Day today. Along with rank-and-file
members of the party, senior government officials representing the
party also took part in the demonstration, which was held under the
motto – In the name of a powerful Azerbaijan under Ilham Aliyev’s
leadership.

The arrival of the head of state and chairman of the party, Ilham
Aliyev, at Qalaba Square came as a surprise to many demonstrators.

[Video showed Ilham Aliyev walking through a crowd, shaking hands
with supporters and waving his hand]

After recalling the changes that have taken place in the country over
the last 12 years and the historic moments of June 1993, the head
of state said Azerbaijan had turned into a state which is capable of
saying its word in the international arena.

Touching on the Nagornyy Karabakh problem, President Aliyev said
Azerbaijan had already overtaken Armenia by many parameters and would
never come to terms with the loss of its lands.

[Ilham Aliyev shown addressing the demonstration] Azerbaijan has the
initiative in the negotiating process, political initiative is also
in our hands, law is on our side, the economic potential is in our
hands, the military might is on our side and the Azerbaijani people
will liberate their lands.

[Correspondent] The head of state said that in order to ensure
sustainable economic development it was necessary in the first place
to preserve the established stability. He noted that the Azerbaijani
people would respond to those interested in undermining stability in
the country themselves.

[Aliyev] Development must be continued in Azerbaijan. And the main
precondition for this development is the stability that we have managed
to establish in the country. We are safeguarding this stability and
we will continue to do that in the future too. And if someone wants
to undermine this stability, they will receive a due response from
the Azerbaijani people.

[Correspondent] The president said that our policy is based on the
will of the Azerbaijani people and repeated that a state supported
by its people is capable of progressing and developing. He added that
no power can divert the Azerbaijani people from this path.

According to the New Azerbaijan Party officials, although about 20,000
were expected to join the rally, more than 50,000 people eventually
took to the streets.

Russia hands tank plant over to Georgia

RIA Novosti, Russia
June 14 2005

Russia hands tank plant over to Georgia
20:48

MOSCOW, June 14 (RIA Novosti) – The chief of the Russian armed forces’
general staff said that the handover of the 142nd tank plant to
Georgia had been completed.

“I would not like to offend our Georgian colleagues, but, as the
saying goes, one shoulder of mutton draws another. And the Georgian
party is seeking to get ownership of movables in addition to real
estate assets,” Chief of General Staff Yury Baluyevsky said.

According to the official, the answer is clear: the movable property
belongs to Russia and cannot be transferred to Georgia.

“If they want to thwart the transfer of certain facilities, they will
be responsible for this,” the official stated.

Speaking on the withdrawal of Russian military bases from Georgia,
Baluyevsky said that the deadline had been fixed for the end of 2008.

“I do not want to elaborate on all the difficulties of the talks,”
he said adding that the deadline for the withdrawal was a compromise
decision, proposed by the Russian party, first of all.

“By the compromise I mean that the Georgian party must assume the
obligation to comply with the agreement signed by foreign ministries,”
the chief of general staff said.

Baluyevsky emphasized that Russia would do its best to fulfill every
obligation under all the agreements reached.

“However, this is a reciprocal process, and I want to believe that
the Georgian party will also do its best to fulfill its commitments
concerning this agreement and additional documents,” the official
stated.

He said that these documents were being worked on by experts. “But
I hope that the other party will comply with the agreement signed by
the two foreign ministers,” Baluyevsky stressed.

In accordance with the agreement on a gradual withdrawal of Russian
military bases from Georgia, all military facilities but the very
bases will be handed over to Georgia in 2005. In 2006 Russia will
withdraw heavy equipment from Akhalkalaki (near Georgian-Armenian
border). The Akhalkalaki base will be closed in the subsequent year.
After the remains of heavy equipment are removed from Batumi (a port
at the Black Sea) in 2008, the base in Batumi will also be closed.