Ankara: Erdogan Warned By Six Ministers In Respect To Israel

ERDOGAN WARNED BY SIX MINISTERS IN RESPECT TO ISRAEL

Hurriyet Daily News
Saturday, October 17 2009 14:36 GMT+2

The 32.Gun program on Kanal D on Thursday night was in the true sense
an international politics summit. Six ministers who have shaped
Turkey’s international politics for 30 years gathered and gave a
grade regarding the AKP administration.

I’d like to draw your attention to the fact that among the six
ministers were İlter Turkmen, who showed the hardest reaction
in respect to Israel and during his term degraded the level of the
Turkish embassy in Israel to a rank of under secretariat, Mumtaz Soysal
and Å~^ukru Sina Gurel, who with their general attitude criticized
Israel the most and together with Mesut Yılmaz and YaÅ~_ar YakıÅ~_
attacked Erdogan’s Israel politics.

I might summarize their common words as follows:

"… Turkey’s strongest side is its consistency and continuity in
international politics. Our relations with Israel are very vital. To
continue these relations in a healthy way is in the long run for
the benefit of Turkey … What’s being done at the moment is making
eyes at domestic politics and assuming an attitude that contradicts
Turkey’s benefits … There are no such rules as applying international
politics the way the society wants …"

Only YaÅ~_ar YakıÅ~_ of the AKP said that what’s been experienced
today cannot be interpreted as a dislocation of basic politics and
that this is only fine-tuning. Other participants stated that this is
"not fine tuning but coarse tuning."

I agree. I too believe that Turkey’s relations with Israel are not
to be underestimated but very vital and should not be a tool for
playing domestic games. As the former ministers for foreign affairs
said Turkey won’t get anywhere with opposing Israel and that long-term
benefits are a result of good relations with Israel and the Arabs. I
believe we need to protect the balance as we used to do.

Will miss Olli Rehn very much

Olli Rehn, commissioner of the European Union Commission responsible
for enlargement probably came to Turkey for the last time. He will
join today’s Bosphorus Conference and say farewell to Turks he used
to work with night and day. He will for sure in the future come back
to Turkey with a different assignment but his visits won’t create
much excitement anymore.

Olli Rehn is one of the top people in relations with Turkey and in the
frame of the European Commission, which I have monitored for almost
30 years now. He is a EU bureaucrat who has comprehended Ankara’s
real value the best and who has openly presented this as well.

He neither has praised Turkey in an exaggerated way nor has he patted
us on the back the way we like nor has he criticized us unnecessarily.

With his calmness specific to his county but with an extremely fine
humor Rehn always told Ankara the truth. He didn’t fool anybody and
didn’t give unnecessary hopes. On the contrary, he always knew how
to create an environment of deep trust in Ankara’s bureaucracy.

Despite receiving harsh criticism from some parts of society, he has
not been upset, has not showed reaction but continued on his path.

He has also followed the sensitivity of the Turkish public and did
some fine tuning when necessary, openly supported AKP’s democratic
approach but also reported attitudes that crossed the limit.

We will miss Olli Rehn and his approach very much.

We will miss his healthy analysis, warnings and criticism if need be.

These qualities are hard to find in bureaucrats who work for
international organizations. And Olli Rehn was one of these rare
people.

We need to thank him for his efforts, time and contribution to Turkey.

Sarkisyan and Gul’s race for courtesy

Everybody was happy about the closing of the Armenian national
football game without any disturbances. We could have encountered
inappropriate events. Check it out, we read in Taha Akyol’s article,
that a young group of ultra nationalists went on the field trying
to open an Azerbaijani flag but were hindered at the last minute. To
tell the truth, these types of protests are quite normal.

For some time now we see that the Turkish-Armenian initiative carries
many personal risks.

In fact, the greatest risk is for Armenian President Sarkisian. He
is very polite. You might have noticed during the game, he was so
polite as to shake Gul’s hand when the Turkish team scored a goal. He
was smiling all the time and never showed the heavy pressure on
his shoulders.

And Abdullah Gul too has taken great risk for the sake of this
initiative. With risk and fine humor he won the hearts of people. But
the best part was when he invited Hrant Dink’s widow and family to
the game in Bursa. Even if Mrs. Dink couldn’t make it, her daughter
and son were there.

These two people really behave in a way that deserves the Nobel
peace prize.

[HH Honeymoon with Barzani continues

Turkey’s relation with northern Iraq is full of very interesting ups
and downs. Once we used to fight the PKK together. Then we became
estranged from each other and openly hostile. Now relations again
are not only put in order but also are deepening.

I could not believe my eyes when reading about Hasan Cemal and Cengiz
Candar’s program on CNN Turk every Thursday. Barzani with open arms
stresses that he counts the days left for this visit to Ankara and
repeats that the PKK should put down its weapons.

Barzani’s general attitude has always been based on establishing
good relations with Turkey. From time to time he reacted to a brisk
statement from Ankara and even if he appears to be protecting the
PKK, his basic politics are always based on leaning his back against
Turkey. He believes that in the long run northern Iraq could only reach
stability and richness if it establishes good relations with Turkey.

And that’s the right thing. Turkey and northern Iraqi Kurds know that
the closer they are to each other the more they can relax. Being closer
means Turkey’s hand in the struggle with the PKK will strengthen and
the Southeast will enrich with trade between the two countries. And
alike, northern Iraqi Kurds will open up to the West and obtain many
basic necessities.

What’s important is to solve our mutual issues without upsetting each
other. And I think important steps are being taken in this respect.

Armenian Parliament Speaker Receives Governor Of The Ukrainian Provi

ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT SPEAKER RECEIVES GOVERNOR OF THE UKRAINIAN PROVINCE OF KHARKOV

ARMENPRESS
Oct 15, 2009

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 15, ARMENPRESS: Armenian parliament speaker Hovik
Abrahamyan received today governor of the Ukrainian province of
Kharkov Arsen Avakov.

NA public relations department told Armenpress that greeting the guest
the chairman of the parliament said that the direct ties between the
Armenian and Ukrainian provinces and cooperation in educational,
trade-economic, cultural, educational and other spheres are prior
directions of the mutually beneficial partnership between the two
countries.

He reconfirmed the interest of the Armenian side in expanding these
relations and developing them, noting that Kharkov province is an
interesting partner and cooperation with it has a rich history.

The governor and members of his delegation presented to Hovik
Abrahamyan a number of suggestions in energy, agriculture, education
and a number of other spheres.

The parties agreed to continue the discussion of these suggestions on
a specialized level after which pass to implementation of the programs.

Protocols’ Signing Changed Geopolitical Configuration: Russian Exper

PROTOCOLS’ SIGNING CHANGED GEOPOLITICAL CONFIGURATION: RUSSIAN EXPERT

News.am
14:03 / 10/15/2009

"Armenia-Turkey Protocols’ signing totally changed the geopolitical
configuration in Caucasus. While the West was not that influential in
the region before, it is now the main actor with increasing impact,"
Russian expert of St. Petersburg Center for Middle East Studies
Alexander Sotnichenko stated. According to him, presently these
agreements were disadvantageous for Russia, Azerbaijan and Georgia. "I
do not know what steps these countries will make, however Azerbaijan
should intensify its diplomacy with the West. Turkey-Azerbaijan
relations are likely to frost," Sotnichenko noted.

Referring to Russia, the expert outlined that this step was a hard blow
to Moscow’s influence in the Caucasus. "Actually, the reconciliation
was reached without Moscow’s participation due to U.S. mediation and
Turkish leadership’s readiness. The Protocols significantly lessen
position of Russia in the Caucasus and the peace-support mission
under the Minsk Group auspices," Sotnichenko concluded.

Be An Angel, Save One Life: Over 1000 Donors Were Attracted During T

BE AN ANGEL, SAVE ONE LIFE: OVER 1000 DONORS WERE ATTRACTED DURING THE EVENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
15.10.2009 17:14 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On October 3, Lovers’ Park in Yerevan hosted "Be
an angel, save one life" charity rock festival, organized by Armenian
Bone Marrow Donor Registry NGO.

Blood donation point was operating during the concert, details on
tissue donating and further transplantation procedures were provided.

"The action, which was also conducted in US and Iran, aimed at
spreading awareness of bone marrow transplantation issues," Armenian
Bone Marrow Donor Registry Executive Director Sevak Avagyan told a
news conference on October 15.

"I’m glad to inform that over 1000 donors were attracted during
the event: 300 from US, 265 from Iran and 185 from Armenia. 15 000
donors were registered all through the period of ABMDR activity,"
ABMDR President Frieda Jordan stated, adding that a number of events
are planned on January 8, in celebration of ABMDR 10th anniversary.

The ABMDR was founded in 1999 as an independent, non-governmental,
not-for-profit organization, whose mission is to ensure that every
ethnic Armenian struck with a life threatening blood-related illness
is able to find hope for long-term survival through the identification
of a genetically suitable bone marrow match.

The ABMDR is a member of the World Marrow Donor Association (WMDA)
and Bone Marrow Donor Worldwide (BMDW) sharing its database information
with other registries around the world. In January 2008, ABMDR became
a member of National Marrow Donor Program – NMDP.

Soccer: Terim ends with a win

Terim ends with a win

Turkey 2 – 0 Armenia

ESPN
Updated: October 14, 2009, 8:00 AM UK

Fatih Terim’s second reign as Turkey boss came to an end with a comfortable,
if unspectacular, ten-man victory over Group Five’s basement side Armenia.

The Turks had not been expected to push group winners Spain too hard in the
qualifiers but their inability to challenge Bosnia-Herzegovina for second
spot – a play-off berth – led to Terim’s announcement this week that he
would stand down after this match.

Goals from Halil Altintop, in the 16th minute, and Servet Cerin after 28
minutes, ensured Terim’s tenure would end on a positive note, but that the
hosts failure to increase the margin – a pursuit not helped by Ceyhun
Gulselam’s first-half red card – was symptomatic of their struggles in
recent times.

The match started slowly but Arda Turan was working hard to inject some life
into proceedings, taking control in the 15th minute and lifting the ball to
captain Tuncay Sanli. The Stoke forward was in the six-yard box when the
ball was delivered and attempted an acrobatic overhead kick which sailed
over the crossbar.

Arda tested goalkeeper Roman Berezovsky seconds later with a long-range
effort but he successfully deflected the ball away from danger. It was Arda
again who teed up the opener, dribbling down the left flank and reaching the
byline before crossing for Altintop to head home at the near post.

Ceyhun Gulselam took on the role of creator 12 minutes later, feeding Servet
in the area. The defender rounded his man neatly before sending a shot into
the top right corner of the net.

Ceyhun saw red in the 33rd minute, for a second yellow card, and Armenia
almost scored from the resulting free-kick after Turkey goalkeeper Volkan
Demirel misjudged Karlen Mkrtchain’s effort.

Altintop crossed for Arda before the half was out but his shot just failed
to beat Berezovsky.

The next chance at either end was not until the 61st minute, Arda once more
the man with the shot, which Berezovsky palmed onto the crossbar.

In the 67th minute Arman Karamian had Armenia’s only meaningful effort,
although his strike was cleared off the line by the alert Ismail Koybasi.
Emre’s cross played in Arda for one last spectacular effort but it remained
2-0.

SCORING SUMMARY
Turkey Armenia
Halil Altintop (16)
Servet Cetin (28)
MATCH INFORMATION
Stadium: Ataturk Olympic Stadium, Turkey
Attendance: 14,000
Match Time: 19:00 UK

TEAMS
Turkey Armenia
1 Volkan Demirel 1 Roman Berezovsky
2 Servet Cetin 4 Sargis Hovsepyan
7 Gokhan Gonul 17 Aghvan Lazarian
13 Ismail Koybasi 5 Robert Arzumanyan
17 Ayhan Akman 15 Grayr Mkoyan
10 Tuncay Sanli 13 Hovhannes Goharyan
6 Hamit Altintop 10 Artavazd Karamyan
5 Belozoglu Emre 7 Ararat Arakelian
14 Arda Turan 3 Karlen Mkrtchain
4 Ceyhun Gulselam 11 Arman Karamyan
9 Halil Altintop 9 Henrikh Mkhitarian
Substitutes
12 Recber Rustu Gevorg Kasparov 12
3 Hakan Kadir Balta Vahagn Minasian 16
16 Ibrahim Kas Eguia Javrouian 2
15 Yusuf Simsek Artur Yedigarian 6
18 Colin Kazim-Richards Eduard Kakosyan 18
8 Nihat Kahveci Samvel Melkonyan 14
11 Gokhan Unal Marcos Pinheiro Pizelli 8
Substitutions
Ibrahim Kas for Tuncay Sanli (46)
Samvel Melkonyan for Hovhannes Goharyan (53)
Nihat Kahveci for Gokhan Gonul (58)
Eduard Kakosyan for Arman Karamyan (77)
Colin Kazim-Richards for Hamit Altintop (83)

Recber Rustu for Volkan Demirel (90)

Yellow Cards
Ceyhun Gulselam (3)
Hovhannes Goharyan (25)
Arman Karamyan (68)
Grayr Mkoyan (68)
Red Cards
Ceyhun Gulselam (33)

· Club Squads: Turkey | Armenia

Clinton And Medvedev Recall Protocols Signing Ceremony

CLINTON AND MEDVEDEV RECALL PROTOCOLS SIGNING CEREMONY

Tert.am
14.10.09

The meeting between Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and U.S. State
Secretary Hillary Clinton took place yesterday at the Russian
President’s Barvikha residence just outside Moscow, reports the
Kremlin’s official website. During the meeting, Medvedev noted that
"our coooperation with the new U.S. administration enters a new
high level."

"And, generally, I would like to distinguish recent events: the
St. Petersburg summit and the UN General Assembly, as well as that
period when you, together with Mr. Lavrov, participated in the
difficult process between Armenian and Turkish sides during the
signing of the Armenian-Turkish Protocols in Zurich. I believe that
this is a good example of our coordination in international issues,"
noted Medvedev.

The U.S. State Secretary expressed hope that the strategic relations
between Russia and the United States would broaden and deepen. However,
Clinton pointed out a few differences between Moscow’s and Washington’s
official positions.

Despite a thaw in Russian-US relations, Clinton admitted that
Georgia was a policy area on which Washington and Moscow did not see
eye-to-eye, reports AFP.

"We will not see eye-to-eye on Georgia, for example. We just have
a difference of opinion. We have made it clear that we will not
recognize South Ossetia and Abkhazia," Clinton added.

Ties between the two former Cold War foes were badly strained by
Russia’s war with US-ally Georgia last August and Russia’s subsequent
recognition of the Georgian rebel regions of Abkhazia and South
Ossetia as independent.

The State Is Like The Battle Of Sardarapat

THE STATE IS LIKE THE BATTLE OF SARDARAPAT

3/sardarapat
06:29 pm | October 13, 2009

Politics

The only way to get out of the current state in the country is to
restore the spirit that our people had during the Battle of Sardarapat,
say Jirair Sefilyan, Vardan Khachatryan and Tigran Khzmalyan who
declared the creation of the new "Sardarapat" movement.

According to Vardan Khachatryan, the people have lost their
resistance and proof of that was the signing of the Turkish-Armenian
protocols. Tigran Khzmalyan evaluated the current situation by one
word-"Sardarapat". "We are seeing the emergence of the danger the
Armenian Genocide in progress. The great powers that stay silent or
continue their policies with indifference become part of that crime."

Sefilyan is certain that the protocols would never have been signed if
our authorities were not that weak. "The Turkish-Armenian protocols
are the result of March 1. What we have today is the effect of the
degenerated situation in the country. Our movement is going to be
aimed at eliminating the causes. Jirair Sefilyan underlined that the
creation of the new movement doesn’t imply that he and his "Armenian
Volunteers" Union is going to leave the Armenian National Congress.

"We will not leave the camp headed by Ter-Petrosyan. He has done a
lot, but why are we demanding so much from one person? We will never
break the unity of the tens of thousands of people. Everyone must do
all that they can."

As far as the viewpoint according to which the "Sardarapat" movement
is turning into the repetition of the ARF protests, Sefilyan sees
nothing in common. He only brought up one example to prove that the
ARF is not sincere.

"If the ARF was aimed at putting an end to Serzh Sargsyan’s treacherous
acts, the most civilized way would be to collect the signatures of
one million people and put them on Sargsyan’s table. In that case,
Serzh Sargsyan would have resigned and would not put on a show abroad."

The "Sardarapat" movement is open for all those who are concerned with
the current state in the country. Sefilyan promised to keep everyone
updated about each step to be taken by the movement.

No mood for concessions in Artsakh

Commander of the Shushi squadron Jirair Sefilyan is certain that there
are no moods for concessions in Artsakh. "Even the political elite
of the NKR will not dare to make any concessions," said Sefilyan to
"A1+". He has no doubt that Serzh Sargsyan will the people of Artsakh
will stand up to fight if Serzh Sargsyan makes any attempt to take
any such action.

http://a1plus.am/en/politics/2009/10/1

The Armenian Diaspora

THE ARMENIAN DIASPORA

os15532.html
11:01:53 – 14/10/2009

French-Armenian writer, Denis Donikian, artist, and critical-thinker
published an amazing piece providing a defining analysis of the
current situation of the Diaspora, in light of the Protocols to be
signed (then) between Armenia and Turkey.

The Diaspora is awakening. The imminent signature of the agreement
protocols between the Turkish and Armenian States on the opening
of the border, which they could freeze as inviolable, seems to have
touched the Diaspora in the raw, in its pride and has reached into
the depths of its struggle. The Diaspora that has seen itself as part
of a single people, today finds itself as the forgotten part of its
history and its destiny. And now, it has reached the rock bottom of
its own schizophrenia.

In fact, the differences between the Armenian Diaspora and the
government of Armenia are as great as the reality that the former
feels the border problem as a symbolic matter, whereas the latter
lives it as a deep issue of actual survival. The Diaspora can hold on
to the issue for as long a time, as time it would be given; whereas
the other has no more time. The main concern of Armenia is to find
exits to offer an economic breathing room to a people that have been
geographically exposed to a stranglehold. Knowing, that of the four
windows that were granted to us by history, the window on Azerbaijan
will stay closed for a long while, and that the Iranian and Georgian
windows can arbitrarily close from one day to the next; the first,
not only because Iran is rapidly becoming a nuclear power, but because
of the suspicion that it is attributed by Western powers and certain
Middle Eastern countries; the second, because it is subject to the
Russian Damoclian sword. Is then President Sarkissian wrong to seek
a large overture towards Armenia’s West at all costs.

But every time the Turkish counterpart signs anything, everything
justly becomes suspect. The Armenians know, out of experience, that
the Turkish state works on all fronts and pulls on every string to
achieve its goals. The Diaspora experiences this anxiety on its own
flesh. On their part, the Armenians of Armenia proper are not foreign
to this either. They know too well the level of concealment achieved
by Turkish diplomatic cynicism. It suffices to see the way Erdogan
"parades" one after the other, Americans, Armenians and even Azeris,
exuding warmth and coldness, truth and falsehood, with the sole aim
to jumble their thoughts and to advance his own pawns. As it was
confirmed in earlier times by Fr. Charmetant (1844-1921) when he
wrote: "… The Turk, in fact, never cedes except to force. He fears
no one on the diplomatic front; he possesses the highest degree of
the art of evasive answers and delaying formulae; during discussions,
he is the master of the art of pretending and no one knows better to
sterilize the negotiations and to gain the time needed to postpone
the solution, and to eventually cause the failure of any combination
that might annoy him".

One can " knock " Serge Sarkissian to one’s heart’s content, but I
fear that we would be ill-advised to attribute to him any political
angelic naïvete as do the numerous protesters and petitioners of
all kinds. We should remember that Sarkissian fought at the highest
levels for the defense of Artsakh, to a point of being decorated
for his merit by none other than his enemy of today, Levon Ter
Petrossian. Moreover, I doubt that that smallest protester of the
Diaspora who shudders at the thought of any sell-out of the Genocide
or of Karabagh, is more conscious than him that nothing can be given
away on these fronts. Finally, to continue along the same line,
it would be appropriate to recognize that the Turks are facing
a counter-negotiator who knows how to skillfully play the rules
of international law. Here is a man, who had shamelessly "seen"
himself as president, several months before the actual elections;
and who became one, even at the cost that he had to pay, meaning,
by disregarding any transparency whatsoever; a man who practices
democracy by lying, by low blows and by an iron fist. A man, who
without second thought, leaves the opposition drooling over him in
public. This man is surely tough, cunning, a warrior, a Machiavellian,
but no one should tell me that he is soft or naïve.

In this game with the Turkish State, he knows that he has to take
risks. But he also knows that the biggest risk for Armenia, which the
Diaspora is not even able to measure, is the risk of isolation. We
have said it: the countries that surround Armenia are unstable. They
are not immune to conflicts that could explode overnight, resulting in
the closing of their doors at the slightest heating up of issues. If
Serge Sarkissian would not look today to push open the Turkish door,
tomorrow, in the case of problems on its Northern or Southern borders,
we would reproach him of not foreseeing what happened. Because,
as the adage goes, to govern is to foresee.

In this case, does the Diaspora have its say? But also, should it
determine how it projects itself as a national consciousness?

For the moment, I shall focus on two of its principle aspects. The
first, of its being a force for mobilization, the other as a power
for economic solidarity. The mobilization for the recognition of
the genocide has been taken on mainly by the troops of a party,
that was traditionally, albeit blindly, active in the defense of
national interests. Those who are raising the red flag today and throw
suspicion on Serge Sarkissian by accusing him of a total sell-out of
even that which he has defended with arms, are close to a caricature
that is playing on fears and frustrations, reviving old myths and
utopias. For that, the more moderates who rub shoulders with the
extremists, become extremists themselves, and the more naives fall
into the trap of overbidding on emotions. They tell me that, on this
issue, it is better to preach the worst possible outcome to avoid
any potential future inconveniences, even when they are hoping that
those would never come to be. But the Diaspora is also a force of
economic solidarity, without who Armenia would have been in a much
worse state. The Diaspora is not only the outcome of the Genocide but
also a political construct willed by the Armenian state since its
independence. By effectively forcing men to work in foreign lands,
the State relieves itself from its own responsibilities and receives
support from this source of wealth which is more or less a co-opted
for the patriotic cause. The financial aid that every exiled person
brings to their parents and children is like a manna that directly or
indirectly contributes to the functioning of the country. As for the
Diaspora resulting from the Genocide, it also contributes to fill in
the gaps left by the Armenian state by its targeted aid (telethons,
twinning of cities etc.) or distributed assistance through various
associations. Not counting all those cousins in foreign lands helping
their families or even those generous donors who profit from their
trips to Armenia to save strangers by issuing them micro credits. We
must also m!

ention al Diaspora who bring assistance to Armenia on a purely
cultural front in its broadest sense (courses, training, events
etc.). Resulting, and I do not hesitate to say this, as I have always
claimed, that those members of the Diaspora who feel that sense
of responsibility towards Armenia can be considered as cultural or
economic citizens of the country. Even when they do not have the full
status of the de facto citizen. It is also true that the Diaspora
does not receive in return the political consideration that its
contribution to the country can make it hope for. More precisely,
today, in this affair of the Protocols that touches the essence of
its battle against the Turkish State, the Diaspora would have counted
for nothing. And for a reason.

Today, this Diaspora has just received a cold shower. That is, since
independence, this power for solidarity that it has represented
seems to have turned to be a lost cause. By not asking for any
political counterweight in exchange, the financial contributors of
the Diaspora have become the cuckolds of Armenia. Not only is their
assistance partially or even completely diverted (like in the case
of the rescue aid provided during the earthquake), but it is always
unilateral (allowing thus the oligarchs and politicians of "business"
to enrich themselves and to shamelessly build sumptuous homes). Since
independence, and in spite of the efforts of the Diaspora, which
concentrated mostly on Karabagh, the Armenian countryside has
languished in a destitute poverty. One is forced to admit that the
Armenian Diaspora, not having a voice on the internal political
stage of the country, could not monetize its financial assistance
into forcing the Armenian State to develop a real social policy. This
demonstrates the level of political contempt assigned to the Diaspora
Armenians which is profoundly humiliating in view of the financial
interest it represents. The creation of a ministry of the Diaspora is
simply designed to channel the external wealth towards the country
(for example by the multitude of village sponsorships by wealthy
Armenians or aid to individuals via micro credits).

It is therefore not surprising that today the Diaspora feels
cheated. In fact, from the point of view of Armenia, it never amounted
to much. (TheAghperoutyoun is just an illusion: between the "brother"
of Armenia and his "brother" of the Diaspora, the relationship is one
of a con-artist thief and his naive victim). Today, the Diaspora pays
the price of having managed the suspect liabilities of the Armenian
State too complacently. When Serge Sarkissian instituted himself at the
head of the country under fraudulent conditions which we knew about,
when he threw his opponents in jail, when he continues to incarcerate
Diasporans who have fought for Karabagh, and even denies them Armenian
citizenship, the representatives of this same Diaspora were never so
furious and menacing as they are today, when it is "their" Genocide
that is at stake. As if the dead were more alive for them than the
actual living. By not supporting the democratic opposition which has
been screaming all year-long against the absurdities and deafness of
the Sarkissian regime, by leaving to their fate a countryside that has
been willingly abandoned, by not denouncing firmly the white genocide
of economic emigration, the Diaspora should have expected to one day
receive back the "fair" change for its coin. What government-opposing
citizen of Armenia, by now a veteran of protest meetings, would not
smile bitterly after reading or hearing the media reports about the
incidents related to the visit of his president in Paris; what he
has been screaming for months: "Sarkissian, resign!".

In fact, the unacceptable and the dangerous in this story of the
Protocols is that at the moment when Sarkissian faces the Turks, his
regime still has not settled the internal and dark accounts plaguing
the country. Democracy is not appeased; the murders of March 1st
remain unsolved; justice is under the boot of power; the economy
is in total disequilibrium at the expense of the rural countryside;
Mafioso oligarchs are thriving and the Karabagh issue is still without
a solution. For a country so young, so fragile and so small as Armenia,
these negative and uncertain components constitute a weakness, if
not a major fault line for our national destiny. There is no doubt
that these unresolved problems constitute as many time bombs. If the
Diaspora was a real political force, it would have not missed the
chance to warn this government, one that plays with the truth and
governs with cynicism. Furthermore, it would have been necessary for
this Diaspora to be sensitive to the warning signs that were apparent
here and there by giving voice to those who have never been afraid to
tear up the flags beneath which lurks a culture of self-hatred. Where
we see today that everything is connected. A complicit silence and
blind sanctification of the nation have produced these censures in the
Diaspora, with the effect of encouraging the abuses that have been the
endemic rot on the socio-political fabric of the country. By diverting
attention to the intense struggle against denial, the Diaspora has
nourished complacencies towards the Sarkissian regime that have come
back today to haunt away what is most dear to it. Not only do they
undermine the goal of Genocide recognition and reparations by the
Turkish State, but they also endanger a country which probably is not
in a position to confront the opening of borders with any confidence.

It would however be wrong to reproach the Diaspora for being a force
prey to distraction. What force is it with respect to the Armenian
State? Its representatives have absolutely no legitimacy, and at a
minimum, whoever they may be, they never even asked me for permission
to speak on my behalf. As such, the Armenian State, which we would
have the right to condemn on many fronts, is facing a nebulous
entity led by militant forces that monopolize the Diasporan voice
in tune with an ideology which they want to believe as expressing
the ideals of all. We also could not blame this Diaspora for being
too late in organizing itself into an external political force,
capable of influencing the destiny of the country and leading a
unified battle for the recognition of the Genocide. The hazards of
contemporary history did not allow it to happen. But it seems that
today, because of the signing of the Protocols, this serious crisis
wedging itself between Armenia and the global Armenian Diaspora, has
to accelerate the process of creating a structure capable of playing
in the political decisional arenas of the country. Also, the recent
closing of the daily Haratch has violently shaken the spirits of many,
who today see very clearly the dangers threatening the existence of
the Diaspora itself. They hasten to establish an inventory list for
our destiny, hoping that they will be persuasive enough to reorient
the elements of our survival in a more pragmatic direction. It remains
to be seen whether the key persons who have contributed unconsciously
to the fossilization of our culture will follow these "lesson givers".

What remains is that Turkey will have succeeded in neutralizing the
Diaspora, as it would be in such a case, by establishing State-to-State
relations with Armenia. However, in this context, the Diaspora does
not constitute a State. Not even a State in Exile.

Some believe that the recognition of the Genocide is a moral
matter. One should admit that principles of morality are more and more
present in the political consciousness of our times, even when it
is due, on the one hand, to the European principles of pacification
of peoples, and on the other, to the new American deal. But, if a
criminal does not recognize his crime except when constrained and
forced, there is no reason to think that the Turkish State would cede
anything due to moral pressure at the price of its own interests. In
fact, it is difficult to see any country cede away even an ounce if
it has nothing to gain. However, it is inside Turkish civil society
itself that this consciousness of the perpetrated evil could result
in action and eventually push for a change in mentality. It is also
true that those who advocate a confrontation with the Turkish state
have neither the time nor the means to wait. This faith will only
bear fruit if it was supported by a new structuring of the worldwide
Diaspora in order to effectively and relentlessly denounce a denial
that has lasted too long, where those who are ignorant thereof can
easily become accomplices to it.

Ultimately, it seems that this identity crisis that our Diaspora
is going through, making itself immediately felt due to the loss of
the Haratch newspaper and the issue of the Protocols, has no other
cause but the hypertrophied excess of "Genocidal" thought, within a
persistent denialist context, which in turn has reduced to nothingness
the only thing which could have given breathing room to the spirit,
namely culture. Not a fossilized culture condemned to a cult of
language, of Church, and I do not know what other myth, but a culture
that is living, loving and humorous. Instead, we have managed to make
our artists run away, to contort our thought, to practice censorship
and ostracism, to transform the Genocide into a castrating ideology.

Der Voghormia ! Der Voghormia !

Denis Donikian

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/society-lrah

Yerevan Mayor’s Office Denies ARF Demonstration Permit

YEREVAN MAYOR’S OFFICE DENIES ARF DEMONSTRATION PERMIT

2 009/10/13 | 14:25

Society

The ARF reports that its request to stage a demonstration in
downtown Yerevan on October 16 has been denied by the Yerevan Mayor’s
Office. The reason given is that another event is scheduled to take
place on the same day, at the same time, and at the same location.

The permit request for a demonstration, to take place at 6 p.m. at
the Charles Aznavour Square in the vicinity of Kino Moscow, was made
on October 9.

http://hetq.am/en/society/qaxaqapetaran/

Yerevan Hosts International Conference On Cross-Border Education

YEREVAN HOSTS INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CROSS-BORDER EDUCATION

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
13.10.2009 17:26 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ October 13-14, Modern Humanitarian Academy (Moscow)
and the Russian-Armenian Modern Humanitarian Institute, with support
of the Ministry of Education and Science organize the International
scientific conference on "Cross-border education: global opportunities
and regional aspects."

The purpose of the two-day conference – to demonstrate the
possibilities of the Modern Humanitarian Academy to the Armenian
educational.

"We intend to begin a dialogue with universities in Armenia, as well as
with educational authorities," director of international cooperation
section of the Modern Humanitarian Academy Dmitry Nersesyan told
PanARMENIAN.Net.