Students Hail French Bill On Turk Genocide Denial

STUDENTS HAIL FRENCH BILL ON TURK GENOCIDE DENIAL

Windsor Star (Ontario)
October 14, 2006 Saturday
Final Edition

YEREVAN, Armenia – About 1,000 students rallied in the Armenian capital
Friday to thank France for backing a bill that would make it a crime
to deny that Turks committed genocide against the Armenians in the
early 20th century.

"Thank You, France!" and "Hail French Justice!" read two of the
placards held up by the students from a nationalist youth group,
who waved flags of Armenia and France as they marched through central
Yerevan.

The French parliament on Thursday approved on first reading a bill
that would make it a crime to deny that the 1915-17 massacres of
Armenians by the Ottoman Turks constituted genocide.

Turkey slammed the vote, saying France had dealt "a heavy blow"
to longstanding bilateral relations.

BAKU: France Will Gain Nothing From Law On Punishment For Denial Of

FRANCE WILL GAIN NOTHING FROM LAW ON PUNISHMENT FOR DENIAL OF "GENOCIDE OF ARMENIANS"

Ïðaâî Âûaîða, Azerbaijan
Democratic Azerbaijan
Oct 16 2006

France will gain nothing from law on punishment for denial of
"genocide of Armenians". This law may cast a shadow on French-Turkish
and French-Azerbaijani relations. As AzerTaj informs these words
were said by Ambassador of France to Azerbaijan, Bernard Amaudric
du Shaffaut, at press conference held October 13 in connection with
adoption of law on punishment for denial of "genocide of Armenians"
during first reading of National Assembly of France. Ambassador said:
"We regret that the law was passed in first reading. Government of
France was against it, and this position is unchanged. Government
holds that there is no need for law on punishment for denial of
"genocide of Armenians".

Having underlined that the law hasn’t come in force yet, Ambassador
said that for this purpose, first of all the document should be
approved by Senate. If some amendments are made to it, it will be
returned to National Assembly for development. In case the law is
approved by Senate, then Constitutional Council may adopt resolution
concerning the absence of the document in Constitution of the
country. Moreover, President of the country may return the law to
the parliament for development.

Ambassador hopes that senators, elected for 9 year term, will be
more reasonable and they won’t approve this decision. Government will
endeavor to prevent enforcement of the above law.

–Boundary_(ID_fo6LncKwKt+Tixdtw/Ww8w)–

Beirut: Armenians Rally Against Turkish UNIFIL Force

ARMENIANS RALLY AGAINST TURKISH UNIFIL FORCE

Monday Morning, Lebanon
Oct 16 2006

As troops from various countries were traveling or preparing to travel
to join the reinforced UNIFIL, thousands of Lebanon’s Armenians
rallied in Beirut against Turkish troops taking part in the force,
on the same day France moved to make denial of the "Ottoman genocide
of Armenians" a crime.

Armenian political and religious leaders attended the demonstration,
which came just two days after the first contingent of Turkish
peacekeepers arrived.

The rally took place on Beirut’s Martyrs’ Square, which honors six
Lebanese nationalists who were hanged by the Ottomans during World
War I.

The crowd, drawn from an Armenian community of about 140,000 people,
held high banners denouncing the presence of Turkish troops as "an
insult to the collective memory of the Armenian people", while waving
Armenian, Lebanese and French flags.

Overriding widespread opposition, the Turkish Parliament approved a
government motion on September 5 to contribute troops to UNIFIL.

In total, Turkey is to deploy some 700 soldiers in Lebanon, including
troops aboard naval ships. Those who landed last Tuesday were the
first Muslim peacekeepers to arrive in the country.

Turkey contests the term "genocide" and strongly opposed the French
bill. It says 300,000 Armenians, and at least as many Turks, died in
civil strife when Armenians took up arms for independence and sided
with invading Russian troops as the Ottoman Empire fell apart during
World War I.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their ancestors were slaughtered
in orchestrated killings, which they maintain can only be seen as
genocide.

The French bill must now go to the Senate, or upper house of
Parliament, for another vote.

ANKARA: EU To Meet Angry Turkey For Progress Review

EU TO MEET ANGRY TURKEY FOR PROGRESS REVIEW

Al-Arab online, UK
Oct 16 2006

Turkey meets the European Union to review tense relations on Monday,
embittered after French lawmakers passed a bill making it a crime to
deny that Ottoman Turks committed genocide against Armenians in 1915.

Although not formally on the agenda of Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul’s
talks in Luxembourg, anger over the French vote seems bound to dominate
the regular session with the 25-nation bloc’s biggest candidate.

The EU, represented by the Finnish and German foreign ministers and
European Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn, will press Ankara again
to open its ports to shipping from EU-member Cyprus to avoid a possible
freeze in entry negotiations.

But European diplomats say the French move, even if it seems unlikely
to become law, made it almost impossible for the Turkish government to
make any concession over Cyprus before elections next year, despite
Finnish diplomatic efforts.

Rehn called last Thursday’s Paris vote "counter-productive" both
for efforts to reconcile Turks and Armenians and for moves to reform
Turkey’s penal code to increase freedom of expression.

Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan was quoted on Sunday as saying
French President Jacques Chirac had telephoned him to apologise and
promise help in heading off the bill.

But the row has fuelled Turkish nationalist arguments that the
Europeans do not really want Turkey as a member, thus it is pointless
to make concessions on Cyprus, Kurdish rights, religious minorities
or ties with Armenia to please Brussels.

Finnish Foreign Minister Erkki Tuomioja is trying to craft a mini-deal
to ease trade ties on Cyprus.

Turkey does not recognize the Greek Cypriot government in Nicosia,
which represents the divided island in the EU.

The executive European Commission issues its next progress report on
Turkey’s candidacy on November 8.

It is likely to conclude that the EU-driven reform process has slowed
and Ankara has not met its treaty obligations on Cyprus.

That could prompt EU leaders at a mid-December summit to freeze or
slow the entry negotiations.

The British ambassador to Turkey, Peter Westmacott, said if the Finnish
move fails, the EU will hold Turkey to account for not meeting its
commitments with the risk that the accession process — at least in
part — would be suspended.

"That would be dangerous. The negotiations, once stalled, would be
very hard to re-start," he wrote in an opinion piece published in
Turkish Daily News on Monday.

Cyprus is using its EU veto to block the opening of any new "chapter"
or policy area in talks with Turkey.

Cypriot Foreign Minister Georgios Lillikas said his government would
not budge from its position of no new negotiations without a move
by Turkey.

"Cyprus is not in a position to open or close chapters or set
benchmarks," he said in an interview with German newspaper Financial
Times Deutschland.

"We are firmly determined to pursue this path because any further
concession to Turkey only serves to undermine the EU’s legitimacy."

The EU will review troubled relations with another long-term aspirant
to membership later on Monday in talks with Serbian Prime Minister
Vojislav Kostunica.

Brussels broke off talks on closer ties with Belgrade in May after
Kostunica failed to make good on a promise to arrest and hand over
former Bosnian Serb military commander Ratko Mladic for trial in The
Hague on genocide charges.

Chief U.N. war crimes prosecutor Carla Del Ponte is expected to tell
the EU troika at Monday’s talks that Serbia is still not cooperating
fully with her tribunal.

Turkish consumers union starts to boycott French goods

Xinhua , China
Oct 14 2006

Turkish consumers union starts to boycott French goods

The Turkish Consumers Union announced Friday that it has started to
boycott goods and services of French origin in protest against a bill
passed by French lawmakers, the semi-official Anatolia news agency
reported.

"As of today, we are going to boycott one French product every week
and show our reaction" against a bill criminalizing any denial of the
alleged massacres of Armenians during World War I, Bulent Deniz,
chairman of the union, was quoted as saying.

"We will not purchase fuel oil, lube oil, and LPG (Liquefied
Petroleum Gas) from the Total Company. France will be the party that
loses unless this unfortunate process ends," Deniz said.

"The Turkish Consumers Union considered boycott as the last
alternative," said Deniz, adding that the boycott will continue
increasingly until the French bill gets annulled.

French lawmakers on Thursday voted 106-19 for a draft bill, which
calls for up to a year in prison and fines of up to 56,000 U. S.
dollars for anyone who denies the alleged Armenian genocide during
World War I. The bill must be passed by the Senate and signed by
French President Jacques Chirac.

Turkey, a secular Muslim country which is seeking EU membership, has
vowed to impose economic sanctions on France if the bill is passed in
the French parliament.

Turkey has always denied that up to 1.5 million Armenians were
subject to genocide in the period between 1915 and 1923.

However, it does acknowledge that up to 300,000 Armenians died during
fighting and efforts to relocate populations away from the war zone
in eastern Turkey.

According to the Zaman daily, Turkey is the fifth largest customer of
French goods outside the EU. France’s export to Turkey values at 5.9
billion dollars while its import from Turkey remains at 3.8 billion
dollars.

Why the writers refuse to be silenced

Financial Times, UK
Oct 12 2006

Why the writers refuse to be silenced

Perihan Magden, a Turkish novelist and journalist, appeared in an
Istanbul court earlier this month accused of the slightly surreal
crime of "alienating the people against military service" because she
defended a young man’s right to be a conscientious objector.

As she entered the court she was attacked by a small crowd of
demonstrators shouting insults and causing a commotion that at least
guaranteed television news coverage.

It was a scene that has become familiar outside Turkish courtrooms. A
series of prosecutions of writers and journalists, for things they
said or wrote, has attracted bigots and xenophobes to each hearing,
adding a sharp political edge to the occasions and turning them into
spectacles that would be considered in some other countries to be
bringing the law into disrepute.

Ms Magden’s case was adjourned to another hearing in late July. She
faces three years in jail if she is convicted. "I cannot believe I am
being prosecuted," she said in court.

Her alleged crime was to write an opinion piece in a magazine in
which she defended the notion of conscientious objection to military
service, arguing in favour of a young man who was refusing to wear
the uniform during his conscription because it was against his
beliefs.

The Turkish military, a powerful institution with a long history of
meddling in politics and silencing its critics, objected to the
article, arguing that it could undermine the standing of the armed
forces in the public mind and perhaps encourage youngsters to refuse
military service, which is compulsory for men.

The notion is absurd in a country where the armed forces are, on the
whole, highly regarded, and where military service is seen as a badge
of honour. But a prosecutor filed a case against Ms Magden, and it is
now being played out in court.

If Ms Magden thinks the case is absurd, many Turks would probably
agree. So would the European Union, which Turkey wishes to join. The
EU has put freedom of expression high on its list of issues Turkey
must address if any progress on entry is to be made.

In particular, the EU wants Turkey to change or abolish Article 301
of the revised penal code passed by this government, which is seen as
a license for any prosecutor to pursue a case against an individual
based on the flimsiest evidence.

The furore that invariably surrounds the prosecution of freedom of
expression cases in Turkey does immense damage to the country’s image
at home and abroad.

This raises the intriguing question of why Turkey, which is a modern
democracy with a pluralist media and no shortage of opinions on every
conceivable subject, still puts writers and journalists on trial, and
why such a powerful country is still so seemingly terrified of
wayward, unorthodox, or subversive yet non-violent opinion.

One reason, commentators say, is because the legal system tolerates
it. Although a constitution drafted by the military top brass and
imposed after a coup d’etat in 1980 has been heavily amended, its
legacy has been pernicious and authoritarian.

Even today, commentators and diplomats say, vaguely worded articles
allow for severe restrictions on freedom of expression. These
restrictions are less draconian than a decade ago, but they are still
effective in making a writer think twice before putting an opinion
down on paper.

Much of the impetus for prosecutors to pursue writers who might be
considered to have insulted Turkey in some way comes from the
hard-line, xenophobic nationalist extremes of Turkish politics.

This is not a large group but it is exceptionally noisy perhaps
because it feels itself alienated from the modern trend of Turkish
politics and it uses the legal system to announce and pursue its
grievances.

"Nationalists are feeling besieged," says Ali Tekin, a political
scientist at Bilkent University. "When they see an avenue to express
their frustration, they seize it."

A second reason is that, although debate on contested historical
questions is now more open in Turkey than it was five years ago, some
subjects are still regarded by some Turks as taboo, such as the fate
of Ottoman Armenians, the plight of the Kurds, or the continuing
usefulness of Kemalism, the republican nationalist ideology
bequeathed by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of Turkey. Those who
would silence debate on these issues say European countries do the
same thing.

They point to Austria, which jailed David Irving a British historian
who denied the Nazi Holocaust for three years.

That is a more severe sentence than any handed down in recent months
by a Turkish court. The saving grace of Turkish cases is that many
are either withdrawn or collapse under the weight of contradictions.

A third, and perhaps more important, reason why freedom of expression
is so sensitive in Turkey is that it is a country where opinions are
important, especially if they challenge received wisdom.

The columnist Cengiz Candar has described Turkish intellectuals as
"iconoclasts in a conservative society", holding Turkey to account on
behalf of the world. There is a vast amount of opinion in Turkish
newspapers, sometimes at the expense of news, but it plays a vital
role in shaping public opinion.

Orhan Pamuk, the novelist whose trial last December on a charge of
"insulting Turkishness" led to an international outcry, recently made
a similar point about writers.

He told a conference of PEN, the international writers’ organisation,
that part of a writer’s task was to raise forbidden subjects "purely
because they wereforbidden".

In his PEN lecture published in the New York Review of Books, from
which these quotations are taken, he recalled a visit to Istanbul in
the mid-1980s by the playwrights Arthur Miller and Harold Pinter, to
show support for jailed writers in Turkey.

Things are not that bad today. But Mr Pamuk observed that for a
writer to self-censor himself simply to avoid upsetting anybody was
"a bit like smuggling forbidden goods through customs" and was
shaming and degrading.

He has refused to be silenced in his own writings. Other Turkish
writers, as Ms Magden shows, feel the same way.

[criticsforumarchive] Critics’ Forum Article, 10.14.06

Critics’ Forum
Music
Elements of a Universal Alphabet
By Sam Ekizian

The musical forms known as folk-fusion and folk revival have often
served as the vehicles of creative expression for performers seeking
to adapt, translate, and modernize traditional musical styles. The
new folk-fusion scene draws inspiration from widespread and
multicultural sources, a process that often entails the
popularization of previously non-mainstream music, the adaptation of
folk styles to pop and rock structures, and the introduction of new
instruments.

Within the Armenian music community, performers such as Arto
Tuncboyaciyan, Gor Mkhitarian, and Armen Chakmakian have already led
critically acclaimed forays into the folk-fusion scene. With the
recent debut of its full-length album, "Yev O Phe," Element has
navigated into this emerging but still somewhat forbidden genre.
The band includes Ara Dabandjian (keyboard, guitar, accordion), Saro
Koujakian (vocals and guitar), Gars Sherbetdjian (vocals), Shant
Mahserejian (violin), and Jeremy Millado (bass). Dabandjian is
also the band’s arranger as well as creative and musical director.

Element performs traditional Armenian folk songs as well as more
contemporary compositions laced with its own sensibilities, some of
them distinctly non-Armenian. The band’s members are aligned in
their determination to elevate their cultural heritage through
music, while paying homage to South American and Mediterranean
traditions – the band’s stylings are variously embossed with the
sounds of Flamenco, Tango, Rembetika, as well as more contemporary
influences.

This commingling of cultures has been the source of much debate.
After all, it tests the bounds of Armenian cultural identity and
seems to present a considerable obstacle to the adaptation of
traditional Armenian music. Therefore, precisely because fusion
presents fertile ground for artistic exploration, it may find itself
bound by a number of powerful cultural constraints, including
anxieties about assimilation. As a result, the growing influence of
fusion may be viewed by some as the dilution of an otherwise pure
sound and a deep-seated cultural memory.

But that view conveniently ignores the fact that much of Armenian
music has developed precisely as a result of its interaction with
outside elements and its rich fusion of disparate influences. After
all, Gomidas Vartabed himself, an ordained monk and
ethnomusicologist, spent the early 1900s initiating a renaissance of
traditional Armenian folk music by visiting far-flung provinces and
villages to take record of the varied traditions of native songs and
dances found there.

Gomidas’s quest clearly suggests that Armenian music is an
undeniably fecund source of musical expression and adaptation. The
characteristic palette of this expression, both musically and
lyrically, manifests itself in rural songs of yearning, spiritual
songs of remembrance, and other traditional expressions of longing,
lament, and rebirth. The recent popularity of folk-fusion and folk
revival reminds us that these musical styles, like traditional
Armenian music itself, succeed when they manage to remain true to
the intrinsic features and inherent values of the various musical
influences they bring together.

"Yev O Phe" delivers Element’s unique expression of folk-fusion by
seamlessly incorporating deft instrumentation, lush vocal harmonies,
and rich multi-ethnic musical styles. And nowhere in the album does
the band impose embellishments otherwise foreign to its core musical
material. The songs are not weighted down by deliberate rock
inflections or plodding digital treatments. The album also manages
to retain the purity of the folk elements and various instruments it
brings together. And throughout, the sound somehow remains
undeniably Armenian.

"Yev O Phe" is elevated by Dabandjian’s hypnotic arrangements and
his superb command of several different instruments, as well as
Koujakian’s deeply soulful vocals. In fact, the most alluring
tracks on the album are those featuring this combination’s
performances. Dabandjian’s talents are on full display on the
album’s fifth track, "Yar Ko Parag Boyin Mernem," which manages to
make a powerful emotional impact while retaining an understated
delicacy. Koujakian’s masculine yet smooth vocals take center stage
on "Mardigi Yerke" and "Anoush Hayrenik," without overpowering the
songs. All in all, "Yev O Phe" represents a powerful fusion of
fervent rhythms and infectious melodies, rippled through with multi-
layered and multi-ethnic influences.

It is worth mentioning that Element is an accomplished live act.
There is an immediacy and improvisational aspect to the band’s live
performances that lend themselves well to its particular adaptation
and re-imagination of the fusion genre. During a recent show at the
Ford Amphitheatre, Element’s soulful performance enveloped the
audience and drew it inescapably into the music being performed on
stage. This captivating quality of Element’s music is due in no
small part to the band’s repertoire, at once intimately familiar and
distinctly different, allowing listeners to celebrate their own
cultural heritage while embracing a more universal perspective.

Element has already acquired a diverse and loyal fan base. But it is
too early to declare whether the band has brought Armenian folk
music back into our collective consciousness or successfully bridged
geographic, linguistic, and multi-cultural divides. What is
undeniable, however, is that Element has cast aside deep-seated
cultural constraints and adopted a more progressive musical register.

In the current era of globalization, music has become the
indispensable mode of communication and integration, a modern and
universal vernacular. Fusion provides opportunities to use varying
elements of this vernacular to stretch creative boundaries and to
spread indigenous music to wider audiences, a crucial stage in the
evolution of the world music scene and of Armenian music itself.
Element’s rendering of folk music is nothing more than an extension
of this evolution, the adoption of a genuinely universal alphabet.

All Rights Reserved: Critics Forum, 2006

Sam Ekizian has been involved with the Armenian cultural and music
scene for over two decades and has helped introduce artists to West
Coast audiences.

You can reach him or any of the other contributors to Critics’ Forum
at [email protected]. This and all other articles published
in this series are available online at To
sign up for a weekly electronic version of new articles, go to
Critics’ Forum is a group created to
discuss issues relating to Armenian art and culture in the Diaspora.

www.criticsforum.org.
www.criticsforum.org/join.

OSCE field office in Syunik province organizes environmental action

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

Oct 13 2006

OSCE field office in Syunik province organizes environmental action

YEREVAN, 13 October 2006 – More than 30 schoolchildren and local
volunteers helped clean up some 2 hectares of land around the
Vahanavank (King Vahan’s Monastery) historic monument in the Armenian
province of Syunik this week.

The action was part of an environmental awareness and cultural
education campaign "Golden Autumn – clean and neat environment,"
organized by the OSCE Programme Implementation Presence in Syunik
province and the Aarhus Public Environmental Information Centre in
Kapan.

Special billboards with notices asking not to pollute the environment
were also installed in the area. Children found out more about the
history of the Vahanavank cultural complex, the preservation of
biodiversity, climate change, local and international environmental
laws.

"Ecological education is an important element in making sure children
help keep our environment cleaner," said Garik Chilingaryan, Project
Co-ordinator of OSCE presence in Syunik province. "Pollution in the
province is mainly caused by the mining industry, but we often forget
that all of us create household waste, which also pollutes the
environment."

http://www.osce.org/

Rehn criticises France’s Armenian genocide bill

Newsroom Finland, Finland
Oct 13 2006

Rehn criticises France’s Armenian genocide bill

13.10.2006 at 15:00

Olli Rehn, the European Union’s enlargement commissioner, said in a
news conference Friday that the French parliament’s adoption on
Thursday of a bill making it a crime to deny that the killing of
Armenians in 1915-17 by Ottoman Turks amounted to genocide was
harmful as it made a historical debate in Turkey more difficult.

Mr Rehn, the Finnish member of the commission, added that the bill,
if approved by the French senate, would probably halt the nascent
debate in Turkey.

Turkey says the killing of 1.5 Armenians was not a genocide.

Demonstration of Gratitude to the Embassy of France

A1+

DEMONSTRATION OF GRATITUDE TO THE EMBASSY OF FRANCE
[05:35 pm] 13 October, 2006

Over a hundred young people organized a demonstration from the Opera
square to the French Embassy in order to express their gratitude to
the French Parliament for adopting a draft criminalizing the negation
of the Armenian Genocide. Students of the Yerevan State University and
members of the youth wing of Hnchakyan Party participated in the
«demonstration of gratitude».

The participants of the demonstration called on other countries to
follow the example of France and voiced hope that sooner or later
Turkey will adopt a similar draft. By the way, seeing the group of
people walking towards the Embassy, many passers by joined them.

Reaching the Embassy, the participants of the demonstration read out
their letter of gratitude. Ambassador Henry Cuny himself came out in
order to meet them. «France recognized the Armenian Genocide long
ago. I think now its time for you to think about your relations with
your neighbor. Good relations with neighbors are important for any
country», the Ambassador mentioned.