BAKU: ‘Armenia~Rs Position Draws The Region Into War’

‘ARMENIA~RS POSITION DRAWS THE REGION INTO WAR’

news.az
Dec 19 2011
Azerbaijan

Armenia’s current position on Karabakh conflict draws the region
into war.

The statement came from chairman Holland Azerbaijani-Turkish Culture
Center Ilhan Ashkin while talking to Gun.Az.

“The Armenian leadership should learn a lesson from event going on in
the world and should seriously think about the future of its country.

If the war breaks out, Armenia’s infrastructure and economy will
perish along with its army and event its security as a state will be
jeopardized”, the Center chairman said.

Ashkin said that Armenia is directly responsible for possible outcomes
in the region.

“This is because Armenia doesn’t come close to any agreement and
trample down all peace principles. In such condition, war in the
region becomes inevitable and the situation is leading to it”,
Ashkin stressed.

ANKARA: Turkish Delegation Holds Talks In Paris

TURKISH DELEGATION HOLDS TALKS IN PARIS

Hurriyet Daily News
Dec 19 2011
Turkey

Volkan Bozkır (3rd R) heads the delegation. AA photo A Turkish
Parliamentary delegation is holding talks in Paris in an attempt
to prevent the passage of a proposed resolution criminalizing the
rejection of Armenian genocide claims.

Delegation head Volkan Bozkır told reporters that the resolution
was in violation of basic human rights and freedoms.

“We are here to tell French officials about the negative effects the
resolution would have on Turkish-French relations if it is enacted,”
Bozkır said.

Trade volume between the two countries was close to 13.5 billion euros
per year, Bozkır said, adding that French investments in Turkey had
reached 6.5 billion euros and that nearly 2,000 French companies were
doing business in Turkey.

Bozkır also said 1 million French tourists visited Turkey every year.

An â~@~uneasyâ~@~] period will begin in Turkish-French relations
if the resolution is adopted, Bozkır said. Cooperation between the
two countries, which has had a considerable effect on fostering peace
and stability in the region and in the world, would be significantly
harmed, he added.

The French parliament will decide on Dec. 22 whether to adopt the
resolution, which calls for a one-year jail term and a 45,000-euro
fine to anyone convicted of denying the genocide claims.

ANKARA: Turkey Can Prevent Adoption Of A Resolution On Incidents Of

TURKEY CAN PREVENT ADOPTION OF A RESOLUTION ON INCIDENTS OF 1915 AT FRENCH PARLIAMENT, SAYS ARINC

Anadolu Agency
Dec 16 2011
Turkey

Ankara: The Spokesperson for the Turkish government and Deputy Prime
Minister Bulent Arinc said Friday [16 December] that Turkey could
prevent the adoption of a resolution that criminalizes rejection of
Armenian allegations on the incidents of 1915 at the French Parliament.

Speaking to reporters following the meeting of the Council of Ministers
in Turkish capital of Ankara, Arinc said that “certain circles want
to sponsor such a resolution in the French Parliament due to internal
political reasons”.

Turkey is in a position to prevent the adoption of such a resolution
and can explain why the resolution is wrong, Arinc stressed.

We hope that the French authorities take the necessary steps after a
letter sent by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to French
President Nicolas Sarkozy and the relations do not get deteriorated,
Arinc underlined.

We will use our inter-governmental and inter-parliamentary relations
to prevent the adoption of such a resolution, Arinc also said.

Turkey Hits Out At French Genocide Bill

TURKEY HITS OUT AT FRENCH GENOCIDE BILL
Thomas Seibert

The National UAE

Dec 20 2011

ISTANBUL // France plans to make it illegal to deny that Armenians
were victims of a genocide by Turks during the First World War –
a move being protested against by the Turkish government.

But critics say these objections are out of step with a growing
willingness by Turkish society to address the genocide question.

“Turkish governments simply don’t know how to deal with this issue,”
said Cengiz Aktar, a political scientist at Bahcesehir University in
Istanbul and a member of a group of Turkish intellectuals calling on
their country to face its past. “Civil society is way ahead of the
state on this,” he said yesterday.

The bill, scheduled to come before the French National Assembly on
Thursday, outlines a jail sentence of up to one year and a fine of
~@45,000 (Dh 215,300) for anyone in France who convicted of publicly
denying the genocide.

Armenia, several western countries as well as some international
experts say that the Ottoman Armenians became the victims of genocide
in the final phase of the Ottoman Empire in 1915 and that up to 1.5
million members of that Christian minority were killed in massacres
and death marches. The Turkish state rejects the term genocide and
says the deaths were the result of a relocation effort under wartime
conditions and that many Muslim Turks were killed by Armenian militias.

France, which has a large population of Armenian descent and is
facing presidential elections next year, recognised the killings
as genocide in 2001. Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, has in
the past promised his country’s Armenian community to support a law
criminalising its denial.

Turkey has protested against several bills by western countries,
like France and Switzerland, condemning the Armenian genocide in the
past, and the bill in Paris is no exception. Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
the Turkish prime minister, has warned of “irreparable” damage to
Turkish-French ties if the bill is passed. An adoption of the bill
would cause serious consequences in political, economic and cultural
ties, Mr Erdogan warned in a letter to Mr Sarkozy, according to the
Turkish Anadolu news agency.

Ahmet Davutoglu, the foreign minister, said on Sunday that an adoption
of the genocide bill would trigger a counter-initiative by Turkey to
draw attention to French misdeeds in former colonies. Engin Solakoglu,
the Turkish ambassador to Paris, told Agence-France Presse he expected
to be recalled to Ankara for consultations if the bill is passed.

Turkish officials also noted that the vote in Paris was scheduled
to take place on the anniversary of the death of a Turkish diplomat
who was killed by Armenian militants seeking revenge for the Turkish
massacres. Yilmaz Colpan, a diplomat at the Turkish embassy in Paris,
was shot in the French capital on December 22, 1979.

“I hope this is just a bad coincidence” as opposed to a deliberate
insult to Turkey, a Turkish diplomat said about the timing of the
vote in Paris.

Volkan Bozkir, a member of parliament in Ankara, travelled to Paris to
convince French lawmakers to cancel the vote. Turkish business leaders
also went to France to warn of consequences for economic relations,
should the bill pass.

But there were few signs that reactions would go beyond strong
criticism and the recall of the ambassador. Mehmet Simsek, the finance
minister, told parliament that Turkey would not launch a boycott of
French goods in retaliation for the genocide bill. With nearly 1,000
French companies doing business in Turkey and a bilateral trade that
reached [email protected] last year, Turkish businessmen are also unlikely to
call for a boycott.

Rifat Hisarciklioglu, the head of the Union of Chambers and Commodity
Exchanges of Turkey (TOBB), told AFP that “French companies are among
our members and we also protect their interests”.

That restraint differs sharply from the situation from a few
years ago when Turkish intellectuals were put on trial in Istanbul
for saying Armenians died in a genocide and, in Istanbul, Turkish
extremists killed Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian journalist calling
for reconciliation between the two countries.

Since then, the issue has been more widely debated at academic
conferences and other panels, a development furthered by a
strengthening of laws guaranteeing free speech, passed under Turkey’s
bid to become a member of the European Union.

Alper Gormus, the former editor of a news magazine that was closed
in 2009 under pressure from the military after exposing alleged coup
plans by officers, told The National that the Turkish public had
moved forward but Turkish politicians still lacked the confidence
to face the Armenian issue. “I think society is ready for this,
but unfortunately politicians do not act upon it,” Mr Gormus said.

Mehmet Ali Birand, a prominent commentator, wrote in the Posta
newspaper last month that the unwillingness to address the Armenian
genocide issue was holding Turkey back. “What are we afraid of?” Mr
Birand wrote. “We cannot gain anything by denial.”

Last month, Mr Erdogan issued a formal apology “in the name of the
state” for massacres by state troops against Alevite Kurds in the
central Anatolian province of Dersim, later renamed Tunceli, in the
1930s when more than 10,000 civilians were killed. But there has been
no similar move in the case of the Armenian massacres.

http://www.thenational.ae/news/worldwide/europe/turkey-hits-out-at-french-genocide-bill

Day Of "Arabic: Language Of Quran" Commemorated In Armenia

DAY OF “ARABIC: LANGUAGE OF QURAN” COMMEMORATED IN ARMENIA

Ahlul Bayt News Agency ABNA

Dec 20 2011
Iran

(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) – The representative office of the UN in
Yerevan, the Republic of Armenia, held a ceremony to commemorate the
Day of “Arabic: the Language of the Quran.

The program was held on the occasion of Arabic Language World Day on
December 18.

Embassies of Egypt and Syria in Armenia, experts, university lecturers
and students of the State University of Yerevan, University of Russia
and Armenia also cooperated in holding the program.

The role of Arabic language in Islam and status of the language at
international interactions and its importance in introducing Arab
cultural and historical heritage were the issues investigated at
the program.

In addition to about 300 million Arab speakers in the world and about
40 million people whose second language is Arabic, there are many
others who learn the language to be able to read and understand the
holy Quran.

http://abna.ir/data.asp?lang=3&id=285166

V. Karakhanyan: France’s Example Should Be Contagious

V. KARAKHANYAN: FRANCE’S EXAMPLE SHOULD BE CONTAGIOUS

Panorama
Dec 19 2011
Armenia

“The example of France should be contagious. Now, France is the engine
actively moving forward the process of international recognition
of Armenian Genocide. And Turkey’s accusations in address to France
are immoral,” Vazgen Karakhanyan, the vice chairman of NA standing
committee on foreign relations told Panorama.am.

PACE President, representative of Turkish ruling “Justice and
development” party Mevlut Cavusoglu stated that France’s President
Nicolas Sarkozy is responsible for the strained Turkish-French
relations.

“Turkey has unveiled a behavior that ignores European values and
proved it doesn’t worth to join the European family. It’s shameful
that Turkey is intended to join EU,” he said.

Vaclav Havel Urged To Consider The Armenian Genocide Not From The Po

VACLAV HAVEL URGED TO CONSIDER THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE NOT FROM THE POLITICAL BUT FROM THE HISTORICAL POINT OF VIEW

Mediamax
Dec 19 2011
Armenia

Yerevan/Mediamax/. Former President of Czech Republic Vaclav Havel,
who passed away on December 18, urged to consider the problem of the
Armenian Genocide from the historical point of view.

Vaclav Havel died aged 76 after a long illness on December 18.

In December 2005, then Czech President Vaclav Havel said that the
“problem of the Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Empire should be
considered not from the political but from the historical point
of view.”

In his written answer to the question of Armenian “Orer” Magazine
published in Prague, Vaclav Havel expressed the opinion that all
interested parties should be ready for a historical assessment of
events by experts. “Although the process of acknowledgement and
assessment of its own past is often too painful, it is necessary in
order to preserve the moral unity of the nation,” Vaclav Havel used
to say.

Fears Grow Over Caucasus Selective Abortions Of Girls

FEARS GROW OVER CAUCASUS SELECTIVE ABORTIONS OF GIRLS

BBC

19 December 2011 Last updated at 15:58 GMT

Across South Caucasus countries, many parents-to-be prefer male
children and baby girls come as a disappointment.

In Armenia, for example, more than 1,000 women had selective abortions
of female foetuses each year over the past five years, according to
a survey by the United Nations Population Fund.

The trend has sparked warnings of a future gender imbalance in the
region, which would make it harder for men to find partners.

Nina Akhmeteli reports.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-16248511

Government Pulls Dilijan Land Swap Bill from Website

Government Pulls Dilijan Land Swap Bill from Website

HETQ
18:53, December 14, 2011

It what appears to be a move to conceal a questionable land swap from
public scrutiny, the government has removed the bill from its official
website.

Tomorrow, the government will review a proposal by the Minister of the
Environment to lease 22.5 hectares of Dilijan National Parkland to the
State Revenue Committee (SRC).

The minister claims the SRC needs the land as an educational and
recreation site for its employees.

US Senate still considering Bryza nomination as Amb. to Azerbaijan

US Senate still considering Bryza’s nomination as Ambassador to Azerbaijan

10:47 – 13.12.11

The US Senate is still considering Matthew Bryza’s nomination as
ambassador to Azerbaijan, according to a Department of State official.

Mark Toner, a spokesperson for the Department, has said in his daily
press briefing that they haven’t yet given up the idea of nominating
the diplomat.

In December 2010, US President Barrack Obama appointed Bryza as
ambassador for one year. The decision was made without the Senate’s
approval, so the final confirmation was blocked. If the Senate does
not approve Bryza’s nomination this time, the Ambassador will be
called back from Baku.

Tert.am