ANKARA: Armenians To Embark On Cinematic Journey To Istanbul

ARMENIANS TO EMBARK ON CINEMATIC JOURNEY TO ISTANBUL

Hurriyet Daily News
April 5 2010
Turkey

The first Turkish Film Festival of Armenia was organized from March
25 to 27. Taking its inspiration from Orhan Veli Kanık’s poem,
"Listening to Istanbul," by Bilge Diren GuneÅ~_ and Veysel Cihan
Hızar, will be shown in Armenian cinemas throughout 2010. The film
will provide Armenian viewers the chance to have a virtual tour of
Istanbul, the directors say

Orhan Veli Kanık, one of Turkish literature’s most beloved poets,
is set to share Istanbul with the people of Yerevan thanks to recently
a Turkish film festival in Armenia.

Nine films from Turkish directors were screened in the Armenian capital
last week as part of the "23.5 Turkish Film Festival in Armenia,"
organized by festival directors Gorgiy Vanyan and Luisa Poghosyan
with the support of the British Embassy in Yerevan.

As the winner of the jury award, "Istanbul’u Dinliyorum – Listening
to Istanbul," which takes its name from Kanık’s most famous poem,
will be played in Yerevan movie theaters throughout the year.

Directed by Istanbul Kultur University’s Cinema and Television
Department students Bilgi Diren GuneÅ~_ and Veysel Cihan Hızar,
"Listening to Istanbul" has already been the recipient of a handful
national awards.

"Our film has been shown in many festivals but it is very important
to us to screen it in Armenia. It made us very happy to get this
proposal. The film will be seen by Armenian audiences throughout 2010.

We thank everyone," Hızar recently told the Hurriyet Daily News and
Economic Review.

Virtual tour of Istanbul through film

Istanbul is a city where many Armenians lived in 19th and 20th
centuries, and a source of modern Armenian language and literature.

"Even an Armenian person, who has never seen Istanbul, has definitely
an image of this city on his mind," said GuneÅ~_. "The main reason
why the film was liked was because of curiosity about Istanbul, in
my opinion. It is a very beautiful city that everyone is in love with."

Hızar said the film would provide an opportunity for all its Armenian
viewers to take a virtual journey of the city. "We want people to
feel like they are in Istanbul when watching the film."

Referring to the current tensions between Turkey and Armenia, Hızar
said both sides need to find common ground. "As young people, we
deeply believe that all offenses will be halted in the near future."

Agreeing with Hızar, GuneÅ~_ said: "The artists of both countries
have an important mission. They can create a new language between
the members of the two publics. We would be very happy if we can make
even a small contribution to relations between the two countries with
this film."

‘We grew up on the same land under the same sky’

GuneÅ~_ was born in the eastern Turkish province of Erzincan, while
Hızar was born in southeastern Å~^anlıurfa before both came to
Istanbul for schooling.

"From Erzincan to Sivas, to Diyarbakır, we and the Armenians grew
up on the same land under the same sky for centuries," said GuneÅ~_.

Touching on Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was
assassinated on Jan. 19, 2007, she said: "Just like we want justice
for our journalists such as Abdi İpekci and Ugur Mumcu, we want it
for Dink, too. We suffered the same pain as Dink."

The biggest wish for both directors is to see Armenia, yet travel
is difficult because of the limited financial resources available to
them as students, Hızar said.

"I hope we can get this chance one day. Maybe our film gets an award
and they invite us to the country. Then our dream would come true,"
he said.

EU Commissioner for Enlargement and Neighborhood Policy to visit

EU Commissioner for Enlargement and Neighborhood Policy to visit Armenia

armradio.am
03.04.2010 13:30

The delegation headed by Åtefan Füle, EU Commissioner for Enlargement
and Neighborhood Policy, will arrive in Armenia on April 6.

Within the framework of the visit the delegation is expected to meet
Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan and
Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian, Press and Information Department
of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs reported.

CNN: Turkish Envoy To Return To Washington

TURKISH ENVOY TO RETURN TO WASHINGTON
By Ivan Watson and Yesim Comert

CNN International
April 2 2010

Istanbul, Turkey (CNN) — Turkey’s prime minister announced Friday
he will send his country’s ambassador back to Washington next week.

The announcement comes nearly a month after Ankara recalled its
diplomat to protest the passage of a non-binding resolution in the
House Foreign Relations Committee, which calls the 1915 massacre of
hundreds of thousands of ethnic Armenians in Ottoman Turkey "genocide."

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Ambassador Namik Tan would
return to Washington, ahead of his own trip to attend a nuclear
non-proliferation summit in the United States in mid-April.

During an appearance before Turkish television cameras on Friday,
Erdogan was asked whether the diplomatic crisis between the two NATO
allies was now over.

"Our foreign minister and the U.S. foreign minister talked earlier.

There are certain positive developments," Erdogan responded, referring
to last Sunday’s phone conversation between U.S. Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton and Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu.

"I wish that these positive developments continue in April."

Video: Genocide vote upsets Turkey RELATED TOPICS Turkey Genocide
Sweden U.S. Government Last month, the Turkish government also
recalled its ambassador from Sweden for several weeks after the
Swedish parliament passed its own law recognizing the Armenian
massacres as genocide.

One columnist in the Turkish press joked that at this rate, Turks
could form a new soccer team made up of ambassadors recalled from
foreign capitals.

Turkish officials have defended the decision.

"We are opposed to the legislation of history," said Burak Ozugergin,
the spokesman for Turkey’s foreign ministry, in a telephone interview
with CNN on Friday. "This should be done by historians, by qualified
people."

Turkey officially denies a genocide took place in the last days of
the crumbling Ottoman Empire. Ankara argues instead that Muslim Turks
and Christian Armenians massacred each other on the killing fields
of World War I.

But every year on April 24, Armenians around the world observe a
remembrance day in honor of the "genocide". Historians have extensively
documented the Ottoman military’s forced death march of hundreds of
thousands of ethnic Armenians into the Syrian desert in 1915. The
massacres decimated the Armenian population in what is modern-day
eastern Turkey.

For years, the government in Yerevan and influential Armenian diaspora
groups have mounted a campaign to persuade other countries to formally
label the events of 1915 "genocide."

The Turkish government will be listening closely on April 24, to
see whether President Barack Obama will use the word "genocide"
in an annual speech commemorating the 1915 massacres.

Last month, Prime Minister Erdogan triggered a firestorm of domestic
criticism from both pro- and anti-government commentators, however,
when he suggested during an interview with the BBC’s Turkish service
that his government might deport citizens of neighboring Armenia
illegally working in Turkey.

"Tomorrow, I may tell these 100,000 [Armenians] to go back to their
country, if it becomes necessary," Erdogan was reported to have said.

He has since accused the foreign media of misrepresenting his remarks.

/04/02/turkey.envoy.washington/

http://edition.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/europe

Will Washington Meeting Change Armenian-Turkish Rapprochement Proces

WILL WASHINGTON MEETING CHANGE ARMENIAN-TURKISH RAPPROCHEMENT PROCESS?

Tert.am
14:57 ~U 02.04.10

The likelihood that the Armenian-Turkish rapprochement will continue
has been reduced, said European Integration NGO Chair Karen Bekaryan
at a press conference today. At the same time, he said, the possibility
isn’t nil.

"In reality, the Washingon meeting in April can add quite interesting
ups and downs to or kickstart the process. We’ll live [and] we’ll see,
because it’s quite a multifunctional situation, and this is only the
Armenian-Turkish issue," he said.

According to Bekaryan, the possible Obama-Sargsyan-Erdogan meeting
will reveal what new possibilities exist in this process.

"Politics doesn’t like black and white colours. Rather, it’s more so
an arena of probabilities," said Bekaryan, noting that a change in
the situation is possible.

Turkish PM Says Going To U.S, Sending Back Envoy

TURKISH PM SAYS GOING TO U.S, SENDING BACK ENVOY

armradio.am
02.04.2010 16:45

Turkey said on Friday that it was returning its ambassador to
Washington, a month after he was recalled to protest a U.S.

congressional committee labeling as genocide the World War One
massacres of Armenians in Turkey.

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan also confirmed that he would attend
an international nuclear summit hosted by President Barack Obama in
Washington on April 12-13, the Reuters reports.

The U.S. House of Representatives committee had approved a non-binding
resolution on March 4 calling on President Obama to refer to the
killings of as many as 1.5 million Armenian Christians as genocide,
prompting Turkey to immediately withdraw its envoy.

Armenian Government Does Not Approve The Bill Submitted By ARF Dashn

ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT DOES NOT APPROVE THE BILL SUBMITTED BY ARF DASHNAKTSUTYUN FACTION

Arminfo
2010-04-02 15:48:00

ArmInfo. During today’s debates at the Armenian Standing Parliamentary
Commission for External Relations, the Armenian government did not
approve the bill on introduction of amendments and alterations in
the Armenian Law "On International Agreements" and introduction of
amendments in the Law "On Regulations of Armenian National Assembly".

The bill was submitted by the parliamentarians from ARF Dashnaktsutyun
faction.

Head of the Commission Armen Rustamyan said that the amendments to
the Law "On International Agreements" aim to expand the powers of the
Armenian National Assembly in the international arena. "We suggest
giving the relevant powers to the Armenian parliament to enable the
latter to introduce certain reservations in international agreements
before their ratification by parliament",- said Rustamyan. He
also said that these amendments do not contradict to the Armenian
Constitution. However, Deputy Foreign Minister of Armenia Shavarsh
Kocharyan pointed out that according to the Armenian Constitution, the
parliament has no right to introduce any reservations in international
agreements. As a result of the debates, a decision was taken to apply
to the Constitutional Court and find out whether these amendments
meet the Basic Law of the republic.

For his part, Vazgen Karakhanyan, Deputy Chairman of the Armenian
Standing Parliamentary Commission for External Relations, member of
the Republican Party of Armenia faction, said that this issue had been
discussed by the ruling coalition. "As this is a nationwide issue,
it requires nationwide debates",- he said.

Both Armenian government and the Standing Parliamentary Commission
for External Relations gave a negative conclusion for the bill on
introduction of amendments and alterations in the Armenian Law "On
International Agreements".

All Government Bodies And Agencies Must Shift To Cashless Transfer O

ALL GOVERNMENT BODIES AND AGENCIES MUST SHIFT TO CASHLESS TRANSFER OF FUNDS AND PAYMENTS FROM 2011: PREMIER

ARKA
Apr 1, 2010

YEREVAN, April 1, /ARKA/. Armenian Prime minister Tigran Sarkisian
said today all government bodies and agencies must shift to cashless
transfer of funds and payments beginning from 2011.

Speaking at a recurrent Cabinet session he said cash expenses of
different government agencies have slashed by 50% after shifting to
cashless settlement of payments

He said the government is a supporter of cashless transactions and
settlements and its staff will make no cash transaction this year.

‘There are, however, some serious problems in this area, particularly,
in cashless procurements the cost of goods is higher than when it
the cost is paid in cash, which means there is a shadow turnover,’
the prime minister said.

The premier said the government should display initiative and implement
phased steps in this direction to cut the shadow turnover.

US Hopes Turkey Will Return Ambassador

US HOPES TURKEY WILL RETURN AMBASSADOR

Agence France Presse
March 29 2010

The United States on Monday voiced hope that Turkey would return its
ambassador, distancing itself from moves in the US Congress to brand
the World War I massacres of Armenians as genocide.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu pressed his US counterpart
Hillary Clinton in a telephone call Sunday to stop the resolution from
advancing to a full vote at the House of Representatives, a ministry
spokesman said in Ankara.

Turkey withdrew its ambassador in early March after a House committee
narrowly approved the resolution calling the mass killings genocide.

"We understand the reasons why Turkey recalled its ambassador," State
Department spokesman Philip Crowley told reporters. "We hope that the
ambassador will be returned as quickly as Turkey feels comfortable."

After the vote by the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Clinton said
that "we do not believe the full Congress will or should act on
that resolution."

"The Turkish side has made its concerns about the House committee
vote known. We’ve also made clear our position on that resolution,"
Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg told reporters.

"So we hope that this is the basis to move forward because we have
a lot of business to do together," Steinberg said, pointing to
cooperation in the Balkans and other areas.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin perished in orchestrated
killings and deportations under the Ottoman Empire in 1915-1917.

Turkey counters that 300,000 to 500,000 Armenians and at least as
many Turks perished in what was a civil strife when Armenians rose up
against their Ottoman rulers and sided with Russian forces invading
the crumbling empire.

Israeli Citizens To Fly Directly To Armenia

ISRAELI CITIZENS TO FLY DIRECTLY TO ARMENIA

news.am
March 29 2010
Armenia

Yesterday "Armavia" air-company presented direct Yerevan-Tel
Aviv-Yerevan flight, operating starting March 28, that according
to company’s president Mikhail Baghdasarov will enable active
communication between the countries and facilitate traveling to
Israel. He expressed hope that the mutually advantageous initiative
will assist frequent visits to cultural-historic sights in both
Armenia and Israel.

Commercial Director Edgar Karapetyan informed that the flights will
be carried out twice a week – Thursdays and Sundays by Ð~P-320 and
Ð~P-319 airbuses. Round trip airfare is around â~B¬350 with 2-hour
time en route, that dramatically reduces the duration of previous
ones for Armenians taking Tbilisi flights.

SPIEGEL Interview With Turkey’s PM: ‘There Can Be No Talk Of Genocid

SPIEGEL INTERVIEW WITH TURKEY’S PRIME MINISTER ‘THERE CAN BE NO TALK OF GENOCIDE’

Der Spiegel
0,1518,686131,00.html
March 29 2010
Germany

In a SPIEGEL interview, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
56, discusses Ankara’s relationship with the European Union, the
debate over genocide against the Armenians and his role as a mediator
in the dispute over Iran’s nuclear policy.

SPIEGEL: Mr. Prime Minister, your country is currently giving a
confusing impression. It is more modern and open than it was before you
came into office, and yet it is also more pious and Islamic. Where are
you taking Turkey: toward the West, toward Europe or toward the East?

Erdogan: Turkey has changed considerably and has been modernized
in the last seven-and-a-half years. Unlike previous governments,
we take the founder of the republic, (Mustafa Kemal) Ataturk, at his
word and are trying to bring the country to the level of contemporary
civilization. In doing so, we look in all directions. We don’t turn
our face from the East when we look to the West. We see this as a
process of normalization.

SPIEGEL: The first thing a visitor sees after passport control at the
airport in Istanbul is an enormous display of the duty free shop’s
alcohol department and a poster advertising an exhibit of the revealing
work of the late Picasso. In the Mediterranean city of Alanya, on the
other hand, there are hotels with separate beaches for men and women,
which would have been unthinkable a few years ago.

Erdogan: What you saw upon arrival at the airport is a nice expression
of freedom. What you say about Alanya is something I hear for the first
time. But even if it’s true, it too is a manifestation of freedom. The
owner of a hotel like that, and his guests, are exercising a right
that we have to respect.

SPIEGEL: This week, you will host German Chancellor Angela Merkel,
who doesn’t want Turkey to join the European Union anytime soon. What
will you say to her?

Erdogan: Turkey submitted its application for associate membership in
the European Economic Community in 1959. That was 51 years ago. No
other country was subjected to such a procedure, and yet we have
remained patient. Nowadays, however, we are no longer a country
that is merely seeking membership in the European Union. Instead,
we are already negotiating for full membership. If proposals are
submitted to us today that diverge from the agreed framework of these
negotiations …

SPIEGEL: You are referring to the "privileged partnership," which
Chancellor Merkel prefers over full membership for Turkey.

Erdogan: … then this is just as strange as someone changing the
penalty rule in the middle of a football match.

SPIEGEL: Your government is trying to shape Turkey into a new regional
power. Why do you need Europe at all anymore?

Erdogan: It isn’t about what we need, but about a mutual need. Turkey
is not a burden for Europe. On the contrary, it takes a burden away
from the EU. Together with Spain, we run the United Nations Alliance
of Civilizations initiative against extremism, which benefits Europe.

We have been a member of the customs union since 1996, and we satisfy
the political criteria established in Copenhagen. In fact, we are
even closer to fulfilling the economic Maastricht criteria than some
EU member states. And then there is the fact that we are a founding
member of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD) and have been a member of NATO since 1952. This makes us a
bridge between the West and 1.4 billion Muslims.

SPIEGEL: Turkey has become very self-confident, and you are considered
to be one of the most influential leaders the country has had since
Ataturk. Do you see yourself in the role of a "sultan," as some
supporters, but also critics, describe you?

Erdogan: I am the chairman of a major party that was founded by the
people. Therefore, I would never compare myself with Ataturk, the man
who founded the republic. I have no intention of becoming a padishah,
a ultan. It’s enough for me when people say good things about me.

Part 2: ‘We Will Be Prepared to Accept Our History’

SPIEGEL: Why doesn’t modern Turkey acknowledge the Ottoman Empire’s
genocide against the Armenians? The Foreign Affairs Committee of
the United States House of Representatives has approved an Armenian
Genocide resolution …

Erdogan: When a journalist uses the word genocide, he should take
a careful look at the issue first. There can be no talk of genocide
against the Armenians. Genocide is a legal term. In 2005, I wrote a
letter to then-Armenian President Robert Kocharian, in which I told
him that this is not a matter for politicians like us, but one that
needs to be studied by historians. There are currently millions of
documents on the subject in Turkish archives, of which more than 1
million have been examined since I wrote to Kocharian. If there are
archives in your country, I wrote to him, then make them accessible.

And if historians cannot clarify the subject sufficiently, then
let lawyers, political scientists and archaeologists take part in
the effort.

SPIEGEL: Armenians say that commissions of historians are just the
best way to put off such disputes indefinitely. And we disagree with
the notion that politicians should not talk about genocide. One person
who has used this word is the current American president.

Erdogan: If he used the word, then he did so in error. A word doesn’t
become more correct because a president uses it. And besides, the
United States is not a party to this matter. America, like other
countries, is merely a bystander here. We and the Armenians are the
only participants. This is our history. The Turkish Republic had
not yet been founded in 1915. It was the era of the Ottoman Empire,
which was allied with Germany at the time.

SPIEGEL: Isn’t the republic the legal successor of the Ottoman Empire?

Erdogan: Turkey was undoubtedly founded on what was left of the
Ottoman Empire. No nation can deny its ancestry. Anyone who denies
his ancestry is committing a sin. If something serious comes to light
after the historical examination of the past, we will be prepared to
accept our history. But it’s important that the Armenians are also
willing to accept their history.

SPIEGEL: What history should the Armenians accept in this regard?

Erdogan: This was not a mass murder committed by one side against
the other, but a battle, one that claimed the lives of Turks and
Armenians, who were loyal citizens of the Ottoman Empire. However,
some of them were later controlled by foreign powers and rose up in
an insurrection. This has to be studied very carefully.

SPIEGEL: Why have you further inflamed an already difficult debate
by mentioning the possibility of deporting all of Armenians working
illegally in Turkey?

Erdogan: It saddens me that you see it this way. I talked about what
we could do. For years, we have tolerated Armenians without residence
permits. All I said was that this doesn’t always have to be the case.

The problem of illegal workers is discussed openly all over the
world, but when someone in Turkey makes such a statement, people feel
troubled. Why?

SPIEGEL: Why do you want to punish Armenians in Turkey for genocide
resolutions adopted abroad — like the one in the United States and,
most recently, in Sweden?

Erdogan: Who says that we hold Armenians responsible for this? I
never said that. We began a process of rapprochement between Turkey
and Armenia a year ago. We want to normalize our relations. And then
the Foreign Affairs Committee in the US Congress, at the behest of
the Armenian diaspora, suddenly adopts a resolution that describes
the events of 1915 as genocide. This is not helpful. We turn to the
Armenian diaspora and those countries that support the diaspora:
There are Armenians in Turkey who are Turkish citizens, and there
are those who live in our country illegally. So far, we have not
considered the question of deportation, but if the diaspora continues
to exert pressure, we could imagine ourselves capable of doing that.

SPIEGEL: You refuse to accept the term genocide, and yet you yourself
use it frequently. For example, you accuse Israel of genocide in the
Gaza Strip. On the other hand, you defend Sudanese President Omar
al-Bashir by saying that a Muslim cannot commit genocide. Are Muslims
somehow better people than Jews or Christians?

Erdogan: You take my words completely out of context. I’m not walking
into that trap. I said that, to a certain extent, one could describe
the events in Gaza as genocide: 1,400 people died there, many of them
killed by phosphorus ammunition, more than 5,000 people were wounded
and 5,000 families became homeless.

SPIEGEL: And what about Sudan?

Erdogan: In that case, I was talking about a principle. I am a Muslim.

But I have never compared my religion with other religions. I said that
a Muslim could not commit genocide the way the United Nations defines
it. Islam is a religion of peace. Muslims believe that someone who
kills an innocent person behaves as if he were killing all of humanity.

SPIEGEL: Turkey is currently a non-permanent member of the UN Security
Council. It is also under consideration to be the country through
which an exchange of uranium enriched in Iran could take place. Will
you support sanctions against Tehran? The International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA), has doubts about the peaceful nature of the nuclear
program.

Erdogan: That’s wrong. The IAEA never made that conclusion.

SPIEGEL: In its latest report, it clearly stated that Tehran has not
cooperated sufficiently to rule out non-peaceful use.

Erdogan: I take a different view. Iran offered to transport its
enriched uranium to another country, and the Iranians wanted nuclear
fuel in return. The question, now, is where this exchange is to take
place. Former IAEA Director Mohammed ElBaradei proposed Turkey. The
Americans were opposed to it at first, but then they agreed. Now we
are waiting for an answer from Iran. Iran seemed to be considering
this possibility, but then the connection was cut off.

SPIEGEL: If Iran refuses, will you support sanctions?

Erdogan: First we have to try to find a diplomatic solution for the
problem. Sanctions have been imposed against Iran several times,
but what’s the result? Aren’t any American or German goods reaching
Iran now? They are, indirectly. Of course there is Mercedes in
Iran. And Peugeot, too. I like to speak openly. I hate hiding things
in politics. What we need is diplomacy, diplomacy, diplomacy. Anything
else will do nothing but threaten global peace. And don’t those who
are exerting pressure have nuclear bombs of their own? Turkey isn’t
a nuclear power, but there is one country in this region that does
have nuclear weapons.

SPIEGEL: You mean Israel.

Erdogan: Iran doesn’t have any nuclear weapons now, at any rate. We
say very clearly: We don’t want any nuclear weapons in our region.

SPIEGEL: Have you made this just as clear to Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad?

Erdogan: Of course. I speak as openly with him as I do with you. We
don’t want any nuclear weapons in this region.

SPIEGEL: Mr. Prime Minister, thank you for this interview.

Interview conducted by Daniel Steinvorth and Bernhard Zand.

http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/