ISTANBUL: Artist Karolin Fisekci Speaks At Fatih Altayli’S Program

ARTIST KAROLIN FISEKCI SPEAKS AT FATIH ALTAYLI’S PROGRAM

Hurriyet
Jan 26 2012
Turkey

Turkish Nobel Laureate Orhan Pamuk has denied having a relationship
with Turkish-Armenian artist Karolin Fiþekci via an official notice
issued by his lawyer Jan. 23 in which he requested she stop making
statements about him to the press.

Despite the warning, Fiþekci discussed the topic of her supposed
relationship with Pamuk as a guest of Fatih Altaylý’s program “Teke
Tek” on Haberturk TV on Jan. 23.

“I did not want to hide it,” Fiþekci said. “It was a secret during
our relationship, and I had to respect Pamuk’s private life. But
when it was revealed, people said many things, and I spoke in order
to clarify the situation.”

When asked if she was looking to gain fame through Pamuk, Fiþekci said,
“How many painters are known in Turkey? Everyone knows Bedri Baykam
on the street. Painters do not appear in the media. I showed Pamuk’s
human side. Yes, he was known through his books, but I wanted people
to know him through me, too.

Karolin Fiþekci “We met during the opening of an exhibition on April
16, 2009, in Istanbul. I had an article I wanted to send to him. He
gave me his email address, and after that we came together […] We
were often together over the past 2.5 years,” she said.

Offended by the notice

Fiþekci said she was offended by the statement made by Pamuk. “We have
lots of emails between us, but I do not want to reveal them. People
have said I am a liar, a schizoid. I was shocked when I received the
official notice. I laughed, too. A person who sees our messages can
also see the relationship between us. He did not personally tell me
to not speak; instead I got the notice. For me, a man should speak
by looking a woman in the eye.”

Fiþekci said her friends from the art world supported her and had
recommended a lawyer to her. “This is a kind of violence. Violence
does not only mean beating someone. This notice is like a threat. I
do not know about the legal process. The reaction from the media has
also been weird. They almost swore at me.”

She said she felt bad about the situation but did not have a desire
for revenge.

“We have not seen each other for about two months. We have not
spoken following the release of these statements. He says there is
no relationship, but I say there is. If he had warned me to not speak
about it, I would not have spoken.”

Size Matters II

Size Matters II

asbarez
Friday, January 27th, 2012

BY GAREN YEGPARIAN

Turkey’s chest thumping, arrogant, threats against France, over the
anti-denial legislation that passed both houses of the French
legislature, betray Turkey’s inherent weakness, stemming from its
refusal to come to terms with and atone for its past misdeeds, and the
Armenian Genocide isn’t its only transgression against humanity.

Much like an adolescent whose body is big but whose brain still
doesn’t know what to do with it, Turkey is thrashing about, lumbering
bewildered, and trying to find its way and place in the international
community. An just like its youthful human analog, it hasn’t yet
learned that being straightforward will help it progress.

Does anyone recall Turkey being quite this loud in its knee jerk,
denial-policy-based reaction before? Was it this intense a decade ago
with France’s recognition of the Genocide? How about the UN’s
acceptance of its special rapporteur’s findings about the Armenian
Genocide? Or the U.S. House of Representatives’ passage of Armenian
Genocide resolutions? Or the U.S. arms embargoing arms to Turkey over
its invasion and occupation of Cyprus? Or the decades long farce of
the EU keeping Turkey as `always a bridesmaid never a bride’?

The reason Turkey is so voluble and strident in its reaction is its
self-perception as being in a much stronger position than it used to
be. And there’s some truth to this. Its economy has been growing
rapidly (though some argue unsustainably). Its population exceeds
that of every European country except Russia and Germany (though a
quarter of that is actually Kurdish). It has had relatively better
governance for a decade now. It feels young, strong, and surging. It
has all the attributes that coupled with immaturity, overweening
pride, and insecurity lead to bullying.

So it’s clear that bigger can mean badder.

That’s why it is an insoluble mystery to me why that same lesson is
not applied by many in society to another institution that is a
manifest example of `bigger-badder’. I refer to those who reflexively
defend large corporate interests.

Corporations are set up as vehicles for conducting business to make
money. That is their primary purpose (with the exception of those
organizations that incorporate as a legal necessity, even though their
purposes are charitable or civic). When an organization gets big, it
unavoidably becomes less personal, and the money making impetus
becomes the sole organizing theme and unifying factor. So far this is
not a problem.

But, as with any human endeavor, there are costs and tradeoffs. The
efficiencies that accrue to big companies enable them to get ever
bigger, and with their financial prowess, deform the functions of
their surrounding societies, bending them to better suit their
purposes. This happens at a cost to the individual citizens of these
societies, usually impinging on their freedoms and voice in
governance.

The only way to counterbalance this deformation is through control,
limitation, of corporate activity. A single citizen is clearly not up
to such an onerous task. That’s where the citizenry’s representative,
the government, comes in. It is the only agent capable of
counterbalancing corporate power.

However, big government can be just as effective a choker of
individual liberty as any money-addled corporation. So citizens must
be aware of and involved in their government, otherwise, `clookhuh
g’arneh, g’erta’ (it will run amok). As paraphrased from a 1790
speech by John Philpot Curran in his ` Speech Upon the Right of
Election’, `eternal vigilance is the price of liberty’.

Corporations of course, act to subvert the only power able to check
theirs, so citizens must be doubly vigilant. A current example of
this awareness/engagement requirement is the effort now underway to
restore corporations to what they rightfully are, legal constructs
that exist based on the government’s permission. Two years ago, in
its `Citizens United’ decision, the U.S. Supreme Court effectively
granted `personhood’ to corporations, a huge threat to every human
citizen. Now, many are out to remedy this abomination.

Big Turkey is bad. Big Corporations are bad. `Citizens United’ is
bad. Please explore this issue and get involved in taking back your
government and powers as a citizen.

Norway apologises for deporting Jews during Holocaust

Norway apologises for deporting Jews during Holocaust

14:52, 28 January, 2012

YEREVAN, JANUARY 27, ARMENPRESS: The Norwegian prime minister has
apologised for the role his country played in deporting its own Jews
as Europe marks Holocaust Remembrance Day, Armenpress reports citing
BBC.

“Norwegians carried out the arrests, Norwegians drove the trucks and
it happened in Norway,” Jens Stoltenberg said in a speech.

It is believed to be the first time a Norwegian leader has been so
explicit about collusion under Nazi occupation.

More than a third of Norway’s 2,100 Jews were deported to death camps.

Others fled to neighbouring Sweden, which remained neutral during World War II.

Norway acknowledged its role in the Holocaust in 1998 and paid some
$60m (£38m) to Norwegian Jews and Jewish organisations in compensation
for property seized.

However, the payout fell short of a full apology.

7 Armenian chess players to participate in Moscow Open

7 Armenian chess players to participate in Moscow Open

January 28, 2012 – 16:48 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – On January 28, Moscow Open 2012 chess festival kicks
off, with 7 Armenian chess players participating. Avetik Grigoryan
will face off against Ray Robson (U.S.) in the second round of RSSU
International Chess Cup.

Men’s chess line-up for Russian Cup has been announced as follows:
David Shahinyan, Arthur Karagezyan, Tigran Harutyunyan and Manuel
Petrosyan.

Women’s line-up is as follows: Lilit Galojan, Evgeniya Doluhanova and
Karina Ambartsumova.

Residents in Armenia’s Aragatsotn Region in snow blockade

Residents in Armenia’s Aragatsotn Region in snow blockade

news.am
January 28, 2012 | 18:23

YEREVAN. – Nigavan village residents in Armenia’s Aragatsotn Region
have appeared in blockade as a result of snow, one of the farmers
Gurgen Muradyan alarmed Armenian News-NEWS.am, adding all the roads
are closed and no cleaning works are conducting.

Armenian News-NEWS.am turned to Armenian Road Directorate on this
regard, which assured to report it to their branch.

Armenians in Georgia need to become MPs in Georgian parliament

Armenians in Georgia need to become MPs in Georgian parliament – expert

news.am
January 28, 2012 | 04:38

TBILISI. – Armenian-Georgian relations have more modern issues than
decisions over the number of the Armenian schools and the issue of
churches, Georgian expert Soso Tsintsadze told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

`Taking into consideration the regional and geopolitical developments,
there is no need to get stuck in those issues,’ he said.

As for the situation of the Armenians in Georgia and the problems of
the Armenian community, the expert said that they really exist.
However, they carry social character. One of the main problems of the
Armenians in the Armenian-populated Javakhk region is the lack of
knowledge of Georgian language, which results in limited opportunities
in finding jobs in private companies and governmental institutions.
Meantime, the expert believes that a dialogue and constructive
approach is necessary to solve all those issues.

Tsinstadze also touched upon the dispute between Armenian and Georgian
churches adding it should be solved by the churches and not by secular
authorities or social circles.

He stressed particularly that the atmosphere presented by the Armenian
media on the condition of the Armenian community in Georgia does not
correspond to reality.

`If there is a problem, we should solve it together, friendly and
united, and everything will be all right,’ he concluded.

Expert says settlement program response to Turkish deportation polic

Expert says settlement program response to Turkish deportation policy

January 28, 2012 – 13:22 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Political analyst Levon Shirinyan deems possible for
Turkey to boost cooperation with Russia following French Senate’s
adoption of the bill criminalizing the Armenian Genocide denial.

Dwelling on Turkish authorities’ decision regarding deportation of
illegal migrants including the Armenians, Shirinyan stressed the need
for Armenia to `shape national settlement policy.’

Turkish authorities plan to amend Migration Act that stipulates
deportation of illegal immigrants. Many believe the move to be a
response to French Senate’s passage of the Genocide bill.

On January 23, the French Senate passed the bill criminalizing the
Armenian Genocide denial with 127 votes for and 86 against. To be
signed into law within 14 days, the bill will impose a 45,000 euro
fine and a year in prison for anyone in France who denies this crime
against humanity committed by the Ottoman Empire.

Defense Minister: No justification for soldiers’ deaths

Defense Minister: No justification for soldiers’ deaths

January 28, 2012 – 16:14 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Armenian armed forces general staff keeps grappling
with the issue of tragic incidents in the army, according to Armenian
Defense Minister.

`Soldiers’ death cases can neither be justified nor mitigated,’ Seyran
Ohanyan said during a general staff sitting dedicated to the 20th
anniversary of the 20th anniversary of the Armenian army formation.

Dwelling on the outcomes of 2011, Armenian Military Prosecutor Gevorg
Kostanyan, in turn, noted that in 2011 the number of soldiers’ deaths
decreased to 36 against 54 in 2010.

France’s proposed genocide law fuels Turkey’s anger

France’s proposed genocide law fuels Turkey’s anger

Relations between France and Turkey has been strained further since the
French Parliament approved legislation that would make it illegal to deny
the Armenian genocide.

By J. Michael Kennedy, Los Angeles Times

January 27, 2012, 4:46 p.m.

Reporting from Istanbul, Turkey –
The object of the game is to see how hard a hand on the computer screen can
slap a cartoon image of French President Nicolas Sarkozy. It made its debut
only hours after the French Senate passed legislation Monday that would
criminalize denial of the Armenian genocide.

That bill has caused a furor in Turkey, further damaging a relationship
chilled by Sarkozy’s staunch opposition to Turkey’s long-standing bid for
membership in the European Union. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
declared it racist and a “massacre of free thought.”

Turkish officials say they do not expect the issue to affect their
relationship with other European countries. But their willingness to
challenge France in a high-profile spat underscores Turkey’s effort to
establish itself as a regional leader. Some see the country as a model,
although still far from perfect, of how Middle Eastern countries might be
able to combine a moderate form of Islam with democracy and a vibrant
economy.

The latest dispute with France began late last year when a deputy in
Sarkozy’s ruling Union for a Popular Movement party introduced legislation
calling for a one-year prison sentence and a $59,000 fine for anyone who
espoused a belief that there was no genocide of Armenians under Ottoman
rule during and immediately after World War I.

The number of dead is still in dispute, ranging from 300,000 to 1.5
million. Turkey acknowledges that atrocities were committed, but denies
that there was a systematic attempt to destroy the Armenian people.

After the bill was passed by the lower house of the French Parliament in
December, Erdogan recalled Turkey’s ambassador from Paris, banned the
landing and docking of French military aircraft and warships in Turkey and
suspended political and economic talks.

Turkish critics accused Sarkozy of using the bill to gain the votes of an
estimated 500,000 French residents of Armenian descent at a time when he
appears to be in trouble in his campaign for reelection in April.

“That’s what it looks like to Turkey,” said Hugh Pope, the Istanbul-based
project director with the International Crisis Group think tank.

Sarkozy has 15 days from the bill’s Senate approval to sign it into law.
Turkish officials have launched a diplomatic push for the legislation to
instead be referred to a court to rule on whether it is constitutional.

Turkey has its own stiff rules that touch on the dispute. Provisions of the
Turkish penal code make it a crime to “insult Turkishness,” and asserting
that an Armenian genocide occurred is considered a violation.

But Pope said the atmosphere had loosened in recent years. “I remember when
you couldn’t even mention the subject,” he said.

Cengiz Aktar, a leading Turkish scholar on the issue, said discussion of it
was widely purged from accounts of the founding of modern Turkey after the
collapse of the Ottoman Empire, but that it could no longer be contained.

“The reality is that there is no more Armenian presence in Anatolia, where
they used to live for the past 3,000 years,” he said.

Fatma Muge Gocek, a Turkish-born sociologist who teaches at the University
of Michigan, said it was only a matter of time before the Turkish
government came to grips with its past, good and bad.

“It’s in the last 20 years that Turks have been trying to figure out what
happened with their past,” she said. “Acknowledgment would mean rewriting a
great deal of their history.”

Perhaps one indicator of progress occurred this month when about 20,000
people gathered in Istanbul to remember Hrant Dink, an ethnic Armenian
newspaper editor killed five years ago by an ultranationalist. Dink angered
nationalists by referring to the killings of Armenians as genocide.

Aktar said the large turnout was a reflection of changing times.

“Of course it’s not a 100% free environment, but it’s incomparably more
free that it was 10 years ago,” he said.

Kennedy is a special correspondent.

Comments (1)

Add / View comments | Discussion FAQ
David B.1 at 7:14 PM January 27, 2012

The reporter, Mr. Kennedy, has disgracefully misrepresented the French law
to LA Times readers. The French law makes no mention of Armenians at
all. It is a very, very general law covering “war crimes,” “crimes against
humanity,” and “genocide.” The wording of the law was recommended by the
European Union for all EU member states, dear “reporter” Kennedy.

Below is part of the law’s text, in French. It says that the law covers any
crime recognized by Articles 6, 7, and 8 of the statute of the ICC
(International Criminal Court), Article 6 of the [Nuremburg] Tribunal
Charter of 1945, and any crime recognized by France. The latter would
include the Holocaust, Armenian genocide, and any future mass crime
recognized by France. Read it, Mr. Kennedy:

… tels que définis aux articles 6, 7 et 8 du Statut de la Cour pénale
internationale, à l’article 6 de la charte du Tribunal militaire
international annexée à l’accord de Londres du 8 août 1945, ou reconnus par
la France.

There is no reference to Armenians, though it would cover the Armenian
genocide and lots of other crimes.

Again, this is the wording the EU is suggesting to all EU states, my dear
“reporter” Kennedy. The LA Times and its correspondent have deliberately,
once again, misrepresented facts in order to make readers think that
Armenians are getting something special.