ANKARA:Davutoglu’s Yerevan Visit

DAVUTOGLU’S YEREVAN VISIT

Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
Dec 10 2013

SEMİH İDİZ

Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu’s visit to Yerevan on Thursday for
a meeting of the Organization for Black Sea Economic Cooperation has
stirred quite a debate in Armenia, judging by Vercihan Ziflioglu’s
article in Monday’s Hurriyet Daily News.

Many in that country say this visit is part of Turkey’s “2015
maneuvers.”

The reference is to the anniversary of the 1915 events, which
Armenians and many in the West and elsewhere consider to be the year
when Armenians suffered genocide at the hands of Ottoman Turks. Turks
deny this saying they suffered as much during World War One, the
difference being that they ultimately came out victorious in Anatolia.

The belief among hardline Armenians is that 2015 is going to be the
watershed year when Turkey is finally put in the dock and made to
atone for systematically denying the genocide. Those who believe this
say that anything Turkey does today that may appear positive vis-a-vis
Turkish-Armenian ties is merely a ploy to ensure that Armenian plans
for 2015 fail.

Born in the 1950s my generation has lived with the “Armenian problem”
since an old Armenian gunned down the Turkish consul and his young
deputy in Los Angeles in 1973. We knew nothing about what happened
in 1915 before that. The killing of the Turkish diplomats in 1973,
however, changed all that.

It also marked the start of a campaign of terrorism by Armenians that
left a large number of Turkish diplomats or members of their families
dead. Seeing Armenians hammering their point home with bullets also
killed off any chance of empathy among Turks for Armenian suffering
in the past, making “the blood feud of the century,” as one Turkish
historian has called it, even more intractable.

Many Turks continue to see that campaign of terror as confirmation
that whatever Armenians may have suffered in the past, this did not
transpire in a vacuum. Some even see divine retribution in the fact
that Turks ultimately came out victorious in Anatolia against all odds,
the country having ended World War One on its knees.

Nearly a century later Turks and Armenians remain locked in a zero-sum
game. For one side to win the other must lose. In the meantime, all
international efforts to force Turkey into the corner on this score
have also failed, notwithstanding the diplomatic headaches these have
caused for Ankara.

Turkey withstood these pressures in the 1980s and 1990s mainly
due to its strategic placing during the Cold War, which it used as
counter-pressure against countries that were coming down on it over
the Armenian issue. The Cold War is over but Turkey’s importance for
the West has not diminished.

Landlocked and resource-poor Armenia, on the other hand, has generated
little strategic and economic value since gaining independence from
the Soviet Union. Armenia’s war with oil-rich Azerbaijan, whose
regional clout continues to grow, has not helped. This problem is
preventing the activation of the Zurich Protocols signed between
Ankara and Yerevan in 2009, although this is not the only reason why
these protocols remain dead letters.

Armenians are a proud people, no less so than the Turks, and will
refuse to bow to pressures that leave them looking as if they have
caved into Turkey. There has to be a way to break this cycle if these
two nations are to be reconciled, if indeed they want to be.

One hopes (against hope unfortunately) that Davutoglu’s visit will
produce some positive results on the bilateral level. Judging by what
some in that country are saying, however, and the continuing cultural
animosity among Turks towards Armenians, which has increased due to
the Karabakh issue, it is hard to be optimistic.

It seems 2015 will have to pass before anything new can even be
considered between these two estranged nations, even if daily contacts
between ordinary Turks and Armenians are increasing, and a growing
number of Turks are coming around to realizing that genocidal events
did occur in 1915.

December/10/2013

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/davutoglus-yerevan-visit.aspx?pageID=449&nID=59290&NewsCatID=416

Will Karabakh "Join" Russia’s Customs Union?

WILL KARABAKH “JOIN” RUSSIA’S CUSTOMS UNION?

EurasiaNet.org
dec 10 2013

December 10, 2013 – 7:28am, by Giorgi Lomsadze

Armenia has made its choice between the two EUs — the European Union
and the Eurasian Union– but will it bring its de-facto addendum,
the breakaway territory of Nagorno Karabakh along with it into the
Russia-plus trade space? Some analysts believe that Karabakh will
indirectly end up enjoying the benefits of the Kremlin’s economic
promised land.

Bent on taking the territory back, Azerbaijan poses a stumbling block
for the predominantly ethnic Armenian territory to reach out to the
outside world; meaning that Armenia is essentially the only friend
and trade partner Karabakh has.

In turn, since Russia is the main economic partner for semi-boycotted
Armenia, Karabakh by default is expected to gain access to the economic
zone coalesced around Moscow, some Armenians believe.

“Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh form one economic space,” Alexander
Iskanderian, director of the Yerevan-based Caucasus Institute, told
Russia’s Gazeta.ru. “Armenian money works in Stepanakert, the banking
system and laws are closely integrated.”

Officially, of course, it will not be a union of Russia, Belarus
Kazakhstan, Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh. Not even Armenia has
recognized Karabakh as an independent state.

Nor, with all members of the union, Russia included, wary of angering
Azerbaijan, the formation of the Eurasian Union is not going to change
the diplomatic status quo for Karabakh.

But, as often happens in the Caucasus, it’s what happens apart from
what’s written that counts. Some observers expect that Karabakh’s
produce, be it mulberry brandy or construction materials, could be
sold customs-free within the union as products of Armenia.

“Nobody is going to put customs checkpoints between Karabakh and
Armenia,” said Viktor Yadukha, a Russian commentator. “Karabakh
will de-facto join the customs union,” he told Azerbaijan’s Vesti.az
news site.

http://www.eurasianet.org/node/67852

LETTERS: Urge Mass. Gov. Patrick To Drop Judicial Nominee

LETTERS: URGE MASS. GOV. PATRICK TO DROP JUDICIAL NOMINEE

Tuesday, December 10th, 2013 | Posted by Contributor

To the Editor:

Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick has blundered in nominating Joseph
S. Berman to be a Superior Court judge. Mr. Berman is a long-time
member of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and has been a National
Commissioner of that organization since 2006.

The ADL has, of course, worked directly with Turkey to defeat
Congressional resolutions on the Armenian genocide and still refuses to
unambiguously acknowledge that genocide. The ADL qualifies, therefore,
as an anti-human rights organization.

Before and during the height of Armenian Americans’ battle against
the genocide denials of the ADL in 2007, National Commissioner Berman
apparently never issued a public statement disagreeing with national
ADL policies towards Armenians.

Moreover, there’s no evidence that he modified the national ADL’s
policies, which remain unchanged.

As a National Commissioner, Mr. Berman must bear responsibility for the
ADL’s anti-Armenian stance, even if he claims otherwise. It’s unclear
if he understands the human rights issues that judges must deal with.

However, powerful forces, including Boston media, are supporting Mr.

Berman and misleading the public about Armenian issues.

Fortunately, the Governor’s Council – eight elected officials who
must confirm judicial nominations – is leaning against Mr. Berman’s
nomination. Among its reasons is his ADL record.

Armenian Americans should write to Governor Deval Patrick and ask
him to withdraw Mr. Berman’s nomination.

They should also ask the Governor’s Councilors to vote against
Mr. Berman.

In 2007-2008, Armenian Americans mobilized against the ADL. As a
result, over a dozen Massachusetts cities, as well as the Massachusetts
Municipal Association, severed ties with the ADL’s so-called No Place
for Hate program. This made international headlines.

With the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide approaching,
and the ADL still lobbying against our genocide resolution, Armenian
Americans must now mobilize against Mr. Berman’s nomination.

David Boyajian Belmont, Mass.

http://asbarez.com/117247/letters-urge-mass-gov-patrick-to-drop-judicial-nominee/

Yerevan Slams Davutoglu

YEREVAN SLAMS DAVUTOGLU

Monday, December 9th, 2013

Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian and his Turkish counterpart
Ahmet Davutoglu shake hands after signing the dangerous Protocols in
Zurich in 2009

Armenia’s Deputy Foreign Minister says Davutoglu should visit
Dzidzernagapert instead of making divisive statements.

YEREVAN-The Armenian government slammed Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet
Davutoglu for undermining the peace process in the South Caucasus by
continuing to precondition the resolution of the Karabakh conflict
with normalizing of Turkey-Armenia relations.

Armenia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Savarsh Kocharyan responded to
Davutoglu, who announced last week that he would visit Yerevan for the
December 12 meeting of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation Organization
and hinted, over the weekend, that he might broach Turkey-Armenia
relations while in Yerevan.

“Instead of making provocative statements, the Turkish foreign minister
would do right by taking the chance to visit the Armenian Genocide
Memorial to pay tribute to the memory of the [Armenian Genocide]
victims,” Kocharyan told Armenpress Saturday.

“Turkey can contribute to the normalization of relations with
Armenia by ratifying and implementing, without any preconditions,
the Armenian-Turkish Protocols,” added Kocharyan

“If Turkey wishes to further accelerate the establishment of civilized
relations between the countries of the region, it must recognize the
Armenian Genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire, and open the
Armenian-Turkish border which it closed,” added Kocharyan stated.

Kocharyan’s comments came in response to Turkish press reports
indicating that while in Armenia, Davutoglu would propose the opening
of the Armenian-Turkish border if Armenia “cede(s) from at least
two of the seven regions Armenia has been occupying since 1993,”
reported the Hurriyet Daily News.

While there has been no official indication about a meeting between
Dovutoglu and Armenia’s Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian, the
Turkish foreign ministry told Hurriyet that such a meeting is
“highly possible.”

Turkey has refused to ratify the dangerous Turkey-Armenia protocols,
which were signed in 2009, saying that Turkey will sign the accord
only after the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, in favor
of Azerbaijan.

Davutoglu recently re-visited the Turkey-Armenia normalizations
process, when in October he visited Switzerland and brought up the
matter with Swiss leaders.

“We are now looking to develop it and advance with creative ideas and
new ways of thinking. We will increase our works in the coming period.

When relations between Turkey and Armenia are normalized, most of
the issues between Azerbaijan and Armenia will also be within the
framework of a solution,” Davutoglu said during his visit to Bern
in October, when he also sought Switzerland’s support for steps in
developing ties with Armenia.

Protest awaits Davutoglu

Protests Awaits Davutoglu The Armenian Revolutionary Federation
Nigol Aghabalian Student Organization announced that it would protest
Davutoglu’s visit to Armenia Thursday.

The organization’s chairman Gerasim Vardanyan said the protesters
will demand recognition of the Armenian Genocide and reparations to
its victims.

“One thing is clear,” said Vardanyan, “We will remind Turkey, once
again, that owes a debt to Armenia and that there are unresolved
issues.”

ANCA Issues Statement on Davutoglu Visit Armenian National Committee
of America Executive Director Aram Hamparian issued the following
statement Friday on Davutolglu’s visit.

Turkish Foreign Minister Davutoglu’s upcoming visit to Armenia for
a December 12th regional conference shines a spotlight on Ankara’s
continued use of its Protocols to escape liability for mass murder,
vast theft, and the wholesale dispossession of a nation of its
ancestral homeland.

The Armenian nation and all peoples should use this visit by a
leading official of a perpetrator state to the land of its surviving
victims to strengthen our call for a truthful, just, and comprehensive
international resolution of the Armenian Genocide. In coming to terms
with its responsibilities, Turkey must not only end its denials and
stop its obstruction of justice, but also cease its century-long policy
of anti-Armenian aggression, strangulation, and coercion rooted in
the legacy of this still unpunished crime.

The United States and our partners in the international community,
rather than abetting Ankara by arm-twisting Yerevan into a politically
untenable and morally unacceptable policy of “normalization without
justice,” should be pressing Turkey to forfeit its genocidal gains,
to fully return all it has stolen, and to fairly compensate the
Armenian nation for its vast and ongoing losses.

The Armenian Genocide-an act of premeditated mass murder and national
dispossession-is not a bilateral “conflict” to be reconciled, but
rather an ongoing international crime that all nations, not Armenia
alone, have a moral and legal responsibility to punish.

http://asbarez.com/117222/yerevan-slams-davutoglu/

L’Arménie pourrait afficher une croissance du PIB de 6,5 à 7% après

ARMENIE
L’Arménie pourrait afficher une croissance du PIB de 6,5 à 7% après
l’intégration dans l’Union douanière

La croissance du PIB de l’Arménie pourrait atteindre 6,5 à 7%, contre
5% prévus, dans le processus d’intégration par étape du pays dans
l’Union douanière selon Ashot Tavadyan professeur d’économique à
l’Université.

Dans le budget 2014, la croissance du PIB réel est de 5,2%.

Si ces taux sont maintenus alors une augmentation de 200 millions de
dollars est prévue en 2015, en gardant à l’esprit que l’intégration
eurasienne influence les taux de croissance du capital a précisé Ashot
Tavadyan.

L’expert a également déclaré que le taux de croissance du PIB
deviendra stable si le pays construit une nouvelle centrale nucléaire
avec le soutien de l’Union douanière, si un chemin de fer relie
l’Arménie avec l’Iran et si le corridor Nord-Sud est construit et que
les chemins de fer via la Géorgie sont ouverts.

dimanche 8 décembre 2013,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

La visite de Poutine en Arménie inquiète l’Azerbaïdjan selon le site

ARMENIE-RUSSIE
La visite de Poutine en Arménie inquiète l’Azerbaïdjan selon le site EurasiaNet

Selon le site EurasiaNet, l’Azerbaïdjan est indisposée par la visite
du président russe Vladimir Poutine en Arménie effectuée le 2
décembre. « Les Arméniens étaient naturellement inquiets de la visite
du président russe Vladimir Poutine en Arménie car cette dernière
démontrait le contrôle important de la Russie en Arménie. Mais en
Azerbaïdjan, cette visite était ressentie comme autrement plus
inquiétant avec l’aide militaire de la Russie à l’Arménie et
l’intervention armée confirmée par Poutine en cas de confrontation de
l’Arménie face à l’Azerbaïdjan autour du conflit du Haut Karabagh »
écrit EurasiaNet.

Le site informe qu’à Bakou l’expert militaire Ouzier Djafarov a
affirmé que le soutien de Poutine à l’Arménie augmente le risque d’une
guerre avec l’Arménie. Ce dernier a confié au journal « Azadlik »
paraissant à Bakou« en janvier et février nous devons être très
prudents sur la tension le long de la ligne frontalière. Il est fort
probable que des violations du cessez-le-feu se déroulent sur cette
frontière. La Russie joue un double jeu. Nous devons être prudents et
inviter l’attention de la Russie à une impartialité dans le dossier du
Haut Karabagh ». La base russe stationnée en Arménie inquiète
fortement l’Azerbaïdjan d’autant que le commandant russe de cette base
a déclaré que « la Russie pourrait entrer en conflit armé avec
l’Azerbaïdjan » si Bakou tente de régler le conflit du Haut Karabagh
par la force.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 8 décembre 2013,
Krikor Amirzayan ©armenews.com

Armenian Delegation call on Indian President

UNI (United News of India)
December 6, 2013 Friday

Armenian Parliamentary delegation call on President

New Delhi

Armenian Parliamentary delegation call on PrezNew Delhi, Dec. 6 — A
19-member Parliamentary delegation of the Republic of Armenia called
on President Pranab Mukherjee yesterday at the Rashtrapati Bhavan.

Welcoming the delegation, led by Speaker of the National Assembly
Hovik Abrahamyan, the President said since ancient times, India and
Armenia have enjoyed historical and civilisational ties. Indian and
Armenians share common culture, traditions, language and values, a
spokesperson for the Rashtrapati Bhavan said today.

He said India attaches importance to its friendship with Armenia and
both the countries enjoy excellent relations at political, official
and cultural levels and between the people of the two countries.

The President said the delegation is visiting India following the
first ever visit of an Indian Parliamentary delegation to Armenia.

Mr Mukjerjee added that such exchanges between the representatives of
peoples help increase understanding and enhance the friendship between
people of the two countries and provide fresh impetus to cooperation
between the legislative bodies of the two countries.

Rotation of Personnel is conducted at the Russian military base in A

DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
December 6, 2013 Friday

ROTATION OF PERSONNEL IS CONDUCTED AT THE RUSSIAN MILITARY BASE IN ARMENIA

Source: Krasnaya Zvezda, December 03, 2013, p. 2

More than 1,600 servicemen were sent to the military units stationed
in Volgograd and Budennovsk with follow-up firing to the reserve.
Soldiers and sergeants trained in training centers of the Southern
Military District and other military districts in various military
professions arrive to replace them. According to the press service of
the Southern Military District, more than 20 aviation flights were
already performed from the airports of Moscow, Rostov-on-Don,
Mineralnye Vody, Samara and Yekaterinburg to Yerevan and Gyumri. They
brought more than 2,000 draftees to the Russian military base.

[Translated from Russian]

Taner Akçam Teaches `Genocide 101′ in Germany

Taner Akçam Teaches `Genocide 101′ in Germany

ARTS | DECEMBER 3, 2013 5:51 PM
________________________________

By Muriel Mirak-Weissbach

Special to the Mirror-Spectator

BERLIN ‘ Two classes of high school students in northern Germany had
the rare opportunity to learn about the Armenian genocide from one of
the most authoritative researchers on the topic, Prof. Taner Akçam
from Clark University in Worcester, Mass.

During his brief visit to Germany over the Thanksgiving holidays
November 26-29, Akçam also lectured for adults, among them a seminar
group at the Free University in Berlin, and a broader general public
at the Potsdam University and the Lepsiushaus in Potsdam. For Akçam it
was not foreign territory. As the dean of the philosophy department of
the Potsdam University noted in introducing him, Akçam had found
political asylum in Germany after his escape from prison in Turkey,
where he had been sentenced for articles he had written about the
Kurds. In 1996 he took a degree from the Hannover University with a
thesis on the Armenian Genocide and then worked at the Hamburg
Institute for Social Research, before moving the US, where he studied
at the University of Minnesota and Michigan, and went on to a position
at Clark University.

In his public appearances, Akçam spoke on themes he has developed in
several books. In his two university lectures in Berlin and Potsdam,
he dealt with `The Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Documents: A Gradual
Radicalization in the Decision-Making Process’ and spoke at the
Lepsiushaus on `Genocide as a Political Security Concept.’ The first
lectures drew on material published in his most recent book, The Young
Turks’ Crime Against Humanity. The Armenian Genocide and Ethnic
Cleansing in the Ottoman Empire, which received the Albert Hourani
Award for the best book of the year.

Opening the Ottoman Archives

Akçam addressed two basic questions: what happened? And, why did it happen?

Although the fact of the Armenian Genocide has been firmly established
(though more can be documented through local histories), the why and
how are still subjects of discussion. Rejecting the notion that it was
the expression of some `ahistorical, genocidal, barbaric Turks’ or
simply a pan-Turkic, pan-Turanist expansionism, or war-time
exigencies, the researcher presented the developments as documented in
Ottoman archives. Those of the Interior Ministry General Directorate
of Security and the Cipher Office, for example, established in 1913,
contain encoded messages from the center to the regions, with orders
for deportations that show the intent to commit genocide. The
strategic reasons behind the decision-making process he identified in
the Ottoman government’s fear that Russian-backed reform moves would
lead to an independent Armenia, thus the circulars issued by Interior
Minister Talaat Pasha in September-October 1914 ordering that
Armenians be disarmed. The dates are important, because these orders,
as well as those for deportations of women and children, are before
the entry into war in November. Then, following the catastrophic
Ottoman losses at Sankamis in January 1915, and later Russian
advances, the decision to commit genocide took shape. As a leitmotif
in his lecture, he noted how moves towards reforms for the Armenians,
supported by foreign powers, were answered with massacres, in the
Hamidian period as later.

Those listening to Akçam’s presentation were struck by the quality of
his source material and asked about access to these archives. The
Ottoman Empire archives are now open and are even catalogued, whereas
the military archives in Ankara are closed. The Committee of Unity and
Progress Central Committee documents and those relating to the Special
Operations, however, are gone. He estimated that what is available may
represent perhaps 30 per cent of the actual documents.

Behind the Policy of Denial

Speaking in German to a capacity crowd at the Lepsiushaus Akçam
explored the reasons why the Turkish establishment has embraced a
policy of denial regarding historical facts that have been so
scrupulously documented. He began by noting that among the documents
found in 2009 pertaining to the Ergenokon case, his name was on a hit
list, along with those of Orhan Pamuk and Hrant Dink, who were all
designated as `traitors to national security.’ The argument was (and
is) that anyone who raises the accusation of genocide is threatening
national security, because of the threat to change borders and destroy
the state. Echoes of similar thinking are found in the reluctance on
the part of US presidents (with the exception of Reagan) to utter the
G-word, who claim they must protect national security interests in the
Middle East and not jeopardize them for a moral issue related to the
past. Others argue that recognition is the only moral choice. For
Akçam the solution lies in the idea that asserting moral issues is
necessary precisely to safeguard national security, and that refusal
to acknowledge the past is the source of regional insecurity. Here, in
reviewing the history, Akçam showed how the willingness or refusal of
Turkish leaders (including Kemal Atatürk) to acknowledge the
atrocities and even agree to punishing perpetrators, was directly
related to their perception of how the foreign powers would treat
Turkey. Atatürk uttered his famous phrase about `a shameful act’ in
expectation of guarantees of national sovereignty and territorial
concessions. Since the continuing Armenian-Turkish conflict is seen in
relation to territorial issues, the speaker urged a revision of the
concept of `national security.’ By the same token, due to the denial
of historic facts, many ethnic and religious groups continue to view
the world from the perspective of the past and the region, thus
traumatized, remains insecure. If the refusal to face the past
generates insecurity, then recognition leads to trust, he said. In the
lively Q&A session, the critical issue of Turkey’s national identity
arose. The speaker summarized the dilemma faced in Turkey, due to the
fact that it is difficult to identify the founding fathers as `thieves
and murderers.’ For such to occur, he stressed the need for a new
ruling elite to emerge in Turkey, one with a democratic identity and
in this context underlined the importance of Turkey’s bid for European
Union membership. He also urged Armenian Diaspora groups to seek
contact and collaboration with democratic grass roots movements in
Turkey who are critically assessing the past.

`Armenian Genocide 101′

The highpoint of Akçam’s visit was undoubtedly his session with German
students, in which I also participated. They came from two prestigious
Gymnasien, high-school level institutions for study of the humanities
and natural sciences. Students in German schools receive instruction
in Holocaust studies but, with the exception of one federal state,
they do not learn about the Armenian Genocide in their history
classes. These two classes had prepared for their special workshop by
reading background material and discussing it with their teachers. The
visiting professor decided to treat them to an introductory course,
`Armenian Genocide 101.’ With the aid of a huge map of Ottoman Turkey,
which showed the deportation routes and concentration camps, he
summarized the phases of the genocide, from the `re-settlement’ to the
extermination. He placed special emphasis on the mathematical
precision with which the operation was organized and executed,
explaining how Armenians would be deported, and could not make up more
than 5-10 percent, and how Anatolia, with its massive Armenian
population, was to be emptied, also in light of the Russia factor.
Referring to documents from the Office of Statistics, he cited the
figure of 180,000 Armenians to be left. When, after the removal of 1.3
million, it appeared that a half million still survived, they were
subjected to killing in the second phase, to reach the desired number.

Throughout the discussion, comparisons to the Holocaust were made ‘
from the Nazis’ `Eastern Plan’ to their pursuit of `Lebensraum’ for a
purely German (or `Aryan’) population. Here he noted that in the
Armenian case one difference concerned religion. Those who converted
to Islam could save their lives (until he number became too large),
whereas in the Holocaust this was not the case. Regarding the
perspectives for Genocide recognition, both Rolf Hosfeld, scientific
director of the Lepsiushaus, and Akçam pointed out the importance of
the military-strategic context. Had Nazi Germany won the war, and a
Nazi-successor elite established post-war Germany, the attitude
towards the Holocaust would have been different. But Germany was
occupied, the Nuremburg trials took place. Similarly, in Turkey after
it lost the war and was under occupation, trials against the CUP
leaders responsible for the massacres took place. However, following
Atatürk’s later military victories, the scene changed. Thus, the need
for a new generation in Turkey to assume leadership and responsibility
for facing the past and establishing justice. He noted several
encouraging steps in this direction on the part of the current
government, which broke the continuity of the elites when it assumed
power over a decade ago; for example, Prime Minister Erdogan’s apology
for the Dersim massacres of Kurds.

The students listened in fascination to his brief account of his own
life in Turkey. As a student leader he had written about the Kurds and
paid for it with a 9-year prison sentence. After one year, he managed
with co-prisoners to break out of prison and flee to Germany, where he
was again arrested, because he carried a false passport, and held
until Amnesty International succeeded in freeing him. It was while
working with a social research center in Hamburg on a project about
`universalizing Nuremburg’ that he first started reading about the
Armenians. In Turkey, he had had no idea of what had happened. That
was the beginning of his work as the leading Turkish researcher of the
genocide. Following up on this biographical profile, I sketched out my
family background, to give an example of how individual Armenians ‘ my
parents ‘ experienced the genocide and survived. With the aid of
pictures of former Armenian villages in eastern Anatolia, I showed how
the denial policy has involved attempts to eradicate traces of the
culture and civilization of the Armenians on the soil of current-day
Turkey.

National Identity or Nationalism?

In a final session, a former school director Ulrich Rosenau moderated
discussion, drawing the lessons of the Genocide for the present. Here
students shared their views of racism, as they have experienced it
against non-ethnic German immigrants, for example, and also in the
wider European Union context, with reference to rightwing extremist
movements in some eastern European countries. They asked what the role
of the Turkish population had been during the Genocide and heard how
the governing CUP leaders in Ottoman mobilized their base with
religious propaganda against the `infidels,’ while providing economic
incentives to plunder the Armenians. As in the Holocaust, it was
crucial to dehumanize the targeted victim population, identifying them
as foreign, alien, tumors to be removed. He provided interesting
insights from his own experience as a Turk in Germany, where he did
experience discrimination, and in America, where he has not. This
prompted reflection on the nature of national identities: is the
identity of a nation its ethnicity? Or are citizens in the US, for
instance, first Americans, and then Armenians, Italians, Hispanics,
etc.? He also remarked that in the case of the US, it has been
possible to face the implications of slavery and the fate of Native
Americans, without eradicating the positive contributions of the
founding fathers.

– See more at:

http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2013/12/03/taner-akcam-teaches-genocide-101-in-germany/#sthash.wpTDmNBj.dpuf

The loans with the Armenian currency can be pushed out of the market

The loans with the Armenian currency can be pushed out of the market

December 7 2013

If the World Bank Council fails Recently, the World Bank published a
report, which details the problems available in various branches of
the economy of Armenia. Studying Armenia’s financial market, the World
Bank (WB) concluded, `The stock market in Armenia, as such, does not
still operate.’ From the perspective of stock exchange capitulation,
our country is behind many countries in Europe and Central Asia: the
capitulation of the stock exchange in Armenia makes only 1% of gross
domestic product. And, although, in 2009, NASDAQ OMX Armenia jsc
entered the Armenian market and implemented a number of technical
improvements, however, the World Bank has noted that these reforms
have not resulted in abrupt changes. According to the report, `Due to
underdevelopment of market mechanisms, as well as the lack of
transparency in activities of the companies and `long money’ managing
institutional investors, the level of liquidity is low. The companies
still have not acquired sufficient experience and knowledge of
corporate governance, which would allow them to operate productively
in the stock exchange. The family governance principles are still
dominant in the corporate sector, under which it is impossible to
effectively invest the diversification culture of the shares, as well
as to separate the management from the ownership.’ Konstantin Saroyan,
Chief Executive Officer of NASDAQ OMX Armenia jsc, also referred to
the transparency of the companies functioning in Armenia as, so to
say, an obstacle to the development of the stock exchange (ARKA news
agency, 02.03.2012 ), which although assured that the year 2012 would
be a turning point for the stock market, however, he had also noted
that there are three factors that after solving them, the Armenian
stock exchange will develop. One of these factors, according to Mr.
Saroyan, is the fight against the shadow economy. `Coming out to the
exchange platform and take the advantage of tax privileges, а question
arises with the shadow business whether it can have savings by acting
as a public and transparent company. Often, our businessmen are not
interested in involving additional funds, because they simply do not
know how to spend them.’ While our large businessmen working in the
shadow would pass to noble and civilized economy and would try to
enter the stock market, we should note that this year the government
issued $ 700 million eurobonds, which by economists’ estimate could
impact the stock market activation in Armenia. Referring to Armenia’s
banking system, the World Bank has stated that it is on a solid basis,
is steadily developing, however, in terms of the size and innovation,
it still lags behind most of European and Central Asian countries.
According to the World Bank report, in 2005-2012, the bank assets have
grown by 6 times, on January 2013, there are 21 commercial banks and 1
development bank functioning in Armenia’s banking sector, which being
the owner of more than 90% of the country’s financial assets, dominate
in the financial market, and the share of credit institutions in the
financial assets is very small. As per World Bank estimates, our index
on deposit involvement services of the banks of Armenia in the region
is low. `After the 2009 crisis, the trust is reduced, the deposits
were mainly in dollar, 10% of banks financing is generated through
Armenian-German foundation, from the loans provided with affordable
interests, and if the costs for the procurement of similar credit
lines are not complied with long-term repayment rates, they can
eventually push the loans with Armenian drams out of the market,’ says
the report. The WB has explained the high level of dollarization of
bank savings by large-scale private remittances received from
Diaspora, in part, by general distrust in national currency and by
fearfulness of devaluation. Pursuant to World Bank study results,
macro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) have difficulties to
access to loans. WB confirmed what local economists are always
raising. The World Bank has explained the problem of MSMEs by mutual
distrust. For example, the banks have noted that MSMEs do not have
required skills to be considered creditworthy. The banks think that
financial management and marketing technologies and skills are missing
in the mistrust companies. However, if we consider that micro business
may have only, let’s say, up to 5 employees, and if we consider that
the small shop or a small production unit, let’s say, is in a remote
village, it is unlikely that the businessman is aware of marketing
technologies, and for this very reason, in fact, they are deprived of
the opportunity to expand their business. For many companies,
according to the World Bank, the loan terms are unfavorable: high
interest rates and collateral requirements are the two factors that
entrepreneurs have stated as the main barriers to the use of bank
loans. The report also stated that many banks are reluctant to expand
the scope of customers, and are satisfied with a small number of
trusted clients. And, although there are development projects
enhancing the financial capacities of MSMEs in Armenia, however,
pursuant to the World Bank, they still have not shown significant
results. The majority of Armenia’s banks, according to the World Bank
report, are small; even the largest bank equity capital does not
exceed 100 million dollars. `Given the 20% loan limit of 1 creditor,
the maximum loan provided by the largest bank in Armenia can not
exceed $ 20 million. Therefore, the commercial banks are deprived of
the opportunity to finance large investment projects.’ According to
experts, if the efficiency of the sector is increased, including the
introduction of modern information and communication technologies, it
is possible to reduce the bank interest rates by up to 1.5 %.

Nelly BABAYAN
Read more at:

http://en.aravot.am/2013/12/07/162876/