UAE Ambassador presents his credentials to Armenia

Emirates News Agency, UAE
February 20, 2015 Friday 8:08 PM EST

UAE Ambassador presents his credentials to Armenia

YEREVAN, 20th February, 2015 (WAM) — The UAE’s Ambassador to Armenia,
Jassim Mohammed Al Qasimi, today presented his credentials to
President of the Republic of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan.

During the ceremony, held at the Presidential Palace, Al Qasimi
conveyed the greetings of President His Highness Sheikh Khalifa bin
Zayed Al Nahyan and Vice President and Prime Minister and Ruler of
Dubai, His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, to the
Armenian President, along with their wishes for further progress and
prosperity to the people of Armenia.

The UAE diplomat also affirmed that he will spare no efforts to
enhance ties of friendship and cooperation between the two countries
in all domains.

For his part, Sargsyan expressed his appreciation to President His
Highness Sheikh Khalifa and Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, praising the
legacy and noble values of the late Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan.

He also extended thanks to the UAE for establishing an Embassy in
Yerevan, stressing that the UAE Ambassador will receive comprehensive
support while carrying out his duties in Armenia.

Sydney: A monumental stoush

Sydney Morning Herald (Australia)
February 21, 2015 Saturday
First Edition

A monumental stoush

by Rick Feneley

A row over monuments to historical atrocities is testing some of the
assumptions of a harmonious, multicultural state, writes Rick Feneley.

Japanese Australians worry their children will be bullied, as they say
youngsters have been in the US. Turkish Australians say they will
become the targets of racial hatred.

The provocation, they say, will be the erection of monuments to
commemorate war crimes or atrocities attributed to their Turkish and
Japanese forebears. Dredging up these events, which they say are
highly contentious and even fabricated, will serve only the agendas of
anti-Turkish and anti-Japanese propaganda and jeopardise the racial
harmony achieved in NSW, where 45 per cent of the population was
either born overseas or has at least one parent born overseas.

Last October the Australian Turkish Advocacy Alliance and the Japan
Community Network united in their own lobbying exercise: a letter to
Hakan Harman, a Turkish Australian who has become the new chief
executive of Multicultural NSW, the state body dedicated to
maintaining racial harmony. They urged Harman to adopt guidelines
advising councils and other authorities not to take sides in debates
when considering recognition of historical events.

On February 3, the Turkish alliance issued a press release
congratulating Multicultural NSW for having distributed such
guidelines. This, however, was the first that most ethnic leaders had
heard about it. Nobody had consulted them. Nor had Harman told the
Minister for Citizenship and Communities, Victor Dominello, about his
guidelines, the preamble to which urged authorities not to “assign
blame” when acknowledging historical grievances.

This week, all hell broke loose. The Armenian, Assyrian, Greek,
Cypriot and Korean communities demanded that Harman resign or he be
sacked. Dominello refused but ordered Harman to withdraw the
guidelines and to work to “restore community harmony”. Harman
apologised, pledged wider consultation and said he had not intended to
“inflame concerns or upset anyone”.

But he did. The agitators say his position is untenable because, they
claim, he pushed the barrow of Turkey and its denial of Ottoman-Turk
genocides against Armenians, Assyrians and Greeks during World War I.

Harman’s guidelines did not mention Turkey or Japan, but his critics
believe they were clearly aimed at memorials in the making: a statue
the Korean and Chinese communities plan for Strathfield to honour
“comfort women” used as sex slaves by Japanese soldiers during World
War II; a monument to be unveiled in Willoughby on April 24, when
Armenians will mark the 100th anniversary of a genocide in which they
say 1.5 million people died.

“These monuments are not an attack on the Turkish or Japanese people
of today,” says Vache Kahramanian, executive director of the Armenian
National Committee of Australia, “just as Holocaust monuments are not
an attack on current-day Germans. They are recognition of historical
facts.”

Tesshu Yamaoka, president of the Japan Community Network, along with
the Turkish alliance, takes umbrage at the Holocaust analogy and the
suggestion they were attempting to “airbrush” atrocities from history.
While Japan apologised to and compensated some comfort women, Yamaoka
says, claims that 200,000 were forced into sexual slavery have been
“highly fabricated for political purposes”. He blames such monuments
for the bullying of Japanese children in north America.

The Turkish alliance says no international court has found the Ottoman
Turks guilty of “genocide”. The Turkish ambassador to Australia, Reha
Keskintepe, tells Fairfax Media there were many Armenian casualties
when the Ottoman Empire decided to “relocate” them while it was under
invasion in 1915. But there was never a plot to eradicate Armenians,
he says.

Only last year, Foreign Affairs Minister Julie Bishop reassured Turkey
that Australia does not use the word genocide to describe these
“tragic events”. Nor does Britain. Barack Obama called it genocide in
2008 but avoids the word now he is US President and Turkey is
strategically critical.

Turkey will play host to thousands of Australians at Gallipoli when
they commemorate the 100th anniversary of that tragic battle on April
25 – the day after the centenary of the Armenian tragedy. But the NSW
Parliament recognised it as genocide in 1997, and the next year it
erected its own monument bearing a bipartisan resolve to reject
“attempts to deny or distort the historical truth”. In 2013, it
extended its recognition to the Ottoman genocide of Assyrians and
Greeks.

Among Harman’s withdrawn guidelines is maintaining consistency with
Australia’s foreign policy, as determined by the Commonwealth. This
alone would have put the State Parliament, and its memorial, at odds
with the guidelines.

Ambassador Keskintepe says they would have been constructive, but he
denies Turkey provides financial backing to the Turkish alliance,
although the group’s own newsletter last year declared its reliance on
consulate funding. Rather, Keskintepe says, the embassy lends
practical support to the alliance’s efforts to “counter the false
Armenian claims that are damaging to the Australian-Turkish
friendship”. This extended to sending baklava, Turkish pastry, to an
event the alliance arranged at Federal Parliament.

Stepan Kerkyasharian is an Armenian who spent almost 25 years at the
head of the predecessors to Multicultural NSW, including the Community
Relations Commission. “Just because an event is described by one party
and denied by another is not, of itself, sufficient to say that the
event should not be remembered,” Kerkyasharian says. “Some in
Australia would object strenuously to the concept of the stolen
generation. Does that mean we should not put up a monument to the
stolen generation?”

In any case, the guidelines are dead and buried. Asked if they might
be modified and re-issued following consultation, Dominello told
Fairfax Media: “These guidelines compounded the difficulties
surrounding the commemoration of historical events and they will not
be revisited by Multicultural NSW.”

http://www.pressreader.com/australia/the-sydney-morning-herald/20150221/284228053927566/TextView

Last days of the great caliphate

The Times (London)
February 21, 2015 Saturday

Last days of the great caliphate

Was the Ottoman Empire really so bad after all, asks Lawrence James

by Lawrence James

On November 13, 1918, the dreadnought HMS Agamemnon (they knew how to
name ships in those days) led an armada of Allied warships into the
harbour at Constantinople. A dismayed Turkish boatman watched and
lamented: “Who would have believed that a foreign fleet would enter
Constantinople so illustriously and that we Muslims would be simple
spectators.” His passenger consoled him: “These black days will pass
too.” But they did not pass.

As in Europe, the end of one war prepared the way for another. The
surrender of the Ottoman Empire marked the beginning of what has been
called “The War of the Ottoman Succession”, an intermittent struggle
for mastery of the Middle Eastern lands once ruled by the Sultan.
First Britain and France attempted to dominate the region and were
evicted, now the US, Israel, Iran and Saudi Arabia contend for
supremacy, and, lately, they have been joined by the ferocious
fanatics of Isis who want a caliphate and the restoration of a Dark
Age Islamic state. Slavery, reluctantly abolished by theTurkish
sultans in the 19th century, has returned to the Middle East. So too
has another Ottoman vice, the systematic massacre of Christians. A
hundred years of turmoil and bloodshed raises the question whether the
Ottononfiction man Empire, for all its faults, was not a bad thing.
After all, as Eugene Rogan reminds us, in the years just before the
outbreak of war, the ruling Committee of Union and Progress (“The
Young Turks”) were endeavouring to modernise the empire.

They were too late: Turkey lacked the industrial base, communications
systems and administrative structure to fight a modern war on several
fronts. German credit and weaponry kept the show going, but only just.
“What kind of war are we fighting?” asked one soldier in the trenches
during the first battle of Gaza in 1917. “Our army has no working
artillery, no functioning machineguns, no aircraft, no commanding
officers, no defensive lines, no reserves, no telephone.”

Material deficiencies were, however, offset by the pluck and tenacity
of theTurkish soldier and a handful of good generals, most famously
Mustafa Kemal Pasha, the future Kemal Atatürk. During 1915 and 1916,
the Turks defeated the Allies at Gallipoli and in Iraq, where an
Anglo-Indian army surrendered at Kut Al Amara. An Oxford historian,
Rogan’s account of these campaigns fits well into a comprehensive,
lucid and revealing history of a war, which has always been seen
though British eyes focused on Gallipoli and TE Lawrence rallying the
Bedouin and posing for photographers. This book will surely become the
definitive history of the war, for there is much that is new. Rogan
has used Turkish and Arab sources and recent research in the Ottoman
archives. Rooting out the truth is, however, a fraught business, since
theTurkish government is cagey about access to wartime military
papers. Official furtiveness is understandable given how prickly
modern Turkey is about the Armenian genocide. At least 850,000
Armenians and Assyrian Christians were murdered between 1915 and 1918,
but successive Turkish governments have denied any complicity by the
Ottoman government and its servants. Anyone who challenges official
orthodoxy is liable to be charged with “insulting Turkishness” and
faces prison. Visit the otherwise impressive military museum in
Istanbul and all you will find are grisly photos of Turks allegedly
slain by Armenian terrorists at the behest of Russia. This repeats
baseless contemporary propaganda that the Armenians were a vast fifth
column, ready to assist invaders.

Rogan blows away the fog of obfuscation and denials. Talaat Pasha, the
Young Turk Minister of the Interior, the Ottoman Intelligence Service,
sundry provincial governors and policemen were actively engaged in
what was intended to be an extermination of the entire Armenian
population of the Near East. “The orders came from the Central
Committee and the Interior Ministry,” one officer told an Armenian.
They were conveyed orally and one governor who sought written
instructions was sacked and later murdered. Rogan’s evidence about the
official origins and enforcement of the massacres augments and
confirms that from German sources.

Killing the Armenians achieved nothing for Turkey’s war effort. The
successes of the first half of the war were not repeated during the
second, when Allied forces pushed steadily through Iraq, Palestine and
Syria. Numerical and technical superiority had tipped the balance in
favour of the Allies, although the Turkish soldier fought doggedly on.
During the fighting at Gaza, Turkish infantrymen stood their ground,
firing their rifles in a futile attempt to repel tanks at close range.

There are some surprises for those who take their history from
Lawrence of Arabia. The repeated demolition of the Damascus to Medina
railway by Lawrence and his Bedouin irregulars had a limited effect,
since the Turks quickly relaid the track and the line stayed open
until the spring of 1918, when it was permanently severed by Allied
forces. The Arab Revolt was also an Arab civil war: some tribes chose
Turkish gold and arms rather than British.

One of the trains that reached Medina from Damascus in November 1917
contained Turkish newspapers with details of the secret Sykes-Picot
Agreement by which Britain, France and Tsarist Russia had agreed the
future partition of the Ottoman Empire. The documents had just been
released by Trotsky to remind the Arab world that it was being duped
by Allied promises of postwar liberation.

This may not have been too much of shock, for French and British
imperial ambitions were in character and over the past 80 years, the
two powers had stripped the Ottomans of Egypt, Algeria, Tunis and
that as it may, the alleged duplicity of Britain and
France continues to have political resonances today in the Middle East
where state boundaries follow lines first sketched on a map by greedy
foreigners. The repercussions of the defeat of the Ottoman Empire will
not go away. Lawrence James’s latest book is Churchill and Empire:
Portrait of an Imperialist The Fall of the Ottomans: The Great War in
the Middle East, 1914-1920 by Eugene Rogan Allen Lane, 445pp £25 * £20

www.Morocco.Be

Security system not changed in such situation – Vardan Khachatryan

Security system not changed in such situation – Vardan Khachatryan

15:23 * 22.02.15

It s truism that a security system is not to be changed in such a
volatile situation, ex-member of Armenia’s Parliament Vardan
Khachatryan told Tert.am as he commented on Armenian-Russian strategic
partnership.

“If you are to change a security system, you regularly find yourself
in such a dangerous situation when you lose the old without getting
anything new thereby becoming the easiest target for your prospective
enemies. In this context, we should consider that our security be
associated with Russia,” he said.

With respect to external challenges, he said that the major threat is
the deepening confrontation between the key political actors.

“That is, according to the ideas of the nations that have geopolitical
interests – the United States, France, China – the world needs
restructuring. Regrettably, Armenia’s role is all the processes is
among the most important ones, because if they want create problems
for Russia now, Ciscaucasia will be viewed as the most serious
problem, which has to do with Armenia,” he said.

According to Mr Khachatryan, evidence thereof is that the United
States plans to establish a sports base for 10,000 people in Georgia.

As regards the Islamic State threat, he said that it poses extreme
threats that defy imagination, and if things go on “we are going to
deal with an army of fanatics.”

“It is better if the Islamic State remains where it is than it would
be destroyed because in the latter case the fanatics will stream to
other countries. In this case, it is a matter of time when they blast
the countries from within,” Mr Khachatryan said.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/02/22/vardan-khachatryan/1597451

Aznavour : L’amour que mes parents ont ressenti pour la France a tou

REVUE DE PRESSE
Aznavour : L’amour que mes parents ont ressenti pour la France a tout changé

Désormais installé en Provence, à Mouriès, Charles Aznavour est sans
doute l’artiste d’origine arménienne le plus connu à travers le monde.
Auteur, compositeur, chanteur, acteur, il a tous les talents. Il a
aussi des convictions pour l’Arménie, qu’il défend bec et ongles.

A 90 ans, Charles Aznavour est loin de penser à la retraite. Dans sa
propriété de Mouriès, au coeur de la vallée des Baux, il fourmille de
projets, d’envies, de passions. C’est là qu’il a bien voulu
s’impliquer pour le Centenaire du génocide, avec une série d’émissions
radio et un film documentaire. Intitulée >, la
première sera diffusée en février par les radios franco-arméniennes de
Paris, Lyon, Vienne, Valence et Marseille (Ayp FM, Radio Arménie,
Radio A et Radio Dialogue), ainsi que par JM, la radio juive de
Marseille (rediffusions prévues au deuxième semestre). Signé Richard
Findykian, le film > sera projeté le 25
avril à Marseille, lors du Festival du Livre Franco-Arménien (Palais
de la Bourse).

Vos parents arrivent en 1923 en France. Comment est-ce que cela s’est
passé ? Charles Aznavour : Je ne sais pas du tout. Ils venaient de
Grèce. Je suppose qu’ils sont arrivés par Marseille. Et je suppose
beaucoup de choses, par exemple que ceux qui avaient un peu plus d’or
dans les plis de la robe de la mère, ils pouvaient monter jusqu’à
Avignon ou jusqu’à Valence, et puis jusqu’à Paris. Exactement comme la
transhumance des juifs, telle que la raconte Marek Halter dans un de
ses livres.

lire la suite…

dimanche 22 février 2015,
Stéphane (c)armenews.com

http://www.laprovence.com/article/histoire/3264362/aznavour%C2%A0-lamour-que-mes-parents-ont-ressenti-pour-la-france-a-tout-change.html
http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=108147

Le ministre turc des Affaires étrangères réaffirme ses conditions d’

ARMENIE
Le ministre turc des Affaires étrangères réaffirme ses conditions
d’ouverture des frontières

Mevlut Cavusoglu le ministre turc des Affaires étrangères a réaffirmé
vendredi les conditions préalables qu’Ankara a énoncé à la
normalisation des relations avec l’Arménie.

Mevlut Cavusoglu, dans une interview à Sabah, a souligné l’une de ces
conditions, en disant : “Pour normaliser les relations avec Ankara,
Erevan doit céder des territoires du Karabagh.

dimanche 22 février 2015,
Stéphane (c)armenews.com

La chanteuse arméno-américaine Tamar Kaprelian rejoint le groupe <<

L’ARMENIE A L’EUROVISION 2015
La chanteuse arméno-américaine Tamar Kaprelian rejoint le groupe > pour représenter l’Arménie à l’Eurovision 2015

Après le chanteur franco-arménien Essaï Altounian et sans doute la
chanteuse d’Arménie Emmi, le troisième membre du groupe >
formée d’Arméniens de la diaspora et de l’Arménie et qui présentera la
chanson . La Chaîne
Publique d’Arménie a confirmé que la chanteuse Tamar Kaprelian qui
habite New-York prendra part pour l’Arménie au concours de
l’Eurovision 2015. > devait s’adresser aux négationnistes -principalement la
Turquie- qui déforment l’histoire et refusent d’admettre leur
responsabilité dans ce crime contre l’humanité.

Krikor Amirzayan

L’Arménie à l’Eurovision 2015 avec Genealogy
dimanche 22 février 2015,
Krikor Amirzayan (c)armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=108379

Wiretaps reveal Turkey’s involvement in Kessab

Wiretaps reveal Turkey’s involvement in Kessab

11:19, 19 Feb 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

(Al-Monitor) – Media reports based on eyewitness and opposition
sources saying that Turkey has become a party to the civil war in
Syria have found their way into court proceedings. During the trial of
the Islamic State (IS) militants who attacked Turkish security forces
at Nigde last year, court files revealed that Turkey, beyond supplying
opposition forces with weapons and ammunition, had also given
artillery support to the opposition groups that captured Kessab. The
prosecutor obtained striking admissions by tapping the defendants’
phones. According to documents obtained by Ahmet Sik of Cumhuriyet,
the wiretapping transcripts reveal that the opposition forces at
Kessab informed people in Turkey of the coordinates of Syrian army
positions around Kessab, after which Turkish forces shelled those
locations.

On March 21, armed Syrian opposition groups entered Turkey from five
different crossings and re-entered Syria at the Yayladag border
crossing and captured Kessab.

In addition to armed Turkmen groups, al-Qaeda’s Syrian affiliate
Jabhat al-Nusra, the Islamic Front’s most prominent group Ahrar
al-Sham, IS-affiliated Shukur el-Izz, Sham el Islam (established by
former Guantanamo prisoner Moroccan Ibrahim Binshekrun) and Ansar
al-Islam, which has links both to al-Qaeda and IS, took part in the
operation to capture Kessab. As clashes continued around Kessab on
March 23, a Syrian warplane was shot down by a missile fired from
Turkey for violating Turkish airspace. In June 2014, when President
Bashar al-Assad’s army recaptured Kessab, including the high ground
known as Feature 45, the Turkish army fired on the Syrian side. The
Turkish government and military persistently said all firing on Syria
after the changed rules of engagement following the shooting down of
the Turkish jet were in retaliation for border violations on the
Turkish side. The Turkish Foreign Ministry rejected the accusation,
saying, “All claims that Turkey has been supporting the opposition
forces by allowing them to use Turkish territory or in any other way
are totally baseless.”

Wiretaps tell another story

The information collected from the Nigde assailants’ tapped phones
contradicted official statements. According to the recordings, Adil
Orli, the commander of the Bayir Bucak Turkmen Front, sends the
coordinates through his brother Ayhan Orli to Mehmet Toktas, the
president of the Yayladag Youth Association. In a conversation on June
7, Ayhan Orli reports that he had sent via Whatsapp the coordinates of
seven targets he had received from Adil Orli. He says, “Firing was
useful. Our friends solved the rest of the problems. But there are
still seven locations. If you fire once on each, that will be enough.”

Toktas answers, “Seven locations OK. Tell everyone to stay on defense
in the coming moments.”

The two also talk of military assistance. Orli complains of a shortage
of ammunition. Toktas says, “Let me talk to Ankara once more to see
what is happening. Without ammunition, nothing can be done.”

In a conversation on June 14, someone called Yasar Benli asks Ayhan
Orli to arrange for the shelling of the Syrian regime’s units deployed
around the cell towers on Feature 45. A short time later, Ayhan Orli
tells Toktas, “There are many soldiers on Syriatel Hill. It will be
good if you can hit them.” He gives a description of the target.

On June 13, a Turkmen from the front line asks Ayhan Orli to help some
surrounded fighters cross into Turkey. Orli calls sub-governor of
Yayladag, Turan Yilmaz.

Orli: There are 20-30 men at Arfal. Can you help them cross the border?

Yilmaz: You mean now, 20-30 people? Where are they now?

Orli: At Arfal.

Yilmaz: Will they cross from near 45?

Orli: Yes, from 45.

Yilmaz: Done.

After the court documents became public, Turan Yilmaz said, “We acted
according to directives.”

Main opposition Republican People’s Party deputy Umut Oran brought the
issue of the Turkish army’s artillery support to the parliament and
asked Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, “Why did the Turkish army open
fire on an area in Syria for no apparent reason? Doesn’t this put
Turkey in a position it can’t explain and rectify?”

Weapons did not go to Turkmens, but to Ansar
The court documents contain remarks that reinforce suspicions about
Turkey’s help to radical groups in the form of arms shipments. In a
conversation between Ayhan Orli and President of the Syrian Turks
Association Ahmet Sirin (alias Ahmad Ohrin), they say weapons sent
from Turkey have actually gone to Ansar al-Islam.

Ansar al-Islam generally operates jointly with Jabhat al-Nusra. When
Orli says they have run out of ammunition, Sirin asks, “What happened
to those weapons that have gone to Ansar?” Orli replies, “I don’t
know. You have to ask those who delivered the weapons to Ansar.”

In another conversation on June 14, when Orli was saying that the
situation at Kassab was not going well, Bayir Bucak Brigade Commander
Col. Ahmed Arnavut (alias Aziz Kikhia) asks, “Where are those guys who
received the trucks? Orli says, “They are not around.”

The same day, Orli complains of an ammunition shortage to Samir Hafez,
the general coordinator of the Syrian Turkmen Groups. Hafez says, “We
haven’t received anything for a year. You think it will come now?”
Orli retorts, “You mean, we are up for sale?”

The issue of weapons assistance to Turkmens found its way to the
national agenda when three trucks loaded with rockets were stopped at
Adana. According to the deposition of one driver, the trucks, which
belong to Turkey’s National Intelligence Organization (MIT), were to
enter Syria through the Cilvegozu border crossing. Bab al-Hawa,
opposite Turkey’s Cilvegozu gate, is controlled by the Islamic Front
and Jabhat al-Nusra. But the Turkish government insists the assistance
was going to Turkmens.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/02/19/wiretaps-reveal-turkeys-involvement-in-kessab/

Cien Anos Del Genocidio Armenio

CIEN ANOS DEL GENOCIDIO ARMENIO

Entorno Inteligente, Venezuela
17 de feb. de 2015

El Espectador / Por decadas la negacion ha sido la política oficial
de Turquía frente a un incontrovertible hecho de la historia que
resulto en la muerte de cerca de un millon y medio de armenios, unos
en ejecuciones públicas, otros forzados a marchar por desiertos y
montañas a una muerte segura. En la república turca, referirse al
hecho como “genocidio” era una ofensa penal.

En abril de 1915, cuando los otomanos se habían unido a las potencias
centrales en la guerra, comenzo el genocidio, prolíficamente
documentado por despachos diplomaticos y prensa. Los armenios fueron
acusados por el regimen turco de la epoca de apoyar a los “enemigos
cristianos” del imperio. El New York Times describio lo que ocurría
como “una campaña sistematica de exterminio, autorizada y organizada
por el gobierno”. Miles de armenios se convirtieron al Islam para
salvar sus vidas.

Los armenios, quizas el primer pueblo del mundo en adoptar el
cristianismo, hacia el año 301, por siglos residentes en Asia menor,
especialmente en la planicie de Anatolia, se convirtieron en víctimas
de una política de limpieza etnica conducente a su eliminacion
de territorio turco. Los tribunales de Malta y de Constantinopla
establecidos por los britanicos y por los mismos otomanos tras la
guerra, buscaron castigar a los culpables del genocidio, sin mucho
exito pues aun no existían reglas reconocidas sobre justicia en
tiempos de guerra. Los segundos fueron disueltos por el padre de
la república turca, Mustafa Kemal. Tras su independencia, en 1924,
la república turca establecio una política de desculturacion contra
la minoría kurda al oriente del país a la cual se le prohibio por
mas de medio siglo el uso de su lengua, su vestimenta y sus costumbres.

A Hitler, planeando el Holocausto judío, se le atribuye la frase:
“¿Quien se acuerda de los armenios?”. Si por mucho tiempo pocos se
acordaron, hoy la humanidad recuerda cada vez mas a los armenios y su
genocidio y exige reconocimiento, justicia y reparacion. A Turquía, que
por su membresía en la OTAN pudo en los años de la Guerra Fría negarse
a hablar del tema, pareciera que le llego el momento. Un comunicado
expresando “condolencias a los nietos de los armenios asesinados en
1915” difundido por Erdogan cuando era primer ministro es el comienzo.

;os-del-genocidio-armenio

http://www.entornointeligente.com/articulo/5048411/Cien-antilde

Different Faces Of Turkish Islamic Nationalism

DIFFERENT FACES OF TURKISH ISLAMIC NATIONALISM

Washington Post
Feb 20 2015

By Senem Aslan February 20 at 9:52 AM

On Dec. 17, 2013, Turkish prosecutors started a corruption
investigation into the activities of the sons of three ministers of
the Justice and Development Party (AKP) government, businessmen close
to the government, and bureaucrats. The corruption allegations later
included then-Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan after wiretapped
telephone conversations between Erdogan and his son about hiding
large sums of cash were leaked on the Internet. The prosecutors were
believed to be followers of Fethullah Gulen, an Islamic scholar who
lives in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania.

The scandal exposed a conflict between two longtime Islamist allies,
the AKP and the Gulen movement, which has rapidly reshaped the Turkish
political scene. Many analysts have argued that the rift emerged from
a power struggle. Erdogan was threatened by the growing influence of
Gulenists within the state while the Gulenists were concerned about
Erdogan’s increasing authoritarianism and personalization of power.

While there is certainly something to this, there are also deeper
reasons for the schism. The AKP-Gulen conflict also resulted from an
ideological clash about the nature of the relationship between Islam
and Turkish nationalism.

The AKP, which has ruled Turkey since 2002, is typically described as
a moderately Islamist party. The less well-understood Gulen movement
is Turkey’s most influential and internationally active religious
network. The community refers to itself as the Hizmet (service)
movement, encompassing a large commercial, media and education network,
inspired by the teachings of Fethullah Gulen. Although Gulenists
portray themselves as members of an apolitical, civil movement, this
image is misleading. The movement has been an influential player in
Turkish politics since the late 1980s. In the 2000s, it openly allied
with the AKP government, supporting a number of its key policies,
most importantly the weakening of the power of the military and
secularist judiciary. Many have alleged that the Gulenists have come
to dominate many cadres in the state bureaucracy, particularly the
police and the judiciary, making them a significant political force
to reckon with in Turkish politics. Today the AKP government accuses
the movement of forming a parallel organization within the state to
capture state authority. Since the corruption probe the government
has purged hundreds of alleged Gulenists from the cadres of the police
and the judiciary.

In the past decade, scholars have noted the rise of a different
conception of Turkish nationalism, called Muslim or Islamic
nationalism, which has led to a transformative shift in the official
state discourse. The AKP and the Gulen movement share some broad
tenets of Muslim nationalism. Challenging the secular and Westernist
character of Kemalist nationalism, they emphasize Muslim identity as
the key element in defining Turkishness. Accordingly, the ideal Turk
should have a strong moral character informed by Sunni Islamic values.

They criticize Kemalist nationalists for being elitist and imitative,
forcing people to change their authentic selves in the name of
Westernization. Muslim nationalists endorse this strong discourse
of victimhood and present themselves as the genuine representatives
of the Turkish nation. Building on this sense of victimhood, they
hold Kemalist nationalists responsible for Turkey’s loss of status
in the international arena, attributing it to the defensive and
inward-looking character of Kemalist nationalism. Instead, Muslim
nationalists imagine Turkey to be a major world power, guided by
an assertive and ambitious foreign policy that rests on building
Turkey’s soft power and economic strength. They associate national
pride with economic success and desire that Turkey play a leadership
role, particularly in the Muslim world.

Such commonalities aside, there have been significant disagreements
between the AKP and the Gulen movement. It is true that these two
groups’ nationalist discourses can be fluid, and at times multi-vocal.

Unlike the Gulen movement, the AKP is subject to the pressures of
electoral politics. The Gulen movement’s discourse can be inconsistent,
partly because what its representatives say or do in their “window
sites” can differ from what they say or do in private.

Nevertheless, it is possible to identify the broad points of
contention.

The most important difference between the Gulen movement and the AKP
is that while the first advocates an ethno-cultural understanding
of Turkishness, the latter prioritizes Muslim identity over ethnic
identity. Fethullah Gulen is a leading advocate of the Turkish-Islamic
synthesis, endorsing the view that Turkish Islam is unique and superior
to the Islam of other ethnic groups. According to this view, Islam did
not come to the Turkish world from the Arabs but came to Anatolia from
Central Asia by way of Sufi dervishes. This Sufi connection makes
Turkish Islam more moderate, tolerant and open to interpretation
and change than the Arab and Persian forms of Islam, which are more
prone to radicalization. Gulen emphasizes the importance of Turkey’s
cooperation with the Central Asian countries to create a strong
Turkic world. In his schools that are spread all around the world,
his followers try to familiarize their students with Turkish-Islamic
morality and culture, teaching them the Turkish language and
history. In Gulen’s writings and the movement’s spectacles, such
as the Turkish Language Olympiads, the central emphasis has been on
exalting and praising the culture of Turkish Anatolia.

For the AKP, on the other hand, the main points of reference
are Ottoman and Islamic history. The AKP’s symbolic capital rests
heavily on Ottoman and Islamic references as seen, for instance, in
the official celebrations of the conquest of Istanbul or the prophet
Muhammad’s birthday. The AKP’s nationalist view downplays the role
of ethnicity. It does not emphasize a hierarchy of nations within
the Muslim world and does not contain a critical discourse about
other Sunni-Muslim ethnic groups. In that sense, the AKP holds on to
a more universalist-Islamist perspective. It is nationalist because
it imagines a Turkey-centered Muslim world but the Muslim identity
is more dominant in its conception of the Turkish nation than a
unique Turkish ethnic identity. Erdogan’s special interest in the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and his outright support of activists who
tried to bring humanitarian aid to Gaza in violation of Israel’s naval
blockade in 2010 were informed by his Muslimhood-centered nationalism.

In contrast, Gulen criticized the initiative for violating Israel’s
sovereignty. The disagreement between the AKP and Gulen in fact first
revealed itself during the Gaza flotilla crisis.

This divergence in their nationalist perspectives has important
implications for their relations with minorities in Turkey,
particularly the Kurds. While both groups use the discourse of Muslim
brotherhood as a bond between the Turks and the Kurds, the AKP has
endorsed a more pragmatic approach toward the resolution of the
Kurdish problem. In his speeches, particularly those in the Kurdish
provinces, now-President Erdogan frequently brings up the concept of
citizenship, downplaying the discourse of ethnic Turkish identity. The
AKP government’s recognition of many Kurdish linguistic and cultural
rights and its negotiations with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK)
have faced the Gulen community’s opposition. What crystallized the
rift between the two former allies were their clashing views about the
Kurdish question. The movement has been much less compromising toward
Kurdish nationalism. The movement sees the resolution of the Kurdish
conflict through the recognition of Kurdish linguistic rights (with
elective Kurdish classes in schools) and the provision of more social
services to the Kurdish areas but stops short of any negotiations
with the PKK and its affiliated groups. It refrains from forming
relations with Kurdish nationalists and supports military solutions
to end the insurgency. The pro-Gulen television channel, Samanyolu,
is noted for its militaristic and nationalist TV series. Because of
its heavy emphasis on Turkish nationalism, the Gulen movement has not
been popular with Kurdish activists. Many believe that the movement was
behind the mass arrests of pro-Kurdish activists. Starting in 2009,
thousands of journalists, politicians, mayors and publishers were
arrested because of their alleged membership in the KCK, the urban,
political wing of the PKK. While the movement has opened several
schools in Turkey’s Kurdish southeast as well as in Iraq’s Kurdish
autonomous region, Kurdish activists have perceived these schools as
institutions of assimilation.

Unlike its relations with the Kurds, however, the movement has had
closer relations with the leaders of Turkey’s non-Muslim minorities,
such as the Greek Orthodox and Jewish communities. Since the 1990s, the
movement’s Journalists and Writers Foundation has organized meetings on
interfaith dialogue, bringing religious minority leaders together. The
Gulen movement’s public face has nurtured a discourse of religious
tolerance and engagement and boasted of helping non-Muslim communities
solve their daily problems resulting from social prejudices.

The AKP, on the other hand, has had a more distanced relationship with
Turkey’s non-Muslims. Despite pressures from the European Union, it
refrained from addressing the major problems of Turkey’s non-Muslim
minorities. While it undertook legal reforms to ameliorate the
institutional autonomy and property rights of non-Muslim minorities,
it dragged its feet to enforce these changes. Particularly at times
of political challenge, the spontaneity and ease with which the AKP’s
rhetoric can take an anti-Westernist, anti-Christian or anti-Semitic
tone underline the stronger weight of its Islamist tradition. The
defiant, conspiratorial discourse of Erdogan, accusing the West,
Zionists, secularists and non-Muslims during and after the 2013 Gezi
protests, and his derogatory remarks about Jews and Armenians have
recently made hate speech against non-Muslims more visible and ordinary
in the public space. For example, in an interview, Erdogan stated:
“Let all Turks in Turkey say they are Turks and all Kurds say they
are Kurds. What is wrong with that? You wouldn’t believe the things
they have said about me. They have said I am Georgian. Excuse me,
but they have said even uglier things. They have called me Armenian,
but I am Turkish.”

The analyses of Muslim nationalism in Turkey have largely ignored the
conflicting trends within the Islamic discourse about Turkish national
identity. Like Kemalists, Muslim nationalists have not been coherent
and monolithic nor have they necessarily endorsed a more inclusive
understanding of Turkishness. The two main constructions of Muslim
nationalism have been exclusivist and intolerant of diversity, but in
different ways. How the conflict between the movement and the AKP will
be resolved is still not very clear. But the way it is resolved and
the upcoming general elections in June will have serious implications
for Turkey’s democracy, social peace and relations with minorities.

Senem Aslan is assistant professor in the Department of Politics at
Bates College. She is the author of “Nation-Building in Turkey and
Morocco: Governing Kurdish and Berber Dissent” (Cambridge University
Press, 2014).

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/monkey-cage/wp/2015/02/20/different-faces-of-turkish-islamic-nationalism/