Armenian FM Optimistic About European Parliament Report On Turkey

ARMENIAN FM OPTIMISTIC ABOUT EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT REPORT ON TURKEY

Armenpress
Sept 29 2006

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 29, ARMENPRESS: Armenian foreign minister Vartan
Oskanian described the European Parliament’s September 27 highly
critical report on Turkey and its progress on EU membership talks as
‘positive’, although it has dropped a suggestion that Ankara must
recognize the Armenian genocide before it can join the bloc.

Back from New York where he took the UN rostrum to back the
right of people of Nagorno- Karabakh to exercise their right to
self-determination, Oskanian told reporters today in Yerevan that
the report’s positive political consequences will be felt in future.

Oskanian regretted over the drop of the genocide suggestion saying
it would have been an ideal report, in terms of Armenia’s interests,
had the genocide clause been retained. But he argued that this will not
have a negative impact on the report’s value because it asks Turkey to
lift its transport blockade of Armenia and normalize relations with it.

Oskanian singled out a paragraph of the report which says that though
the recognition of the Armenian genocide is not a Copenhagen criterion
for Turkey’s EU accession, however, a country striving to join the
EU must accept its past. Oskanian said it was a remarkable wording,
which can be considered as a precondition.

Concerning elimination of the transport blockade and establishment of
diplomatic relations with Armenia, Oskanian said the report is very
clear about these two issues demanding that Turkey lifts the blockade
and normalize relations with Yerevan without any preconditions.

NKR: Policlinic Opened In Stepanakert

POLICLINIC OPENED IN STEPANAKERT

Azat Artsakh, Republic of Nagorno Karabakh
Sept 27 2006

On September 23 the ceremony of opening of the new building of the
policlinic of Stepanakert took place, which had started operating
two months ago. In the ceremony President Arkady Ghukassian, Speaker
Ashot Ghulian, Prime Minister Anoushavan Danielian, the primate of
the Artsakh Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church Archbishop
Parghev Martirossian, members of the government, members of the
board of trustees of Armenia Foundation, the director of the health
project in NKR Alineh Durian, workers of the health sector, guests were
present. This building built on the donations of our Diasporan friends
is part of the health complex, which will be built in Artsakh. The
new building of the hospital is planned. Congratulating the guests
of the ceremony, the minister of health Zoya Lazarian said the dream
of the people of Artsakh at last came true. In the post-war years,
this is the first important event for the health sector. Over the
past few years different medical establishments were repaired and
reconstructed, as well as built both in the capital and the regions
of the republic, but the policlinic with the diagnostic center is
really unprecedented. Zoya Lazarian thanked the NKR president for
the special attention to the construction of the policlinic and
assistance. She thanked the benefactors George Baghumian and Hrair
Hovnanian, the New York branch of Armenia Foundation, the director of
the health project Alineh Durian, and everyone who had contributed to
the construction of the policlinic. The East Coast director of Armenia
Foundation, member of the board of trustees Gevorg Toroian expressed
his happiness to see Artsakh being reconstructed and said hopefully
the project will be carried on, and new victories will be celebrated
in these marvelous highlands. Unfortunately, the president of the
charity fund of the Baghumian family George Baghumian could not come
to the ceremony. The policlinic was named after Armineh Baghumian,
the aunt of George Baghumian, who fell to the Armenian genocide in
1915. The NKR minister of health Zoya Lazarian read the congratulation
letter of the great benefactor where he emphasized the love of his
family for the people of Karabakh. I believe that these hospitable,
heroic people create their present and future successfully, ran the
letter. The executive director of the policlinic of Stepanakert Karineh
Andrian thanked the government and the benefactors for the wonderful
present. In his speech, NKR President Arkady Ghukassian touched
upon the reason for delay of construction and emphasized that it is
unacceptable independent from any reason, especially for the health
sector. Therefore, he said, control by the government and benefactors
over the construction of such buildings should be enhanced. Arkady
Ghukassian also mentioned that the project of the hospital is definite,
the names of the benefactors are known, and unlike the policlinic
the construction of the hospital will be finished in time. Once again
emphasizing the role of the Diaspora in the development of Artsakh,
President Ghukassian added, "Everyone understands that the fate of the
Armenian people is decided in Karabakh. They understand what Artsakh
means in the life of Armenians and what it means to solve a problem
for the sake of Artsakh and the people of Artsakh. Therefore, we need
good infrastructures, supply everything, for this is the only way to
keep the people of Artsakh here. I believe that we will be opening
a number of other such buildings. It is highly important for us that
the benefactors funding different projects in Armenia know that their
money is not dissipated." Alineh Durian told news reporters that
the project will continue. The premises are not enough. High-level
medical services are primary, therefore the doctors and nurses will
regularly attend training.

Slain On Altar Of National Fervour

SLAIN ON ALTAR OF NATIONAL FERVOUR
by William Rubinstein

The Times Higher Education Supplement
September 22, 2006

Are mass murder and ethnic cleansing the essential foundations of
the modern state? asks William Rubinstein

Genocide in the Age of the Nation State Volume One: The Meaning of
Genocide Volume Two: The Rise of the West and the Coming of Genocide
By Mark Levene I. B. Tauris, 266pp and 463pp£ 24.50 and £ 29.50 ISBN
1 85043 752 1 and 1 84511 057 9

The Great Game of Genocide By Donald Bloxham Oxford University Press
329pp, £ 21.00 ISBN 0 19 927356 1

The study of genocide has emerged as one of the most contentious and –
if this is the right word – popular growth areas in recent historical
research. This flows from the centrality of the Jewish Holocaust to
the modern consciousness of evil, as well as from the range of other
murderous catastrophes during the past century in Armenian Turkey,
the Soviet Union, Cambodia, Rwanda and elsewhere.

The questions at the heart of genocide – can it be defined
accurately? how does it arise? can it be prevented? – have spawned an
ever-growing array of books, articles, journals and conferences in a
subject notable for the extreme controversy these have often generated.

Mark Levene of Warwick University, a highly regarded scholar
of this subject, is engaged in a four-volume study of genocide,
the first two of which are out now. The first one, The Meaning of
Genocide, is an extended, wide-ranging discourse on the innumerable
definitional difficulties in coming to terms with the many ambiguities
of the term. The book is marked by a high level of intelligence
and wide-ranging knowledge, although it is often necessarily
controversial. In essence, Levene identifies genocide as a by-product
of modern state development.

He briefly discusses non-Western and pre-modern examples of genocide,
such as the massacres carried out by Shaka in southern Africa, but
his conclusions come down firmly on the side of those who argue
that genocide primarily grows out of "radical state development"
and "the historical transformations of human societies worldwide as
a politically and economically interacting and universal system of
modern – mostly nation – statesI At the outset it was the avant-garde
modernising states, usually in their colonial or imperial guise,
who were its prime exponent. Later it was primarily their foremost
global challengers, later on, all manner of postcolonial polities."

This volume is consistently interesting and obviously an important
contribution to the subject, although the work is arguably too
discursive, its contents arranged in a series of extended discussions
about the various definitional modes that have been proposed for
understanding genocide.

The second volume, The Rise of the West and the Coming of Genocide,
deals at length with European conquests of the frontier in America,
Australasia and elsewhere. Much here is of considerable originality
-for example, a discussion of the conquest of the Baltic areas by
the Teutonic knights.

More original still is an extended discussion of the situation in
the French Vendee in 1794, when the Revolutionary general Francois
Westermann carried out a systematic slaughter of the population
while suppressing an antirevolutionary insurrection, leaving perhaps
130,000 dead. Levene appears to see this slaughter as inherent in
the modernising tendencies of the French Revolution.

There are also extended discussions of the notorious suppression of
the Hereros in southwest Africa and the crushing of a Muslim revolt
in western China in the 1870s, which will be novel to most readers.

Nevertheless, like any discussion of this controversial subject,
Levene’s interpretation is often problematical. As with many other
historians of genocide, Levene may be too willing to see genocide as
an inherent component of Western state-building when it is arguably
no such thing.

Virtually all the infamous examples of genocide that occurred between
1914 and 1980 grew, plainly and immediately or indirectly, out of the
First World War and its consequences: the Armenian genocide of 1915,
the Jewish Holocaust and the other enormities of Nazi rule, Soviet
communism and then, in China and Cambodia, Asian communism. It is as
certain as any historical counterfactual can possibly be that none of
these would have occurred in the absence of the Great War, which, by
destroying the elite structure of most of Central and Eastern Europe,
granted power to fringe political movements and leaders who would have
remained in complete obscurity if normal prewar politics had continued.

Whatever Germany’s deeply rooted anti-Semitism and authoritarianism,
it seems impossible that Hitler would have come to power were it not
for the Great War, the defeat of 1918, the semi-legitimacy of Weimar
and the Great Depression. Indeed, without the First World War, it
seems unlikely that there would even have been a concept of genocide.

Nor is it the case that modern Western state-building is normally,
or often, marked by genocide.

Bismarck’s "small Germany" (excluding Austria), which existed between
1871 and the mid-1930s, was constructed and maintained without the
deliberate killing of a single civilian.

Levene also ranges widely to consider genocide in the colonial world.

He is well aware of the argument, put by Steven Katz and others, that
the introduction of virulent diseases by Europeans was responsible
for most of the sharp decline in indigenous numbers in the Americas
and Australia, but he argues that such a view fails to take into
account the "repeated abuse, rape and massacre, the scorched-earth
destructionI the starvation, induced trauma and psychic numbing"
that invariably (in his view) accompanied European settlement in
these places. Levene enters here into an extremely emotive area and
appears to be far too one-sided. There is no mention of the type of
society the Europeans were likely to find when they arrived.

Levene is far too sensible to indulge in the "myth of the noble
savage", but his silence may be read as an implicit endorsement of
such a view. What about Aztec Mexico, where human sacrifice was
at the heart of society, with about 15,000 sacrifices a year, or
150,000 per decade? The dedication of the Great Temple of Tenochtitl
n in 1487 was accompanied by at least 14,000 human sacrifices, which
some experts increase to 78,000. The royal court there included a
zoo in which animals fed on the remains of the sacrifice victims, a
"skull rack" with 60,000 skulls of these victims and "apartments for
human freaks", in the words of Stuart Fiedel. It is inconceivable
that the Spanish would not have suppressed this monstrous society,
and by any moral standards they were perfectly right to do so.

Levene refers in a footnote to the debate launched by the Australian
historian Keith Windschuttle about European killings of Tasmanian
Aborigines. Using on meticulous research, Windschuttle found that no
more than about 120 Tasmanian Aborigines were killed by Europeans.

Levene refers to Windschuttle’s book as a "whitewash", but offers
not an iota of evidence for this description and fails to note
Windschuttle’s exposure of shoddy, if not overtly fraudulent,
research by previous historians who made claims for much higher
levels of killings of Aborigines by whites that appear to be clearly
exaggerated. This is admittedly an area of great controversy, but
Levene is far from neutral.

Many of these arguments have been made in the context of the
"uniqueness" of the Jewish Holocaust. This debate has aroused fierce
controversy, arguably exceeding in passion any other historical
debate (as in Alan Rosenbaum’s edited collection Is the Holocaust
Unique?). Levene sensibly steers a middle course, accepting that
the Jewish Holocaust was unique in many respects, especially in its
refusal to make exceptions of virtually any Jews and in the relentless
assembly-line like nature of the Nazi killing machine. But he also
notes that other mass murders probably claimed more victims and were
arguably just as horrible. He shrewdly observes that the Jewish
Holocaust has created a "victimology" in which other groups have
been keen to show that they also suffered catastrophically from past
slaughters and – implicitly, if not explicitly stated – that they,
too, are entitled to the moral credibility that has unquestionably
come to the post-1945 Jewish world in sympathy for their suffering.

Donald Bloxham’s The Great Game of Genocide: Imperialism,
Nationalism, and the Destruction of the Ottoman Empire is a detailed
and sophisticated account of the Armenian genocide of 1915, placed
in the wider context of the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. This
first-class work offers much new material and is probably the most
detailed and complex account in English of these terrible events.

Many of its conclusions are surprising, while others may not be
welcomed by all historians who have participated in the study and
debates about the Armenian catastrophe. Bloxham, for example, finds
that Germany’s role in the Armenian genocide, often highlighted
as significant and a direct precursor to the Nazi Holocaust,
has been exaggerated and overstated: "Evidence is non-existent of
German approval of the Turkish measures once it was known what they
ultimately meant."

Bloxham is more careful than most historians to note the
often-overlooked fact of anti-Muslim "ethnic cleansing" in the Balkans
and Crete, which drove 1.5 million Muslims from these areas between
the mid-1870s and 1914.

He also places the Armenian genocide in the context of the fact that
it arose as a response to a Russian invasion of eastern Anatolia in
1914-15, a fact often omitted from accounts of these events.

The book provides a detailed history of the radicalisation of the
Committee of Union and Progress (the "Young Turks"), noting that the
outbreak of the war was crucial to this process.

Bloxham’s work may indeed be seen by some pro-Armenian historians
as at least moderately pro-Turk, in the sense that it offers a
three-dimensional account of these events rather than being an
automatic condemnation of the Ottomans. It is indeed difficult to
make full sense of these events, and Bloxham has probably struck
just the right note. The major leaders of the CUP and its genocide –
Ahmed Cemal, Enver Pasha and Talaat Bey – still remain among the most
faceless and anonymous of modern mass-murderers, a not-unimportant
reason for the mystery and controversy that surrounds these events.

William Rubinstein is professor of history, University of Wales,
Aberystwyth.

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NKR: Unity Is The Solution Of Nation’s Problems

UNITY IS THE SOLUTION OF NATION’S PROBLEMS
Christine Mnatsakanian

Azat Artsakh, Republic of Nagorno Karabakh
Sept 22 2006

The third Armenia – Diaspora forum ended on September 20. On the second
day the New Answers to Old Questions: Armenia in the 21st Century
Forum took place, and our compatriots from India, Germany, Argentina
made reports. The forum was followed by the debate on the practical
aspect of the Armenia-Diaspora relations, in which famous businessmen
from Armenia and the Diaspora participated. In this context, they also
touched upon economic migration in an effort to seek possibilities
to battle this negative phenomenon. In answer to our question how
this could be carried out, Avetik Chalabian from Russia emphasized
the importance of this forum itself. He says the forum is unique
in the sense that it is intended to implement a definite project,
namely investments by Diasporan businessmen in the development of
rural communities, remote villages in Armenia. It is clear that this
will enable people to earn their living in their village. However,
everything is not that simple. The talk with Diasporan businessmen
reveals their worries about development of Armenia but they avoid
making big investments, and the reason is clear: in a number of cases
the funds provided by Diasporan benefactors were wasted. It appears,
however, that the formula of tackling this phenomenon was worked out
in the course of the forum.

Member of Parliament Khachatur Sukiassian, for instance, suggests
controlling the funds provided for a project to ensure its targeted
use. In other words, every businessman will attend to a separate
village. The Armenia-Diaspora relations will not be viewed as charity,
and two basic problems will be solved. Besides the targeted spending
of the funds provided by Diasporans, this project will enable
connecting each of the Diasporan communities to separate regions
and separate communities of Armenia and make them full participants
of the processes in different villages of Armenia. For its part,
the third Armenia-Diaspora forum has one purpose – view the program
of overcoming poverty as a project intended to establish mutually
profitable cooperation to replace charity. By bringing into being
this project our compatriots will be helped to overcome the feeling of
being guests in their homeland. The chair of the Union of Armenians of
Russia Ara Abrahamian said the idea of national unity should underlie
the implementation of this project. "Even if separate communities
are strong, and separate organizations of the Diaspora are strong, it
is impossible to guarantee the organizational and political unity of
the Armenians worldwide without the active engagement of the Republic
of Armenia."

Turkey starts to admit it has an ‘Armenian Question’

Asia News, Italy
Sept 22 2006

Turkey starts to admit it has an ‘Armenian Question’
by Mavi Zambak

Despite resistance and opposition by nationalists, books, newspapers
and TV are starting to talk about the hitherto taboo issue. Judges
are helping the process by throwing out cases against writers accused
of insulting the nation and its institutions.

Istanbul (AsiaNews) – Section 301 of the Turkish Penal Code, which
makes it an offence to insult Turkish identity, is outdated, a
leftover from a nationalist past that is still hanging, thanks in
part to groups like the Grey Wolves, who are linked to the Turkish
Nationalist Movement Party (Milliyetci Hareket Partisi or MHP). It
was Grey Wolves’ member Mehmet Ali Aðca who tried to kill Pope John
Paul II in 1981.

Last year famous Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk received death threats
after admitting to a German newspaper that a million Armenians had
been killed in Turkey. He was also charged under Section 301 with
denigrating "Turkishness, the Republic or the Grand National Assembly
of Turkey, [. . .] the Government of the Republic of Turkey, the
judicial institutions of the State, the military or security
organizations". Only after several postponements and Europeans
grumbling about Turkey’s commitment to freedom of expression was the
writer found not guilty on January 24 of this year.

Similarly, elements within the judiciary close to the MHP tried to
ban a conference entitled Ottoman Armenians During the Decline of the
Empire: Issues of Scientific Responsibility and Democracy at
Istanbul’s Bilgi University on September 24-25 2005 after it was
blocked in the previous May because its scientific validity and the
qualifications of its participants were challenged. Also in this
case, protests in favour of academic freedom led Turkish Prime
Minister Erdogan to intervene and so it went ahead.

Elif Þafak, a young Turkish writer who lives in the United States,
went on trial yesterday for the same reason. Charges were brought
again by Kemal Kerincsiz, head of the Executive Board of the Lawyers’
Association, which pretends to defend the country against any writer,
editor, journalist or free thinker opposed its own narrow-minded
nationalism.

On trial with Ms Þafak was her bestselling novel The Bastard of
Istanbul (50,000 copies already sold) in which an Armenian character
accuses "Turkish butchers" of massacring Christian Armenians from
1915 till the end of the Ottoman Empire.

If Pamuk risked three years in prison for a historical-political
statement, Ms Þafak faced the same prospect for words uttered by a
fictional character in a novel that had nothing autobiographical
about it. But she too was acquitted and case against her was thrown
out of court. Kemal Kerincsiz lost again.

With the exception of a few nationalist lawyers who protested outside
the Istanbul courthouse, no one has questioned the judge’s decision.

The writer was not present at the proceedings because she gave birth
to a daughter over the weekend. But outside the courthouse
nationalist protesters came face to face with her left-wing
supporters. As a shouting match quickly descended into scuffles, riot
police moved to stop them from degenerating.

All this is a sign that Turkish nationalism is no longer what I used
to be: the ban on talking about Armenian issues is increasingly being
violated.

For years, Turkey has tried to tackle its own recent history. The
Armenian Question is undoubtedly one of the hardest and most painful
ones. It is at the core of a process Turkish historian Altuð Taner
Akcam has called the black hole of the Turkish Republic’s identity.
Leading the charge are Turkish journalists and intellectuals.

"There is a silent revolution underway but it is largely the work of
reform-minded political and cultural elites," Ms Þafak said. "The
refusal to acknowledge the genocide inflicted on the Armenian people
stems from collective amnesia, a fracture point in [a people’s]
memory". Several cultural events are however underway to "give back
to the Turkish people its own memory and past".

In early 2005 an exhibit showcasing some 600 old postcards opened in
Istanbul. The purpose was to allow ordinary Turkish citizens to see
how important and rooted the Armenian presence was on Ottoman
territory. The opening of Istanbul’s Armenian Museum, inaugurated by
Prime Minister Erdogan himself, represents another step in the same
direction.

On the 90th anniversary of the genocide (1915-1916), TV stations,
including state-run broadcasters, devoted several programmes to the
Armenian Question inviting historians and intellectuals with
different points of view to round table discussions.

With in-depth reports, interviews and editorials, print media has
also begun covering the Armenian Question and modern Armenia.

The publishing industry has also started to do its part by releasing
many books in Turkish on the issue.

Another element in this trend is the number of Turks of Armenian
origin daring to speak out. For decades descendants of Armenians
converted to Islam to escape the massacres tried to hide their
shameful origins. Now, taking advantage of greater openness in
today’s Turkish society, many are coming out into the open and
reclaim their roots.

Lawyer Fethiye Cetin was amongst the first to do it. In her 2004 book
Anneannem (My Grandmother), she tells the story of her grandmother
who was born in an Armenian village in Elazig province, eastern
Turkey. Based on the old woman’s recollections of her life, the
tragic events of 1915, the massacre of the men of her village, the
deportation of the women, her own adoption by a Muslim family and
conversion come alive again. The book has sold 12,000 copies and is
in its 7th printing.

What is important to Ms Cetin is that hundreds of "people in a
situation like mine called to tell me: ‘Me too, my grandmother . . .
always with a veil of suffering."

"I hope that my book will be a trailblazer. I, too, was afraid to
deal with this because it is so taboo," she said. "Being called an
Armenian was an insult. Armenians are seen as conspirators, but today
there is process of digging out" the truth.

After her book came out others started revealing that they, too, were
partly Armenian according to columnist Bekir Coskun. This set in
motion a new trend as more and more people tried to stir the murky
waters of their past.

Film maker Berke Bas is one of them. She set out to find out more
about of her own old grandmother’s story and interviewed residents of
Ordu, a town on the Black Sea, in north-eastern Turkey.

"Many people provided me with information. They remembered very well
their old neighbours," she said. "Turks in Ordu remember with sadness
and nostalgia a time of peace and coexistence."

For the young woman who learnt about her Armenian ancestry only as an
adult, Turks today are better prepared to look at their past and are
happy to discover a history that is different from the official
version, one in which Armenians were portrayed as cruel enemies.

"In my opinion half of all Turks are of Armenian origin," said Luiz
Bakar, an attorney for Istanbul’s Armenian Patriarchate, as she told
stories of converts who talked to her.

According to Bakar, every year about 20 people or so, who lived most
of their life as Muslims, come to the Armenian Patriarchate to be
baptised finding their way back to the religion of their forebears
before they, too, die.

In order to look at the past with courage the nationalist
stranglehold over history must be broken. Only this way can the
country’s painful and troubled past be brought to light without fear
of losing face or one’s honour.

This is why more and more people want Section 301 of the Penal Code
abolished, a step the European Union has insistently called for. Not
only does it criminalise any affront to Turkishness but it also
stifles freedom of thought and limits the rights of historians to
freely conduct their research.

Prime Minister Erdogan himself welcomed the court’s decision in
favour of Ms Elif Þafak.

He went further and said that parliament must take heart and sit down
to calmly discuss abolishing or at least unanimously amending the
offensive section that has forced to so many Turkish intellectuals to
stand in the defendant’s box.

Still another writer, Ipek Calishar, is up for trial on October 5.
She is faced with a possible five-year sentence for writing the story
of Ataturk’s former wife thanks to the latter’s sister. Like the
Armenian Question, the founder of the Turkish Republic is another
issue, too taboo for Turkish nationalists.

en&art=7288

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http://www.asianews.it/view.php?l=

Another <<Expo>>

ANOTHER "EXPO"

A1+
[06:44 pm] 22 September, 2006

Today "Panarmenian expo 2006" panarmenian exhibition was launched in
the sport-cultural center after Karen Demirchyan. It was organized
within the framework of the celebration of the 15th anniversary
of the RA Independence and of the second economic conference
"Armenia-Diaspora". The organizers of the exhibition are the RA
Chamber of Commerce and Industry and company "Expocent".

"Panarmenian expo 2006" was opened by RA President Robert Kocharyan who
cut the red ribbon without saying a word. Accompanied by a number of
officials he went through the stands stopping occasionally near some
of them, and then left the hall without speaking to the journalists.

250 organizations are participating in the exhibition.

Almost all the branches of the economy of Armenia are represented.

The aim of the exhibition is to give a chance to the Armenian and
foreign businessmen to represent their production to the consumers
and to create business links between Armenia and foreign countries,
as well as to sum up the achievements of the past 15 years.

The exhibition will be open until September 24.

Karabakh’s Liberation Greatest Achievement Of Armenian People In RA

KARABAKH’S LIBERATION GREATEST ACHIEVEMENT OF ARMENIAN PEOPLE IN RA MODERN HISTORY

PanARMENIAN.Net
22.09.2006 15:25 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Third All-Armenian Armenia-Diaspora Forum
that was held on the days when the republic was celebrating the
15th anniversary of independence adopted the resulting declaration,
which says, "We confirm our will and determination to assist in
strengthening of Armenia’s statehood as a condition for resolving
the existing problems and progress of Armenianhood. The forum proved
that the relations between Armenia and Diaspora developed in the
atmosphere of mutual trust and respect and laid a firm basis for
further efficient evolution. We have common history, goals and problems
concerning the whole Armenian nation and only with uniting human and
material resources we can resolve the problems we face. The Republic of
Armenia, as a state, should take every opportunity to secure conditions
essential for each Armenian to participate in the development and
strengthening of the state. The identity of the Armenian nation is
immediately bound with the Christianity and attaches an important
role to the Armenian Church, whose mission is to support the spiritual
life of the people and deepen relations between Armenia and Diaspora."

The conference participants also approved the rural areas development
program as a key instrument for poverty reduction and called upon the
all the structures and organizations to take part in the realization
of the project.

"The liberation of Karabakh is the greatest achievement of the Armenian
people in the modern history. We confirm our responsibility and all
possible support to the Nagorno Karabakh Republic for their right
to live freely. After the proclamation of Armenia’s independence the
Diasporan Armenians faced a new reality and challenges that befell the
young state. The Armenians of Diaspora rendered and keep on rendering
assistance to the republic while Armenia helps Diaspora to maintain
the Armenian traditions, culture and identity," the declaration says.

The forum participants affirmed readiness for pressing for the Armenian
Genocide international recognition.

"We are convinced that democratic principles, human rights and
freedom are a priority for the state and community structures. We
highlight peace, friendship between people and mutually beneficial
cooperation, the right of nations to free life and development, freedom
of speech and conscience. In the 21st century we are responsible
for protection of national rights and interests, strengthening of
cooperation, realization of our hopes and aspirations in the name
of secure development and welfare of our people and Homeland," the
statement says.

The Pope and Islam

AZG Armenian Daily #180, 21/09/2006

Article

THE POPE AND ISLAM

On a scale of one to ten, Pope Benedict XVI’s first
attempt at an apology was barely a 3. He said nothing
himself, but on Saturday Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone
told the world that "The Holy Father is very sorry
that some passages of his speech may have sounded
offensive to the sensibilities of Muslim believers."

That didn’t stop the protests that have been building
in the Muslim world since the Pope gave the speech on
12 September to an academic audience in Germany, so on
Sunday he tried again. Speaking from his summer
residence at Castel Gandolfo, south of Rome, he said:
"I am deeply sorry for the reactions in some countries
to a few passages of my address at the University of
Regensburg, which were considered offensive to the
sensibility of Muslims."

That won’t stop the protests either, because he really
isn’t sorry for what he said. He’s sorry for "the
reactions in some countries" to his remarks, but he
implicitly stands by what he said in Regensburg. So is
the new pope really anti-Muslim? After the 9/11
attacks five years ago, the former Cardinal Ratzinger
told Vatican Radio that "it is important not to
attribute simplistically what happened to Islam" —
but then he added that "the history of Islam also
contains a tendency to violence." True enough, but
Christianity has its own history of violence: the
Crusades, the Inquisition, the religious wars that
devastated Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries, and
several other detours from the path of peace and
tolerance.

Just before he became pope last year, Benedict
declared that Turkey should not be allowed into the
European Union because its Islamic culture is
incompatible with the "Christian" culture of Europe.
But the real case for the prosecution rests on his
invitation to Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci to
visit him at Castel Gandolfo last September.

It certainly wasn’t a religious visit, since Fallaci
(who died last week) was an atheist, and her fame as a
war correspondent and interviewer was decades behind
her. But she carved out a second career as the most
extreme anti-Muslim writer in Europe, producing two
best-selling books since 2002 that vilified Muslims as
dirty sub-humans who multiply "like rats," and
portraying Islam as an irrational religion that breeds
hatred. The title of her second-last book, the one
that presumably inspired the Pope’s invitation, was
"The Force of Reason," whose core argument was that
the West is rational and reasonable, whereas Muslims
aren’t. And there was Benedict in Germany last week,
saying exactly the same thing. What a coincidence.

In his speech, Benedict quoted from the 14th century
Byzantine emperor Manuel II Palaeologus, who told a
Persian visitor that "spreading the faith through
violence is something unreasonable…God is not
pleased by blood." So far, so good — but then Manuel
asked his Muslim visitor: "Show me just what Muhammad
brought that was new and there you will find things
only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread
by the sword the faith he preached." Benedict quoted
that, too, without any further comment.

He ended his speech, four and a half pages later, by
quoting the emperor again: " ‘not to act reasonably,
not to act with logos, is contrary to the nature of
God,’ said Manuel II, according to his Christian
understanding of God….It is to this great logos, to
this breadth of reason, that we invite our partners in
the dialogue of cultures." in other words, you Muslims
are unreasonable people, but if you do it our way,
then we’ll finally get somewhere.

So now we know that the new pope is a parochial and
intolerant man — but anybody who paid attention to
Cardinal Ratzinger’s previous career knew that
already. "God’s Rottweiler" was the late Pope John
Paul II’s favourite hit-man, reducing Karol Wojtyla’s
critics in the Catholic hierarchy to a sullen silence
or driving them out of the Church altogether. Now he
is in a position to do much more damage.

Pakistan’s parliament has unanimously passed a
resolution condemning the Pope’s speech. Seven
Christian churches in the occupied Palestinian
territories have been bombed, set ablaze or shot at. A
Catholic nun has been shot to death in Somalia. Most
Muslims are well aware that violence is an
inappropriate way to protest against accusations that
Islam is a violent faith, but why do they even care
what the Pope says?

Benedict need a few lessons in manners, but the real
reason for the uproar is that so many Muslims feel
under attack by the West. Two Muslim countries have
been invaded by the United States and its allies since
9/11, and another, Lebanon, has been bombed to ruins
by Israel with full support from the US and Britain.

At least twenty times as many Muslims have died in
these brutal wars as the number of Americans who died
in the 9/11 attacks, and almost none of them had
anything to do with that terrorist atrocity. So the
suspicion grows among Muslims that all this is not
really about 9/11 at all, and almost any minor insult
to Islam from the West — cartoons in a provincial
Danish newspaper, a foolish quote by an arrogant pope
— is enough to trigger outrage from Morocco to
Indonesia.

We haven’t achieved a full-scale "clash of
civilisations" yet, but we’re making progress.

By Gwynne Dyer

King Abdullah of Jordan Congratulates President of Armenia

King Congratulates President of Armenia

Jordanian News Agency
September 20, 2006 Wednesday 2:29 PM EST

Amman, September 20 — His Majesty King Abdullah II on Wednesday
sent a cable to President Robert Kocharian of the Republic of Armenia
congratulating him in his name and on behalf of the Jordanian people
and government on the occasion of his country’s Independence Day.

The King wished the president continued good health and happiness
and the people of Armenia further progress and prosperity.

Turkish Terrorist Warned Pope Can Pay with Life for Visiting Istanbu

Turkish Terrorist Warned Pope Can Pay with Life for Visiting Istanbul

Yerkir
20.09.2006 13:58

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – Terrorist Mehmet Ali Agca, who attempted the life
of Pope John Paul II in 1981, called on Pope Benedict XVI to cancel the
scheduled visit to Turkey. Agca assured the Pope’s life is in jeopardy.

Agca, who is serving his sentence for a murder did not mention the
source of danger. The letter received by La Republica contains vague
hints in the activities of "special services". The terrorist offered
the Pope to resign and "return to the homeland and live in peace."

After the attempt at John Paul II, who was gravely wounded, Agca was
convicted to life sentence. After the Pontiff’s death he was pardoned
and extradited to Turkey, where he was later arrested for other crimes,
reports PanARMENIAN.Net.