Mellowing of Ankara’s position in the matter of opening of the borde

MELLOWING OF ANKARA’S POSITION IN THE MATTER OF OPENING OF THE BORDER TO ARMENIA AND ESTABLISHING OF THE BILATERAL RELATIONS MAYBE EXPECTED SOON, AN ARMENIAN SCIENTIST THINKS

arminfo
2007-08-28 16:39:00

Mellowing of Ankara’s position in the matter of opening of the border
to Armenia and establishing of the bilateral relations maybe expected
soon, director of Oriental studies Institute of the Armenian Academy
of Science Rouben Safrastyan said at the briefing in Yerevan, Tuesday.

He also added that nevertheless at present there is no pre-conditions
for Turkey’s position changing in the matter of the Armenian genocide
recognition. Touching on the foreign policy course of Armenia
on establishing the political dialogue with Turkey, the Armenian
scientist said that the dialogue should be based on the declarative
level along with the real measures. Highly appreciating Yerevan’s
statement about readiness of Yerevan ‘to set the diplomatic relations
with Ankara without pre-conditions’, he said that the real strategy
should be more consecutive and based on holding talks with important
allies, first of all, Russia as well as the USA and the countries of
the European Union, which may affect Turkey. ‘The existing political
will in Turkey cannot change the situation regarding the relations
with Armenia, only interfering of the third states may affect it’,
– Safrastyan said and added that it is necessary to take into
consideration the fact that the strong military potential may be
dangerous for the countries that are direct neighbours of Turkey.

Anti-Defamation League Recognizes Armenian Genocide, But It’s Not En

ANTI-DEFAMATION LEAGUE RECOGNIZES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE, BUT IT’S NOT ENOUGH
Stephen Silver

North Star Writers Group
August 27, 2007

The Anti-Defamation League did its part to right a historical wrong
this week. But was it too little, too late?

The ADL, probably the most influential group representing the Jewish
community in the United States, announced in mid-August that its
position is now to acknowledge the Armenian genocide. This comes as a
reversal of the organization’s previous position, which was to take no
position, and to argue that the question is best left to historians,
not to Congress. It’s yet another case of events from many decades
ago having a profound effect on the debates of today.

The occasion for the controversy is a resolution, currently pending
in Congress, that would make it the official policy of the U.S. to
recognize the Armenian genocide – a massacre of over a million members
of the Armenian ethnic minority by the Ottoman Turks that took place
during World War I, beginning in 1915. Armenian-Americans have pushed
for years for the U.S. to recognize the genocide, while the Turkish
government, as well as Turkish-American groups, have opposed it,
taking the position that what took place was not genocide, but rather
simply casualties of war.

The position of ADL head Abraham Foxman was opposed by many voices
from within the Jewish community, including the ADL’s Boston-area
director, who spoke out and was fired for his trouble. And prior to
the position switch, Foxman’s resignation has been called for by the
online magazine Jewcy.com, specifically its wonderfully-written and
even more wonderfully-named blog, The Daily Schvitz.

What’s the rationale for opposing the resolution, which the ADL
continues to do? The idea is that Turkey is a rare majority-Muslim ally
of both the U.S. and Israel, and antagonizing them is counterproductive
– especially in regard to events that took place over 90 years ago
and can never be undone.

Much like the U.S. reluctance to move towards an independent Kurdistan,
despite it being probably the best move for both the Kurds and us,
the reluctance to recognize the 1915 genocide is yet another case
of a potential ally being reluctant to put pressure on Turkey. As
one of the few Muslim democracies, Turkey – despite their refusal
to cooperate in regard to the Kurds or the Armenians – is a valuable
ally for the West in the war on terrorism.

Foxman, who has been with the ADL since 1965 and its head since
1987, has often found himself at the center of controversy in recent
years. Foxman, depending on your point of view, is either a gutless
liberal, a cold-hearted conservative or neither. He’s been called
"Likud’s point man in Washington" by the left-leaning alternative
weekly New York Press, but found himself on the opposite side from
the cultural right during the "Passion of the Christ" controversy,
when Foxman and the ADL argued – correctly, we now know – that both
the film and its creator were anti-Semites.

The answer is simply that Foxman is the leader of an interest group,
and he acts in most cases in what he feels represents the interests of
the group itself and its constituents. These involve coming down on the
left in some situations, and on the right in others. But considering
that these controversies have become more and more common, and more
and more indefensible from Foxman’s side – first Foxman’s lobbying
for the Marc Rich pardon, and now this – perhaps it’s time for some
new blood at the top of the ADL.

What’s not right is to prescribe ulterior motives to the ADL and other
Jewish groups who have simply made the wrong call. In a great piece
in the New Republic earlier this month about the various lobbying
maneuvering behind the Armenian genocide, Michael Crowley quoted an
observer as saying that, "Jewish groups don’t want to give up their
ownership of the term genocide."

But that’s not quite true either. After all, the American-Jewish
community has been among the most vocal in the world in regard to
ending the killing in Darfur. And the Armenian genocide has a unique
connection to the Holocaust itself: Adolf Hitler is said by historians
to have pointed to the ambivalence of most of the world to the killing
of the Armenians, and decided that he could then mount a genocide of
his own.

The genocide of the Armenians did indeed take place, historians find
nearly unanimously, and Turkey needs to come to grips with its past and
apologize for it. And it’s time America, and interest groups within
it, push for the resolution to acknowledge this, and put pressure on
Turkey to do so as well.

HHK Candidate Leading In Election Community 15

HHK CANDIDATE LEADING IN ELECTION COMMUNITY 15

Panorama.am
14:43 27/08/2007

Khachik Manukyan, candidate of the Armenian Republican Party (HHK)
is in a leading position in number of votes received in majority
contest elections at election community fifteen in Talin and its
vicinities. Hovik Asatryan, chairman of election committee of community
fifteen, told Panorama.am that the HHK member has already received
16,121 votes, according to initial results.

Khachik Manukyan won the election in this election community during
May 12 parliamentary elections, as well. Later, he put down his
mandate and demanded new elections.

In the words of Asatryan, the elections went on in quiet and normal
atmosphere and they receive no complaints-applications on electoral
breaches.

Non "Sunflower" Prices for Sunflower … and Anti-corruption

Panorama.am

15:12 25/08/2007

NON `SUNFLOWER’ PRICES FOR SUNFLOWER… AND
ANTI-CORRUPTION COMMERCIALS

The prices for social promotional ads are the same as
for other products, Chairman of the Consumers Rights
Protection NGO Abgar Yeghoyan told in an interview to
Panorama.am. He assures the prices for commercials are
so high that even if NGOs find money to shoot a social
promotional ad, as a rule, they do not manage to
broadcast them.

`For instance, the Public TV should have some free air
because it gets funds from the state. These funds must
be allocated to social promotion. We do not have that
distinction here and all promotions are charged the
same,’ Yeghoyan said also saying the `Consumers Rights
Protection’ will submit a new draft of the `Law on
Commercials’.

Source: Panorama.am

Armentel No Longer Has Privileges

Panorama.am

19:54 24/08/2007

Armentel no longer has privileges

Starting on October 1, Armentel will no longer retain its
communication monopoly in Armenia. This decision was made today by a
governmental commission. Discount prices, seen as `balanced,’ are to
remain the same. To make the communication market freer, the
commission announced 60 changes in licensing, removing special rights
formerly enjoyed by Armentel.

We note that people had gathered at the meeting site, demanding to
take part, and saying they had asked to do so and weren’t turned
down. But they were only allowed inside after the meeting was
concluded.

Source: Panorama.am

Jewish Clergy To Pay Tribute Of Respect To Memory Of Victims Of Arme

JEWISH CLERGY TO PAY TRIBUTE OF RESPECT TO MEMORY OF VICTIMS OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Noyan Tapan
Aug 24, 2007

JERUSALEM, AUGUST 24, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The chief
executive of the Liberal Judaism organization Rabbi Danny Rich is
going to arrive in Yerevan next week in order to pay a tribute of
respect to the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide.

In his interview on the website of "The Jewish Chronicle", Rabbi Danny
Rich said that he applied to the Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sax with the
request to send some representatives with him to Yerevan but there
has been no response so far.

BAKU: Armenian Forces Violate Ceasefire In Aghdam And Goranboy

ARMENIAN FORCES VIOLATE CEASEFIRE IN AGHDAM AND GORANBOY

Azeri Press Agency
Aug 22 2007
Azerbaijan

Armenian Armed Forces violated the ceasefire again, Defense Ministry’s
press service told the APA.

The enemy fired on the positions of Azerbaijani Armed Forces from
their positions in Javahirli village of Aghdam region, Tapgaragoyunlu
village of Goranboy region from 22.00 till 23.40 on August 21, from
Bashgarvand, Ajarli villages of Aghdam, Tapgaragoyunlu village of
Goranboy region from 01.05 till 05.40 on August 22 with machine and
submachine guns. The enemy was silenced by counterfire. No casualties
were reported.

"I Want To Live In Armenia" Said The Azerbaijani Soldier

"I WANT TO LIVE IN ARMENIA", SAID THE AZERBAIJANI SOLDIER
By Gegham Vardanian

AZG Armenian Daily #152
24/08/2007

Azeri Deserter

The reporter of the Armenian office of the Institute for War and
Peace Reporting (IWPR) conducted an interview with Azerbaijani
soldier Samir Mammadov, who is already a half year in Armenia, in
the criminal-operative center "Kentron".

Samir Mammadov passed the Armenian-Azerbaijani border (Ijevan-Ghazakh
part) and voluntarily yielded to the Armenian armed forces on December
24, 2006.

"I want to live in Armenia, but I don’t know, whether I will be given
1 per cent chance to live here in freedom", Samir Mammadov told IWPR.

He told that he had sent a letter to RA President Robert Kocharian
and applied for a refugee status.

The 20-years old Azerbaijani soldier (Meskhet-Turkish by origin) is
afraid of being accused of treachery and sentenced to 10-20 years in
prison in Azerbaijan.

"Samir Mammadov is an international human rights’ subject and
the authorities of Armenia cannot make him return to Azerbaijan",
mentioned the Head of the working group of RA State Committee on
Captives, Hostages and Missing Armen Kaprielian.

In a cell of the criminal-operative center "Kentron" Samir Mammadov
lives with two Armenians. The Azerbaijani soldier is pleased with
his two friends, as they help him to live and to learn Armenian.

"I know 50 per cent of Armenian. I read and write in Armenian",
said Samir.

He has decided to adopt Christianity after he is released. He has
also chosen an Armenian name for himself.

In case of rejection by the Armenian authorities, the Azerbaijani
soldier will apply to international organizations for taking him to
a European country.

‘We have an obligation to tell the truth’

The Jerusalem Post
Aug 23, 2007 23:49 | Updated Aug 23, 2007 23:49
Zuroff: ‘We have an obligation to tell the truth’
By ETGAR LEFKOVITS

The World War I-era massacre of Armenians by the Turks should be
recognized as genocide despite the political ramifications such a move
would have with Turkey, the chief Nazi hunter of the Los Angeles-based
Simon Wiesenthal Center said Thursday.

"I think it is very important that it be recognized as a case of
genocide," the director of the the organization’s Israel office
Dr. Efraim Zuroff said in an interview with The Jerusalem Post.

"With all the sensitivities we have regarding Israeli-Turkish
relations and the well-being of the Turkish Jewish community, we have
an obligation to tell the truth about historical events – even if they
sometimes create certain problems for us," Zuroff said.

His remarks come two days after the New York-based Anti Defamation
League, in a dramatic about-face, called the World War I-era massacre
of Armenians a genocide, after previously firing an organization
official who said the same thing.

In contrast to the ADL, the Wiesenthal Center has always included some
presentation of the Armenian Genocide in its museums, dating back to
its first museum in 1979, officials in the organization said.

"Our position on this issue has always been very straightforward; we
view it as an educational, not a political issue," said associate dean
Rabbi Abraham Cooper.

Cooper noted that when the organization’s Museum of Tolerance in Los
Angeles opened in 1993 there was pressure by the Turkish government
not to include mention of the Armenian genocide in the museum, while
others were upset that an exhibition on the killing was not slated for
permanent exhibition. "This is a piece of history," Cooper said.

Historians estimate that as many as 1.5 million Armenian Christians
were killed by Muslim Ottoman Turks between 1915 and 1923, in what is
widely viewed by scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century.

Turkey, however, denies the deaths constituted genocide, saying that
the toll has been grossly inflated and that those killed were victims
of civil war and unrest.

Meanwhile, Yad Vashem, which has recently referred to the mass
killings in Darfur as genocide, said Thursday that the massacre of the
Armenians was part of the Holocaust center’s educational activities on
"other instances of genocide, ethnic cleansing and mass murder."

"Yad Vashem, as an educational and research center, is dedicated to
the historical truth, and to educating, researching, studying and
memorializing the Shoah," a Yad Vashem spokesperson said.

"In the course of our educational activities, other instances of
genocide, ethnic cleansing and mass murder are dealt with as well,
including that of Armenia." The issue is especially sensitive for
Israel on a political level due to the country’s close relations with
Turkey.

Separately, the US Holocaust Museum declined comment Thursday on
pending legislation before the US Congress which would recognize the
Armenian massacre as genocide due to the Museum’s status as a federal
entity, museum spokesman Andrew Hollinger said.

Armenian Wrestler Is World Champion

ARMENIAN WRESTLER IS WORLD CHAMPION

Panorama.am
19:50 22/08/2007

In the world’s youth wrestling championships held in Peking,
Armenian Arsen Julfalakyan earned a gold medal in the 74 kilogram
weight division.

As informed by the Armenian wrestling federation, Julfalakyan defeated
Azeri wrestler Elvin Mursalin.

Third place in the division was shared by Lativian Aleksander
Vishnyakovvsk and Ukrainian Dmitri Arabji.

The other Armenian wrestler, Artur Shahinyan, is already in the finals
and will battle for first place today.

We note that seven Armenian wrestlers will take place in the
Greco-Roman free-style matches. Wrestlers from 70 countries are taking
place in the matches in China.