ARF Bureau statement in connection with Hrant Dink’s assassination

ARF Bureau statement in connection with Hrant Dink’s assassination

Yerkir.am
January 26, 2007

Armenian Revolutionary Federation Bureau made a statement condemning
Hrant Dink’s assassination.

The statement reads: "This brutal crime is a new threat against the
rights and existence of Armenians in Turkey. Turkey’s government bears
the entire responsibility for this killing.

Dink was killed because of his political views. Views that were one of
its kind on the rights of Turkey’s remaining Armenian remnants as well
as other minorities, the Armenia-Turkey relations and the issue of the
Armenian Genocide recognition by Turkey, always taking into account the
interests of "civilized" Turkey.

Views for which he had been harassed by the Turkish government. Dink’s
killing showed once again that pluralism is not tolerated in Turkey. We
are extending our sympathies to Dink’s family.

ARF Bureau, January 19, 2007, Yerevan."

New gas discovery in the Black Sea, Turkey

Jan 26, 2007 6:52:00 AM MST

New gas discovery in the Black Sea, Turkey
ry2007/26/c9626.html

Stratic Energy announces sixth gas discovery in Black Sea, offshore Turkey
(Stratic-Energy)

CALGARY (CP) _ Stratic Energy Corp. (TSXV:SE) has announced a sixth
natural gas discovery in the Black Sea off Turkey.

The Akcakoca-4 well, drilled from a semi-submersible rig from the same
surface location as the Akcakoca-3 well, tested a separate structure
on the same geologic trend, Stratic said Friday.

Stratic=80=98s share of the discovery is 12.25 per cent, in
partnershipwith Turkish national oil company TPAO and Toreador
Resources Corp.

The Akcakoca East discovery well encountered 37 metres of gas-bearing
sands in three zones between 1,159 and 1,375 metres in depth. The
deep zone tested at 8.6 million cubic feet of gas per day.

The new well is east of the recently announced Akcakoca find and north
of the Ayazli, Dogu Ayazli and Akkaya discoveries, where the first gas
expected in the current quarter.

The Akcakoca partnership is retaining the rig for the next well in the
exploration sequence, on its Guluc prospect, described as the largest
in the South Akcakoca play.

INDEX: BUSINESS OIL&GAS INTERNATIONAL

http://www.cnw.ca/fr/releases/archive/Janua

Half-hearted Condolences

Monthly Review, VA
Jan 28 2007

Half-hearted Condolences

by Kenan Erçel

Hard to tell which is more upsetting: Hrant Dink’s "unsurprisingly
shocking" murder, or the hypocrisies uttered by government officials
in his wake.

Once words of condolences and condemnation are quickly dispensed with
— in a monotone reminiscent of a computerized voice telling a caller
that "the number you have dialed is not in service" — the topic
invariably turns toward the pending vote on the Armenian Genocide
resolution in the US Senate. As if the real tragedy is not the
murder of Dink, but its inopportune timing! Evidently, those who
couldn’t bring themselves to celebrate Orhan Pamuk’s Nobel prize
cannot bring themselves, for the very same reasons, to grieve Dink’s
death.

This is much like the evasiveness of the royal family in the days
following Lady Di’s passing. But even in her foot-dragging, Queen
Elizabeth was a good deal more sincere than our Turkish officials;
Her Majesty appeared before the cameras only after the mounting
protests of her "subjects," and even then, patently reluctant,
unwilling. She was more like Putin in that regard. It took Putin
three days and insistent questioning by the foreign press to make a
public statement about Anna Politkovskaya, who was shot dead on
October 7, 2006 in the elevator of her building, no doubt in
retaliation for her outspokenness on the atrocities committed by the
Kremlin in Chechnya. And yet, even in his chilling blankness toward
the demise of Hrant Dink’s Russian counterpart, Putin was more honest
than his Turkish counterpart.

On the Turkish front, in contrast, words of sympathies and sorrow
galore, but the only genuine sentiment is the deep concern that the
repercussions of the event will jeopardize national interests abroad.
These are crocodile tears — like the ones that welled up in
Türkeş’s eyes back in the day, while reciting Nazım
Hikmet.1

Government officials are not alone in their half-hearted condolences.
The media pundits, who have always echoed their master’s voice, are
whistling the same tune. On a radio broadcast of CNN-Turk, veteran
journalist Oktay Ekşi repeated almost verbatim his Prime
Minister’s comments, making a point of noting, of course, that the
murder of his "peer" might play into the hands of the Armenian lobby.
Beginning his column with the exclamatory outburst "No, this can’t
be happening," the columnist and sports commentator, Hıncal
Uluç, reveals a couple of sentences later what is really rending his
heart: "From those striving to stir trouble in Turkey to those
seeking support for their Armenian thesis, there are so many out
there hoping to benefit from this death."

"Condolences," only short of finding Dink himself at fault for
putting the Republic of Turkey on the spot! I wish this were
hyperbole, but it is not. Remember the accusations of "provocation"
levelled at Aziz Nesin in the aftermath of the Madımak inferno,
which he had barely survived.2

So nauseating is the hypocrisy oozing out of these half-hearted
condolences that the frankness of those who openly shout out "good
riddance!" is almost preferable in comparison. Which is worse,
really: the audacity of the gunman shouting out threats in the
courtroom against the human rights activist Akın Birdal, while
being tried for taking multiple rounds of point-blank shots at Birdal
in his office, or the two-facedness of the powers that be who
prosecute the monsters of their own making? Had he also survived the
attempt on his life, wouldn’t Dink have been seeking justice from the
very authorities who had sentenced him to 6 months in prison for
denigrating Turkishness? Such is the sorry state of affairs in
Turkey.

We know from his latest writings and interviews that this last
punishment he was meted out under the infamous article 301 of the
Turkish penal code had devastated Hrant Dink. Even as bottomless an
optimism as his seemed depleted. Dink was taken to court for using
the phrase "venomous Turkish blood," by which he meant, the long
held, almost visceral animosity the Armenians harbor against Turks —
a hatred, he believed, Armenians should get out of their systems for
the sake of dialogue and reconciliation. Dink was calling Turkish
blood venomous only in the same sense that I called his murder "good
riddance" above, i.e., he wasn’t. But the court insisted on taking
the metaphor literally and out of context and found him guilty all
the same, despite the expert opinion of a commission of three
professors to the contrary. And we are supposed to believe that
those who made his life a Kafkaesque nightmare are now grieving Hrant
Dink’s death?

That being said, it wouldn’t be fair to chalk up all the faults to
the government officials and their high-fidelity echoes in the media.
For the onus of the tragic end that Dink met is on all of us who
didn’t help outnumber Kerinçsiz and his gang in front of the court
houses when it really mattered. I wish we could muster our
organizational skills for something other than funeral processions,
our resourcefulnness for something other than commemoration. Had
only one person for every thousand reader of Pamuk in Turkey, had
only a fraction of the masses at Dink’s funeral, showed solidarity
with the prosecuted/persecuted during their trials, maybe today. . .
.

Now the most poetic lines, the most poignant observations are of no
avail. And when he wrote "the pigeon-like timidity of my soul,"
Hrant Dink didn’t leave us much to say. And no, our sorrow, our pain
is not half-hearted, but most of us sound repentant these days.

1 The leader of the far-right, nationalistic party, MHP, and its
militant offshoot, "Grey Wolves," the late Alparslan Türkeş is
known to have quoted at a MHP congress from Nazım Hikmet, a
world-famous Turkish poet, who remained a committed communist all his
life and died in Russia in exile ("Hero or Traitor? Jon Gorvett
Reports from Istanbul on Celebrations to Mark the Birth of Nazim
Hikmet 100 Years Ago," 1 April 2002).

2 On July 2, 1993, a mob of furious fundamentalists laid siege to a
hotel (Madımak) in Sivas where the participants of the Pir
Sultan Abdal Culture Festival were staying, including Aziz Nesin, one
of the most published authors of Turkey. Nesin and his company were
targeted for Nesin’s Turkish translation of Salman Rushdie’s Satanic
Verses. As the security forces watched on, the mob set the hotel on
fire, as a result of which 37 people — mostly Allevite, leftist
poets, singers, performers — died ("Madimak Tragedy Commemorated on
13th Year," 14 September 2006).

Kenan Erçel, a Turkish citizen, is a graduate student in economics at
the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. He is also a member of the
editorial collective of the journal Rethinking Marxism.

http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/ercel270107.html

Armavia Sets Out Regular Flights

ARMAVIA SETS OUT REGULAR FLIGHTS

Yerevan, January 26. ArmInfo. Armavia Air Company starts regular weekly
flights of U8-109 Yerevan-Cologne and U8-110 Cologne-Yerevan on March
29. The flights will be maintained on Thursdays on Airbus. Departure
from Yerevan will take place at 6:50 a.m. Arrival in Cologne is at 8:30
a.m. Departure from Cologne is at 11:00 p.m., arrival in Armenia at
5:55 p.m. (local time). The tickets cost are as follows: business class
Yerevan-Cologne – 600 USD, Yerevan-Cologne-Yerevan – 1000 USD; economic
class Yerevan-Cologne – 390 USD, Yerevan-Cologne-Yerevan – 350 USD.

Armenian army capable to defend fatherland

PanARMENIAN.Net

Armenian army capable to defend fatherland
26.01.2007 16:15 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ With professional officer staff and modern
equipment, the Armenian Army is capable to fulfill all tasks set to
it, said RA First Deputy to Defense Minister, Colonel General Mikael
Haruryunyan who took part in the preparation of the forum dedicated to
the 15th anniversary of the Armenian Armed Forces. According to him,
the Armenian Army is well skilled and special attention is paid to
training of the staff. `God forbid, if hostilities are launched the
Armed Forces will be capable to defend the homeland,’ he said adding
that Army is not a frozen organism and can develop. `Certainly, not
all the problems were settled during 15 years. There are international
standards we should head for and then apply taking into account
national peculiarities. A national doctrine based on the experience of
developed states should be worked out. I am convinced we’ll
succeed. However, we do not want to carry out military reforms at the
expense of the taxpayers. We should do our best to efficiently use the
funds allocated to the army,’ the Col. Gen. said.

In Harutyunyan’s words, presently the people’s trust in the army
reached 80%. He emphasized that the Armenian Army is firm and
equipped. `Any wish to launch aggression against Armenia can be
forgotten. The army is capable to defend the fatherland,’ he resumed,
reports IA Regnum.

Arpi Vartanian: politics should not intrude into history

PanARMENIAN.Net

Arpi Vartanian: politics should not intrude into history
26.01.2007 18:18 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ `Each presidential contender promises the American
Armenians to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide. It’s natural. They
want to enlist support of various levels of population while the
Armenian community is rather strong and influential,’ Arpi Vartanian,
the Armenian Assembly of America Regional Director for Armenia and
Nagorno Karabakh said in an interview with PanARMENIAN.Net. In her
words, politics should not intrude into history. `Senators Barack
Obama and Hillary Clinton, who enjoy popular support, have already
announced the decision to run for President. It’s too early to say who
can win the race but we can suppose that an African American or a
woman may be elected President for the first ever time in the
U.S. history. A woman has already been elected the Speaker of the
House of Representatives. Thus, everything is possible and we are
hopeful that one of the U.S. Presidents will keep promise and
recognize the Armenian Genocide,’ she said.

Fassier: In order to prepare for peace, it is necessary to speak abo

Fassier: In order to prepare for peace, it is necessary to speak about peace and not war

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.01.2007 18:06 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "War will not solve the problem, there can be
only peaceful solution to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. In order
to prepare for peace, it is necessary to speak about peace and not
war," stated OSCE MG Co-Chair Bernard Fassier in Stepanakert after
the meeting with NKR President Arkadi Ghukassian.

Answering the question on EU’s intention to directly work with Nagorno
Karabakh, the French mediator said, "Today via negotiations in the
framework of OSCE Minsk Group the U.S.A., France and Russia are trying
to help the conflicting sides to come to a peaceful solution to the
conflict. On the whole, the European Union has other means to solve
such problems. The Neighborhood Policy is an example. The European
Union can assist the settlement process, but it does not participate
in the talks," IA Regnum reports.

In the framework of the regional visit OSCE MG Co-Chairs on the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict settlement Yuri Merzlyakov (Russia), Matthew Bryza
(U.S.A.) and Bernard Fassier (France) arrived in Stepanakert today.

The mediators have met with NKR President Arkadi Ghukassian and
talked to him several hours. NKR Foreign Minister Georgy Petrossian
also was present at the talks.

In defense of the indefensible

Statesman Journal, OR
Salem Statesman Journal, OR
Jan 24 2007

In defense of the indefensible

Inside the First Amendment

By CHARLES C. HAYNES
Gannett News Service

January 24, 2007

If any speech should be a crime, denying the Holocaust would be at
the top of my list.

That’s why it’s easy to understand the motivation behind Germany’s
announcement Jan. 8 that it will push for legislation that would
criminalize "Holocaust denial" throughout the European Union.

Germany, France and eight other European nations already have laws
that make denying the Holocaust punishable by prison sentences. Last
year, British author David Irving was convicted in Austria under one
such law and sentenced to three years in jail. (He was released in
December and is now on two years’ probation.)

Germany’s move to expand the ban on Holocaust denial comes in wake of
Iran’s one-sided conference "debating the Holocaust" in Tehran last
month. By giving credence to some of the most deluded and bigoted
Holocaust deniers in the world, Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
stirred outrage in Europe and elsewhere.

However well intentioned, Germany’s proposal is the wrong response to
this very ugly problem.

Criminalizing speech denying the Holocaust not only threatens free
speech – it gives power to the vile views it seeks to suppress.

Once Europe heads down the slippery slope of state censorship, where
will it stop?

Consider the French slide toward state censorship of speech. In 1990,
France passed a law punishing Holocaust denial with a year in prison
and a 45,000-euro fine. Last October, the lower house of the French
parliament added to the list of forbidden speech by passing a law
that would make it a crime to deny that Armenians suffered genocide
at the hands of Turks in 1915. The measure still needs Senate
approval.

While French Armenians celebrated the vote, Turkey reacted with
predictable anger – not in defense of free speech, but because Turkey
itself denies that any genocide against Armenians ever happened.

Turkey, which aspires to join the European Union, is already near the
bottom of the anti-speech slope. Not only can you go to jail for
calling the Armenian tragedy a genocide, but you also can be arrested
for any speech that insults the republic, parliament or any organs of
state.

In 2005, Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk was put on trial for
questioning the official version of the mass killing of Armenians.
After intense international pressure, an Istanbul judge halted the
trial.

Meanwhile in Sweden, the Rev. Ake Green was convicted of "hate
speech" for preaching a sermon against homosexuality. Although the
Swedish Supreme Court acquitted Green in 2005, his trial provoked
worldwide concern about the use of hate-speech laws to limit freedom
of speech and religion.

Although the United States prides itself on strong protection for
freedom of speech under the First Amendment, we are not immune from
the temptation to censor unpopular speech. This is especially true on
college campuses where speech codes and anti-harassment policies are
frequently invoked to punish student and faculty speech.

And in the land of the free, we have plenty of ugly, repulsive speech
that pushes the limits of public support for robust free speech.
Exhibit A is the Rev. Fred Phelps and his small band of followers who
have incensed Americans with their protests at funerals of soldiers
killed in Iraq. Carrying inflammatory signs with anti-gay messages,
Phelps and Co. declare that the soldiers’ deaths are God’s punishment
for the nation’s support of gay rights.

Thanks to Phelps, some 27 states and the Congress have passed
legislation limiting protests at funerals. Critics of these laws
argue that they go beyond constitutionally permissible limitations on
such things as noise level and disorderly conduct by imposing overly
broad and vague restrictions on free speech and assembly.

By giving the state the power to ban the offensive speech of a few,
we give the state the power to limit the fundamental rights of us
all.

Moreover, state censorship doesn’t work. Putting people like David
Irving in prison only makes them martyrs of the extreme right.
Attempting to silence people like Fred Phelps only makes them media
magnets and pushes them to more outrageous behavior.

After Irving’s conviction, historian Deborah Lipstadt, whom Irving
unsuccessfully sued for libel in 2000, put it this way: "I am not
happy when censorship wins, and I don’t believe in winning battles
via censorship. … The way of fighting Holocaust deniers is with
history and truth."

It’s never easy (or pleasant) to defend the indefensible. But for
Europeans, Americans and people in any nation that would be free, the
familiar battle cry of free speech still applies: Fight bad speech
with good speech – not with state power.

Charles Haynes is a senior scholar for the Freedom Forum First
Amendment Center, 1101 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, VA 22209. Send e-mail
to [email protected].

ANKARA: Letter Of Threat To Dink

Turkish Press
Jan 21 2007

Letter Of Threat To Dink
Published: 1/20/2007

BURSA – No documents were submitted to judicial authorities in
northwestern city of Bursa after Hrant Dink reported a threatening
letter (mailed from Bursa) to Chief public Prosecutor`s Office in
Sisli district of Istanbul, sources said.
Dink wrote about a threatening letter in his article on January 10th.

"Memory of my computer is full of lines containing threats and rage.
I`m unable to determine whether they are real or not," he had wrote
in his article.

Khoren Palyan Passes Away

Panorama.am

18:40 20/01/2007

KHOREN PALYAN PASSES AWAY

Khoren Palian, honored worker of culture, passed away
this morning. He lectured at Yerevan State University,
philology faculty and headed Tohmik band. Palyan was
the husband of Lusine Zakaryan. In the course of the
last few years, he actively engaged in protest actions
organized by the opposition.

Source: Panorama.am