Erdogan: Our Goal Is To Develop Unity And Solidarity Through Normali

ERDOGAN: OUR GOAL IS TO DEVELOP UNITY AND SOLIDARITY THROUGH NORMALIZATION OF RELATIONS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
22.03.2010 14:23 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said
Turkey propagandizing the idea of peace, justice, stability and glory,
highlights equal attitude towards its citizens.

"Our goal is to develop unity and solidarity and strengthen the
atmosphere of trust through normalization of relations," he said during
a meeting with cinema and theater actors, film directors and producers.

Earlier, Erdogan threatened to deport illegal Armenian migrants from
Turkey. "There are 170 thousand Armenians living in Turkey. 70 thousand
of them are Turkish citizens. If necessary, I will tell the remaining
100 thousand to leave. I can do so because they are not Turkish
citizens and I’m not obliged to keep them in my country," he said.

The fierce reaction of the Turkish PM came after the adoption of
the Armenian Genocide resolution, H.Res.252, by the US House Foreign
Affairs Committee on March 4 and passage of a resolution recognizing
the Genocide of Armenians, Assyrians/Syrians/Chaldeans and Pontic
Greeks by the Swedish parliament on March 11.

BAKU: Bulent Aliriza: No progress in NK due to complicated situation

APA, Azerbaijan
March 20 2010

Bulent Aliriza: No progress in Nagorno-Karabakh conflict due to
complicated situation in Caucasus

[ 20 Mar 2010 07:25 ]

Washington. Isabel Levine`APA. `If there was even a small progress in
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the situation in Caucasus wouldn’t be so
complicated’ – told APA’s Washington correspondent Bulent Aliriza,
Senior Research Associate and Director of the Turkey Project at Center
for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), Washington DC based
think tank.

Analyst reminded that, In October 2009 US State Secretary Hillary
Clinton had played a prominent role at a ceremony in Zurich where
Turkey and Armenia finalized prolonged negotiations by signing
protocols relating to the establishment of full diplomatic relations
and the reopening of their common border.
In his tern, Turkish Prime minister Tayyib Erdogan made it clear soon
after this event that the protocols would not be ratified by the
Turkish Grand National Assembly (TGNA) until Armenia began the process
of withdrawal from occupied Azeri territory in and around
Nagorno-Karabakh.

`As there has been little tangible progress in Azeri-Armenian talks,
the TGNA has not moved on the protocols. For its part, the Armenian
government has continued to argue that the two issues are independent
of each other, declared that the Armenian Parliament will not ratify
the protocols until after Turkish ratification and recently sought and
received parliamentary authorization to withdraw its signature from
the protocols’ -Mr. Aliriza added.

Speaking about the `Genocide Vote’ in Congress on March 4, 2010,
analyst stressed that, even as the House Foreign Affairs Committee was
preparing to vote, the administration continued to stress the
importance of Turkish Parliament approval of the protocols:

According to the analyst, on top of all his other domestic and
international problems, US president Barak Obama now needs to find a
way to navigate between the competing and contradictory claims of the
Armenian Diaspora in the US and the Armenian government which want him
to live up to his word on the genocide issue and the Turkish
government which is calling on him to act in accordance with America’s
geopolitical interests.

`Attention now shifts from Congress to what Obama will choose to say
on April 24′ ` Mr. Aliriza said finalizing his thoughts.

BAKU: Turkish FM Not Rules Out Possible Resolving Of Armenia-Azerbai

TURKISH FM NOT RULES OUT POSSIBLE RESOLVING OF ARMENIA-AZERBAIJAN CONFLICT

Trend
March 19 2010
Azerbaijan

If Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia were able to restore their
relations after a full-scale war, it means that there is a chance to
establish peace between Azerbaijan and Armenia, Hurriyet newspaper
reported quoting Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu.

The war between Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia was a much large
than the Nagorno-Karabakh one. As a result, the parties could agree to
normalize relations and, hence, there is a chance to restore relations
between Azerbaijan and Armenia, Turkish minister said.

Davutoglu said that Armenia continues to accuse Turkey of supporting
Azerbaijan and refuses to discuss resolving of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict with Ankara.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
armed forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and 7 surrounding districts.

Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994.

The co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia, France, and the U.S. –
are currently holding the peace negotiations.

Armenia has not yet implemented the U.N. Security Council’s resolutions
on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh region and the occupied
territories.

"Voices of Armenian Women in the 21st Century" (Forum on 3-27-10)

Regional Executive
Armenian Relief Society of Western U.S.A., Inc.
517 W. Glenoaks Blvd., Glendale, CA 91202-2812
Telephone: (818) 500-1343
Fax: (818) 242-3732
Web Site:
Contact: Talar Aintablian
Email: [email protected]

Press Release

"Voices of Armenian Women in the 21st Century"

The year 2010 commenced with His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great
House of Cilicia, proclaiming it as "The Year of the Armenian Woman."
Calling attention to this occasion, His Holiness conveyed a well-rounded
message about the value and significant role of Armenian women, as well as
the ARS, within Armenian life.

In an effort to highlight the important role of Armenian women, the ARS
Regional Executive’s Educational Committee has organized a public forum
entitled "Voices of Armenian Women in the 21st Century," which will be held
on Saturday, March 27, 2010 at 6:00 p.m. at the Glendale Central Library –
222 E. Harvard St., Glendale, CA.

The event will feature three well-known, accomplished intellectuals as the
guest speakers, who have helped the advancement of the Armenian community
with their knowledge and skills. The speakers and their respective topics
follow:

* Ungh. Sona Zeitlian – "The History of Armenian Women Prior to
Genocide"

* Dr. Roubina Peroomian – "The Suffering Continues: The Armenian Woman
in Turkey after 1915 – The Survivor, The Victim"

* Dr. Talar Chahinian – "Hyphenated Belonging, Compartmentalized
Lives: Meditations of the Contemporary Armenian Woman"

Artwork by Armenian women will also be on display at the event.

We invite the Armenian community to be present at this interesting public
forum and artwork display as a way to be better familiarized, as well as
take pride in, the important role of the Armenian woman in our lives.

Additional information regarding the event can be obtained by calling the
ARS Regional Headquarters at (818) 500-1343, e-mailing
[email protected], or visiting the ARS website at
< gt; .

This seminar will be presented bilingually. Admission is free and a
reception will follow the lectures.

###

http://www.arswestusa.org/&
www.arswestusa.org
www.arswestusa.org

VoA: Was 1915 Massacre Of Armenians By Ottoman Turks Genocide?

WAS 1915 MASSACRE OF ARMENIANS BY OTTOMAN TURKS GENOCIDE?
Andre de Nesnera

Voice of America
e/Was-1915-Massacre-of-Armenians-by-Ottoman-Turks- Genocide–88437737.html
March 18 2010

A U.S. congressional panel has described as genocide the 1915 killing
of Armenians by Ottoman Turks.

The non-binding resolution in the House Foreign Affairs Committee
recommends that President Barak Obama recognize the 1915 killings of
Armenians by Ottoman Turks as genocide. The measure was passed by a
narrow 23 to 22 vote with one member not participating.

The Obama administration opposed the resolution. After the measure
passed, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the U.S. does not
believe the full House of Representatives will or should vote on
the resolution.

Turkey’s reaction was swift. Ankara said the measure accused the
Turkish nation of a crime it had not committed. Its ambassador to
Washington Namik Tan was recalled for consultations. And Turkey’s Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan indicated he might not attend a mid-April
nuclear energy summit in Washington hosted by President Obama.

Historians agree Armenians were massacred by the Ottoman Empire –
what was to become Turkey – during World War I. But not all agree
that it was genocide.

Genocide

Ronald Suny, an expert on Armenia with the University of Chicago,
defines genocide. "The definition of genocide that is most often used
is the official U.N. definition in the Genocide Convention of the late
1940s. And that definition argues that a genocide is the intentional
killing of all or part of a designated people defined by their faith,
their race, their ethnicity or their nationality," he said.

Suny explains that during the First World War, the Ottoman Empire
sided with Germany and was thus at war with Russia and most of Europe.

"When the Ottomans were defeated at a major battle in the winter of
1914-15, the government saw the Armenians, who were on both sides
of the Russian-Turkish frontier, as a potential ‘fifth column’ –
a danger, an internal danger to their empire," he said.

"And they then carried out systematically, deportations of Armenians
from eastern Anatolia, first demobilizing the Armenian soldiers who
were serving with the Ottoman army, forcing them to dig their graves
and shooting them. And then women and children, deporting them into
the deserts of Syria, massacring them along the way and ultimately
killing thousands and thousands when they reached Dayr az Zawr,
the end point in the Syrian desert," he added.

Suny says the case is clear – the action by the Ottoman Turks was
genocide. "There is no doubt that there was, in fact, a state
organized, systematic deportation and massacre of a designated
population, defined by their religion and ethnicity, namely the
Armenians," he said.

"And that it was carried out, initiated and organized by this
government. So if you have a mass killing of an ethno-religious group,
carried out by a government in order to eliminate those people from
their homeland, or to destroy their political and cultural potential –
that is, by the conventional definition and most scholarly definitions,
a genocide," he continued.

Not genocide

The majority of scholars and historians agree with Ronald Suny. But
Guenter Lewy from the University of Massachusetts does not.

"There is the initial definition by the United Nations when they
adopted the genocide convention, which is considered generally
authoritative. And that involves the intentional destruction of a
group in whole or in part for religious, ethnic or racial reasons.

Applying that definition, I do not think one can consider what
happened here a case of genocide. I don’t think there was any intent
to exterminate the Armenian community. There was an intent to remove
them and neutralize them as a fifth column," he said.

Lewy says rejecting the genocide label is not a popular view. "It takes
some courage these days to do so because there is a lot of pressure
and some rather vicious attacks. I can speak here from personal
experience. If you look me up on Guenter Lewy, Armenian genocide and
you look at some of the blogs, you will find a lot of vituperation: you
are called a genocide denier on a par with holocaust deniers," he said.

Experts also disagree on the number of Armenians killed by the Ottoman
Turks. Guenter Lewy says close to 700,000 perished.

But most scholars – such as Roger Smith with the College of William and
Mary – say the figure is higher. "Out of about two million Armenians
that were thought to exist in 1915, probably about a million and a half
– at least over a million – perished and others were dispersed. So
that if you say in 1915 there were two million Armenians in what
we call Turkey, but the Ottoman Empire – there are now about 60,000
Armenians in Turkey. So a huge, vast population change," he said.

The issue of the Armenian genocide remains a very emotional one for
both sides. Experts say for any chance of normal relations between
Turkey and Armenia in the future, Ankara and Yerevan must first
resolve a very painful chapter in their past.

http://www1.voanews.com/english/news/europ

Raffi Hovannisian: Armenia’s Policy Of "No Preconditions" Has Failed

RAFFI HOVANNISIAN: ARMENIA’S POLICY OF "NO PRECONDITIONS" HAS FAILED

18-raffi-hovannisian-armenia-s-policy-of–no-preco nditions–has-failed
Thursday March 18, 2010

Raffi Hovannisian speaking at Georgetown on March 1. PF-Armenia photo

Washington – The policy of not setting preconditions for establishment
of relations with Turkey embraced by three presidents of Armenia
has proved to be a failure, a leading Armenian opposition figure and
former foreign minister Raffi Hovannisian told The Armenian Reporter.

Mr. Hovannisian said that what he thought was "a measured and
considered approach" when the policy was first introduced in his time
as foreign minister in 1991-2, 18 years later has failed to deliver
results for Armenia.

Mr. Hovannisian spoke to The Reporter after delivering a keynote
speech at a conference on Armenia-Diaspora relations organized by
Policy Forum Armenia at Georgetown University on March 1-2.

"It is possible that we were wrong that that [policy] might be the
way to resolve the issues," Mr. Hovannisian, adding that there was
a need to develop a new policy towards Turkey.

"No" to protocols Mr. Hovannisian reiterated his strong criticism
of the protocols that the Armenian government signed with Turkey
last October.

The government "is in a state of effective resignation from the
[Armenians’] right to homeland, to Armenia’s territorial integrity
as defined de-jure," Mr. Hovannisian said in a reference to a clause
in Armenia’s Declaration of Independence that commits the republic to
pursuing international recognition of the Genocide in Western Armenia.

Should protocols ever come to ratification in the Armenian parliament,
Mr. Hovannisian believes that there will be widespread opposition in
Armenia, including from elements inside the ruling establishment.

Armenia’s president Serge Sargsyan has argued that the protocols
were in line with the "policy of no-preconditions." At the same
time, suspicious of Turkey’s intentions, the Armenian president made
Armenia’s ratification of protocols conditional on Turkey ratifying
them first.

Moreover, Mr. Sargsyan has warned that he would rescind Armenia’s
signature from the agreement should Turkey continues to stall.

Although he gave no concrete timeframe, commentators have speculated
the next April 24 will become an effective deadline.

Turkish leaders have refused to ratify the protocols unless Armenia
commits to a study that would question the facts of the Armenian
Genocide while also agreeing with Azerbaijan on basic principles of
settlement of the Karabakh conflict.

A long-standing policy Speaking at Georgetown, Mr. Hovannisian noted
that even before the Armenian military success in Karabakh, Turkey
refused to establish diplomatic relations with Armenia.

Moreover, in early 1992 Turkey threatened to veto Armenia’s membership
in the Conference for Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE,
now OSCE) unless Armenia endorsed the 1921 Treaty of Kars, which
established the current Turkish-Armenian frontier and absolved parties
from war crimes committed during and after World War I.

Mr. Hovannisian recalled that under U.S. pressure, Turkey at the
time dropped the veto threat, opening the way for Armenia’s CSCE
membership. But Ankara refused to establish diplomatic relations with
Yerevan unless its pre-conditions were fulfilled.

In April 1993, in response to Armenian advances in the Karabakh war,
Turkey suspended ground and air communications with Armenia and
threatened to intervene militarily on Azerbaijani side.

While a direct Turkish intervention did not come – as Russia also
threatened to get involved – and restrictions on air travel were
lifted in the mid-1990s, Turkey continues to advance pre-conditions
for a full normalization of its relations with Armenia.

http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2010-03-

Armenia Now Permits Deaf & Hard-Of-Hearing Individuals To Drive

ARMENIA NOW PERMITS DEAF & HARD-OF-HEARING INDIVIDUALS TO DRIVE

Tert.am
13:02 ~U 18.03.10

During a session today, the Armenian government approved changes to a
law which previously prohibited deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals
from driving vehicles.

According to RA Minister of Health Harutyun Kushkyan, international
experience was studied and on that basis, the decision was made to
allow deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals to drive in Armenia.

Kushkyan added that they would be allowed to drive if corresponding
signage was fixed on the vehicle.

Violentes Reactions Armeniennes Aux Declarations D’Erdogan

VIOLENTES REACTIONS ARMENIENNES AUX DECLARATIONS D’ERDOGAN
par Jean Eckian

armenews
ARMENIE-TURQUIE
jeudi18 mars 2010

Reponse de Tigran Sarkissian aux menaces du Premier ministre turc
sur l’expulsion de 100 000 ressortissants armeniens vivants sur le
territoire turc.

" cela montre que la question de la reconnaissance du genocide arrive
au bon moment et qu’elle ne trouvera d’issue veritable que si la
Turquie elle-meme reconnaît le genocide ". Et de poursuivre que "
ce type de declaration politique ne contribue pas a ameliorer les
relations entre nos deux Etats ". " Quand le Premier ministre turc se
permet de faire de telles declarations, cela ravive immediatement les
souvenirs des evenements de 1915 ", a-t-il ajoute. Tout en jugeant les
chiffres presentes par son homologue turc " gonfles plusieurs fois par
rapport aux chiffres dont dispose la partie armenienne ", a-t-il dit.

Par la voix de son representant Hrayr Karapetian le parti dachnak
a qualifie les propos du PM turc de " terreur internationale par
la Turquie " qui prouve une nouvelle fois que la question de la
reconnaissance internationale du genocide est urgente. Il a egalement
estime qu’il existe aujourd’hui une menace de repetition du genocide,
dans la mesure où toute action de violence a l’encontre d’une minorite
nationale revet un caractère genocidaire. Les propos d’Erdogan
prouvent, selon lui, que meme si les regimes changent en Turquie,
leur style demeure le meme.

Le turcologue Artak Chakharian, qui cite les chiffres du Ministère
turc du tourisme constatant que le nombre de ressortissants armeniens
qui dans les annees 2000 a 2008 sont entres sur le territoire turc
et ne l’ont pas quitte oscille entre 6000 et 7000. Si l’on ajoute a
ce chiffre les flux migratoires des annees 1990, l’on peut supposer
qu’il ne s’agit que de 20 000 a 25 000 ressortissants armeniens.

La presse armenienne se dechaîne contre les propos d’Erdogan. Voici
quelques titres releves par le Service de Presse de l’ambassade de
France en Armenie dirige par Merie Hakobian :

" Esperons que les nouvelles deportations d’Armeniens de Turquie ne
se traduiront pas par de nouveaux massacres et un nouveau genocide
", ecrit Hayots Achkhar avec ironie.

" Les declarations d’Erdogan ravivent les souvenirs du genocide,
selon le PM armenien "- Azg

" Menace insensee "- Aravot

" La Turquie parle a nouveau aux Armeniens le langage des deportations
"- Novoye Vremia

Armenian, Russian Security Councils Will Sign Cooperation Accord

ARMENIAN, RUSSIAN SECURITY COUNCILS WILL SIGN COOPERATION ACCORD

Interfax
March 16 2010
Russia

The Armenian and Russian Security Councils plan to sign a cooperation
agreement, a spokesman for Armenia’s National Security Council told
Interfax on Tuesday.

Armenian National Security Council Secretary Artur Bagdasaryan is due
to visit Moscow at the invitation of his Russian counterpart Nikolai
Patrushev on March 17, the spokesman said.

At their meeting, Bagdasaryan and Patrushev will "discuss the prospects
of cooperation on security issues," he said.

"The two structures will also sign an agreement on cooperation,"
he added.

During his visit to Moscow, Armenia’s top security official is also
expected to meet with Russian Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov,
Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) General Secretary
Nikolai Bordyuzha, Federal Drug Control Service head Viktor Ivanov,
as well as the chairman of the business council of the CSTO Interstate
Commission for military and economic cooperation.

Germany To Assign 117.5 Euro For Armenian Economy Development

GERMANY TO ASSIGN 117.5 EURO FOR ARMENIAN ECONOMY DEVELOPMENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
16.03.2010 10:47 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian Finance Minister Tigran Davtyan and German
Ambassador to Armenia Hans-Jochen Schmidt are expected to sign an
agreement on financial cooperation, the Embassy’s press center said.

According to the report, the funds will be spend for the welfare
of the Armenian people and development of economy. The agreement
envisages allocation of 105.5 million euro during the year of 2010.

Besides, 12 million euro will be assigned in the framework of Caucasus
Initiative.

The BMZ (German Federal Ministry of Economic Development and
Cooperation) Caucasus Initiative supports the political and
economic cooperation activities of the southern Caucasus republics
Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia. The initiative not only steps up
country-specific bilateral Development Cooperation, it also places
it in a regional context. It forms the conceptual framework and an
umbrella for German Development Cooperation with and in the region.

The regional projects in turn build on experience from the bilateral
projects and enhance their impact in terms of the stripped-for
development results. At the same time it is important to put successful
national projects in a regional context and to examine how the
results achieved in these projects can be expanded and deepened at
regional level.

Germany has issued loans and grants amounting to 220 million euro to
Armenia since 1995.