Ankara responds sharply to Yerevan proposal to normalize relations

Ankara responds sharply to Yerevan proposal to normalize relations

PanARMENIAN.Net
26.01.2007 14:45 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Comments made by Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister
Arman Kirakossian that Armenia is prepared for unconditional diplomatic
relations with Turkey have elicited a sharp response from Ankara.

Yesterday evening in Ankara, PM Erdogan referred to the Yerevan
administration’s refusal to consider the Ankara suggestion of a joint
commission to investigate Armenian "claims" of genocide, saying,
"First they need to answer our suggestion. They have still not offered
an answer. This is not a show of good intention. I do not find this
stance of theirs sincere," reports Hurriyet.

Arman Kirakossian touched on the Armenian-Tukish relations during
Hrant Dink’s funeral in Istanbul.

TBILISI: Armenia sends mixed signals on new rail link

The Messenger, Georgia
Jan 24 2007

Armenia sends mixed signals on new rail link
By Christina Tashkevich

The Akhalkalaki – Tbilisi section
of the railway will have to be
completely rehabilitated

Armenia is ready to open its border with Turkey and has softened its
line on the Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi railway project, a leading
Armenian official said last Thursday.

"There are certain problems, because Armenia and Turkey have no
diplomatic relations," Armenian deputy foreign minister Ghegam
Gharibjanyan said. "Armenia is ready to open its border with Turkey,
and is ready for counter-proposals [to its stance on the new
railway]."

The diplomat added Armenia is also ready to join the
Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi railway project, but reaffirmed Armenia’s
position.

"We already have the Kars-Gyumri-Akhalkalaki railway, which has not
been used since the collapse of the Soviet Union, when the countries
in the region gained independence," he said. "If the border between
Armenia and Turkey is opened, the railway could be opened practically
the following day." The border between Turkey and Armenia has been
closed since the collapse of the Soviet Union and the eruption of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, in which Turkey supports Azerbaijan.
Turkey and Armenia do not have diplomatic relations with one-another.

The deputy minister says that cooperation between all countries in
the region would add to the security of the South Caucasus.

Earlier in January another Deputy Foreign Minister Aram Kirakosyan
reaffirmed Yerevan’s desire to establish diplomatic relations and
reopen the land border with Turkey. He called for Turkey to "abandon
its policy of excluding Armenia from regional projects."

Kirakosyan says the re-establishment of the Kars-Gyumri railway is a
necessity for Armenia and the region, claiming it will encourage the
turnover of goods across the region.

The head of the board of directors of Analytical Center on
Globalization and Regional Cooperation, Stepan Grigoryan, thinks that
from the economic point of view the Kars-Gyumri route is more
acceptable, as the line already exists and does not need serious
investment.

"[Trying to activate Kars-Gyumri] Armenia should work on
normalization of relations with opponents: Turkey and Armenia are not
ready to do that without preliminary conditions, also Armenian and
Azeri governments have no readiness to quickly settle Karabakh
conflict," he said.

Azeri expert Ilgar Nur thinks that the proposal to use the existing
line of Kars-Gyumri and therefore not to construct Kars-Akhalkalaki
line is unreal.

"Armenia could have proposed with the same success another existing
route: Kars-Gyumri-Yerevan-Baku, which is not working for obvious
reasons. The position of Baku is that Azerbaijan would not
participate in any joint economic projects until the occupied
territories [Nagorno-Karabakh and adjacent areas] are liberated," he
told Nezavisimaya Gazeta.

Just before Armenian officials made their statements, US diplomat
Matthew Bryza requested Armenia become involved in the
Kars-Akhalkalaki trunk-railway project.

"Of course, we would like the railway, which connects Turkey with
Baku, to pass through Armenia, though if Azerbaijan, Turkey and
Georgia want to construct a railway, of course, we cannot object. But
we do not particularly support that project," he said.

Chief of the Georgian Railway, Irakli Ezugbaia, went to Baku on
January 23 to discuss the technical details of the
Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi project, while the meeting of foreign
affairs ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan in Moscow was also
scheduled on January 23.

Turkish Journalist Mourned Monday

All Headline News
Jan 24 2007

Turkish Journalist Mourned Monday

January 24, 2007 6:36 a.m. EST

Megan Shannon – All Headline News Staff Writer
(AHN) – The streets of Istanbul were flooded Monday with mourners of
Turkish-Armenian Journalist Hrant Dink, who was murdered last Friday.

The 53-year-old news editor was close to his office when he was
gunned down. He was known for his controversial writings on the
genocide of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during World War I.

Tens of thousands of people followed Dink’s coffin for five miles,
pausing at the spot where he was shot to applaud. They stopped at the
Armenian Orthodox church where Dink was buried.

During the funeral Dink’s widow said, "We are seeing off our brother
with a silent walk, without slogans and without asking how a baby
became a murderer."

Teenage suspect Ogun Samast confessed to the murder. Police have six
other suspects they are questioning at this time.

Hrant Dink’s Funeral To Take Place in Istanbul Today

Hrant Dink’s Funeral To Take Place in Istanbul Today

PanARMENIAN.Net
23.01.2007 13:05 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today Hrant Dink’s funeral will be held in
Istanbul. For this purpose the police has strengthened the security
measures. Thousands were expected to take part in the funeral, marching
in silence along an eight-kilometer route from ‘Agos’ office to an
Armenian Orthodox Church. Dink’s family has asked mourners not to
chant slogans or to turn the funeral into protest. Only one banner,
reading "We are all Hrants, we are all Armenians," would be allowed.
An ethnic Armenian Hrant Dink was gunned down Friday January 19 near
the editorial office of his ‘Agos’ weekly. The Police has already
detained one suspect, 17-year-old Ogun Samast, who has confessed to
the murder. Also Yasin Hayal has been arrested who has confessed to
instigation and organization of the assassination.

Ankara must solve murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist, says EU

Deutsche Presse-Agentur, Germany
January 19, 2007 Friday

Ankara must solve murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist, says EU

Brussels

DPA x Turkey Crime Murder EU Ankara must solve murder of
Turkish-Armenian journalist, says EU Brussels
The European Union on Friday urged Turkish
authorities to fully investigate the murder of Turkish-Armenian

journalist Hrant Dink, calling the crime a "brutal act of violence."

Dink was "a campaigner for freedom of expression in Turkey," EU
Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn said in a statement.

The journalist, shot dead by an unknown attacker in Istanbul on
Friday, "was a respected intellectual who defended his views with
conviction and contributed to an open public debate," Rehn said.

The EU, which last December partially suspended membership talks
with Ankara over its refusal to recognize EU-member Cyprus, has
repeatedly voiced serious concern over freedom of speech in Turkey.

"I trust that the Turkish authorities will fully investigate this
crime and will bring the perpetrators to justice," Rehn stressed.
Jan 1907 1536 GMT

ANKARA: We Are All Armenians, We Are All Hrant Dink

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
Jan 20 2007

We Are All Armenians, We Are All Hrant Dink

Saturday , 20 January 2007

A prominent Turkish Armenian newspaper editor and leading figure in
one of Turkey’s most painful historical debates was shot dead on
Friday.

Hrant Dink, 53, was shot three times in the head outside the office
of his weekly newspaper Agos in Istanbul. He died almost immediately.
His murder brought swift condemnation from the prime minister, Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, who despatched the interior and justice ministers to
the city as an investigation got under way.

Thousands of Turkish people have rallied in Istanbul to protest at
the murder of a prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist, Hrant Dink,
outside his office.

"We are all Armenians, we are all Hrant Dink," the crowd chanted.

"A bullet has been fired at democracy and freedom of expression,"
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told a hastily convened
news conference as news of Dink’s murder spread.

The attack on Dink was an attack on Turkey and on Turkish unity and
stability, Mr Erdogan said, adding that the "dark hands" behind the
killing would be brought to justice.

The murder is likely to increase political tensions in Turkey.

Police said Dink, 53, was shot at least twice. Turkey’s NTV, STV and
Star televisions showed pictures of a white sheet covering the
journalist’s body in front of the newspaper building’s entrance.

Turkish media quoted Istanbul’s governor as saying three people were
in custody in connection with the killing.

Journalists and politicians in Turkey expressed outrage at the
killing, which many described as a political assassination, while the
US, EU, Armenia, and several human rights groups also voiced shock
and condemnation.

A crowd of several thousand people marched towards the office of
Agos, the bilingual Turkish and Armenian weekly newspaper Dink
edited, on Friday night.

Many carried red carnations and photographs of Dink with the
inscription "My dear brother" in Turkish, Armenian and English.

There was also a protest by several hundred people in Ankara.

THE U.S.A.K. CONDEMNS THE MURDER

The Ankara-based Turkish think tank USAK, like many other Turkish
NGOS has also condemned the murder. Dr. Sedat Laciner, head of the
USAK said "the target was not Hrant but Turkey".

Minister Oskanian Condemns Hrant Dink Assassination

MINISTER OSKANIAN CONDEMNS HRANT DINK ASSASSINATION

Yerevan. January 19, ArmInfo. We are deeply shocked by the news of the
assassination of Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, a man who
lived his life in the belief that there can be understanding, dialogue
and peace amongst peoples, the press-service of the Armenian Foreign
Ministry told ArmInfo.

We categorically condemn this act, regardless of the circumstances,
and call on the Turkish authorities indeed to do everything to
identify those responsible.

Armenian Reporter – Armenian editor Dink killed in Istanbul

ARMENIAN REPORTER
PO Box 129
Paramus, New Jersey 07652
Tel: 1-201-226-1995
Fax: 1-201-226-1660
Web:
Email: [email protected]

BREAKING NEWS, January 19, 2007, 11:35 a.m. EST

Armenian editor Dink killed in Istanbul:
Murder condemned as a "literal killing of the truth"

YEREVAN–Hrant Dink, the outspoken editor-in-chief of the bilingual
Turkish and Armenian weekly "Agos," was shot dead in front of his
central Istanbul office around 3 p.m. local time (8 a.m. Eastern)
today.

The murder in broad daylight was greeted with horror in Turkey.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan called the assassination an attack
against "Turkey’s stability," Bloomberg reports.

"This attack against Hrant Dink is against the Turkish nation’s
togetherness and peace," Mr. Erdogan said. "A bullet was fired at
freedom of thought and democratic life."

The Turkish broadcaster NTV said he had been shot three times in the
neck and police had arrested two people in connection with the murder.
Police believe a male aged 18 or 19 may have killed Mr. Dink, CNN Turk
television reported citing unidentified police officials.

Armenia’s foreign minister, Vartan Oskanian told Armenia TV he was
"deeply shocked by the news of the assassination" of Mr. Dink, "a man
who has lived his life with the belief that understanding, dialog, and
peace is possible among people."

An editor at the "Turkish Daily News" told the "Armenian Reporter" in
tears, "We all thought the time was past" when people were shot in
Turkey for taking unpopular positions.

In a statement condemning the murder, the Committee to Protect
Journalists noted, "In the last 15 years, 18 Turkish journalists have
been killed for their work, many of them murdered, making [Turkey] the
eighth deadliest country in the world for journalists."

Ross Vartian, executive director of USAPAC, said, "Turkish government
denial of the Armenian Genocide and prosecution of those who dare
speak the truth breeds an environment of extreme intolerance. The
government is ultimately responsible for this murder–this literal
killing of truth."

Protesters at the scene chanted "shoulder-to-shoulder against fascism"
and "the murderer government will pay," Reuters reports.

"This bullet was fired against Turkey," said CNN Turk television
editor Taha Akyol. "An image has been created about Turkey that its
Armenian citizens have no safety."

Television footage showed Dink’s body lying in the street covered by a
white sheet, with hundreds of bystanders gathering behind a police
cordon.

Last year Turkey’s appeals court upheld a six-month suspended jail
sentence against Dink, an Armenian born in Turkey, for referring in an
article to the Armenian Genocide.

The court said the comments went against article 301 of Turkey’s
revised penal code which lets prosecutors pursue cases against writers
and scholars for "insulting Turkish identity." The ruling was sharply
criticised by the European Union, which Turkey wants to join.

Mr. Dink was one of dozens of writers who have been charged under laws
against insulting Turkishness, particularly over the Armenian
Genocide.

The European Union’s enlargement commissioner Olli Rehn issued a
statement saying he is "shocked and saddened by this brutal act of
violence."

"Hrant Dink was a respected intellectual who defended his views with
conviction and contributed to an open public debate. He was a
campaigner for freedom of expression in Turkey," Mr. Rehn’s statement
continued.

The U.S. Embassy in Ankara issued a statement saying it was "shocked
and deeply troubled" by the news.

Mr. Dink wrote in "Agos" that he had been receiving "angry threats."
He said he found one letter "extremely worrying" and said police took
no action after he complained.

Mr. Dink’s notoriety had also led him to get calls every day from
Turkish citizens who wanted to "come out" as Armenians. "He was the
point person for people who were deciding no longer to keep their
Armenian identity a secret," an acquaintance who asked to remain
anonymous told the "Reporter."

http://www.armenianreporteronline.com

Stallone To Talk Turkey With Political ‘Hot Potato’

STALLONE TO TALK TURKEY WITH POLITICAL ‘HOT POTATO’
By Oliver Duff

The Independent/UK
18 January 2007

* Sylvester Stallone is in town this week to promote his latest slice
of testosterone-fuelled hokum, Rocky Balboa, which sees the ageing
boxing champ return to the ring for one more fight. His next rumoured
project will require more cerebral direction – if no less fake blood.

Stallone is touting the idea that he might direct an adaptation of
the controversial novel The Forty Days of Musa Dagh, which describes
the Turkish massacre of its Armenian community in 1915.

A movie based on the Austrian author Franz Werfel’s 1934 fictionalised
account would, Sly says, be "an epic about the complete destruction
of a civilisation".

The topic is, to understate it somewhat, a thorny issue over in
Turkey, where the claimed "genocide" has never been wholly accepted
as historical fact.

A group calling themselves the Association on Struggle Against Armenian
Genocide Acknowledgement is targeting Stallone with an angry letters
campaign urging him not to make the film.

"The book is full of lies, since the author got his information from
nationalist and radical Armenians," says the association’s chairman,
Savas Egilmez.

"We have already sent necessary documents about the mentioned days
to the producer of the film. Our allies will urge the producer not
to produce this film."

Stallone concedes: "Talk about a political hot potato. The Turks have
been killing that subject for 85 years."

The uproar about Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ could seem
tame.

* The author and transatlantic socialite Plum Sykes has a fractious
relationship with the Fourth Estate.

In 2004, hours before the launch of her chic lit novel Bergdorf
Blondes, Plum’s embarrassed publisher rang the diarists of Her
Majesty’s Press Corps to announce that they could consider themselves
uninvited.

Plum told perplexed gatecrashers that they were "ghastly", adding:
"I don’t like English journalists. Apart from anything else, they
dress so badly."

Harsh – given that her own brother, Tom, was a New York hack at the
time. She blacklisted us.

So she was a surprise (if elusive) presence last night, then, at
the launch of Tom Sykes’s new book, A Drunkard’s Tale, accounting 14
years of drugs and drinks since his expulsion from Eton.

Plum was clutching a shabby, ancient, leopard-print handbag and
wearing a see-through black top.

Pot, kettle.

* Word has it that the latest addition to this rather shabby
series of Celebrity Big Brother is uber-paparazzo Darren Lyons,
the cockatoo-haired boss of the Big Pictures sleb photo agency.

Viewers of the pap’s late-night television series may recall his
"forthright" opinions and abrasive management style.

And Lyons has a head start on the other housemates: his friends cackle
that he knows all about the racism row that has sparked rioting on the
streets of India, and that he plans to wind up the other housemates
(who are banned from knowledge of the outside world).

"Jade Goody’s in the firing line," says a pal. "The contestants are
about as sharp as bath sponges and probably won’t realise Darren
got rich by selling pictures of them falling over drunk with their
nipples hanging out."

* Evening Standard theatre critic Nicholas de Jongh – known as
"de Dongh Corleone" for his assassinations of new productions –
was beside himself with praise yesterday for Days of Significance,
now showing in Stratford.

The wannabe mafioso described the play, about a bunch of squaddies
on the day before assignment to Basra, as a "brilliantly acted,
in-yer-face and get-out-of-the-way promenade".

One distinguished theatregoer disagrees: "It was a load of rot,
tantamount to treason, and very rough around the edges." He suggests
cruelly that de Jongh’s thumbs-up has something to do with the
playwright Roy Williams, who happens to be the partner of Standard
arts editor Fiona Hughes.

"Either that or he really loved it. He is normally very mean with
his stars."

* The must-go event in Labour MPs’ diaries for February is the 50th
birthday party of Keith Vaz, the exuberant former minister and friend
of the Hindujas. The invitation to the trendy Soho curry house The Red
Fort on 21 February is adorned by a charming sepia photograph of the
cherubic young Keith (aged seven?) astride what appears to be a rocking
camel. (Like a rocking horse.) Guests are promised "amusing anecdotes"
from the Lord Chancellor Charlie Falconer, Tony’s old flatmate.

But what to do about the delicate subject of gifts? In 2001 the
Parliamentary standards watchdog found Vaz guilty of failing to
properly declare a donation; he was cleared of other severe charges. So
bravo to KV, who asks his friends to send money to the Silver Star
Mobile Diabetes Screening Unit in the Midlands. Who says a leopard
never changes its spots?

Resolution On Using Word ‘Genocide’ To Be Introduced In US House Of

RESOLUTION ON USING WORD ‘GENOCIDE’ TO BE INTRODUCED IN US HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

Yerkir.am
January 12, 2007

On January 15, the Armenian Lobby in the USA is going to introduce
a message-resolution in the House of representatives to President
George Bush about using the word ‘genocide’, Kiro Manoyan, the
director of the ARF Bureau’s Hay Dat and Political Affairs Office,
told journalists in Yerevan on Thursday, PanARMENIAN.Net reported.

In his words, a great opportunity opens for turning to President Bush
through US House of Representatives. Manoyan informed beginning from
2005 the Armenian Lobby uses such method for turning to the president.

At the same time he thinks that the inclusion of the Armenian Genocide
issue into the foreign policy agenda of Armenia is a correct step. "If
we take off this question from the foreign policy agenda we will
reduce possibilities to exert pressure on Turkey.

The experience of 1991-1998 shows that when the Genocide issue was
not included in the agenda of official Yerevan, Turkey imposed a
blockade on Armenia.’ he summed up, ‘Novosti Armenia’ reports.