Recognition Of Genocide Will Be Followed By Territorial Claims

RECOGNITION OF GENOCIDE WILL BE FOLLOWED BY TERRITORIAL CLAIMS

Karabakh Open
Oct 15 2007

"The affirmation of the resolution on the genocide is commendable.

The Hay Dat Office of the United States has worked toward this for many
years and made some progress. However, the process needs continuity,
it is necessary that the U.S. Congress recognize the genocide," said
the secretary of the ARF Dashnaktsutyun Artsakh Central Committee
Jirair Shahidjanyan.

He thinks the recognition of the genocide will be followed by
territorial claims and demand for compensation. "Since the Armenian
issue has a number of interrelated components, Karabakh, West Armenia,
the Genocide, the committee’s affirmation means the Armenian claims
are fair. Karabakh is the first victory of the Armenian issue, which,
however, needs to be further reinforced. Certainly, we should not be
naïve regarding the clash of international interests. Tomorrow never
knows, but at least today we can say that the developments favor
us. I hope one day we will reach our goal," Jirair Shahidjanyan said.

As to possible influence of the recognition of the Armenian genocide on
the Karabakh settlement, Jirair Shahidjanyan said everything depends
on the developments that will come later. "Turkey is making moves in
that direction. However, if the developments pursue along this path,
it will be helpful to reaching a fair and peace settlement of the
Karabakh conflict," he said.

–Boundary_(ID_SwA8JkJRfMHKD0v0Ag0+cA)–

Turkey In The Crosshairs

TURKEY IN THE CROSSHAIRS

Washington Times
Oct 15 2007

A combination of events – including a dramatic upsurge in violence
from Kurdish terrorists based in northern Iraq and a House resolution
condemning Turkey for the mass killings of Armenians more than 80
years ago – have created an explosive, dangerous situation on the
Turkish-Iraq border that could endanger the resupply of U.S. forces
in Iraq.

In recent years, Ankara has been complaining with considerable
justification about an upsurge in attacks from northern Iraq by
members of the Marxist-Leninist Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK.

Beginning in 1984, PKK forces (based in Syria and Lebanon) launched
a bloody war in southern Turkey in which 37,000 people were killed;
the war appeared to have ended in 1999 after Turkey pressured Syria to
exile PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan, who has been imprisoned in Turkey for
the past eight years. Unfortunately, however, the Kurdistan Regional
Government in northern Iraq has failed to crack down vigorously against
PKK operatives based in KRG territory. The PKK has made a comeback,
and during the first half of this year, it was responsible for the
deaths of at least 80 Turks. On Sept. 28, Turkey and Iraq signed
an agreement to clamp down on PKK operations in Iraqi territory,
but the agreement did not give Turkey permission to pursue PKK
operatives inside Iraq. The following day, the PKK ambushed a bus
carrying Turkish soldiers and civilians, killing 12 people. Then,
last weekend, another PKK attack killed 13 Turkish soldiers.

As anger mounts in Turkey over the PKK, the Bush administration has
been urging restraint while simultaneously leaning on Iraq (and Iraqi
Kurdish leaders in particular) to take action against terrorists
operating from their territory. But last week, as Turkey was burying
its most recent war dead and American diplomats were working feverishly
to prevent the situation on the Iraqi border from exploding, the
House of Representatives (in this case members of the House Foreign
Affairs Committee) decided to pour gasoline on the fire, approving
a resolution accusing Turkey of committing genocide against against
the Armenians between 1915 and 1923. And House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
has agreed to bring the resolution to the floor – all the better to
ensure that U.S.-Turkish relations, already damaged by the failure of
Washington and Baghdad to stop PKK attacks, continue to worsen. Ankara
is now hinting that the genocide resolution could cause long-lasting
damage to Washington’s military relationship with Turkey, a nation
critical to the resupply of the 160,000-plus American soldiers in Iraq.

Two things need to happen right away 1) Responsible adults on Capitol
Hill need to bury the Armenian genocide resolution to prevent it from
doing more damage to relations with Turkey, a critical ally, and 2)
Washington needs to press the Iraqi government, especially the Kurds,
to act now to put the PKK out of business. That’s the way to ensure
that Ankara does not take the dangerous, destabilizing step of sending
its forces across the border into Iraq.

Serzh Sarkisian And Levon Ter Petrosian To Become Main Presidential

SERZH SARKISIAN AND LEVON TER-PETROSIAN TO BECOME MAIN PRESIDENTIAL CONTENDERS: ANM CHAIRMAN

ARMENPRESS
Oct 15, 2007

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 15, ARMENPRESS: A senior member of the former ruling
Armenian National Movement (ANM) said today the main contenders in
the next year’s presidential election will be ex-president Levon
Ter-Petrosian and the current prime minister Serzh Sarkisian.

Speaking at a news conference, Ararat Zurabian, chairman of the
governing board of the ANM, said the struggle will be between these
two candidates, because they both enjoy strong public support.

Zurabian said an ARF candidate may also become a serious rival in
the race for presidency.

Ararat Zurabian downplayed speculations that the outcome of the
election is hinged on external actors.

"External actors’ impact is big when the candidates are puppets,
which is not the case in Armenia,’ he said.

Zurabian rebuked major opposition groups for failing to unite and
nominate a single candidate. He added that some of these groups will
be in Levon Ter-Petrosian’s team, but declined to name them saying
these parties will have themselves announce their support to the
first president of the post-Soviet Armenia.

Although Ter-Petrosian has made little indication that he will join
the presidential race, Zurabian said there are no doubts about it.

Lebanon: Turkey should finally admit to Armenian Genocide

Ya Libnan, Lebanon
Oct 14 2007

Turkey should finally admit to Armenian Genocide
Sunday, 14 October, 2007 @ 4:21 PM

By Vahe Gabrielyan

Throughout the twentieth century to the present day there has not
been any substantiated doubt about the character of the mass
deportations, expropriation, abduction, torture, starvation and
killings of millions of Armenians throughout Ottoman Turkey that
started on a large scale in 1915 and carried onto 1923.

Centrally planned by the government of the day and meticulously
executed by the huge machine of the state bureaucracy, army, police,
hired gangs and – specially released for that purpose – criminals
from prisons, the campaign had one clear aim expressly stated by the
government in secret directives: to rid Anatolia of its indigenous
Armenian population and settle the so -called `Armenian question’ for
good.
An entire nation and its Christian culture were eliminated to secure
a homogenous Turkish state on territories where Armenians had lived
for many centuries.

Terms such as `genocide’ or `ethnic cleansing’ were not in
circulation then, so Winston Churchill later referred to the 1915
massacre of 1.5 million Armenians as an `administrative holocaust’.

The Turkish authorities made no secret of the aim once it was
achieved and other governments and nations have known the truth
since. One of the early accounts of Armenian Genocide was published
in 1916 in Britain.

The British Government at the time commissioned James Bryce and
Arnold Toynbee to compile evidence on the events in Armenia. The
subsequent report was printed in the British Parliamentary Blue Book
series `The Treatment of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, 1915-1916′.
The report leaves no doubt about what was taking place.

In 1915, thirty-three years before UN Genocide Convention was
adopted, the Armenian Genocide was condemned by the international
community as a crime against humanity. It is well acknowledged that
Polish jurist Raphael Lemkin, when he coined the term genocide in
1944, cited the Turkish extermination of the Armenians and the Nazi
extermination of the Jews as defining examples of what he meant by
genocide.

Amidst huge international pressure, the Turkish Government succeeding
the Young Turks had not only to recognize the scale and vehemence of
the atrocities but also to try the perpetrators in military tribunals
and sentence the leaders to death.

However, the sentences were not carried out and with the passage of
time moods changed not only in Turkey but also in some countries,
such as the UK, where Turkey is nowadays seen as a key alley. Still,
even in countries that have not yet for some reason recognized the
Genocide scholars have no doubts about the character of the events:
they point out that there is no scholarly issue, only one of
political expediency.

Armenians throughout the world insist that there be an international
recognition and condemnation of what is often called the first
genocide of the twentieth century. We are past the stage of scholarly
discussion since a very few challenge the fact. To dispel any doubt,
126 leading scholars of the Holocaust placed a statement in the New
York Times in June 2000 declaring the "incontestable fact of the
Armenian Genocide" and urging western democracies to acknowledge it.

In 2005 the International Association of Genocide Scholars addressed
an open letter to Turkey’s Prime Minister R. Erdogan calling upon him
to recognize the truth. The evidence is so overwhelming that the only
question remaining is how to help the two nations close that shameful
page of the history, reconcile and move forward.

However, despite the affirmation of the Armenian Genocide by the
overwhelming majority of historians, academic institutions on
Holocaust and Genocide Studies, increasingly more parliaments and
governments around the world, and by more and more Turkish scholars
and intellectuals, the Turkish government still actively denies the
fact. So long as they do that, Armenians have no choice but to
struggle for wider international recognition.

This is however not an end in itself. It is important that Turkey
recognizes the Genocide, apologizes and condemns it. When the Germans
have apologized for the sufferings they had caused to the Jews, the
British for slavery, the Americans for their treatment of native
Americans etc, Turkey’s continuing denial, moreover, increasing
efforts and resources spent on the denial are alarming signs,
aggravated by their insistence not to establish diplomatic relations
with neighboring Armenia and by maintaining a blockade on all ground
communication. Armenia does not even set the recognition of the
Genocide as a prerequisite for normalizing relations and calls for
establishing diplomatic relations and opening of the border without
any preconditions.

As the killing this January of Hrant Dink, the Turkish-Armenian
editor of the Agos bilingual periodical demonstrates, international
community cannot stand aside and watch. Hrant was persecuted under
the infamous 301 article for `insulting Turkish identity’ and the
hysteria around someone daring to speak the truth created the fertile
soil for the hatred that killed him. His case was shamefully still
open even after his assassination and in a demonstration of absolute
absence of morality, Turkish courts yesterday sentenced Hrant’s son,
as well as another of Agos’s current staff to a year of imprisonment
under the same accusations, for simply daring to re-print Hrant’s
words.

This is why the world should not yield to Turkish threats that are
outright blackmailing. The resolutions in various legislatures across
the world, and recently in the US House of Representative Foreign
Relations Committee are not merely the result of Armenian Diaspora’s
– which by the way, was created in the first place because of the
genocide in Turkey – influence. It is because there are more people
who believe in values and in putting the wrongs right.

A number of British MPs have tabled an EDM (Early Day Motion), to
raise the awareness about the Armenian Genocide and calling on
British Government to recognize it as such. Currently, around 170 MPs
across the party lines have signed an EDM which reads `That this
House believes that the killing of over a million Armenians in 1915
was an act of genocide; calls upon the UK Government to recognize it
as such; and believes that it would be in Turkey’s long-term
interests to do the same.’

Their number grows steadily. It is time the British Government
followed many others and re-affirmed the UK’s place among the
standard-bearers of democracy and human rights.

It is worth repeating that international recognition of the Genocide
cannot do harm to Turkish-Armenian relations since they simply do not
exist. It does not prevent a dialogue, on the contrary, creates the
necessary conditions to start a frank one. By recognizing the
historic truth and helping open the last closed border in Europe, the
international community can facilitate long-lasting stability and
prosperity in our region. And it is also probably time to show that
the human race’s evolution into the 21st century is evolution of
ideals, principles and a code of behavior that should take precedence
over political expediency or sheer commercial interest.

Vahe Gabrielyan is the Armenian ambassador to Britain. Born in 1965
he was educated in Armenia, Austria and the United States. He was
awarded a PHD in the Theory of Linguistics in 1994

Source: New Statesman
0/turkey_should_f.php

http://yalibnan.com/site/archives/2007/1

Cohen’s Turkey stance a puzzler

Commercialappeal.com , TN
Oct 14 2007

Cohen’s Turkey stance a puzzler

By Wendi C. Thomas
Sunday, October 14, 2007

Unless he changes his mind, U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen is about to sack
his budding reputation as a human-rights crusader. And he’ll do it
with a vote against a resolution to officially label as genocide the
World War I era massacre of 1.5 million Armenians at the hands of the
Turks.

His stance on a resolution with broad bipartisan support is an
unfortunate yet avoidable deviation from socially conscious positions
Cohen has selected to stake out in his first year as a congressman.

Wendi C. Thomas

And it calls into question whether Cohen is the principled
politician he portrays himself to be.

Not two months into his new job, Cohen introduced a bill to apologize
for Jim Crow and slavery. After decades of representation by a black
man with the last name of Ford, this move undoubtedly scored points
with any black voters who wondered if a white congressman would have
their best interests at heart.

In August, he withstood fire from some local black ministers against
his support of a hate-crimes bill that would protect gay men and
women, which had to play well with a liberal base worried that he’d
cave under the pressure.

Cohen aborted an attempt to join the Congressional Black Caucus — a
politically savvy, if slightly silly, move to bolster one of his
favorite assertions: He’s so liberal, he might as well be a black
woman.

But he’s not. He’s a Jewish man, which makes his denial of the 20th
century’s first holocaust unconscionable, says Dany Beylerian, whose
grandparents survived the Armenian genocide.

Denial, Beylerian says, is the last stage of genocide. It thwarts
complete mourning and inhibits healing.

Adolf Hitler, Beylerian points out, admired the Turks’ systematic
slaughter of Armenians and the absence of any punishment after the
killing stopped. "Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of
the Armenians?" Hitler is quoted as saying in 1939. Just a few years
later, his "final solution" had killed six million Jews.

But never mind the compelling moral arguments. All that matters,
according to Cohen, is that supporting this resolution would rile a
key ally in the Middle East.

"I regret whatever happened," he says, careful not to label the
"whatever" as genocide, "but this is not the right time."

Military officials have said that passage of House Resolution 106
could threaten the safety of U.S. troops in Iraq, which rely on
supplies trucked through Turkey.

Despite opposition from the Bush administration, the House Foreign
Affairs Committee approved the nonbinding resolution Wednesday. It’s
expected to come before the full House within weeks.

Turkey’s already stomping its feet; it has told its ambassador to
come home and is threatening to withdraw support for the Iraq war.

Cohen has other reasons to mollify Turkey, not the least of which is
the $256 million in goods Tennessee exported there in 2005.

Turkey is Memphis in May’s honored country for 2008. That month, the
U.S.-Turkey Study Group, a passel of leaders from both countries,
will convene here. "I’ve got to factor in that I’m their host," Cohen
says.

Under the guise of Southern hospitality, Cohen will bow to the
arm-twisting Turkey exacts on all who broach the Armenian issue.

In Turkey, where Hitler’s autobiography "Mein Kampf" is a bestseller,
the democratic government is still struggling with the concept of
free speech; Article 301 makes it a crime to insult "Turkishness."
Suggesting that the Turkish government is guilty of genocide
qualifies as such an insult. Article 301 has been a sticking point
between Turkey and its attempts to join the European Union.

The government maintains that blood was shed on both sides and that
the death tolls have been hugely inflated.

Among scholars, though, "there’s about as much debate about the
Armenian genocide as there is about the Holocaust," says Beylerian, a
graduate of Rhodes College.

In the early 1900s, U.S. ambassador Henry Morgenthau witnessed what
was happening in what was then the Ottoman Empire and described it as
"racial extermination." In 1915 alone, The New York Times wrote 145
stories about the massacres.

With historical evidence on his side, Beylerian expected at least a
neutral reception when he and nine other people of Armenian descent
met in August with Cohen.

Instead, the group was shocked to hear Cohen suggest that Armenians
started a rebellion — the same denialist arguments Turkey advances.

As Ara Hanissian, a local doctor also at the meeting, listened to
Cohen, he wondered, "How could something factual be so offensive?"

"He was suddenly a cold, real political kind of guy," says Beylerian,
an inventor and diplomatic consultant who supported Cohen’s
congressional campaign. "I was deeply saddened that he took this
position.

"We didn’t ask him to go against the majority. We didn’t ask him to
go against his party. We didn’t ask him to sponsor the legislation —
we asked him to be the 227th co-sponsor."

Cohen sees no contradiction between his bold introduction of the Jim
Crow apology, his staunch support of the hate-crime bill and his
refusal to join his party and the majority with the Armenian genocide
resolution.

"I don’t think there’s any corollary," he says. The first two affect
his constituents; keeping Turkey calm is a matter of national
security.

Cohen acknowledges that his failure to back the resolution could cost
him votes, even though Beylerian estimates there are fewer than 100
people of Armenian descent in Memphis. But if people remember that
Armenia is recognized as the first Christian nation in the world, the
political fallout could be severe.

"He has transformed from a sensitive historian-civil libertarian into
a heartless pragmatist in a mere nine months," says Hanissian, whose
grandmother escaped the massacres by fleeing into the hills.

"To waver so dramatically from such strong positions on human rights
smacks of hypocrisy."

/news/2007/oct/14/cohens-turkey-stance-a-puzzler/

http://www.commercialappeal.com

US tries to halt Turkey attack

The Guardian, UK
Oct 14 2007

US tries to halt Turkey attack

Diplomats fly to Ankara to stop military move against Iraqi Kurds
after ‘genocide’ resolution

Peter Beaumont, foreign affairs editor
Sunday October 14, 2007
The Observer

Senior US officials were engaged last night in last-ditch efforts to
persuade Turkey not to launch a major military incursion into Iraqi
Kurdistan to target armed separatists.
A team was diverted from a mission to Russia to make an unscheduled
stop in Ankara yesterday. Against the background of the escalating
diplomatic row between Turkey and the US over a congressional
resolution that branded as ‘genocide’ massacres of Armenians by
Ottoman Turks in 1915, US Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice,
revealed she had personally urged Turkey to refrain from any major
military operation in northern Iraq. The row between the two Nato
allies comes against the dangerous background of a threat by the
Turkish parliament to approve this week a ‘hot pursuit’ of the
Kurdish separatist Kurdistan Workers’ Party, the PKK, across the
border into northern Iraq.

The threat of military action came after last Sunday’s killing by the
PKK of 13 Turkish soldiers in an ambush in Sirnak province, close to
the Iraqi border.
‘I urged restraint,’ said Rice, on a visit to Moscow, acknowledging
‘a difficult time’ between the two countries as she described her
telephone conversations with Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul, its
Prime Minister and foreign minister.

‘It’s a difficult time for the relationship,’ Rice said. ‘We just
thought it was a very good idea for two senior officials to go and
talk to the Turks and have reassurance to the Turks that we really
value this relationship.’ Rice said that in her conversation with the
Turks ‘they were dismayed’ by the congressional resolution. ‘The
Turkish government, I think, is trying to react responsibly. They
recognise how hard we worked to prevent that vote from taking place.’

About 60,000 Turkish troops are based near the northern Iraqi border.
US military officials have said they believe they will get some
warning if the Turks attack the PKK.

Rice’s phone conversations came as two senior US officials flew to
Turkey yesterday to attempt to defuse tension that has seen the
Turkish ambassador to Washington return home for consultations
following the resolution, which Turks regard as deeply offensive.

US Assistant Secretary of State Dan Fried and US Under Secretary of
Defence Eric Edelman flew from Moscow, where they had been
accompanying Rice. It was reported that Edelman said on his arrival
they were visiting Turkey to express regret over the approval of the
resolution. The pair are likely to hear sharp criticism from the
Turkish government.

‘They are sure to raise the northern Iraq issue, but from our
perspective the top issue is the Armenian resolution,’ a Turkish
diplomat said. The row between the two allies follows the decision by
the Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of Representatives to
approve a resolution labelling the 1915 killings genocide, rejecting
appeals by President Bush. Turkey denies genocide but says many died
in inter-ethnic fighting in an issue that is still deeply sensitive
to Turks.

Turkish officials say foreign ministry and military officials met
after the resolution was approved to discuss potential measures
against the US. In initial repercussions, a US visit by Trade
Minister Kursad Tuzmen was cancelled, along with a conference being
held by the Turkish-US Business Council.

Other potential moves may include blocking US access to Incirlik air
base, cancelling procurement contracts, scaling down bilateral
visits, denying airspace to US aircraft and halting joint military
exercises, say analysts and diplomats.

The US relies heavily on Turkish bases to supply its war effort in
Iraq. Ankara has long complained Washington has not done enough to
crack down on PKK rebels who use northern Iraq as a base to attack
Turkey. The PKK said on Friday its guerrillas were crossing back into
Turkey to target politicians and police after the prospect of a
cross-border military operation emerged. Turkey blames the PKK for
the deaths of more than 30,000 people since the group launched its
armed struggle for an ethnic homeland in south-east Turkey in 1984.

Calgary: How do we stop what we cannot comprehend?

The Calgary Herald (Alberta)
October 14, 2007 Sunday
Final Edition

How do we stop what we cannot comprehend?

by: Kris Kotarski, Calgary Herald

THE EDITORIAL PAGE; Pg. A14

Communication is never easy, so when we speak or write, we use
metaphors and analogies; or we tell fables to make others understand
unfamiliar situations.

Whether it’s a classroom, a marriage or a newspaper article, so long
as people are willing to speak and listen, understanding can follow.
It is not an easy or quick process, but comprehension is never
impossible.

Yet in my 15 years of immersion in the English language, I have never
come across a word as difficult to comprehend as genocide.

What is the analogy for genocide?

What metaphors can we use when telling the story of the Holocaust,
Rwanda or Darfur?

How can we even begin to understand an evil so singular and so
terrible that it defies the bounds of human imagination?

The only way genocide can be diluted to one truism, one statement, is
to say that it is a terrible evil, that it is mass murder and mass
death.

But, as we have learned time and time again, genocide is far more
than one statement, and it is both a collective and individual
failing for each one of us that we live in a world where genocide
continues to take place.

Is genocide a preventable crime?

Absolutely.

Genocide is man-made evil and not an inevitable calamity or an act of
nature.

Genocide is a process with identifiable signs of early warning, even
if our eyes, ears and international instruments are not always
fine-tuned to the message. Leading up to every genocide, the same
signs are always there: hate speech, branding, the loss of dignity,
and exclusion.

The perpetrators always follow the same patterns: they divide, they
incite, they vilify and eventually, they murder.

In every genocide, people cease to see the humanity of the victims,
and this process of dehumanization always exists both within the
genocidal state and in the external states that fail to act.

Long before the Second World War, dehumanization was present and
evident in Nazi Germany, through the use of yellow stars, through
posters and speeches inciting hate and, perhaps most famously,
through an entirely different set of laws and rules handed down to
the Jewish population. In Rwanda, in the years leading up to 1994,
Tutsi schoolchildren were singled out and called snakes or
cockroaches in front of their fellow classmates while in Cambodia,
"class enemies" were identified by the Pol Pot regime and sent into
camps.

In the states that watched idly as these events were taking place,
the same dehumanization took place, even if it took on different
forms. There is an important lesson for all of us in the fact that
many pets of western diplomats were evacuated from Rwanda, but not
the Tutsis themselves. We must come to terms with the fact that
someone, for some reason, placed a higher value on the life of a
Belgian dog than that of a Tutsi child.

In Canada, media and politicians currently lament the death of every
one of our soldiers with a sense of urgency and feeling that is
genuine and true. Yet, this same urgency is missing when they mention
the destitute human beings–millions of human beings!–in Darfur.

Why?

The problem with genocide is that we do not understand the crime in
its entirety — that while we clearly spot the victims and
perpetrators once the massacres are underway, we do not understand
our role or know how to act. On an individual level, when one sees a
crime on the street, basic human dignity dictates that one should
help, or call the police. Whether it is Canada, Russia or Egypt, the
actions and consequences are clear, and we have a good idea of what
action to take and who to turn to in a time of need.

However, who does one call about Darfur? How do we stop that which
many of us cannot even comprehend?

During the leadup to the genocide in Rwanda, General Romeo Dallaire
famously called on the United Nations.

Unfortunately, both the United Nations and the states it comprises
failed.

During the Holocaust, Jews called on the Allies to bomb the railroad
tracks to Auschwitz.

Here, too, the request was denied.

Trying to stop the atrocities that are underway in Darfur, even the
very cynical U.S. government has called to the international
community for action. They, too, — and we, too, — are failing.

Much more than boots on the ground, much more than politicians,
soldiers, relief workers or donation drives, preventing genocide must
begin with changing how we think.

Long before we get to the terrible point where military action is the
only solution, or where governments are using sanctions to stop
massacres in the "early stages" of a conflict, we must inoculate
ourselves to the idea of genocide, learn

to stop it in its tracks.

For some — like the Turks and Armenians — it means coming to terms
with the past. For some — like Canadians, Americans or Australians
— it means accepting our own place of privilege in the world and
recognizing that we owe our opportunities and lifestyles in part to
the mass extinction of our own Aboriginal people.

Within the genocidal state — such as Rwanda — genocide begins with
hate speech, with national identity cards that divide people by
tribe, physical traits or creed, and with ever-escalating violence
and humiliation of each group.

In societies like our own, it begins with our patterns of thinking,
in our naive, though often well-meaning attitudes that allow
dehumanization to take place.

There is no silver bullet that will rid the world of genocide, just
as there was no single reason for the almost complete disappearance
of slavery, or for the fact that women in Canada are legally equal to
men. In each case, there are multiple reasons, multiple arguments and
multiple strategies, that, over time, created a new and better
reality.

Creating a world without genocide is not an easy calling, but it is
possible.

It is hard to imagine through the tears of Rwanda and the blood of
Darfur, but a world without genocide can and must take shape.

This means not only support for intervention in Darfur, for
reconciliation in Rwanda, economic support for Cambodia, moral
support for Holocaust survivors or sympathy for those who perished in
Armenia during the First World War, it also means support for those
who fight hate speech today, and for all government, UN or civil
society initiatives that stress inclusion and common humanity in
every country around the globe.

A world without genocide needs support for the courts, for justice,
for reconciliation, for painful but necessary dialogue, and for a lot
of self criticism, both as individuals and as collective societies.

Each of us should ask what role we play in the system of genocide and
how we can choose another path. Each one should ask not only how we
can help, but also how we can be helped to understand a terrible evil
that remains beyond the grasp of our very imagination.

Usually at the conclusion of a good editorial, the author offers a
solution or one last metaphor to drive the point home. However, in
the case of genocide, there is no simple solution and no simple
metaphor to call on.

Still, we must think and we must try — we must imagine and, where we
can, we must act. In the end, there are steps that we can take to
prevent, to react and to reconcile, and while these steps are never
easy, we can never lose the sense of what exactly is at stake.

Some 60 years ago, the world said never again. For our own sake and
for the sake of our children and their children, we must never let go
of this statement as a central and unifying goal.

Kris Kotarski is participating in the International Young Leaders
Forum at the Global Conference on the Prevention of Genocide, at
McGill University in Montreal, October 7-13. He is a Master’s
candidate at the Centre for Military and Strategic Studies at the
University of Calgary and a frequent contributor to these pages.

ANKARA: Turkey condemns local elections in disputed NK enclave

Anatolia News Agency, Turkey
Oct 12 2007

Turkey condemns local elections in disputed Nagorno-Karabakh enclave

Ankara, 12 October: Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) said
that holding local elections in Upper Karabakh, which was occupied by
Armenia, on 14 October symbolizes an attempt ignoring all efforts to
provide a peaceful and lasting solution.

The ministry said in a statement, "we learnt that local elections
will be held in Upper Karabakh region of Azerbaijan, which has been
occupied by Armenia, on 14 October by ignoring international law and
expectations of the international community following the so-called
presidential election on 19 July. It is evident that these elections,
which are considered parts of efforts to unilaterally legitimate the
illegal situation in Upper Karabakh, will mean violation of
international laws, decisions of the UN Security Council and
principles of the Council of Europe (COE) and the Organization of
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)."

"Holding local elections in Upper Karabakh on 14 October symbolizes
an attempt ignoring all efforts to provide a peaceful and lasting
solution and ongoing negotiations under the OSCE Minsk Process to
resolve Azerbaijan-Armenia dispute. Turkey condemns such an attempt
violating political unity, sovereignty and territorial integrity of
Azerbaijan, and calls on the international community not to recognize
results of this unbinding local elections," the Ministry said.

U.S. officials head to Turkey over genocide dispute

Reuters, UK
Oct 13 2007

U.S. officials head to Turkey over genocide dispute
Sat Oct 13, 2007 6:33 AM EDT

By Arshad Mohammed and Daren Butler

MOSCOW/ANKARA (Reuters) – Two top U.S. officials flew to Ankara on
Saturday after a worsening of ties between the NATO allies and fears
Turkey will launch a military incursion into northern Iraq to crush
Kurdish rebels, diplomats said.

Relations between the two countries have been strained by a U.S.
congressional resolution branding as genocide massacres of Armenians
by Ottoman Turks in 1915. Some analysts believe the vote could weaken
Washington’s "restraining" influence on Turkey and make an incursion
more likely in coming weeks.

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Dan Fried and U.S. Undersecretary
of Defense Eric Edelman will make the trip from Moscow where they
have been accompanying Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, said a
U.S. official who spoke on condition he not be named.

The two are likely to hear sharp criticism from the Turkish
government, which this week recalled its ambassador to the United
States to Ankara for consultations and said U.S.-Turkish relations
were in danger because of the resolution.

The Turkish government, which faces pressure from the public and the
army to act, has decided to seek approval from parliament next week
for a major operation.

Kurdish separatist rebels said on Friday they were crossing back into
Turkey to target politicians and police after the prospect of a
cross-border military operation emerged.

The United States relies heavily on Turkish bases to supply its war
effort in Iraq, where more than 160,000 U.S. troops are trying to
restore stability more than four years after the invasion that
toppled former dictator Saddam Hussein.

Turkey denies genocide was committed but said many died in
inter-ethnic fighting. It remains a sensitive issue, but many Turks
are starting to more openly discuss such past taboos.

The U.S. resolution was proposed by a politician with many
Armenian-Americans in his district and is the culmination of decades
of pressure by a strong Armenian lobby that enjoys wide support in
Congress.

CONFERENCE CANCELLED

Ankara has long complained that Washington has not done enough on its
own or through the Iraqi government to crack down on Kurdistan
Workers Party (PKK) rebels who use the mountains of northern Iraq as
a base to attack Turkish targets.

Turkey blames the PKK for the deaths of more than 30,000 people since
the group launched its armed struggle for an ethnic homeland in
southeast Turkey in 1984.

The possibility of a major Turkish military incursion into northern
Iraq is deeply troubling to U.S. officials, who fear this could
destabilize a relatively peaceful area of Iraq.

The presence of Edelman, who was with Fried in Moscow for a meeting
of the U.S. and Russian foreign and defense ministers, may aim to
appeal to the Turkish military, a highly influential institution in
the mostly Muslim but secular nation. Edelman was U.S. ambassador to
Turkey from July 2003 to June 2005.

Amid further signs of repercussions from the resolution, a conference
being held by the Turkish-U.S. Business Council in the United States
this week was cancelled, along with a visit by Turkish Trade Minister
Kursad Tuzmen, CNN Turk television said.

Turkey and the United States are NATO allies but relations have been
strained in recent years, particularly after Ankara’s refusal to
allow the United States to use its territory to stage the March 2003
U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.

Armenia to participate in int’l tourism exhibit "World Travel Mkt"

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Oct 12 2007

ARMENIA TO PARTICIPATE IN INTERNATIONAL TOURISM EXHIBITION "WORLD
TRAVEL MARKET" ON NOVEMBER 12-15

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 12, NOYAN TAPAN. This year Armenia will participate
for the 7th time in the annual international tourism exhibition World
Travel Market in London, the exhibitions coordinator of the Armenian
Tourism Development Agency (ATDA) Gohar Mirzoyan told NT
correspondent.

According to her, at the Armenian pavilion covering an area of 35
square meters, ATDA and 7 Armenian tourism companies will display on
November 12-15 information and maps on Armenia’s historic and
cultural places, hotels, rest homes, public catering facilities, as
well as 2 commercials about Armenia shown on CNN.

Author:
Editor: Eghian Robert