The Turkish Think That They Have Made A Historical Mistake

THE TURKISH THINK THAT THEY HAVE MADE A HISTORICAL MISTAKE

Aysor
Sept 3 2009
Armenia

The opposition leader of the "National Movement" of Turkey (MHP) Devlet
Bahceli has criticized the last Armenian – Turkish agreement. Bahceli
has described the process started between Armenia and Turkey as
a process contradicting the interests of Ankara and yielding the
Armenian demands. The mentioned party has spread a statement on this
occasion which according to "CNN Turk" reads:

"The "MHP" will be against the signed records which will be presented
to the Turkish parliament for verification. The party will speak out
about the historical sin and the responsibility of the Prime Minister
and his supporters that they have committed against their nation."

In the message is also mentioned that the Armenian – Turkish boarder
shouldn’t be open before the NKR conflict settlement.

Armenia Will Promote Correct Understanding Of Karabakh Conflict

ARMENIA WILL PROMOTE CORRECT UNDERSTANDING OF KARABAKH CONFLICT

Interfax
Sept 1 2009
Russia

Armenia will have to ensure the security of the self-proclaimed
Nagorno-Karabakh republic and to provide the international community
with a correct picture of this problem, Armenian President Serzh
Sargsyan said.

"Armenia’s top priority tasks include ensuring the security of the
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic as part of the ongoing talks and helping
the international community understand this problem correctly,"
Sargsyan said at an annual meeting with Armenian Foreign Ministry
officials in Yerevan on Tuesday.

"In this conflict, the Armenian people acted as a freedom fighter, and
no one has a right to call Nagorno-Karabakh an aggressor. Our response
to all this must be precise and confident," the Armenian leader said.

Armenian-Azeri talks aimed at finding a solution to the conflict over
Nagorno-Karabakh have been guided by "this visible and understandable
logic," he added.

"It is clear that the principles behind the Madrid proposals published
by the co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group contain points that differ,
in certain cases dramatically, from the solutions presented by us. But
it is a fact that all the parties involved perfectly realize that the
Nagorno-Karabakh people’s right to self-determination and guarantees
of Karabakh’s multi-layer security are key," Sargsyan said.

It will take weeks or even months to solve this problem, the Armenian
president said.

"Everyone should understand that our negotiations address just some of
the main conflict settlement principles. Even if we manage to reach an
agreement on them, a large number of other issues will remain open,
including the treaty itself. All details of its application need to
be agreed upon. This process requires a great deal of work," he said.

Sargsyan also called on Armenian ambassadors accredited in member-
countries of the Organization of the Islamic Conference to step
up their efforts to "neutralize" the negative impact of this
organization’s resolutions on the Karabakh conflict.

"Armenia And Turkey Should Form New Relations Based On New Legal Bas

"ARMENIA AND TURKEY SHOULD FORM NEW RELATIONS BASED ON NEW LEGAL BASIS"

Panorama.am
18:14 02/09/2009

The Former Foreign Minister of Nagorno-Karabakh Republic Arman
Melikyan told at news conference that the protocol published by
Foreign Ministries of Armenia and Turkey and Switzerland as mediator
state is a very interesting advancement.

If the matter is opening of Armenian-Turkish border, then the border
exists and there is a contract between Armenia and Turkey.

"If Kars paper has already exhausted itself and we are long to create
mutual relations then Kars resolution should be denounced and Armenia
and Turkey should form new relations based on different legal basis,"
expert said.

Whether the protocols have any connection to Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,
Melikyan said that NKR conflict is issue number one in the region and
all the activities implemented by powerful states and our regional
countries are correlated to the perspectives of NKR conflict settlement
or non-settlement.

Congress Is Seriously Preparing

CONGRESS IS SERIOUSLY PREPARING

ountry&pid=15036
15:37:22 – 01/09/2009

The member of the Armenian National Congress (HAK), the head of Levon
Ter-Petrosyan’s election headquarters in the 2008 presidential election
Alexander Arzumanyan stated on September 1 that the ANC is seriously
preparing for the September 18 rally.

Alexander Arzumanyan stated that during the recent visits to the
regions Levon Ter-Petrosyan assured the citizens that serious changes
are expected in autumn. The reporters asked what changes he meant.

Alexander Arzumanyan stated that he hates this division into
seasons. He says politics takes daily work and he is sure that the
point is about the daily work the HAK and the other oppositional
forces carry out every day. The HAK is seriously preparing for the
September 18 rally, and as Arzumanyan stated it will mark the phase
of steps aimed at the resignation.

http://www.lragir.am/src/index.php?id=c

Turkey Violated Kars Treaty

TURKEY VIOLATED KARS TREATY

Aysor
Sept 2 2009
Armenia

Armen Maruqyan, Ts., Senior researcher, Ph. D. of the Institute of
History of the RA National Academy of Science (NAS), Department of
Armenian Cause and Armenian Genocide, touched upon the developments
of the bilateral relations between Armenian and Turkish Republics.

He mentioned that when they speak about the policy without
preconditions we remember only the Artsakh issue forgetting about
the Genocide.

"The conditions that exist are still valid, no any Turkish official
has said that Turkey refuses the preconditions. If they remain valid
what else can be said. The Armenian side was to make Turkey to refuse
its previous preconditions", – said the speaker.

Coming up to the opening the boarders he mentioned that when the
European hears about the opening of the boarders he thinks that the
boarders are closed by the two sides while it is Turkey that has
closed the boarders.

"They should speak about the unblockading the boarder. If we do not
do that we appear in the same status with Turkey", – assured Maruqyan.

As for Turkey’s regional integrity, according to the speaker, it will
seriously harm the abolishment of the after-effects of the Genocide as
not only the financial aspects should be taken under consideration:
"The problem is in the historical fatherland: if we recognize the
regional integrity of Turkey we put a cross over our historical
fatherland."

As for the Kars treaty the speaker said that we can even put demands
in front of as Turkey it has violated the treaty by keeping Armenia
in a blockade.

Maruqyan suggested internationally annulling the Kars treaty as it
has been violated by Turkey itself.

AAA: On The Announced Protocols To Establish Diplomatic Relations

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Assembly of America
122 C Street, NW, Suite 350
Washington, DC 20001
Tel: (202) 393-3434
Fax: (202) 638-4904
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA STATEMENT ON THE ANNOUNCED PROTOCOLS TO
ESTABLISH DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS BETWEEN THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA AND THE
REPUBLIC OF TURKEY

Washington, DC
September 2, 2009

On August 31, 2009, the foreign ministries of Armenia, Turkey and
Switzerland announced protocols to be signed within six weeks to
establish diplomatic relations between the Republic of Armenia and the
Republic of Turkey and to open the border.

NORMALIZATION OF RELATIONS WITHOUT PRECONDITIONS

This announcement is consistent with the U.S. position that
normalization of relations between Armenia and Turkey proceed without
preconditions. Armenian authorities have also made it clear that no
preconditions means just that – no linkage to progress on the Nagorno
Karabakh peace talks and no conditions on affirmation of the Armenian
Genocide, or debating whether a genocide occurred through a
commission-style process. The incontestable fact of the Armenian
Genocide is internationally recognized, and Turks and Armenians have
previously commissioned in 2003 an independent analysis through the
International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ), which concluded
that the events of 1915 constituted genocide.

The Armenian Assembly supports normalization of relations between
Armenia and Turkey without preconditions. The United States has spoken
clearly about the need for Turkey to lift its blockade and establish
diplomatic relations with Armenia. Turkey’s lifting of its blockade
against Armenia and opening the border is not only long overdue but
obligated under international treaties. For this long-awaited effort to
succeed, it is incumbent that the United States require Turkey to adhere
to its commitments with respect to Armenia.

UNEQUIVOCAL AFFIRMATION OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

While the August 31st announcement represents an important step,
experience has shown that reconciliation between Armenia and Turkey
requires Turkey to come to terms with its past. President Barack Obama,
Vice President Joe Biden and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have all
spoken eloquently on the need to recognize the Armenian Genocide. We
could not agree more and urge President Obama and the U.S. Congress to
unequivocally affirm the Armenian Genocide. In so doing, the United
States will honor a proud chapter in U.S. history in helping to save the
survivors of the first genocide of the twentieth century.

TURKEY’S TRACK RECORD OF BROKEN PROMISES

The Armenian Assembly views as encouraging the commitments made by the
government of Turkey to normalize relations with Armenia without
preconditions. However, we recall Turkey’s ample track record of
unfulfilled promises. As such, many remain skeptical as prior
governments of Armenia had also offered to normalize relations with
Turkey without preconditions only to be rebuffed.

Moreover, it is of particular concern that on the same day as the joint
statement released by the Armenian and Turkish foreign ministries
regarding the start of consultations to establish diplomatic relations
that Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu sent mixed signals.
Foreign Minister Davutoglu not only indicated that the opening of the
border would be "a long process," but also stated that Turkey would
guard Azerbaijan’s interests.

These pronouncements by Turkey’s Foreign Minister not only breach the
spirit of framework just announced, but also directly contradict U.S.
policy "that normalization should take place without preconditions and
within a reasonable timeframe."

NORMALIZATION OF RELATIONS WITHIN A REASONABLE TIMEFRAME

The U.S. government has urged "Armenia and Turkey to proceed
expeditiously, according to the agreed framework…" The protocols set
specific time limits and the international community expects Turkey to
fulfill its commitments through measurable results and in good faith to
normalize relations with the Republic of Armenia. The protocols also
call for consultations and parliamentary debate, which we expect, will
be vigorous and emotional, while also conducted with respect and
dignity.

Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly of America is the largest
Washington-based nationwide organization promoting public understanding
and awareness of Armenian issues. The Assembly is a 501(c) (3)
tax-exempt membership organization.

###

NR#2009-065

http://www.aaainc.org/

Is "Leniency Programme" Applicable In Armenia?

IS "LENIENCY PROGRAMME" APPLICABLE IN ARMENIA?

PanARMENIAN.Net
31.08.2009 18:51 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ State Commission for Economic Competition Protection
conducts a poll on methods of competition regulation, published at
its official website, SCECP press service reported. The Commission
prepares legislative changes stipulating for "leniency programme"
implementation, offered by European experts. The programme stipulates
for extenuating responsibility in case the business entity, as a party
to anti-competition agreement, informs the Commission and provides the
facts pertaining to the agreement. Also, experts suggest increasing
the fine from 2% to 10% of last year’s income, the practice applied
in developed European states.

According to statistics, about 80% of anti-competition agreements
were discovered in states applying leniency program.

Even with deep Armenian roots, Watertown High barely saves classes

The Boston Globe, MA
Aug 30 2009

Even with deep Armenian roots, Watertown High barely saves classes

WATERTOWN – With the third highest number of Armenian immigrants in
the United States, Watertown faces a formidable challenge – how to
preserve what may be the country’s last surviving Armenian-language
program at a public high school.

Prospects for the program, on the eve of its 40th anniversary, looked
dim after the school could not find a replacement for its founder,
Anahid Yacoubian, who retired from full-time work in 2007 but taught
the advanced-level class to juniors and seniors until the end of
school this spring.

Watertown’s school administrators considered dropping the program for
lack of teachers, but after a frantic search found an instructor just
two weeks before the start of classes on Sept. 8. Superintendent Ann
Koufman-Frederick said officials were working out one-year contract
last week.

It appears the program at Watertown High is saved for this year but
its future beyond that is uncertain.

`I would like Watertown High to continue offering Armenian. We are
looking for a way to preserve the program, if possible, and are
looking for a way to make that happen,” said Koufman-Frederick, who
is starting her first year as the district’s superintendent.

The uncertainty was a painful reckoning for a town known worldwide for
its vibrant Armenian-American community, but where about 9 percent of
the population claimed Armenian heritage on the 2000 Census.

In Watertown, Armenian is not like other traditional high school
language offerings. It represents a history and a legacy deeply
imbedded in the town’s makeup, one revered even more because the
culture was nearly destroyed during a genocide by the Ottoman Empire
that killed 1.5 million Armenians, and imprisoned and displaced
millions more, between 1915 and 1918.

For nearly four decades, the language program at the high school was
operated and taught almost entirely by Yacoubian, a native Armenian
who came to Watertown High in 1970. She was the school’s Armenian
heart and soul – organizing annual cultural festivals, bake sales, and
scholarships for college-bound students.

She still teaches adult Armenian language classes locally, and despite
her retirement remains a frequent sight in Watertown High’s Room 333,
where maps of Armenia and the former Soviet Union line the walls, and
the classroom computer is equipped with a hard-to-find Armenian font.

The idea that the program could fade away horrified her, Yacoubian
said last week.

`The community has always been so supportive of us, and that is what
has helped us get that far,” she said. `It is a struggle for
Armenians to keep their culture, but if we do this we have so much to
share with the rest of the world.”

Armenian language classes in Arlington and Belmont public schools
disappeared years ago. Most Armenian cultural and language classes in
the area are now held privately – mostly in Watertown, at either
St. James Armenian Apostolic Church, St. Stephen’s Armenian Apostolic
Church, or the Armenian Library and Museum of America. One of the
nation’s largest Armenian summer camps, Camp Haiastan, run by the
national Armenian Youth Federation, is less than 25 miles away in
Franklin.

>From a practical standpoint, keeping the program alive is difficult,
Yacoubian acknowledged. The language is so obscure that there is no
official state certification for its instructors. Many parents today
prefer that their children learn a more mainstream tongue. Some
students have schedule conflicts because Armenian and some honors
classes are taught at the same time.

`I’m very concerned about the future, but I am optimistic they have a
whole year to look for someone now,” she said. Without the
upper-level class, few, if any, students are likely to enroll in the
lower level one, she said, instead choosing another foreign language
in which to become proficient.

For survivors of the genocide who fled to the Middle East, Europe and
the United States, and their descendents, keeping that culture alive
is considered the most sacred of obligations.

Although it happened nearly a century ago, the genocide is by no means
ancient history. It continues to be a combustible international and
political issue. In 2007, Anti-Defamation League president Abraham
Foxman was blasted with international criticism after calling the
Armenian massacres by the Turkish military `tantamount” to genocide,
in the context of the Jewish Holocaust.

Earlier this year, the Armenian community pressured online search
giant Google to ban ads from a Turkish genocide-denial group. And a
congressional resolution that would officially recognize the Armenian
genocide, after pending for many years, was quietly shelved yet again,
advocates say, because of delicate US-Turkish diplomatic relations.

`Knowing our language is knowing our history,” said teacher Sirhan
Tamakian, who arrived at Watertown High five years ago and is able to
teach only the freshman/sophomore Armenian class in addition to her
English-as-a-second-language course load. `If we don’t know our
history, we can’t teach it to others or defend it.”

But the number of students interested in studying Armenian is
dwindling, due to changing immigration patterns and
assimilation. Today, nonnative students moving into Watertown are more
likely to be from Pakistan or Brazil, in contrast to the immigrants of
a generation ago arriving from Armenian-speaking households in Lebanon
and the former Soviet Union, school officials said.

The school system has its own limitations, including shrinking
budgets, teacher shortages and dwindling enrollments,
Koufman-Frederick said. Between 6 and 15 students were lined up to
enroll in each Armenian class this fall, compared with more than 20
pupils in each of the high school’s several Spanish classes.

But local Armenian-Americans say the language curriculum is deeply
meaningful to the community, and should not be abandoned.

Ani Eskici, a 1986 Watertown High School graduate, took Armenian
classes from Yacoubian, and today her 15-year-old son, Kevin, is a
second-generation student.

Eskici’s great-grandparents perished in the genocide, and she was
raised in Turkey by parents who were forbidden to speak Armenian
because of governmental regulation. Today, as a bank teller at
Watertown Savings Bank, Eskici uses her Armenian skills daily to
assist elderly Armenian-speaking customers.

She hopes Kevin can use his language education to not only visit his
homeland and relatives, but to work oversees in business or diplomacy.

`The program has been so important to us and I think it is so
important for the community. I was so disappointed to hear it could
get cut. There are a lot of people who value it greatly,” Eskici
said.

Koufman-Frederick said the district wants to support the program, but
admitted the future is anything but clear.

`We’re trying to be as smart as possible with what we offer,” said
Koufman-Frederick, who noted that one of her goals as the system’s
incoming chief is to appoint a task force to overhaul and expand
foreign language programming, especially in the elementary schools.

Perhaps a partnership with local Armenian cultural organizations could
be fostered to help support Watertown High’s offerings, she said.

Houry Boyamian, principal of St. Stephen’s Armenian Elementary, which
has students in preschool through fifth grade, said the loss of
Armenian at the high school would be devastating.

`It is very important that our students can continue learning at an
advanced level in school,” she said. St. Stephen’s already operates
supplementary Armenian classes for its young members on Saturdays and
Sundays, in addition to its day school and Armenian-language church
services.

Watertown should not take the language program away, Boyamian said. `I
think it should continue.”

Erica Noonan can be reached at [email protected].

ucation/k_12/articles/2009/08/30/watertown_high_ek es_out_another_year_of_armenian_language_classes/

http://www.boston.com/news/ed

Vahan Dilanyan: Armenian And Azerbaijani Publics Are Not Ready To Co

VAHAN DILANYAN: ARMENIAN AND AZERBAIJANI PUBLICS ARE NOT READY TO COMPROMISE NKR CONFLICT RESOLUTION

armradio.am
27.08.2009 16:24

Publics of Armenia and Azerbaijan are not ready to compromise
resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, Vahan Dilanyan, head
of the Research Center for Political developments told journalists
in Yerevan.

"At a time when the public is not ready to compromise, displaying a
political will by the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan is very
important. The leaders of both countries have two options: abandon
the adoption of the Madrid document, or take steps to establish the
atmosphere of trust in Armenia and Azerbaijan," the expert said.

He mentioned that the expected visit of the OSCE Minsk Group to the
region in fall to submit the updated Madrid principles to the conflict
parties does not specifically affect the public opinion in Armenia
and Azerbaijan.

Opponents Spurn Dashnak Criticism Over Turkey, Karabakh

OPPONENTS SPURN DASHNAK CRITICISM OVER TURKEY, KARABAKH
Anush Martirosian

Armenialiberty.org
Aug 26 2009

Representatives of Armenia’s government and opposition camps have
spurned, for different reasons, the criticism contained in the latest
statement of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun),
in which the nationalist party called for Yerevan’s major policy
change on Turkey and Nagorno-Karabakh.

In a statement released on Tuesday, Dashnaktsutyun’s Executive Council
of Armenia, in particular, called for an end to negotiations with
Turkey, which it described as "seriously dangerous for Armenia" and
"serving Turkish interests".

"Time has shown that these negotiations are fruitless," Artyusha
Shahbazian, a member of the party’s supreme body, stressed in an
interview with RFE/RL on Wednesday. He added that Dashnaktsutyun
would not limit itself to a public rally in Yerevan on September 2
dealing with the current state of Armenian-Turkish relations and the
Nagorno-Karabakh settlement process, but would continue to present
its demands on these issues also "in other ways".

Dashnaktsutyun, which cited foreign policy differences to quit
Armenia’s ruling coalition in April after staying within Armenian
governments for nearly a decade, also reaffirmed on Tuesday that it
continued to hold Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian responsible
for "diplomatic failures" both in the current Armenian-Turkish
rapprochement and in the continuing peace talks with Azerbaijan over
Nagorno-Karabakh.

Vice-Chairman of the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) Razmik
Zohrabian laughed off the stance of the former coalition partner,
noting that the foreign minister solely fulfils the policy of the
current political coalition and the president.

"If they [Dashnaktsutyun] demand the resignation of the foreign
minister, it means they also hit the political coalition," Zohrabian
underscored.

In its statement, Dashnaktsutyun also demanded that Nagorno-Karabakh
regain a full party’s status in the continuing talks with Azerbaijan
where at present Armenia effectively negotiates on its behalf.

Hovannes Igitian, a senior member of the opposition Armenian National
Movement (HHSh), called Dashnaktsutyun’s demand ‘illogical’ given
the party’s tacit support for the policy of former president Robert
Kocharian, whom Armenia’s main opposition group holds responsible
for supplanting Nagorno-Karabakh as a negotiating party.

"Dashnaktsutyun supported him and perhaps out of gratitude did not
interfere with Kocharian’s policies and did not point out those
mistakes. And today, when the process is becoming irreversible,
suddenly Dashnaktsutyun remembers that something wrong has
happened. This all is more connected with individuals rather than
with the objective situation," said Igitian.

The main opposition Armenian National Congress (HAK), of which the
HHSh is a core member, is also known to support Stepanakert’s return
to the negotiating table as a full party.

The HAK and its top leader, ex-president Levon Ter-Petrosian, have
also repeatedly denounced the current administration’s policy on
Turkey as a gross failure.