ANKARA: `Turkey, Armenia should no longer be hostage to history’

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
May 10 2009

`Turkey, Armenia should no longer be hostage to history’

European Stability Initiative experts Diba Nigar Göksel and
Gerald Knaus Diba Nigar Göksel and Gerald Knaus from the
European Stability Initiative (ESI), a nonprofit research and policy
institute, have said both Turkey and Armenia have a chance to
marginalize extremist voices and enable a more reasonable debate to go
forward, as the border between them remains closed but signs of a
rapprochement have appeared.

In their recent report `Noah’s Dove Returns: Armenia, Turkey and
the Debate on Genocide,’ they explore the issue of `genocide,’ which,
they said, is the single topic that poisons relations between Turks
and Armenians. `There are hardly any reputable scholars in the field
of genocide studies who doubt that what happened to the Armenians in
1915 constitutes genocide.

However, it is also clear that modern-day Turkey is not legally
responsible for genocidal acts committed nearly a century ago, and
that acknowledging the genocide would not bring into question the
established Turkish-Armenian border,’ the report stated.

The report went on: `Armenians today face a choice: either treat
Turkey as an eternal enemy or re-engage with its western neighbor in
the hope of one day sharing a border with the European Union. ¦ For
their part, Armenians must accept that the recognition of the genocide
will never pave the way for challenging a territorial settlement that
has stood for nearly a century.’

For Sunday’s Zaman, Göksel and Knaus gave more details about
the issue and the outlook of Turkish-Armenian relations.

You went to Armenia several times, lived there and talked with people
from every strata of Armenian society for the report. What was the
most striking part for you?

Göksel: Before traveling to Armenia, I had assumed that the
descendants of the Ottoman Armenians were all in the diaspora and that
the Armenians in Armenia had always been there. As a Turk, what
surprised me most was how high a proportion of the Armenians I met in
Armenia had come from different places in Turkey. Probably 80 percent
of the people I met in Armenian villages in the middle of nowhere
would be from [the eastern Turkish provinces of] MuÅ?,
Diyarbakır, etc. that made me see the magnitude of the problem.

You also talked with people with extreme views — those who would
defend such ideas as defining the current border between Turkey and
Armenia illegal. Do you think this idea has a chance of survival in
Armenia?

Göksel: The people in Armenia who expressed rather radical
positions were quite polite to me. These were the same people who gave
presentations in town meetings in Armenia about having claims in
Anatolian land. But this is not the most important thing for most
ordinary people in Armenia.

What is the most important thing to them?

Göksel: For most of them, meeting a Turk for the first time and
being able to talk to her freely is more important. Just 10 minutes of
conversation changes the entire atmosphere, and we see that more
dialogue is really the only way to melt the ice — except for the
people who come up with theories about land claims and
reparations. Ordinary people would not go out and demonstrate for
land.

But do you think some of the opinion leaders could influence the
public in a way to make that happen?

Göksel: As for land claims, no. As for 1915, Armenians believe
that it was genocide and that they should be able to tell the world
about it. This is a strong feeling. Expecting Armenians to give up
their beliefs or their agenda in that regard is not realistic.

So they support opening the border mostly because of economic
concerns?

Göksel: We found a great deal of fear in Armenia toward Turkey;
a suspicion about Turkey’s intentions. This is also a result of being
isolated from each other for so long. There is also extreme curiosity
about what is happening in Turkey.

Are they questioning why Turkey wants to open the border?

Göksel: They question everything, from why Turkey restores the
Church of the Holy Cross, the Akdamar Church, on the island of Akdamar
[in the Turkish province of Van] to the real intentions of the Turkish
intellectuals who launched the `apology campaign.’ There is general
skepticism about Turkey’s efforts to reach out to Armenia — so
Armenians wonder if it is a public relations act, a way to prevent
third countries’ parliaments from passing genocide resolutions. A
great amount of change has also taken place since the early 2000s,
particularly as a result of increased contacts. More Turks go to
Armenia, and there are more civil society contacts. So the Armenian
view of a monolithic Turkey that is out to destroy Armenia is
definitely cracking.

Is the economy part of the debate?

Göksel: Part of Armenian society seems to think that an open
border with Turkey will solve Armenia’s economic problems. Other
segments of society have started to see that maybe border closure
isn’t the only problem and that the economy has some structural
problems, too. There is also another dimension, like being able to go
and visit the lands of their grandmothers, to see the places that
their grandmothers told them about. That’s very high on the agenda. I
once told a waiter that `you can just fly to İstanbul and do
that,’ and he said, `Look, I have a family to feed, and I cannot
afford a plane ticket and then drive or travel to the east of Turkey.’

`Any Armenian politician would like to preside over the opening of the
border’ Would a border opening be a victory for the Armenian
politicians?

Göksel: It has an economic and a symbolic meaning, as well as a
psychological and a political meaning. It would be a victory for any
Armenian politician to preside over the opening of the border.

Is there a chance that the current government of Armenia could be
toppled depending on the result of the upcoming mayoral election in
Yerevan?

Göksel: Former President Levon Ter-Petrossian will run for
mayor as a candidate of the Armenian National Congress. It will
largely be a symbolic act to demonstrate or challenge the election. It
could increase the pressure but not topple the government per se.

The Dashnak Party recently decided to leave the government. Do you
attach any significance to that?

Göksel: They are one of the four coalition partners. The
government can keep on functioning. Numbers don’t prohibit that. It is
a blow in terms of legitimacy. It is thus all the more important that
the talks with Turkey yield results without much delay. It is too
early to say that the stability of the government has been threatened,
but it is a warning sign and shows the red lines when it comes to the
issue of genocide. It creates a politically fragile situation in
Armenia.

Knaus: One good thing is that you have the government and the
opposition united on the Turkey issue for the first time. The Dashnaks
had less than 14 percent in the last election, which was the best
result they ever had. It is important to realize that the two big
blocs, both Sarksyan and Ter-Petrossian, want to improve relations
with Turkey.

Do you think supporters of Robert Kocharyan [former leader of the
break-away republic of Nagorno-Karabakh and the former president of
Armenia] are a bigger threat to the stability of the government?

Knaus: If this dialogue [the Turkey-Armenia rapprochement] delivers
anything, [Armenian President Serzh] Sarksyan and Ter-Petrossian will
be vindicated. Even though the political tension in Armenia has been
high in recent years, they have both been constructive. If this
delivers something in the next few months, it’s really going to
isolate the hard-liners. It will also isolate those who, like
Kocharyan, did not believe anything would come out of the invitation
to [Turkish President Abdullah] Gül last year.

So do you think something needs to happen in the near future in this
process of rapprochement?

Knaus: The worst that could happen to this process is if Sarksyan and
others come out and say that they were naïve, that the Turks
were just playing a game because of Washington and that whatever the
Turks were saying was never genuine. If the process fails, it would
make the government vulnerable to attack. It would harm those in
Armenia in favor of opening the border. On the other hand, if the
border opens in a gradual way, if something concrete is achieved, it
would really isolate the hard-liners. Ter-Petrossian favored
rapprochement in the early ’90s, but nothing happened. This then
allowed Kocharyan to say, `Look at what he did, and he got nothing in
return.’

There is a vision, interestingly best expressed by Ter-Petrossian in a
speech two years ago that Armenia as a society can only win if Turkey
continues on the road to EU membership, becoming more democratic and
prosperous. This would allow Armenia to move closer to the
West. Indeed, it would be good if the Armenian diaspora in France sees
that helping Turkey move towards the EU would be the best way to help
Armenia become a Western democracy. These are the kinds of arguments
that would be helpful for both sides. And as far as history is
concerned, the more people talk about what happened to the Armenians,
the more attention can be drawn to what happened to the Turks in the
late 19th and early 20th century. Then the Turkish argument about the
killings of Turks and the expulsions from the Balkans and Caucasus
will be discussed more openly as well. And nobody is any longer a
hostage to history.

`Turkey’s extreme sensitivity on genocide surprising’ In the report,
it seems like you are trying to make a case about the issue of
genocide in regards to perceptions about it in Turkey, right?

Knaus: We were surprised by the extreme sensitivity and nervousness
around this issue. Every year on the 23rd or 24th of April, all of
Turkey holds its breath and waits for what happens in Washington. You
get the feeling that depending on what words are being used in
Washington, there will either be a huge crisis with an ally or
everything will go back to normal — until the situation repeats
itself the following year.

Why do you think that is the case?

Knaus: We asked this question and found three answers. One is that the
Turkish policymakers think that there was no genocide. They also say
that genocide recognition is a huge insult to Turkish honor and that
is anti-Turkish. But the paradox is that the countries that have
passed resolutions in the last few years are actually some of Turkey’s
best allies. The German Parliament that passed a resolution in 2005
was the most pro-Turkish German Parliament in history. It was the time
of Fischer and Schroeder, who strongly backed Turkish accession to the
EU. Or take US President Barack Obama. He is very supportive of
Turkey, but still sticks to his beliefs.

So do you think there is a misconception on the side of Turkish
government about this?

Knaus: Turks see the radical Armenian forces and the Armenian diaspora
behind all of this. They also fear that this might single them
out. That is an argument we heard a lot in Turkey –that calling 1915
`genocide’ would make the world equate Turks with Nazi Germany. That
isn’t true. [The International Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia] ICTY called what happened in Srebrenica genocide, and
that’s the prism through which the world looks at genocide
today. `Genocide’ doesn’t have to translate to `Holocaust.’ If you
look at history and the current debate on genocide, you’ll see that a
huge number of events in the 20th century alone are now considered
genocide. What German colonialists did in Africa in 1904, for example
— in modern day Namibia — is now being called the first genocide of
the 20th century. But Germany today, in all surveys, is one of the
most respected countries of the world. Acknowledging something that
happened a hundred years ago is neither a matter of singling out
Turkey or of damaging its honor.

What is the third argument?

Knaus: It’s the fear of material repercussions. We understand why the
Turkish government thinks this way. Some of the Armenian organizations
pushing for recognition are doing so in order to achieve something
practical. But nobody — not the German Parliament, not the French
Parliament, not the European Parliament, not America — actually
believes that Armenian genocide recognition will lead to restitution,
compensation or territorial claims. There is no legal basis for
assuming this. In 2001, the French Parliament decided to call 1915
`genocide.’ It’s a law. But where are the court cases in France? If
recognition is meant to have practical consequences, why haven’t there
been any? Some Armenian diaspora organizations are disappointed by
this.

There is a UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime
of Genocide. Does it have any implications for Turkey?

Knaus: No. There is one thing the Turkish public hasn’t heard enough
about, and that is the opinion by the International Center for
Transitional Justice commissioned by the Turkish-Armenian
Reconciliation Commission in 2003. These were leading legal experts
among nongovernmental organizations in New York. They said clearly
that the convention cannot be applied retroactively, that no claims
whatsoever can arise from Armenian genocide recognition. So it’s not a
legal issue. The convention does not apply to events that took place
prior to 1948; it is not retroactive.

10 May 2009, Sunday
YONCA POYRAZ DOÄ?AN İSTANBUL

Movses Shakhverdyan: Armenia Can’t Avoid Relations With Turkey

MOVSES SHAKHVERDYAN: ARMENIA CAN’T AVOID RELATIONS WITH TURKEY

PanARMENIAN.Net
07.05.2009 19:14 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ I believe that the border between Armenia and Turkey
mustn’t be closed and see no danger in its opening, RA Socialist
Labor Party Leader Movses Shahverdyan told a news conference.

He also added that Turkey, rather than Armenia has a negative attitude
towards its neighbors. He stated that Turkey, in difference to Armenia,
is conducting a strong diplomacy and Armenia can’t avoid relations
with Turkey.

Movses Shahverdyan noted that information on road map was only
published in Turkey. Armenia made no comments in this matter, only
stating that the agreement hasn’t been signed and negotiations are
in process.

FAAE Chairman Calls For Creating World All Armenian Forum To Contrib

FAAE CHAIRMAN CALLS FOR CREATING WORLD ALL ARMENIAN FORUM TO CONTRIBUTE TO HAY DAT SOLUTION

Noyan Tapan
May 7, 2009

BRATISLAVA, MAY 7, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Ashot Grigorian,
the Chairman of the Forum of Armenian Associations of Europe,
made a statement calling organizations acting in the Diaspora for
unifying establishing a World Forum, the activity of which will be
aimed at solving the Hay Dat (Armenian Cause) and preventing issue’s
developments not favorable for Armenia. The statement, the text of
which A. Grigorian also provided to Noyan Tapan, in particular, read:

"A change in the domestic and foreign political situation was recorded
after Armenia and Turkey came to a mutual consent over provisions
unknown yet and created a road-map, which called forth much concern
in the Diaspora.

The creation of the road-map is no doubt much regress on the background
of the huge achievements of past decades in the issue of Genocide,
which is very alarming for the Diaspora. The Armenians in the Diaspora
are also very much concerned with another important issue of Hay Dat,
developments proceeding around the Nagorno Karabakh problem.

The Forum of Armenian Associations of Europe (FAAE) receives many
telephone calls and letters from Diasporan Armenian organizations
and individuals, who express bewilderment how the RA authorities can
sign any document on vital issues of the nation of nearly 10 million
people spread all over the world without taking into consideration
the people’s opinion, especially completely ignore Artsakh people’s
opinion. The Diasporan Armenians hold the same opinion in an issue:
the Armenian authorities should not be permitted to make personal
decisions. Even attempts of Hay Dat’s solution not favorable for
Armenia will drive a wedge among the Armenian nation, which is fraught
with serious consequences.

FAAE proposes Armenian organizations and parties in the whole world
unifying and creating a common All Armenian Forum, which will either
unitedly support the Armenian authorities in resisting insuperable
pressure exerted on the latters by third countries or will form
opposition to the Armenian authorities in case the latters make
personal decisions in issues of national significance and will assume
the struggle for solving the Hay Dat.

We would like the organizations and authorities of Artsakh to also
take an active part in the work of the newly created World All Armenian
Forum, union of Armenian organizations of America, Europe, and Russia
(etc.).

Forum’s founding congress will be held in September. Before that
we are ready through electronic or other means of communication
to discuss problems we all are concerned with and working with the
Armenian authorities to prevent fatal actions posing danger for the
Armenian people and to contribute to solution of the Hay Dat. We are
waiting for responses with hope."

According to the statement, bids for participation in the organizing
committee’s work on forum’s creation can be introduced to FAAE to
the following e-mail: [email protected].

Regular Meeting Between RA And Azeri Presidents To Take Place In Pra

REGULAR MEETING BETWEEN RA AND AZERI PRESIDENTS TO TAKE PLACE IN PRAGUE

NOYAN TAPAN
MAY 6, 2009
YEREVAN

RA President Serzh Sargsyan leaves for Prague on a two-day working
visit on May 7, where he will participate in the EU Eastern Partnership
summit. The RA President will give a speech within the framework of
the summit.

According to the RA President’s Press Office, within the framework
of the Nagorno Karabakh settlement negotiations process S. Sargsyan
will meet with President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev in Prague.

In the capital city of Czech Republic S. Sargsyan will have working
meetings with Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko and Turkish
President Abdullah Gul on the latters’ initiative.

President, 435 Members of Congress Get Genocide Documentary

PR
River Ran Red
Susanna Kim
Tamar Mashigian P.R.
310.276.5001
[email protected]

President, 435 Members of Congress Get Genocide Documentary
"River Ran Red" with Letter from Jewish World Watch

Film is Screened to Large Audiences Nationwide

(April 24, 2009) – Jewish World Watch founder Rabbi Harold Schulweis
urged members of Congress to support House Resolution 252 on the
Armenian Genocide in a letter accompanied by a DVD copy of The River
Ran Red, the epic documentary film on the Genocide by Dr. J. Michael
Hagopian.

The film has become an important tool in recounting the events of
1915, when the Ottoman Turks carried out the planned extermination of
1.5 million Armenians in what is the first Genocide of the 20th
century. More than 300 people attended the East Coast Premiere of The
River Ran Red in Watertown, MA, on March 22, and screenings during the
past week at Genocide commemorative activities at the University of
Southern California and the University of California, Los Angeles,
drew hundreds of students.

Culminating more than 40 years of interviews with 400 eyewitnesses to
the Armenian Genocide of 1915, The River Ran Red is the final film in
Hagopian’s The Witnesses trilogy produced by the Armenian Film
Foundation. The 60-minute documentary film depicts the epic search for
survivors of the Armenian Genocide along the Euphrates, which snakes
from the Armenian Plateau in Turkey to Syria. Hagopian weaves a
compelling story of terrifying intensity and resounding warmth. The
search concludes with the discovery and testimony of the last three
survivors, among several thousand, who had been stuffed into a burning
cave in the forbidden desert of Deir Zor.

The Jewish World Watch has been a strong supporter of the Armenian
Film Foundation’s efforts to bring the events of the Armenian Genocide
to the fore. In his letter to the members of Congress, Rabbi Schulweis
wrote, "We are men and women of conscience, and together we ask our
government to recognize what we know as true: that 1.5 million
Armenians were systematically slaughtered in a government-sponsored
campaign of genocide against them. … I urge you to watch this film,
and put your vote to work recognizing the Armenian Genocide by
endorsing H.Res. 252." DVD copies of The River Ran Red along with the
same letter also were sent to President Barack Obama, Vice President
Joe Biden and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

The River Ran Red has had several screenings in the past several
weeks. The National Association of Armenian Studies and Research
(NAASR) organized a showing in Watertown, at the Mosesian Theater at
the Watertown Arsenal Center for the Arts. Dr. Hagopian and Armenian
Film Foundation board member Gerald Papazian attended the Boston-area
event from Los Angeles. Afterwards, there was a panel discussion with
Dr. Hagopian, Prof. Taner Akçam, who holds the chair in Armenian
Genocide studies at Clark University, and Dr. Bedross Der Matossian
from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

In another screening on the East Coast, the film was shown at New
Jersey’s Englewood Public Library on April 23.

In Southern California, Armenian students joined in the call for
passage of H.Res. 252. The screening at USC on Monday, April 20, was
sponsored by the USC Armenian Student Association and the USC
Institute of Armenian Studies. The showing at UCLA on Sunday, April
26, was sponsored by the Armenian Studies Program and the UCLA
Armenian Graduate Student Association. Immediately following the
screening there was a lively question and answer session with director
J. Michael Hagopian.

"Armenian students at these two great universities will be critical
for generations to come," stated Dr. Hagopian. "They should be well
versed in all aspects of the Genocide and accept the responsibility
history places upon them as future leaders of our people." He added,
"At both institutions I was amazed at the intellectual attributes of
the students and their fervent devotion for Armenian causes. The
future will be in good hands with these students."

The River Ran Red may be purchased by calling the Armenian Film
Foundation at 805-495-0717 or visiting

www.armenianfilm.org.

Catholicos Received Young Political Leaders

CATHOLICOS RECEIVED YOUNG POLITICAL LEADERS

Panorama.am
15:02 04/05/2009

The Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians His Holiness
Karekin II hosted in the Mother See of Holy Echmiadzin yesterday the
participants of the young political leaders’ meeting, having arrived
in Armenia from 19 different states, the press service of the Mother
See of Holy Echmiadzin reports. The young political leaders have
been introduced to the history of the establishment of the Mother
See of Holy Echmiadzin, the significance Armenian Apostolic Church
has in the lives of the Armenian people. His Holiness referred to
the current challenges of the changing world and the activities the
church takes in the process of facing them.

From Now On Public Television Of Armenia [PTA] Is Starting Giving Ai

FROM NOW ON PUBLIC TELEVISION OF ARMENIA [PTA] IS STARTING GIVING AIR TIME TO CANDIDATES FOR ELDERS’ COUNCIL OF YEREVAN

ArmInfo
2009-05-04 18:20:00

Beginning from today PTVA is starting giving air time to candidates for
Elders’ Council of Yerevan within the frames of election campaign,
Chairman of Central Electoral Commission Garegin Azaryan told
journalists today.

He also added that CEC is cooperating with IFES and OSCE in the matter
of preparing to the election. ‘IFES will assist setting of the new
same type cabins for voting’, – Azaryan said and added the OSCE will
prepare placards with information about the candidates, parties and
blocs participating in the election. ‘An advertising animation film was
prepared together with the OSCE Yerevan office, which will be broadcast
at all the TV channels involved in the campaign’, – Azaryan said.

12 Slain In Shooting At Azerbaijan Oil Academy

12 SLAIN IN SHOOTING AT AZERBAIJAN OIL ACADEMY
Aida Sultanova

AP foreign
Thursday April 30 2009

A young man armed with an automatic pistol and clips of ammunition
rampaged through a prestigious institute in the Azerbaijani capital
Thursday, killing 12 people and wounding others before killing himself
as police closed in, the government said.

Little is known about the gunman and even less about the motive for
the bloodshed that shook the faculty and students of the Azerbaijan
State Oil Academy, a noted school whose graduates have included future
presidents and tycoons.

The suspect, Farda Gadyrov, entered the Azerbaijan State Oil Academy
in Baku and climbed five floors of the building, shooting everyone he
met along the way, according to a joint statement from the Interior
Ministry and state prosecutors.

Gadyrov, a Georgian citizen born in 1980, then shot and killed himself
with the gun, a Makarov pistol, when he saw police approaching,
the statement said. It said he had three magazines of ammunition.

The statement gave no motive for the attack in Azerbaijan, a country
at the crossroads of western Asia and Eastern Europe, with Russia,
Georgia, Armenia and Iran at its borders.

TV footage from inside the academy showed victims lying face down
in the corridors, apparently dead, with blood seeping onto the
floor. Students carried others, apparently injured, out of the
building, and weeping women hurried out.

"We were in an exam, we heard gunshots, we went out of the classroom
in panic and saw a gunman opening fire on everyone. Three of my
friends were shot," Bekir Belek, a Turkish student, told CNN-Turk
television from a Baku hospital. "Everywhere was covered in blood,
all the corridors."

"We were trying to escape but had to return when my friends were shot;
we took them to hospital," Belek said.

"There were bodies at each floor," said Ibrahim Kar, another Turkish
student at the hospital.

Ilgar Mamedov, whose father, an employee of the academy, said the
gunman walked the corridors of the academy taking aim at the head of
anyone standing within range, and shooting. If it was apparent a victim
was not dead after a first shot, the attacker shot again, Mamedov said.

Azeri President Ilham Aliev offered condolences in a statement later
Thursday, and said he would personally oversee the investigation.

The Azerbaijani television station ANS quoted an official in Dashtepe,
the Georgian village where Gadyrov grew up, as saying that Gadyrov
had left with his parents about a decade ago to live in Russia, then
returned briefly about a month ago before moving to Azerbaijan. "It
was said that someone had promised him work," said the official,
Vidadi Gasanov.

Gasanov described him as an unsociable child who mostly stayed in
his house and s aid "there was something strange in his character."

During his brief return to the village "he went outside only to make
purchases at the stores," Gasanov said.

The academy, which has existed under a variety of names since the
beginning of the 20th century in this oil-rich former Soviet republic,
has long been recognized as a major international center for the
training of oil industry specialists.

Among its graduates were Vagit Alekperov, the president of Lukoil,
Russia’s biggest independent oil producer; Angola’s President Jose
Eduardo dos Santos; Heydar Aliyev, Azerbaijan’s first post-Soviet
president; and Lavrenti Beria, the head of the Soviet secret police
under Josef Stalin.

Associated Press Writer Jim Heintz in Moscow contributed to this
report.

According To ANC, Opposition Representatives Will Become Target Of M

ACCORDING TO ANC, OPPOSITION REPRESENTATIVES WILL BECOME TARGET OF MONTH OF SEARCH FOR DRUGS AND ILLEGAL ARMS

Noyan Tapan
Apr 30, 2009

YEREVAN, APRIL 30, NOYAN TAPAN. According to RA Police Chief Alik
Sargsian’s decision he publicized the other day, a month of search
for drugs and illegal arms and their confiscation will be held between
April 29 to May 29 in the country.

According to the Armenian National Congress, those undertaking such
a measure should not declare it publicly by warning such offenders
in advance.

And term’s exact coincidence with the election campaign of Yerevan
Council of Elders elections prompts regime’s goal: that is, to receive
a "legal" occasion for provocations and mass police checkings and
persecutions by making opposition representatives its target.

"ANC condemns this mean fraud of the regime and declares that such
frauds will not affect either its resolution or resolution of the
most part of people sympathizing with ANC. Not only in preelection
issues, but in general our main arms is legality, of which the regime
is terrified, and which will lead us to a final victory," the ANC
April 29 statement read.