Nikolay Rizhkov: We Have No Armenophoby In Russia And We Can Never H

NIKOLAY RIZHKOV: WE HAVE NO ARMENOPHOBY IN RUSSIA AND WE CAN NEVER HAVE

AZG Armenian Daily
20/10/2006

Nikolay Rizhkov, member of the Federal Council of the Russian
Federation, Co-Chair of the Armenian-Russian Interparliamentary
Commission, met with Karekin II, Catholicos of All Armenians, on
October 17. In the course of the meeting, Karekin II expressed concern
about certain cases of bad attitude to Armenians in Russia. The Press
Office of St. Etchmiadzin informed that Catholicos of All Armenians
confirmed his friendly attitude to Russia and its people and stated
that one should spare no efforts to settle the issue.

In response, Nikolay Rizhkov stated that there is no armenophobia in
Russia and they will try hard to prevent any xenophobic action.

ANKARA: The Genocide Terror: The Armenian Bill In France Parliament

THE GENOCIDE TERROR: THE ARMENIAN BILL IN FRANCE PARLIAMENT
View: Sedat Laciner

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
Oct 11, 2006

Turkey’s membership to the EU has been a test of democracy and
"Europeanness" for the EU rather than Turkey.

We were used to harsh criticisms of the "Europeans" about Turkey’s
economy, democracy etc. Until now, they have scolded the Turkish
people and the Turks have listened to them.

Most of the time, the EU side was right in its criticisms. They
kept on saying "human rights", "end the torture", "consolidate your
democracy", "liberalize your economy" and many more. There were of
course some unjust criticisms too. Particularly, the Cyprus and the
Aegean disputes and the Armenian issue were giving us signs from the
"dark side" of Europe. But it has never been this much dirty.

MODERN WITCH HUNT

Even listing the incidents one after another will be enough to
demonstrate how ‘Europe’ is in a stalemate and how it nurtures a
medieval "monster" within itself:

After September 11, so to say "the witch hunt" started in Western
Europe against the Euro Muslims and Euro Turks. Being a Muslim
has been equated with being a "potential terrorist" even in
countries like the Netherlands and England, which are thought to
be "minority heavens." Many Muslims in these EU countries have
unjustly been detained, and have remained in cells as if they were
criminals. Some were proven innocent and released. Neither apology
nor compensation… The detentions are still continuing. Those whose
skin color is darker or who look like Middle Easterner now have to
walk faster in the streets because of the attitude of the security
forces towards them.

The Denmark daily Jyllands-Posten’s cartoon contest, which had an
obvious aim of insulting the Prophet of Islam, and the publication
of these cartoons in Denmark were also provocations. Turkey noticed
that a crisis was imminent and called for a meeting to calm down the
situation. However, the Denmark’s PM Anders Fogh Rasmussen ignored
these calls, and what is more, gave a lesson of "Europeanness"
to Turkey. He said "is Turkey European or not, it should decide on
that." Moreover, he strictly and impolitely rejected the requests
of ambassadors of Muslim countries to Copenhagen for a meeting
with him. "There is nothing to talk" he said. But the fears have
come true. The Muslims, whose Prophet was depicted as "terrorist",
"murderer" and "barbarian" by the Danish newspaper, organized protests
in many countries. Because they knew that it was not only the Prophet
but also themselves who were being insulted. The one depicted in the
cartoon was not only the Prophet, but the whole Muslim community,
whose number is more than 1 billion. The Muslims were identical
with terrorists in the subconscious of the Danish. When the Danish
products were boycotted in the Muslim world, Rasmussen abruptly
changed his attitude. He personally called the Muslim ambassadors for
a meeting. But it was too late. The relations between the Christian
and Muslim worlds had been seriously damaged.

There is another scandal and it is again in Denmark. The youth
organization of People’s Party of Denmark, the rightist, if not racist,
political party, organized a contest of humiliation of the Muslims’
Prophet. This party is the third largest party in Denmark and supports
the government outside.

Again, the aim is to insult the Muslims. Those members, who are mocking
with Islam, are portraying a "typical" Muslim by hanging grenades
on their belts. For Denmark, all these events must be considered as
"freedom of speech." But nobody talks about principles such as respect
to faith and religion, keeping the balance of ethnic relations, and
discouraging the intercultural hatred and violence. The freedom of
thought openly turns out to the "freedom of insult and incitement." As
a matter of fact, the freedom of speech is just a tale. ‘The Christian
Europe’ cannot control its annoyance after Turkey’s membership process
has become a serious affair. There is a ‘monster’ in Europe which
feels the clash of civilizations in its very veins particularly after
the September 11. This monster is the monster which burned the Jews
in Spain alive; the monster which could exterminate people at the
hands of the Nazis because they were Gypsies, Jews or black. This
monster is religionist and racist. This monster is fanatic, naughty
and fully ignorant. Don’t pay attention to the science and technology
cover on Europe, because the monster beneath is so strong…

***

And the Netherlands… A country seen as a fortress of liberalism and
democracy… The political parties in this country are so privileged
that the Dutch cannot afford to close a party which defends pedophilia
and zoophilia.

They say "Let everyone speak. The essence of democracy is the
freedom of thought and speech." But in the Netherlands, rejecting
the Armenian claims against the Turks is a bigger mistake than even
pedophilia. Three Turkish candidates were deprived to run for the
elections from their party lists just because they did not agree
with the Armenians. What is more, these parties, which dropped the
candidacy of the three Turks, were not marginal or small ones. One was
the party in power, and the other was the main leftist party. In short,
it is even impossible to voice different opinions in the Netherlands,
even in main current Dutch political parties.

How will the Turks in this country, whose number is about 450.000,
voice their demands if political channels are closed to them?

Who will bear the responsibility if al-Qaeda says that "the Netherlands
even doesn’t allow you to enter the parliament? You think differently
from the Armenians but they cannot even tolerate that?"

What will the results of excluding the Turks, who are the most
harmonious and peaceful Muslim minority in Europe, from the system?

AND FRANCE…

Nowadays, we have been experiencing "Armenian genocide insanity"
from France to the Netherlands, from Germany to Belgium. The Armenian
claims are not new. For almost a century, the Armenians have been
trying to get the great powers press Turkey with the hope of getting
a homeland in Anatolia.

They have tried many ways: Terror, assassinations, financial aid to
the terrorist organizations in Turkey, boycotting Turkish products,
issuing anti-Turkey bills in various parliaments etc. But they have
failed. They have failed not because Turkey was a very strong country
or the Turkish lobbies have done their best to stop these attempts. It
was because the Armenian claims were so weak even baseless. It was
because their method was wrong. It was because slandering a whole
nation was illogical by just relying on claims. It was because it
was against the nature of any small or big country to judge and
blame a state or a nation based on the claims of just one side. And
had the Armenians been right, they would have applied to courts,
not parliaments.

Despite this picture, France approved the Armenian claims (I prefer
calling them "obsessive belief") in the parliament in 2001 as if they
were the historical facts. The President of France also approved the
bill and the Armenian claims were legalized in France. According to
these claims, the Turks slaughtered 1.5 million Armenians in 1915,
that is, during the Ottoman State period. The name of this action is,
they say, "genocide". I cannot help myself but ask: Since the 1915
incidents were "genocide", why does France pass the law as late as
2001. What have the French politicians been doing until now? For
example, why didn’t they take that decision when France invaded the
Ottoman territories at the end of the World War 1 and seized all
the Ottoman official documents? Why didn’t they arrest and try the
"criminals"? Why didn’t they investigate the Armenian claims on the
spot instead of cooperating with the Armenians to kill thousands
of Turks and Kurds at that time? OK, let’s assume that France was
unaware of the situation because of the joy of victory, but how come
the French politicians haven’t remembered the so-called "genocide"
for 86 years? And didn’t they think of the 1915 Incidents while they
were slaughtering the 1.5 million Algerian Arabs? Have they compared
the Armenian claims with what the French soldiers have done in Africa
and Asia?

We can ask more questions to France because the decision has no legal
or political logic. The bill was passed in the parliament thanks
to the 30-40 radical-militant pro-Armenian legislators’ insistence
in the pre-election period. Other MPs, who did not want to draw the
anger of 300.000 Armenian votes in France, did not even participate
the voting of the bill. As a result, there was "genocide of facts"
in the French Parliament, and the others just watched it.

The current step is more tragicomic. The French Parliament first
issued the bill which approved the Armenian claims as true; they
are now trying to criminalize to say "lie" to the lies. The French
parties, which have been captured by the Armenian origin MPs and
their supporters, are not aware of what impact they will have not
only on Turco-French relations but also themselves and Europe.

Some rightist, religionist and racist people, like Sarkozy, support the
idea of "Christian Europe", and these people are endorsing anything
which is against Turkey. Recently, the TUSIAD’s (Association of
Turkish Businessmen and Industrialists) Brussels Representative has
asked why he was so opposed to Turkey’s membership. His answer was
"I know the Arab world very well."

Sarkozy, who is the minister of interior of France, a candidate for
presidency and has been a politician for years, thinks that Turkey
is an Arab country!

I have written it above: The monster which Europe nurtures inside
is not only racist and religionist but also ignorant. Imagine,
Mr. Sarkozy’s ‘knowledge’ on Turkey is not limited with that. He
says "shall we just let the 100 million Muslim Turks to migrate
Europe?" The French Minister of Interior Nicolas Sarkozy thinks
that the population of Turkey is 100 million. One cannot say that he
rounded the number. The discrepancy equals to three times of Greece’s
population. Let’s assume that Turkey’s population is 100 million. How
ignorant and militant is the one who thinks the all of the Turks
will flow to the European cities once Turkey is a full member. It is
obvious that Sarkozy sees himself as a Pope in the Medieval Age. He
sees Turks invading Europe in his nightmares every night!

On the other hand, the leftist groups in France have been the "captive"
of the Armenian constituents and lobbies. The Armenian lobby, which
spends more than 100 billion dollars for the Armenian cause each
year, has made this affair an industry. They have formed up a strong
network consisting of universities, parliaments, companies and even
movie theaters. They are using the Armenian Diaspora very well for
this job. The country where the Armenian "genocide" industry has
been most successful is France. But the France’s current pathetic
situation is not only because of Armenians’ attempts in that country.

The most important reason for this extreme behavior of France is
Turkey’s speedy progress towards full EU membership. Turkey has been
breaking growth records in the last five years. It has become the 17th
(or 18th) largest economy of the world. There are no obstacles for
the Turkish economy to be in the top ten in the near future. Turkey
has surprised the entire Europe with its reforms in the last few
years. Turkey’s realization of numerous reforms in a few years was
defined by the European countries as "outstanding." The Turkish economy
and the maturity of its politics were seen as sufficient in 2004 and
2005 for the EU membership, and as a result, the EU decided to start
accession talks. In other words, the full membership of Turkey, a
country which has been procrastinated since 1959, has become a serious
issue for the EU. Turkey could be a full member if nothing is done.

For the first time, a Muslim country would be a member of EU with equal
rights. This scenario has been the nightmare of many people in Europe.

First, the Pope said "the Europe is Christian; Turkey should establish
a union with Arabs". These words were noted down by the Turks, never to
be forgotten. This is perhaps the reason why the strongest reaction to
the Pope’s words on the Prophet of Islam has come from Turkey. However,
the Pope was not alone unfortunately. The German PM Angela Merkel
also opposed Turkey’s membership in 2004. Though the French President
Jacques Chirac ostensibly approved Turkey’s accession talks, in other
occasions he said "don’t worry, many things will change until the
accession talks finish and their membership depends on the results
of the referendum in France." This is a very disrespectful attitude,
and in fact, it is a fraud. The French President, who promised full
membership in written agreements and mobilized Turkey’s economy and
politics for this aim, was thinking just the opposite in reality,
and he has done everything to impede Turkey’s membership.

Chirac was unable to criticize Turkish democracy and economy, and
he was unable to reverse the signatures he made. So, he wanted to
use the Cyprus issue and then the Armenian issue against Turkey. The
Cyprus issue is a problem which the world has been unable to solve
for decades. The United Nations peacekeeping force, UNFICYP, was
deployed in Cyprus in 1964, and it is still there. That is to say,
France knows that conditioning Turkey’s membership to the solution of
the Cyprus problem means delaying Turkey’s accession for many more
decades. But the most effective way to hinder Turkey’s entry to the
EU is the Armenian issue:

There are claims and counterclaims, and it is almost impossible for
any party to convince the other one in this issue. The Armenians blame
Turkey and Turks with one of the world’s worst and most insulting
crime, genocide, by relying on statements such as "my grandfather
said this, my grandmom said that". Naturally Turkey or any country
cannot admit such accusations.

In such a case, conditioning Turkey’s membership to the acceptance of
the Armenian claims means intentionally excluding Turkey from the EU
forever. A problem which hasn’t been solved for a century cannot be
solved in a short time, and anyone in the EU knows that the Armenian
issue cannot be solve in couple of days or years. The Armenians are
not aware of the situation. The Armenians in the Diaspora are content
with their lives. They are making money, reputation and power through
the difficulties of the Armenians in Armenia. On the other hand,
Armenia Armenians cannot even decide on their fate. The country is
headed by a diaspora Armenian from Nagorno-Karabakh, Robert Kocharian,
who is obsessed with the Turks and more territories. Mr.

Kocharian is an Armenian from the Diaspora, who later obtained Armenian
citizenship. He talks of nothing but blood and war. He stays in the
power thanks to his discourse on creating tensions and obtaining
more territories.

He stays in power thanks to the militants recruited from Karabakh. He
even repressed street demonstrations by using the Karabakh militants.

Even the Greeks realized that an EU-member Turkey is better than
a Turkey outside the EU, but Armenians. If Turkey becomes a full
member of the EU, Armenia will become a neighbor of the Union. This
probably means that the border between Turkey and Armenia will be
opened, and the Armenians will prosper. For the moment, there are
more than 70.000 Armenians from Armenia who are living and working
in Turkey. Some are babysitters, some are servants, and some others
work in constructions. Most of them come to Turkey illegally or as
tourists. But then, they find a job and start living in Turkey with
bad conditions. They are taking care of children and houses of Turks,
who have been presented to them as "the perpetrators of genocide" for
the years. These Armenians are surprised of the Turks’ trust in them.

These Armenians, who were afraid of being treated badly in Turkey,
after a while see that being an Armenian has no advantage or
disadvantage in Turkey.

So, they work in Turkey and send remittances to Armenia motherland. I
don’t think that 70 million Turks will emigrate to European cities once
Turkey is an EU member, but I will not be surprised if the number of
Armenians living in Turkey reaches at least 1 million. As a matter of
fact, the population of Armenia has dropped from 3,2 million to 2-2,5
million during the Kocharian period. If Turkey becomes an EU member,
this number is likely to drop to 1,5 million. In other words, what the
Diaspora has wanted will come true: The Armenians will have returned
to Anatolia! This is just a joke, but it is apparent that Armenia
will be the most profitable country from Turkey’s accession to the EU.

IS FRANCE SINCERE?

As I have discussed before, the issue has nothing to do with the
Armenians.

They are only the pawns in the attempts to hinder Turkey’s
membership. It is so obvious that France is not sincere in its support
to the Armenian claims. When the Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan asked for the withdrawal of the Armenian "genocide" bill
from the French Interior Minister Sarkozy, the minister had three
conditions:

1. "The Commission (proposed by Turkey for the investigation of the
historical disputes between Turks and Armenians by historians) be
set up of any person, not only historians, 2. Abrogate the Article
301 of the (Turkish) Penal Code, which restricts the freedom of
thought in Turkey according to Mr. Sarkozy, 3. Assure the opening of
Armenia-Turkey border."

If the 1915 Incidents were really a genocide, which was legalized
by the French Parliament, and if this crime is so grave that even
its denial will be punished, how come Mr. Sarkozy propose such
conditions to Turkey in exchange for the withdrawal of the bill? What
is the relationship between Turkey’s Article 301 and "not punishing"
the ones who denies the so-called genocide? Let’s say, if Turkey
becomes the most democratic state in the world and if Turkey opens
its borders fully with Armenia, will that change the history? What
can be the relationship between the Armenian bill in the French
Parliament and the participation of historians or businessmen in the
joint Turco-Armenian commission set up to investigate the allegations?

It is clear that France’s priority is not recognizing Armenian claims
as "genocide", or punishing those who deny it. Their problem is
neither the Armenians nor the historical facts. Their real objective
is to exclude Turkey from the EU, and forcing Turkey to act under
the French influence.

That’s why they offer to make bargain on crucial principles like
‘genocide’ and ‘freedom of speech’.

Another indication of France’s lack of sincerity is the exclusion of
scientists or researchers from the current bill. In other words, if an
ordinary citizen or a politician denies the Armenian claims, he/she
may be imprisoned up to five years, according to the French bill,
but if a researcher, historian or an academician commits the same
"crime", he/she will not be punished at all. Is there such logic of
law? If an act is a crime, it is a crime for everyone. So, can there
be a rule which dictates that a professor doesn’t have to stop in
the traffic if the light is red, but an ordinary citizen has to stop
in red light? And if the subject in question is the biggest crime,
that is, genocide, can there be such levity?

If someone denies the Holocaust in France, do the authorities check
his profession to punish him?

WHAT BENEFITS ARE EXPECTED?

It is surprising that those who haven’t recognized the Armenian claims
as genocide for 86 years, and who haven’t considered penalizing the
denial of Armenian claims for 91 years have suddenly found "the right
way." Timing is important. So, what do the French expect to receive
from the bill?

Ostensibly, they want to support the Armenians. Chirac, in his last
visit to Armenia, clearly stated that the Turks committed Armenian
genocide.

Moreover, he presented acceptance of the Armenian claims as a
precondition for Turkey’s EU membership. On the other hand, Chirac has
neither condemned nor criticized Armenia’s invasion of Azerbaijani
territories. He only said "put a little bit more effort in solving
your problems with Azerbaijan."

He definitely did not mention the Hocali Massacre (if not genocide)
committed by the Armenians during the Karabakh War, or the Armenian
terror in the 1970s and 1980s which claimed the lives of many Turkish
diplomats.

And now, the bill penalizing the denial of the Armenian claims… As
one would remember, France approved the Armenian claims as a
historical fact in 2001. France claims that it has fulfilled a
historical justice. Secondly, Paris maintains that Turkey should open
its border with Armenia and establish good neighborhood relations
before entering the EU.

Despite all these policies, France’s approach doesn’t help a
Turco-Armenian rapprochement at all. On the contrary, this policy
intensifies the reactions in Turkey against the Armenians and
undermines the credibility of France and the EU in the eyes of the
Turkish public opinion.

One cannot expect the Turks to be tolerant towards the Armenians,
who always make intrigues against Turkey. Moreover, those who
attribute the biggest crime of the world to the Turkish people
must admit that this is not a good way of solving the problem. The
people who have good will and are constructive don’t take one-sided
decisions. Insulting is not a good way to initiate dialogue. On the
other hand, French Parliament’s attempt to silence Turkish people
on Armenian allegations has eroded the credibility of France and the
EU in Turkey. Even the most pro-Western politician or author cannot
defend the EU at the moment. Those who criticize Turkey on the issue
of freedom of speech cannot explain the five years imprisonment for
having a different view in France. The EU authorities, criticizing
the court decisions in Turkey, cannot explain the expulsion of three
Turkish politicians from their parties in Netherlands just because
of their different views on the Armenian issue.

> > From time to time, there are people who take the Article 301 as
an > > example.

They say "you are preventing the discussion of the Armenian issue
in Turkey with the Article 301." But the Article 301 has nothing
to do with the Armenian issue. The Article regulates the insults on
Turkishness, and similar laws in one way or another also exist in other
European countries, like Italy. Prevention of insults to a nation or
individuals is a matter which has to be protected by laws. It is true
that this law has been sometimes abused and that some people have
been unjustly tried. Among these people are Elif Shafak and Hrant
Dink. But none of these authors were found guilty on the basis of
the Article 301. We definitely wouldn’t like to see them tried. But
those who sue these authors are not state authorities, but "ordinary
citizens", and the courts have to consider the petitions. The Article
can be amended or a better practice can be applied. But there is no
similarity between the Article and the bill that France wants to pass.

Turkey is the most liberal country on the earth to discuss the
Armenian issue. You cannot discuss the issue neither in Armenia,
nor Switzerland nor the Netherlands. In these countries, if you claim
something different than the Armenians do, you will be silenced, you
will be imprisoned. You may lose your job. The state institutions may
insult you for your different ideas than the Armenians. And whether
you are a professor or a diplomat, the outcome is the same. The
case filed against the Turkish consular general in France is a good
example. Similarly, the warrant of arrest issued for the Chairman of
the Turkish History Institution, Prof. Yusuf Halacoglu, in Switzerland
just because Halacoglu was thinking differently than the Armenians is
another example. Last year Armenia authorities imprisoned a Turkish
historian when he wanted to make research in Yerevan.

The situation in Turkey, however, is completely different. You will
find many pro-Armenian books in any of the bookstores in Turkey. Most
of the significant Armenian language books on the issue have been
translated into Turkish language and Turkish readers freely can
reach the Armenian books now. Pro-Armenian scholars and authors can
freely express their views on Turkish TV and radio channels. There are
pro-Armenian scholars at state and private Turkish universities. The
newspapers are full of Armenian approach.

Under these circumstances, we can say that only Turkey in the world
left to discuss freely the historical Armenian claims relations,
but no where.

12 October 2006

Sedat LACINER: Director, USAK & Davos Economic Forum Young Global
Leader 2006 BA (Ankara University), MA (University of Sheffield),
PhD (King’s College, University of London)

ANKARA: Turkey Said Sceptical On Chirac’s Assurance On Armenian Geno

TURKEY SAID SCEPTICAL ON CHIRAC’S ASSURANCE ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE LAW

TRT 2 television, Ankara,
16 Oct 06

[Studio announcer] A cautious approach is maintained on the impression
President Chirac created during his telephone conversation with Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to the effect that he will not sign the
law on the so-called Armenian genocide claims. Speaking on the matter
after the Council of Ministers meeting today, Government Spokesman
Cemil Cicek said that such a bill reaching this stage is enough for
us to be sceptical.

[Cicek] Esteemed Chirac is in office today. But, he might not be
there tomorrow. Someone else might be in his office. The matter is
not one that will exist for only day or a week. We have to closely
follow it. We have to completely remove the lie. We have to inform
everyone that it is a lie. So, we cannot ignore the problem just
because such a statement has been made. In other words, we cannot
view such an individual statement as a guarantee.

BAKU: Participants Of NK War Held Protest Action In Front Of French

PARTICIPANTS OF NK WAR HELD PROTEST ACTION IN FRONT OF FRENCH EMBASSY IN AZERBAIJAN
Author: S.Ilhamgizi

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
Oct 16 2006

On 16 October, a protest, initiated by the Karabakh Liberation
Organization (KLO), the Society of Karabakh Invalids (SKI) and the
Organization War Veterans (OWT), was held outside the French Embassy
in Baku. Although the protest was stopped, it was possible to submit
the resolution of the action to the French Embassy, Trend reports.

18 protestors were detained, but later released. Three participants
are still in the Sabail District Police Department No. 39.

The protesters demanded the annulment of the law penalizing denial
of the so-called "Armenian genocide", for the French President and
Parliament to apologize to the Azeri and Turkish citizens, to stop
the activity of the French Embassy in Azerbaijan and to expel Armenia
from the co-chairmanship in OSCE Minsk Group.

Pride and suspicion over Pamuk prize

BBC News, UK
Oct 14 2006

Pride and suspicion over Pamuk prize
By Sarah Rainsford
BBC News, Istanbul

Pamuk is one of the youngest writers to have won the prize
The novels of Orhan Pamuk are now piled high in the windows of
Istanbul bookshops. His smiling face beams from the front page of
every newspaper.

"Our Pride," is the headline in Radikal. "Thank you Orhan!" blazes
BirGun.

"It’s very important, I congratulate him," says bookseller Mehmet,
who moved all his Pamuk stock to the front of the store as soon as he
heard that the first ever Turk had won the Nobel Prize for
Literature.

"It’s not only Orhan Pamuk who’s won here. This prize will be a
chance for all the world to get to know Turkish literature."

Even before the Nobel announcement, Orhan Pamuk was Turkey’s
best-selling novelist by far.

Each of his books had sold more than 115,000 copies here at home. He
has been translated into dozens of foreign languages – and demand is
now soaring.

In the first four hours after the news from Sweden, Pamuk’s
publishers in Istanbul received another 6,000 orders. They have had
to allocate extra printing presses to keep up.

But Orhan Pamuk is a difficult hero for some in Turkey.

‘Western plot’

Earlier this year nationalist groups labelled the author a traitor
when he spoke out on two of Turkey’s most sensitive issues – claims
that Ottoman Turks committed genocide against the Armenians nine
decades ago, and the plight of ethnic Kurds in modern-day Turkey.

His comments earned him death threats – and criminal charges.

He didn’t get this award for his literature, they gave it to make a
point to us here in Turkey

Pamuk critic
Pamuk was put on trial for insulting Turkishness, sparking a wave of
pressure from the EU which accused Turkey of limiting free speech.

"For his words, or his pen?" demands the headline in Vatan newspaper.
Inside a columnist argues that the Nobel Prize decision is part of a
dark Western plot against Turkey.

"I’m not proud Pamuk won. This is all political," Gokhan protests
outside another Istanbul bookshop sporting a brand-new window display
devoted to the writer.

"He didn’t get this award for his literature, they gave it to make a
point to us here in Turkey."

"The nationalists will see Pamuk’s win as their loss. It’s as if they
let in a goal in a football match," Ragip Zarokolu explains.

The dissident publisher is on trial himself here for publishing books
on the fate of the Ottoman Armenians.

He believes Pamuk fully deserves his Nobel Prize, for his literature.

"But I feel those of us who dare to speak about our history and face
our taboos have won a moral victory with this award too," Ragip
Zarokolu adds.

"It’s an award for the right not to be silent, for freedom of
expression."

Orhan Pamuk himself is abroad at the moment, where he pronounced
himself honoured to receive such recognition.

Official silence

But in the narrow cobbled streets close to his Istanbul home his
neighbours are divided over the news.

"He comes in here sometimes to buy kiwi fruit and chocolate, he
always says hello," enthuses Mehmet, shopkeeper at Pamuk’s nearest
grocer’s.

Turkish people should recognise that Orhan Pamuk has achieved a
great success and that he is serving the Turkish nation

Bahar Siber
Pamuk editor
"Of course we’re pleased he’s brought a prize to our country," he
adds. "But is he really on Turkey’s side?"

"He wanted fame and he’s got it," the local florist fumes. "But look
at all the muck he’s spread with his comments about the Armenians!"

Neither Turkey’s prime minister nor its president has congratulated
Pamuk publicly on winning such a prestigious award, a sign perhaps of
how divisive a figure he is here – and how sensitive the Armenian
issue in particular remains.

The prize announcement came on the same day that the French
parliament voted to make denial of the Armenian genocide a criminal
offence, a decision that infuriated many Turks.

Work in progress

But at Iletisim publishing house in Istanbul there is no doubt that
their most successful author fully deserves his Nobel Prize for his
literary genius alone.

"As a novelist he has his own political thoughts, that is natural,"
believes Bahar Siber, one of a team of editors who works closely with
Pamuk. "But this prize is because he invested great efforts for years
in the art of novel writing."

Iletisim has published Pamuk since 1994.

"I think Turkish people should recognize that Orhan Pamuk has
achieved a great success and that he is serving the Turkish nation,"
his editor argues. "He should be a source of pride."

For those who agree, there is good news: the editor revealed that
Orhan Pamuk’s next novel is due out next year.

"I’m excited," Mr Siber admits, explaining that the book will be a
new departure for the author – a contemporary love story, to be
called Museum of Innocence.

"He has not submitted his first draft to us yet, we’re expecting the
manuscript very soon."

France: Natl Assembly passes draft law criminalising Genocide denial

IFEX, Canada
Oct 14 2006

National Assembly passes draft law criminalising the denial of
Armenian genocide

Français: L’Assemblée nationale adopte un projet de loi pénalisant la
négation du génocide arménien
Country/Topic: France
Date: 13 October 2006
Source: Reporters Without Borders (RSF)
Person(s):
Target(s):
Type(s) of violation(s): censored
Urgency: Threat
(RSF/IFEX) – RSF strongly regrets the first reading passage of a law
that would make it a crime punishable by prison sentence to deny the
1915 Armenian genocide. The organisation notes that memorial laws are
part of the creation of an official historical truth – a practice
typical of totalitarian regimes – and expressed the hope that
senators, who are to examine the draft law shortly, will have the
wisdom to reject it.

The French National Assembly passed the draft law on 12 October 2006.
The law would make denial of the Armenian genocide a crime punishable
by five years in jail and a 45,000-euro fine.
The law complements a 19 January 2001 law which publicly recognised
the genocide.

"There is obviously no question of going back on the recognition of
the Armenian genocide, but legislating on it will expose anyone
denying it to harsh judicial penalties set out by the 18 July 1881
law on press freedom (Article 24a). Memorial laws contribute to the
creation of an official historical truth. This practice, typical of
totalitarian regimes, is incompatible with France’s fundamental
values, starting with freedom of expression," said the organisation.

"Not only is it absurd that free expression – however contestable,
and that is not the question – should be subjected to a constraint
which is, in addition, a threat, but it seems to us that this
legalistic concept of history will be much more likely to stoke up
antagonism than to promote debate.

"It is particularly symbolic that this vote should have been held on
the same day of the awarding of the Nobel Prize for literature to
Orhan Pamuk, who was himself taken to court by the Turkish
authorities for having raised the issue of this genocide," RSF
stressed.

RSF hopes that senators due to examine the law on second reading will
pay less attention to upcoming elections and have the wisdom to
reject it. If not, it could have incalculable consequences for all
historians as well as for press freedom.

MORE INFORMATION:

For further information, contact Zuzana Loubet del Bayle at RSF, 5,
rue Geoffroy Marie, Paris 75009, France, tel: +33 1 44 83 84 67, fax:
+33 1 45 23 11 51, e-mail: [email protected], Internet:

http://www.rsf.org
http://www.ifex.org/en/content/view/full/78373/

Threat to free speech France should renounce attempt to legislate

Financial Times (London, England)
October 13, 2006 Friday
London Edition 1

Threat to free speech France should renounce an attempt to legislate
history

Yesterday’s vote by France’s National Assembly was an act of
diplomatic folly and electoral opportunism. It dealt a blow to
Turkey’s hopes of joining the European Union and damaged the cause of
free speech within theEU itself.

By a margin of 106 to 19, the chamber backed a bill that could jail
people for a year for denying that there was an Armenian genocide
early last century. The move is an attempt to use legislation rather
than persuasion to change others’ beliefs – a tactic already proving
counterproductive in Turkey and running counter to Europe’s
traditions of free expression and open debate.

The vote was the result of transparent electioneering. French
Socialists insisted on pushing the bill through, while most deputies
kept away. Characterising the murder of up to 1.5m Armenians in
Anatolia in 1915-18 has no bearing on France’s vital interests. But
it is an issue of great concern for the 450,000 French citizens of
Armenian origin ahead of the 2007 elections.

This comes at a terrible time for Turkey’s troubled EU negotiations
and all they symbolise for an accommodation between Europe and the
Islamic world. If the bill ever became law, Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
Turkey’s prime minister, could run the risk of arrest while on French
soil.

Fortunately, the legislation is likely to die in the French Senate.
But by allowing the measure to get this far, France’s politicians
have damaged the case for sorely needed reform in Turkey itself.
Officials and politicians in Ankara demur from ditching Turkey’s own
rules against "denigrating" the Turkish state, arguing that the
French proposal shows the limits of the EU’s own respect for free
speech.

Europe’s record is already blotted. Austria imprisoned the historian
David Irving for denying the holocaust, making him a martyr for
far-right sympathisers. Britain’s government sought – but luckily
failed – to pass legislation that would have restricted the right to
criticise religion.

The risk is that France’s strong-arm tactics will only bolster
Turkey’s intolerance of any mention of Armenian genocide. As a
result, it is now more likely that Turkish writers will continue to
be prosecuted for such references – the indignity suffered among
others by Orhan Pamuk, the novelist who yesterday won the Nobel
prize.

Turkey’s combination of prickliness and authoritarianism means it
will have to change radically if it is to join the EU one day. The
country needs to address the massacres of Armenian families that
preceded the creation of the modern Turkish state – whether they are
called genocide or not.

That does not excuse France’s pandering politicians. President
Jacques Chirac’s government was right yesterday to repudiate the
genocide bill. The rest of the political class must now follow – and
renounce the idea of legal curbs on what people say or think.

The Giant Camel of Thamudd

The Giant Camel of Thamudd
2006/10/08

Mathaba.Net, UK

The camel was so huge that grazing sheep fled from it in fright.

By Dr. Sahib Mustaqim Bleher

I read with interest that Swiss scientists had discovered an ancient
giant camel or dromedary in Syria. Professor Jean-Marie Le Tensorer
of the University of Basel said the camel’s shoulders stood three
meters high and it was around four meters tall, as big as a giraffe or
an elephant, adding "nobody knew that such a species had existed."
standing a good three meters tall. They also found bones of early
humans who appeared to be somewhere between the categorizations of
Neanderthal and Homo sapiens. The researchers suggested that their
find indicated that a group of humans killed the large animal when it
was drinking from a spring. Could this be the she-camel of the people
of Thamudd referred to in the Qur’an?

The Thamudd are an ancient Arab people thought to be the descendants
of the Arab tribe of ‘Ad. They had an impressive civilization, carving
houses out of rocks, some of which can still be seen in the region to
the North of the Arabian peninsula and today’s Syria. Their prophet
Salih gave them a she-camel as a sign which he instructed they had to
share their drinking space with and forbade them from harming
her. Instead they hamstrung her and brought upon themselves the doom
of total annihilation. The land once known for its abundance of water
returned to being a desert, exactly as the researchers from Basel
describe it.

According to Islamic folklore the camel was created by the prophet as
a sign from a rock and was so huge that grazing sheep fled from it in
fright and even cattle would keep their distance. As a one-off miracle
it would be unique rather than a remnant of an extinct
species. Further analysis should prove most interesting if the results
will be shared with the public. We are still waiting for the results
of the exploration of Noah’s ark on mount Judi in the Greater Ararat
range in Eastern Turkey (Western Armenia) which once excited
archaeologists, but has gone strangely quiet over the years.

— Dr. Sahib Mustaqim Bleher is a German living in England, a Muslim
and a pilot – in the oppressive neo-fascist climate of today, this
means walking a tight rope. And it requires speaking out. He has done
so through articles, pamphlets and books, many of which are available
via his FlyingImam web site which you can visit at FlyingImam.com.

BAKU: French Ambassador: "Senators are more far-sighted than MPs"

Today, Azerbaijan
Oct 13 2006

French Ambassador: "Senators are more far-sighted than MPs"

13 October 2006 [16:25] – Today.Az

"I regret that France Parliament adopted the law that would make it a
crime to deny false Armenian genocide by first reading," Bernard
Amaudric du Chaffaut, French Ambassador to Azerbaijan told
journalists.

He said the decision triggered serious public reaction, APA reports.

"The decision needs to be approved at some stages. I hope the Senate
will not approve this decision. French senators are more far-sighted
than parliamentarians. Even if the Senate approves it, the
Constitutional Court will determine whether the decision contradicts
to the constitution or not, because there is an item on freedom of
thinking in France constitution. The president may be the last
obstacle in the adoption of the law. A president having no veto can
refuse to sign the law. I hope the adoption of the law will be
postponed till March 2007, the parliamentary elections in France,
because, Armenian electors have great influence on France Socialist
Party," he said.

The Ambassador also said that he got acquainted with the Azerbaijan
Foreign Ministry’s position on the decision. He said this law will
damage France-Turkey and France-Azerbaijan relations.

"When France Parliament recognized false Armenian genocide the
relations between France and Turkey were not damaged. The other
positive point of it was that Turkish and Armenian historians agreed
to probe into historical events. Armenians organized strong Diaspora
in France and take an active part in political processes. I hope
Azerbaijan and Turkey will express their positions until the decision
is passed," Mr.Chaffaut said.

Ambassador also touched upon France President’s visit to Azerbaijan
and said that Jacques Chirac is not expected to postpone his visit.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/31409.html

BAKU: Simmons: There Is No Need To Change Talks’ Format On Solution

SIMMONS: THERE IS NO NEED TO CHANGE TALKS’ FORMAT ON SOLUTION TO NK CONFLICT

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Oct 12 2006

NATO supports the efforts made by OSCE Minsk Group on the solution to
Nagorno Garabagh conflict, Robert Simmons, NATO Special Representative
to South Caucasus and Central Asia told the APA.

He said that there is no need to change the talks’ format and the
sides will come on agreement. The representative also stressed that
NATO does not take part in the solutions to Nagorno Garabagh conflict
and the organization will not directly interfere in the talks "We
are ready to help the conflict sides if necessary," he said.

Simmons touching upon the South Caucasian states’ integration into
NATO said that Georgia makes progress in this matter compared to
Azerbaijan and Armenia.