"We Really Massacred Them"

"WE REALLY MASSACRED THEM"
by Dyer, Gwynne

Lindsay Daily Post (Ontario)
October 16, 2007 Tuesday

Nothing much will happen right away. The Turkish ambassador to
Washington has gone home for "consultations" after the Foreign Affairs
Committee of the House of Representatives approved a bill declaring
that the mass killing of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire during the
First World War was a genocide. But he will come back to Washington,
and it will be weeks before the full House passes the bill. This will
be a slow-motion disaster.

The White House tried hard to stop this bill. President George W. Bush
declared that "This resolution is not the right response to these
historic mass killings," and all eight living former US secretaries of
state, both Democratic and Republican, signed a joint letter to the
Foreign Affairs Committee urging it not to approve the bill. But it
did, by a 27-21 vote, and next month the full House will do the same:
more than half the members have signed up as co- sponsors of the bill.

Bush promises that it will die in the Senate, but by then the damage
will be done. The US-Turkish alliance will be gravely damaged, and
American use of Turkey as a major supply line for its troops in Iraq —
70 percent of US air cargo for Iraq goes through Turkey — will be at
an end. "I can assure you that Turkey knows how to play hardball,"
as Egeman Bagis, an adviser to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyib
Erdogan, told reporters in Washington.

Turkey may also send its troops into northern (Kurdish) Iraq, thus
destabilizing the one stable and moderately prosperous part of that
country. But then, it might have done that anyway. Fifteen Turkish
soldiers and twelve civilians have been killed in the past week by
Kurdish rebels who are allegedly based across the border in Iraqi
Kurdistan, and the political pressure on Prime Minister Erdogan to
authorize another cross-border military operation is intense.

The United States will be the 23rd country to fall to the Armenian
campaign to link the Ottoman Turkey of ninety years ago with the
Nazi Germany of sixty years ago — and, by extension, to implicate
the current Republic of Turkey in the crime of premeditated genocide.

Once such a law is passed, to question the Armenian take on what
happened is to become the equivalent of a denier of the (Jewish)
Holocaust. The Armenian desire to have their national tragedy given
the same status as the Jewish Holocaust is understandable, but it is
mistaken. The facts of the case are horrifying, and certainly justify
calling the events in eastern Turkey in 1915- 16 a genocide, but the
key elements of prior intent and systematic planning that distinguish
the Nazi Holocaust are absent.

When I was a young graduate student in Middle Eastern history, as a
translation exercise I was given the hand-written diary of a Turkish
soldier who was killed during the retreat from Baghdad in 1917.

"Mehmet Cavus" (Sergeant Mehmet) was a youthful village school-teacher
who had been called up in 1914. At first he had a safe billet guarding
the Black Sea entrance to the Bosphorus, but in 1915 his unit was
suddenly ordered to march east to deal with a Russian invasion and
an Armenian rebellion.

And then, in the diary of this pleasant, rather naive young man,
I read the phrase "iyi katliam etmistik." Loosely translated, that
means: "We really massacred them" — and he wasn’t making a sporting
analogy. The diary was written in the old Ottoman rika, a version
of handwritten Arabic script that never really served Turkish well,
so I asked my teacher if it really said what I thought it did. "Oh
yes," he said. "Those were different times."

That excuses nothing, but it explains much. The foolish young officers
who led the Ottoman empire into the war panicked when they realized
that the Russians were invading from the east and the British were
about to land somewhere on the Mediterranean coast. And just at that
point, Armenian revolutionaries (Dashnaks and Hnchaks) who had been
plotting with the Russians and the British to carve out an Armenian
state from the wreckage of the empire launched feeble, futile revolts
to assist the invaders.

The Turks responded by slaughtering many Armenians in what is now
eastern Turkey and deporting the rest to Syria in long marching
columns. Huge numbers were murdered along the way: at least 600,000
died, and perhaps as many as 1.5 million. It was certainly a genocide,
but it was not premeditated, nor was it systematic.

Armenians living in other parts of the empire were largely left alone,
and even in the war zone those with money to travel by rail mostly
reached Syria safely.

So why is the US Congress "recognizing" the Armenian genocide, but
not the rather more recent genocide of the Tutsis in Rwanda? Because
there are not many voters of Tutsi descent in key Congressional
districts. This is all about domestic politics: alienating the Turks
doesn’t cost much politically.

Today’s Armenian activists aren’t looking for "justice". They want
to drive the Turks into extreme reactions that will isolate them and
derail the domestic changes (including a gradual public acceptance
of Turkey’s responsibility for the atrocities) that are turning that
country into a modern, tolerant democracy. They do not want Turkey
to succeed. And Western countries are falling for it.

Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent journalist whose articles
are published in 45 countries.

Levon Ter-Petrosian Meets With Collaborators Of Yerevan Office Of Ra

LEVON TER-PETROSIAN MEETS WITH COLLABORATORS OF YEREVAN OFFICE OF RADIO LIBERTY

Noyan Tapan
Oct 16, 2007

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 16, NOYAN TAPAN. Levon Ter-Petrosian, the
first President of the Republic of Armenia, had a meeting with
the collaborators of the Yerevan office of the Radio Liberty on
October 16. According to the information provided to a Noyan Tapan
correspondent by Atom Margarian, the Head of the office, during the
sincere conversation held during the meeting Levon Ter-Petrosian
promised to answer some questions during the mass meeting to be held
in the Azatutiun (Freedom) square on October 26.

FIDH: Hrant Dink case : harassment against Agos continues

PRESS RELEASE
International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH)
Marie Camberlin, Chargée de programme/ Program Officer
Afrique du Nord et Moyen Orient
Middle East and North Africa

Tel.: 33(0)1 43 55 17 89
Fax: 33(0)1 43 55 18 80
17, passage de la main d’or
75011 Paris
France

Turkey

Hrant Dink case : harassment against Agos continues

Paris, 12 October 2007 – The International Federation for Human Rights

(FIDH) strongly deplores the continued harassment faced by journalists
debating the question of the killings of hundreds of thousands by the
Ottoman Army in 1915-1917 of Armenians in Turkey. Yesterday, Hrant
Dink’s son and one of his colleague from the newspaper Agos were
sentenced to a suspended prison sentence for « insulting the Turkish
identity », pursuant to Article 301 of the penal code.

FIDH recalls that one year ago Hrant Dink, a Turkish journalist of
Armenian origin, former leader of the movement for democratic reforms in

Turkey, who personified dialogue between Turks and Armenians, was
charged with making « disparaging comments about Turkish identity »
after he called the 1915-1917 killings a genocide. On 19 January 2007,
Hrant Dink was assassinated on a public street in front of his office in

Istanbul by a teenager close to ultra nationalist movements.

Arat Dink and Sarkis Seropyan, respectively editor in chief and director

of Agos – a bilingual Turkish-Armenian newspaper – were sentenced on
the

ground that Agos published in their columns an interview of Reuters in
which Hrant Dink called the 1915-1917 killings a genocide. Hrant Dink
had been prosecuted several times and sentenced to six-month of prison
on the basis of Article 301.

FIDH is deeply worried about this continued pattern of infringement to
freedom of expression and opinion which constitutes a flagrant violation

of international standards and, in particular the International Covenant

on Civil and Political Rights which was ratified by Turkey in September
2003. We are very concerned about the frequent use of Article 301on the
denigration of «Turkishness », the Republic, and the foundation and
institutions of the State, to prosecute non-violent critical opinions.
The majority of cases recently brought against journalists, publishers
and writers are based on Art. 301.

Despite the assassination of Hrant Dink, the Turkish authorities
continue to consider that discussing the nature of the 1915-1917
killings is an insult to Turkish identity, and thus expose the lives of
those opening the debate.

FIDH requests the Turkish authorities to:

take the necessary measures to ensure the respect of freedom of
expression and opinion and, in particular, amend domestic legislation in

order to comply with its international and regional obligations;

put an end to prosecutions brought against individuals under Article 301

of the penal code; and abrogate this article;

ensure that the trial of perpetrators and masterminds in the
assassination of Hrant Dink is conducted in a fair and transparent
manner and examine thoroughly the responsibility of the Government and
authorities which failed to protect a citizen who lived under a threat
that was known to all.

Press contact : Karine Appy/Gaël Grilhot : + 33 1 43 55 25 18


Karine Appy
Attachée de presse
Press Officer
FIDH
+33 1 43 55 14 12
+33 1 43 55 25 18
+33 6 68 42 93 47

http://www.fidh.org
www.fidh.org

Kremlin Power Grab Troubling, Rice Says

KREMLIN POWER GRAB TROUBLING, RICE SAYS
By Matthew Lee

Washington Times, DC
Oct 15 2007

MOSCOW (AP) – The Russian government under Vladimir Putin has amassed
so much central authority that the power grab may undermine Moscow’s
commitment to democracy, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said
yesterday.

"In any country, if you don’t have countervailing institutions, the
power of any one president is problematic for democratic development,"
Miss Rice told reporters after meeting with human rights activists.

"I think there is too much concentration of power in the Kremlin. I
have told the Russians that. Everybody has doubts about the full
independence of the judiciary. There are clearly questions about
the independence of the electronic media and there are, I think,
questions about the strength of the Duma," said Miss Rice, referring
to the Russian parliament.

Miss Rice and Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates were in Moscow to
discuss the U.S. plan for a missile-defense system in Eastern Europe
with the Russian leaders. On Friday, they received a chilly reception
from Mr. Putin and senior Russian officials on U.S. proposals for
cooperating on the shield that Russia vehemently opposes.

Miss Rice, a competitive figure skater in her teens, visited a group
of young skaters at Moscow’s Central Army Sports Club yesterday,
but refused to get on the ice. She stepped gingerly on a blue rug
laid out on the ice when greeted warmly by the youths, ranging in
age from 7 to 17.

While in Moscow, Miss Rice expressed concern about the state of
U.S.-Turkish relations, appealing to the U.S. ally for restraint
against Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq and in reaction to an Armenian
genocide resolution in Congress. Two senior U.S. officials in the
Moscow delegation – Assistant Secretary of State Dan Fried and Eric
Edelman, defense undersecretary for policy – flew to Ankara for direct
talks with senior Turkish officials.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan plans to seek parliament’s
approval this week for a military incursion into northern Iraq to
fight Kurdish rebels who attack Turkey from there.

Meanwhile, the Democrat-led U.S. House of Representatives has moved a
resolution terming mass killing of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire,
the forbear of the Turkish republic, as genocide.

In Ankara, Mr. Fried told a Turkish television interviewer that the
administration "will do everything we can so that this resolution
will not come to the House floor."

Washington is concerned about the centralization of power and
democratic backsliding ahead of Russia’s legislative and presidential
elections in December and March. Mr. Putin will step down next
year as president. He has said he would lead the ticket of the main
pro-Kremlin party in the parliamentary elections and could take the
prime minister’s job later.

Miss Rice sought opinions and assessments of the situation from eight
prominent rights leaders.

"I talked to people about the coming months and how they see the
coming months. How these two elections are carried out will have an
effect on whether Russia is making the next step on toward democracy,"
Miss Rice said after the private sessions at Spaso House, the residence
of the U.S. ambassador in Moscow.

Miss Rice declined comment on Mr. Putin’s possible political future
and said she did not raise the matter in her official discussions.

Earlier, Miss Rice said she hoped the efforts of rights activists would
promote universal values of "the rights of individuals to liberty and
freedom, the right to worship as you please and the right to assembly,
the right to not have to deal with the arbitrary power of the state."

Vladimir Lukin, the government-appointed human rights ombudsman, was
quoted by Interfax as saying he told Miss Rice that human rights should
be discussed in a dialogue rather lecturing in a "doomsday" style.

The State Department frequently has criticized what Washington
regards as creeping authoritarianism among Mr. Putin and other top
Russian leaders.

Its most recent human rights report on Russia notes continuing
centralization of power in the Kremlin, a compliant legislature,
political pressure on the judiciary, intolerance of ethnic minorities,
corruption and selectivity in enforcement of the law, and media
restrictions and self-censorship.

Government earmarks AMD 63 million for housing program implementatio

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Oct 12 2007

Armenian government earmarks AMD 63 million for housing program
implementation

YEREVAN, October 12. /ARKA/. Armenian government has earmarked some
63 million Armenian drams for putting housing program into reality.

Governmental press office told ARKA News Agency on Thursday that 6.8
million was targeted for providing certificates for buying
apartments.

Of this amount, AMD 5.3 million was allocated to Armenian Urban
Planning Ministry. AMD 691,500, AMD 233,400 and 590,100 were
allocated to Shirak, Lori and Kotayk provinces.

Another 52.2 million was targeted for solving Agartsin village
residents’ problems – their houses are located on landslide area. ($1
= AMD 333.45).–0–

Armenian paper reporter attacked over controversial article

Aravot, Armenia
Oct 12 2007

Armenian paper reporter attacked over controversial article

"Attack on Aravot reporter" and published in the Armenian newspaper
Aravot on 12 October:

A group of women and men broke into the newsroom of Aravot yesterday
and attacked reporter Ruzan Minasyan. They were trying to hold the
reporter accountable for an article published in our paper the day
before. The assailants were the relatives of those killed on 24 June
2002 and "explained" their violence by saying that Aravot, in their
opinion, had no right to publish the letter of the person sentenced
for the killings; the convict claimed he was not guilty.

Since the assailants would not calm down, and the obscene curses
(also voiced by women) and the brawl continued, the paper’s employees
called the police, who arrived shortly and stopped the attackers. A
criminal case under Article 164 [of the Armenian Criminal Code] –
"obstruction of a reporter’s professional activities by a group of
individuals accompanied by physical threats" – has been launched. The
assailants were not satisfied with just threats; they injured Ruzan,
who is planning to visit a forensic doctor.

ANKARA: Turkey brands US genocide res. vote as "Irresponsible Act"

NTV Television, Turkey
Oct 11 2007

Turkey brands US genocide resolution vote as "irresponsible act"

The House of Representatives Foreign Relations Committee has approved
a resolution which calls for official recognition of the Armenian
allegations of genocide. Twenty-seven of the members of the Committee
voted in favour of the resolution while 21 Representatives opposed
it. The resolution is expected to be tabled in a plenary session of
the House of Representatives before 22 November. But, the resolution
will not be binding even if it is approved in a plenary session and
it will not constitute a piece of legislation.

President Abdullah Gul has said that the resolution adopted by the
Foreign Relations Committee had no validity. Commenting on the
ratification of the resolution, Gul said: "Unfortunately, some
politicians in the United States have turned a deaf ear to calls for
using common sense and attempted to use and sacrifice an important
issue for insignificant political purposes."

Meanwhile, Ankara condemned the approval of the resolution about the
Armenian allegations about events which took place in 1915 by the
House of Representatives Foreign Relations Committee.

A statement issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said: "The
advancement of the resolution which will create difficulties in
relations with a friendly and allied country in a critical period was
an irresponsible act." It said that all kinds of efforts would be
made in order to prevent the resolution from being ratified by the
House of Representatives.

Meanwhile, Egemen Bagis, a deputy from the Justice and Development
Party, has said that they would make efforts to ensure that the
resolution is not tabled or ratified in the House of Representatives.

Nabi Sensoy, Turkish Ambassador in Washington, said that the approval
of the resolution had caused disappointment in Turkey.

Turkey Orders Envoy Home Amid Controversial Armenian Genocide Bill

AHN – All Headline News
Oct 11 2007

Turkey Orders U.S. Envoy To Return Home Amid Controversial Armenian
Genocide Bill
October 11, 2007 7:22 p.m. EST

Jay Olle – AHN News Writer

Washington, D.C. (AHN) – The Turkish Ambassador to the United States,
Nabi Sensoy, will return to Ankara as tensions continue to rise
following the passage of a U.S. House bill calling the killings of
Armenians during World War I a genocide.

"We are not withdrawing our ambassador. We have asked him to come to
Turkey for some consultations," Foreign Ministry spokesman Levent
Bilman said Thursday. Turkey was quick to say this wasn’t the end of
diplomatic relations between the two countries.

Orders arrived from Ankara on Wednesday right after the bill passed
the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. The move, strongly lobbied by
Armenian-American interest groups, pushed through despite strong
contradictions from President George Bush and several other
lawmakers. The House may put it to a general vote on Friday.

Turkey is an important U.S. ally in the Middle East. Defense
Secretary Robert Gates noted that Ankara allows American planes and
vehicles to use its airspace and roads, with 70 percent of all air
cargo bound for Iraq traveling through Turkey.

Gates believed that access to airfields and roads would be put at
risk if the resolution passes the House, if "the Turks react as
strongly as we believe they will," he said.

Turkish President Abdullah Gul, in an announcement through the
government’s official website, finds the resolution "unacceptable"
and "doesn’t fit a major power like the United States." He warned
Bush that "in the case that Armenian allegations are accepted, there
will be serious problems in the relations between the two countries."

"We still hope that common sense will prevail and that the House of
Representatives will not move this resolution any further," Gul said.

08800413

http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/70

Hammarberg’s Visit Completed

HAMMARBERG’S VISIT COMPLETED

A1+
[07:58 pm] 11 October, 2007

The RA Prime Minister Serge Sargsyan received Thomas Hammarberg, the
Council of Europe’s Commissioner for Human Rights and the delegation
headed by him.

The Council of Europe’s Commissioner for Human Rights said that his
5-day official visit to Armenia was completed with the meeting with
the Prime Minister.

During his visit Thomas Hammarberg met with the institutions that were
included in the agenda of his mission and with the representatives of
various fields. He briefly presented his impressions to the Head of the
Government underlining, that they were preliminary impressions and he
would prepare a report on the visit after returning to Strasbourg. "If
we find any problems, we will study the experience of other countries,
what solutions they have given to the problems, so that we will be
able to present reasonable proposals in the final text of the report",
said the Council of Europe’s Commissioner for Human Rights.

In regard with the human rights sphere, he underlined the necessity
of adopting a national comprehensive draft, which would represent a
comprehensive approach to the problems in that field. He mentioned
that this approach was widely spread in Europe, and by defining the
succession of actions and their timetable, we would save time and
energy in implementing the planned works.

During the meeting the parties underlined bilateral wish to register
success in this field and expressed willingness to collaborate in
this regard.