The Search For Turkey’s Identity And Real Soul

THE SEARCH FOR TURKEY’S IDENTITY AND REAL SOUL
Dr. Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis

American Chronicle
Aug 1 2007

Turkey crosses the most severe moments of its 9-decade long History.

Events that may occur in Turkey in the next few weeks will influence
developments and issues in dozens of countries from China and
Kazakhstan to Albania and Saudi Arabia. From a simulative retrograde
path to the Islamic extremism, as attested in so many numerous Middle
Eastern tyrannies, to the reinvigoration and re-assertion of the
great Principles of Kemal Ataturk and the Secular Modern Democracy,
all options are open for today’s Turkey. It is clear that for Turkey
to possibly play a positive role in the Middle East, Central Asia,
Caucasus, the Balkans and the Mediterranean, the Islamist danger must
be eliminated and the correct choices must be made in this regard by
Turkey’s secular democratic establishment.

As Turkey has to face a severe betrayal from the part of several
countries considered as allies and to confront the perfidy of ominous
centers of power that disseminate discord and disaster, it is essential
for today’s Turks to clarify and address questions of identity and
cultural – national – historical individuality. Only this will put the
final, irreversible stamp on the outcome of the predicament between
Secular Turkey and Islamist Turkey.

In three earlier articles, we presented a basic frame of a Master
Plan that should be set up by means of synergy among the various
components of Turkey’s secular establishment, the academia and the
intellectuals, the world of finance, the military, the diplomats, the
politicians and the statesmen, the activists and the administrative
elite. Coordination will be the turnkey solution for the Secular
Democratic Establishment, and it must take the form of a Consultative
Committee with many sections.

In a first article, entitled "A Secular Democratic Master Plan to
oust Islamist Simulator Erdogan" we identified the topics to debate
and the issues to tackle. To get Turkey rid of Erdogan’s pestilence,
the Turkish Secular Establishment’s representatives should reach common
conclusions as regards 1) across-the-board political considerations,
2) cultural – national – historical considerations, 3) the formation
of the necessary tools, and 4) the elaboration of a list of target
and activity priorities, and then embark on a thunderous campaign to
bring the disastrous Islamist simulator down.

In the two subsequent articles, entitled "A Master Plan to force
Islamist Erdogan out – Orhan Pamuk for President" and "The Master
Plan to terminate the Perilous Erdogan Predicament" we underscored
the importance of a final unification of all the conservative and
nationalist parties, the need of the CHP Center Left main opposition
party to undergo self-criticism and renovation, and the significance of
establishing a common approach to the Kurdish issue, the basic Foreign
Policy directives, and the Turkish economy’s further liberalization. We
added that Turkey’s Secular Establishment should opt now for Nobel
Prize Orhan Pamuk as Common Candidate for President, while preparing
for common lists in the next parliamentary elections that can – and
should – occur much before 5 years pass. In addition, they should
help launch an Islamic Party that would make Erdogan face two fronts
at the same time, while mercilessly discrediting him in the eyes of
Islamic electorate as a silly puppet of the voraciously anti-Islamic,
Apostate Freemasonic Lodge of France.

In this article, we will focus on the critical issue of the Cultural –
National – Historical considerations that will help the Turkish Secular
– Democratic establishment get Turkey rid of the Erdogan pestilence.

Axes of Cultural – National – Historical Identity

It has long been debated about their importance as regards the
efficient and effective nation building. It is beyond any doubt that
the National – Historical Identity plays an absolutely determinant
role in the nation building process.

The national portrait of a people’s path within millennia or centuries
of History is not only relevant to Modern Sciences of Humanities,
and more particularly the Disciplines of History, Literature, History
of Religions, Archeology, Philosophy, Art History, etc.

It also hinges on the use, cultural – educational – political, of the
academic knowledge that a political – academic- financial – military –
intellectual – religious elite may wish to make.

Because of this, a great number of subjective perceptions are involved,
which is already true at the primeval level, namely that of the study
of a people’s past.

It has to do with the representation of the historical reality that one
scholar (and ultimately a class of scholars) is able or predisposed
to make; to what extent they are ready to see the historical reality
face to face or to keep living on their dreams and falsehoods that
they later project within their studies, their studies’ conclusions,
and the part of their conclusions that they want to instill within
the level of education, culture and politics.

At times, the national portrait can be an absolute forgery, a plain
myth. Examples we have plenty; Modern Egypt is not an ‘Arab’ state as
its official name suggests, and Greece is a South Balkan amalgamation
of peoples of Slav, Albanian, Romanian, Latin and other backgrounds
that got an injection of Greek blood after the 1924 exchange of
populations between Turkey and Greece, and the arrival in ‘Greece’
of numerous Greek populations from Istanbul, Izmir, Cappadocia and
the Pontus province of Anatolia.

What can the national portrait of Turkey possibly be? From the
aforementioned, we can understand that it can be absolutely anything.

Calling an Algerian, an Iraqi or a Yemenite "Arab" is equivalent of
considering a Black American as ‘Anglo-Saxon’. Similarly, a Modern
Turk can be ‘Greek’, ‘Mongol’ or ‘Iranian’.

The ultimate question is whether the Search for a National Soul,
for a Historical Portrait of the Diachronic Existence of a People,
can be effective, productive and successful.

Lies and myths, exaggerations, embellishments, amplifications,
and misinterpretations are omnipresent. The only criterion for the
correctness of a National Portrait is the after effect, the results,
the final outcome. Did the nation that adopted the figurative
National Portrait achieve to over-perform, to outperform its rivals
and adversaries, its demons and nightmares? Or not?

Four Models of National Portraits for comparison

The National Portraits of France, Greece, Egypt and Turkey are all
an amalgamation of truth and lies, alterations, and inaccuracies
(stated either consciously or unconsciously).

France consists in the extermination of Gallic culture, but this
helped the elite of that country to expand its influence in Europe
and in several other continents (colonialism).

Greece consists in the total misinterpretation of the Mediterranean
Antiquity, and it was plunged in civil wars, racist ideas, social
disorder, and pathetic self-satisfaction ‘due to the achievements of
the Ancient Greeks’; this was the result of imposing Thucydides and
Herodotus, Aeschylus and Demosthenes in the Greek education. It ended
up making of the Greeks the unconscious puppets of the French, the
English and the Russians in their efforts against the Ottoman Empire
– which was the country of the Greek speaking populations as late
as 1800. By betraying their country and letting discord infiltrate
between them and the Turks, the Greeks lost an incredible chance of
sharing power with the Turks in a powerful and extremely wealthy –
as resourceful – Ottoman Empire that would start in Corfu and end up
in Oman and Yemen. With all the Oil income of fabricated pseudo-states
like Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Emirates, Kuwait, etc. in Turkish and Greek
hands….

Egypt preferred to betray the Ottoman Empire, and instead of improving
their own land, they turned out to be the shoeshine boys of their
French and English masters, who diffused in Egypt the prefabricated
theoretical systems of Islamism and Pan-Arabism, plunging the
country in strife, misery, poverty, starvation, and pestilence. How
much ‘Egyptian’ are the tools of modern National Identity Search in
Egypt? The Egyptian Museum and the Islamic Museum were both established
by Europeans who stipulated what the Egyptian past has been! The first
Modern Egyptian who studied and learnt Hieroglyphics did so almost
100 years after the Egyptian Hieroglyphics had been deciphered by the
Champollion! The only honorable exception are the Copts who managed
to set up the Coptic Museum by themselves, clearly understanding
the malignant Freemasonic purpose of Colonial France and England to
eradicate Oriental Christianity. With the falsehood of Pan-Arabism,
Egypt was definitely and permanently plunged among the Third World
undeveloped countries.

Turkey’s Search for a National Portrait and Soul came last, due
to the fact that the country consisted in the central part of the
Ottoman Empire, a 7-century old, imperial state with very marked
identity. Contrarily to what happened in Greece and in Egypt, the
effort was not prefabricated abroad and projected to the new nation
(by means of ‘students’ studying abroad ! – what a ridiculous story),
but thoroughly and pertinently undertaken locally – by Kemal Ataturk.

It heralded a certain turcization of the various indigenous peoples
of Anatolia, but it was not either impulsive or prefabricated. The
effort was devoid of excesses that one could have expected, due to
the earlier Pan-Turanist movement. In this regard, it is essential
to notice that Turkish scholars participated in the earlier efforts
of decipherment of the Hittite, the Hatti, and the Luwian writings
of the 2nd BCE millennium Anatolia, since the 1920s.

The Search for the Turkish Soul at the days of Kemal Ataturk

What we have to maintain from the fundamental and pioneering, nation
building effort of Kemal Ataturk consists I mainly two points:

1. It was not an all-out attempt to make of non Turks ‘Turks’,
although some viewed it like that, because it brought about too much
of an innovation in a nation-less empire. There were may hints at
the Mesopotamian Sumerians, the Anatolian Hittites and Hatti, the
Zagros people of Kassites, and others. It certainly evolved around the
emigration of a number of peoples from an outer space into permanently
present Anatolia.

2. At those days the Search for the National Soul used to mostly turn
around a people’s movements and destiny within History. One must not
forget that at those days the nationalisms were at their extreme
high, and the Search for National Soul was an exclusive reference
to a national nucleus around which additional populations, various
newcomers, and minor groups could eventually be accepted.

This cannot be the case today, as we live almost 90 years after the
time of the earliest efforts of Kemal Ataturk. Due to a multitude of
reasons, we live in significantly different societies than the European
societies of the early 1920s. Political environment assessment is
key to correct understanding of Kemal Ataturk’s original and colossal
work. Consequently, today, closer to Kemal Ataturk’s ideas and practice
is not the nonsensical imitator who tries to repeat out-of-the-context
policies and options implemented before 90 years, but the comprehensive
assessor of the position and political choice that best corresponds
to Kemal Ataturk’s principles within the present environment.

Modern multicultural societies and the Search for National – Cultural
Identity

The present environment relates to multicultural societies where the
concept of the Nation and the Search for the National Soul and the
Cultural – Historical Identity – to be successful – involves great
synthesis made out of numerous equitable elements that help compose
a great historical entity.

To effectively drive today’s multicultural societies to concord,
confidence, progress and knowledge – and we live in the Societies of
Knowledge -, one has to incorporate in the Search for the National
Soul and the Cultural – Historical Identity as many traditions and
cultural entities as one can, suffice it that the interpretational
diagram and thesis will make them evolve around a homogeneous axis.

This drives us from a people-centered to a land-centered concept of
National – Cultural – Historical Identity, whereby various extinct
peoples have left their stamp, contribution, and Heritage to the
extant ones.

Of course, this makes certain land more privileged than other
peripheries where only one people existed and developed diachronic,
cultural values. This is certainly relative; it hinges on the ability
of the intellectual elite of a country to early understand and deliver
a historical interpretational thesis. As we examine various examples
in this regard, we have to admit that the US, the European Union, and
India have understood these realities far better than Russia and China
have. Within European Union, Spain has advanced far more than France,
and Italy has progressed far more than Greece or Poland in this regard.

The aforementioned point, namely that some countries are more
privileged than others, has led some countries – along with other
reasons as well (or reflecting other reasons) – to willingly merge
with others in great, multinational entities.

This is the unnoticed reason for which the ideal of an Islamic
state stretched from Morocco to Indonesia, as preached by some
many Islamic terrorists and extremists, is so appealing to numerous
populations in all these Muslim countries. It appears more convincing
and more attractive because it is more modern and closer to the
multicultural realities of our days. Opposite to it, one can find
only pathetic and anachronistic tyrannies of national exclusivity
that represent nothing, unrepresentative and dysfunctional systems
that have monstrously disfigured the cultural – historical face of
the indigenous peoples, uncultured and uneducated, and illegitimate
plutocracies that alienated local populations from their natural
cultural – historical backgrounds. As a matter of fact, the Islamic
extremists are bound to success in convincing masses not because of
their ideological strength or right but simply due to the fact that
they reflect better our times’ conditions and situations.

By this, I do not imply even for a moment that the Islamic extremist
ideal, multinational, Islamic state is justified through a correct
interpretation of the History of the Islamic Caliphates; on the
contrary, it can be refuted with relative theoretical easiness. But
certainly not by the corrupt, besotted and miserably poor
‘intellectual’ elites of Lebanon, Tunisia, Emirates and Egypt.

This last point casts some light on Erdogan’s appeal over the past few
years; due to his fear of a military ousting of his lewd and subversive
team, he may not have revealed his targets, but through his stance,
attitude, bahaviour, and policies, it becomes clear that his vision
and perception of the Turkish Soul and Cultural – National Identity
is very close to that of the Islamists and the extremists he has been
left to calmly identify as his possible interlocutors.

The Search for the Turkish Original today

Like this, we enter into the subject that will be an inevitable
predicament for the Turks in the years ahead. In fact, all the
different pieces of the Erdogan puzzle that the pathetic European
liberals so shamelessly exalt, if adequately reconstituted, will
show precisely this: the face of Turkey Erdogan wants to reveal when
it suits him best is a bogus-Islamic monster that assimilates Turks,
Kurds, Iranian peoples, Indian Muslim peoples, Arabic speaking people,
and Central Asiatic Turkic peoples, by eradicating all the different
peoples’ pre-Islamic past and non Islamic cultures, and soaking them
all into the pseudo-Islamic Barbary they have as main, yet hidden,
target in their uneducated mind.

With this said, if Erdogan’s targeted Turkish Soul and Cultural –
National Identity is for any reason attained, we should expect a
complete barbarization of Turkey according to the well-known, colonial
example of the so-called Arabic speaking uncivilized peripheries. If
this comes to happen, Turkey will almost cease to exist as Turkey, and
will start acting as farcical revival of the Ottoman Empire. Although
internally collapsed, islamically defunct, and morally corrupt, the
Ottoman Empire was still real in the early 20th century. However,
Erdogan’s secret target in the early 21st century will be a culturally
– mentally – intellectually dead circumference, a morbid and decomposed
body without the slightest sign of life, a nauseating abode of inhuman
Hatred and uncivil Hysteria.

Yet, the Erdogan’s model is stronger than Turkey’s extant National
Portrait and Cultural – Historical Identity; this is not due to
ideological comparison at real-time validity. In fact, the extant
National Portrait dates back to the early and middle Ataturk years,
having not been adequately updated. This creates a problem, as that
model emanates out of a completely different environment that does
not exist anymore. And this is the danger of ideological debates in
today’s Turkey. The pro-democratic and pro-secular circles in today’s
Turkey would not easily prevail in a debate, and would not easily
convince large masses with a correct yet obsolete model. For this
reason, the suggested considerations must become an urgent priority
among the Secular – Democratic establishment of Turkey. At the end
of this article, we will feature the basic axes on which we strongly
believe that the Secular Democratic Establishment of Turkey must
soon conclude to found a new Search for the National – Cultural –
Historical Identity of Turkey.

Today’s Turkish citizen, and his National Heritage and Cultural
Background

Who is today’s Turk? To this question only the land where modern
Turks are born can give an accurate and pertinent answer: Anatolia
has been the land of numerous peoples, civilizations, cultures, arts,
religions, theologies, philosophies and political formations. The
amalgamation of all the peoples who passed from and settled here,
this is the modern Turk.

1. The One out of Many: the Hittite empire as the Archetypal Anatolian

Inside this great variety of peoples and cultures, we encounter the
local Hatti and the Luwians of the Cappadocian plateau who date back to
the times of Sumer and Akkad. Further on, we come across the Assyrian
merchants of Kanish, the Indo-European people of Nesa who became
known as Hittites, the Wilusa (Filion or Troy) of the Northwestern
confines, and the menacing Lukka of the Southwestern coast. The
entire Anatolian world about which we are extensively documented
lasted more than 15 centuries until the Sea Peoples put an end to it,
as they did in the Southern Balkans to the Achaean, Mycenaean state,
because it consisted in a trusted ally of the Hittite Empire.

2. The Multicultural Anatolian times of the 1st half of the 1st
Millennium BCE

The collapse did not last much; the imperial capital Hattushas may
have been permanently forgotten until the moment it was unearthed
last century (starting by 1906 – Deutsche Orientgesellschaft),
but civilization sprung allover Anatolia. In the east the Urartu,
centered around Van, grew under Mesopotamian and Antolian influences.

Neo-Hittite Kingdoms were formed in the south-easternmost confines
of Anatolia, where they amalgamated with the Aramaeans of the
north-westernmost confines of Mesopotamia, before being absorbed
within the immense Neo-Assyrian Empire already before the Sargonids.

In Central and Western Anatolia political multi-division let the
Assyrians become Anatolia’s predominant power, especially after the
demise of the Urartu (Ararat) kingdom. Phrygians, Lydians, Aeolians,
Ionians, Carians, Dorians, Lycians and Cilicians reflected Mesopotamian
influences as the main centers of Knowledge and Wisdom attracted
the free thinkers who challenged local priesthoods, and established
the first philosophical systems. It is clear that the most authentic
representative of the Pre-Socratic philosophers is Turkey, not Greece,
And this sould be stressed at the educational level.

3. Medes, Persians, Cappadocians, Macedonians, Armenians, Pontus,
Commagene, Pergamus, and Aramaeans: the Multicultural Anatolia down
to the Roman times

With the Achaemenidian Persians establishing the first systems of
secured communication and transportation network, Anatolia enters
an advanced level of multi-ethnic, multi-linguistic, multi-religious
and multicultural interactions.

With the Aramaeans establishing links throughout the Iranian Empire
and beyond to India, Central Asia and China, another lingua franca –
after the Assyrian which was the first International Language in the
History of the Mankind – helped people to communicate and faiths and
ideas to travel: Aramaic was attested in Anatolia as early as the 6th
century BCE in the Lydian Aramaic bilingual inscription from Sardes.

And like this, the Iranian Mithra travels to Anatolia, and beyond,
in the Conquest of the West. Who else could be Mithra’s best servant
except Alexander of Macedonia who, merging the various Greek states
under the Macedonian scepter, re-unified the vast Iranian Empire and
helped the Great Iranian God of Trinity be diffused among the Greeks?

The interaction among the Attalids of Pergamus, the Seleucids of
Antioch, the Parthians and the Cappadocians, the Armenians and the
Commagenes was due mainly to the fact that in Anatolia ‘border’
meant always nothing.

4. Late Antiquity Anatolia: a High Place for the Nascent Christianity

Many seem to forget that, if John wrote his Revelation when isolated at
the island of Patmos, he probably did it looking at the Anatolian coast
during his free hours. And all the Seven churches of the Revelation
are located in Western Turkey. In addition, Chalcedony, Nicaea,
Constantinople / Istanbul, Caesarea of Cappadocia (Kayseri), the
Underground cities of Cappadocia, Nyssa and Nazianzos are unsurpassed
sources of Christian inspiration and theology that consist in integral
part of today’s Turk’s identity, despite official Christianity
is not anymore part their beliefs. The deeper character and stamp
of Cappadocia remains intact within the Anatolian Muslim mind and
heart. One has to go beyond the limits put by official religious
approaches to understand it.

5. Christian, Sabian, Gnostic, and Manichaean Aramaean North-western
Mesopotamia: an early Anatolian Cosmopolitanism

Centered around Edessa of Osrhoene (Urfa), Nisibis (Nusaybin),
Margdis (Mardin), Antioch (Antakya), and the entire Tur Abdin, a
mountainous area at the confines between SE Anatolia and N Mesopotamia,
the Aramaeans attributed to Anatolia a cosmopolitan touch due to
their masterful involvement in the Land and Desert Routes of Silk
Trade. From places like Urfa, Nusaybin and Mardin, caravans of traders
for many long pre-Islamic centuries left cross Mesopotamia, enter the
Sassanid Empire of Iran, and then proceed through Bactriana (today’s
Afghanistan), Sogdiana, Transoxiana and the Central Asiatic kingdoms
to China. These parts of today’s Turkey have been noticed as referred
to by Chinese chronicles, and to their markets arrived the flow of
Arachosian, Pentapotamian (Punjab) and Indian trade. From here one
could take the road to Constantinople and Europe or Arabia and Yemen or
Egypt and Libya. And on these roads, Gnostics, Manichaeans and Oriental
Christians prospered diffusing their ideas, faiths, arts, and customs.

6. The best preserved Roman tradition: the Constantinopolitan Empire

This is another part of the so far disregarded in Turkey Heritage
of Anatolia. Yet, even at this point Kemal Ataturk was an innovator
whose followers had difficulty to accurately identify the meaning of
his deeds. The fact itself of turning the Great Mosque of Mehmet II
to a Museum signified that the founder of Modern Turkey wanted his
country to actively represent the Eastern Roman Christian Heritage.

With all the changes Kemal Ataturk stipulated, he had already turned
the decomposed Islamic Caliphate to a Modern Democratic Secular
state. The Great Mosque of Mehmet II (formerly Church of the Saint
Sophia) could have been left – like so many other mosques – to function
in the same way it had continuously since 29 May 1453, when the
original church was converted to mosque. However, by turning the mosque
to a museum and by unveiling the covered Christian mosaics (that had
been covered for centuries by another layer of wall painting), Kemal
Ataturk expressed the political willingness to see Modern Turkey as the
best Heir of the non Muslim, Roman Imperial tradition. For a Modern
Turk, the monument is more valid as a museum than as a mosque. It is
up to the Secular Democrats of today to reveal to Turks in Turkey why.

7. The Selcuk and Ottoman Islamic tradition of Knowledge, Science
and Art

In revealing and claiming this part of rather obvious Turkish Cultural
and Historical Heritage, Turkey’s Modern Secular and Democratic
establishment will have to clash with Erdogan’s Islamists, who
absolutely want to claim themselves as the most genuine descendants. In
reality, this debate would be of global, not only Turkish interest. The
reason is the fact that the secular and democratic Turks will have
to discredit at this point Erdogan’s Islamists, unveiling the plain
truth: real Islam is knowledge, science, research, experiment and
lights, not the pathetic insistence in prohibition of premarital sex
and imposition of the purely and totally anti-Islamic veil.

In this regard, the story of Taqieddin Efendi and the Ottoman empire’s
last Observatory would be a critical point to remind to anyone
interested in the outcome of the War against Islamic Terrorism. We
will refer to this story in a next article where we will discuss the
necessary tools of political action that Turkey’s secular establishment
must produce in order to eradicate the perilous Erdogan pestilence.

Note

Yazilikaya, the Hittite religious capital,is of tremendous importance
for today’s Turks as an element helping identify perceptions and
characters that lasted throughout millennia.

Former Armenian Justice Minister: Citizens Are More Afraid Of Police

FORMER ARMENIAN JUSTICE MINISTER: CITIZENS ARE MORE AFRAID OF POLICEMEN THAN CRIMINALS

Noyan Tapan
Jul 31, 2007

YEREVAN, JULY 31, NOYAN TAPAN. Changes are needed in the police system,
otherwise Armenia will become a country where evidence is obtained
under duress. Larisa Alaverdian, the first ombudsperson of the RA,
NA deputy, expressed this opinion during the July 31 discussion
"Human Rights in the Police System", which was organized by the
Armenian Office of the Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR).

In the words of Davit Harutyunian, the chairman of the RA National
Assembly Standing Committee of State and Legal Issues, former
Armenian justice minister, it is regrettable that citizens are more
afraid of policemen than criminals, and this problem requires system
solutions. In this respect D. Harutyunian attached special importance
to a number of system changes, such as the transfer of court executive
institutions from the police to the justice system, the transfer of
the function to conduct an investigation from the prosecutor’s office
to the police, etc.

The NA committee head assured discussion participants that such system
solutions are now being worked out.

BAKU: US Diplomat: OSCE Minsk Group Close To Compromise On Settlemen

US DIPLOMAT: OSCE MINSK GROUP CLOSE TO COMPROMISE ON SETTLEMENT OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
July 31 2007

The co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group are close to a compromise
settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the US Co-chairman of the
Minsk Group, the US Deputy Secretary of State, Mathew Bryza, reported
in Yerevan during his meeting with the Armenian Parliament Speaker,
Tigran Torosyan.

Speaking on the conflict Bryza focused on three principles of the
Conclusion Statement in Helsinki – territorial integrity, free
self-determination of the people and the search for compromising
options to settle the conflict without resorting to military
operations.

"The co-chairmen of the Minsk Group are close to a compromise
settlement where all three principles of Helsinki are reflected,"
Bryza said to ARKA agency.

According to him, basic principles should be used with the settlement
of any conflict. However, he believes it illogical to follow the
Kosovo precedent.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
due to the territorial claims of Armenia to Azerbaijan. Armenia
has occupied 20% of the Azerbaijani lands including Nagorno-Karabakh
region and seven nearby regions. Since 1992 to the present time, these
territories have been under the occupation of the Armenian Forces. In
1994, Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a cease-fire agreement which put
an end to active hostilities. The Co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group
(Russia, France and USA) are presently holding peaceful negotiations.

Marks Of 184 Examination Works Appealed Among 11 Admission Examinati

MARKS OF 184 EXAMINATION WORKS APPEALED AMONG 11 ADMISSION EXAMINATIONS IN WRITTEN FORM

Noyan Tapan
Jul 30, 2007

YEREVAN, JULY 30, NOYAN TAPAN. 184 entrants submitted applications
of complaint to subject boards from 11 admission examinations in a
written form during the five examination days, that is to say during
the period between July 20 to 24 in the republic. 38 out of them have
managed to improve their marks, only one mark was lowered, and those
of 145 entrants remained the same.

According to the information provided to a Noyan Tapan correspondent
by the Press Service of the Republican Admission Board, most of the
applications of complaints were received from the English written
examination, that is, 51 works, the marks of only ten of them
were improved, and those of the rest did not change. The next most
applications of complaint were received from the subject "Mathematics":
in general, 43 entrants submitted applications of complaint, five
out of these 43 marks were improved and the rest remained the same.

18 marks received from the subject "Biology" were appealed and only
6 of them were improved, the other 12 marks remained the same. 16
entrants, who took an examination in the subject "Chemistry", appealed
their marks, however, only six of them managed to improve them. Three
entrants taking an examination in Physics improved their marks and
those of another ten entrants remained the same.

After the English language among foreign languages German takes second
place with the number of complaints: there were 9 applications of
complaint, 5 marks were improved and the other four remained the
same. Five applications of complaints were submitted in each of the
French and Russian written examinations.

The only mark that was lowered as a result of an appeal was from the
"Armenian History" subject with a difference of a half point, and
the total number of applications in this subject makes 17. No mark in
this subject has been improved so far. There is only one application of
complaint from the "General History", however the mark has remained the
same. As for the "Geography", there are 6 applications of appeal, the
two of which have been improved and the rest of them have not changed.

By the way, the marks improved as a result of an appeal do not
exceed 1.5.

How far Turkey can resist global development is little clearer now

The Statesman (India)
July 29, 2007 Sunday

HOW FAR TURKEY CAN RESIST GLOBAL DEVELOPMENTS IS LITTLE CLEARER NOW

Modern Turkey was founded as a secular state by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk
in 1923 out of the ruins of the Ottoman Empire. In recent years,
Turkey has been perceived internationally as a moderate Muslim
democracy, something of a rarity. This is why the results of last
weeks parliamentary election in Turkey were eagerly awaited by a
watching world. Like so many significant elections, the outcome has
proved complex and difficult to interpret. Prime Minister Tayyip
Erdogans AKP (Justice and Development) Party received 47 per cent of
the vote, significantly more than five years earlier, and with about
340 seats out of 550, is the clear winner.

The right-wing nationalists received about 70 seats, while the party
of the Kurdish minority hold about 22 seats; many of these stood as
independents, to circumvent restrictions on Kurdish representation.
The loser was the Republican Peoples Party, the CHP, the party of
Kemal Ataturk, which has only 110 seats in the new parliament. The
long-term strategy of Erdogans party remains something of an enigma.
It is described in the Western press as mildly Islamic. It
exemplifies a moderate Islam, although its roots were in a more
openly Islamic party, banned under the secular constitution, of which
the military have been the principal upholders and enforcers. The
military have intervened in Turkish politics three times in the past
50 years, most recently in 1980; and it was in consequence of yet
another threat from the army that Erdogan called early elections this
month. The issue was over the AK Partys nomination to the Presidency.
It had chosen Abdullah Gul, whose wife openly wears a headscarf, a
religious emblem prohibited in public places by the Constitution.
Demonstrations in Istanbul and Ankara by secularists earlier in the
year gave the impression of powerful forces in favour of maintaining
the place of religion as subservient to the State. The success, even
of the mild Islamists remains open to interpretation: the wearing of
headscarves has actually become more prevalent in Turkey in recent
years. Does this mean a hardening of the popular sensibility in
favour of a more committed Islam, or does it, combined with
widespread support for the AK, serve as a warning to the military not
to intervene again in the politics of Turkey? Some commentators
believe that the AK has a more profoundly Islamist long-term agenda;
and as confirmation of this, they point to the growing commitment of
Muslims all over the world to a less compromising form of political
Islam. On the other hand, Erdogan has presided over five years of
considerable economic growth. He has furthered negotiations for
Turkey to become part of the European Union, in spite of considerable
hostility from many members of the EU. He has shown himself in favour
of modernisation and the prosperity this brings, a process surely
incompatible with a concealed religious objective. The AK is
vigorously opposed by the ultra-nationalists of the MHP, who have
been suspicious of Europe ever since the break-up of the Ottoman
Empire, and they fear Europe has further designs on their country: an
inflow of foreign investment, the modernising of Turkey in the
interests of admission to the European Union, the growth of the
market economy which has left many people, especially poor, rural
people, stranded in a bewildering limbo, have provided fertile ground
for the nationalists. In the past year an American journalist was
killed, and three Christian evangelists murdered in Turkey: this was
the work of extreme nationalists, who are more suspicious of the West
than they are of the Islamists. There are, of course, also darker
historical aspects of Turkish nationalism. Before Kemal Ataturk could
drag what was a medieval society into the modern world, Turkish
nationalism, promoted by the Young Turks had come to dominate the
Ottoman Empire. When the Ottoman Empire sided with Germany and
Austro-Hungary in the First World War, an aborted attack on Russia
was blamed on the Armenians, who were Christian. This led to a
slaughter of Armenians by the Turks, the first of the many genocides
of the 20th century. Between 1915 and 1917, hundreds of thousands of
Armenians were massacred. Discussion of this event became taboo in
Turkey; as recently as 2005, Nobel prize-winning author Orhan Pamuk
was threatened with jail for mentioning the Armenian issue. But it is
the position of the large Kurdish minority in Turkey that remains the
most vibrant issue in the rise of the nationalists. Kurds constitute
more than 15 per cent of the population of Turkey; and they also make
up sizeable minorities in neighbouring Iran, Syria and Iraq, where
they now form the most stable part of liberated Iraq. Ever since the
birth of the Turkish Republic, there have been uprisings and
struggles for independence by the Kurds. These especially in 1927 –
1930 and again in 1938 39, were brutally put down by the Turkish
military, and between 1983 and 1991, use of the Kurdish language was
prohibited, and a policy of forced assimilation or Turkification was
pursued. The Kurdish separatist Abdullah Ocalan, leader of the
Left-wing Kurdish Workers Party, was arrested, tried and sentenced to
death for terrorism in 1999. On the intervention of the European
powers, his sentence was commuted to life imprisonment, a leniency
which infuriated the Turkish nationalists, who saw it as voluntary
self-abasement of Turkey to the diktat of the Europe. The Kurds
remain the largest linguistically and culturally homogeneous group
people in the world who lack a separate state; and as such, their
presence remains a threat to the countries where they live. In
Turkey, although many Kurds speak Turkish and many more are
bilingual, about five million are Kurdish-speakers only. The presence
in Iraq of a semi-autonomous Kurdish region has led to the massing of
the Turkish army on the border with Iraq; and the question of a
Turkish invasion of Iraqi Kurdistan, in pursuit of Kurdish
separatists or terrorists, poses yet another problem for the US and
coalition forces in Iraq. These, then, are the issues that remain
unresolved, even by this, the most decisive of election results. The
question of minorities, the ambiguous relationship between a
secularism (which in Turkey has been enforced with a heavy, even
authoritarian, hand) and the growth of religious ideology, itself a
conservative reaction of people fearful of a modern economy which,
while wiping out their traditional agricultural function, appears to
offer them no space these are issues that touch not only Turkey, but
almost every so-called developing country. The results in Turkey
suggest that this is a victory for democracy. But these are only
temporary arrangements: mandates expire, or are overtaken by more
dramatic events. What happens in Turkey is not necessarily dependent
upon what happens within Turkey, as the nationalists perceive.
Whether the military will impose a more aggressive secularism,
provoking increased religious militancy, and whether the modernising
thrust will call forth a conservative backlash, have their echo in
many other countries now embarked upon the road of Western-style
development (by no means all of them Islamic). The fate of Mustafa
Kemal Ataturks party, the CHP, reduced to mimic its more vehement
nationalistic rivals, is a measure of the decay of truly secular
ideologies in the face of the rising wave of religious fundamentalism
in the world. How far Turkey can resist these global developments is
little clearer now than it was before the elections.

Armenia Celebrates Triple Victory In The 9th Of Intellectual Games

ARMENIA CELEBRATES TRIPLE VICTORY IN THE 9TH OF INTELLECTUAL GAMES

armradio.am
27.07.2007 13:10

Armenian teams had achieved great success in the 9th Championship of
Intellectual Games of the South Caucasus held in Georgia, winning three
of the four main competitions. In the "What? Where? When?" competition
"Perezagruzka" team of Yerevan shared the first place with "Galakhad"
team of Georgia.

Head of the Armenian delegation Tigran Kocharyan informs that member
of the "DAF-HKK" team Hasmik Garyaka became the winner of the "Own
game" competition.

The Armenian team became the winner of the "Erudite-Sextet" competition
of the combined teams of the three republics.

"Our team was participating in the championship on its own means,
this time we had no sponsor, which, however, did not prevent us from
reaching serious achievements," Tigran Kocharyan said.

"It is characteristic also that the team was comprised of only five
instead of the traditional six players. Nevertheless, we managed to
celebrate victory and return to Armenia with a cup. The Armenian team
had a triple victory, and this is an unprecedented success."

The 9th Championship of Intellectual Games of the South Caucasus
was held in Kobuleti (Georgia) July 20-22. The tournament featured
5 Armenian, 15 Georgian and 8 Azerbaijani teams.

U.S. May Apply Sanctions Against Turkey Over Agreement With Iran

U.S. MAY APPLY SANCTIONS AGAINST TURKEY OVER AGREEMENT WITH IRAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
27.07.2007 17:08 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Turkey’s preliminary memorandum of understanding
(MoU) on possible gas cooperation is of concern for two reasons. First,
a MoU could seriously set back the work that Turkey and the U.S. have
been doing for a decade to develop Caspian Basin gas resources as
well as a pipeline infrastructure to bring those resources to Turkey
and to international markets," U.S. Ambassador to Turkey Ross Wilson
said when commenting on Turkey’s energy deal with its neighbor Iran.

"By continuing to support projects like the trans-Caspian gas pipeline,
Turkey’s regional leadership will help diversify its and other European
countries’ energy supplies, make Turkey a key gas transit country and
strengthen the developing economies of Turkey’s neighbors. A major
increase of Iranian gas exports to Turkey and beyond may hinder the
development of gas resources in Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and western
Turkmenistan," Amb. Wilson added, APA reports.

Arthur Abraham To Defend His IBF Title Against Khoren Gevor

ARTHUR ABRAHAM TO DEFEND HIS IBF TITLE AGAINST KHOREN GEVOR

ARMENPRESS
Jul 26, 2007

YEREVAN, JULY 26, ARMENPRESS: IBF middleweight champion Arthur Abraham
will make his second mandatory title defense against Khoren Gevor (both
are Armenia-born living now in Germany) at the Max Schmeling-Halle
in Berlin, Germany on August 18.

Abraham, 23-0 (18), last stopped Sebastien Demers inside three
rounds. He is currently shaping up in Zinnowitz, a tiny village near
the Baltic Sea.

"After my long break I have to give 100 percent in each and every
session to be perfectly prepared for this important fight. I am happy
that I can make the mandatory defense in Berlin, which is where I
live. I hope the fans will support me," Abraham was quoted by news
agencies as saying.

The IBF made fifth-ranked Gevor the mandatory challenger after Edison
Miranda´s recent loss to Kelly Pavlik and Amin Asikainen´s European
title defeat against Sebastian Sylvester.

"Of course Arthur is the favorite," said coach Ulli Wegner. "But you
must not underestimate Gevor – even though his name might only ring
a bell with a few experts. Arthur must not take him lightly."

"Our country fellows are not happy since one of us will have to lose,
but this is life,’ Arthur Abraham told journalists.

–Boundary_(ID_LSJa87a/NfI9wfYb6z0vx A)–

VTB Group Becomes 100% Shareholder Of VTB Bank (Armenia)

VTB GROUP BECOMES 100% SHAREHOLDER OF VTB BANK (ARMENIA)

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
July 25 2007

YEREVAN, July 25. /ARKA/. The VTB Group became 100% sole shareholder
of the "VTB Bank (Armenia)" CJSC.

The Bank’s General Director, Chairman of the Board of Directors Valery
Ovsyannikov said that on July 25, 2007, the VTB Group obtained the
remaining 30% minus one share from "Mika Armenia Trading" Ltd, thus
becoming the sole shareholder of its affiliate company in Armenia –
VTB Bank (Armenia).

According to Ovsyannikov, this deal should be treated as a positive
factor, which first of all gives an opportunity to VTB Bank to have
100% for managing the bank, and, second, it will allow making the
next step towards increase of bank’s capital.

The VTB Bank (Armenia) CJSC (former Armsavingsbank) was established
in 1923. Before 1993, it was a part of the USSR State Savings Bank,
then it started operating as a specialized Savings Bank of Armenia.

In September 2001, ARCH Limited Consortium [the Bahamas] and ÌIKA
Armenia Trading privatized the "Armsavingsbank" by direct sale. In
April2004, the Russian "Vneshtorgbank" purchased 70%+1 shares of the
"Armsavingsbank".

According to the official balance data, as of June 30, 2007,
the total capital of the VTB Bank (Armenia) made AMD 9.4bln, the
authorizes capital – AMD 7.5bln, total assets – AMD 38.2bln, balance
sheet profit – AMD 1.5bln, and profit of the 1st half-year of 2007 –
AMD 67.4mln. At present the bank has 94 functioning branches.

By the main financial indices, the Bank has leading positions in the
RA banking sphere. In particular, according to the preliminary data,
by the amount of assets it ranks the 7th in the 2nd quarter of 2007,
by crediting to legal entities and individuals it ranks the 5th and 3d
respectively, by the volume of attracted time deposit from individuals
– the 4th, by means of individuals poste restante – the 3d, by the
volume of total capital – the 4th, and by the authorized capital –
the 3d. ($1 – AMD 337.93).

–Boundary_(ID_w2RnkkbFN+Vx+vlQN6BlHg)–

BAKU: Norway Does Not Consider ‘Presidential Elections’ In Nagorno K

NORWAY DOES NOT CONSIDER ‘PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS’ IN NAGORNO KARABAKH LEGITIMATE

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
July 19 2007

The Kingdom of Norway will not recognize the result of the
"presidential elections" held in Nagorno Karabakh by the separatist
regime. Norwegian Ambassador to Azerbaijan Jon Ramberg told the APA
that his country does not consider these elections legitimate.

The Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly (PACE), GUAM-International
Organization for Democracy and Economic Development, European
Commission Special Envoy to Azerbaijan, the US, Turkey and other
countries have already stated that they will not recognize the
results of the so-called elections held in the occupied Azerbaijani
territories.