Many Russian Armenians Seek RA Citizenship

MANY RUSSIAN ARMENIANS SEEK RA CITIZENSHIP

PanARMENIAN.Net
23.10.2008 15:22 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Several dozens of Armenians living in the south
of Russia have already taken the opportunity to acquire Armenian
citizenship as a second citizenship, Yerkramas, the newspaper of
Armenians of Russia, quoted Armenia’s Consul General in the RF Federal
Okrug Ararat Gomtsyan as saying.

"There are many Armenians in Russia wishing to be granted Armenian
citizenship. It’s gratifying that Armenia demonstrated political will
by introducing changes in its Constitution for its compatriots living
abroad," he said.

Russian President Medvedev: Global Economy Pays For American Blunder

RUSSIAN PRESIDENT MEDVEDEV: GLOBAL ECONOMY PAYS FOR AMERICAN BLUNDERS

Center for Research on Globalization
October 23, 2008
Canada

"We are paying for others’ – primarily American – blunders." This
is how the President of Russia, Dmitry Medvedev, assesses the state
of affairs in the global economy. Medvedev was speaking at a news
conference in the Armenian capital Yerevan.

He blamed the global financial crisis hit so hard because the American
market played such a big role and exerted such a big influence on
the global economy. What any national government is supposed to do,
he said, is try to pull through with minimum losses. Comment from an
analyst with the Russian business consulting agency Alexander Yakovlev.

Yes, the U.S. strategies of the past eight years fanned the flames of
the latest crisis. Yes, the configuration of the American financial
system contributed to the crisis. But lots of national economies
are as different as can be from the American one, and they have been
charting their own courses. Yet, they have also felt the impact of
the current financial crisis. So, Yakovlev says, the United States
of America bears part of the blame, and other nations, with economic
policies of their own, bear part of the blame, too. Crises have never
been products of human efforts; they have long plagued the global
economy and are caused by a number of things. But crises come and
go, and there is no end to development. In other words, cyclicity is
still there; no one has been able to rule it out.

Some experts feel it will take the global economy much less time to
cope with this crisis than it took it to cope with the crisis of
the early 20th century. Because, today’s economy is, unlike that
of the bygone years, global and far more flexible. Economists say
the current problems have only put the limelight on the need for an
overhaul of global financial architecture. And, this is, by the way,
what a United Nations’ expert task team, headed by Nobel-winning
economist Joseph Stiglitz, is called to focus on, although the think
tank of the International Monetary Fund have already understood that
a way to end this crisis will be shown by the fledgling economies of
Russia, China, India, and Brazil.

It is not only IMF experts but the leaders of the hardest-hit western
economies who have understood that. U.S. President George W.Bush has
held telephone conversations with Chairman Hu Jintao of China and
the leaders of other developing nations. President Bush wants them
to support international efforts for economic stability. His French
counterpart Nicolas Sarkozy and the head of the European Commission,
Jose Barroso, are, in the meantime, planning an early visit to
Beijing where they will try to talk China and India into joining an
international summit conference on ways to end the global crisis.

Tbilisi: How To Bring Europe Closer To Its Youth

HOW TO BRING EUROPE CLOSER TO ITS YOUTH

The FINANCIAL
20/10/2008 13:28
Georgia

The FINANCIAL — It’s common knowledge that today standards for the
competitive labour market are very high in Europe. Young people need to
improve their education by examining new forms of learning in Europe.

Making new contacts and cooperating with community media centres in
Poland, Germany and Ukraine . This was the issue the participants
discussed during the conference "Europe and the Caucasus: Youth,
Media, Education" which took place on 5 October, 2008 at Caucasus
University in Tbilisi .

Young Georgians, Armenians and Azeris took part in the conference.

"We want to create a programme of the political education "Academy
of Democracy" for Georgia. That’s why an agreement with Caucasus
University was signed in September. The second programme is a variety
of seminars and trainings on journalism for the citizens of Caucasian
countries as well as cooperation for the creation of a European
community TV programme via the internet," commented Michal Wojcik,
coordinator of the project.

"Citizen media is especially popular in Germany. The citizens can
make their own products and express opinions. What we want to create
is a unified system of European Citizen Media. Citizen media exists,
but it’s not enough. In Germany a special tax system guarantees the
existence of this media. If the government won’t support citizen
media it will be very difficult to raise funds," Dr Joachim Musholt,
General Director, Citizens Media Centre Bennohaus, told The FINANCIAL.

This initiative provides young people with the opportunity to express
themselves creatively and explore ideas, experiences and communicate
the above-mentioned to the public. It gives the chance to create
a community web TV service open to everyone. The aim of the Free
Media Bridges is to bring Europe closer to its youth. The project
involves young people from Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Germany,
France, Poland and Ukraine . The project is supported by the European
Union. It is granted by the Education, Audiovisual & Culture Executive
Agency of the European Commission.

Caucasus University in collaboration with the Georgian youth
organization ERTOBA invited all interested students who study
journalism and international relations, as well as leaders,
employees and volunteers of the youth NGOs to get acquainted with the
programme offer presented by the European institutions of non-formal
education. The programme of the conference presupposed discussions
on the topics of political education, as well as media and citizens
education programmes which are realized by the Foundation Nowy Staw
from Poland, Bennohaus from Germany, Centre Nasha Sprava from Ukraine ,
ERTOBA and the European Association Youth4Media e.V.

The conference in Tbilisi took place in the framework of the Free
Media Bridges from East to West project.

Free Media Bridges is an international two-year media initiative
promoting cooperation and dialogue among young people in Europe. It is
designed to encourage active participation and involve young people in
non-formal education projects, youth initiatives as well as in creating
their own TV. It provides trainings for youth workers, international
media workshops, regional conferences in East Europe and what’s most
important: production of the European web TV program Prioritaire.

Dr Joachim Musholt spoke about the importance of creating citizen
media in Georgia.

According to Dr Musholt the real worth of Citizen Media is in its
independence and freedom from the government. In this case state
control is changed by public control.

"In Germany things have changed and they don’t support open channels
any more. Because of financial difficulties the European Committee
decided to save money," said Dr Musholt.

According to Dr Musholt, by dealing autonomously with new media in a
simple, informal way, youngsters will get the possibility to develop
new media skills and cope with political and socio-cultural topics.

ANC-EM Requests Watertown Council Pres to Clarify Remarks Re ADL

Armenian National Committee of Massachusetts
47 Nichols Avenue
Watertown MA 02472
617-926-1918
[email protected]

Press Release
October 20, 2008

Contact: 617-347-2833

ANC Responds to Watertown Town Councilor’s Remarks in Boston Globe After
Council President says he is comfortable with ADL assurances

Watertown, MA -The Armenian National Committee of Massachusetts has
asked Watertown Town Council President Clyde Younger to clarify his
remarks in the Boston Globe suggesting that he is `comfortable with
assurances from the Anti-Defamation League’s national leader, Abraham
H. Foxman, that the organization recognizes the Armenian genocide."

In a Sunday, October 19, 2008 article, entitled, `ADL fight appears
over,’ the Boston Globe reported that Younger has had a `change of
heart’ after receiving an October 3 letter from national ADL director
Abraham Foxman.

The ANC letter to Mr. Younger is below.

####

Dear Chairman Younger:

We were shocked to discover in today’s Boston Globe that you now feel
"comfortable with assurances from the Anti-Defamation League’s
national leader, Abraham H. Foxman, that the organization recognizes
the Armenian genocide." And imagine our surprise when we read that
the `ADL fight appears over!’ It was particularly disappointing that
this was the way by which the Armenian community first learned of the
letter you received from Mr. Foxman addressing an alleged change in
the ADL’s policy regarding the Armenian
Genocide. s/globe_west/west/2008/10/adl_statement_o.html

Wo uld you please share this letter with us, as we have not found any
evidence of a new ADL position anywhere in the public arena?

As you agreed at the September 23, 2008 Watertown Town Council
meeting, the ADL’s August 2008 statement, as well as its August 2007
statement, do not qualify as an unambiguous acknowledgement of the
Armenian Genocide.

A careful reading of the ADL’s insincere August 22, 2008 letter, which
was buried deeply on its web site and has since been removed, reveals
that the ADL states only that is has `referred’ to genocide, it is
by no means an unequivocal acknowledgment of the Armenian Genocide.
Rather, it reads, `ADL has never denied the tragic and painful events
perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire against the Armenians, and we have
referred to those massacres and atrocities as genocide.’ Moreover,
this letter provocatively accuses those who are working to end
genocide denial of `demonization.’

This letter apparently refers to the only other public – and now
infamous – ADL statement of August 21, 2007, which read, `the
consequences’ of the Turkish massacres and atrocities were `tantamount
to genocide.’ That statement was clearly not an acknowledgment of the
Armenian Genocide.

As you know, the ADL carefully crafted its August 2007 statement to
contravene the international legal definition of genocide. The
phrasing circumvents the `intent’ required by the 1948 United Nations
Genocide Convention by suggesting that Armenians died simply as a
`consequence’ of World War I conditions and not from a planned program
of extermination – which just happens to be Turkey’s position.

Judging the August 21, 2007 statement inadequate, Massachusetts cities
and towns, the Massachusetts Municipal Association, human rights
commissions, the Jewish community, and the Armenian community called
on the ADL to issue an unambiguous affirmation of the Armenian
Genocide at its national meeting in early November 2007. The ADL
refused to do so, releasing instead a dismissive one-sentence
statement reaffirming the ADL’s national policy that read, `The
National Commission of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) today, at its
annual meeting, decided to take no further action on the issue of the
Armenian genocide.’

As you also know, The Massachusetts Municipal Association and 12 of
the 13 Massachusetts communities that dissociated from the ADL’s No
Place for Hate program did so after the ADL’s August 2008 statement,
judging it unacceptable.

The ADL not only has refused to explicitly acknowledge the Armenian
Genocide, but has for several years actively lobbied on behalf of the
Turkish government to deny the Armenian Genocide and to prevent
passage of a Congressional resolution formally recognizing the
Armenian Genocide. It continues to publicly voice opposition to a
Congressional resolution.

Although nation-states have national security and realpolitik
considerations when formulating policy, a human rights organization
simply cannot put politics above universal rights. Yet this is
exactly what the ADL does whenever a human rights issue conflicts with
the perceived interests of the state of Israel.

Mr. Foxman has admitted as much. In an interview with the New Jersey
Jewish Standard, published October 26, 2007, he explained his
reasoning regarding the Armenian Genocide:

`It was also very clear to me that after the United States the most
important ally Israel has is Turkey. It’s a country that not only has
promised to provide Israel with water until moshiach comes, but it’s a
country that permits Israel’s pilots to do maneuvers over its land.
And, so, to me, it was very clear that there are two moral issues, but
one trumps the other. And it was clear to me that I cannot save one
Armenian human being, not one. But if I do what the Armenians want me
to do, I will put in jeopardy the lives of Turkish Jews and Israeli
Jews.’

The ADL continues to engage in other forms of genocide denial as well.
It has, for instance, repeatedly endorsed Turkey’s proposal for a
joint commission of Turkish and Armenian scholars `to investigate what
happened in the past.’

In June 2008, the internationally respected anti-hate group Southern
Poverty Law Center (SPLC) issued an extensive intelligence report
documenting Turkey’s campaign of genocide denial
( /article.jsp?aid=935),
and condemned such calls for a `historian’s commission.’ The SPLC
pointed out that `a lie isn’t the other side of any story. It’s just a
lie.’ The report quoted Torben Jorgensen of the Danish Center for
Holocaust and Genocide Studies as saying, `When it comes to the
historical reality of the Armenian genocide, there is no `Armenian’ or
`Turkish’ side of the question, any more than there is a `Jewish’ or
`German’ side of the historical reality of the Holocaust. There is a
scientific side and an unscientific side – acknowledgement or denial.’

Human rights are universal and they must be respected and protected
for all people. Discrimination against any person or group on the
basis of race, gender, sexual orientation, religious beliefs or
disability must never be tolerated. And historical truths must be
upheld.

We would welcome a sincere, unambiguous acknowledgment of the Armenian
Genocide by the Anti-Defamation League. Rather, what we have observed
is an organization engaged in a double game: issuing disingenuous
statements that do not actually recognize the Armenian Genocide but
are crafted in such a way as to mislead the public, while continuing
to engage in genocide denial by promoting Turkey’s agenda with regard
to a historical commission and Congressional recognition of the
Armenian Genocide.

We would appreciate the opportunity to discuss this with you at your
earliest convenience.

Sincerely,
Sharistan Melkonian
Armenian National Committee of Massachusetts
47 Nichols Avenue
Watertown MA 02472

http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/regional_edition
http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport

S. Hatspanian To Apply To Court: Asks Artsakh For Political Asylum

SARGIS HATSPANIAN IS GOING TO APPLY TO COURT: NOW HE HAS ASKED ARTSAKH
AUTHORITIES FOR POLITICAL ASYLUM

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 15, NOYAN TAPAN. The other day French Armenian
freedom-fighter Sargis Hatspanian applied to NKR President Bako
Sahakian in a written form asking him for a political asylum in
Artsakh. S. Hatspanian said this in his interview to Noyan Tapan
correspondent. According to him, on October 9, when his apartment "for
already three days had been surrounded by unshaved people in civil
clothes" he rang up NKR Foreign Minister Georgy Petrosian, National
Assembly Speaker Rudik Hyusnunts and asked for a political asylum, in
response to which the latters promised to attend to that issue.
However, according to S. Hatspanian, he has received no response from
NKR power representatives and President so far.

S. Hatspanian said that as early as on October 6 a group of people
tried to enter his apartment, without introducing any document they
stated that they are representatives of law enforcement bodies and have
an instruction to expatriate S. Hatspanian from Armenia. S. Hatspanian
refused to open his door before them. And only on October 9 he was
handed a notice on that, and the order to expatriate the former
freedom-fighter from Armenia was proved to have been signed by former
President Robert Kocharian as far back as on March 10.

According to S. Hatspanian, that order of R. Kocharian was not valid on
October 6 as no notice was introduced to him. Besides, keeping his
apartment under control for 24 hours without introducing the respective
documents to him, as he evaluated it, reminded of a house arrest. S.
Hatspanian said that he is going to apply to the Administrative Court
on October 16 to challenge R. Kocharian’s above mentioned order, as
well as the actions of the Police, which are illegal in his opinion.
The former freedom-fighter stated that all those guilty of terrifying
his family lately will be called for liability. He added that though he
does not trust the justice system in Armenia, nevertheless he is not
going to sit idle and will go as far as the European Court.

A Turkish writer’s brave plea

A Turkish writer’s brave plea

IHT
The Boston Globe
Published: October 19, 2008

Political scientists evaluate societies with quantitative methods.
Literary figures prefer a more telling, qualitative criterion: freedom
of expression.

The 2006 Turkish Nobel laureate for literature, Orhan Pamuk, delivered
a devastating critique of the power elite in his own country last week
when he lamented the oppression of Turkish writers in a speech at the
Frankfurt Book Fair.

Pamuk’s description of the situation of Turkish writers was courageous,
and not only because he gave it in the presence of Turkey’s President
Abdullah Gul.

The novelist’s denunciation of attempts to silence writers was striking
because in 2005 he himself had been charged, under the infamous Article
301 of the Turkish penal code, with "public denigration of Turkish
identity." His offense was to have told a Swiss newspaper that "30,000
Kurds and a million Armenians were killed in these lands and nobody but
me dares to talk about it."

The article has since been amended. But as Pamuk said in Frankfurt,
"The state’s habit of penalizing writers and their books is still very
much alive; Article 301 of the Turkish penal code continues to be used
to silence and suppress many other writers, in the same way it was used
against me." He said there are hundreds of writers and journalists
being prosecuted and found guilty under the code.

Pamuk was not only protesting the folly of repressing writers in the
name of protecting Turkish identity. He also made a plea for Turkey’s
writers to "value the richness of our cultural traditions and our own
uniqueness."

Turkish political elites should heed this plea. Turkey wants to be both
true to itself and truly European. That can happen only when it allows
writers to express themselves freely.

A1+ – Ter Petrosyan speech at the rally of October 17, 2008

A1+

THE SPEECH OF LEVON TER-PETROSYAN AT THE RALLY OF OCTOBER 17, 2008
[01:32 pm] 18 October, 2008

Dear Compatriots,

I had promised to you during our rally on September 26 to reveal and
explain in detail the strategy of the Popular Movement or the Armenian
National Congress without concealing anything from you. Today it is
the time to fulfill that promise, therefore, I ask you to be patient
and to listen carefully to every word of my speech.

I have already had the opportunity to draw your attention to the
unprecedented geopolitical situation in which Armenia has found itself
lately, putting special emphasis on the fact that our country has
never been as vulnerable to external pressure in the 17 years of its
independent existence, as it is today. It is in this dangerous
situation that instead of thinking about the interests of our state
and the well-being of our people, Serge Sargsyan is worried
exclusively about clinging on to power and having his legitimacy
recognized. What is more, his recent steps demonstrate that in order
to attain his goals he is ready to revise Armenia’s foreign policy
doctrine, and instead of preserving the policy of maintaining a
balance between Russia and the West, gradually to lean toward the
latter.
* * *

How can we explain Serge Sargsyan’s sharp turn toward the West? After
all, he was known up to recently as the most pro-Russian statesman in
Armenia. Let us not forget that he is the main architect of the
`Property for debt’ deal, which ensured the transfer of Armenia’s
entire energy system to Russia. Let us also not forget his significant
activities in the context of the `Organization of the Collective
Security Treaty,’ as well the stubborn rumors about his connections to
both the Russian intelligence service and the world of organized crime
in that country.

So what has forced Serge Sargsyan to reject the Russian orientation
and tilt toward the West? The reasons, obviously, have nothing to do
with Armenia’s strategic or state interests, but rather the simple
benefit of solving his legitimacy problem.

Russia never questioned Serge Sargsyan’s legitimacy. President
Vladimir Putin was among the first to congratulate him even before the
official results of the elections had been announced. Sargsyan on his
part violated certain diplomatic norms and expressed his gratitude to
Russia in such an exaggerated form that it created a difficult
situation for that country’s diplomacy.

Serge Sargysan has a legitimacy problem in the West. The US president
George W. Bush has still not congratulated him. The Parliamentary
Assembly of the Council of Europe, meanwhile, continues to threaten
sanctions against Armenia, which would seriously undermine Serge
Sargsyan’s legitimacy.

What this means is that Sargsyan has no expectations from Russia in
this issue, and his only hope is to get the West’s endorsement for
which he is ready to make any concession. And since given the absence
of mineral resources, transit routes and an attractive market, Armenia
does not have much to offer the West except for its state interests,
he has decided to sacrifice those interests. This claim is supported
not only by the conciliatory position he has assumed on the
Nagorno-Karabagh conflict and on the issue of normalization of
Armenian-Turkish relations, but also ` and this is even more important
– by his intention to make Armenia’s foreign policy `orientationalist.’

Throughout the entire period of independence Armenia has adhered to
the principle of maintaining a balance between the West and
Russia. Having adopted the Western values of democracy, liberalism,
and market economy, Armenia never allowed itself to come under the
West’s unilateral influence. On the other hand, having a close
economic and military relationship with Russia, Armenia nonetheless
did not become the latter’s political satellite. In other words,
Armenia has tried to be neither pro-Russian, nor pro-Western, but
rather pursue a policy based solely on its state interests.

During my presidency this position was called the policy of
`balancing,’ under Kocharyan it was called the policy of
`complementarism,’ but the difference here is rather terminological.

Serge Sargsyan is thus sharply changing this established order of
things, and, in order to protect his personal interests, he is trying
to flirt with the West. I consider it a waste of time to assess the
advantages or disadvantages of Western or Russian orientations,
because I consider any orientation dangerous. What has convinced me in
that first and foremost is the experience of the traditional Armenian
political thinking, which has had catastrophic consequences for
Armenia in the past. In the final analysis, both the genocide that our
people was subjected to and the territorial losses the first Republic
of Armenia incurred were the consequences of the flawed
`orientationalist’ thinking. What also convinces me in this is today’s
reality. In front of our eyes the adoption of the Western orientation
by Georgia confronted that country with a national disaster, which it
could have avoided had it pursued a more balanced policy with
Russia. If we ignore the empty demonstrations of solidarity and the
bluster of anti-Russian rhetoric, the West was unable to do anything
to help its junior ally. * * *

The politics of orientation is not just an abstraction or a
theoretical construct for us. It has a very specific and practical
content. By turning his back to Russia and embracing the West,
represented by the USA and its ally Turkey, Serge Sargsyan is
entrusting the unilateral solution to the most crucial problem of
Armenia’s foreign policy ` the Karabagh conflict ` to them. The basis
for reaching such a conclusion is the West’s obvious effort to exclude
Russia from the process of resolving the Karabagh conflict. It is most
clearly manifested in the transparent statements of Western diplomats,
as well as the fact of trilateral negotiations on Karabagh between
Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Turkey, especially in the context of
conversations regarding the inclusion of Turkey’s representative as a
co-chairman in the Minsk Group. By the way, Serge Sargsyan is so
dependant on the West now that he could hardly resist the demand to
replace Russia with Turkey in the Minsk Group co-chairmanship if such
a demand was pressed on him.

As a result, there is a threat to the very existence of the Minsk
Group, which for the last sixteen years has been the only
international mechanism for resolving the Karabagh conflict. Despite
its many flaws, the Minsk Group has been the most convenient or
optimal format for us, both because the USA and Russia were equally
represented in it, and also partly due to the competition that existed
between them. It is no coincidence that Azerbaijan has spared no
effort for discrediting the Minsk Group as a forum for settling the
Karabagh conflict and to replace it with other international fora.

Unfortunately, the danger that the integrity of this format will be
violated and that Russia will be excluded from it is real, because
Russia, being preoccupied with the developments following the conflict
with Georgia, will hardly be able to resist the West’s increased
involvement in Karabagh. It goes without saying that in case of a
resolution to the Karabagh conflict that has been unilaterally
sponsored by the West, Russia will be excluded also from the
international peacekeeping force that will be deployed there. And that
means if not complete eradication of Russia’s influence in the South
Caucasus, then its substantial weakening, which entails serious and
unpredictable geopolitical consequences, such as suspension of both
Armenia’s and Azerbaijan’s participation in the CIS, removal of the
Russian base and the Russian frontier troops from Armenia, etc.

* * *

The change of the Minsk Group format thus implies a unilateral Western
solution to the Karabagh problem, with active Turkish participation to
boot, which can never be beneficial for Armenia. By the way, realism
on this issue demands to say also that a unilateral Russian solution
would also not be in Armenia’s interests, since Russia has stated on
numerous occasions that it sees such a solution only within the
confines of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. This, however, is an
abstract observation, since there is no threat of a unilateral Russian
solution to the problem, mainly because Azerbaijan would never agree
to that.

Whereas, the opposite, i.e. an exclusively Western, or more
specifically American and Turkish, solution is an entirely real
prospect, as I tried to demonstrate.

Does Serge Sargsyan realize the dangers of jumping into the West’s
embrace and granting it the monopoly of resolving the Karabagh
conflict and that such a step can lead to a national catastrophe?
There is no doubt that he does not. He is trying to play the same game
with the West as Robert Kocharyan has played for the last ten
years. The essence of that game, which I have explicated in detail in
my speech on October 26, 2007, was to pretend that Armenia was
genuinely interested in resolving the Karabagh conflict, but in
reality to try to sabotage that process and to maintain the status
quo.

And even though the OSCE mediators have in their turn pretended to
believe the sincerity of the Armenian side, it does not mean that they
have not understood the latter’s not very sophisticated game. The fact
that they have not expended much effort to get the conflict resolved
is because on the list of great powers’ priorities Karabagh had an
extremely secondary importance. International terrorism, North Korea,
the Balkans, Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, the Arab-Israeli conflict, and a
multitude of other questions have always obscured the Karabagh
problem.

If Serge Sargsyan thinks he can continue to play this game, he is
fatally mistaken, because he is not taking into account three
substantial changes in the geopolitics of the South Caucasus:

1. However paradoxical it may seem, after recognizing Abkhazia’s and
South Ossetia’s independence, Russia’s influence in this region is
showing tendencies of diminishing rather than increasing in strength;

2. Russia is being forced out of the Minsk Group format, therefore, it
is losing its role in the process of resolving the Karabagh conflict;

3. In contrast to the last ten years, the Karabagh problem today has
become a priority for the West.

The logic driving the West’s policy toward Russia relies on the
following: `Very well, you solved the problems in Abkhazia and South
Ossetia, now we are going to solve the problem in Nagorno-Karabagh.’
What is frustrating about this situation is that as the West could do
nothing to prevent Russia from solving the problems in Abkhazia and
South Ossetia, Russia in all likelihood will be unable to prevent the
West from solving the Karabagh problem. The deepening of the
international financial crisis and the threat of that crisis becoming
uncontrollable can become the only impediment creating certain
obstacles on the path of implementing the West’s plan for resolving
the Karabagh conflict. * * *

The factor of confronting Russia, however, is only one of the many
motives conditioning the West’s behavior, and certainly not the main
one. The main factor is Serge Sargsyan’s weakness and the
unprecedented opportunity to exploit it. The presence of such levers
as the absence of legitimacy, the degree to which he is corrupted, and
the vulnerabilities that exist in his moral character, are like a
treasure the West has found. Which other leader of Armenia would agree
to jump to the West’s embrace so unreservedly, to deepen the
cooperation with NATO, to turn its back to Russia, to contribute to
its exclusion from the Minsk group, to endorse the creation of the
forgotten proposal of a commission of Armenian and Turkish historians,
which would raise doubts about the factual veracity of the genocide
and torpedo the process of its international recognition, to agree to
hold trilateral Armenian-Turkish-Azerbaijani negotiations, and
finally, literally to put Nagorno-Karabagh up for sale?

In exchange for all of this, the West is naturally ready to turn a
blind eye on Serge Sargsyan’s all aforementioned flaws, to forget the
scandalous elections of February 19 and the atrocity of March 1, to
pretend not to see his dictatorial domestic policy, to tolerate the
curbs put on constitutional liberties and the wide-spread human rights
violations, and to have the resigned attitude toward the fact of the
existence of political prisoners in Armenia. Serge Sargsyan has in
essence received a green light from the West to do as he pleases in
domestic affairs, which is evidenced by the recent escalation of
police violence against the people. This behavior of the West, aside
from being immoral and demonstrating that the West is ready to
compromise on its values for a very low price, contains an element of
conspiracy that is being hatched against Karabagh.

Serge Sargsyan either does not feel this danger, or he cannot imagine
another method of retaining his power. He has gotten himself into the
cauldron of a geopolitical game, the consequences of which are going
to be if not catastrophic, then at least unfavorable for Armenia and
Karabagh. After the presidential elections in Azerbaijan on October 15
the West and Turkey are going to increase the pressure on Armenia and
to speed up the process of resolving the Karabagh conflict,
simultaneously, as I already mentioned, trying to exclude Russia from
it.

Russia will certainly try to counteract against such developments,
which are undesirable for it, but how effective, and how beneficial
for Armenia Russia’s steps will be, is not clear. We should not ignore
the Iranian factor either. Although it is the only country, which has
to date pursued a balanced policy in the South Caucasus, having tried
to maintain normal relations with Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Armenia,
the increased Western and Turkish activism cannot cause a certain
level of anxiety there. And it has already done so, which is evidenced
by the hastily organized visit of Armenia’s Minister of Foreign
Affairs to Iran.

Only God knows how Serge Sargsyan is going to figure a way out of this
complicated geopolitical situation. If he thinks that by ingratiating
himself to the West he can win time and even evade a resolution to the
Karabagh conflict, and later somehow mend the fences with Russia, then
he really does not understand anything in politics. And if Sargsyan is
pinning hopes on the idea that being preoccupied with presidential
elections and with the problem of dealing with the financial crisis
America is not going to engage in a serious effort to resolve the
conflict, he is going to be disappointed, because resolving the
conflict in the newly created circumstances is not going to demand too
much of the USA. One also cannot fail to take into account the
possibility that the outgoing American administration would like to
crown its departure with such a success as the resolution of the
Karabagh conflict and the normalization of the Armenian-Turkish
relations. * * *

Thus, it is perfectly obvious that we are standing on the brink of a
resolution to the Karabagh conflict. It is also beyond doubt that the
Madrid proposal, which the Minsk Group gave to the parties in
December, 2007, and which is based on the idea of reconciling two
principles of international law ` the right to national
self-determination and the principle of inviolability of territorial
integrity ` will be the basis of the new proposal. As for the essence
of the resolution or the specific program, it will consist of
approximately the following points:

1. Withdrawal of Armenian forces from the Azerbaijani regions
surrounding Nagorno-Karabagh;

2. Resettlement of these regions with Azerbaijani refugees;

3. Return of Azerbaijani refugees to the territory of Nagorno-Karabagh
itself;

4. Provision of an overland link connecting Nagorno-Karabagh to
Armenia through the Lachin corridor;

5. Deployment of peace-keeping forces on across the borders of
Nagorno-Karabagh;

6. Demilitarization of the territories that have been returned to
Azerbaijan;

7. Lifting of the blockade of Armenia’s and Karabagh’s external
communications, and reopening of the Armenian-Turkish border;

8. Definition of an interim status for Nagorno-Karabagh Republic;

9. Conduct of a referendum on the final status of Nagorno-Karabagh in
some undefined, future date;

10. Provision of international financial aid for the restoration of
the conflict zone.

Considering also that apparently an effort is underway to resolve the
Karabagh conflict and normalize the Armenian-Turkish relations in a
package, we should not rule out the possibility that the package will
include the question of the creation of a commission of historians to
study the genocide. Since Serge Sargsyan has swallowed the hook on
this issue, they are not going to let go of his collar.

Of course, we can discuss which of the points listed above are
beneficial for Azerbaijan and Turkey and which ones for Armenia, but
it is a pointless endeavor, because they can only be appreciated in
their entirety and interconnectedness. It is more essential to figure
out which points are going especially to complicate the negotiations.
Points 3, 4, and 9, which respectively deal with the return of
Azerbaijani refugees to Karabagh proper, the definition of the legal
status for the Lachin corridor, and the conduct of a referendum in
Nagorno-Karabagh are going to be the hardest to resolve. But taking
into consideration the latest geopolitical developments, I think these
difficulties are not going to be insurmountable for the mediators.

What we need to understand is that if up to recently the co-chairmen
of the Minsk Group have followed the principle of achieving an
agreement among the parties, now the West has the opportunity to
impose its preferred solution, i.e. to implement the Dayton
variant. It is sad that the same Dayton logic implies that
Nagorno-Karabagh will not participate in the resolution process, and
its interests in the upcoming fateful negotiations will be represented
by Armenia, as the interests of the Bosnian Serbs were represented by
Yugoslavia. Soon we are probably going to become the witnesses of
Armenia and Azerbaijan participating in a Dayton type conference
initiated by the USA and Turkey, where Russia and France as
co-chairing countries of the Minks Group will participate, but at best
as observers. In this regard, I don’t think the timing of adopting a
final resolution on Armenia by the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe ` January, 2009 ` is chosen by coincidence. That is
how much time has been given to Serge Sargsyan to fulfill the promises
he has given regarding the resolution of the Karabagh conflict,
otherwise the threatened sanctions will finally be imposed.

Of course, Serge Sargsyan alone should not be saddled with the
responsibility for the current situation. In the final analysis, this
is the consequence of Kocharyan administration’s eight-year-long
deplorable policy on the resolution of the Karabagh conflict and the
normalization of the Armenian-Turkish relations, and for which the
responsibility should be shared also by the all coalition governments
that came one after the other, the criminalized National Assembly, the
official press, the intelligentsia that was fed from the government’s
trough and the pocket political parties. Today we are eating the
bitter fruits of that policy, as well as the criminal behavior of the
kleptocratic system created under Kocharyan.

* * *

It is beyond doubt that the West is not going to miss this most
convenient opportunity to resolve the Karabagh conflict, which
threatens to confront the Armenian authorities with extremely serious
problems. It is not clear from the latter’s behavior and statements
whether they realize the seriousness of the situation, and if they do,
what measures they are taking to confront this dangerous
challenge. Meanwhile, there are certain obvious steps that can be
taken to blunt the external pressures and to improve the Armenian
authorities’ positions in the upcoming negotiations. By measures I do
not mean the empty calls to unity directed at the Armenian nation,
which Serge Sargsyan recently made in his address to the
representatives of the Armenian community of the USA, but very
specific political initiatives, such as:

1. Alleviating the political and social tensions in Armenia, ensuring
the primacy of the law, ceasing to put curbs on democratic freedoms,
stopping the unrestrained violations of human rights, uprooting the
wide-spread corruption, stopping the plunder of the country’s wealth,
which goes on unpunished, getting rid of unscrupulous and criminalized
officials, restoring the independence of legislative and judicial
branches of power, starting a constructive dialogue with the society –
in a word, neutralizing all those things that have become levers in
the hands of the outside world for putting pressure on Armenia;

2. Improving the relations with Russia and work out the disputes that
have lately arisen in those relations. Doing everything to prevent
Russia’s exclusion from the Minsk Group on the basis of the simple
realization that violation of the balance between the West and Russia
in the process of settling the Karabagh conflict promises nothing
good;

3. Making an effort to achieve clarity on the issue of the referendum
on Karabagh’s status, demanding specificity on the following points in
particular:

‘ Who is going to organize the referendum? The UN, the OSCE,
Azerbaijan, or Karabagh?

‘ When is the referendum going to take place?

‘ What territory is the referendum going to cover?

‘ Who is going to participate in the referendum?

‘ What is going to be the formulation of the referendum question?

‘ What kind of legal consequences is the referendum going to have?

4. Abandoning the discredited practice of Armenia speaking on behalf
of Karabagh in the negotiating process, and demanding instead to
restore the previous format of those negotiations, where, following
the decision adopted during OSCE’s Budapest summit in 1994,
Nagorno-Karabagh was recognized as a full party to the conflict. It
should not be allowed to decide Karabagh’s fate without its
participation, because one can hardly imagine a worse violation of the
right to self-determination than that.

5. Taking into account the disconcerting fact that after the
recognitions of Kosovo, Abkhazia, and South Ossetia the problem of
Karabagh in a certain sense has been left out of the general context
of resolving the frozen conflicts, perhaps it is time to think about
the possibility of the National Assembly putting forward an initiative
to recognize Karabagh’s independence. Serge Sargsyan should not feel
obligated to react to that initiative. But having the National
Assembly’s decision, while leaving the question of ratifying that
decision suspended, he will get a big opportunity to maneuver in
response to the external pressures during the upcoming
negotiations. The situation is not an ordinary one, and hence it
demands extraordinary steps, diplomatic magic and flights of
imagination.

* * *

Being one of the most influential forces in Armenia’s political life,
the Popular Movement or the Armenian National Congress has an
obligation to outline its position in this situation. If you remember,
in one of my previous speeches I had stated that in our political
struggle we put national and state interests above everything, and
that in case of a military threat against Karabagh I would appeal to
the participants of the movement and ask them to suspend their
activities and take up the sacred cause of the national struggle. The
imminent resolution of the Karabagh conflict is equivalent to a
military threat given the dangers that it contains, and, therefore, I
think it makes the fulfillment of that appeal imperative.

We are not talking, of course, about a complete suspension of the
activities of the movement, but only about a temporary stop to the
mass rallies and marches throughout the republic. Especially, since
the suspension is not going to last long, because the untangling of
this process is a matter of two-three months. And if that process is
extended due to new circumstances, for instance, because of the
deepening of the international financial crisis, we will always have
the opportunity to make corrections in our strategy and resume the
actions of mass protest whenever necessary.

I confess that this is a momentous decision, which is difficult to
accept at first glance, and which will become subject to all sorts of
judgments. It should therefore be easier to understand how serious and
well-founded the reasons are that have determined the need to make
such a decision.

To appreciate that need we have to take into account the
following. The activity of the movement automatically weakens Serge
Sargsyan’s positions and expands the opportunities for putting
pressures on him from the outside in the current context of a sharp
turn in the process of resolving the Karabagh conflict following the
Russian-Georgian conflict. In other words, there is danger that the
opposition can unwittingly become a tool in the hands of the external
forces. The behavior of these forces, therefore, could be considered
as doubly immoral: on one hand they tolerate, or one could even say
they encourage the repressions unleashed against the opposition by the
Armenian authorities, and on the other hand they are trying to exploit
that same opposition’s activity to their sinister ends.

To fall into this trap would be an inexcusable mistake and a case of
political shortsightedness. Moreover, it would fundamentally
contradict the Popular Movement’s main tenet, which rests on the
principle of the primacy of state interests. Consequently, being
sincerely in favor of both resolving the Karabagh conflict and
normalizing the Armenian-Turkish relations in a speedy manner, we do
not want to prevent the Armenian authorities from solving these
problems. By suspending our activities we only want to shield them
from external pressures and from the need to make unnecessary
concessions. There are also certain tactical considerations for taking
this step, but I do not consider it necessary to reveal them, since as
I have had the opportunity to point out before, if tactics are
revealed they cease to be tactics.

I realize very well that the governing camp is going to scoff at our
decision to stop even temporarily the actions of mass protest, and
that there are going to be complaints and doubts in the ranks of the
popular movement. But I want to dash the hopes of the scoffers and
calm the doubters. Looking for elements of retreat or a deal with the
authorities in our decision is not a serious endeavor. In a few months
everybody is going to be convinced how justified and well-founded this
decision was.

The suspension of rallies and marches throughout the republic does not
mean that the Movement is pulling out of the struggle or withdrawing
the demands that it has put forward, which include the immediate
release of the political prisoners, the establishment of a real
democracy and the rule of law in the country, the conduct of pre-term
presidential and parliamentary elections. To the contrary, we are
convinced that this move is going to accelerate the realization of
these goals.

In the upcoming months the Movement is going to concentrate its
activities mainly on organizational work and on the formation of the
structures of the Armenian National Congress in order to prepare for
the founding convention of the Congress, which is going to become an
important event in the political life of Armenia, and which is
simultaneously going to prepare the grounds for even more populous
public events if organizing them becomes necessary. Parallel to that,
we are going to continue with smaller acts of protest, with
participating actively in the political trials, with endorsing and
defending our own candidates in the local elections, with the campaign
of raising public awareness through the distribution of DVDs and
through the print media, with our own investigation into the crime of
March 1 and the revelation of the real culprits of that crime.

It is significant that we are taking this decision not when the
Movement is in decline, but when it is in ascendancy, i.e. during the
most populous rally since March 1, which is the best manifestation of
both the power and the capacity to restraint of the Armenian National
Congress.

Thus in the upcoming months we will become witness to very important
events connected to Karabagh and to the fate of the Armenian
statehood, which in this juncture make internal political problems
secondary. We are going to follow very carefully the progression of
those events, to assess how adequate the Armenian authorities’ moves
are given the situation, to keep the society informed on the process
of resolving the Karabagh conflict, and to try to prevent or minimize
the threat to the interests of the Armenian side. We expect the same
kind of concern from all the healthy political and civic
organizations, which care about the future of the nation and the
state.

In the end I would ask you not to make hasty conclusions from my
speech, but rather to form an opinion about it after reading it in
tomorrow’s newspapers. I hope that this speech will finally jump start
a long overdue debate regarding the Karabagh problem, in the process
of which many things will become clearer to you.

I thank you for your attention.

The Artist Inside Dr. Death Jack Kevorkian To Open Exhibition Of His

THE ARTIST INSIDE DR. DEATH JACK KEVORKIAN TO OPEN EXHIBITION OF HIS PAINTINGS AT ARMENIAN MUSEUM IN WATERTOWN
by Erica Noonan Globe Staff

The Boston Globe
October 2, 2008 Thursday
MA

GLOBE NORTH 1

The art is severe, and at times disturbing.

So is the artist, Dr. Jack Kevorkian, who will be in Watertown on
Sunday to unveil an exhibition of 16 of his paintings owned by the
Armenian Library and Museum of America.

This weekend’s planned appearance will be a rare out-of-state trip for
Kevorkian, a former pathologist from Michigan who earned the nickname
"Dr. Death" for his advocacy of assisted suicide, and who by his
estimate helped 130 terminally ill people take their lives. Kevorkian
has been free on parole since June 2007, after serving eight years in
prison. He was convicted of second-degree murder in 1999 for giving
a lethal injection to a 52-year-old man with Lou Gehrig’s disease.

Visiting the museum is a homecoming of sorts. Kevorkian, 80, is the
child of two Armenian genocide survivors, and the anguish suffered by
his ancestors is reflected in several of his pieces. "1915 Genocide
1945" mixes real human blood with paint to commemorate the extinction
of 1.5 million Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman Turkish empire,
and three decades later the murder of 6 million Jews under Nazi
Germany.

In a phone interview last week, he said he doesn’t consider himself
an artist, just someone who "puts in paint the condition of the world
that we live in."

Kevorkian said he began to paint as a hobby when he was a young
man. But he kept delving into the topics of life and death that he
dealt with as a medical examiner. "Everyone was painting landscapes
and clowns and I couldn’t see the value in that. I guess the rebel
in me was thinking I’ll shock them," he recalled.

That urge provoked him to paint "Very Still Life," a brightly rendered
image of an iris bloom growing through a denuded skull and scattered
bones.

"I thought I’d shake them up and they’d be shocked," he said of
the piece. But instead, he said, his classmates and instructor
"were fascinated."

Most of Kevorkian’s artworks are political or religious in nature,
although the exhibition includes a later triptych tribute to composer
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and his music that portrays a brighter view
of life, said museum curator Gary Lind-Sinanian.

Many of his original works were stolen from a storage unit in
California, where Kevorkian was living in the late 1970s, but he
repainted many from memory. He donated them and other personal effects
to the Watertown museum before entering prison in Michigan to serve
a 10- to 25-year term, which was shortened for good behavior and
because Kevorkian was ill with hepatitis and diabetes.

The exhibition will feature some new works, including portraits of
the artist’s parents, that are on loan to the museum, Lind-Sinanian
said. The 3 p.m. reception Sunday is part of a slate of provocative
events at the museum this fall, including an appearance next Wednesday
by Mark Krikorian, author of "The New Case Against Immigration,
Both Legal and Illegal."

Bringing Kevorkian to the library and museum may upset some people
who disagree with physician-assisted suicide, acknowledged director
Mariam Stepanyan. But its mission is "to preserve the heritage of
Armenians for future generations, and to make it relevant for current
generations," she said, and the doctor is among the world’s most
famous Armenian-Americans.

"His art and how he intersects it with religion and the present day
is informed by the experience of the Armenian people," she said. "He
is very connected to his heritage."

Kevorkian is scheduled to follow his Watertown appearance with an
open forum Monday at Harvard Law School, where he expects to discuss
his current run for Congress, among other topics.

"My platform is talking about the real problems in this country,"
he said. "I call myself a radical, which some people think implies
violent behavior. But it comes from the Latin root, which means
`growing straight from the ground.’ I see it as getting straight to
the gist of a problem."

He runs as a independent, Kevorkian said, because belonging to a
political party "straitjackets your mind."

Kevorkian, who was stripped of his Michigan medical license in 1991,
is forbidden under his parole agreement to discuss specific euthanasia
techniques or his assisted-suicide work, including the 1998 case
that led to his conviction after a videotape of the procedure was
broadcast on "60 Minutes." He must also get special permission to
travel out of Michigan.

Kevorkian’s political platform includes prison reform, public
education overhaul, and constitutional rights. He’s also quick to
opine on the news of the day, including the current economic meltdown:
"The solution is not so simple as to throw a lot of money at it,"
he said. "It will just make leaders more corrupt."

His art will stay on public display in Watertown for two months. "We’re
hoping people come and keep an open mind and see the rest of the
treasures that are here," said Lind-Sinanian.

The opening reception for "The Doctor Is Out: The Art of Dr. Jack
Kevorkian" is 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday at the Armenian Library and Museum of
America, 65 Main St., Watertown. The show will run through Dec. 5. More
information is available at

www.almainc.org.

PM Tigran Sargsyan’s Visit To The US Continues

PM TIGRAN SARGSYAN’S VISIT TO THE US CONTINUES

armradio.am
14.10.2008 13:03

Within the framework of his visit to the United States Prime Minister
of Armenia Tigran Sargsyan had meetings with the Executive Director
of the International Monetary Fund Dominique Strauss Kahn and the
Prime Minister of Georgia Lado Gurgenidze.

During the meeting with the Executive Director of the International
Monetary Fund the interlocutors discussed issues of the economic crisis
in the world, the trends of fall of oil prices and the possible impact
of those processes on the Armenian economy. The parties discussed the
perspectives of establishing an IMF Office in Yerevan, agreeing to
refer to the question in November, when the IMF delegation is going
to Armenia.

During the meeting with the Georgian Prime Minister, the parties
discussed the process of preparation of the sitting of the
Armenian-Georgian Intergovernmental Commission to be held in Tbilisi
October 27-28 and referred to questions of the latest developments
in the region.

PM Tigran Sargsyan participated also in the annual sitting of the World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund. Today the Prime Minister
of Armenia is expected to meet US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

New York.- By Vicki James Yiannias – Community: Telling About The De

NEW YORK.- BY VICKI JAMES YIANNIAS – COMMUNITY: TELLING ABOUT THE DESTRUCTION OF SMYRNA, 1922

Greek News
October 13 @ 11:49:34
New York

"I was writing a novel which had one chapter set in Smyrna. When I
started to research this chapter, I realized the need for a serious
work of history about the city and its destruction," Giles Milton,
historian, journalist, and author of Paradise Lost – Smyrna 1922 –
The Destruction of a Christian City in the Islamic World, told the
Greek News, "There is a real hunger to know what happened and why. If
my book helps to answer some of these questions then it will have
fulfilled a purpose."

The title of the book is not gratuitous, says the author, "To the
Americans who poured into this most alluring of Middle Eastern cities
at the bang of the 20th century, Smyrna seemed like paradise. So much
so that they gave this name to their large and wealthy colony on the
outskirts of the city."

The critically acclaimed new book was presented by the Consulate
General of Greece, the GreekAmerica Foundation, and Greek America
magazine, to a large audience of Greek and foreign journalists and
correspondents to the U.N., members of U.N. missions, Greek Americans,
and philhellenes at the Greek Press and Communication Office in New
York on October 2nd.

Consul General of Greece in New York Mrs. Agi Balta, introduced the
book and Greg Pappas of the GreekAmerica Foundation, and Greek America
magazine moderated the event. The author read abstracts of his book
and took questions from the audience.

Paradise Lost recounts the days of prosperity and the days of horror
in Smyrna — known as the richest and most cosmopolitan city in the
Ottoman Empire, and a majority Christian city that was unique in the
Islamic world — prior, during and after the war in the beginning of
the 20th century.

"What happened there in September 1922 was to prove one of the
most compelling human dramas of the 20th century, says Milton, "One
million innocent civilians – men, women, and children from scores of
different nationalities – were caught in a humanitarian disaster on
a scale that the world had never before seen. One million people were
trapped on the quayside – trapped between the sea, the Turkish machine
gun posts and a devastating fire. But the fire – and the refugees –
was only a part of the story. The destruction of Smyrna was to lead
to a far greater crisis. Two million people were to find themselves
caught up in a catastrophe on a truly epic scale."

While Paradise Lost tells of the devastating destiny of the city of
Smyrna and its people, it also provides an examination of political
and religious relations at the time and it tells a fascinating,
yet horrifying, story with clarity and insight.

Eyewitness testimonies, diary entries, and letters – some of them
published for the first time – are all part of this meticulously
researched, informed account. Paradise Lost is tells the story of the
cityʼs burning from an unusual and interesting angle and perspective,
from the viewpoint of the Levantine population in Smyrna.

Milton explains that he wanted to tell the story, where possible, from
the Levantine point of view. Who were the Levantines, and why tell
the story from their point of view? "These were wealthy Europeans
who had lived in Smyrna for two centuries; they did not care who
ruled the city as long as they could continue to make money. As such,
they are impartial witnesses. From everything I read – both their own
writings and those by Americans in the city – it is without question
that Smryna was burned by the Turks."

For many of the Greek survivors of the cataclysmic destruction of
the city and its inhabitants, the story was too painful to tell, says
Milton. "Children of the Greek survivors know less than others about
the Catastrophe because their parents don’t want to remember. I met
many second and third generation Greeks in America who have almost
no idea what their parents and grandparents experienced in Smyrna.

And the story of Smyrna is little known in Britain or America,
Milton stresses, even though there are many elements that are
extremely relevant to us today. "Genocide and ethnic cleansing –
both of which occurred in Turkey at this time – are still with us –
think of the Balkans and Rwanda"

The burning of Smyrna is part of the same chapter of history that
was the Armenian genocide, ‘Turkey for the Turks’ was the slogan; in
an age of nationalism, there were no longer any place for Turkey’s
‘troublesome’ Christian minorities, says Milton. "It is perhaps
ironic that Ataturk’s republic, built along democratic, secular lines,
was founded upon the expulsion of all the minority groups of the old
Ottoman Empire."

There are important lessons for us to be learned in this, says the
author, who is interested in the idea of Smyrna as the prototype of
our own modern cities – multi-ethnic and cosmopolitan. "It alarmed me
to see just how quickly such a diverse city – where Greeks, Armenians
and Turks had lived as neighbours and friends – could be destroyed. And
there is also the question of great powers intervening in the affairs
of a foreign country. In Turkey, Britain and America used a proxy
(Greece) to carry out their foreign policy. Nowadays, those same to
powers intervene with their own armies. If we had learned lessons
from Smyrna, the mess in Iraq might never have happened."

Having lived alongside each other as neighbors for centuries Greeks
and Turks in Smyrna shared some cultural roots, says the author. "They
had a shared culture, heritage, music, cuisine. Time and again in
the Greek archives the Greeks speak of getting along extremely well
with their neighboring Turks…you read of the different communities
in Smyrna living alongside each other in peace and harmony; they
played in the same football teams, went to each other’s weddings
etc. It was the rise of nationalism that caused the rupture in these
harmonious relations. With the rise of nationalism, all this came to
an abrupt end. Centuries of friendship was torn apart in the space
of a few months."

Milton explains that there are two groups in Turkey taking
two different stands (on the history of the event: the liberal
intelligentsia and the rabid materialists. Turkey is a divided
country. The educated liberal intelligentsia is willing to speak about
Turkeyʼs role in history. But the ardent nationalists refuse to admit
that any wrongs were committed. According to most Turkish historians,
Smyrna was burned by either the Armenians or the retreating Greek
army. It is almost impossible to publish a book in Turkey saying
otherwise."

Will the book be sold in Turkey? "There is the infamous Penal Code
301 which forbids publication of anything that ʽpublicly denigrates
Turkishnessʼ. My book does not do that…it simply tells the story
of what happened in Smyrna. Several publishers turned the book down,
although they thought it was fascinating. But now I have one publisher
who believes it is very important that the story be known to a wider
audience in Turkey."

–Boundary_(ID_m71H+hppOWDOPVHQJN2u 4A)–