Ankara: Armenians Happy With Warm Turkish Welcome

ARMENIANS HAPPY WITH WARM TURKISH WELCOME

Hurriyet Daily News
Monday, October 12, 2009

CONTENT: Armenian Football Federation chief Ruben Hayrapetyan is
happy with the way the squad was welcomed in Bursa. AA photo

The Armenian national football team arrived in Bursa on Monday for
its World Cup qualifying round match against Turkey.

Turkey and Armenia will play their last fixture for Group 5 of the
2010 World Cup Qualifying tournament on Wednesday at Bursa’s Ataturk
Stadium.

Both teams have lost their hopes of qualifying for the World Cup,
but the game is still an important one, as it comes just after the
two countries signed protocols that may be the first step to solving
their troubles that date back a century.

Speaking after arriving in the northwestern city of Bursa, Armenian
Football Federation Chairman Ruben Hayrapetyan voiced his satisfaction
with the way the squad was welcomed.

"We were welcomed very well in Bursa," said Hayrapetyan. "Thanks to
the Turkish authorities for organizing it so well.

"I hope everything will be fine in the game, and both teams make a
good ending [to the campaign]."

In light of both countries’ political history, there were worries
of trouble triggered by ultra-nationalist groups in Bursa, but the
government took a string of precautions to avoid them.

"The tickets to the game will not be sold," daily Hurriyet reported
on Monday, "and will be distributed to hundreds of policemen and
soldiers who will enter the stadium as civilians."

The Bursa Police Department also warned Turkish citizens of Azerbaijani
origin who were reportedly planning to go to the game to protest
the normalization of relations between the Turkish and Armenian
governments.

The daily said the supporters were warned to avoid signs, banners or
flags related to Azerbaijan.

Armavia Launches New Yerevan – Bahrain Flight

ARMAVIA LAUNCHES NEW YEREVAN – BAHRAIN FLIGHT

PanARMENIAN.Net
12.10.2009 18:59 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armavia Air Company is opening a new gateway to
the Middle East. From now on, in addition to such cities as Dubai,
Beirut and Aleppo, Armavia clients will be able to visit Bahrain,
Armavia’s forth point of destination in the Middle East.

Flights to Bahrain and v.v. will be operating on Mondays, starting
from October 26, 2009.

An Open Letter To The Armenian Nation

AN OPEN LETTER TO THE ARMENIAN NATION
By Raffi K. Hovannisian

lrahos15520.html
16:46:48 – 12/10/2009

PROTOCOLS AND PRECONDITIONS

The history of the Armenian people has been an ordeal of suffering,
tragedy, and genocide. In this millennial series of misfortunes,
however, never has the nation invited destruction upon itself.

But today it stands at the brink, with a small group of improperly
elected leaders apparently racing toward a forsaking of both identity
and interest.

With the stroke of a pen, the Armenian president and his foreign
minister have crossed the line of danger and dignity; in Zurich,
Switzerland on October 10, 2009, they resigned from a long-standing
national quest to preserve the fundamental rights, security, and
integrity of an ancient land and its native heirs.

The signing of the two diplomatic "protocols" between Armenia and
Turkey might indeed constitute the latest entry in the ledger of
crimes committed, and covered up, against the Armenian nation.

Core Values are Not Commodities

As a servant of the Armenian nation, reflecting both prior office
and present opposition, I am appalled by this latest offense. As an
Armenian citizen, for many years denied that honor by successive
authorities, I ache as the soul of our nation is traded away for
illusory promises of "good will" and "open borders" with Turkey.

Our vital values, from our collective responsibility as heirs of
the Genocide to our individual expression of liberty and belonging,
are not commodities. That unrequited murderous conception of 1915-the
original plan to drive to extinction the Armenian people, the Armenian
homeland, and so the Armenian species-is one of the principal sources
of our modern identity, just as its equitable resolution is the anchor
of our future national security.

This is Duplicity, Not Diplomacy

What will "open borders," a courtesy commonly extended at no cost to
all civilized nations, cost the Armenians?

Of course every Armenian seeks peace, prosperity, and good-neighborly
relations. But what we have in these protocols is only an expensive
illusion of them.

The ends, generally stated, are sound: Open borders and normal
diplomatic relations among neighbors are pure and prudent goals. But
the means we use must be as pure and prudent as the ends we
seek. Unfortunately, the secretive diplomatic process launched by the
Armenian and Turkish administrations is defective at the fundaments,
sourced as they are in bloody soil, where a pronounced asymmetry of
power survives to this day.

First, the protocols stipulate that Armenia relinquish its lawful
historic rights and extend an unlimited de jure recognition of Turkey’s
de facto borders, which were drawn and defined on the very basis of
the eradication and violent dispossession of the Armenian people
from its ancestral heartland. In so doing they demand, and have
received, the Armenian presidency’s endorsement of that fantastic
crime against humanity which has deprived generations of Armenians
of its civilization, heritage, and patrimony.

Second, the protocols entail a joint condemnation of terrorism,
yet fail to include any corresponding renunciation of the broader
criminal outrage of genocide.

Third, the protocols impose a requirement for a "dialogue on the
historical dimension" of relations. This measure, representing
a unilateral attempt at imprisoning the Armenian genocide in a
bilateral echo chamber, not only challenges the untouchable veracity
of the Genocide, but secures the complicity of the Armenian state in
absolving Turkey of any responsibility for its genocidal actions.

Once these terms are brought to life, absolutely little will remain
of the legitimate expectation to secure Turkey’s and the world’s
reaffirmation of and redemption for the Genocide. Turkey will forever
deflect and delay liabilities for its genocidal acts by leveraging
the infinite and inconclusive nature of the bilateral "dialogue."

Normalization or not, these protocols move us not one inch toward
reconciliation, that pure and total communion based on the truth-a
brave recognition of all aspects of shared Turkish-Armenian history,
including the great genocide and national dispossession of the
Armenian people.

The Protocols in the Proper Perspective

In all the pomp and circumstance of diplomatic "breakthroughs,"
we cannot forget that the burden of "normalization" rests, as it
always has rested, with the Turkish republic. The decisions to
close the border with Armenia and to withhold normal diplomatic
relations-violations, both, of all viable international norms-were
decisions that Turkey made and realized on its own. Hence, each of
the Turkish "concessions" reflected in the protocols represents only
the most basic minimum commitment of a decent and civilized country.

Turkey’s bare and stated readiness to open borders and normalize
relations-the extent of its responsibilities in the framework of the
protocols-is, therefore, a non-event. No international initiative
should have been necessary for those moves. And that Turkey has made
that determination now-only after accepting the sacrifice of an entire
nation-deserves not praise but continued skepticism in the substance
behind its diplomatic flourishes, whether they relate to the European
Union or broader geopolitical objectives.

>>From Protocols to Parliaments

Now that the Armenian and Turkish sides have signed these protocols,
the second stage, of ratification, is set for the parliaments at
Yerevan and Ankara.

Regrettably, dispensing with a parliament’s traditional role of
advice and consent in the foreign policy of state, the executives
have imposed a prohibition on amending or altering these protocols
in any way. While this stands in clear contradiction with democratic
standards and practices, it also denies the public and its members
in each country the right to exercise or engage their opinions in
this process. This extraordinary methodology flies in the face of
customary diplomatic practice, which calls for the establishment of
official relations through a simple exchange of notes.

The scheme here is plain, perfectly tailored, and aimed at tying down
for good history’s loose ends. Soon the Armenian National Assembly,
too, will be called upon to bear complicit responsibility in giving
legislative validation nearly 90 years after the fact to the illegal
Bolshevik-Kemalist pacts which crowned the genocidal process and
sought to seal the fate of the Armenian nation.

What is more, not content with pursuing this official acceptance
of Turkey’s long-standing occupation of the Armenian homeland,
its leaders will continue audaciously to abuse every turn of the
ratification process in order to deflect their own culpability by
linking implementation of the protocols and lifting of the Turkish
blockade with what they pitch as the "occupied territories of
Azerbaijan." Clearly, that would be a disingenuous and inapposite
reference to the freedom-loving people of Mountainous Karabagh, its
odds-defying liberation and constitutional decolonization from the
Turco-Stalinist legacy, and its resultant territorial integrity.

In the final analysis, Armenian and Turkish citizens have been refused
both voice and choice in determining the outcome of an immensely
significant process that will forge the future course of both
countries. This is especially distressing, because on the judgments
to be made in the coming weeks and months shall turn the fate of
generations to come-and their imperative to face history, remember
collectively, and bridge in earnest the great Turkish-Armenian divide.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/politics-

Azerbaijan Comments On Protocols

AZERBAIJAN COMMENTS ON PROTOCOLS

/azerbaijan
07:14 pm | October 12, 2009

Politics

Azerbaijan started heated discussions on the Armenian-Turkish Protocols
signed in Zurich, Switzerland.

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry was the first to come forth with a
statement. "Azerbaijan believes the pledges of brotherly Turkey and
is hopeful that the Karabakh conflict will be resolved within the
territorial integrity of Azerbaijan."

Note that Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdo"an made a
similar statement on October 11 saying that no breakthrough can be
anticipated in the relations unless Armenian troops are withdrawn
from the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

A number of politicians have shared opinions on the Protocols.

According to Wafa Guluzade, Turkey signed the Protocols under the
pressure of the USA.

The step was humiliating for Turkey, but Turkey signed the documents
to weaken Russia’s position in the region and to make Armenia withdraw
from the influence of Moscow, said Wafa Guluzade.

"Following the signing ceremony Serzh Sargsyan was summoned to Moscow
to detail the documents. I think Russia will play its game," said
the politician.

The expert says Turkey hopes to join the European Union, and therefore,
neglects the interests of Baku, and goes to a rapprochement with
Armenia.

Another Azerbaijani political scientist, Zardusht Alizadeh, believes
that the Protocols are advantageous to Armenia and Turkey in the
sense that Europe will remove senseless accusations from Ankara.

In addition, he argues that the settlement of the Karabakh conflict
lies in the lines of the Protocols since the signing ceremony was
attended by the OSCE Minsk Group.

Rasim Musabekov thinks the ratification will take a long time, since
the Armenian parliament will introduce some changes in the document
and make it inadmissible for Turkey.

http://a1plus.am/en/politics/2009/10/12

Turkish FM: Armenian-Turkish Protocols Reaffirm Lausanne Treaty

TURKISH FM: ARMENIAN-TURKISH PROTOCOLS REAFFIRM LAUSANNE TREATY

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.10.2009 11:35 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenia-Turkey protocols will reaffirm Turkey’s
borders with Armenia as outlined by the Lausanne Treaty of 1923, said
Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu during a press conference
Thursday.

In response to a question about the comparisons made between Turkey’s
Lausanne Treaty and the protocols with Armenia, the minister added
that the protocols are an agreement with Armenia outlining bi-lateral
relations. The protocols are expected to be signed by foreign
ministers of Turkey and Armenia in Zurich on Saturday. Davutoglu
asserted that the specifics of the ceremony are to be announced by
the Swiss foreign ministry.

Questioned about Turkey’s participation in the process, Davutoglu said,
"Of course, Turkey has basic principles on the issue of participation,
which is known by the parties. We believe that all of these parties
will calmly reach a solution."

Asked about Thursday’s meeting between the Azerbaijani and Armenian
presidents in Moldova to discuss the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute, the
minister said, "We naturally expect positive results", Hurriyet Daily
News reported.

Vahan Hovhannisian: One Has To Be Blind To Overlook Preconditions In

VAHAN HOVHANNISIAN: ONE HAS TO BE BLIND TO OVERLOOK PRECONDITIONS IN ARMENIA-TURKEY PROTOCOLS

Noyan Tapan
Oct 7, 2009

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 7, NOYAN TAPAN. "With incomprehensible logic,
some mass media outlets are trying to convince Armenian society that
everything is allegedly quiet in the Diaspora, there is no discontent
and problems regarding the pre-signed Armenia-Turkey protocols and
their fate," the leader of the RA National Assembly "ARF" faction,
member of the ARF Bureau Vahan Hovhannisian said at the October 6
sitting of the parliament.

He informed those who try to present "the real picture in a distorted
way" that 90% of 100 thousand Armenian families surveyed from Los
Angeles to Boston and from Chicago to Miami have said "No" to the
protocols. "So as not to create an impression (to the advantage
of Turks) that this protest is only a Diaspora phenomenon, whereas
everything is quiet in Armenia, there are no problems, and everybody
applauds this process," he announced that on October 6 twelve Armenian
parties had signed a joint statement "clearly indicating those 4
serious dangers that the pre-signed protocols contain".

The statement ends with a demand "not to sign the published protocols
in this text and to make changes aimed at neutralizing the indicated
dangers".

In the words of V. Hovhannisian, "there are still people who try to
convince our public that there are no preconditions in the protocols",
whereas any international expert examination, including ones by
Swiss and American experts, proves that "preconditions exist", and
"one has to be blind to overlook them".

Signing An Illegal Step

SIGNING AN ILLEGAL STEP

5421.html
10:54:09 – 06/10/2009

Statement on the legal status of the protocols, on the establishment of
diplomatic relations between the Republic of Armenia and the Republic
of Turkey and on the development of relations between the Republic
of Armenia and the Republic of Turkey

The following is defined in the second clause of Article 2 of the law
of the Republic of Armenia on international treaties (of the 22nd of
February, 2007): "By this law, any written agreement is considered to
be an international treaty of the Republic of Armenia, be it in the
form of a treaty, agreement, convention, memorandum, protocol or as
a document of any other name, or which has been expressed with the
exchange of official notes or letters."(unofficial translation)

In my opinion, such wording has provided much broader commentary
on the concept of a treaty than is prevalent in international
public law (cf. Article 2 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of
Treaties). Nevertheless, seeing as the aforementioned definition
is different from, but not opposed to, international law, taking
it into consideration as such, let us examine the protocols on the
establishment of diplomatic relations between the Republic of Armenia
and the Republic of Turkey and on the development of relations between
the Republic of Armenia and the Republic of Turkey.

According to the definition as per the law of the Republic of
Armenia on international treaties above, a protocol between states
is an international treaty. Therefore, the passing of a protocol is
"the conclusion of necessary procedures as provided [by the law]"
(Article 8, clause 1; unofficial translation). That is to say, the
passing of such a protocol is a chain of regulated, consecutive stages
and is required by law for its provisions to be completely fulfilled
without error.

The law of the Republic of Armenia as cited provides for the following
preparatory stages for treaties, that is, the protocols, in this case:

Stage 1. The initiative to sign an international treaty

In order to commence the process of passing the Armenian-Turkish
protocols, it would be necessary as a first step to have the written
orders of the President (Article 8, clause 5).

Stage 2. Pushing forward with the initiative to sign an international
treaty

As the ministry with the corresponding purview, the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs would be obligated to prepare a statement on the appropriate
nature of signing an Armenian-Turkish protocol and drafts of such
a protocol (Article 9, clause 1), to be presented to the President
(Article 9, clause 2.1).

Stage 3. Starting the process of signing an international treaty

In this stage, the President, having received drafts of the protocols,
would express his position in a letter to the Foreign Ministry. If the
position were in the affirmative, the Foreign Ministry would start
the process of getting agreement within the state on the drafts of
the protocols within ten days of receiving the President’s written
agreement. That is, written documentation pertaining to the protocols
would be sent to all state bodies having prerogatives to do with the
matter at hand, along with the drafts (Article 10, clause 2).

Stage 4. Agreement on the drafts of the international treaty and
proposals and criticism with regards to the international treaty

The state bodies involved – and, in our case, that would be all
the ministries, as well as around twenty or so other agencies –
upon receiving the documentation and draft protocols, would present
in writing to the state body with the legal purview (the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs) proposals and criticisms pertaining to areas of
operation within their own jurisdiction, within fifteen days at the
most (Article 12, clauses 1 and

2)

Stage 5. Summation of opinions on the draft international treaty

The state body with the legal purview – the Foreign Ministry in this
case – would review or amend the draft of the international treaty
upon receiving the opinions of the state bodies with prerogatives on
the matters of the treaty (Article 14, clause 1.1).

Stage 6. Agreement on the text of the international treaty with the
opposite party

The law of the Republic of Armenia as cited has the provision that
the text of the given international treaty of the Republic of Armenia
would be agreed upon with the opposite party by authentication or
through some other means provided for by law (Article 18, clause
1). In our case, it is through authentication. It is essential to
emphasise that the given international treaty could be authenticated
by the Republic of Armenia only after the completion of the process
as defined for the preparation and authentication of the draft treaty
(Article 18, clause 2).

Conclusion. Considering the fact that the protocols in question have
not undergone "the conclusion of necessary procedures" as provided
by this law, as well as the fact that the authentication of the
protocols has been carried out without due process as defined by law
for authentication, therefore the authentication of the protocols
on the establishment of diplomatic relations between the Republic
of Armenia and the Republic of Turkey and on the development of
relations between the Republic of Armenia and the Republic of Turkey
is void, and thus the protocols themselves are not subject to being
signed. Signing them would be an illegal act.

Ara Papian Head of the Modus Vivendi Centre 5 October, 2009

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/comments-lrahos1

Corruption Problems Were Discussed At RA Government

CORRUPTION PROBLEMS WERE DISCUSSED AT RA GOVERNMENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.10.2009 19:46 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Recently, RA Government’s anti-corruption council
held a meeting, headed by RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan,
governmental press service reported.

RA Government’s anti-corruption council discussed and approved
corruption prevention strategy and 2009-2010 strategy implementation
program, submitting them to governmental ratification.

Anti-corruption strategy was developed with the assistance of OSCE
Yerevan Office, EU consulting group and RA social organizations
representatives.

Sharmazanov Vs. Sahakyan

SHARMAZANOV VS. SAHAKYAN

News.am
19:50 / 10/06/2009

"The Republican Party of Armenia respects all the appraisals of the
Armenia-Turkey normalization process, but they must be correct and
civilized," Eduard Sharmazanov, Press Secretary of the Republican
Party of Armenia (RPA) faction, stated in Parliament.

The Armenian-Turkish protocols are the first step to the resolution
of acute problems in the bilateral relations. "By initiating a
pan-Armenian tour, President Serzh Sargsyan made an unprecedented
step," Sharmazanov said. He pointed out that he understands the
Armenian Diaspora’s concern as "thorny issues like this involve
problems."

The head of the RPA faction has already called the Diasporan
representatives participating in the actions of protests "dregs of
the nation."

Hayastan All-Armenian Fund Establishes Scholarships For 10 Best Stud

HAYASTAN ALL-ARMENIAN FUND ESTABLISHES SCHOLARSHIPS FOR 10 BEST STUDENTS OF STATE AGRARIAN UNIVERSITY OF ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
Oct 5, 2009

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 5, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. In its ongoing
effort to foster agricultural development in Armenia and Artsakh,
the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund established scholarships for ten
outstanding students of the State Agrarian University of Armenia.

According to the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund, the scholarships are
initiated and sponsored by the Armenia Fund U.S. Western Region the
fund’s affiliate in the Western United States. To be eligible for
the scholarships, students must demonstrate extraordinary scholastic
achievement and come from socially vulnerable families of freedom
fighters who have lost their lives during Artsakh’s war of liberation.

"We hope that the recipients of these scholarships will go on to
dedicate themselves to their great calling, promoting agricultural
excellence in their homeland," Aida Khachikyan, social and humanitarian
projects advisor to the fund’s executive director, said.