Turkey May Say ‘No’ To EU

TURKEY MAY SAY ‘NO’ TO EU

News.am
17:22 / 10/16/2009

President of Turkey Abdullah Gul says Turkey might not be willing
to join the EU club. "If the negotiation process is successfully
concluded the French and the Austrians will go to a referendum and
will say "yes" or "no" to Turkey. But maybe, on that day, Turkey will
say "Thanks, but NO, we have decided to follow a different way," he
said Oct. 9 in Paris at the conference "French-Turkish Partnership:
To be Stronger in Europe and the World", TRT informs.

The message was mostly addressed to France which has been skeptical
about Turkey’s membership in EU. Gul underlines that Turkey becoming
a stronger country is also in the interest of France and EU.

"Indeed, you want strong partners. The tasks you can accomplish with a
weak partner are limited. This is the reason of our insistence on EU
membership, because the process is refreshing Turkey and carrying us
to EU standards. Turkey will do what’s necessary by herself. We don’t
have any requests from other countries. We just say ‘Let us improve
ourselves.’ Do not consider Turkey as a 71 million population. Turkey
has a larger hinterland. You can reach out to Middle East, Caucasus,
Central Asia and Russia easily via Turkey," he said.

French Economy, Labor and Industry Minister Christine Lagarde stated
Turkey has seen a rapid growth in recent years and became an important
actor in the global economy.

State Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan said Europe can
become a "real global power" with Turkey being included in the club,
TRT informs.

Saakashvili To Be Under Parliament’s Control

SAAKASHVILI TO BE UNDER PARLIAMENT’S CONTROL

News.am
13:12 / 10/17/2009

Georgian new Constitution will most probably contain points limiting
presidential powers, Chairman of the Constitutional Court of Georgia
Avtandil Demetreshvili told Georgia Online.

According to him, the issue of limiting the presidential powers,
particularly dissolving the Government and abolishing act is presently
considered by the Advisory Board. In the meantime, the Board Chairman
states that the powers vested in the Parliament will be enlarged,
and it will implement the control over the President.

Baku: Signing Of Protocols Between Turkey And Armenia Is Unreasonabl

SIGNING OF PROTOCOLS BETWEEN TURKEY AND ARMENIA IS UNREASONABLE: AZERBAIJANI PARLIAMENT’S FIRST VICE SPEAKER

Today.Az
15 October 2009 [17:56]

Opening Turkish-Armenian border without the liberation of occupied
lands will be a blow to the back of Azerbaijan, said the First Deputy
Speaker of the Parliament of Azerbaijan.

"Azerbaijan’s position on the Armenian-Turkish relations was known
in advance and we are committed to it. We were against the signing
of these protocols," the First Deputy Speaker, chairman of the
parliamentary committee on security and defense Ziyafet Asgarov told
the official Web site of the ruling New Azerbaijan Party (NAP).

Foreign Ministers Ahmet Davutoglu of Turkey and Edward Nalbandyan of
Armenia signed Turkey-Armenia protocols to resume diplomatic relations
and reopen border in Zurich on Oct. 10.

Asgarov said Turkish officials said during their visits to Azerbaijan
and in their country that borders with Armenia will not be opened
unless Armenia puts an end to its occupation policy.

"For this reason, the signing of protocols between Turkey and
Armenia looks unreasonable. Because Armenia and Western officials
have stated that the signing of the protocols should not be linked
to the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. We supported parallel discussions
over both issues. The signing ceremony in Zurich was attended by the
foreign ministers of co-chair countries of the OSCE Minsk Group. On
the one hand, they say that they are separate issues and on the other
hand, the ceremony was attended by the foreign ministers of co-chair
countries. This fact shows that this process is directly related to
the Nagorno-Karabakh issue," said chairman of the committee.

Asgarov said the opening of borders in the current circumstances is
contrary to the interests of Azerbaijan.

"If the border is opened without liberation of our occupied
territories, it will be a blow to the back of Azerbaijan. Because such
an action does not correspond to the logic and spirit of the friendly
and brotherly relations between A ey. This should not occur between
the friendly and brotherly countries. We consider Turkey a fraternal
country and expect reciprocity. I would like to believe that these
protocols will not be ratified by the Turkish Parliament. President,
prime minister, foreign minister and chairman of the Turkish Parliament
should remain true to their words," said the first vice speaker.

Dashnaks To Defy Ban On Next Yerevan Rally

DASHNAKS TO DEFY BAN ON NEXT YEREVAN RALLY
Ruzanna Stepanian

/1851799.html
14.10.2009

The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) said
on Wednesday that it will defy a government ban and again rally
supporters in Yerevan this week in protest against the controversial
Turkish-Armenian agreements.

In accordance with Armenia’s law on public gatherings, Dashnaktsutyun
notified the municipal authorities last week about its intention
to hold the rally in Charles Aznavour square in downtown Yerevan on
Friday. The municipality said on Tuesday that it can not be authorized
because another even has already been scheduled to take place in the
same place and on the same day.

Vahan Hovannisian, a Dashnaktsutyun leader, rejected the explanation
and said the authorities failed to offer an alternative venue for
the protest, as is required by the law. "They only verbally informed
us that some other, children’s event is to take place there at the
same time," he said. "And when we said that we can hold it elsewhere,
they said, ‘We will organize an event there too.’"

Hovannisian claimed that the authorities are thus keen to prevent
the Dashnaktsutyun rally at any cost. "We cannot reckon with such a
desire," he told a news conference.

Thousands of people, most of them Dashnaktsutyun supporters, marched
through the city center last Friday to condemn the two Turkish-Armenian
protocols that were signed the next day. Dashnaktsutyun and its
influential chapter in Armenian communities around the world have
rejected the deal as a sellout. They are particularly opposed to its
provisions that commit Armenia to recognizing its existing border
with Turkey and agreeing to a joint study of the 1915 mass killings
of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire.

Hovannisian also criticized Sarkisian for accepting Turkish President
Abdullah Gul’s invitation to visit Turkey for Wednesday’s soccer game
between the two countries’ national teams. He said the Turkish side
has failed to meet Sarkisian’s earlier conditions for the trip.

The Armenian president said throughout this summer that he will accept
travel to Turkey if Ankara lifts its 16-year economic blockade of
Armenia or is at least "on the verge" of doing that.

The Dashnaktsutyun leader insisted that the reopening of the
Turkish-Armenian border, envisaged by one of the signed protocols,
is still not on the cards, citing statements to that effect made by
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and other Turkish leaders.

"If [the Armenian authorities] are ready to make other concessions
to make border opening imminent and inevitable, then this is the
subject of a separate conversation," said Hovannisian. "But I think
the conditions set by the president were not satisfied."

http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article

Ameriabank To Ensure 10%-15% Growth Of Key Figures Till Late 2009

AMERIABANK TO ENSURE 10%-15% GROWTH OF KEY FIGURES TILL LATE 2009

ArmInfo
2009-10-14 10:54:00

ArmInfo. Ameriabank will ensure 10%-15% growth of key figures till
late 2009, Levon Arevshatyan, the Head of Corporate Client Managers
Department, said in the press conference on Tuesday.

He said the bank’s assets grew 90% over 9 months of 2009 to 93 billion
drams. The credit portfolio grew 41% over the 3Q of 2009, including
93% of the growth was the share corporate credits. As of October 1,
the credit portfolio reached 44 billion drams including 37 billion
drams (84% of total credit portfolio) was the share of credits to
corporate clients. Personal loans grew 26% over 9 months of 2009 and
14% for 3Q alone. "The credit portfolio is an evidence of the high
level of the bank’s investments in the real sector," L. Arevshatyan
said. He said Ameriabank competes with 2-3 leading banks in Armenia
by the level of credit portfolio. "We believes that this is crisis
management and economic rehabilitation of Armenia," he said.

L. Arevshatyan told media that in the structure of Ameriabank
liabilities, time deposits grew 3.8 times over 9 months of 2009
and totaled 44 billion drams on October 1. Time deposits of legal
entities grew 3.3 times to 32 billion drams or 74% of total. Time
deposits of individuals grew 5.9 times over 9 months of 2009 and 5.2
times per year to 12 billion drams. Over 3Q of 2009 time deposits of
individuals grew 80% and those of legal entities – 24%.

Ameriabank occupied the 5th position by assets, credit portfolio and
time deposits for the first half of 2009.

"Education And Career 2009" 10th Exhibition Opens

"EDUCATION AND CAREER 2009" 10TH EXHIBITION OPENS

ARMENPRESS
Oct 14, 2009

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 14, ARMENPRESS: "Education and Career 2009" 10th
exhibition opened today in Karen Demirtchyan sport and concert
complex organized by the "Logos Expo" center with the support of
"VivaCell-MTS".

Deputy education and science minister Robert Abrahamyan said that from
October 14 to 16 Armenian governmental bodies, scientific-educational
establishments and big companies will have an opportunity within
the framework of the exhibition present their vision of development
of career and share the acquired experience. Armenian Education and
Science Minister Armen Ashotyan in his message expressed hope that
the event will serve to its purpose and will help the students be
more competitive and prepared.

More than 40 scientific-educational and big companies are participating
in the event.

Consequences Of Armenia-Turkey Protocols

CONSEQUENCES OF ARMENIA-TURKEY PROTOCOLS

nalysis/caucasus/264-consequences-of-armenia-turke y-protocols.html
Friday, 09 October 2009 13:10 |
Analysis / Caucasus

Questions That Need Answers: The Diaspora was loud, forceful and
often not even civil when it delivered its message to President
Serzh Sargsyan during his five-city visit intended to explain the
government’s position on the protocols and ostensibly to rally support.

What began inauspiciously in Paris continued in New York, Los Angeles
and Beirut, and concluded in Rostov, albeit more mildly. At the end,
one thing is clear. The organizers miscalculated. The content and the
intensity of the reactions, responses and reception were different
from what was customary and what was expected.

As a result, the government’s – more specifically, the president’s –
message was not effective. The consequence of all of this is that
the Diaspora is not on board. The Armenian public was already not
collectively on board. Yet this is a policy and an action that
requires solid support from a people who have lost much and who
therefore believe they have much to lose still.

At the end, there are several old, and several new questions that the
Armenian government must be able to answer regarding the signing of
these protocols:

Does the Armenian government truly believe that any opening with
Turkey is necessary at all cost?

Is the economic incentive of an open border truly so great and so
realistic that it outweighs the strategic and political concessions
inherent in these documents?

Is there the will to postpone the process, set aside the odd,
artificial time line and re-negotiate a document that indeed sets us
on a path to the future?

Is there the will to address the Diaspora, again, this time with a
view to removing the chasm that now exists?

The Diaspora was loud, forceful and often not evenQ civil when it
delivered its message to Q Serzh Sargsyan during his five-city visit
intended to explain theQ government’s position on the protocols
and ostensiblyqqwdsdWhat began inauspiciously in Paris continued
in New York, Los Angeles and Beirut, and concluded in Rostov,
albeit more mildly. At the end, one thing is clear. The organizers
miscalculated. The content and the intensity of the reactions,
responses and reception were different from what was customary and
what was expected. As a result, the government’s – more specifically,
the president’s – message was not effective. The consequence of all
of this is that the Diaspora is not on board. The Armenian public was
already not collectively on board. Yet this is a policy and an action
that requires solid support from a people who have lost much and who
therefore believe they have much to lose still.At the end, there are
several old, and several=2 0new questions that the Armenian government
must be able to answer regarding the signing of these protocols:Does
the Armenian government truly believe that any opening with Turkey
is necessary at all cost?Is the economic incentive of an open border
truly so great and so realistic that it outweighs the strategic and
political concessions inherent in these documents?Is there the will
to postpone the process, set aside the odd, artificial time line and
re-negotiate a document that indeed sets us on a path to the future?Is
there the will to address the Diaspora, again, this time with a view
to removing the chasm that now existsQuestions

http://www.civilitasfoundation.org/cf/a

"Today We Dig Trenches, Tomorrow We Shall Take Up Arms"

"TODAY WE DIG TRENCHES, TOMORROW WE SHALL TAKE UP ARMS"

2/nkr
03:46 pm | October 12, 2009

Politics

Karabakhi people, especially the youth, get insulted whenever they
hear the phrase "liberated territories."

The Nagorno Karabakh Republic has fixed its borders in the country’s
Constitution. Today the country leads a quiet life.

Karabakhi youth are more resolute in their viewpoints and are not
interested in the events outside the NKR.

They help Karabakhi servicemen to dig trenches in frontier areas.

"This is not the first time we are participating in the army’s
engineering works. We set no discrimination among male and female
volunteers. Girls are also welcome to participate in the protection
of our country," head of the Youth Union, Gegham Stepanian said to A1+.

"We are not interested in the negotiations between the Armenian and
Turkish Presidents. This land is ours and we shall not cede it. If
we dig trenches here, it means we are ready to protect our land. No
one else but Karabakhi people can handle the Karabakh issue. We are
ready to take up arms instead of a spade as we did during the war,"
said Anush Ghavalian.

"We are the masters of our country and we shall surrender no
territory," added her friend Ani Martirosian.

"We don’t have liberated territories. We have a country we have built
with our hands and we must pass it to our generations as our parents
did at the cost of their blood," announced Hovhannes Madasian.

http://a1plus.am/en/politics/2009/10/1

Kaligian To Sarkisian: How Can You Accept These Severe Concessions?

KALIGIAN TO SARKISIAN: HOW CAN YOU ACCEPT THESE SEVERE CONCESSIONS?
By Dikran Kaligian

0/kaligian-to-sarkisian-how-can-you-accept-these-s evere-concessions/
October 10, 2009

Below is the text of the comments made by Dr. Dikran Kaligian during
the Oct. 3 meeting with President Serge Sarkisian in New York.

Mr. President, I am here representing the Armenian National Committee
of the Eastern U.S., but I am also a historian. As a historian, one
of the most disturbing parts of these protocols is the establishment
of a historical commission. The text of the protocols calls for
an "impartial scientific examination of historical records and
archives." This implies that decades of research on the genocide by
Armenian and non-Armenian scholars was not impartial or scientific
and undermines its credibility. And, as genocide scholar Roger
Smith wrote in an open letter to you, this call for a historical
commission is offensive to all genocide scholars and especially to
those non-Armenian scholars who have spent their lives documenting
the historical reality of the Armenian Genocide.

In spite of anything that Armenian members of such a commission may
or may not do, the mere existence of a historical commission will be
exploited by the Turkish government to discredit the scholarship of
Dadrian and Hovannisian, Charney and Smith, and all the others who
have written on the subject. Turkey will exploit it to undermine
the campaign for international genocide recognition and to dismiss
the consensus among all genocide scholars that the events of 1915
constitute genocide. In your opening remarks, you spoke of the need
to educate the population of Turkey. Yet the Turkish government will
use the protocols to sabotage the process of educating the Turkish
people about the Armenian Genocide that has been started by a few brave
Turkish scholars-they will be discredited and endangered. This is an
extremely harmful proposal and should be dropped from the protocols.

A second disturbing feature regards Artsakh [Karabagh]. We know
from press reports that Turkey has consulted with the government of
Azerbaijan throughout the negotiation of the protocols. The lack
of an Azeri outcry when the protocols were announced, as opposed
to what happened in April, shows that they are certain that their
demands regarding Artsakh will be satisfied-there is no other way to
interpret it.

The protocols are flawed in that they not only speak of a
general principle of territorial integrity without mentioning
self-determination, but go much farther by including a mutual
recognition of existing borders.

This shows that Azerbaijan is right: the protocols threaten the
independence and self-determination of Artsakh. Not only that, but a
mutual recognition of borders strips the Armenian people of our rights
to the return of our Western Armenian lands. This is a dangerous and
foolhardy concession to Turkey.

We in the diaspora have been confronting Turkey for generations. We
understand the Turkish government’s tactics and we have succeeded
in putting Turkey on the defensive around the world-they cannot
appear anywhere without being confronted by the Armenian demand for
justice-and now this is being signed away.

We saw how, when Turkey’s entry into the European Union was being made
contingent on its recognition of the genocide, the State Department
and Turkey created the Turkish Armenian Reconciliation Commission to
give the semblance of dialogue and reconciliation. Thus the European
Commission was conned into dropping all mention of the Armenian
Genocide. Mr. President, how are these protocols any different? Are
they not just another con game cooked up by the State Department?

Mr. President, I do not understand how you can accept the severe
concessions contained in these protocols. I do not understand how
you can place the future of Artsakh in jeopardy.

I do not understand how you can deprive the Armenians of the diaspora
of their rights. I do not understand how you can adopt protocols that
will have such a terrible impact on the diaspora without giving the
diaspora any voice, until now, at the eleventh hour, when we are told
that they are to be signed in a week and changes cannot be made.

I do not understand how these protocols provide any benefit whatsoever,
to Armenia or to the Armenian people. Mr. President, I truly do
not understand.

http://www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/10/1

Raffi Hovannisian Is Appalled

RAFFI HOVANNISIAN IS APPALLED

raffi-hovannisian
05:53 pm | October 12, 2009

Politics

Heritage Party founder Raffi Hovannisian issued an open letter today
with regard to the Armenian-Turkish Protocols signed in Zurich on
October 10.

AN OPEN LETTER TO THE ARMENIAN NATION

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