Thirty Foreign Agents Unmasked In 14 Years – Armenian Security Chief

THIRTY FOREIGN AGENTS UNMASKED IN 14 YEARS – ARMENIAN SECURITY CHIEF

Golos Armenii, Yerevan
16 Dec 04 p 3

Excerpt from Vladimir Darbinyan’s report by Armenian newspaper Golos
Armenii on 16 December headlined “Thirty foreign agents have been
disclosed over the last 14 years”

An interview with the director of the National Security Service,
Gorik Akopyan.

(Correspondent) The 20 December marks the anniversary of national
security bodies. What would you wish your staff?

(Gorik Akopyan) Traditionally, our system has marked the 20 December
as a professional holiday, and the decision of the Armenian government
of 2002 to mark the 20 December as a day of the Armenian national
security service was taken by most people with enthusiasm.

(Passage omitted: Akopyan continues to comments on the traditions
in the national security system, the principles of its formation and
other details; biography details)

(Golos Armenii correspondent) You used to head the secret department
of the Armenian National Security Service. What results have been
achieved in this sphere?

(Gorik Akopyan) The secret department is one of the main directions
in the work of security structures. The ensuring of state security
greatly depends on the secret department. I think the fact that
the activities of more than 30 foreign agents have been revealed and
prevented over the last 14 years testifies to the work we have carried
out. I would like to recall that as a result of the activities of
the secret department, Turkish and Azerbaijani agents Bozholyan and
Shilina’s group were recently unmasked and appeared before the court.

(Correspondent) The fight against terrorism has become the main task of
almost all the secret services of the world. What working links does
the Armenian National Security Service have with similar structures
of other countries?

(Akopyan) The main department to defend the constitutional system
and fight terrorism was set up in 2000. The fight against terrorism
requires a complex approach and close cooperation between relevant
state structures. In the issue of stepping up the fight against
terrorism, Armenia is cooperating with relevant international
structures in line with corresponding international treaties and
provisions of UN Security Council resolutions. Specifically,
we are cooperating on this sphere within the framework of the
CIS antiterrorism centre, the CIS Collective Security Treaty, the
Black Sea Economic Cooperation Organization, as well as with other
interested parties.

In recent years, a new legislative base, which also covers problems
of ensuring efficiency in the fight against terrorism, has been
created in Armenia. Specifically, the new Criminal Code of Armenia
has several articles related to the fight against terrorism. The
National Assembly has drawn up a law “On the fight against terrorism”
and adopted it in its first reading, which will provide a universal
legal solution to problems in fighting terrorism.

(Correspondent) Are there specific results in this sphere?

(Akopyan) The protection of special purpose facilities against
terrorism, as well as of the most important means of supporting the
economy, is the most significant thing in the process of fighting
terrorism. The prevention of terrorist attacks while they are
being prepared is in the centre of the attention of the national
security structures. Specifically, several assassination attempts
were revealed and prevented. Over the last three years, the National
Security Service has impounded several hundreds of guns, light missile
launchers and machine guns. The National Security Service is paying
special attention to the fight against the illegal circulation of
radioactive materials. We recently arrested an Armenian citizen who
had radioactive material caesium-137 that posed a serious threat to
the population. We are also concerned about so-called “telephone
terrorism”. Unfortunately, this new phenomenon is already common
in our country. It causes panic among the population and creates
additional difficulties in the work of the law-enforcement agencies. A
telephone terrorist was recently unmasked and arrested. On 19 November,
he chose the Chekhov secondary school as a target for “terror”.

(Passage omitted: Akopyan said that the secret service did everything
possible to disarm the gunmen who seized the Armenian parliament
in 1999 and killed the prime minister and members of parliament;
Other details)

Europe must clutch the cloak of history

Europe must clutch the cloak of history
By ADRIAN HAMILTON

The Independent – United Kingdom
Dec 17, 2004

The vote this week of the European Parliament in favour of starting
membership talks with Turkey should presage a decision by the EU
leaders today to start the whole process rolling.

One says “should” partly because one can never be quite certain in
Europe that its leaders will do what is required of them – witness the
extraordinary about-turns over the European constitution and the rows
over keeping to the rules of the stability pact. The major players,
including President Chirac, with important caveats, and Chancellor
Schroder and Prime Minister Tony Blair, more enthusiastically, have
all said that they will give it the green light.

But there’s a lot of bad politics about the Turkish application at the
moment, especially in Austria, Germany, France and the Netherlands
where the right-wing anti-immigration parties are rearing their
head. Even Chirac has had to promise a referendum to let the French
people decide when negotiations finally come to fruition.

Such hesitations are understandable, but miss the urgency and
importance of the moment. To say no at this stage, or to fob Turkey off
with a “country membership” or something less than full conjunction
would be an act of religious prejudice and historic recidivism of
the worst and most parochial sort. Europe has an opportunity to reach
out to a whole new world of a bigger, wider and more diverse Europe.

All the objections and the last-minute hurdles being put forward
against Turkey – the demands that it admit to the Armenian genocide,
the imposition of additional rules on labour movement, the proposal
for a “privileged partnership” instead of membership – are little
more than masks for a much more fundamental fear and dislike, and
that is of Turkey as a Muslim state. Even Nicolas Sarkozy, the world’s
favourite French politician, has made some deeply dispiriting remarks
about non-Catholics. If anything, Europe should be wanting Turkey in
precisely because it is a liberal, modernising country of Muslims
(officially it is still a secular state, although it is now headed
by an Islamic party).

In that sense Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish Prime Minster, is quite
right to insist, as he did in The Independent earlier this week,
that Turkey will not accept second-best, special requirements, lesser
membership or anything other than the straight road to membership
that every other country has followed. Anything less would be an
insult, not least to all those in Turkey which have pushed, harried
and argued for the huge changes that have been needed to get Turkey
to this point of even beginning serious negotiations,

Of course Turkey has a long way to go. Anyone who knows Turkey also
knows how very far it is from properly integrating its Kurdish
minority, accepting even a minimum standard for its workers and
instituting the kind of law that would bring it into line with Western
Europe. We are not talking here of a neat homogenous country like
Sweden, but a largely Islamic nation developed through four centuries
of empire and then dramatically wrenched away from imperial habit to
modern national state by Ataturk after the First World War.

The benefit of that change is to produce a formally secular state
which, at least among the elite, feels its future looking westwards
and its place in Europe. The price has been a state that is fiercely
nationalistic, with an army at the centre of its constitution and an
attitude to its Kurdish minority and to human rights that has more
in common with Moscow than Brussels.

Far from that being a bar to full membership, however, it is the
very reason we should be insisting on it. Joining Europe brings
with it stringent obligations in a whole host of fields, from equal
opportunities to civil rights and financial disciplines. Lock Turkey
in those negotiations, and keep absolutely firm on their requirements,
and you help all those in Turkey wanting modernisation. Accept it as
something less than an equal European and you accept it as a basically
different country with lesser standards for its own people. Which is
why so many Kurds and even Armenians want the negotiations to go ahead.

Voting today for negotiations to start does not mean immediate
membership. Talks could last a decade and there is no reason why the
EU should compromise its own principles, at it seemed to be doing with
Romania, in order to include it. But there is equally no reason to
make Turkey a special case in negative terms, forcing on it special
obligations which are not true of everyone.

Of course politicians have to take note of their domestic opinion. At
a time when a leading Dutch documentary director has been murdered in
the Netherlands, 191 have been killed in the Madrid bombing and the
police forces of almost every European country are issuing warnings
about the dangers of attacks from Islamic extremists, now is not a good
time to talk of Turkey’s potential contribution to multiculturalism
in the Union.

But politics has to be about the promotion of causes in inconvenient
times as well as propitious ones. The Muslim aspect to Turkey’s
membership is important, not only because to turn it down would
be to send such hostile messages to Muslims within Europe as well
as its neighbours outside. Yet in some ways one can exaggerate this
aspect. Turkey has its own history and ethnic background which make it
quite separate from the Arabs and Iranians around it, or the Pakistani,
North African and Bangladeshi Muslims populations within Europe.

More profoundly, Turkey is important because it represents a whole
new leap towards regional integration in Europe. It brings with it not
just an Islamic background but a military force in Nato, a reserve of
labour and interconnections that spread out to Central Asia and beyond.

This year’s enlargement of the Union from 15 to 25 members was meant
to be the end of the story for the time being. But everywhere round
Europe – in Ukraine, Georgia, Turkey and now Romania – the older order
is collapsing and new democratic governments are coming to power who
see in the EU both a path to the future and a means of consolidating
change. Belarus and even some Arab states around the Mediterranean
could well follow in the coming years.

It’s a development most European politicians have been slow to grasp
and fearful of embracing. The EU was desperately slow to respond
to Viktor Yuschenko’s call for EU partnership, and to the change
in government in Bucharest. Even though they know that existing
enlargement has changed forever the tight, inward-looking club of
Western Europe, the instinctive response of EU governments is to look
inwards and backwards. It won’t work. The dam has broken, and leaders
have the choice of either embracing this change or turning aside and
pretending it isn’t happening for fear that they cannot control it.

In the nervy and uncertain days before the fall of the Berlin Wall
and the reunification of Germany, Chancellor Kohl liked to quote
Otto Bismark’s statement about clutching the cloak of history (God,
as he called it) as He swept by. Kohl took the chance, and he was no
Bismark. Today’s European leaders are arguably even less statesmen than
Kohl. But history is passing by, and on Friday, and over the coming
months in Central Europe, they have the chance to touch its cloak.

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Karabakh leader accuses Azerbaijan of ignoring reality

Karabakh leader accuses Azerbaijan of ignoring reality

Mediamax news agency
16 Dec 04

Yerevan, 16 December: The efforts of the political administration of
the Nagornyy Karabakh republic (NKR) are still aimed at reaching a
“lasting peaceful solution to the conflict with Azerbaijan on the
basis of the principles fully reflecting the will of the NKR people”,
a Mediamax special correspondent quoted the president of the NKR,
Arkadiy Gukasyan, as telling a meeting of representatives of all
branches of power of the republic in Stepanakert today.

The NKR president expressed his regret that “at the current stage in
the peace process, which runs under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk
Group, attempts are being made to artificially isolate the Karabakh
side”. At the same time, he expressed his confidence that “this very
circumstance impedes a new impetus to the negotiating process that
can develop the positive results achieved over the past more than
10 years thanks to the effort of the parties to the conflict and
international mediation”.

“The counter-productive position of the Baku authorities, which
are reluctant to reckon not only with the existing realities but
also with the interests of the world and regional states, including
Azerbaijan’s own allies, has actually brought the negotiating process
to an impasse the way out of which cannot be found without the equal
involvement of Nagornyy Karabakh in the negotiations,” Gukasyan said.

He said if the Azerbaijani authorities had the good will and a
genuine interest in resolving the conflict on the basis of reasonable
compromises, the way out of the crisis would be found and the efforts
of the Minsk Group co-chairmen would produce the desired positive
results.

Gukasyan confirmed the readiness of the Nagornyy Karabakh republic for
a direct dialogue with Baku and for the joint discussion of all issues
concerning the prospects for relations between Nagornyy Karabakh and
Azerbaijan, Mediamax reports.

“However, the Baku authorities do not seem to have given up their
crazy and suicidal intentions to resolve the problem by force, which
compels us to continue taking the necessary measures to strengthen
the defence capability of the NKR and raise the combat readiness of
our army, which is the most reliable guarantor of the security of
our state and the people of Nagornyy Karabakh,” Arkadiy Gukasyan said.

Turkey’s press freedom far from EU standards -media watchdog RSF

Turkey’s press freedom far from EU standards -media watchdog RSF

Reporters Sans Frontieres press release, Paris
16 Dec 04

Text of report in English by press release by Paris-based organization
Reporters Sans Frontieres (RSF) on 16 December

Reporters Without Borders has said that Turkey is still far from
meeting European press freedom standards as the European Council
prepares to decide on 17 December whether or not to open negotiations
on Turkish EU membership.

European deputies voted on 15 December for the discussions to start
without “needless delay” but on the basis of Ankara complying with
certain conditions.

In particular they are seeking the repeal of Article 305 of Turkey’s
new criminal code, that comes into effect on 1st April 2005 and which
they consider runs contrary to freedom of expression.

“The legislative progress that has undeniably been made should not
conceal the fact that the climate remains as harsh as ever for the most
outspoken journalists,” the worldwide press freedom organization said.

“The press is exposed to misuse of authority by the courts, which in
practice continue to impose prison sentences and exorbitant fines
that push journalists to censor themselves extensively on the most
sensitive subjects such as the army and the Kurdish question,”
Reporters Without Borders said.

The TV and radio stations are still subject to “brazen censorship”
by the High Council for Broadcasting (RTUK), while pro-Kurdish
journalists continue to be the target of many kinds of pressure,
the organization continued.

“Despite progress towards European standards, the gap between the
declarations of good intentions and the reality is still considerable,
with the result that Turkey still does not fulfil all the necessary
conditions for real press freedom,” it added.

Genuine progress made

The legislative amendments undertaken by Turkey with a view to joining
the European Union have been positive for journalists. Heavy fines have
replaced prison sentences in the new press law, adopted in June. The
most repressive sanctions, such as the closure of news organizations
or bans on printing and distribution, have been eliminated, while
the protection of sources has even been reinforced.

Article 159, which has led to many journalists being prosecuted
for “affront to the state and state institutions and threats to
the indivisible unity of the Turkish Republic”, was amended in
2002 and 2003, with the prison sentence being cut from one year to
six months. At the same time, criticism not intentionally aimed at
“ridiculing” or “insulting” state institutions is no longer punishable
by imprisonment.

Journalists still under pressure

Even though the new criminal code that becomes law on 1st April 2005
removes the offence of “mocking and insulting government ministers”,
there remains a problem with Article 305.

This punishes alleged “threats against fundamental national
interests”. It specifically targets freedom of expression, particularly
on issues involving Cyprus or Armenia. The European parliament voted
on 15 December for a resolution calling, among other things, for the
immediate repeal of this article, viewed as incompatible with the 1950
Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms.

Contrary to European standards, the new criminal code stipulates
that insult is punishable by three months to three years in prison,
with the sentence increasing if the offence is committed by means of
the press (Article 127).

In practice, judges still interpret the concept of “criticism” very
subjectively and abusive prosecutions continue.

Four journalists with the pro-Kurdish daily Yeniden Ozgur Gundem who
criticized government policy on the Iraq war were brought before the
courts in 2003 while on-line journalist Erol Oskoray was detained for
“mocking” and “insulting” the army. Sabri Ejder Ozic, the manager
of Radyo Dunya, a local radio station in the southern city of Adana,
was sentenced to a year in prison for offending parliament.

Hakan Albayrak, a former editorialist for the daily Milli Gazete,
was imprisoned on 20 May and is serving a 15-month prison sentence
for “attacking the memory of Ataturk” in violation of the 1951 law
governing crimes against Kemal Ataturk. Article 1 of this law punishes
any offence against the Republic of Turkey’s founder by one to three
years in prison. Article 2 doubles the sentence if it is committed
by means of the press.

On 15 October, Sebati Karakurt of the daily Hurriyet was held for 12
hours at the headquarters of the anti-terrorist police in Istanbul and
some 10 policemen searched his home. It stemmed from a report published
a few days earlier that included an interview with Murat Karayilan,
the military chief of the former Kurdish Workers’ Party (PKK), now
renamed Kongra-Gel. The report included photos showing female rebels
in combat fatigues in a favourable light, relaxed and smiling. Karakurt
was released after being interrogated by the police and a prosecutor.

Memik Horuz, the managing editor of the far-left newspaper Isci Koylu,
has spent years in prison for the views he expressed in the course
of their journalistic work.

Pro-Kurdish media targeted

While the national radio and TV stations are now allowed to use
the Kurdish language, the RTUK continues to impose disproportionate
sanctions – ranging from warnings to withdrawal of licence – against
pro-Kurdish media or media that are very critical of the government.

Ozgur Radyo, a local radio station in Istanbul, was sentenced
by the RTUK to a month’s closure for “inciting violence, terror,
discrimination on the basis of race, region, language, religion or sect
or the broadcasting of programmes that arouse feelings of hatred in
society.” The station stopped broadcasting on 18 August. In the event
of a further offence, the RTUK could withdraw its licence altogether.

Gunes TV, a local television station in the eastern city of Malatya,
was also forced to stop broadcasting for a month from 30 March. This
was because the RTUK accused it of “attacking the state’s existence
and independence, and the country’s indivisible unity with the people
and Ataturk’s principles and reforms” under article 4 of RTUK law
3984. Using the same article, the RTUK closed down local TV station
ART in the south-eastern city of Diyarbakir on 15 August 2003 for
broadcasting two love songs in Kurdish.

Mass detentions of pro-Kurdish journalists by the anti-terrorist police
on the eve of the NATO summit in Istanbul on 28-29 June 2004 were
also indicative of the treatment reserved for the pro-Kurdish press.

Finally, nine journalists covering the dispersal of protesters against
electoral fraud were badly beaten by police in Diyarbakir during the 28
March local elections and three of them had to be hospitalized. Those
responsible have still not been punished.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Vardan Oskanian: Europarliament’s Decision Is Joint Victory OfArmeni

VARDAN OSKANIAN: EUROPARLIAMENT’S DECISION IS JOINT VICTORY OF ARMENIAN
DIPLOMACY AND DIASPORA

YEREVAN, December 16 (Noyan Tapan). The RA Foreign Minister Vardan
Oskanian welcomes the adoption of the resolution by the Europarliament
on Turkey’s joining the EU. The resolution calls on Turkey to recognize
the Armenian genocide and lift the blockade imposed on Armenia. He
stated this in an interview to the Armenian Public Television. Noting
that the resolution approves the start of negotiations on the issue
of Turkey’s joining the EU, the RA Foreign Minister at the same time
inderlined some conditions have been also put forward. According to
Oskanian, for Armenia “from the political point of view it is important
that the opening of the Armenian-Turkish border and the recognition
of the Armenian genocide have been included in these conditions.”

The minister also mentioned that if Turkey does not meet the political
criteria, which also include relations with Armenia, at the first
stage of the negotiations, “it is not ruled out the negotiations
might be interrupted.”

The RA Foreign Minister stressed that the decision made by the
Europarliament is a joint victory of the Armenian diplomacy and
the Diaspora communities. In particular he pointed out the letter
presenting the essence of the problem sent by the RA President to
the leaders of the EU member countries.

Western United States Youth To Protest Turkish Admission To EU

WESTERN UNITED STATES YOUTH TO PROTEST TURKISH ADMISSION TO EU

LOS ANGELES, December 16 (Noyan Tapan). The Armenian Youth Federation,
Western United States Central Executive announced that it will hold
a protest at the Netherlands Consulate in Los Angeles to express its
opposition to Turkey’s possible membership in the European Union.

“Before considering Turkey’s admission into the EU, European leaders
should consider Turkey’s abysmal record on human rights,” commented
Shant Baboujian, chairman of the AYF. “If Turkey wants to be considered
a part of Europe and the EU, it has to first adhere to basic human
rights standards – this includes admitting the historical record of
the Armenian Genocide.”

Baboujian explains that the AYF will present a formal letter to
the Consul General of Netherlands, which chairs the EU, to convey
its opposition.

The Los Angeles protest is one of many peaceful protests taking place
around the world this week in an international Armenian effort to
voice opposition to Turkish membership in the EU. The largest such
demonstration is undertaken by the Armenian National Committee
of Europe, which is organizing a massive protest in Brussels on
December 17.

Youth will begin picketing at the Netherlands Consulate starting at
3pm on December 16.

Turkey Does Not Correspond To EU Standards – Armenian Youths Underli

TURKEY DOES NOT CORRESPOND TO EU STANDARDS – ARMENIAN YOUTHS UNDERLINE IN
THEIR LETTER TO AMBASSADORS OF EU STATES

YEREVAN, December 16 (Noyan Tapan). Turkey was not and cannot be
a state-bearer of the European legacy in the political and cultural
sense or in terms of civilization. The ARF “Nicol Aghbalian” students
union and the “Mitk-Kentron” youth analytic organization state this in
a letter sent to the EU states’ ambassadors accredited in Armenia. In
the letter they express conviction that Turkey does not correspond
to the human rights and political freedoms standards of the EU.

“Denying the fact that the Ottoman Empire and the Turkish Republic
committed the Armenian genocide in 1915-1923, Turkey today
perpetrates destruction of the Armenian cultural legacy. Since
Armenia’s independence Turkey has been implementing an extremely
hostile policy with respect to Armenia by violating repeatedly the
fundamental principles of the international law,” the authors of the
letter emphasize.

The Armenian youths are concerned about the scandalous facts of the
human rights violation in Turkey, by restriction of freedom of speech
and by intolerance of etnic minorities whose rights are stipulated
by the constitution.

“In the Armenian society and among the Armenian youth the European
Union is perceived as an institution that supports the high criteria
of human rights and fundamental freedoms defence, while the start
of negotiations on Turkey’s membership in the EU with Ankara raises
doubts about this image of the European Union,” the authors of the
letter underline.

Noting that Armenia considers the European orientation to be one of the
priorities on its political supremacies agenda, the Armenian youths
express hope that the EU leaders will not yield to an inoportune
and momentary interest, to Ankara’s “insincere and vain reforms”
and will take a correct decision refusing to negotiate with Turkey on
the issue of its joining the EU until Ankara in particular recognizes
the 1915-1923 Armenian genocide. “By agrreeing silently to Turkey’s
membership, the member states assume responsibility for this heinous
crime against humanity,” the letter reads.

Strasburgo approva il via ai negoziati. Chirac:

Corriere della Sera, Italia
16 Dicembre 2004

Strasburgo approva il via ai negoziati. Chirac: un’adesione parziale
per Ankara non è accettabile

L’Europarlamento dice il primo sì alla Turchia

Tra le richieste, tolleranza zero sulle torture e l’ammissione del
genocidio degli armeni

DAL NOSTRO INVIATO
STRASBURGO – L’Europarlamento invita a iniziare il negoziato di
adesione della Turchia all’Unione Europea: collegandolo però al
rispetto di varie condizioni che, se non fossero rispettate,
consentirebbero di bloccare tutto in qualsiasi momento. Questo
messaggio politico, approvato a Strasburgo dopo un acceso dibattito,
è indirizzato ai capi di Stato e di governo dei 25 Paesi membri
dell’Ue, che stasera e domani si incontrano nel Consiglio europeo a
Bruxelles per decidere se (e quando) andare incontro alle aspettative
turche di integrazione nell’Ue. E anche per valutare come conciliare
le esigenze politico-economiche con l’ostilità manifestata da ampie
fasce di europei verso l’adesione di un Paese con 70 milioni di
abitanti in maggioranza musulmani.
Il presidente dell’Europarlamento, lo spagnolo Josep Borrell, ha
considerato «chiaro» il segnale lanciato ai governi. 407 deputati
hanno votato a favore dell’inizio della trattativa con il governo
turco. I contrari sono stati 262 e 29 gli astenuti. Il sì è stato
trainato dalla maggioranza dei socialisti, liberali, verdi e
comunisti. I popolari hanno provocato polemiche chiedendo il voto
segreto, che ha tentato di rendere meno evidenti le loro spaccature
interne (i membri tedeschi e francesi sono contrari, mentre Forza
Italia e i conservatori britannici appoggiano la Turchia). La Lega ha
votato no con il gruppo degli «euroscettici». Non è passato il
tentativo di declassare il negoziato nella concessione di un
«partenariato privilegiato». Il presidente francese Jacques Chirac,
finora critico verso l’ingresso della Turchia, è apparso alla tv Tf1
per spiegare l’indisponibilità dei turchi verso un’adesione parziale
e l’utilità di accoglierli nell’Ue se rispetteranno tutte le
condizioni previste. Per questo, ha spiegato Chirac, «la domanda che
ci si deve porre è: l’Europa, e in particolare la Francia, hanno
interesse ad accogliere la Turchia? La mia risposta è: “Sì, ma…”.
Sì, se la Turchia risponderà a tutte le condizioni imposte a ciascun
candidato che vuol aderire alla nostra Unione».
Tra le condizioni poste ieri a Strasburgo dell’Europarlamento spicca
il rispetto dei diritti umani. Vengono pretese garanzie sulla libertà
religiosa, sul trattamento delle minoranze curde, sull’inizio di una
«tolleranza zero» della tortura. Ci si aspetta poi l’ammissione del
genocidio del popolo armeno nel periodo 1915-1923 (richiesta anche
ieri da Chirac), negata dalle autorità di Ankara. La presidenza
olandese di turno dell’Ue ha rilanciato il (non facile)
riconoscimento della parte greca di Cipro, Stato membro dell’Ue dal
maggio scorso.
«E’ ora che il Consiglio europeo annunci l’apertura dei negoziati con
la Turchia», ha auspicato il presidente della Commissione Josè Manuel
Barroso. Ma stasera i leader di Francia e Austria potrebbero
continuare a guidare il fronte scettico accentuando le condizioni e
contrastando l’orientamento a far partire il negoziato già entro il
2005 per cercare di concluderlo in 10-15 anni.

Ivo Caizzi
Esteri

–Boundary_(ID_S0OHl6sdmRXmUsf0LpB9dw)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Turkey and the hypocrisies of Europe

Turkey and the hypocrisies of Europe
By Fred Halliday

Open Democracy, UK
Dec 16 2004

Fred Halliday dissects four underlying arguments against Turkey’s
admission to the European Union – and finds them all wanting.

The European Union is attempting to create common European
institutions and policy: a worthy and desirable project, if a pale
reflection of the original, liberal-internationalist aims of the
1950s. It has agreed two momentous decisions in 2004: the inclusion
of ten new member-states, and the foundation of its legal identity
embodied in a new constitution. Now, at a summit in Brussels on 16-17
December 2004, it faces a third: whether to open negotiations with
Turkey that will lead to that country’s membership of the European
Union.

There are, however, few sights so undignified as that of European
states in a condition of moral indignation, and the unseemly debate
over this major strategic issue has not just divided but shamed many
Europeans. While some states – led by the United Kingdom and Spain –
wish to proceed with serious negotiations with Turkey, and others
take a more ambiguous or even hostile stance, the argument reveals
more about the European “community” than about the Turkey it has been
preparing to judge.

Europe’s moral foundations

A rhetorical device favoured by opponents of Turkish entry is to
affirm the “Christian” (or “Judaeo-Christian”) foundations of Europe.
The former French president, Giscard d’Estaing; the current Italian
prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi; the European Union commissioner
for the internal market, Fritz Bolkestein; leaders of the opposition
CDU in Germany, Angela Merkel and Edmund Stoiber – are just some of
those who invoke this alleged religious-historic identity.

The argument ignores three basic realities. First, the cultural,
political and linguistic origins of European lie in Greece and Rome,
and long predate Christianity (the word “democracy” is found nowhere
in the Bible). Moreover, Christianity and Judaism are in their origin
not European at all, but – itself a testament to 2,000 years of
interaction – religions that originated and have long flourished in
the middle east.

Second, Muslim empires – and in particular the Ottoman, precursor of
the Turks – have a record of historic tolerance of Jews and other
minorities that (while open to considerable criticism) is far
superior to that of Christian Europe. Indeed, the permanent Jewish
population of around 50,000 in modern Turkey, descendants of those
expelled by Christian Spain in 1492, is testimony to one of the best
records of toleration of Jews of any country.

Third, the contemporary culture of Europe is not in any meaningful
sense Christian; it is, rather, secular in tone and content if not
actually hostile to religion.

The prominent European political figures cited above may concede
these points, but then shift the argument to the defence of certain
basic European principles like equality between men and women. Yet
here, no one examining the record of the Vatican, for example – from
its 1968 encyclical Humanae Vitae to the letter to Catholic bishops
on 1 August 2004 and its catastrophic policy on contraception and
Aids – can believe that this variant of Christianity is compatible
with core modern, human, values.

History’s shadow

Many opponents of Turkish entry to the European Union question
whether Turkey (or Islam) is part of Europe. The truth is that in
terms of its cultural and religious presence Islam has been integral
to Europe for over 1,000 years – including 800 years in Spain and at
least 600 years in the Balkans and Russia.

What is true of religion is equally so for power politics: the
Ottoman empire was a component of the European great-power system,
variously allied with Britain and France (against Russia in the
Crimean war of 1853-56) and with Germany (against Britain and France
in the first world war).

Even more important, in the past century Europe has been unable to
insulate itself from the process of politics in Turkey itself. Turkey
played the key role in detonating the explosion of 1914 – one that
destroyed the old European order and led to the European civil war of
1914-1991 from which we are just emerging. Its precedent lay in a
fundamental event of modern European and middle-eastern history, the
Young Turk revolution of 1908. This event led to the Balkan wars of
1911-1913, from which emerged the radical Serbian nationalism that
killed Archduke Ferdinand in Sarajevo in June 1914.

This is a reminder that the modern politics of Europe are
inextricably shaped not by the fantasies of Brussels – capital of a
country that has pioneered a radical form of ethnic-political
separatism – but by the condition of the middle east. There are many
illustrations of the point: the impact of the Algerian war on France
in the late 1950s, of Afghanistan on the Soviet Union in the 1980s,
and of Morocco on Spain in the 1920s and again on 11 March 2003.
Whether or not the EU opens the way to Turkish membership, intimate
bonds tie Europe to events in its neighbouring region.

Does Turkey qualify?

The discussion of Turkish membership of the European Union is
dominated by the legal and constitutional requirements Turkey is
expected to meet in order to qualify. Where these reflect progress in
implementing the rule of law, ending torture, ensuring the rights of
women, and creating a reasonable federal solution to the Kurdish
question, then – as the Turkish writer Soli Özel has written – many
Turks welcome the changes.

The Turkish state’s deficiencies over human rights and the rule of
law explain its civil society’s enthusiasm about Europe. This civil
society wants to accelerate a democratic process in the country.
Europe should help it – but Europe (witness Berlusconi’s great escape
from corruption charges and the illegalities of party funding in
France) has little moral authority to lecture the world about
political standards.

Indeed, it could be said that in key respects Turkey is too European,
in that it shares with France a rigid and (for human rights)
lamentable concept of state secularism. The French proclaim
themselves defenders of secularism as if their 1905 legislation had
patented the idea, but forget that clothing bans (as in the country’s
new law forbidding the wearing of religious apparel in schools) are
valid under international law only if they relate directly to
national security – certainly not the case over the hijab. There is
only one consistent, universalist and secular position on the wearing
of religious headwear – for Muslims, Catholic nuns, or Orthodox
Jewish haredim alike: to be against it, but to defend the right to
wear it.

The argument over whether Turkey qualifies for the European Union
often spills over into other important areas: Cyprus and the Armenian
genocide.

The Cyprus question remains unresolved but to hold Turkey of all
countries responsible for the current impasse is grotesque. Turkey is
certainly responsible for abuses in the years after the island’s
independence in 1960, but its main agonies lie in the conflict and
partition of 1974, when Greek Cypriot nationalists helped by Athens
organised an illegal coup that provoked a Turkish invasion. It is
that intransigent and manipulative Greek nationalism which in early
2004 blocked a reasonable settlement proposed, after lengthy
negotiations, by Kofi Annan. The Turks are right to say that the
United Nations, not the European Union, must find a solution to
Cyprus.

The issue of the Armenian genocide is one that Turkish nationalism
has refused to acknowledge. The best way to proceed in resolving it
is not through inter-state confrontation but to work with those
Turkish historians and writers who are prepared to recognise what
happened on developing a common, and documented, account of the
events of 1915.

A focus on the genocide serves, moreover, to absolve Europe
(including Russia and Turkey itself) from a comparably grave injury
to the Armenians – their confinement in the aftermath of 1918 to a
landlocked mini-state around Yerevan. In any case, Europe cannot
easily make official recognition of the Armenian genocide a condition
of Turkish entry without exposing its own hypocrisy: Germany’s record
in Namibia in 1904 and Europe in the 1940s, Italy’s in Libya after
1911, Belgium’s in the Congo in the 1900s, Spain’s in the Americas
and Portugal’s in Africa after 1500, are sufficient evidence.

A modicum of post-imperial self-criticism – including the Turks as
inheritors of the Ottoman empire – is in order here. This would
encompass two further issues that are currently less discussed than
Cyprus or Armenia: Kurdish rights in Turkey, and Turkey’s role in the
Kurdish areas of northern Iraq.

A question of culture

All sides in the debate over Turkey and the European Union seem to
want to invoke a fixed – “essential” or “true” – version of European
culture to which Turks, and Muslim immigrants in general, should
adhere. Proponents of Turkish entry see this culture as open and
cosmopolitan; opponents see it (or its Leitkultur (“leading
culture”), as espoused by the CDU) as incompatible with Islam.

The argument that every society and political system needs a
Leitkultur is not in itself invalid, and most people in Turkey would
agree with its presupposition. What is in question is how this
Leitkultur is defined. European culture is no more frozen in time
than are Europe’s external frontiers; rather, it is a set of
possibilities that modern society and politics can define. All
cultures (including Muslim ones) can be open or closed, and all can
and do change.

European arrogance over Turkey is a definite barrier to the deeper
opening that the 17 December decision should register. This is
evident too in the comprehensive ignorance of Turkey among many of
Europe’s politicians, commentators and intellectuals. How many
pontificating voices know the basic facts of Ottoman and Turkish
history, including repeated violations inflicted by the country’s
Christian neighbours over the last three centuries, culminating in
the attempted subjugation of the country by Britain, France and Italy
after the first world war? How many know the tiles of Iznik, the
films of Yilmaz Güney and Handan Ipekci, the poems of Nazim Hikmet
and Orhan Veli Kanik, the novels of Yasar Kemal and Orhan Pamuk – or
even the joys of Imam Bayildi? Such historical and knowledge might
teach a lot about politics also.

In short, Europe’s decision over Turkey – and the wider issues of
coexistence, multiculturalism and different values it signifies – is
not for Turkish citizens and Turkish immigrants to learn German or
English (which they or their children will anyway) but for Europeans
to learn Turkish – and perhaps eat köfte at least once a week. The
more Turks and Europeans mix and mingle, the more the truths of their
shared past, present, and future will emerge.

–Boundary_(ID_ZAhjc4qUOpNtgt6kXzkL7g)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Armenian Patriarch believes Turkey to get accession date on

Armenian Patriarch believes Turkey to get accession date on 17 December

Anatolia news agency, Ankara
16 Dec 04

Istanbul, 16 December: Mesrob II, Patriarch of Armenian community
in Turkey, said on Thursday [16 December] that he always advocated
Turkey’s membership to the European Union (EU). He said he believed
the EU would give a date to Turkey on 17 December to start full
membership negotiations.

Mesrob II told AA [Anatolia] correspondent that he shared the view that
the EU was not a Christian club, and noted: “Religion and religious
culture have become a tool of politics both for the EU and the Turkish
politicians more than necessary. Parliaments of the EU member countries
do not make decisions according to the doctrines of the Bible and
the Turkish parliament does not make its decisions according to
Koran. Integration of the EU and Turkey would be for the interest of
the region, the world and the peace among the civilizations.”

Replying to a question about the attitude of the Armenians living
in France, putting forward the allegations of “so-called Armenian
genocide”, towards Turkey’s EU membership, Mesrob II said: “The
disaster in 1915 is an issue which can be abused. To this end,
the foreigners will bring this issue on the agenda when they have
the opportunity. The issue should be excluded from being an issue
of exploitation soon by starting official and unofficial dialogue
process.”

“Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in an earlier
statement said this was the job of historians and should be left to
historians. His statements are extremely realistic. Meeting face
to face with history is important for building of future on solid
basis. People can not embrace each other before making peace. Dialogue
process should be initiated,” Mesrob II said.