ANCC: Armenian delegation meet’s prime minister and senior ministers

PRESS RELEASE
ARMENIAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE OF CANADA
3401 Olivar-Asselin
Montréal, Québec
H4J 1L5
Tél. (514) 334-1299 Fax (514) 334-6853

13 December 2004

Contacts: Shant Karabajak 514-334-1299
Roupen Kouyoumdjian 514-336-7095
Aris Babikian 416-497-8972

Armenian delegation meet’s prime minister and senior ministers

Toronto- Representatives of the Armenian National Committee of Canada
(ANCC), the Armenian National Committee of Toronto (ANCT) and the
Armenian Revolutionary Federation Youth Organization (ARF-YOC), attended
a fund-raising reception, on December 2, organized by the Liberal Party
of Canada. The guest speaker was the Prime Minister of Canada, the Right
Hon. Paul Martin. In his speech, the prime minister touched upon the
recent visit of U.S. President George W. Bush to Canada, Canada-U.S.
bilateral relations, Canada ‘ s commitment to human rights around the
world, the Darfur crisis, the Israel-Palestine peace process, the
upcoming Ukrainian, Palestinian, and Iraqi elections. The prime minister
emphasized that Canada, as a middle power, has an important role to play
in the above issues.

During the reception ANCC, ANCT and ARF-YOC delegates met the prime
minister and Minister of National Defense, Bill Graham; Minister of
Human Resources and Skills Development, Joseph Volpe; Minister of
International Trade, James Peterson; Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration, Judy Sgro; Minister of State (families and caregivers),
Tony Ianno. The establishment of a Canadian embassy in Armenia and the
inclusion of Armenia in the Canadian International Development Agency’s
(CIDA) projects were highlighted by the Armenian delegates. The
ministers promised to follow up on the issues raised during the talks.

The large number of our delegates and their participation in the talks
was greatly appreciated by reception organizers.

-30-

Armenia Conference Concludes USAID Earthquake Recovery Program

PRESS RELEASE

December 13, 2004

American University of Armenia Corporation
300 Lakeside Drive, 4th Floor
Oakland, CA 94612
Telephone: (510) 987-9452
Fax: (510) 208-3576

Contact: Gohar Momjian
E-mail: [email protected]

ARMENIA CONFERENCE CONCLUDES USAID EARTHQUAKE RECOVERY PROGRAM

More than 200 people participated in a conference on December 2 and 3, which
focused on the successes of the USAID Earthquake Zone Recovery Program. The
conference, From Recovery to Development: 2000-2005, was jointly convened by
USAID, the Government of the Republic of Armenia, the Urban Institute, and
the American University of Armenia at the Marriott Armenia Hotel in Yerevan.

The Conference marked the successful completion of USAID’s Earthquake Zone
Recovery Program (EQZRP) and acknowledged USAID’s assistance to the
Government of Armenia in approaching closure to shelter compensation in the
earthquake zone while, at the same time, fostering local economic
development. USAID’s implementing partner in this project is the Urban
Institute, in collaboration with Catholic Relief Services and the American
University of Armenia.

The $35 million EQZRP program ends in December 2004 and has been the largest
single endeavor of USAID/Armenia in the Mission’s twelve years of rendering
humanitarian and technical assistance to Armenia.

The Conference highlighted the primary results of EQZRP. Approximately 7,000
families – about 30,000 individuals – received permanent housing with 6,270
families benefiting from Housing Purchase Certificates and more than 700
families benefiting from Housing Improvement Grants. Over 120 municipal
sites have been reclaimed by the clearing of temporary shelters in five
cities, more than 50 sites that were formerly occupied by temporary shelters
have been redeveloped and are undergoing urban development, more than 100
public buildings and other sites – schools, kindergartens, museums, parks,
and squares — have been reclaimed and returned to the communities for use,
and over 4,000 temporary shelters have been removed.

Conference participants included US Ambassador to Armenia, John Evans,
USAID/Armenia Director, Robin Phillips, members of the Government of Armenia
and the 18 local governments partnering in the USAID Earthquake Zone
Recovery Program, non-governmental and other organizations that provided
services to the Program, the international donor community contributing to
the development of the earthquake zone, and Program staff and partners
including banks, auditors, engineers, and real estate professionals.

USAID/Armenia Director, Mr. Robin Phillips, cited the primary achievements
of the Earthquake Zone Recovery Program: `Since the year 2000, well over
6,000 households have already obtained permanent housing using Housing
Certificates in Gyumri, Akhuryan, Vanadzor, Gugark, Spitak, Stepanavan,
Maralik, Amasia, Jajur Station and Aparan. And 664 families in nine
communities in Shirak and Lori Marzes also have benefited by the Housing
Improvement Grant Program.’ Mr. Phillips continued, `The Program’s
`Planning for Redevelopment’ component focuses on leveraging capital
infusion through housing certificates and housing improvement grants to
promote restoration of the urban fabric of the communities and to foster
local economic development, in particular in Gyumri and Spitak, which have
undergone the most visible transformations.’

********************

The American University of Armenia is registered as a non-profit educational
organization in both Armenia and the United States and is affiliated with
the Regents of the University of California. Receiving major support from
the AGBU, AUA offers instruction leading to the Masters Degree in eight
graduate programs. For more information about AUA, visit

www.aua.am.

Denver: Free for now

Colorado Daily, CO
Dec 13 2004

Free for now

The Associated Press

DENVER – An Armenian family held in an immigration detention center
in Denver for nearly five weeks has been unexpectedly released.

“I’m shaking. It happened so fast. It’s incredible. I feel like I’m
in a dream,” said Gevorg Sargsyan, moments after he, his sister Meri,
brother Hayk and father Ruben walked out of the center Thursday.

The Sargsyan family was taken into custody while their attorney was
trying to obtain visas for them, based on their contention they were
victims of a con man who trafficked in fraudulent visas. That battle
is not over.

The family has lived and worked in the western Colorado town of
Ridgway for more than six years.

Gevorg was on the dean’s list at the University of Colorado, where he
was studying chemical engineering. Hayk is a senior honor student at
Ridgway High School. Meri was well known for playing piano in local
churches. Ruben, a space-optics scientist in Armenia, had been
working multiple jobs to provide for his family.

His wife, Susan, and their daughter Nvart, who both work in Ouray and
Ridgway, were not taken into custody because their immigration cases
were being heard separately.

Ouray County residents have raised more than $30,000 for their legal
defense, written hundreds of letters and e-mails and asked officials
from regional immigration officials to President Bush to take another
look at the case and allow the family to stay.

Take it to the bank

Jersey City Reporter, NJ
Dec 13 2004

Take it to the bank

Branch has grand opening

NEW BANK – This is the new branch of Provident Savings Bank which
saw its grand opening on Tuesday morning.
On Tuesday morning, Provident Savings Bank held a grand opening from
their new branch at 30 Hudson St., which was attended by Mayor
Jerramiah Healy along with other local politicians.

Provident Savings Bank, since its inception in 1839, has been an
institution in Jersey City. It maintained its tradition with the
opening of the 78th branch in its history.

The new branch, located on the ground floor of the Goldman Sachs
building, has been open for several weeks but it received the grand
treatment on Tuesday with a ribbon cutting and appearance by bank
officials and local celebrities like Hudson County Executive Tom
DeGise, Ward D City Councilman William Gaughan, and Hudson County
Freeholder Barry Dugan. The bank, according to Kevin J. Ward, vice
chairman and chief operating officer, is one of the new prototype
branches that Provident is opening. “The bank has a modern design
with such elements as retractable sections of the bank. The teller
booths can be taken out if the need arises for more ATMs,” said Ward.

Healy said Provident Savings Bank is “a good corporate citizen” and
announced that the bank will hold the account that Healy will set up
in the near future to keep the money collected for his proposed gun
buy-back amnesty fund.

The manager of the new branch is Haigo Armenian-Mouradian and the
assistant manager is Melissa Harris.

Nicosia: The Smiling Face of the Renovated Past

Mathaba.Net, Africa
Dec 13 2004

Nicosia: The Smiling Face of the Renovated Past

From: Dabrowska

Nicosia’s old town has the smiling face of the renovated past. The
tourist information centre was once the watch tower at Edirne Gate
(now Kyrenia Gate) of the Venetian Wall which surrounded the city. A
quaint room in the watch tower with nostalgic photographs from days
gone by was the home of the watchman, Horoz Ali, who passed away aged
146. The British demolished sections of the wall during the colonial
period but much still remains.

Nicosia (Lefkosa in Turkish) was once the ancient kingdom of Ledra.
Lefkosa flourished when it became the capital of the Lusignans. The
old town was surrounded by a star shaped wall of about three miles in
circumference, which was further fortified by the Venetians in 1567
and flanked by eleven bastions. The British brought the eucalyptus
trees to help with drainage. They also bequeathed three pin plugs to
the island so visitors from the UK can use their electrical
appliances without an adaptor.

The small old town is rich in heritage. It is very `user-friendly’
and is best explored on foot. Many of the historic, architectural
treasures were damaged during the inter communal fighting which led
to the separation of the island into Greek and Turkish zones in 1974.
Today it is the world’s only divided city but the Turkish-Cypriot
border police are only too happy to let tourists photograph the check
point – as long as their cameras are pointed at the sign welcoming
them to the Turkish Republic of North Cyprus (TRNC).

A medley of Christian and Muslim cathedrals turned into mosques,
Greek foundations topped by Turkish roofs, churches reworked as
public baths and archbishops’ palaces reincarnated as municipal
offices, make Lefkosa memorable.

Among the most impressive restorations is the Great Inn (Buyuk Han)
whose construction was ordered by the first Ottoman governor of
Cyprus, Muzaffer Pasha, in 1572. Its architecture resembles many
other inns from this period in Anatolia. Around the inner courtyard
and store inn are 68 rooms and a number of unique arts and craft
shops rich in local paintings, ceramics and embroidery. After years
of restoration the inn was opened to visitors in 2002. It is a
spacious, pleasant place to relax over a cup of coffee and
traditional, super-sweet Turkish cakes and desserts. Live music fills
the inner courtyard with soft melodies on Tuesday and Thursday
nights.

Near the Great Inn, stands the Selimiye Mosque which started life as
St Sophia Cathedral, the most important example of gothic
architecture in Cyprus. It was built by the Louisianans between 1208
and 1326. The monumental main door and the carved stone window above
it are spectacular works of gothic art. After the Ottoman conquest of
Nicosia in 1570, a minaret was added to the cathedral and thus it was
transformed into the Hagia Sophia Mosque, which was renamed Selimiye
Mosque in 1954. Nearby is the covered bazaar with everything from
designer jeans to fresh produce and souvenirs, both tasteful and
cheap and gaudy.

Two other notable restorations are the mansion of Dervish Pahsa and
the Lusignan House near the Ministry of Tourism, a historical
building in its own right. The 19th century Dervish Pasha Mansion
belonged to the publisher of the first Turkish newspaper Zaman in
Cyprus. It has been transformed into an enchanting ethnography museum
with life size models of men and women in ethnic costumes and a
collection of everyday items, including colourful costumes and lamps
with intricate designs in bright colours.

The mansion is part of the conservation project of the historic Arab
quarter on the western edge of Lefkosa’s walled city which was
falling into disrepair. Following hostilities between Greek and
Turkish Cypriots in 1963-73 and the island’s subsequent division in
1974 the area witnessed an influx of Turkish-Cypriot refugees who had
been forced out of their villages. After 1974 however, many of the
settlers had the means to return to their former homes, leaving only
the elderly and the very poor.

In order to address the severe deterioration of the quarter, the Arab
Ahmet conservation project was instigated with the help of the UN.
The focus of the project, which is aimed at both the historic quarter
and the contemporary city of Lefkosa, is primarily economic. Balanced
development has, with the backing of the whole community, allowed the
area to benefit from widespread regeneration and, more importantly,
to attract an inward flow of investment. A large park is being
developed, local artists work in the area and the 21st century with
an internet café blends effortlessly into a street with old, restored
houses.

Restoration at its best can be seen in the Lusignan House, a 15th
century mansion with its Gothic-arch entrance door and coat-of-arms
as well as the Ottoman era addition of a kiosk and decorated wooden
ceilings. In 1958 the mansion, which was used by the Russian Classen
family as a residence and weaving workshop, was bequeathed to the
government. During the early 1980s it was used by refugees and after
two years of arduous restoration by the Antiquities and Museums
Department was opened to the public in 1997. It is filled with
authentic furniture from the Lusignan and Ottoman periods.

The place for lunch, or dinner, is certainly Boghjalian Konak
Restaurant in what used to be the Armenian Quarter of the Arab Ahmet
area. Once owned by the Armenians who left the area, the
Turkish-Cypriot owner Sevil-Zihni Turksel is proud he now manages one
of the top ten restaurants on the island. Generous hot and cold
starters precede a main course fit for a pasha and a selection of
sweets and fruits. Cheaper restaurants line the road from the tourist
information centre to the Saray Hotel, one of the only two hotels in
the old city. It is also a street for gold jewelry and Rustem’s
Bookshop, the largest and best-stocked in North Cyprus.

After the immersion in Turkish – Gothic architecture a soak in a
Turkish bath may be welcome. It is possible at the Grand Baths (Buyuk
Hammam) whose entrance has sunk well below pavement level, the level
of the street in the 14th century. The elaborate entrance portal
carved in stone is now all that survives of the Church of St George
of the Latins, the original incarnation of this building before the
Ottomans converted it into a Turkish bath.

The old city, like the rest of the island, is friendly and relaxed.
Visitors are made welcome and it is easy to think of North Cyprus as
a home away from home, a small slice of paradise neglected and
isolated by the international community due to the embargo which
prohibits direct flights.

But as the renovations of historic buildings and sites continues and
more hotels and restaurants are built, Mehmet Basel, the Director of
the Tourism Promotion and Marketing Department at the Ministry of
Economy and Tourism is convinced that tourist numbers will rise from
240,000 in 2003 to 600,000 in the next five years and one million in
2020. `Why not?’ he asks answering his own question. `South Cyprus
has 2.6 million visitors a year’.

Mevlevi Tekke Museum, a monastery of the whirling dervishes, the
mystic order founded by Mevlana a Persian/Turkish poet of the 13th
century, is in the road which leads to the heart of the old city.

The people of North Cyprus seem to have taken the order’s code of
conduct to heart:

Be like a river when it comes to generosity and help,
Be like the sun when it comes to affection and mercy,
Be like a night in covering up the faults of others,
Be like a dead body when it comes to fury and nervousness,
Be like the earth when it comes to humility and humbleness,
Be like a sea when it comes to tolerance,
Either appear as you are or be as you appear.

Getting there: The cheapest and most direct flights (with a 40 minute
re-fuelling stop in Turkey) are offered by Cyprus Turkish Airlines
which fly every day from most European capitals. The embargo on
direct flights may be lifted this year.

Where to stay: The elegant 72 room Saray Hotel in the old city is
Lefkosa’s best. It has a roof top restaurant with magnificent views.
Ataturk Meydani (Square) Nicosia. 00-90-392-2283115)

Who to contact: IAH Ltd () a London-based
company which specializes in tours of Turkey and North Cyprus.

www.flightholiday.co.uk

On this day – Dec 14

Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia
The Mercury, Australia
Dec 14 2004

On this day

14dec04

1988 – Sixty more survivors are pulled from rubble of earthquake that
rocked Armenia.

1417 – Sir John Oldcastle, a leader of the Lollards religious sect,
is hanged and burned in Britain; he was considered to be the model
for Shakespeare’s character Falstaff.
1542 – Following the battle of Solway Moss, James V of Scotland has a
mental breakdown and dies; his daughter Mary Stuart acceded to the
throne at the age of one week.
1799 – Death of George Washington, first president of the United
States (1789-1797).
1822 – Congress of Verona ends, ignoring Greek war of independence.
1861 – Prince Albert, consort and husband of Queen Victoria, dies of
typhoid at Windsor Castle.
1900 – Max Planck first publishes his Quantum Theory: that radiant
energy comes in small indivisible packets and was not continuous as
previously thought.
1911 – Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen becomes first man to reach
South Pole.
1912 – Louis Botha resigns as South Africa’s Prime Minister.
1913 – Greece formally annexes Crete.
1916 – People of Denmark vote to sell Danish West Indies to United
States for $US25 million.
1918 – Women in Britain vote for the first time in a general election
and are allowed to stand as candidates; first to be elected was Irish
nationalist Countess Markievicz of Sinn Fein, who could not take her
seat as she was in prison; Sidonio Paes, president of Portugal, is
assassinated.
1920 – First fatalities on a scheduled passenger flight occur when an
aircraft crashes into a house killing the two-person crew and two
passengers at Cricklewood, London.
1927 – Britain recognises Iraq’s independence; China and Soviet Union
break relations.
1937 – Japan establishes puppet Chinese government at Peking.
1939 – The Soviet Union is dropped from the League of Nations.
1941 – US Marines make stand in battle for Wake Island in Pacific
during World War II.
1945 – Josef Kramer, known as “the beast of Belsen”, and ten others
are hanged in Hameln for crimes committed at the Belsen and Auschwitz
Nazi concentration camps.
1946 – United Nations General Assembly votes to establish UN
headquarters in New York City.
1947 – Death of three-times British prime minister Stanley Baldwin;
he headed the government during the General Strike of 1926 and the
abdication crisis of 1936.
1959 – Archbishop Makarios becomes the first president of the
Republic of Cyprus.
1960 – Paris convention is signed creating the Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, to come into force in
September 1961.
1962 – North Rhodesia’s first African-dominated government is formed
under Kenneth Kaunda; Mariner II space probe begins sending back to
Earth man’s first information from another planet, Venus.
1968 – Referendum in Tasmania gives go-ahead for Wrest Point casino.
1972 – US Apollo 17 astronauts blast off from Moon after three days
of exploration on lunar surface.
1978 – UN General Assembly calls for an oil embargo against South
Africa.
1981 – Israel annexes Golan Heights captured from Syria in 1967.
1986 – Fifty people are reported killed and 125 injured in ethnic
riots in Pakistan.
1987 – Allan Border becomes highest run-scorer in Australian cricket
with double-century against New Zealand in Adelaide.
1988 – Sixty more survivors are pulled from rubble of earthquake that
rocked Armenia.
1989 – Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov dies; Opposition leader
Patricio Aylwin is elected president in Chile’s first free election
since 1970.
1990 – In Hong Kong, 10 Vietnamese boat people set fire to themselves
to protest against a screening policy that could prevent them from
settling in the West.
1991 – Former East German leader Erich Honecker, facing extraditiion
to Germany and trial on manslaughter charges, is offered asylum in
North Korea.
1992 – Left-wing member of Parliament in Britain introduces
legislation to eliminate the Queen’s job.
1993 – US and European Community set aside a bitter fight over films,
unlocking the door to the world’s biggest-ever trade reform package;
European Union establishes diplomatic relations with South Africa,
putting the final touch to a new policy of cooperation after years of
isolation.
1994 – Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic asks former US President
Jimmy Carter to mediate a lasting peace in Bosnia.
1995 – Australia announces a wide-ranging defence and security treaty
with Indonesia; Heavy fighting erupts in Gudermes, in the breakaway
Russian republic of Chechnya, when rebel guerrillas disrupt
Kremlin-imposed elections; Leaders from former Yugoslavia sign a
Bosnian peace treaty in Paris, formally ending Europe’s worst
conflict since World War II.
1996 – Balancing bundles of food and clothing on their heads, Rwandan
refugees who previously refused to return home begin re-entering
Rwanda after 2-1/2 years in Tanzania; Liberal government wins WA
election, gaining three seats.
1997 – Reform-minded Iranian President Mohammed Khatami says that he
is ready to re-establish dialogue with the United States, the first
such statement since the 1979 revolution in Iran; US comic actor
Stubby Kaye, who endeared himself to movie and theatre audiences as
the gambler Nicely-Nicely in the stage and film versions of Guys and
Dolls, dies aged 79.
1998 – In the presence of US President Bill Clinton, the Palestinian
Council votes to revoke a paragraph in its charter that demanded the
destruction of Israel.
1999 – US and German negotiators agree to establish a fund of $US5.2
billion for Nazi-era slave and forced labourers; Japan says it will
lift all sanctions against North Korea, setting the stage for an
improvement in ties.
2000 – Vladimir Putin, the first Russian president to visit Cuba
since the collapse of the Soviet Union, holds talks with Fidel Castro
in Havana as he starts a trip aimed at warming up ties between the
former Cold War allies.
2001 – Hundreds of US Marines occupy the Kandahar Airport, carefully
picking through unexploded weaponry and debris left by the Taliban as
the US military relocates its main base in southern Afghanistan,
arresting dozens of suspected militants.
2002 – The wooden ferry Papa Friends 2000 pitches its nearly 200
passengers into Lake Piso in Liberia, near the coastal town of
Robertsport, killing all but 15.
2003 – Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf escapes an
assassination attempt when a powerful bomb explodes on a bridge in
Rawalpindi less than a minute after his motorcade crosses it.

BAKU: Azeri leader holding talks in British Parliament

Azeri leader holding talks in British Parliament

ANS TV, Baku
13 Dec 04

[Presenter] The Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict will be the main subject
of discussion during Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s negotiations
in his official visit to Britain.

We should recall that the head of state has already started his
official meetings. The president is now holding talks at the British
Parliament’s foreign relations and defence committees. The president’s
working day will end with a dinner and party at the Anglo-Azeri
Society today.

[Passage omitted: details of the president’s work schedule tomorrow]

European experts unhappy with Armenian constitutional reform drafts

European experts unhappy with Armenian constitutional reform drafts

Arminfo
13 Dec 04

YEREVAN

All three drafts of constitutional reforms put up for public
discussion are still far from democratic principles, Vardan Pogosyan,
representative of the international NGO Partnership in the Name of
Open Society, said in Yerevan today, citing the conclusion of the
Venice Commission of the Council of Europe.

Addressing a meeting to discuss these draft laws, he said that the
Venice Commission had looked into the three drafts: the one of
Armenia’s ruling coalition, the one offered by the National Democratic
Bloc party led by Arshak Sadoyan and the draft put forward by the
United Labour Party chaired by Gurgen Arsenyan.

European experts reckon that the main shortcoming of all the drafts is
the ill-defined division of the branches of power.

The draft offered by the National Democratic Bloc is weaker than the
others since it does not say anything about the protection of people’s
basic rights and freedoms, as well as about the protection of freedom
of speech and conscience. Experts at the Venice Commission believe
that the package of constitutional reforms drafted in July 2001 should
be taken as a basis. It was drafted by a special ad hoc commission
which included the chairman of the Constitutional Court, Gagik
Arutyunyan, Justice Minister David Arutyunyan and others. For their
part, the 2003 and 2004 packages may serve as addenda to the aforesaid
document.

In the European experts’ view, for some reason the three drafts lack
provisions guaranteeing citizens’ judicial protection while the
abolishment of the death penalty is mentioned only in passing – “each
citizen has the right to life”. The experts at the Venice Commission
believe that the members of the Council of Justice must be appointed
by the parliament, not by the president. The president must be
stripped of his right to appoint and dismiss prime ministers, and this
right should be handed over to the parliament.

The functions of the head of state must not be dominant even in
countries with semi-presidential rule. Among all the countries with
semi-presidential rule, only in Armenia and Russia it is the president
who appoints and dismisses prime ministers. Ukraine is the last
country to give up this practice.

On the whole, the Venice Commission’s experts concluded that there are
all conditions in Armenia to conduct genuinely democratic
constitutional reforms with the broad participation of all the
political organizations without exception in the process of
establishing a civic society, Vardan Pogosyan said.

Turkey’s Self-Emasculation

Global Politician, NY
Dec 13 2004

Turkey’s Self-Emasculation

12/14/2004

By Antero Leitzinger

Under the new Islamist government, Turkey’s foreign policy has been a
complete disaster, unrivalled in the country’s long and proud
history. Few other countries in the world have ever managed to depart
from their traditional foreign policies so rapidly while voluntarily
missing so obvious chances for achieving great victories. Instead of
participating in the liberation of Iraq, to which Turkey was invited
by the USA, its closest ally, Turkey prostrated to France – to the
very same country that just recently condemned Turkey for the
Armenian genocide, and opposed NATO guarantees for Turkey’s security.
Instead of having the Turkish Army parading in Kirkuk as the
protector of Iraqi Turks and Kurds, Turkey not only choose to side
with the Arab Socialist Baath Party dictatorship of Saddam Hussein,
but even went on expressing publicly concerns on Kirkuk’s security on
April 10th, the very day its inhabitants were celebrating their
liberation by Kurdish freedom-fighters.

Turkey’s disastrous choices and perverted image campaign in order to
appeal to traditionally anti-Turkish left-wing peace activists and
Arabic radicals, can no more be explained by the lack of experience
of its new government, leading AK Party, and foreign minister
Abdullah Gül. The only rational explanation must lie in Turkey’s
political self-emasculation. Apparently, it will present its
application for EU membership as a political eunuch for Europe – as a
harmless country without real military capabilities (not even a show
of force beyond Cyprus, for over 80 years), and without an
independent agenda to integrate its Kurdish minority. Instead of
having a grateful Kurdish protectorate, or a friendly Iraqi
government as its south-eastern neighbour, Turkey will be bordered by
independent-minded Kurds who will have a leading role in shaping the
foreign policy of Free Iraq.

The consequences of Turkish total failure in spring 2003 will be
studied and regretted by scholars of military strategy and diplomacy
for decades to come. The frustration felt in the Turkish Army and
intelligence services, will boil for a long time. When the media will
realize, that Turkey lost a unique chance to secure a role in forming
future Iraqi policy, and to present its military force as the
guarantor of peace and prosperity for the whole Kurdish people, added
with the realization of being betrayed by the French and the
disappointment of being left outside the EU anyway, the popularity of
the current AK Party administration will fall to low bottom. How much
humiliation can a government take? Since the party has a majority in
the parliament, a crisis of Turkish democracy will be inevitable. A
military coup would not be the worst possible result.

Just when Turkey was on the brink of becoming the leading country of
the region, and a trusted pillar of the Free World, Turkish
politicians and journalists failed to follow the example of Kemal
Atatürk, who had led his country with convincing strength and vision.
Instead of winning the top prize in the three weeks. war, Turkey
became the worst casualty of the whole process, irresponsibly
degenerating into a third-class power, and a destabilizing factor in
the Middle East. The contrast can not be exaggerated. Consequences
will be felt also in the Caucasus and Cyprus, where Turkey lost
critical credibility and authority.

Imagine the Turkish Army having returned from a glorious march
through Mosul and Kirkuk to Baghdad. There would have been many
military decorations and promotions, valuable experience, some
martyrs to be commemorated, and plenty of deserved self-assurance.
The Turkish people as a whole would have felt a new sense of unity
and pride. Turkey as the main Muslim member of the international
coalition would have been remembered and loved in the USA, in
Britain, and in several other courageous EU member states. The
economy would have gained both through immediate US aid and Iraqi
contracts. The Greek, Armenians, Syrians, and Iranians, would have
respected Turkish concerns and taken Turkey’s requests into account.

But this all did not materialize. The sole responsibility lies on the
Turkish government, and all attempts to make any late recovery by
attempts to bully the Kurds, to occupy Northern Iraq, or to act as an
interested party to the reconstruction of Iraq, are vain, will be
ridiculed, and only serve to emphasize Turkish confusion. It is sad,
but the heavy work of generations of skilled Turkish diplomats,
analysts, public relations officers, and private friends of Turkey,
was wasted in a few weeks. Honour is hard to earn, shame even harder
to loose.

Some years ago, foreign policy analysts wondered “Who lost Russia”.
Today, the question is, “How did Turkey lose itself?”

The article was originally written in April 2003.

Antero Leitzinger is a political historian and a researcher for the
Finnish Directorate of Immigration. He wrote several books on Turkey,
the Middle East and the Caucasus.

Turkish-style European adaptation

Turkish-style European adaptation

Yerkir/arm
December 10, 2004

The desperate efforts that Turkey makes to convince the Europeans it
has adopted the European values and principles has been discussed a
lot.

The last example was the Turkish prime minister’s inauguration of an
Armenian museum where he made a “tender” speech how his government
values Turkey’s minorities, including Armenians. The trick’s goal was
to change Turkey’s image in the mind of an average European who likes
idyllic pictures.

Turkey is trying to once again deceive the international community
like it did a few years ago. International organizations, including
UNESCO, expended significant grants to Turkey who had committed to
restore and preserve historical monuments on the modern Turkey’s
territory. Now, Europeans and advocates of Europeanizing Turkey can
themselves see how those monuments — and especially the 10th-century
St. Cross Armenian church of Agtamar — were “restored.”

The picture on the left was taken before the “restoration.” One can
clearly see the cross held by angels. The Armenian cross of the church
has disappeared on the right-hand photo taken after the “restoration”
which has changed nothing else. Isn’t this how Turkey adapting
European values?