Friday, December 15, 2006

Armenian Patriarch Urges EU to Continue with Turkey


By Sezai Kalayci, Istanbul

Patriarch Mesrob II, the head of the Armenian Orthodox Church in Turkey, sent out a letter to the leaders of all European countries asking them to support Turkey’s EU bid during the European Council meeting.

The letter was sent on Dec. 12 to 23 EU leaders, except Greek and Greek Cypriot leaders.

Mesrob Mutafian reminded EU leaders the obligations of the union and asked them to fulfill their promises.

The Armenian patriarch said Mustafa Kemal urged Turkey in the 1920s to turn to the West, adding: “It is of utmost significance that the EU should not force Turkey to fulfill multifaceted conditions and derail negotiations, while ignoring its obligations.”

Mutafian said as the leader of the Armenian Orthodox community he wanted to convey his opinions and concerns ahead of the council meeting started the previous day, and indicated that EU leaders’ decision regarding Turkey would have impacts in a wide context.

The current impasse over Turkey-EU relations would put Turkey’s accession process to the union in a risky position, the Patriarch said, adding: “This critical period should be handled with responsibility.”

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

IMF forecasts Armenia's GDP will grow 11% in 2006

YEREVAN. Dec 13 (Interfax) - The International Monetary Fund is forecasting that Armenian GDP will grow 11% compared with a planned growth in the budget of 7.5%, Nienke Oomes, IMF permanent representative in Armenia, said at a Wednesday press conference.

GDP will be $6.114 billion in nominal terms in 2006 and per capital GDP will be $1,882, he said.

The Armenian budget deficit is forecast at 2.3% of GDP in 2006, budget revenue at 17.4% of GDP and spending at 19.7% of GDP, Oomes said.

Armenian GDP grew 13.1% year-on-year to 2.033 trillion dram in January-October 2006. GDP grew 13.9% in 2005.

The official exchange rate on December 13 was 365.11 dram/$1

Sunday, December 10, 2006

ANCA ACTION ALERT

Demand Return of Stolen Armenian Genocide-era Assets.


Take 60 seconds to fill out an action alert demanding Deutsche Bank repay assets belonging to heirs of Armenians killed in the Armenian Genocide.


(click here)

Saturday, December 9, 2006

In Memoriam

To the over 25,000 killed, over 100,000 injured and hundreds of thousands left homeless as a result of the December 7th 1988 Spitak (Gyumri) Earthquake in Armenia.

Tuesday, December 5, 2006

READ THESE TWO ARTICLES...Similarities in Ridiculousness...?!?

Iran Invites Scholars to Assess Holocaust

By NAZILA FATHI
Published: December 6, 2006

TEHRAN, Dec. 5 — The Iranian authorities, who have frequently accused the Jews of distorting history to legitimize Israel, announced plans on Tuesday for an international conference on the Holocaust.

They said the conference, to be held in Tehran next Monday and Tuesday, would include more than 60 scholars from 30 countries and would examine a range of issues, including whether the gas chambers were real.

Iran's president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, stirred outrage in the West last year when he stated on several occasions that the Holocaust, in which six million Jews perished at the hands of the Nazis, was either greatly exaggerated or an outright myth. He also called more than once for Israel to be wiped off the map.

Beyond questioning the Holocaust, Mr. Ahmadinejad has said the Jews have used it as a propaganda tool to promote Israel’s interests. Since several European countries make Holocaust denial a crime, he says scholars there are not free to do honest research on the subject.

...the conference would “provide the opportunity for scholars from both sides to give their papers in freedom and without preconceived ideas.” He refused to give the names of the 67 scholars invited to attend the seminar out of fear that their countries would prohibit them from coming.

The Foreign Ministry is sponsoring the event though its Institute for Political and International Studies, whose Web site says, “The word ‘Holocaust,’ which entered the political literature during the Second World War, turned into one of the most important propaganda tools used to politically justify the support for the Jewish People in the 20th century.”
____

Turkey Challenges Armenian Claims: Ankara Considers to Appeal to the International Court


Melek K. DURMAZSOY (JTW)

ANKARA - Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul declared that Ankara Government consider to appeal to the international court regarding the Armenian genocide claims. Armenians have never applied any court for their claims, but foreign parliaments. The details of the initiative will be declared in coming days.

Following Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s letter to Armenian President Robert Kocharyan last year in which he proposed the appointment of a joint commission of historians to discuss the 1915 incidents, Turkey intends on offering new initiatives.

Speaking at the Budgetary Commission of the Turkish National Assembly, Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said Turkish and foreign lawyers were studying the issue. Gul noted that Turkey did not rule out international adjudication, an option for which the views of both domestic and foreign international lawyers were being sought. Minister Gul also recalled that Turkey had invited not only Armenians but also third parties to join the proposed commission of historians.

Sukru Elekdag, CHP MP, gave strong support to Gul’s proposal and argued that Turkey is right and Armenians will have noting in the appeal.
Sedat laciner, head of the Ankara-based International Strategic Research Organization (USAK) told the JTW that the Armenians never went to the courts, but the foreign parliaments:

“Armenians want to keep the problem in the political framework, because they do not have prove their claims in the political area.” Laciner added.

According to Laciner, no international court can support the Armenian allegations under the UN Convention. Dr. Laciner further continued:

“The Armenians were armed in 1915, they had political aims against the Government, they supported the other side, and there were communal clashes between the Armenians, Kurds and Turks. The difference between genocide and political clashes is very clear in the UN Convention. The Armenians wanted a seat in the Lausanne Peace Treaty Negotiations, claiming they also fought against the Turks. The Armenians vividly confessed after the First World War that they were against the Ottoman State and they joined the allies against their state. All these prove that the Armenian case was not a genocide. Apart from the Armenian claims, the international court should also look at the Turkish massacres committed by the Armenian armed groups during the First World War. Many family in Turkey want to go to the courts against the Armenians.”

Dr. Sukru Elekdag says the new initiative is a milestone in Turkey’s Armenian issue policies. “It is the first time a Turkish FM is speaking about international court” Elekdag added.

Armenia has rejected all Turkish offers and invitations to discuss the past. The Armenian side argues that Turkey has to accept what the Armenians say, “because there is nothing left to be discussable”.

Armenia Leads the Way In Using Cleaner Fuel

(iran-daily.com)
Cut off from world energy markets, the mountainous state of Armenia is making a virtue of adversity and may be leading the world in using cleaner car fuel, officials say.
While the European Union is looking at 2020 before 10 percent of vehicles there will use alternative fuel, in Armenia up to 30 percent of cars already run on clean compressed gas, officials here say.
This statistic includes about 45,000 private cars and 90 percent of public transport.
Such high levels of clean fuel use are due “to the fact that Armenia, which has no energy resources of its own, is trying to use the most affordable alternative fuel,“ said Pavel Siradegian, a transport ministry official.
In this the ex-Soviet republic appears be leading a trend, AFP reported.
Around the world some five million vehicles are run on compressed natural gas and liquefied natural gas, according to the United States energy department’s Internet site.
Natural gas vehicles are just as safe as conventional petrol and diesel-fueled ones and produce lower harmful emissions, the department says.
In Armenia, the switch has its origins in the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union.
Before then, Armenia got petrol from its oil-rich neighbor Azerbaijan, but after the two countries plunged into a war over the Armenian-populated enclave of Nagorny Karabakh, Armenia cut ties with both Azerbaijan and Turkey.
Armenia buys its gas from Russia for 110 dollars (77 euros) per 1,000 cubic meters, with 84 percent of the population having access to gas at home.
The gas used for cars is three or four times cheaper than petrol and half the price of diesel fuel “and so people convert to gas of their own accord,“ Siradegian said.
The gas containers are usually imported from Russia or Italy and are installed in the car’s trunk at licensed centers--an operation that costs the equivalent of 700 to 1,000 dollars (530-760 euros).
“Even with such high installation prices it’s cheaper to use gas than petrol. A 20-litre-canister of petrol would cost some 17 dollars, while topping up with gas costs only four dollars,“ said the head of Yerevan’s Ultra taxi service, Aram Hachian, who has converted all his cars.
“If we used petrol, many people here wouldn’t be able to afford a taxi,“ he said.
Armenia currently has 140 filling stations equipped with gas compressing equipment.
“Drivers have no fear of being left without fuel,“ Siradegian said.
But some admit the choice has been forced on them.
“If I were rich, I’d fill my car with petrol because gas is bad for your engine and it is not very nice carrying an 80-kilogramme container in your trunk,“ said one Yerevan resident, 37-year-old Artem.
At the country’s environment ministry, officials hail the benefits of increased gas use after the damage done to the environment in the 1990s.
“Switching to gas has been a real salvation for... Armenia, whose forests suffered very much during the energy crisis,“ said environment official Martin Tsarukian.
“Gas-using cars emit half the amount of nitric oxide than petrol-driven cars,“ he said. “Conversion to gas was an economic necessity, but there have been ecological benefits as a result.“
The ministry is aware that the popularity of compressed gas could be time-limited if the country pulls itself out of economic hardship--the average salary is currently 100 dollars a month.
But it is now looking at ways of ensuring drivers stick to compressed gas--for example through tax benefits.

Monday, December 4, 2006

New Book From Taner Akcam

A Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish Responsibility

The story of the Ottoman Empire's slaughter of one million Armenians in 1915—a genocide still officially denied by the 83-year-old modern Turkish state—has been dominated by two historiographical traditions. One pictures an embattled empire, increasingly truncated by rapacious Western powers and internal nationalist movements. The other details the attempted eradication of an entire people, amid persecutions of other minorities. Part of historian Akçam's task in this clear, well-researched work is to reconcile these mutually exclusive narratives. He roots his history in an unsparing analysis of Turkish responsibility for one of the most notorious atrocities of a singularly violent century, in internal and international rivalries, and an exclusionary system of religious (Muslim) and ethnic (Turkish) superiority. With novel use of key Ottoman, European and American sources, he reveals that the mass killing of Armenians was no byproduct of WWI, as long claimed in Turkey, but a deliberate, centralized program of state-sponsored extermination. As Turkey now petitions to join the European Union, and ethnic cleansing and collective punishment continues to threaten entire populations around the globe, this groundbreaking and lucid account by a prominent Turkish scholar speaks forcefully to all.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Sunday, December 3, 2006

Turkey and Azerbaijan- Intent to Tag Team the Armenian Diaspora

Turkey Intends to Work with Azerbaijan on Joint Strategy in relation with Actions of Armenian Lobby – Turkish Ambassador

Source: Trend
Author: A.Ismaylova


Turkey intends to work out the joint strategy with Azerbaijan, in relation with the actions of the Armenian lobby regarding so-called “Armenian genocide”, the Turkish Ambassador to Azerbaijan, Turan Morali, briefed the media in Baku, commenting on the decision of the Parliament of Argentina dated on November 20, “On recognition of Armenian genocide in Ottoman Turkey in 1915”, Trend reports. According to the diplomat, this decision of the Argentinean Parliament was not a surprise for Turkey, since a strong Armenian lobby function in Argentina. “Currently, it is important for us to see what position Armenia will demonstrate in this process”, the diplomat said. He said that currently it is not possible to speak about sanctions in reply to the decision of the Argentinean colleagues. He said that presently Turkey is revising the strategic plan regarding the adequate steps with regard to the decision on the recognition of the so-called “Armenian genocide”. “We hope that this strategy will be worked out together with Azerbaijan”, Morali said.

Thursday, November 30, 2006

Turks Agree to Armenian Relations....With CONDITIONS

(PanARMENIAN.Net)
The overwhelming majority of Turks have a positive stance towards establishment of relations with neighboring Armenia, in case the latter meets “certain conditions,” returns of a sociological survey in Turkey indicate. 82% of respondents out of 8 thousand 714, questioned by Association for Struggle against Ungrounded Statements on Genocide have a positive stance over establishment of relations with Armenia, in case the latter meets “certain conditions.” These include refusal from “statements” on the Genocide, “apologizing to Turkey for these statements.” 53% of respondents listed a whole range of preconditions, including “Armenians should apologize to Turks for pogroms during WWI,” “demolish” memorial to victims of the Armenian Genocide in Yerevan, withdraw from Nagorno Karabakh.

16% of those questioned considered “breaking off relations with the Armenian communities of Europe and US and refusal from statements on the Genocide” sufficient. 18% of interviewees do not wish establishment of relations between Armenia and Turkey at all. Meanwhile, the percentage of those willing to establish relations without preconditions is not mentioned, reports RFE/RL.

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Digging Past Big Numbers

Ara at (Martuni or Bust ) has a very interesting analysis of the recent ArmeniaFund telethon, which purported to raise over $13.5 million.


"The annual "Hayastan" All-Armenian Fund telethon, which is the most successful government controlled collectors of Diaspora monies reported that they successfully collected $13.7 million.

Running the numbers, we discover that $9.8 million were given by 7 donors (who gave $500k or more), $270,000 were given by 4 donors of $50k or greater, $1.4 million were given by Germany, Belgium, Holland and Switzerland, and $1,200,000 was squeezed out of the natives of Armenia and Artsakh, totaling $12,670,000. This means a little more than $1 million was giving by the Diaspora of America, which makes up about 1 million of the better off financially Armenians of the world (less than 1% participated).

The above "success" is an indicator of the confidence the Armenian-American Diaspora has in the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund and its Board of Trustees. I would guess this has to do with the large Armenians from Armenia who have seen first hand how those in power use collected Disapora money."

Pope in Turkey

New York Times
ANKARA, Turkey, Nov. 28 — Pope Benedict XVI arrived in Turkey on Tuesday armed with a surprise gesture of good will aimed at blunting Muslim anger toward him: he backed Turkey’s long-stalled desire to join the European Union, reversing a statement he made two years ago.
The pope visited the mausoleum of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, who founded the secular republic that Turkey is steadily shifting away from.
Turkey’s prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, told reporters after a brief meeting with Benedict at the airport here that he had asked the pope to support Turkey in its attempt to become a member of the European Union.
“He said, ‘You know we don’t have a political role, but we wish for Turkey’s entry into the E.U.,’ ” Mr. Erdogan said the pope told him. “His wish is a positive recommendation for us.”
Although the Vatican does not play a formal role in the European Union, or delve publicly into domestic matters of other states, the pope’s gesture was nonetheless a piece of political stagecraft at a delicate time both in relations between Muslims and the West and in Benedict’s own damaged reputation among Muslims.
Long before he angered the Muslim world two months ago with a speech criticized as equating Islam with violence, Benedict was disliked here because of comments he made, as a cardinal in 2004, opposing Turkish membership in Europe. As the successor to the Ottoman Empire, Turkey had always stood, he said at the time, “in permanent contrast to Europe.”

(full story)

Friday, November 24, 2006

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE DENIER AWARDED NATIONAL HUMANITIES MEDAL

Pres. Bush Honors Recipients at White House Ceremony
(anca.org)

WASHINGTON, DC - Armenian Genocide denier and controversial Middle East historian Bernard Lewis was amongst those honored by President Bush this month with the prestigious National Humanities Medal, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA.) President Bush, joined by First Lady Laura Bush, bestowed the medal at a November 9th ceremony held in the White House Oval Office.

"The President's decision to honor the work of a known genocide denier - an academic mercenary whose politically motivated efforts to cover up the truth run counter to the very principles this award was established to honor - represents a true betrayal of the public trust," said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian.

Bernard Lewis, Professor Emeritus at Princeton University in the department of Near Eastern Studies, began his career as a historian with an honest assessment of the Armenian Genocide as a "terrible holocaust." He soon reversed his position, serving as leading spokesman for the Turkish government's denial campaign, along with Princeton University Professor Heath Lowry. Lowry was exposed as a paid spokesman for the Turkish government's worldwide campaign of genocide denial in the seminal journal article, "Professional Ethics and the Denial of Armenian Genocide", ("Holocaust and Genocide Studies," 1995).

Lewis' genocide denial became international news on June 21, 1995, when a French court condemned him for statements he made during a 1993 interview with French newspaper "Le Monde." The case, which argued that Lewis' statements caused harm to Armenian Genocide survivors, was filed by the International League Against Racism and Anti-Semitism and the Forum of Armenian Associations, representing a number of French Armenian organizations, including the ANC of France. The Court found Lewis "at fault," stating that, "his remarks, which could unfairly revive the pain of the Armenian community, are tortuous and justify compensation." The court further affirmed that, "the historian is bound by his responsibility toward the persons concerned when, by distortion or falsification, he credits the veracity of manifestly erroneous allegations or, through serious negligence, omits events or opinions subscribed to by persons qualified and enlightened enough so that the concern for accuracy prevents him from keeping silent about them." Lewis was symbolically fined one franc and "Le Monde" was ordered to reprint portions of the French court judgment, which appeared two days later.

Nine individuals and one institution were awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2006, including: Fouad Ajami, James M. Buchanan, Nickolas Davatzes, Robert Fagles, Mary Lefkowitz, Bernard Lewis, Mark Noll, Meryle Secrest, Kevin Starr, and the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace at Stanford University.

The National Humanities Medal honors individuals or groups whose work has deepened the nation's understanding of the humanities, broadened citizens' engagement with the humanities, or helped preserve and expand Americans' access to important resources in the humanities. The award, given by the National Endowment for the Humanities, was established in 1988. The National Endowment for the Humanities is an independent agency of the U.S. government that supports research, education, preservation, and public programs in the humanities. It was created by the U.S. Congress in the National Foundation on the Arts and the Humanities Act of 1965.

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

WATCH SCREAMERS TRAILER

New System of a Down Film Soon To Be Released
(Official Site)

Documentary feature examining why genocides keep occurring -- from the Armenian genocide in 1915, to the Holocaust, Bosnia, Rwanda and now Darfur -- through the eyes and music of the Grammy award-winning rock band System of a Down, based in Los Angeles, whose members are all grandchildren of genocide survivors. As the band tours the world and touches on the locations and stories of genocide in the last century, the film follows the personal story of the lead singer's grandfather, a 96-year old survivor of the Armenian genocide, one of the few remaining survivors from his village in Turkey. With the arguments of Harvard Professor Samantha Power, the personal stories of survivors from Armenia, Rwanda and Darfur, policy critics and whistleblowers- "the screamers"- the film targets the problem of genocide denial, with specific reference to the Turkish government's current campaign to stop its citizens from discussing the genocide. When the band arrives back in the United States, they confront the hypocrisy of U.S. foreign policy in the debate on genocide recognition, with Speaker of the House, Dennis Hastert, actively blocking a vote in Congress. Through the band's efforts to get Dennis Hastert to "Do the Right Thing" and Power's thesis that America's interest has always been to stay neutral, no matter how wide-scale the carnage, the film shows how successive Presidents and corporate interests have conspired to turn a blind eye to genocides as they are happening "whether it be Iraqi Kurds in the 80s, Rwanda in the 90s or Darfur today. After the Holocaust, we may say "never again" -- but we don't mean it.

Monday, November 20, 2006

Azeri President Wages War on Armenian Diaspora


Even though there is a ceasefire in the Karabakh conflict, and Armenian forces control the territory, Azeri president Ilham Aliev has decided to open up a new front.

This new front to the Karabakh conflict has been opened in Los Angeles, and soon to expand into every Armenian populated and influenced region.

The belligerent statements made by Aliev purport to use Azerbaijan's newly utilized oil wealth to, "fight the Armenian lobby on its own turf."(read story)

These statements can be seen two ways.
  • To galvanize the efficacy of Armenian activism. To reassure Armenians that their efforts are heard and valuable.
  • To rally Armenians to further unite, join together and organize to combat this "new" enemy. The Karabakh conflict is no longer a military matter; it is a political one. The people of Karabakh bravely fought for their right to self-determination and now the Diaspora must make it a priority to secure international recognition of the Negorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR).
For a nation to decide to open embassies and consulates worldwide with the stated goal (not to serve their countrymen) but to counterbalance the "influence" of others is a great sign of weakness and anxiety on the part of Azerbaijan.