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  • Armenian Americans battle with Los Angeles Times

    PopMatters, IL
    May 6 2007


    Armenian Americans battle with Los Angeles Times


    FRENSO, Calif. - A well-known Fresno author and journalist is waging
    a heated battle with his boss at the Los Angeles Times - a very
    public struggle that has outraged many in Southern California's large
    Armenian community.

    It's also reverberating in Fresno, not only because of the sizable
    local Armenian population, but because Times staffer Mark Arax lives
    here and is of Armenian descent.

    `People I talked to locally are really upset,' said Varoujan Der
    Simonian, executive director of the Armenian Technology Group, a
    Fresno-based nonprofit that provides support for Armenian farmers.

    The dispute revolves around an article Arax wrote - but the paper
    refused to publish - to mark April 24, the 92nd anniversary of the
    Armenian genocide. An estimated 1.5 million Armenians died between
    1915 and 1923 at the hands of the Turkish Ottoman Empire.

    The modern Turkish republic contends that no genocide occurred, but
    for Armenians - and many Armenian Americans - the issue remains
    critically important.

    Hygo Ohannessian, who chairs the local chapter of the Armenian
    National Committee of America, said the Arax family has deep ties to
    Fresno and has long shown loyalty to its Armenian community.

    `We all want to come to (Arax's) aid, not just because he is
    Armenian, but because he has good values,' she said. `I stand behind
    him 100 percent.'

    The latest twist in the controversy came late Tuesday, when the
    Armenian National Committee of America urged members to call for the
    resignation of Times Managing Editor Douglas Frantz, whom Arax blames
    for killing his story.

    Harut Sassounian, a Southern California Armenian leader, and others
    say thousands of e-mails have flooded the Times - and they plan to
    continue pressing the matter.

    The dispute erupted in early April after Arax completed a story on
    the Armenian genocide resolution in Congress.

    According to Sassounian and accounts in the online political journal
    LAObserved.com, Arax's article looked at how the resolution battle
    was dividing not only Turks and Armenians, but also the Jewish
    community. Some Jews feel a kinship with Armenians because both were
    victims of genocide, while others don't want to damage Israel's
    alliance with Turkey.

    Frantz declined to comment on why he halted publication of the story.
    But LAObserved.com has published several internal Times memos on the
    issue, as well as a comment by Frantz.

    `I put a hold on a story because of concerns that the reporter had
    expressed personal views about the topic in a public manner and
    therefore was not a disinterested party, which is required by our
    ethics guidelines, and because the reporter and an editor had gone
    outside the normal procedures for compiling and editing articles,' he
    wrote in an e-mail to LAObserved.com.

    Frantz said he was concerned about bias because the writer, along
    with several other staff members, had signed a memo in the fall of
    2005 to top Times editors. The memo pointed out that the paper wasn't
    adhering to its written policy of unequivocally referring to the
    Armenian genocide as a historic fact.

    Arax, a longtime Times staffer who currently is assigned to the
    paper's Sunday magazine West, declined to comment on the dispute.
    However, he wrote a lengthy memo to his Times colleagues on Monday
    that was posted on LAObserved.com in which he defended himself and
    said he deserved a public apology from Frantz.

    In the memo, Arax said an internal investigation found the reasons
    cited by Frantz to be baseless. He offered no evidence of this
    finding, however.

    After Frantz stopped the story, a Times reporter in the Washington
    bureau used some of Arax's reporting to fashion a different story
    that appeared on the paper's front page April 21.

    An April 26 memo by Editor James O'Shea to the staff that also was
    posted on LAObserved.com said the published story `was the best one.'
    O'Shea noted that Arax's story was not killed but had been sent back
    for additional reporting. Arax could have had a double byline but
    rejected it, O'Shea wrote.

    Bill Erysian, coordinator of grants and international projects for
    the Armenian Agribusiness Education Fund, a nonprofit based at
    California State University, Fresno, said he has known Arax since
    college. Arax has always been unbiased - even on Armenian issues -
    Erysian said.

    `The whole irony to this situation is Mark Arax is not an activist,
    not a `professional Armenian,'' Erysian said.

    Arax, however, has taken public stances on other issues. Last year,
    he tangled publicly with Fresno County Supervisor Bob Waterston at a
    meeting of the Local Agency Formation Commission, and also criticized
    the LAFCO board for its failure to discuss urban sprawl.

    Arax also wrote a letter to the editor criticizing The (Fresno) Bee
    after it offered its Fresno Unified school board endorsements. The
    Bee had not endorsed his sister, Michelle Asadoorian, who later went
    on to win one of the trustee seats.

    Local Armenians maintain that Frantz's logic in the matter is flawed.
    If his claim that Arax's signature on a memo showed he has a
    pro-Armenian bias, then the same claim could apply to other ethnic
    minorities.

    `Are you saying no Jewish people can write about the Holocaust?'
    asked Barlow Der Mugrdechian, a lecturer in Armenian studies at
    Fresno State. `That seems a little ludicrous.'

    Some Armenian activists feel Frantz has his own bias on the issue.
    Before becoming managing editor of the Times, he was a longtime
    correspondent in Istanbul, Turkey, and is scheduled to moderate a
    panel discussion this month in Istanbul titled `Turkey: Sharing the
    Democratic Experience.'

    In the end, many in the Armenian community say, something has to give
    in the dispute.

    Said Sassounian, the Armenian leader who first rallied a defense for
    Arax: `There's no way Douglas Frantz and Mark Arax can exist in the
    same newsroom after what has happened. One of them has to go, and
    hopefully not the one who is innocent, but the one who is guilty.'

    - John Ellis [McClatchy Newspapers (MCT)] 1:01 am | Permalink


    http://www.popmatters.com/pm/blogs/sourcessay_p ost/34030/armenian-americans-battle-with-los-angel es-times
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