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  • Armenia Hails Genocide Vote

    ARMENIA HAILS GENOCIDE VOTE
    By Tatul Hakobian in Yerevan

    armradio.am
    19.10.2007 10:39

    Politicians in Armenia have welcomed a vote by a US Congressional
    committee recognising the mass killings of Armenians in early 20th
    century Ottoman Turkey as genocide.

    Despite Turkey's anger over the move, Armenian politicians and
    commentators say they do not expect major repercussions, if only
    because relations between the two states are tenuous.

    Congress Foreign Affairs Committee passed the non-binding "Affirmation
    of the United States Record on the Armenian Genocide Resolution" on
    October 10, by 27 votes to 21 votes. The resolution is now set to go
    forward to Congress itself.

    The resolution says that genocide took place between 1915 and 1923,
    and involved the killing of 1.5 million Armenians and the expulsion
    of half a million more from the east of the Ottoman Empire.

    The vote caused excitement in Armenia. Alina, 26, who lives in Yerevan,
    said she received numerous text messages and emails after the news
    broke. "We all congratulated each other," she said.

    Armenian President Robert Kocharyan, who was visiting Brussels when
    the vote took place, hailed the outcome as a triumph for Armenians
    worldwide.

    On the question of the implications for Armenia's relations with
    Turkey, he said, "Recognition of a historic injustice cannot damage
    bilateral relations."

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan had earlier warned that if
    the resolution went through, it would damage his country's relations
    not only with the United States but with Armenia as well.

    "Those who expect any positive moves from Turkey will be left alone
    with their problems," said Erdogan. "They will pay for their hostility
    towards a country as important as Turkey."

    Egemen Bagis, a foreign policy adviser to Erdogan, was more specific,
    accusing Armenian officials for lobbying Congress.

    "Turkey must impose sanctions against Armenia," he told CNN-Turk
    television. "Turkey has already drawn up a list of what it will do
    and when it will do it, and the prime minister has already given the
    necessary orders."

    Lobbying for recognition of the genocide has been at the top of
    Armenia's foreign policy agenda for the past decade. A "national
    security strategy" adopted in February 2007 says that achieving
    universal recognition and condemnation of the genocide, including by
    Turkey, is seen "not only as the restoration of historical justice,
    but also as a way of improving the mutual confidence in the region
    and of preventing such crimes in future".

    Turkey did not establish diplomatic relations with Armenia when it
    became independent of the Soviet Union in 1991. Their common border
    remained open until April 1993, when the Turks closed it after Armenian
    forces captured the Kelbajar region adjacent to Nagorno Karabakh. This
    was at the height of the Karabakh war, in which Turkey was sympathetic
    to Azerbaijan.

    Yet despite the lack of formal diplomatic ties, relations with Turkey
    are still far better than with Azerbaijan. Armenian nationals are
    free to enter Turkey, simply buying a visa at the border. There are
    two direct flights a week between Istanbul and Yerevan.

    Turkey has a 70,000-strong Armenian population of its own, concentrated
    largely in Istanbul. But some reports suggest that there are also
    about 30,000 Armenian nationals living and working in Turkey.

    International media reported last week that some of those Armenians
    were suffering. The Irish Times reported that 100 illegal migrants
    from Armenia had been detained in Turkey and would be deported
    to Armenia. "The deportation is seen as revenge for the genocide
    resolution," the newspaper said.

    The only Armenian diplomat in Turkey, Karen Mirzoyan, who represents
    his country at the Black Sea Economic Cooperation Organization,
    confirmed the reports. "I have unofficial data to hand that confirm
    the facts," he said. "I can't provide more accurate information,
    because these issues are beyond my competence."

    In Yerevan, however, foreign ministry spokesman Vladimir Karapetian
    said that official information obtained from the Turkish authorities
    indicated that of the 542 foreigners detained recently for illegal
    residence, only one was an Armenian citizen.

    Ara Gochunian, editor of the Istanbul-based Armenian daily Zhamanak,
    told IWPR by telephone that Turkish police were taking tougher action
    against illegal immigrants of any ethnicity.

    "There are Armenians among those detained," he said. "But they were
    detained not because they are Armenians, but because they are illegal
    residents and had problems with their visas."

    In contrast to most of the Diaspora, the Armenian community in
    Istanbul opposed the US Congressional resolution, and the Armenian
    Patriarch of Constantinople, Archbishop Mesrop Mutafyan, went to the
    US to press for the resolution not to go through.

    "We will try to prevent the resolution from being passed by the US
    House of Representatives," the Turkish news agency Anadolu cited him
    as saying. "We are concerned that this resolution may impact on the
    lives of Armenian citizens in Turkey."

    Robert Hattechian, editor of the Istanbul-based Armenian daily Marmara,
    recalled that strong anti-Armenian sentiment manifested itself in
    Turkey after the murder of the well-known journalist Hrant Dink in
    January. He fears the US resolution will fuel Turkish nationalism.

    "Turkey's spite is now leveled against the Armenian Diaspora,"
    Hattechian said by telephone from Istanbul.

    Citing Prime Minister Erdogan's approval of Patriarch Mesrop's
    lobbying effort, Hattechian noted, "The Armenian community in Turkey
    has avoided making moves that might cast doubt over its loyalty."

    On October 11, a court in Istanbul court handed out one-year suspended
    sentences to Arat Dink, son of the murdered journalist and senior
    editor with the Agos newspaper, and editor Sarkis Serobian for
    republishing an interview Hrant Dink gave last year about the 1915
    mass killings of Armenians. Sentence was passed just a few hours
    after the US resolution went through.

    In Armenia, the view among experts seems to be that relations with
    Turkey are unlikely to deteriorate drastically, partly because Ankara
    cannot afford to make things worse than they are now.

    "The border is closed, there are no diplomatic ties, and trade
    is carried out through third countries," said political analyst
    Alexander Iskandarian. "The resolution will be forgotten in a few
    months' time. But it is not just a resolution, it's a process of
    recognising the genocide, it's a train that has started moving."

    He predicted, "If Turkey continues on the path it's on now, in other
    words seeking membership of the western community, then in five,
    ten or 15 years it will inevitably find itself having to improve its
    relationship with Armenia."

    Haik Demoyan, the director of Yerevan's Genocide Museum Institute,
    agreed, telling Armenian Public Radio that, "when a country closes
    its border with its neighbour, imposes a blockade on it and severs
    diplomatic ties, the only thing worse that one can imagine happening
    is a war. I don't think Turkey will dare complicate relations further."

    Vahan Hovhannissian, the deputy speaker of the Armenian parliament
    and one of the leaders of the nationalist Dashnaktsutiun party,
    argued that recognition of the genocide might actually serve to
    unblock relations with Turkey.

    "The argument that recognition of the Armenian genocide is going to
    damage efforts to normalize Armenian-Turkish relations is completely
    wrong," he said. "On the contrary, so long as the genocide remains
    unrecognized at an international level, Turkey will not have an
    interest in improving relations with Armenia and the Armenians."

    Tatul Hakobian is a commentator for the Public Radio of Armenia and
    the New-York-based weekly newspaper Armenian Reporter.
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