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  • First European Armenian Convention Attracts Hundreds

    EUROPEAN ARMENIAN FEDERATION
    for Justice and Democracy
    Avenue de la Renaissance 10
    B - 1000 BRUSSELS
    Tel. +32 (0)2 732 70 26
    Tel. /Fax. +32 (0)2 732 70 27
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Website: www.eafjd.org


    PRESS RELEASE

    For Immediate Release
    Contact: Talline Tachdjian
    Tel. +32 (0)2 732 70 26
    October 18th, 2004


    FIRST EUROPEAN ARMENIAN CONVENTION ATTRACTS HUNDREDS

    -- FEATURES LEADING EUROPEAN UNION EXPERTS

    BRUSSELS, BELGIUM (18 October 2004) - In a landmark event that brought over
    two hundred and fifty Armenian advocacy leaders from more than fifteen
    European nations, the European Armenian Federation for Justice and Democracy
    (EAFJD) today held the opening day of the first ever Convention of European
    Armenians in the European Parliament building in Brussels, Belgium.

    The Convention, which is taking place at a critical time for the more than
    two million Armenians living in the European Union, provided a forum for
    scholarly discussion, rigorous debate, and consensus-building on the role of
    Armenian culture and identify within the Europe, the implications of
    Turkey's candidacy for the European Union, and the expansion of the EU's
    "neighbourhood" to include the countries of the Caucasus. Today's program,
    which included the first two of the Convention's sessions, featured
    presentations by senior European policy-makers, intellectuals, and community
    leaders. Each presentation, which was simultaneously translated in the
    French, English, and Armenian, was followed by a question and answer
    session. The day's events ended with a reception in the European Parliament
    building.


    WELCOMING REMARKS

    The Convention opened with remarks from Francis Wurtz, (MEP -European United
    Left), the Chairman of the European Parliament host committee for this
    program. His remarks were followed by Ruben Shugarian, the Deputy Foreign
    Minister of the Republic of Armenia, whose responsibilities include Armenian
    diplomacy toward Europe and the Western Hemisphere. A welcoming speech was
    made by EAFJD Chairperson Hilda Tchoboian, who followed her remarks by
    inviting Toros Sagherian, the Chairman of the Forum of Armenian Associations
    of Europe, to offer his thoughts to those in attendance. Messages of
    support were read from the H.H. Karekin II, Catholicos of all Armenians,
    H.H. Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House Cilicia, and His Beatitude Nerses
    Bedros, XIXth Patriach of Armenians Catholics.


    ARMENIAN CULTURE ET IDENTY IN EUROPE

    The first session covered the issue of "Armenian Culture and Identity in
    Europe," a topic of pressing concern to community leaders committed to
    seeing the Armenian contribution to Europe fully recognized and appreciated.
    The four member panel was chaired by Alexis Govciyan, the Chairman of
    "Europe de la Memoire." The discussion started with a presentation, titled
    "The European Linguistic Policy: Commission's Planning 2004-2006," by
    Jacques Delmoly, the Head of the Language Policy Unit in the European
    Commission's Directorate General. He stressed the importance the Commission
    places on promoting a favourable climate for the learning of languages based
    on a policy of linguistic diversity in an environment of integration. He
    spent considerable time, both in his presentation and during questions and
    answers, explaining the role of the Armenian language - which he cited as an
    official European minority language - within this system of language
    education.

    Delmoly's official perspective on Armenian language education was followed
    by Haroutioun Kurkjian, an Athens-based author of Armenian language text
    books. After reviewing the context in which the Armenian community has
    evolved within Europe, Kurkjian, in his presentation on "The Armenian
    Culture and the European Union," stressed the need for the European Union to
    create a favourable environment for multiculturalism, one that is conducive
    for the development of Armenian language and culture. He noted his
    dissatisfaction with the failure of schools and the media to sufficiently
    propagate the Armenian language, and called for the European Armenian
    community to undertake the gradual "cultural rearming" of the Armenian
    diaspora.

    The third speaker on the first panel was Prof. Mihran Dabag, the Director of
    the Institute of Diasporas and Genocide at Bochum University in Germany.
    His comments, titled "The Armenian Experience in the Context of European
    Policies of Remembrance," examined European attitudes and policies dealing
    with the Armenian Genocide and other aspects of Armenian history within the
    context of traditional and modern European models of remembrance. He noted
    that Europe's remembrance has not normally been understood as including the
    Armenian Genocide, despite the fact that this crime falls well within the
    European experience on a number of fronts. The Armenian Genocide should be
    recognized as part of European history, he argued, not simply as an element
    of the Turkish-Armenian relationship. Prof. Dabag cited the new Turkish
    Penal Code, which criminalizes discussion of the Armenian Genocide, as a
    prime example of Turkey's refusal to come to terms with this matter.
    Europe, he said, needs to provide a political answer to the political issue
    of Turkey's genocide of the Armenian nation. Moving beyond the Genocide
    issue, he stressed that the Armenian community must make concerted efforts
    to create a framework that will ensure that Armenian literature is accepted
    by Europeans as part of their own tradition.

    The final speaker in the first panel was Jules Mardirossian, Chairman of the
    Armenian Studies, Information and Documentation Center in France. The
    comments by this long-time intellectual and community leader, were on the
    theme of "New Identities, Political Challenges and the Issue of Transfer of
    Culture." In his presentation, Mardirossian explored the transformation of
    individual and collective identity and values of Armenians in Europe.
    Starting with a theoretical discussion of the nature of identity, he then
    described the reality of the post-modern, traditional, and transitional
    models of Armenian community identity today. Mardirossian ended his
    sweeping review of the identity challenges and opportunities facing the
    Armenians of Europe with the insight that culture without politics cannot
    survive, while politics without culture is sterile.

    Questions for the first panel included requests for additional insights into
    how to secure EU funding for Armenian language education, the potential loss
    of the Melkonian School as a center of Diasporan education, and the broader
    neglect of identity building outside of Armenia. A spirited exchange on
    these issues lasted an hour, and was only adjourned to make time for the
    group to break for lunch.


    EU-ARMENIA RELATIONS

    The second session, chaired by EAFJD Executive Director Laurent Leylekian,
    moved the focus of discussion from Armenian identity within the Europe to
    the EU's relations with Armenia. This topic began with insights from
    Marie-Anne Isler-Beguin, MEP, the Chairwoman of the EU-South Caucasus
    delegation. As the point person in the European Parliament on engagement
    with Armenia and its Caucasus neighbours, Isler-Beguin began by noting the
    EU's concern about the Armenian Cause, and stressing her appreciation of the
    fact that the concerns raised by Armenians about Turkey's candidacy are
    founded in fact. While noting that the EU should use its leverage over
    Turkey's entry to bring an end to the blockade of Armenia, she added that
    she believed that, in time, Turkey would accept its past and mutual
    interests would prevail over mutual hostility. On the topic of EU-Armenia
    relations, Isler-Begiun stated that European institutions would welcome
    progress by the Caucasus countries toward the EU family. She specifically
    expressed encouragement about Armenia's acceptance into the EU's new
    neighbourhood program, the values that the EU and Armenia share, and the
    prospect for continued cooperation between Europe and Armenia on specific
    projects.

    The second speaker, Vicken Tchitetchian, serves as Armenia's Ambassador to
    the European Union. He provided an in-depth review of the current status
    and future prospects for expanded EU-Armenia relations. He pointed out that
    European integration was not being imposed from the outside, but rather
    sought by the Armenian government, which is moving this process forward in a
    realistic and practical manner. Amb. Tchitetchian stressed that Armenia has
    made progress in its key areas of reform, despite the fact that its
    neighbour to the West has sought, using the last closed border in Europe, to
    hinder its progress at every turn.

    Also presenting as part of the second panel was Vahan Zanoyan, the CEO of
    the Petroleum Finance Corporation and a world-renowned expert on
    international energy issues. Zanoyan reviewed the history and current
    status of the Baku-Tiblisi-Ceyhan pipeline and its implications for Armenia.
    He focused on two pressing challenges for backers of the pipeline, namely
    financing, which has largely been resolved via multilateral agencies, and
    the sufficiency of oil throughput for the line's viability, which remains an
    open question. He then spent considerable time offering his insights on the
    geopolitics of the pipeline and its impact on Armenia and the region.

    Richard Tibbels, the Armenian Desk Officer of the European Commission's
    Directorate General, offered a presentation on "EU-Armenia relations:
    Challenges and Opportunities." Tibbels, who works on a daily basis with the
    Armenian government, stressed that Armenia has made considerable progress
    across a number of reform areas - including alignment with European legal
    standards, membership in the World Trade Organization, and in its poverty
    reduction efforts. He also pointed out areas for improvement, including the
    conduct of the 2003 presidential elections, respect for human rights, and
    the need to address income disparity and corruption as the economy grows
    stronger. The neighbourhood program is not a gateway to prospective EU
    membership, but nor does it, he explained, in any way close the door to
    future participation in the European Union. Tibbels closed by noting the
    critical role that Europe's Armenian community plays in bringing the EU and
    Armenia closer together.

    The next presentation began with an announcement by Amb. Tchitetchian that
    the speaker - Demetrio Volcic - had been awarded the "Mkhitar Gosh" award in
    recognition of his support for the rule of law and the virtue of justice.
    Volcic, a former member of the European Parliament, noted that the EU has
    adopted a new pattern of thinking about areas on its borders. The EU, he
    said, can no longer afford to ignore the Caucasus region, and should devote
    increasing attention to Turkey's policies toward Armenia.

    Volcic was followed by Armand Sarian, a noted economist from France, who
    spoke on the topic of "Economic Relations between Armenia and the EU."
    Sarian began by noting the economic importance of this relationship, on
    issues ranging from investment to foreign aid. He stressed the progress
    Armenia has made on economic issues, despite its lack of resources, the near
    total orientation of its economy to Soviet markets, the 1988 earthquake, and
    the ongoing Turkish and Azerbaijani blockades. He underscored the need to
    continue Armenia's growth, to foster the conditions for peace, and to make
    Armenia increasingly attractive to outside investors.

    The final speaker of the day was Prof. Otto Luchterhandt, who teaches
    International Law at the University of Hamburg. In his remarks, he outlined
    a compelling historical and legal case for Nagorno Karabagh's right to
    self-determination. In addition, he sharply criticized the EU's
    inconsistency in identifying serious shortcoming in Turkey's willingness to
    meet clear European standards, while still recommending that Turkey begin
    talks toward eventual membership. He stated his strong opposition to any
    actions by the EU that position it as a neutral party in the matter of the
    Armenian Genocide. The proper role for the EU, he argued, is in the morally
    correct position of pressing Turkey to come to terms with this crime.

    During the discussion period after this presentation, Deputy Foreign
    Minister Shugarian repeated a point he had made several weeks earlier that
    Turkey's recognition of the Armenian Genocide represents a security issue
    for the Republic of Armenia. Other topics raised in questions included
    whether the EU was fully using its leverage to press Turkey to meet
    international norms domestically and in its conduct with neighbouring
    states. Other issues for discussion included Armenia's economic integration
    with Europe and the need for a differentiated EU approach to the Caucasus
    countries based on the merits of their respective progress in economic and
    political reforms.

    Additional news about the second day of the Convention will be forthcoming.
    The EAFJD represents more than 300 Armenian organizations in Europe.
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