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Massis Weekly Online - Volume 27, Issue 50 (1350)

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  • Massis Weekly Online - Volume 27, Issue 50 (1350)

    Massis Weekly Online
    http://MassisWeekly.com
    VOLUME 27, ISSUE 50 (1350)

    - Levon Ter-Petrosian Confident Of Election Triumph
    - Russian Company Takes Over Armenian Railway
    - Denmark Refuses To Recognize Armenian Genocide
    - Hrant Dink Commemoration To Feature Prominent Speakers
    - Hrant Dink: Belated Victim of Armenian Genocide
    ------------------

    - Levon Ter-Petrosian Confident Of Election Triumph

    YEREVAN -- Former President Levon Ter-Petrosian on Friday referred to
    himself and his loyalists as the only ?real? opposition to Armenia?s
    current leadership and said he is confident about beating Prime
    Minister Serzh Sarkisian in next month?s presidential election.
    At his first news conferences in more than a decade, Ter-Petrosian
    said he will urge supporters to take to the streets of Yerevan if the
    vote is falsified by the authorities. He also spoke favorably about
    international mediators? existing plan to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict, saying that it is essentially identical with a peace deal he
    had advocated while in power.
    ?I?m not going to comment on Serzh Sarkisian?s scenarios,?
    Ter-Petrosian said when asked about upbeat statements made by the
    government camp. ?I have my scenario and I will realize it. ?I am
    convinced that that scenario is working. And while others say ?We will
    win,? I say ?I have already won.??
    Ter-Petrosian played down Sarkisian?s government levers and formidable
    propaganda machine, claiming that senior government and law
    enforcement officials will start defying government orders ?in 10-20
    days.?
    He said he is also succeeding in getting his anti-government message
    across because he and parties supporting him are ?the only real force
    opposed to the authorities.?
    ?I have already spoken to half a million people,? he said.
    ?The brochures and DVDs of my speeches have already reached them. No
    other candidate has such audience. Even the candidate of power who
    supposedly talks to the people through 15 TV stations. They don?t
    watch and listen to him.?
    Ter-Petrosian was repeatedly asked by journalists what he will do if
    he concludes that the presidential ballot has been rigged in
    Sarkisian?s favor. ?Being conscious of my rights, being well aware of
    our constitution and laws and international legislation, I would take
    all steps stemming from that legislation: demonstrations, marches,
    pickets, court actions,? he replied. ?This is going to be my path.?
    Still, it remained unclear if Ter-Petrosian is ready to stage the kind
    of post-election street protests that brought down governments in
    neighboring Georgia and other former Soviet republics in recent years.
    He stressed only that he will steer clear of any violent actions.
    The 63-year-old former scholar also made it clear that Western
    monitors? opinion about the Armenian government?s conduct of the
    upcoming election will not serve as the ?supreme judgment? to himself
    and his political allies. He pointed to their largely positive
    assessment of Armenia?s May 2007 parliamentary elections that
    contrasted with opposition allegations of blatant fraud.
    ?I may have my opinion, they may have their opinion,? said
    Ter-Petrosian. ?As you know, there were wonderful opinions about last
    year?s parliamentary elections. Go out to the streets and ask people
    what they think of those opinions.?
    ?I don?t care what international bodies will say,? he added. ?We have
    to solve our problems with our laws and within the limits, no matter
    how narrow, of our freedoms.?
    Downplaying the impact of foreign powers on the Armenian presidential
    race, Ter-Petrosian insisted that he is not seeking any external
    support for his bid to return to power. ?I will not appeal to Russia,
    America, Europe or anyone else,? he said. ?I don?t need external
    support. I don?t need power granted to me from abroad.?
    Ter-Petrosian also spoke about unresolved Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,
    the main theme of his previous news conference held in September 1997
    less than five months before he resigned under pressure from his key
    cabinet members, including then Prime Minister Robert Kocharian and
    Interior Minister Serzh Sarkisian. He indicated that, if elected
    president, he will go along with international mediators? existing
    peace proposals which call for a gradual settlement of the Karabakh
    dispute.
    ?The logic, if not the formal agreement or that proposal, of the
    current state of the negotiation process can be the basis [for an
    Armenian-Azerbaijani peace deal,]? said Ter-Petrosian. He reiterated
    his view that the peace plan formally put forward by the OSCE Minsk
    Group in November is ?in essence? the same as the one which he
    advocated in 1997-1998 and which Kocharian and Sarkisian rejected as
    ?defeatist.?

    - Russian Company Takes Over Armenian Railway

    Russia?s state-run railway operator formally took over the long-term
    management of Armenia?s rail network on Wednesday, pledging to give it
    a new lease of life with hundreds of millions of dollars in investments.
    Transport and Communications Minister Andranik Manukian signed a
    30-year management contract with Vladimir Yakunin, the visiting chief
    executive of the Russian Railways company, after officially declaring
    the latter the winner of an international tender.
    The Russians, who have the option of extending the deal by another 20
    years, are to make a one-off payment of $5.5 million to the Armenian
    government and invest at least $570 million in the Armenian railway.
    Of that, $220 million is supposed to be invested in the next five
    years. The government will also get 2 percent of its annual operating
    revenues.
    Under the terms of the agreement, the Russian investments will jump to
    $1.8 billion if Armenia restores its rail communication with Turkey
    and Azerbaijan. The sum is to total about $2.2 billion in the event of
    the reopening of the Abkhaz section of Georgia?s railway linking the
    region to Russia.

    - Denmark Refuses To Recognize Armenian Genocide

    COPENHAGEN -- Denmark does not officially recognize that Ottoman
    massacres of Armenians during World War I constitute genocide, Danish
    Foreign Minister Per Stig Moeller said Thursday.
    ?In the government?s opinion, this is a historical question that
    should be left up to the historians,? Moeller wrote in a written
    parliamentary answer, indicating that Denmark would not follow the
    lead of some 20 other countries, including France, that have labeled
    the killings genocide.
    Moeller?s note came in response to a question from parliamentary
    member Morten Messerchmidt, of the far-right Danish People?s Party, on
    whether ?Denmark had officially recognized this genocide.?
    ?It is unfortunate that the Danish government refuses to join other
    countries in recognizing this genocide,? Messerschmidt told AFP. ?It
    is as if they fear Turkey?s reactions.? Copenhagen?s decision ?to not
    recognize this genocide shows that the government indirectly supports
    Turkey?s cowardly refusal to take responsibility for its history the
    way the Germans did after World War II,? he said.


    - Hrant Dink Commemoration To Feature Prominent Speakers

    The first anniversary of the murder of Istanbul Armenian journalist
    Hrant Dink will be marked on Friday, January 25, at 7:00 p.m., at the
    Western Diocese of the Armenian Church of North America, 3325 North
    Glenoaks Blvd., Burbank, CA 91504. This special event will feature
    talks by Prof. Taner Akçam of the University of Minnesota, Prof.
    Richard G. Hovannisian of the University of California, Los Angeles,
    and Stephen A. Kurkjian, formerly of the Boston Globe.
    The evening?s program is co-sponsored by the Organization of Istanbul
    Armenians of Los Angeles, the Armenian Educational Foundation Chair in
    Modern Armenian History at UCLA, and the National Association for
    Armenian Studies and Research, and will take place under the auspices
    of the Western Diocese, His Eminence, Archbishop Hovnan Derderian,
    Primate. Simon Acilacoglu, President of the Organization Of Istanbul
    Armenians, will give opening remarks and Abp. Derderian will offer
    closing remarks and a prayer.
    There will be a musical performance by Salpi Kerkonian (flute) and
    Sosi Kerkonian (harp). Edvin E. Minassian, Esq., Vice President of the
    Organization of Istanbul Armenians, will serve as Master of Ceremonies.
    One Year After: Possibilities and Difficulties The murder of Hrant
    Dink, the Turkish-born Armenian founder and editor of the newspaper
    Agos and passionate advocate of Turkish-Armenian dialogue, stunned and
    horrified the world and prompted an unprecedented demonstration of
    hundreds of thousands taking to the streets of Istanbul waving signs
    saying ?We Are All Hrant Dink? and ?We Are All Armenian.? The brutal
    slaying of the peace-loving, reconciliation-oriented Dink underscored
    both the possibilities and the difficulties of Armenian-Turkish
    dialogue and reconciliation efforts. His prosecution under Turkey?s
    Article 301 for ?insulting Turkishess? and the subsequent prosecution
    of his son, Arat, for the same ?crime? raise serious questions about
    free speech in Turkey and have dramatized the difficulties faced by
    journalists in a country seeking entry into the European Union.
    To mark the first anniversary of his death, a program has been
    organized that will not only pay tribute to this courageous man but
    also bring together a group of speakers who are well qualified to put
    both his life and his untimely and tragic death in some meaningful
    perspective.
    Profiles of Featured Speakers:
    A pioneer among scholars of Turkish origin, Prof. Taner Akçam is the
    author of A Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide and the Question of
    Turkish Responsibility, a groundbreaking study that makes extensive,
    unprecedented use of Ottoman and other sources largely unexamined in
    Englishlanguage works, as well as From Empire to Republic: Turkish
    Nationalism and the Armenian Genocide, Dialogue Across An
    International Divide: Essays Towards a Turkish-Armenian Dialogue, as
    well as numerous other books and articles in Turkish, German, and
    English. Akçam, a close friend of Hrant Dink, will discuss his final
    conversations with Dink which took place only two weeks before his
    death.
    Prof. Richard G. Hovannisian is the holder of the Armenian Educational
    Foundation Chair of Modern Armenian History at the University of
    California, Los Angeles. He is the author of the four-volume history
    The Republic of Armenia, Armenia on the Road to Independence, and has
    edited and contributed to more than twenty books including The
    Armenian Genocide in Perspective; The Armenian Genocide: History,
    Politics, Ethics; The Armenian People from Ancient to Modern Times;
    Remembrance and Denial; Looking Backward, Moving Forward; The Armenian
    Genocide: Ethical and Cultural Legacies; and six volumes on historic
    Armenian cities and provinces. He recently cochaired a special session
    on ?On Hrant Dink and Armenian-Turkish Relations? at the Middle
    Eastern Studies Association 2007 Annual Meeting in Montreal. He will
    reflect on Hrant Dink?s legacy now and in the future.
    Stephen A. Kurkjian recently retired from the Boston Globe after a
    career of more than thirty-five years at the paper during which he won
    three Pulitzer Prizes and more than twenty other regional or national
    awards for his investigative reporting. The Globe?s Washington bureau
    chief from 1986-1991, he had previously been a founder and the head of
    the Globe?s Spotlight investigative team. He is a member of NAASR?s
    Board of Directors and serves on its Executive Committee. In January
    2007 he traveled to Istanbul to witness and cover the funeral of Hrant
    Dink and its aftermath. He presented his initial report in a Globe
    feature and in a talk at NAASR in February 2007, following up with a
    lengthy article in the AGBU Magazine in April. He has continued to
    follow the murder investigation and related developments in Turkey and
    will give an updated report and personal view.


    - Hrant Dink: Belated Victim of Armenian Genocide
    By Toros Sarian

    On January 19, 2007 the publisher and Editor of the bilingual weekly
    Istanbul newspaper AGOS was shot by a young Turkish nationalist. Who
    was this Armenian who had over the years continuously and persistently
    displayed courage through his intellectual campaign against the
    Turkish state apparatus? A state which not only denies the Armenian
    Genocide but also has created through a systematic racial
    indoctrination of its citizens a social and political climate in which
    such murders are tolerated if not accepted by society. The Armenian
    Patriarch of Istanbul Mesorb Mutafyan whose relationship to Hrant was
    not always free of conflict, described Hrant Dink with the following
    words "his life full of struggle and challenges turned Hrant Dink into
    a courageous, sensitive and decisive personality; becoming a symbol
    for justice, freedom of belief and human rights. He voiced his
    opinions and ideas with total disregard for the possible dangers. When
    he was convinced of the necessity of doing something then he acted
    with the same decisiveness.?
    Hrant Dink was born in Malatya on 15th September. This city had before
    the Genocide a large Armenian population. His father Sarkis, a tailor,
    came from Gürün and his mother Gülvart from Kangal in the province of
    Sivas.
    Hrant was the eldest of three sons. In 1960 his family moved to
    Istanbul and a year later his parents separated. Hrant and his
    brothers were sent to an Armenian orphanage in Gedikpasa which was run
    by the Armenian evangelical community. The children spent the Summer
    in the Tuzla holiday camp on the Marmara Sea. This place played an
    important role in his life as he met here his first love Rakel.
    Together with her they later ran this holiday camp. After attending
    the local protestant Armenian community Primary and Middle schools,
    Hrant went to the Armenian Grammar school Surp Hac Tibrevank in
    Üsküdar. In these years he developed his political awareness and
    became a supporter of a radical left party. In 1972 he changed his
    name and was then called Firat Dink. His friend Armenak Bakirciyan,
    who came from Diyarbakir and also involved in the left revolutionary
    movement, renamed himself Orhan Bakir.
    The purpose of changing their names was not to distance themselves
    >From their Armenian roots but to avoid unnecessary difficulties for
    innocent Armenians due to their campaigning. As result of Hrants
    political activities he was expelled from the Armenian Grammar school.
    In May 1980 Armenak, Hrants friend and political ally, who was a
    leading member of the Maoist TKP/ML, was shot by the Turkish security
    forces. Hrant Dink was later very critical and disappointed about the
    attitudes of the Turkish left regarding the Armenians and the question
    of national identity. ?I was extremely shaken that the Armenian
    genocide was also not discussed by the Turkish left, and that they
    closed their ears especially to problems concerning national and
    cultural identity. But I believe that exactly this fight about
    retaining ones own identity, to live ones own tradition and being
    allowed to speak ones own language is an extremely decisive fight.?
    After his A-Levels at a Turkish school Hrant studied Zoology and
    Philosophy at Istanbul University and founded with his two brothers a
    bookshop in the Bakirköy district which still exists today. In 1984
    Hrant experienced the bitter realities faced by any Armenian
    institution or foundation in Turkey in the form of whimsical and
    illegal dispossession.
    On the basis of a law from 1936 which regulated foundations and
    inheritance, the Tuzla Summer Camp was confiscated. This event was a
    turning point in Hrants life. Until the mid 70´s the Armenian
    community in Turkey had led fairly inconspicuous lives. However, after
    Armenian organizations had begun taking military actions against
    Turkish facilities and embassies abroad the situation changed
    dramatically for the Armenians in Turkey. The State increased its
    suppression and rekindled the hate against the Armenians. In view of
    the near civil war conditions prevailing at the end of the 70´s it is
    not surprising
    that these developments were scantly reported by the international
    community. Almost daily bloody armed attacks took place between left
    wing organization and fascist groups or the state security forces.
    This disparate and divided revolutionary movement was in the end
    brutally put down by the military putsch of 12th September 1980.
    Tens of thousands of state opponents were imprisoned and dozens of
    political prisoners were tortured to death or executed. Although, the
    Armenian organizations ended their armed struggle from the mid 80´s,
    the repression by the Turkish state of the Armenians increased even
    more. One reason for this was the success of the Armenian Diaspora in
    gaining international recognition of the Armenian Genocide.
    The fury of the Turkish state was felt by Armenian minority in Turkey.
    At the same time the Turkish regime in order to be considered for EU
    membership, had to allow a minimum of democratic civil liberties. From
    1990 Hrant Dink began looking for ways for
    the Armenian minority to express itself socially and politically.
    Together with a few friends and with the support of the former
    Patriarch Galustyan, Hrant Dink decided to publish a new Armenian
    newspaper. The first issue of the Bilingual weekly AGOS appeared on
    the 5th April 1996. Within a short time it had become the most
    important Armenian newspaper in Turkey with a circulation of more than
    6000. The idea of publishing a bilingual Armenian newspaper came to
    Hrant Dink because he wanted to inform the Muslim-Turkish majority
    about the history, culture and the current social and political
    problems being faced by the Armenian minority. He was convinced that
    only through increasing awareness within Turkish society could the
    existing and deep rooted prejudices against the Armenians be broken
    down.
    In an interview about the AGOS he said ?We view the AGOS as our
    instrument for education and reconciliation. This does not prevent us
    >From holding up a mirror to the Turkish society and saying that when
    we wish to join the EU then we must accept responsibility for our
    history and the forced assimilation of all minorities must be ended?
    The renowned Italian based Armenian Language and Literature Professor,
    Zekiyan, described Hrant Dink as the man who made courageous strides
    to drag the Armenian Community in Turkey out of the ghetto existence.
    Hrant Dink and the AGOS broke through the wall of silence and fear
    which the remaining Armenians have lived behind since the Genocide.
    The editor of AGOS was increasingly becoming a National Threat for the
    Turkish state; a threat which had to be silenced. Nationalists
    orchestrated harassment campaigns and the Judiciary started regularly
    legal proceedings against him and other workers at AGOS. The Turkish
    media also played their part in creating an atmosphere of hatred.
    Hrant Dink did not give up hope even after his prosecution and
    sentence for Insulting of Turkishness and decided to appeal against
    his sentence at the Court for Human Rights in Strasbourg. He had
    lodged his appeal just a few days before his murder and had no idea
    that at the same time a Turkish-Nationalist fanatic had already
    planned his murder and that the State Security forces were aware of
    this.
    Ogün Samast, Hrant Dinks murderer, said after his arrest that the
    Armenian had insulted Turkishness. He posed proudly, between two
    grinning Turkish policeman, before the cameras holding a the Turkish
    flag in his hand. One of the policemen even congratulated him by
    saying ?Well done brother?, and was depicted in Turkish television
    broadcasts as a national hero by the state security forces. ?Ogün had
    carried out his national duty and had saved the honor of Turkey?
    enthused Yasin Hayal the man who had encouraged Ogün Samast to commit
    the crime. Celattin Cerrah, the Head of the Istanbul police explained
    in a statement just after the murder that it had not been politically
    motivated but that the young perpetrator had only been following his
    ?National feelings?.
    On January 22, 2007 Turkey and the world was eye witness to a moving
    event in Istanbul. Over a hundred thousand people paid their last
    respects in silence to an intellectual in a city which had also
    witnessed the arrest of hundreds of Armenian intellectuals and their
    expulsion and murder on 24th April 1915. The developments in Turkey
    since the 19th January have shown that the solidarity with the
    Armenian minority was only of short duration.
    The country is confronted with other more pressing problems. The fate
    of the Armenian minority is again left to chance and many see
    emigration as the only way out of their hopeless situation.
    The Turkish government has recently hinted that paragraph 301 will be
    changed. However, an internal fight is taking place between the
    coalition parties as to how #301 should be changed. In principal, any
    amendments to #301 will not result in a significant change to the
    undemocratic processes valid in Turkey at present. The armed forces,
    the bureaucracy and the allied nationalistic political forces within
    the parties will use any methods at hand to oppress any opposition to
    the ruling state ideology. These developments pose for us the question
    What can we do about the continuing oppressive policies of the Turkish
    Government? It is in any case important Armenians continue informing
    world opinion of the undemocratic and racist nature of the Turkish
    state. The present nationalistic state ideology was established by the
    Young Turks after their takeover in 1908. Anyone who questions this
    ideology or doubts the official version of Turkish history is
    automatically an ?enemy of the state.? A state which not only denies
    the Armenian Genocide but also brutally suppresses any honest debate
    regarding this crime.
    Therefore it was clear to Hrant Dink and his friends that the
    achievement of Freedom of Speech is of utmost importance in the battle
    against the Turkish system of lies and denial. The fight which Hrant
    Dink had begun with the founding of AGOS will continue and many more
    courageous people will become victims of fanatical Turkish
    nationalists. However, in the end this racist Turkish system, built
    upon violence and suppression will collapse as other criminal systems
    and governments have done so in the past. Hrant Dinks commitment and
    courage in the fight for Freedom of Speech and Justice will serve as
    an example for all people. Like so many other Armenian martyrs before
    him, he will always be remembered by his people.

    Toros Sarian is a historian
    and community activist
    in Hamburg, Germany

    --
    Massis Weekly Online
    MassisWeekly.com
    1060 N. Allen Ave, Suite 203
    Pasadena, CA 91104
    Tel. 626.797.7680
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