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TOL: Nationalists Launch Hunger Strikes Against Turkey Reconciliatio

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  • TOL: Nationalists Launch Hunger Strikes Against Turkey Reconciliatio

    NATIONALISTS LAUNCH HUNGER STRIKES AGAINST TURKEY RECONCILIATION DEAL
    Marianna Grigoryan

    Transitions Online, Czech Rep.
    Sept 17 2009

    Nagorno-Karabakh and genocide claims could divide Armenian public
    opinion on the diplomatic breakthrough. From EurasiaNet.

    The tentative Armenian-Turkish plan for diplomatic normalization has
    sparked Armenia's oldest political party, the nationalist-oriented
    Armenian Revolutionary Federation, to take to the streets with sit-down
    protests and hunger strikes. Public support for the party's criticism
    that the Armenian government risks selling out Armenia's national
    security interests appears to be spreading, even though it remains
    far from uniform.

    Bearing red party flags and banners proclaiming "Don't forget,
    don't surrender, let's rebel!" 74 party activists, including 24
    hunger strikers, kicked off their campaign in front of the Foreign
    Ministry and the prime minister's office in downtown Yerevan on 15
    September. The protests will continue until the end of the six-week
    period envisaged for discussion of the protocols within Armenia and
    Turkey before the documents' ratification, the party's TV ads state.

    President Serzh Sargsyan plans to start consultations on the protocols
    on 17 September with the leaders of Armenia's major political parties.

    Supporters claim that the 31 August protocols imply that Armenia
    should recognize the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, accept the
    current Armenian-Turkish state border, and, by agreeing to "implement
    a dialogue on the historical dimension," potentially backtrack on
    the country's longstanding demand for international recognition of
    Ottoman Turkey's 1915 mass slaughter of ethnic Armenians as genocide.

    The documents, however, make no such specifications on these
    topics. Written in broad language, they commit the two sides to opening
    their joint border within two months of the protocols' ratification and
    to establishing bilateral government commissions to work on expanding
    cooperation in fields ranging from education to energy. Turkish Foreign
    Minister Ahmet Davutoglu has emphasized in media interviews that
    border recognition is the first step in the reconciliation process,
    but the protocols do not mention border recognition.

    That, however, does nothing to reassure many Armenians. "We will fight
    until the end since [the protocols signed with Turkey] contradict
    our national interests," one male protestor in his late 20s told
    EurasiaNet. "We will do everything that promotes our national
    interests."

    Statements from Turkish government officials that the border will
    not open until Armenia and Azerbaijan make progress in settling the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict suggest that attention on the Karabakh
    issue will increase in the coming months, opined political analyst
    Yervand Bozoian. "That's the most dangerous thing," he said.

    The governing Republican Party of Armenia counters that the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation is using the protest to score self-interested
    political points. The 119-year-old party left Armenia's coalition
    government in April in protest at President Sargsyan's Turkey policy.

    "The Armenian Revolutionary Federation and other political forces have
    the right to choose what way to fight," commented Republican Party
    parliamentarian Eduard Sharmazanov, the party's spokesperson. "Any
    preconditions from Turkey are unacceptable for us."

    Other members of the governing coalition have echoed those comments. "I
    think we just need good will and courage. We see it in the actions
    of this president [Sargsyan]. We'll help the president to settle
    this issue," declared Heghine Bisharian, head of the Orinats Yerkir
    (Country of Law) parliamentary faction.

    But many Armenians do not see any manifestation of "good will"
    in the protocols' provisions. "Turks are so cunning, they will do
    everything to serve their interests. We know it perfectly well,"
    asserted 70-year-old Anzhela Garanian, whose parents survived the
    1915 slaughter. "How can I believe in their sincerity when I have
    heard all these stories from my father?"

    Philologist Mkrtich Hambardzumian similarly equates the Turkey of
    the Ottoman past with the Turkey of the present. He takes issue
    with Turkish assertions that Turkey's border with Armenia cannot be
    reopened until Armenian forces withdraw from Azerbaijani territory
    surrounding Karabakh. "What are we talking about? Turkey forgetting
    its bloody history now tries to interfere with the Karabakh issue," he
    fumed. "I'm not a political scientist, but the protocol is worrying."

    Suspicion in Yerevan about Turkey's motives is far from universal,
    however. Some passers-by at the protest commented on the irony of
    a former government coalition member now staging hunger strikes to
    block a government policy. Other Yerevan residents said protestors
    should consider the future. "I don't say we need to forget the past,"
    said 25-year-old designer Emma Babaian. "But two neighbors cannot live
    with closed borders forever. Bilateral relations will help Armenia
    economically and will offer an alternative route to Europe."

    The protests are not limited to the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation. The Heritage Party, the only opposition party represented
    in parliament, has written Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian about
    holding a referendum on the protocols. Earlier, Heritage Party leaders
    proposed a vote of confidence in the president, and a petition to
    the Constitutional Court. On 15 September, the party called on all
    members of parliament to appeal for "radical" changes in the protocols.

    "The development of Armenian-Turkish relations cannot directly or
    indirectly be linked to the establishment of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    Republic," asserted the Heritage Party's parliamentary faction
    secretary, Larisa Alaverdian.

    Meanwhile, Suren Surenyants, a senior supporter of ex-President Levon
    Ter-Petrosian, the head of Armenia's main opposition coalition, argues
    that Turkey wants to take on a leadership role in the South Caucasus,
    and will, therefore, try to play the role of an impartial mediator on
    Karabakh. The documents pose no danger to Armenia, he continued. Those
    casting doubt on Turkey perhaps are trying to conceal their own
    private agenda, he hinted. "Political groups should be sincere,"
    he said. "Either we want [to establish] diplomatic relations [with
    Turkey], which means we need these protocols, or we do not."
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