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ISTANBUL: Armenia diaspora wing flies in new direction

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  • ISTANBUL: Armenia diaspora wing flies in new direction

    Hurriyet, Turkey
    Jan 21 2011

    Armenia diaspora wing flies in new direction


    Friday, January 21, 2011
    VERCİHAN ZİFLİOĞLU
    MARSEILLE, France - Hürriyet Daily News


    Didier Parakian, a politician and businessman who owns the global
    Parakian brand, is also the deputy mayor of Marseille. Daily News
    photo

    Liberal members of one of the most conservative Armenian diaspora
    groups have called for the renewal of rapprochement efforts with
    Turkey, saying the border between the two countries should be opened
    to trade and travel.

    "[Diplomatic] protocols were signed and a new process was beginning.
    For once we believed things were going to change, but it ended up
    quite contrary," politician and businessman Didier Parakian, a member
    of the French Armenian diaspora in Marseille, told the Hürriyet Daily
    News & Economic Review. "We were planning to start trade [between
    Turkey and Armenia], and I was planning to lead this process, but
    everything got turned upside down."

    Parakian said he is unhappy with the way the Armenian diaspora is
    understood by the Turkish public. "We cannot take the diaspora as a
    homogenous whole. There of course is a very strict conservative
    segment, but there are also liberals like us," he said, adding that
    the liberal wing would gain more power if the border between Turkey
    and Armenia were to be opened, while leaving it closed fuels negative
    radicalism.

    The apology campaign started by Turkish intellectuals in late 2008 to
    atone for the events of 1915, when Armenians claim up to 1.5 million
    of their kin were systematically killed in the waning days of the
    Ottoman Empire, received positive reactions within the diaspora,
    according to Parakian, who is also the deputy mayor of Marseille.

    The businessman said they never blamed the Turkish people for the
    events of 1915, which Armenia has characterized as genocide. "They
    [Turks] only know what the official history tells them, but there is a
    bitter truth," he said. "As liberals we could have started trade
    activities as a first step if the borders were opened. But it is
    impossible for us to take a step back in terms of our efforts to get
    the genocide recognized in other countries."

    Colette Babouchian, another Armenian politician from Marseille, was
    among the first supporters in the diaspora of the Armenian apology
    petition campaign launched in Turkey. He said he is not against the
    formation of a historians committee to further investigate the events
    of 1915.

    "I believe in communication. There must be a historians committee, but
    one composed of objective, impartial scholars," Babouchian told the
    Daily News. "If the truth will really be uncovered with no vested
    interest involved, there is nothing to be afraid of on our part. The
    evidence is already in the open."

    Launched in December 2008, the "I apologize" campaign has drawn harsh
    criticism within Turkey, even as approximately 30,000 people,
    including many intellectuals and journalists, have signed the
    petition, which reads in part: "My conscience does not accept the
    insensitivity showed to and the denial of the Great Catastrophe that
    the Armenians were subjected to in 1915." Turkey denies claims of
    genocide, saying that any deaths were the result of civil strife that
    erupted when Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern
    Anatolia.

    Efforts to bridge the diplomatic gap between the two countries started
    in 2008, when Turkish President Abdullah Gül made a historic visit to
    Armenia to watch a World Cup qualifier football match between the
    Turkish and Armenian national football teams. Armenian President Serge
    Sarkisian visited Turkey to watch the return match in 2009.

    Following this "football diplomacy," Turkey and Armenia signed two
    protocols for the development of relations and the mutual opening of
    their sealed border in 2009, but the two countries have been unable to
    complete the process of ratifying the protocols.

    Asked why much of the diaspora is against renewing relationships with
    Turkey, Babouchian said: "If I am to exemplify those from Marseille,
    almost all the Armenians here are the sons and daughters of those who
    luckily survived the events of 1915 and moved here. How do you expect
    them to feel?"

    He immediately agreed with Parakian that the Armenian diaspora does
    not blame the Turkish people for the historical events and only seeks
    acknowledgment of the truth and an apology for it. "We will never come
    back to Turkey; my country is now France," he said.

    Remembering the slain Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink, whose
    murder four years ago was commemorated in Istanbul this week, Parakian
    said: "When Hrant was shot we thought history was repeating itself. He
    was trying to open doors and establish a dialogue between these
    cultures. Besides, he genuinely loved Turkey and Turkish people."




    From: A. Papazian
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