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Armenia This Week - 11/15/04

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  • Armenia This Week - 11/15/04

    ARMENIA THIS WEEK
    Monday, November 15, 2004

    In this issue:

    U.S.-Armenian security cooperation

    Millennium Challenge program

    Azeri propaganda and military build-up

    Economist on Armenian Genocide and Turkey


    ARMENIA CONFIRMS PLEDGE TO U.S. AMID FRESH ANTI-ARMENIAN TERRORISM IN IRAQ

    Armenian leaders reaffirmed their commitment to contribute to the
    U.S.-led forces in Iraq despite anti-Armenian terrorism in Iraq,
    significant domestic opposition and delays associated with rotation of
    the U.S.-allied forces out of Iraq. Last week, a car bomb went off
    outside the Armenian school in Baghdad. While no casualties were
    reported, the school which has 200 students has been closed
    indefinitely. Iraqi Armenian community leaders have appealed to the
    Armenian government against sending servicemen that would be seen as
    helping U.S. forces, fearing new, more deadly attacks. While sharing
    these concerns, Armenian officials argued that Armenia could not expect
    to benefit from stability accorded by the U.S., without contributing to
    it even in modest ways.

    Peacekeeping and other cooperation issues were high on the agenda of
    Armenia's Chief of General Staff General Mikael Harutiunian who just
    completed a week-long visit to the United States. Gen. Harutiunian held
    talks with the Chairman of the Joint Chief of Staff General Richard
    Myers and other Department of Defense officials. He also visited the
    National Defense University in Washington, DC, the U.S. Joint Forces
    Command and NATO Allied Command Transformation in Norfolk, Virginia,
    U.S. Central Command in Tampa, Florida and the state of Kansas whose
    National Guard is cooperating with the Armenian military. During the
    visit, the U.S. awarded Gen. Harutiunian with the Legion of Merit, a
    prestigious U.S. medal given to foreign officials and officers who have
    made a significant contribution to bilateral relations.

    Earlier this year, the Armenian government made a decision to send a
    military transportation company, engineers and medics to Iraq, a move
    that must receive parliamentary endorsement. In an interview last week,
    Prime Minister Andranik Margarian said that the government has not yet
    requested parliamentary approval due to recently announced changes in
    the Polish-led international division where the Armenian unit is due to
    serve. Poland, which after the U.S. and Britain has the third largest
    force in Iraq, is planning to scale back its deployment, while Hungarian
    forces, which are part of the Polish-led division, are due to be fully
    withdrawn. (Sources: Armenia This Week 8-2, 10-4; Armenian Embassy in
    U.S. 11-9; R&I Report 11-4; Nezavisimaya Gazeta 11-11; RFE/RL Arm.
    Report 11-11)



    ARMENIA'S MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE AID ELIGIBILITY RENEWED

    The U.S. Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) last week renewed
    Armenia's eligibility to receive Fiscal Year (FY) 2005 funds under the
    performance-based foreign assistance program. Armenia and Georgia remain
    the only former Soviet countries eligible and their governments' reform
    efforts are considered sufficiently advanced to qualify under MCC rules.

    None of the $1 billion slated for FY 2004 have been disbursed since
    Armenia and fourteen other countries were first selected last May.
    Armenia's Finance Ministry submitted a draft of its proposal to the MCC
    last month and is currently updating it with input from non-government
    experts. MCC's Stephen Groff, who was in Yerevan this Monday, said the
    Corporation urges all eligible countries to take their time and prepare
    quality proposals. (Sources: http://www.mcc.gov; Armenia This Week 5-7,
    9-20; Noyan Tapan 11-15)



    NO PROGRESS ON NK, AS AZERBAIJAN DUE TO STEP UP "INFORMATION WAR"

    Armenia's President Robert Kocharian this week expressed pessimism over
    the potential progress in talks with Azerbaijan on the future status of
    Karabakh. He said that Azerbaijan's refusal to negotiate directly with
    Karabakh's duly elected leadership or to work towards building mutual
    confidence in the region might present insurmountable obstacles for the
    peace process. Last week, Azerbaijan again declined Armenia's offer to
    sell electricity to Nakhichevan, the Azeri-controlled exclave
    experiencing severe energy shortages. Instead, Azerbaijan is stepping up
    what its officials have described as "information war" over Karabakh.

    Benefiting from high oil prices, Azerbaijan is also increasing its
    military spending, budgeting close to $250 million for defense next
    year. Armenia's defense budget for 2005 is projected at just under $100
    million. Karabakh Army Commander General Seyran Ohanian said this week
    that while the Azeri army was continuing to improve and was hiring
    outside advisors, NKR had the necessary capability to monitor and
    balance these efforts and, should it become necessary, undertake
    operations across the Line of Contact.

    Azeri officials last week dismissed U.S., French and Russian criticism
    of its efforts to force a debate on the Karabakh conflict in the United
    Nations' General Assembly (UN GA) with support from Turkey, Pakistan and
    other members of the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC). Meeting
    last week with Ambassadors of OIC states accredited in Baku, Azeri
    President Ilham Aliyev thanked them for their support against Armenia.
    Aliyev is also reaching out to African countries to win their support.
    According to an investigative report in an independent Azeri news
    magazine, Aliyev, following unexpected rendezvous' with Presidents of
    Djibouti and Gambia, last month hosted the Ivory Coast's embattled
    President Laurent Gbagbo. According to the magazine's sources, Gbagbo
    flew into Baku to discuss arms purchases there in circumvention of UN
    sanctions.

    Aliyev's Yeni Azerbaycan Party and Parliament member Samed Seyidov,
    speaking in Washington last week, attempted to justify his government's
    tactics by claiming that Azeris displaced in the Karabakh war were
    "pushing" his government to be more aggressive. He then repeated his
    government's propaganda figure of "1 million" displaced and presented a
    fictitious map showing Azerbaijan's entire territory covered in refugee
    camps.

    In fact, Azerbaijan's own statistics show that the number of its
    internally displaced (IDPs) is well below half a million. Tens of
    thousands of them were long kept in squalid conditions to be showcased
    to visiting foreign delegations. U.S. officials have urged the Azeri
    government to "allow IDPs to leave squalid camps, integrate locally, and
    begin building a new life." Finally last month, the Azeri Deputy Prime
    Minister Ali Hassanov announced that the five remaining IDP camps are
    due to be closed next year. (Sources: Armenia This Week 6-17-03, 6-14,
    7-19, 11-1; Azerbaijan Central Election Committee Oct. 03; Monitor
    10-23; Regnum.ru 10-29; Day.az 10-30; U.S. Mission to OSCE 11-4; Arminfo
    11-8, 9, 12, 13, 15; Azertag.com 11-10; R&I Report 11-5; RFE/RL Armenia
    Report 11-15)

    Visit the Armenia This Week archive dating back to 1997 at
    http://www.aaainc.org/ArTW/archive.php.

    A WEEKLY NEWSLETTER PUBLISHED BY THE ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA

    122 C Street, N.W., Suite 350, Washington, D.C. 20001 (202) 393-3434 FAX
    (202) 638-4904

    E-Mail [email protected] WEB http://www.aaainc.org
    <http://www.aaainc.org/>

    http://www.economist.com/World/europe/displaySto ry.cfm?story_id=3379889

    The Economist
    November 11, 2004

    Human rights in Turkey

    Haunted by the past

    A human-rights commission embarrasses the government


    ANKARA - "HAPPY is he who calls himself a Turk!" That breezy slogan,
    emblazoned on mountainsides and offices from the Aegean to the
    Euphrates, was devised by Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey,
    as he set about forging a fresh identity for his people. The idea was
    that former subjects of the Ottoman empire - whose native language might
    be Arabic, Albanian or Kurdish-would find a new togetherness as citizens
    of a unitary republic. And in case people hesitated to embrace the joys
    of Turkishness, there were harsh penalties for those who asserted any
    other sort of identity.

    For most of the past 80 years, these principles have been sacrosanct.
    But if Turkey is to have any hope of joining the European Union, some
    taboo topics of history, identity and language must be discussed openly,
    without fear of prosecution. In a burst of zeal three years ago, the
    government-led by former Islamists-set up a panel to take a broad look
    at questions of human rights and identity, and to suggest how things
    could be improved. But Turkey's masters got more than they expected. The
    board's report, released this month, said things that were almost
    unsayable, triggering a sharp backlash.

    For example, the report implies that if the Lausanne treaty of 1923-the
    basis of the Turkish state and its foreign relations-had been fully
    implemented, bloodshed between Turks and Kurds might have been avoided.
    To justify this argument, which is explosive in Turkey, however mild it
    might seem elsewhere, the report cites article 39 of the treaty, which
    allows Turkish nationals to use "any language they wish in commerce, in
    public and private meetings and all types of press and publication."

    It also says that articles which supposedly protect non-Muslim
    minorities have been read too narrowly: as well as covering Jews,
    Armenians and Greeks, these articles should have been applied, for
    example, to Syrian Orthodox Christians. More controversially still, it
    suggests replacing the term "Turk" with a more inclusive word to cover
    all ethnicities and faiths, such as "Turkiyeli"-"of Turkey".

    It was more than some Turks could bear. Even as Ibrahim Kaboglu, the
    jurist who heads the board, was reading the report at a press
    conference, a fellow member snatched it and tore it into shreds. Both Mr
    Kaboglu and Baskin Oran, a political scientist who wrote the report,
    have been bombarded with threatening phone calls and mail. "Fraternal
    blood will be spilled," warned one. Another called for a military coup.
    Prosecutors in Ankara are investigating claims that both academics may
    have committed treason. Ilker Basbug, a top general, has joined the
    fray, saying Turkey's unity should not be tampered with. The government,
    frightened by the reaction, has washed its hands of the report and
    denied commissioning it.

    It is possible, though unlikely, says Husnu Ondul, a human-rights
    lawyer, that the two authors may be prosecuted under an article of the
    new penal code approved in September, which provides for up to ten
    years' jail for those who engage in unspecified "activities" against the
    "national interest". What might such activities be? In a footnote, the
    law deems "anti-national" anyone who advocates withdrawing Turkish
    troops from Cyprus, or terming "genocide" the killing of hundreds of
    thousands of Armenians in 1915. If the aim was to stifle discussion of
    this second issue, it failed: at a conference in Venice last month,
    historians from all countries involved took a broader, more cool-headed
    look at the 1915 tragedy than would be possible in Turkey-now or, it
    seems, any time soon. And what about the 100,000 Turkish-Cypriots who
    voted (vainly) in April for a UN plan that would have removed most
    Turkish troops from Cyprus: was that a crime?
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