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EAFJD Skeptical About Turkey's Caucasus Pact

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  • EAFJD Skeptical About Turkey's Caucasus Pact

    EAFJD SKEPTICAL ABOUT TURKEY'S CAUCASUS PACT

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    09.10.2008 15:15 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Peter Semneby, the EU special envoy to the South
    Caucasus, and Hilda Tchoboian, the Chairperson of the European Armenian
    Federation, held a meeting on 24 September in the framework of the
    regular consultations that take place between the Euro-Armenian NGO
    and EU institutions, the EAFJD told PanARMENIAN.Net.

    The main focus of their talks was the recent geopolitical unrest in the
    South Caucasus, the renewed interest in improvement of Turkey-Armenia
    relations, and the challenges faced by Georgia's ethnic Armenian
    population.

    Both Tchoboian and Semneby reiterated their common interest in
    eventually seeing the normalization of regional cooperation in South
    Caucasus, particularly in the wake of the Georgian crisis. The
    President of the European Armenian Federation, however, informed
    Mr. Semneby of her organization's skepticism about Turkey's proposed
    "Caucasian Platform for Stability and Cooperation," noting that, until
    now, Turkey has primarily been a destabilizing factor in the region,
    as evidenced by its blockade of Armenia and its pro-Azerbaijani bias
    in the Karabakh conflict.

    "In the context of the emergence of a new balance of power in Caucasus,
    Turkey is seeking assert for itself a role as an intermediary between
    Europe, Russia and the Caucasian States" stated Hilda Tchoboian. "But
    it's hopes are clearly not supported by the facts on the ground -
    which include recent statements by its Minister of Foreign Affairs
    stressing Turkey's intention to make Armenia pay dearly for the
    opening of the border, in particular, by stopping the international
    process of Armenian Genocide recognition," she added.

    Many observers consider the apparent goodwill displayed recently by
    Turkey toward Armenia to be driven primarily by the domestic power
    struggle between Kemalists and Islamists and their competing efforts
    to assert primacy in guiding their nation's foreign affairs, not any
    sincere interest in materially improving relations with Armenia.

    With regard to Georgia, the Federation's President shared with Semneby
    the urgent concerns voiced by the country's Armenian minority.

    "After their defeat in South Ossetia, we need to be mindful that
    nationalistic elements of Georgian society and the Georgian power
    structures could target the ethnic Armenians community as scapegoats"
    explained Hilda Tchoboian. "Georgia has compelling interest in moving
    toward a policy of respect for the rights of minorities - especially
    those of the ethnic Armenians of Javakhk - as per its commitments to
    the Council of Europe. Trying to build a centralized, unitary state
    in the 21st century is simply unrealistic for a diverse, multiethnic
    country such as Georgia" concluded the chairperson of the European
    Armenian Federation.

    The Federation holds that the EU has a vital role to play
    in implementing confidence building programs in Georgia. Ethnic
    Armenians represent the main minority of Georgia (roughly 10% of the
    whole population), principally located in Tbilisi and in the southern
    region of Javakhk. Since the fall of USSR, they have endured forced
    assimilation and discriminatory policies (linguistic, administrative,
    and religious) as have the other minorities in the country. Perhaps
    most notably, Armenians Churches are regularly "converted" into
    Georgian churches. Despite this official and unofficial discrimination,
    ethnic Armenian in Georgia, are not advancing irredentist claims. They
    do, however, demand that their collective, democratic, and regional
    rights are fully respected within the framework of a decentralized,
    pluralist, and tolerant Georgian state.
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