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Town Halls Raise Awareness On Next Steps Against Protocols

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  • Town Halls Raise Awareness On Next Steps Against Protocols

    TOWN HALLS RAISE AWARENESS ON NEXT STEPS AGAINST PROTOCOLS

    Asbarez
    Nov 23rd, 2009

    ENCINO, CA-Town hall meetings have begun throughout the Western
    United States to inform Armenian communities of the current state
    of negotiations between Armenia and Turkey and the steps being taken
    to prevent the ratification of dangerous agreements between the two
    countries, the Armenian Youth Federation (AYF) reported on Saturday.

    The community briefings, which began this week with two meetings in
    the San Fernando Valley and Orange County, will be updating Armenian
    Americans on the ongoing developments in the anti-protocols initiative
    and providing avenues for activism on the issue.

    The first town-hall, organized by the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation's Western Region (ARF-WR), was held at Ferrahian Highschool
    in Encino on November 19. More than 200 people attended the discussion,
    lead by ARF-WR Central Committee Members Steven Dadayan and John
    Kossakian.

    Kossakian presented a brief history of Armenian-Turkish relations
    since the independence of Armenia, discussing Turkey's decades long
    blockade of Armenia and its efforts at pressuring the young Armenian
    republic into making the difficult choice between the Armenian people's
    historical rights or the country's economic prosperity.

    On April 22, Armenia and Turkey announced they had agreed to a
    roadmap to normalize their relations and open the closed border. The
    announcement came on the eve of the 94th anniversary of the Armenian
    Genocide, allowing US President Obama to backtrack on promises to
    recognize the Armenian Genocide. Amid intense opposition and protests
    by Armenians around the world, Armenia's foreign minister signed
    agreements with his Turkish counterpart on October 10 to establish
    ties between the two countries.

    The signature came despite Turkey's strong preconditions that Armenia
    must relinquish legal rights to historic territories in Turkey,
    agree to the establishment of a historical commission to debate
    the Genocide, and concede the independence of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict to Azerbaijan.

    "Now that the protocols have been signed, everyone's main concern is
    which parliament is going to ratify it first," Kossakian said, adding
    that Armenia is currently playing a waiting game with the document.

    "Instead of worrying about this, we should start working on our next
    step-to confront the Armenian government about the protocol issues."

    In his remarks Kossakian underscored the anti-protocols campaign's
    latest initiative of channeling public sentiment against the protocols
    to pressure the Armenian parliament not to ratify the devastating
    documents.

    Dissecting the actual provisions in the protocols, Dadayan discussed
    the legal implications of the documents and the heavy burdens Armenia
    will be required to uphold if it's ratified.

    Through these protocols, Dadayan explained, Turkey is seeking to
    legalize its current de-facto border with Armenia. The current
    boundaries are illegal and based on the illegitimate treaties of
    Moscow and Kars, signed in the 1920s by the rogue Bolshevik and
    Kemalist regimes. If the protocols are ratified, Armenia will once
    and for all relinquish its rights to US President Woodrow Wilson's
    arbitral award of historic territories now under Turkish occupation.

    Dadayan also discussed provisions in the protocols that will constrain
    Armenia's relations with Karabakh and prevent Yerevan from from serving
    as the guarantor of its independence and security. He explained that
    if Karabakh is one day attacked or overrun by Azerbaijan and Armenia
    wants to take action or send medical or military assistance, it is
    legally prevented from doing so.

    In underscoring the unequal bargaining position Armenia has been
    placed in throughout the negotiations process, Dadayan recalled his
    encounter with Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian during his visit
    to Los Angeles in September to meet with Armenian Community leaders.

    Dadayan said he had asked Sarkisian what international lawyers and
    experts of international law were consulted by the Armenian government
    about the legal implications of the protocols, which were drafted in
    English. "The president said he was not good in English nor was he a
    lawyer" Dadayan recalled, noting that Sarkisian said he trusted his
    diplomats enough not to seek professional advice.

    The same points were raised at the Armenian Center in Santa Anna,
    CA on Saturday, November 20 by Vache Thomassian from the ARF Shant
    Student Association. Thomassian spoke to some 50 people at a briefing,
    hosted by the AYF's Orange County 'Ashod Yergat' chapter. In his
    remarks, he reiterated community concerns over the forced choices
    being presented to the Armenian people by the protocols and discussed
    the unprecedented level of activism around the issue.

    Presenting a photo-montage of global anti-protocols activities
    spanning the last two months, Thomassian stressed the resound impact
    of the Diaspora's actions in Armenia. "Anywhere you had an Armenian
    community around the world, you saw people express their disapproval,"
    he said. "Our voices were heard and shared all the way to Yerevan,
    where 60,000 people demonstrated against the signing of the protocols."

    That there is widespread opposition to the documents is not
    surprising. "There's a lot to be lost here and very little to be
    gained," said Thomassian, explaining the many preconditions Armenia is
    faced with if it wants to normalize relations with its neighbor. "The
    protocols could very well evolve into a package deal that includes
    a quick resolution to the Karabakh conflict."

    Thomassian discussed the current strategies and tactics being employed
    by the "Stop the Protocols" Campaign, from educating and mobilizing
    Armenian communities across the US to work within the American
    political system to advance the Armenian Genocide resolution to a
    vote in Congress.

    He also discussed many of the ARF's recent initiatives in Armenia. The
    party has been working around the clock in parliament and at the
    grassroots level to not only prevent ratification but also to address
    the underlying problem of corruption, he explained. ARF activists
    have been visiting villages, organizing communities to oppose the
    documents. Meanwhile, the ARF has been meeting with other parties
    opposed to the protocols in Armenia to strategize future joint actions
    against ratification.

    But neither Sarkisian, nor the protocols are the "end all problem
    here," Thomassian said, explaining that the present situation is
    largely due to corruption and a lack of democracy in Armenia. "The
    protocols didn't pop out of nowhere; they are the result of oligarchs
    selling out the interests of the people for their own self interest."

    Thomassian discussed the ARF's call for a serious overhaul of the
    corruption and oligarchic rule in Armenia, talking about the party's
    initiative to build the groundwork for radical changes in Armenia."The
    long-term objective of the ARF is social reforms, government reforms
    and democratic reforms," Thomassian said. "In the last few weeks the
    ARF has been introducing dozens of pieces of legislation in parliament
    on issues concerning the national debt, women's' rights, poverty,
    and social security."

    "The protocols are in limbo right now, but that doesn't mean we
    are meaningless; we need to dig in further and do more work, be
    more active and get our voices heard that much louder," Thomassian
    exclaimed. "everything we have done to this point has had an impact
    and if we can increase the pressure and create enough obstacles,
    this thing might completely collapse."
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