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Ankara: Armenian-Americans Protest Serzh Sarksyan In LA

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  • Ankara: Armenian-Americans Protest Serzh Sarksyan In LA

    ARMENIAN-AMERICANS PROTEST SERZH SARKSYAN IN LA

    TODAY'S ZAMAN
    06 October 2009, Tuesday

    Nearly 12,000 Armenian-Americans protested Armenian-Turkish
    protocols upon Armenian President Sarksyan's arrival in California
    on Sunday. Photo

    More than 12,000 Armenian-Americans from throughout California
    converged in Beverly Hills on Sunday to stage a protest against
    visiting Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan and to show their
    disappointment over an agreement between Ankara and Yerevan to
    establish diplomatic ties and reopen their common border.

    Blockades and guardrails contained the protesters, who held signs
    proclaiming, "Serzh Don't Betray the Armenian People," "Turkey Accept
    the Genocide!" and "No to the Protocols!" the Los Angeles-based
    English-language Armenian newspaper Asbarez reported. The report
    noted that during the protest, planes flew overhead bearing banners
    which stated "Stop Turkish-Armenian Protocols," as large moving vans
    drove around the hotel with billboards featuring pictures of Armenian
    President Sarksyan and Turkish President Abdullah Gul with the slogan
    "Don't Betray us."

    Los Angeles was the third leg of Sarksyan's tour of influential
    Armenian communities worldwide as he seeks support for his landmark
    bid to establish ties with Turkey. Earlier, he sought support from
    the Armenian diaspora in Paris and New York. While in Paris on
    Friday, Sarksyan faced violent protests, with demonstrators shouting
    "Traitor!" and criticizing his plans to establish ties with Turkey. At
    least 200 protesters from the Armenian diaspora in France showed
    up at a public appearance in Paris. The protest in Los Angeles was
    organized by the "Stop the Protocols Campaign."

    Last month, Turkey and Armenia said they would set aside hostilities
    and establish diplomatic ties due to practical concerns such as
    oil interests, Turkey's European Union membership bid and relations
    with Russia and the United States. Armenians in their poor, isolated
    homeland are eager to open up trade and other ties with Turkey, he
    vast Armenian diaspora, most of whom are descendants of those who
    escaped the killings.

    There are two protocols which Armenia and Turkey are to sign in
    the upcoming days -- a protocol on the establishment of diplomatic
    relations and a protocol on the development of bilateral relations.

    Particularly subject to the Armenian diaspora's harsh reaction is the
    one of the developments in relations between Armenia and Turkey which
    says that the two countries have agreed to "implement a dialogue on
    the historical dimension with the aim to restore mutual confidence
    between the two nations, including an impartial scientific examination
    of historical records and archives to define existing problems and
    formulate recommendations."

    Sarksyan is scheduled to travel to Beirut and Rostov-on-Don in Russia
    as part of his tour in order to hold discussions with the Armenian
    diaspora ahead of a planned meeting on Oct. 10, when the Turkish and
    Armenian foreign ministers are expected to sign a deal to establish
    ties. Armenians abroad -- estimated at 5.7 million -- outnumber the
    3.2 million living in Armenia itself, the smallest of the ex-Soviet
    republics. The largest communities are in Russia (2 million), the
    United States (1.4 million), Georgia (460,000) and France (450,000),
    according to government data.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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