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President Sargsian Promotes Turkey Protocols In Diaspora Meetings

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  • President Sargsian Promotes Turkey Protocols In Diaspora Meetings

    PRESIDENT SARGSIAN PROMOTES TURKEY PROTOCOLS IN DIASPORA MEETINGS
    by Emil Sanamyan

    http://www.reporter.am/index.cfm?furl=/g o/article/2009-10-06-president-sargsian-promotes-t urkey-protocols-in-diaspora-meetings&pg=2
    Tues day October 06, 2009

    ARF stages street protests in New York and Los Angeles

    New York - At meetings in New York and Los Angeles on October 3 and 4,
    representatives of American-Armenian and Canadian-Armenian groups had
    an exchange of views with President Serge Sargsian on the agreement
    on the normalization of relations initialed between Armenia and
    Turkey. The meetings were part of a longer presidential tour with
    stops in France, Lebanon, and Russia.

    According to Turkish officials, the protocols on diplomatic relations
    and bilateral cooperation are expected to be signed by the foreign
    ministers of the two countries in Zurich, Switzerland, on October
    10. Armenian officials have not yet confirmed that date.

    Armenian officials requested that the diaspora discussions be treated
    as off the record, although many of the statements delivered by
    organizations were made public either before or after the meetings.

    The October 3 New York meeting included representatives from the
    eastern United States and Canada, with representatives from the
    western United States and Latin America attending the Los Angeles
    meeting the following day.

    The meetings were by invitation only. No public appearances were
    organized, and an anticipated presidential interview with three Los
    Angeles-area Armenian television channels did not take place.

    Debate in New York

    The New York event involved about 50 participants from the diaspora,
    representing several dozen organizations, sitting at tables arranged
    in a large square, with media sitting at a separate table.

    President Sargsian's delegation included former president of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh Republic Arkady Ghoukasian, the chairperson of
    Armenia's Constitutional Court Gagik Harutiunian, Diaspora Minister
    Hranush Hakobyan, and a dozen or more aides and diplomats.

    Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian, who handled the negotiations over
    the protocols and is expected to be the one to sign the documents on
    Armenia's behalf, was not in the delegation. Neither were any members
    of parliament; the protocols require parliamentary ratification to
    go into effect.

    Diaspora organizations represented included this newspaper's parent
    company CS Media and the U.S.-Armenia Public Affairs Committee
    (USAPAC). In attendance were archbishops and other clergy from the
    Eastern and Canadian dioceses and prelacies of the Armenian Church,
    representatives of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF),
    Armenian National Committee of America, and affiliated groups in the
    eastern United States and Canada, the Armenian General Benevolent Union
    and its associated organizations, the Armenian Assembly of America and
    its affiliates, the Zoryan Institute, the Fund for Armenian Relief,
    the Armenia Fund, Birthright Armenia, and the Congress of Canadian
    Armenians.

    Andranik Migranian, a Russian-Armenian community leader and former
    Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation Commission member now working in
    New York, and Vahan Kololian of the Mosaic Institute of Toronto were
    also present.

    Media representatives in attendance included the Armenian Reporter,
    the New York-based freelancer Florence Avakian, Ardzagank TV (which
    also reports for Voice of America Armenian Service), AGBU and Ararat
    magazines, the Boston-based Hairenik, Armenian Weekly, and Armenian
    Mirror-Spectator newspapers, and the Montreal-based Horizon newspaper.

    The event began with on-the-record introductory remarks by the
    president. He reiterated his determination to proceed toward
    normalization of relations with Turkey, while also admitting to a
    number of reservations and concerns, many of which he had shared in
    his interview with the Armenian Reporter last week.

    Mr. Sargsian, who in the early 1990s was commander of Karabakh
    self-defense forces, compared the ongoing talks with Turkey to the
    war in Karabakh. The war was incredibly difficult and few initially
    expected Armenian success, he said, but it was also unavoidable.

    Just as Armenians prevailed in the war, Mr. Sargsian said, he fully
    expected to be successful in talks with Turkey as well, which he also
    described as difficult but unavoidable.

    He also argued that the process of normalization of relations with
    Turkey was not an excuse for a curtailment of genocide-affirmation
    efforts.

    On the subject of talks with Azerbaijan, Mr. Sargsian confirmed the
    long-standing Armenian position that Nagorno-Karabakh cannot be made
    part of Azerbaijan and that any settlement required serious security
    guarantees for its Armenian population.

    The president's 40-minute introduction was followed by more than 40
    statements, remarks, and questions from various organizations and
    individuals that continued for nearly four hours uninterrupted.

    The views expressed ranged from unreservedly supportive to highly
    critical of the president's policy on the Turkey protocols. There
    were a number of tense exchanges.

    Following the diaspora presentations, and comments by Mr. Ghoukasian
    and Mr. Harutiunian, Mr. Sargsian wrapped up the meeting by responding
    to some of the concerns and questions posed.

    According to participants in the Los Angeles meeting, the event
    involved about 60 diaspora representatives, with the president
    responding to points raised after each of about 30 presentations. At
    that meeting, while a number of disagreements were voiced, the
    discussion remained civil.

    Angry protests

    Throughout the president's tour, the ARF organized street protests,
    with many thousands reportedly turning out in Los Angeles on October 4,
    while up to 200 were seen picketing in New York the day before.

    In New York the protestors came from as far away as Boston, Chicago,
    and Washington. They held placards saying "Voch" (no) to the protocols,
    telling the president "Mi Davachanir" (or Mi tavajanir, Do not betray),
    and announcing that Mr. Sargsian was "not welcome in New York."

    According to the Armenian Weekly, a smaller group of protestors at
    one point entered the New York hotel where the meeting was taking
    place; the protestors' chanting briefly became audible inside the
    meeting hall, before the New York police and the U.S. Secret Service
    intervened.

    Video reports available online indicate the Los Angeles protest
    included similar slogans and also involved a brief attempt by
    protestors to cross the police barricade, but no serious incidents.

    According to Asbarez, some 200 activists set up a human barricade
    around the Armenian Genocide monument in Montebello, as activists in
    Paris had done two days earlier, in order to prevent President Sargsian
    from laying flowers there. Whereas the president laid a wreath in
    Paris after police physically removed protesters, he simply did not
    show up at Montebello at the time the demonstrators had expected him.
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