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Chinese Armenians on Protocol: Two Questions Everyone Should Ask

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  • Chinese Armenians on Protocol: Two Questions Everyone Should Ask

    PRESS RELEASE
    ChinaHAY
    Skyline Commercial Center #1201-12F
    71-77 Wing Lok Street
    Sheung Wan
    Hong Kong
    Tel.: +852.6793.6410
    Email: [email protected]
    Web: www.ChinaHay.com

    October 9, 2009


    Statement by the Armenian Community of China on the Proposed Protocol
    Between Armenia and Turkey: Top Two Questions Everyone Should Ask and
    Why the Protocol Should Not Become Law

    On behalf of the 200 some Armenian families of China, we would like to
    issue this statement of our views on the proposed Protocol between
    Armenia and Turkey. Much has already been stated about the Protocol in
    well thought out articles, statements and commentary issued by many
    political and national organizations, journalists and private citizens.
    Rather than re-stating what has already been said, we would like to set
    forth below certain comments that do not appear to have previously
    entered the public forum on the Protocol and each independently support
    our position that the Protocol should not become law.

    1. Is Armenia and Serge Sarkisian Surrendering to the Nazi
    French Occupation Government a Week Before D Day?

    When the United States upholds President Obama's promise to withdraw
    from Iraq and a conflict longer and more expensive than World War II,
    the autonomous Kurdistan created by the United States in Northern Iraq
    is likely to secede from Iraq just as the provinces of Serbia and
    Croatia seceded from the former Yugoslavia.

    The more than 50 million Kurds living in Eastern Turkey, Iraq and
    elsewhere comprise the world's largest group of people without a nation.
    For the first time in modern history, they have self-rule and a rule
    making parliament in elections sanctioned by the United States, United
    Kingdom and other nations supporting the Iraqi government. Autonomous
    Kurdistan in Iraq is allowed to negotiate or approve certain oil deals
    for Kurdistan. When and if Kurdistan is independent, the frightening
    question for Turkey will be how much of the Kurdish provinces of Turkey
    comprising Kars, Ardahan, Van and much of Eastern Turkey, including
    Mount Ararat, will be annexed to Kurdistan.

    With the United States now over debt-burdened and debating on whether to
    support and pay for a continuing occupation of Iraq, and the President
    trying to make good on his promise to withdraw from Iraq, Kurdistan and
    the possible beginning of the dismemberment of Turkey could begin within
    the next 12 - 36 months.

    With Kurdistan being on the verge of being created, why would one
    negotiate, acknowledge and cede Armenian claims to Kars, Ardahan, Van
    and Ararat when Turkey may not even control those lands at the end of
    this decade? Surrendering or ceding the claims now may seem about as
    prudent as a French town surrendering to the Nazi French occupation
    government a week before the Allies invaded Europe in Normandy to help
    liberate France and the rest of Europe.

    In summary, no, we do not think that the Protocol should become law or
    that the Turkish border and Armenian claims for the restoration of lands
    in Eastern Turkey should be ceded to Turkey until the next period of
    history passes and we find out whether Kurdistan becomes independent as
    the United States withdraws from Iraq, which all observers and
    principals expect to happen within the next 12 - 36 months. At a
    minimum, we have to keep in mind that the current American President,
    who distinguished himself from his political competitors by stating that
    he was against the War in Iraq and for a rapid withdrawal, does not
    expect to go to the American electorate and ask for re-election in 3
    years with what will be another 5,000 dead American soldiers and another
    US $700 billion spent on the Iraq war. To the extent the Protocol
    relinquishes claims to one square meter of claims to Armenian lands in
    Eastern Turkey before it becomes clear whether there will be an
    independent Kurdistan and whether its creation de-stablizes and annexes
    Eastern Turkey, the Protocol is flawed and should not become law.

    2. Does Serge Sarkisian Remember the 1972 Olympic Gold Medal
    Game Between the United States and the Soviet Union?

    In the 1972 Olympic gold medal game between the United States and Soviet
    Union, America's Doug Collins sank two free throws with 3 seconds on the
    clock to put the United States ahead 50 - 49 at the end of the game. At
    that moment, the Soviet coaches charged the scorers' table saying that
    they called a timeout at the point of the shot and play should have been
    stopped. The officials decided to restart play with 3 seconds remaining
    on the clock. However, when play resumed, the clock had not been reset.
    At the moment it became clear that the Soviets could not score in the
    remaining 3 seconds, the officials again sounded the buzzer to give the
    Soviets a third chance to win the game. On each of these first two
    times the buzzer was sounded, the American players stormed the court
    with tears of joy as they believed that they won. When the clock was
    restarted to replay the last 3 seconds and the Soviets had their third
    opportunity to win the game and gold medal, the Soviets made their
    inbound pass from the opposite side of the court and scored, handing the
    Americans its first and only loss in Olympic basketball history.

    One of the many points about the Protocol that is disturbing is that
    Serge Sarkisian is agreeing to discuss the legitimacy of the Armenian
    Genocide again with Turkey. We note three of the more significant
    findings or legal conclusions on whether the events of 1915 comprised
    genocide or crimes against humanity below:

    (a) in 2003, the U.S. State Department funded and sponsored the
    Turkish Armenian Reconciliation Commission. The Commission purchased a
    legal opinion issued by the International Center for Transitional
    Justice. The opinion was that the facts of the Armenian massacres of
    1915 "viewed collectively, can thus be said to include all of the
    elements of the crime of genocide as defined in the [1948 Genocide
    Convention]";

    (b) in 1984, the Permanent People's Tribunal in Europe
    concluded after deliberation that the Armenian massacres of 1915
    comprised genocide; and

    (c) in the 1920s, a German court exonerated Soghomon Telerian
    because, in short, Talaat Pasha, the Turkish Minister of the Interior,
    committed crimes against humanity.

    We are concerned that, like the Soviets and their sympathetic
    Soviet-block officials in 1972, it is the intention of the Turks to
    replay and litigate the issue of whether the events of 1915 comprise
    genocide again-and-again until they find the one finder of fact, or
    biased set of rules and procedures, that enable a conclusion to be
    reached that the events of 1915 comprise nothing more than an internal
    disturbance of a few hundred citizens.

    On this point we note that the Protocol requires that there be "an
    impartial scientific examination of historical records and archives to
    define existing problems". We are concerned that there will either be
    no due process or fairness in such an examination of the events of 1915,
    or that the Turks, now tired of losing every objective examination of
    the events of 1915, might simply require there be a vote of participants
    in this scientific examination. We note that in the Turkish Armenian
    Reconciliation Commission, the Armenians were outnumbered by Turks, 4-5.
    So, if there had been a simple vote with majority ruling, the Commission
    would have likely ruled that the events of 1915 did not comprise
    genocide. For this reason, we believe that the Protocol is flawed and
    should not become law.

    Thus, no, we do not believe that the Protocol should become law unless
    the Protocol or any future protocol contains a provision whereby the
    Turkish government expresses acknowledgment for the Genocide or
    eliminates any indirect references to it entirely.

    * * *

    We can be contacted for further queries or comments on this topic.


    The Armenian Community of China
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