Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

NowLebanon: Armenian Anger

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • NowLebanon: Armenian Anger

    NowLebanon, Lebanon
    Oct 19 2009


    Armenian Anger

    By Ana Maria Luca

    Sultana, Arshalouys, Elise and Mary only have each other now. The four
    grey-haired ladies have no families left and, each day, they sit
    together in the lounge of their nursing home in Bourj Hammoud,
    watching the news and reminiscing about times past.

    But in the last week, since they saw the television report about
    Armenia signing an unprecedented accord with Turkey, which features
    images of the Armenian president going to a football match with his
    Turkish counterpart, Arshalouys has found it difficult to stay calm,
    Sultana's brown eyes have often filled with tears, while Elise stays
    silent and Mary sighs more than usual.

    They talk one at a time about the killings in the 1915 genocide, when
    pregnant women were raped and killed by the Turkish soldiers, young
    girls threw themselves in the rivers for fear they would be taken
    slaves, men were tortured and cut in half, and boys had their eyes
    punctured with needles.

    Elise remembers the terribly stark story her mother used to tell her.
    `They murdered our entire family. 50 people, all at once. They were
    gathered for a celebration in Adana. The Turkish soldiers murdered
    them all. My mother was one of the few who weren't there. So she lived
    to come to Lebanon,' the old women says, trembling, `Many were killed
    back then, but much more, died of hunger during the marches through
    Syria.'

    `Those were massacres,' Arshalouys says in decisive voice. `It was
    genocide. This president deserves the worst for signing the protocol
    [agreement] with Turkey. He is not Armenian, we don't think he is
    truly Armenian and our people showed him they don't agree with this
    protocol. We had protests against him here in Beirut.'

    The accord on the development of diplomatic relations was signed on
    October 10 in Zurich by Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu and
    his Armenian counterpart Eduard Nalbandian. Turkey and Armenia are set
    to open the border in six weeks and to establish joint economic
    committees.

    They have had no diplomatic or economic ties since Armenia declared
    its independence in 1991 after the fall of the Soviet Union. The
    issue of the Armenian genocide has been haunted Turkey's foreign
    relations for at least two decades, especially as the country has
    engaged in negotiations over possible membership in the European
    Union. And while Ankara has faced significant pressure to admit and
    apologize for the Armenian genocide, but it has steadfastly refused to
    do so.

    However, in July 2008, then-Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan said
    Turkey was open to normalize relations with Yerevan. Then in
    September 2008, Turkish President Abdullah Gul travelled to Armenia to
    watch the 2010 FIFA World Cup qualifier match between the two
    countries upon an invitation of the Armenian president.

    `I don't want to go into the way this protocol was agreed upon,'
    Lebanese MP and Minister Jean Ogassapian told NOW. `But I can say that
    I, personally, don't agree with it. I can't agree with this before
    Turkey admits it committed genocide. For us, the genocide is a fact,
    they need to acknowledge it. Then maybe we can talk about committees
    and borders.'

    After a round of Swiss-mediated talks, Turkey and Armenia agreed in
    August on an accord to establish relations and open their shared
    border. Gul invited Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, to watch the
    return match in Turkey on October 14, but offered no apology for the
    genocide.

    Most of the estimated 150,000 Armenians in Lebanon, almost all
    descendants of the refugees of 1915, share Ogassapian's feelings
    toward the accord. Many took to the streets and gathered in front of
    the Turkish embassy to protest the newly signed document and the
    attitude of Sargsyan, who was in Lebanon at the beginning of the month
    in order to convince the community that the accord was a step forward.

    `We will continue our struggle against it,' Ogassapian vowed. `We will
    use diplomatic and political strings to stop this protocol from being
    implemented.'

    `The Turks cannot do anything anymore to make things right to us,'
    Arshalouys says. `What they did to us is unforgettable. The government
    in Armenia should know that. This president went to that game! How
    could he? He should know how much we suffered. We were born in exile
    and we will die in exile. This is our fate.'

    http://www.nowlebanon.com/NewsArticleDetai ls.aspx?ID=120989
Working...
X