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ANKARA: Right-Wing Armenians Stage Hunger Strike Against Talks

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  • ANKARA: Right-Wing Armenians Stage Hunger Strike Against Talks

    RIGHT-WING ARMENIANS STAGE HUNGER STRIKE AGAINST TALKS

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Sept 16 2009
    Turkey

    Supporters of a nationalist Armenian party start a hunger strike
    in Yerevan to protest the normalization talks between Turkey and
    Armenia, demanding the resignation of the foreign minister. If the
    necessary precautions are not taken, they will demand the resignation
    of President Sarkisian as the next step, says one of the organizers

    FOTOALTI: A nationalist Armenian woman holds a placard reading 'No
    concessions to the Turks,' in a protest against the normalization
    talks.

    A right-wing Armenian party has launched a sit-in and hunger strike
    in Yerevan in protest of the normalization talks between Turkey
    and Armenia as the government plans to launch political talks on
    establishing ties with Turkey after decades of hostility.

    Nearly 50 members of the nationalist Armenian Revolutionary Federation,
    or Dashnaktsutyun, protesting outside the foreign ministry on Tuesday
    said the protocols threatened Armenia's national interests. They
    demanded the resignation of Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian
    due to his role in normalization talks.

    Turkey and Armenia last month agreed on steps toward establishing
    full diplomatic ties - a first for the neighbors. The countries will
    hold six weeks of domestic debate over the accords, which were drawn
    up under Swiss mediation, before they are submitted for ratification
    by their parliaments.

    Settling a century of animosity between the two sides would help foster
    stability in the southern Caucasus, through which Caspian oil flows
    to European markets. It may also boost Turkey's chances of achieving
    European Union membership and improve predominantly Muslim Turkey's
    relationship with the United States, where Congress has considering
    labeling the 1915 killings of Armenians as "genocide."

    Armenia claims up to 1.5 million Armenians were systematically killed
    in 1915 under the rule of the Ottoman Empire. Turkey denies this,
    saying that any deaths were the result of civil strife that erupted
    when Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia.

    Turkey also closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with
    ally Azerbaijan over Yerevan's backing of ethnic Armenian separatists
    in the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    Committee offer

    Chanting "No concessions to the Turks!" protesters said they
    would remain outside the ministry throughout the six weeks of
    consultations. Protesters said they were especially concerned that
    the deal calls for the creation of an intergovernmental commission
    to examine the two countries' historical grievances.

    The normalization protocols contain grave threats to Armenia's national
    interests, said Tatul Harutyunyan, one of the main organizers of the
    hunger strikes, adding: "A historian committee offer will certainly
    be the first pre-condition of the Turkish side. Nevertheless, we will
    not allow Turkey to make the genocide issue a debate topic."

    Turkey has long suggested that a committee of Turkish and Armenian
    historians re-examine the events of 1915 and could open ways for
    Turks and Armenians to come together by using archives in Turkey,
    Armenia and other countries. But Armenian leadership has rejected
    the overture, dismissing it as a political maneuver.

    Demanding an apology

    While giving implicit support to the normalization talks, Harutyunyan
    said Turkey should give up denying the "genocide" and issue an official
    apology. "We do want the resignation of Nalbandian because he is
    the one who has signed the agreements with Turkey. If the necessary
    precautions are not taken, we will demand the resignation of [Armenian
    President Serge] Sarkisian in the next step," Harutyunyan told Hurriyet
    Daily News & Economic Review.

    Meanwhile, Sarkisian will meet with the leaders of Armenia's political
    parties on Thursday, his spokesman Samvel Farmanian said, as part of
    internal consultations agreed upon under a deal with Turkey.

    "These consultations will be one of the important steps in the public
    discussion on normalizing Armenian-Turkish relations," he said. "As
    the president has promised, these questions, which are of national
    importance, are becoming the subject of a wide public discussion."

    Nationalist Dashnaktsutyun left the coalition government in April
    to protest the normalization talks. Sarkisian's Republican Party, or
    Hanrabedgan Gusagzsutyun, holds the majority in the parliament with
    64 out of 131 seats. Harutyunyan predicted that the protocols would
    not be approved in the Armenian parliament. "Like the all Armenians
    across the country, the MPs of Hanrabedgan Gusagzsutyun are worried
    about our national interests."

    A nationalist Armenian girl holds a placard saying 'No Concessions
    to the Turks,' in a protest against the normalization talks.
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