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  • A More Actionable Road Map...

    A MORE ACTIONABLE ROAD MAP...


    For Justice to the Armenian Genocide

    By Shahe Yeni-Komshian, M.D.

    November 18, 2012

    This is a paper/article that describes the components of Armenian
    national challenges, with a particular focus on a roadmap for a
    comprehensive resolution to the Armenian Genocide.

    Overall this is a piece of synthesis, bringing together different
    but viable strands of thought and approach, aiming to generate larger
    coherence in our political thinking.

    There is a definite effort to prioritize our challenges; there is
    emphasis on the necessity to focus on the judicial angle in our fight,
    and some attempt to identify action plans.

    My aim is to initiate public discussion about the topic and also
    bring these ideas to the widest possible audience. It may hopefully
    spark and initiate a discussion by thoughtful minds to possibly start
    a new, serious effort to develop and pursue a realistic road map for
    the ultimate realization of our National goals.

    INTRODUCTION

    Most Armenians in the Republic of Armenia and the Diaspora have a
    reasonable understanding of the political landscape that our nation
    is facing today and are cognizant of the realities that are challenges
    to our national interests.

    Unlike in the past, almost all Armenians expect realistic solutions
    to those challenges.

    The inherently acknowledged national aspiration is to achieve Long
    Term Viability for the Armenian Nation, with the following OBJECTIVES:

    A. Healthier and Stronger Republic of Armenia

    Protect the national interests and security of the homeland Create a
    healthier civil society in order to strengthen the Republic Protect
    the institutionalization of democracy and rule of law Secure the
    people's economic well- being and establish social justice

    B. Solutions to the Unresolved Injustices: The Armenian Rights or
    HAY TAHD

    Just Resolution of the ARMENIAN GENOCIDE Free and secure ARTSAKH Safe
    and sustainable JAVAKHK

    C. A Healthy Armenian Diaspora

    Build and better organize Diasporan communities Protect and enrich
    the Armenian identity Influence and guide the governments' policies
    on matters of interest to the Armenian Nation

    The above objectives represent aspirations and not necessarily
    strategies. Do Armenians have a common understanding of how to set
    the agenda to undertake solutions to our aspiration? Do we have an
    ARMENIAN NATIONAL RIGHTS' ADVOCACY GUIDE, a sense of what challenge
    has the greatest urgency and significance to the nation? Do we have
    a ROAD MAP in how to achieve our goals?

    The answers to the above questions are beginning to take shape.

    PAN-ARMENIAN COMMON AGENDA

    The agenda for the Armenian nation is simple yet complex at the same
    time. It is simple, because it seeks the viability of the entire
    Armenian nation.

    Complex, because the Armenian nation and its population are comprised
    of two different and yet complementary entities; the Republic of
    Armenia which represents the state and the Diaspora which comprises
    people settled far from their ancestral homelands, each with different
    immediate priorities.

    For a while this duality created confusion which led to a non-coherent
    and non- homogeneous political course. In the past we did not have
    a vision of how to organically, practically and strategically link
    them together. Our efforts to rectify the above challenges remained
    static for a long time; the inertia hurt our cause.

    The good news is that in the past 3 years a louder quest for justice
    has evolved on all levels, thereby in some cases transforming our
    demands from a vague and unclear strategy into a more distinct one.

    We now realize that:

    All three objectives for the Armenian nation's viability, i.e. strong
    and healthy Armenian state, solutions to the unresolved injustices
    (Genocide, Karabagh and Javakhk), and strengthening the viability of
    an organized Armenian Diaspora, are intuitive links to the same chain
    and are intertwined with the ultimate fate of the Armenian nation.

    There is now conviction about the need to create a coordinated policy
    between the three.

    The anchor of a viable Armenian Nation is the first aspiration -
    namely a healthier/stronger state i.e. Republic of Armenia. There is
    now ample realization by all, that the socioeconomic deterioration of
    current day Armenia, the present day injustice, is a national security
    threat, and is rapidly becoming a dire challenge hence requiring
    imminent short term as well as long term strategic prioritization.

    There is also an undisputed realization by leaders, scholars and the
    public at large, that on the geopolitical level the claim to the
    Karabagh (NKR) liberated territories, the territories referred to
    by some as the "security zone", and the case for de jure recognition
    are an imminent national political priority.

    Strengthening of the Armenian state is hence the most important
    Armenian agenda and that is why today's pan- Armenian political
    view is clear about the fact that the viability of the Republic of
    Armenia is the core priority of our national challenges. Issues of
    the political inertia, the vast emigration and the emptying out of
    villages nearby the borders and the socio-economic injustices are
    big challenges for a modern country to survive, and yet have not
    been fully appreciated. Hopefully the social and economic injustices
    within the Republic of Armenia, the necessary changes in the foreign
    policy of the state of Armenia and its strategic approach to the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict would take a more actionable priority soon.

    This must be addressed in a separate paper.

    Prioritizing the core component is not of course the same as excluding
    the others.

    Because of the centennial, the national injustice of the Genocide has
    become a parallel political priority and a succinct transformation
    is occurring with the quest for Genocide justice. A realization has
    emerged that although the universe of the Armenian nation contains more
    than genocide recognition, this historic injustice cannot be irrelevant
    and not only does it have a very strong psychological component for
    more than half of the Armenian nation, but the restitution of this
    historic injustice may have important contemporary dimensions as it
    relates to state to state Armeno-Turkish relations.

    This paper makes an attempt to explain the current status and, at
    the end, offers some actionable suggestions.

    DEMAND FOR JUSTICE FOR THE GENOCIDE AND ARMENIAN RIGHTS

    The next three years preceding the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide
    are going to be the time for the Armenian nation to redouble its
    efforts toward the pursuit of justice for the Armenian Genocide. Until
    recently most of our efforts for the Genocide Resolution have had a
    psychological basis, with an emotional and subjective focus. We have
    had commemorative programs, requiem services and speeches every year
    on the day of April 24th all throughout the globe. We have organized
    demonstrations. We have received repetitive proclamations from state
    Governments in favor of the Armenian Genocide recognition and all that
    made us feel better. During the last decade more concrete efforts were
    taken in our quest to obtain Recognition. Lately there has been some
    rhetoric and discussion about Reparations, without much clarification
    of action plans. And sadly, the geopolitics of Anatolia and the Middle
    East has prevented the Armenian side from creating common interests
    between the needs of any superpower and the Right for Justice to
    the Armenians.

    More specifically, until 2010 our approach to pressuring Turkey
    into accepting culpability of the Genocide followed a rather narrow
    strategy:

    First, the focus on the injustice has been solely that of Recognition;

    Second, the efforts to pressure Turkey have been indirect, namely by
    creating international awareness of the committed injustice with the
    hope that the World's acknowledgement of the Genocide would inevitably
    lead to Turkey's acceptance.

    In reality, the Armenian Genocide Right and the quest for the Injustice
    is an elaborate process. Its components can be summarized as follows :

    Fight against Turkey's denial and obstruction of justice Recognition:
    To obtain a formal apology Reparations: property restitution and
    financial compensation Territorial issues: Delineation of frontiers
    and borders Right to return to ancestral lands

    We should emphasize that the customary 'sequential' approach -
    recognition, then reparations, then restitution - is a fairy tale
    approach. It is not suitable for current-day politics. The above
    compartmentalization is simply for explaining the complexity of
    our quest.

    The solution to the injustice may be achieved by a proactive attack on
    all levels, simultaneously if necessary. The point is that recognition
    is no longer viewed as the end goal . There are certain strategic
    configurations, whereby reparations activities, by appearing even more
    radical, could actually enhance the drive for genocide recognition.

    This issue potentially may become a true diplomatic setback for Turkey.

    Also, we need to highlight that territorial issues and the Right
    to return are processes much more convoluted then Recognition
    and Reparation. Although primarily linked to the act of Genocide,
    solutions to territorial issues are more complex on the legal front.

    This is because of international legalities created from the Treaty of
    Kars, the land given to Turkey that included the ancient city of Ani
    and Mount Ararat, and the present political reality of the independent
    Republic of Armenia as a sovereign state. From the perspective of
    international law, Armenians have many valid rights but the territorial
    component of the injustice may need a different legal strategy,
    albeit complementary to that of Genocide recognition/reparation.

    The quest for Reparation, or the journey towards that goal, is in
    itself multidimensional:

    Restitution of property, national and personal: Given the Deportation
    and Liquidation legislation passed by the Turkish Government (see
    below), Armenians have been robbed from their assets. The assets
    lost comprise Church and national properties/that of the Millet,
    as well as personal properties.

    Financial or monetary compensation that have not been adequately
    appraised yet.

    The effect of the Genocide on our cultural heritage and the continuous
    threat to our viability as a nation, in view of our dispersion in
    western countries, with ongoing risk to our language, culture and
    identity. This is what we call the "White Genocide".

    Given the current legal status of Armenian properties in Turkey,
    Armenians realize that the issue of reparation is a tall task.

    Legislation in 1929 gave the right to title and deed to the new Turkish
    possessors of any vacant land such as fields, orchards, and farmland
    held for 15 years since 1914, and any buildings or other real estate
    held for 10 years since 1919, thereby legally Turkifying all seized
    Armenian assets and properties linked to the Genocide. But that is
    exactly the focus our legal fight.

    The Armenian side also well understands the legal difference
    between Armenian properties seized after 1937 from those linked to
    the Genocide, because several more Armenian properties, many of them
    belonging to Armenian Charitable Foundations the patriarchate included,
    were "nationalized" by the Turkish government in later years. The
    legal status of the latter is therefore different.

    Road Map towards a More Comprehensive Approach

    The quest for Reparations for a positive conclusion of the Genocide
    Injustice can be fought on the International level as well as in
    Turkey. The strategy has 3 different vehicles: Awareness building,
    political pressure, and legal action. Since the 1970's we have
    gradually built up the first two vehicles of our fight. We are now
    building a cohesive strategy for the third vehicle, that of legal
    action.

    Awareness Building: The target has been Armenian constituencies in
    the Diaspora and to a lesser extent in the Republic of Armenia. We
    continue to work in mobilizing the media, civil society and more and
    more the NGOs of international communities.

    Political Pressure: Political pressure and lobbying is essential to
    our success, but we should assert and emphasize that all countries
    base their decisions upon their own national interests and not
    Armenian interests. We should be careful with their motives. Yet,
    the political will of governments and geopolitical changes in and
    around Turkey is pivotal for our success. The US House Resolution 306
    and the French Genocide Bill are some examples of political pressure
    (mostly lobbying) in 2011, by which Armenians capitalized and managed
    to score partial successes. As for Turkey's involvement in the
    rapidly evolving Syrian crisis, it is an example of a geopolitical
    change that may potentially be a stalemate for Turkey, to which we
    Armenians should be well prepared and take advantage.

    Judicial Demands: This is the cornerstone of the new strategy. The
    roadmap to resolving the injustice via the judicial route is based on
    a 2 pronged approach: International pressure on Turkey and exploitation
    of Turkey's internal political vulnerabilities.

    International pressure on Turkey:

    The ultimate outcome of political awareness and political pressure
    will be in the form of a judicial claim, bringing a lawsuit against
    the Government of Turkey. In order to bring a lawsuit, the following
    clarifications are being made:

    Clear characterization of the Injustice. Does the Injustice have
    a legal principle? The historic and moral validity is not even
    a question.

    Clarification of the Judicial Forum: International vs. Turkish forum?

    Is it the International Court of Justice (UN) or the International
    Criminal Court? European Court of Human Rights or UN General Assembly
    (for an advisory opinion)? Turkish courts or Turkish domestic
    legislation? Note that Individual claims may be brought to the European
    Court of Human Rights, whereas claims of land between states are
    ultimately settled between states through the International Court
    of Justice.

    Who is the plaintiff? A Diasporan Committee, the Istanbul Patriarchate,
    the Catholicosate of Cilicia? The Republic of Armenia?

    Also note that simultaneously, different plaintiffs may present
    different complaints.

    Is there adequate engagement of the political will of the Governments
    (superpowers included), and is there mobilization of civil society?

    Does the lawsuit require mediation, and if so by whom?

    Taking into consideration the present political landscape and
    geopolitical interests, this is not an easy task. In designing the
    roadmap towards a resolution, it is essential that the Armenian side
    coordinates the actions of its different stakeholders, groups that
    can present a legal claim for the injustice and reclaim assets. The
    following entities have historic rights to their assets:

    The Patriarchate of Istanbul assets The Catholicosate of Cilicia assets
    The Catholicosate of Echmiadzin assets A Diaspora Body representing the
    collective asset demands (Group Reparation) for lost personal assets.

    And of course the Government of Armenia and its demands

    It is to be stressed again that when it comes to international law,
    the strategy to demand Armenian properties lost due to the Genocide
    is different from that of comprehensive land and borders' discussion
    between Turkey and present-day Republic of Armenia.

    There is also the realization that there are 2 types of lawsuits and
    two judicial approaches: Group Reparation approach and Individual
    compensation approach.

    Here are examples of some current and potential lawsuits through
    plaintiffs representing the Rights of the Armenian Nation against
    the Republic of Turkey.

    Examples of Individual Compensation Lawsuit: Genocide Related
    Insurance Claims class action suit: The CA 9th Circuit case Movsesian
    v. Versicherung AG. Also, many individual Armenians have cadastral
    copies of their old properties and some are making individual requests
    to the Government of Turkey.

    Examples of Group Reparation Lawsuits: Lawsuits by the Patriarchate of
    Constantinople related to Genocide confiscated properties; Potential
    lawsuit by the Catholicosate of Cilicia related to the return of
    Armenian assets seized in 1915; Potential Legal Demands from the
    Republic of Armenia

    The following should be emphasized: Individual reparations through
    lawsuits do not satisfy our national quest for justice for the
    Genocide. Only Group reparation lawsuits would be considered to
    include a reparative dimension.

    None of the above lawsuits have been filed within a comprehensive
    Genocide Resolution context. The Armenian side realizes well that in
    the larger picture, Turkey may utilize minor concessions to individuals
    to the detriment of the larger Armenian Right.

    Alternative but Complementary Strategic Approach- More Focus on
    Turkish Politics and Society:

    It is also necessary to exploit the internal vulnerabilities from
    which Turkey suffers today and such strategies are also being analyzed:

    EU and Turkey: Some European Union politicians who are politically
    sensitive to the Armenian Genocide issue have pressed Turkey into
    formally recognizing the Armenian Genocide as a precondition for
    joining the EU, mainly for their own national interests.

    Hrant Dink strategy: The essence of his strategy was in the
    transformation of the Turkish society from within, and the focus and
    target of his strategy is the Turkish citizen. Dink was instrumental in
    getting Turks to discuss the Armenian Genocide; nonetheless, Dink also
    reserved some criticism for the Armenian diaspora, for its insistence
    on enforcing a claim of genocide without engaging the modern Turkish
    people. Working to further those changes presently going on inside
    Turkey and to capitalize on them deserves greater strategic attention.

    Turkish Domestic Legislation strategy: There are at least some 100,000
    Muslim Armenians in the body of the Hamshen, close to a million
    Armenians who were forcibly converted to Islam to save their necks,
    some 20 million Kurds, and many of the disenchanted in Turkey, who
    present a political peril to the Turkish government. Exploiting the
    internal vulnerabilities from which Turkey continues to suffer today
    is essential and deserves full consideration. We should aim to create
    a sentiment in Turkey positive enough to engage the Turkish Parliament
    to pass pro-Armenian Turkish laws. A tall order indeed, but in due
    time, perhaps better relations are needed with the Hemshen and Muslim
    Armenians within Turkey, as well as the Kurds and the Alevites.

    Turkey's involvement in Syria may perhaps open a door.

    We should emphasize again how important is for us to reshape our
    political thinking, and realize that for us Armenians, Turkey's
    internal challenges and contradictions have to become much more
    actively sought strategies.

    SUMMARY: PAN ARMENIAN RIGHTS' ADVOCACY and its REVIVED ACTIONABLE
    STRATEGY The most appropriate Armenian Rights Advocacy roadmap for the
    next 10 years is a multipronged approach with strategic prioritization:

    A. There is consensus to view the long term viability of the Armenian
    nation from a pan-Armenian angle, whereby there is a coordinated
    policy between the emphasis to resolve the immediate needs of today's
    Republic of Armenia, the injustices of the past, and the future
    viability needs of both the Diaspora and the homeland, realizing
    well of the strategic necessity of a strong Republic of Armenia. The
    establishment of modern reshaped governance in the Republic of Armenia
    with less feudal tendencies and the enhancement ofsocio-economic
    benefits to assist all sectors of Armenian society would be a most
    natural positive requirement. Most Armenians also believe that change
    in the Armenian state's foreign policy and strategic approach to the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict beyond the "Madrid Principles" and the OSCE
    Minsk Group would create a new basis toward a lasting settlement of
    the Nagorno Karabakh Republic's status and security.

    B. As for the Genocide, the100th anniversary is a one-time
    opportunity that cannot and will not become a replay of what has
    gone on countless times before, i.e. be limited to demonstrations and
    solidarity declarations for its recognition. The Genocide injustice
    is multifaceted and the quest for its solution is complex and
    multidimensional .It needs a sophisticated approach:

    These past few years there has been some commotion in our political
    discourse, and reparations are now being proposed as a course to
    run in coordination with the usual focus on genocide recognition. We
    argue that Genocide recognition is no longer viewed as the end goal,
    that reparations activities could actually enhance the drive for
    genocide recognition and that this historic injustice has important
    contemporary dimensions for state-to-state Armeno-Turkish relations.

    Notwithstanding the complex issue of borders, how would Armeno-Turkish
    relations (state-to-state) be affected if Turkey were no longer an
    unrepentant aggressor but actually 'on the hook' for genocide?

    The Genocide has two outstanding issues, two different levels of
    injustices, namely the fight for the injustice of the Genocide and
    that of the lost Armenian lands. Although complementary, the objectives
    and the strategy to address the two issues are different.

    The first of the outstanding issues remains the Turkish state's
    obstruction of the truth. It consists of the Armenian nation's fight
    for Recognition of the Armenian Genocide and the fight for Reparations
    for the Armenian institutional properties as well as to the descendants
    of Armenians who lost their lives and properties during the 1915-1923
    Armenian Genocide. In this regard, the judicial front should take a
    much more imminent strategic relevance.

    The second issue is the satisfactory legal resolution with regard to
    the lost Armenian lands from the Genocide and also from the Treaty of
    Kars, in other words the delineation of Turkish-Armenian borders. The
    latter is a more complex process and the preparation of its legal
    basis will take longer. We have historic rights but the success of
    this step is inherently linked to a politically strong Republic of
    Armenia. This reemphasizes and validates our aforementioned theory that
    all 3 objectives for the Armenian nation's viability are intuitively
    linked to the same chain, and yet the most important of those is
    clearly the sustainability of a strong Armenian state.

    The judicial agenda of the Genocide resolution has begun. The
    Patriarchate of Istanbul and the Catholicosate of Cilicia have already
    initiated this process.

    Alternative and complementary strategic approaches that seek to
    exploit the internal vulnerabilities, from which Turkey suffers today,
    have come to be appreciated as part of our political discourse. They
    should be pursued with more effort and conviction.

    We have also realized that in addition to the resources and manpower
    of Diasporan organizations, we must engage the expertise of Armenian
    and non-Armenian professional experts in the field, who can assist
    in formulating as well as implementing the initiatives necessary to
    achieve our objectives.

    The preparation of a relevant cadre of Armenians in public policy
    and international law has begun, but there is further need for
    such committed Armenians, citizens of a variety of nations, to get
    engaged in public policy matters and others to become experts in
    international law.

    THE AGENDA FOR THE IMMEDIATE FUTURE

    Since the 1970s much progress has been achieved by the Armenian
    nation, but Turkey's denialist Genocide efforts and its aggressive
    diplomatic influence are a formidable challenge for us. We need to
    be more focused and creative in our quest to resolve our injustice.

    In order to have a potentially successful agenda, two preconditions
    must be met:

    The Armenian government's critical role and involvement in the
    pursuit of our National Goals' agenda: In our efforts to create a
    more actionable roadmap, it is critical for the leadership of the
    Armenian government to take an ownership role of the aforementioned
    National Armenian goals, far beyond symbolic measures. This once
    again emphasizes how important is the viability and sustainably of the
    Republic, something that is a challenge today. A clear position about
    the Genocide and the Armenian nation's Rights and a new strategy that
    is in sync with its foreign policy is soon to be expected from the
    government of the Republic of Armenia. Closer coordination between
    more engaging strategies of the government of Armenia and those of
    the Diaspora is a necessity. The creation of a Genocide Centennial
    Committee does not satisfy such a requirement.

    Clarification of the legitimate body representing the interests of
    the Diaspora and that of the Armenian Nation: The idea is not new,
    but is politically and strategically essential. To obtain Reparations,
    the Armenian Nation has to either negotiate with the Republic of Turkey
    or submit a claim(s) to an International or Turkish court. In either
    case, the Armenian side has to have clear and explicit negotiation
    positions, strategy, and a legitimate representative body. In
    order to begin the implementation phase of the road map, we need to
    develop a pan-Armenian structure in the Diaspora that represents the
    aspirations of all Armenians with one voice. We also need to develop
    the human and financial resources necessary to pursue the realization
    of the stated goals of the road map. As a starter, a revised, open
    mindset is necessary from all political, religious and other national
    institutions, and it is the imminent task of our leadership to make
    such a structure a reality. This Diasporan structure will be later
    followed by the formation of a legitimate body representing the entire
    Armenian nation (Diaspora and the Republic).

    The above two preconditions will immensely help the implementation
    of a more legally oriented actionable road map. In this regard,
    the following points need to be emphasized:

    The entire judicial portfolio of the Armenian Genocide, if it is
    to be presented in front of international judicial courts, requires
    professional preparation. What is important is to do our homework,
    and before officially presenting our case, to first assess the
    internationally acceptable legal validity of the Genocide claim. In
    parallel, a separate analysis about the legality of the current
    Turkish-Armenian borders is to be addressed. These legal consulting
    opinions have to be presented to the representatives of the Armenian
    nation by a group of respectable international law jurists and top
    of the line, reputable expert lawyers, who would be commissioned by
    the Armenian nation specifically for this task. Most of the jurists'
    team is presumed to be non-Armenian, but some have to be Armenian
    and some should be representatives of the Republic of Armenia.

    The next priority is the selection of the international court that
    is considered most advantageous to rule in favor of our claim.

    Consultation with the above team of jurists and lawyers is essential
    to select the most proper international court of justice, and begin the
    process of requesting a legal opinion in the matter of our Genocide.

    The mere addition of Reparations as part of the Genocide injustice is
    not a game changer. Detailed chronicling of seized Armenian properties
    and a solid appraisal of all Genocide losses is a necessity. To
    properly compensate the victims of the Genocide (or their heirs) it is
    essential to have solid documentation and actuarial analysis. Scholars
    have begun this work and in fact Professor Kevorkian has initiated the
    task of developing detailed and meticulous records of the genocidal
    process. However, International Human Rights and Humanitarian Law
    experts have to be consulted and retained for this purpose. With
    respect to right to financial compensation, legal professional
    accounting input, beyond and above scholarly research, is essential.

    Prioritization of funding: In order to achieve the desired outcome,
    our funding priorities and efforts, as the Armenian nation and people,
    are to be directed towards judicial priorities of the Genocide. This
    effort should be pan-Armenian and must begin soon.

    Ongoing Political Pressure: Legal opinions alone, even from
    international courts, are not enough for Turkey to abide by them. A
    positive verdict is necessary but insufficient for implementation; and
    judicial laws should be accepted and ratified by legislative powers.

    That is why political pressure on Turkey is essential not only by
    Armenians but also by superpower nations. In such key countries,
    continuous efforts to create a national interest and a foreign policy
    that is synchronous to those of Armenian national interests should
    go hand in hand with our judicial agenda.

    http://www.keghart.com/ActionableRoadMap#comments

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