Category: Azerbaijan

  • Obama says Turkey’s leadership is vital in Middle East

    Obama says Turkey’s leadership is vital in Middle East

    US president praised Turkey’s role in its region during telephone conversation with Tukish PM Erdogan and President Gul.

    Tuesday, 17 February 2009 09:24

    U.S. President Barack Obama told Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan during a telephone conversation on Monday that Turkey played an important role for peace in its region.

    Obama’s recent praises came only few days after Israeli commender accused Turkey of 1915 incidents and tensions rose between Turkey and Israel.

    “I would like to say that your leadership is vital in the Middle East peace process and America always understands Turkey’s sensitivities,” Erdogan’s press office quoted Obama as telling the Turkish premier.

    Obama also expressed willingness to work with Turkey in many issues such as maintaining peace in the Middle East, ending PKK terrorism and relations with Armenia.

    Erdogan in return highlighted Turkey’s sensitivities regarding Armenia and the Middle East, expressing the importance of fair and impartial stance of the United States to secure that the relations between the two countries were not damaged, said AA.

    Obama has also telephoned Turkish President Abdullah Gul, said a statement from Gul’s press office on Monday.

    “During the telephone conversation, President Obama underlined the importance that he attaches to Turkish-U.S. relations, saying he appreciated the leadership Turkey has taken in regional issues,” the statement said.

    Top on the agenda of telephone conversation was Caucasus. They discussed also developments in Afghanistan, Middle East and EU.

    President Gul paid a visit Russia last week and met with Russian counterpart and PM. They discussed energy, trade and developments in the region. Turkey and Russia also signed a trade deal. They also agreed on using Turkish Liras and ruble in bilateral trade, instead of US dolar.

    The two leaders also “re-affirmed the will to work together, reviewing regional as well as international issues.”

    “In both calls, the leaders discussed a number of current issues, including U.S. support for the growing Turkish-Iraqi relationship, the importance of cooperation in Middle East peace efforts, and the U.S. review on Afghanistan and Pakistan policy,” the White House said in a statement.

    Agencies

    Source:  www.worldbulletin.net, 17 February 2009

    Turkey’s growing influence in the Middle East

    Published: Tuesday 17 February 2009
    Sinan Űlgen, Centre for Economics and Foreign Policy Studies
    Turkey’s growing stature in the Middle East has “the potential to make it more attractive to the European Union,” argues Sinan Űlgen, chairman of the Centre for Economics and Foreign Policy Studies, in the spring 2009 edition of Europe’s World.

    Turkey has become increasingly “influential in the Middle East” given its diplomatic success in the region, the commentary claims.

    Űlgen points to the number of progressive goals that the country has achieved, such as ending “factional strife in Lebanon” and “engineering the start of direct talks between Syria and Israel” over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

    On top of this, the article praises Turkey’s diplomatic efforts in helping to “ease the nuclear stand-off between Iran and the West”.

    Űlgen notes that Turkey’s progress in the Middle East is the result of a “growing lack of US legitimacy and lack of EU influence”. As a result, the country has been “able to leverage both its regional ties and its standing in the transatlantic community to play a more instrumental role vis-à-vis its southern neighbours,” the author asserts.

    This has “without a doubt” enhanced Turkey’s role and influence in the Middle East, Űlgen declares.

    However, the author wonders whether this comes “at the expense of the country’s EU ambitions”. Indeed, “with so much of the country’s diplomatic and political energy now focused on regional issues, it seems to leave little room for advancing its EU membership ambitions,” the paper observes.

    Nevertheless, Űlgen insists that Turkey’s growing influence in the Middle East can be a “sure way of enhancing its asset value for the EU” and facilitating “Turkey’s European bid”.

    On the other hand, the author admits this claim is “predicated on the assumption that Europe has the capacity and the willingness to benefit from what Turkey has to offer”.

    Indeed, this “strategy can only pay off if the EU is able to strengthen its own capacity for concerted action on foreign policy,” the paper asserts.

    In light of Turkey’s diplomatic progress in the Middle East, Űlgen concludes that Turkish EU membership would “make Europe a more influential and capable world power”.

    Turkey’s route to the EU may be via the Middle East

    Spring 2009
    par Sinan Ülgen
    With western influence in the Middle East faltering in the wake of America’s misadventure in Iraq and Europe’s general indecision, Sinan Ülgen argues that Turkish diplomatic successes in Syria and Iran and its growing stature throughout the Middle East have the potential to make it more attractive to the European Union

    Just a few years ago, Europe headed Turkey’s agenda. Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s newly-elected government had embarked on a series of ambitious reforms to meet the EU’s political criteria for joining the common area. At the end of 2004 the EU decided in return to initiate accession talks with Ankara.

    The ensuing pro-European euphoria was to be short lived, and for all practical purposes the accession negotiations have now reached deadlock. Turkey started EU membership talks at the same time as Croatia, but while Croatia is now in the final stages of the process, Turkey is struggling to proceed with the negotiations. These difficulties have had a detrimental impact on both Turkish politicians and on public opinion.

    Not surprisingly, the Turkish government has also lost its appetite for EU-related reforms. For more than two years now, the European Commission has been hard pressed to find anything positive to say in its annual progress reports on political reform developments. In short, Turkey’s European future is today as clouded as at any point in its contemporary history.Yet just as Europe is looking more distant, the Middle East is looming larger on Ankara’s radar screen. Turkey is shifting its attention from west to south, from Brussels to Beirut and beyond. The question is whether this turnround is a structural phenomenon – a sign of a fundamental shift in Turkey’s – or just a temporary and transitional phase.

    Turkey has traditionally remained a bystander in Middle Eastern politics. It was thought the country had little to contribute to or gain from getting involved in the problems that beset Middle Eastern countries. The Ottoman legacy was often used to justify this stance, with the argument being that as long as the legacy endures Turkey will be viewed by its Arab neighbours with suspicion. Developments in recent years have seriously challenged this perception, with Turkey becoming a much more active and visible player in the Middle East.

    Turkish diplomacy has scored a number of successes in the region. Ankara played an instrumental role in bringing about an end to the factional strife in Lebanon and its policy on Syria also produced tangible results. Turkish overtures to Syria, undertaken in spite of warnings from Washington, have paid off handsomely. Turkey was able not only to defuse the international tensions surrounding its Arab neighbour, but also to engineer the start of direct talks between Syria and Israel, a crucial contribution to the elusive Middle East peace process. Ankara obtained this result by investing in its relationship with Damascus and eventually gaining the trust of the Assad regime. Turkey’s strong relations with Israel then enabled Ankara to bring the two rivals to the table.

    On Iran, Turkish activism has been even more pronounced. In recent months, Turkey has multiplied its diplomatic efforts to help ease the nuclear stand-off between Iran and the west. Ankara went as far as hosting a visit from Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmedinejad in August of last year. Turkey does not want to see a nuclear Iran, but that’s chiefly because Turks are more afraid of the regional repercussions of such a development than of the threat it would pose to their own country.

    Turkey’s growing activism in the Middle East is now being underpinned by a confluence of regional factors and geopolitical shifts. Turkey has been able to make headway in the turbulent waters of the Middle East because of the growing lack of U.S. legitimacy and lack of EU influence. In other words, as a rising regional power, Turkey has benefited from the handicaps of the global powers.

    The U.S. lost its ability to play a more constructive role in the Middle East following its ill-fated intervention in Iraq. With anti-American sentiments reaching new heights, the ability of many Arab governments to collaborate with the U.S. has been severely impaired. The Bush Administration’s neo-conservative agenda of bringing democracy to the Arab world has also backfired. The U.S. first distanced itself from the more autocratic Arab leaders in a bid to support home-grown democratic alternatives, only to find that the only realistic political alternative to these regimes was to be found in the territory of political Islam. Given the lack of appetite in a U.S. administration conditioned by the “war on terror” for such an option, a return to the traditional policy of supporting the status quo was inevitable.

    The EU has faced a different dilemma. Unlike the U.S., the EU’s difficulty stems not from a perceived lack of legitimacy or crude attempts at promoting democracy, but a real lack of unity and, therefore, influence. The quest for a common denominator between the positions of different EU governments has hardly been conducive to the emergence of the sort of cogent and reliable diplomacy needed to address the deep problems of the Middle East. Individual EU countries continue to maintain high national profiles in the region than the sum of countries that the EU purports to be.

    In light of these serious deficiencies on the part of the main western powers, Turkey has been able to leverage both its regional ties and its standing in the transatlantic community to play a more instrumental role vis-à-vis its southern neighbours. And Turkey’s potential for influence has been further enhanced by opportune demand and supply conditions. On the demand side, the main structural barrier that traditionally prevented Turkish involvement in the Middle East has been eroding. Arab nationalists are fast becoming an endangered species, replaced by a rising political class more influenced by religion – a supranational ideology. As a result, the Ottoman legacy of a working state structure, tolerant of religion, was beginning to be viewed in a more favourable light. The Turkish model, whose particularity for many Middle Eastern observers was its ability to nurture a democracy-friendly political Islam, was suddenly in demand. And too is Turkey.

    On the supply side, Turkey has been more prepared than ever to take advantage of these fundamental shifts. The ruling AKP party traces its roots to political Islam, and many of its leaders have their social networks in Islamic countries – in stark contrast to the secular style of Turkey’s previous leaders, who had proudly displayed their western identity. The result is that formal and informal links between the new Turkish political élite and the Arab world have been considerably easier. Decades-old trust and confidence deficits between Turkey and Middle Eastern countries are thus gradually being overcome.

    The frustrations of dealing with an undecided Europe have led Turkish policy-makers to focus their efforts on an area where the expected return on their investment was more immediate and more concrete. Prime Minister Erdoğan has recently visited many countries in the Middle East – Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, Algeria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Iran and Iraq – but has not been to Brussels since 2005.

    There can be no doubt that Ankara’s growing activism in its foreign policy, especially in relation to the Middle East, has begun to enhance the role and influence of Turkey in its own region. Turkey is now firmly set to become a regional power, with its recent election to the UN Security Council a further testimony to Ankara’s diplomatic prowess.

    The question is whether this shift of focus towards the south and towards Turkey’s status as a regional power comes at the expense of the country’s EU ambitions. With so much of the country’s diplomatic and political energy now focused on regional issues, that seems to leave little room for advancing its EU membership ambitions. It is no coincidence that Turkey’s failure to implement a long-term communications strategy with Brussels comes in the face of ever-falling public support in EU countries for enlargement of the common area to include Turkey.

    For optimists, Turkey’s growing regional influence is seen as a sure way of enhancing its asset value for the EU. The multi-faceted diplomacy of Ankara and the strengthening of Turkey’s status as a soft power in the region are not necessarily at odds with its EU membership objective. On the contrary, it should facilitate Turkey’s European bid.

    Yet this claim is predicated on the assumption that Europe has the capacity and the willingness to benefit from what Turkey has to offer. In other words, this strategy can only pay off if the EU is able to strengthen its own capacity for concerted action on foreign policy. So Turkish accession would not, as European federalists like to argue, lead to a weaker Europe. On the contrary, Turkey’s membership would make Europe a more influential and capable world power.

    Source:  www.euractiv.com

    Turkey’s route to the EU may be via the Middle East

    INTERNATIONAL
    par Sinan Ülgen

    With western influence in the Middle East faltering in the wake of America’s misadventure in Iraq and Europe’s general indecision, Sinan Ülgen argues that Turkish diplomatic successes in Syria and Iran and its growing stature throughout the Middle East have the potential to make it more attractive to the European Union

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    par Güven Sak
    par Cemal Karakas
    par Joachim Fritz-Vannahme
    par George Vassiliou
    par David Tonge

    Just a few years ago, Europe headed Turkey’s agenda. Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s newly-elected government had embarked on a series of ambitious reforms to meet the EU’s political criteria for joining the common area. At the end of 2004 the EU decided in return to initiate accession talks with Ankara.

    The ensuing pro-European euphoria was to be short lived, and for all practical purposes the accession negotiations have now reached deadlock. Turkey started EU membership talks at the same time as Croatia, but while Croatia is now in the final stages of the process, Turkey is struggling to proceed with the negotiations. These difficulties have had a detrimental impact on both Turkish politicians and on public opinion.

    Euro-scepticism is now at an all-time high in Turkey, and continues to be fuelled by the rhetoric of some European political leaders who voice their opposition to Turkey’s accession. The EU’s own failure to dissipate doubts about the feasibility of Turkey’s eventual membership is leading ever-larger constituencies in Turkey to lose faith in Europe and in the likelihood of accession. Domestic support for EU membership had reached 70% at the start of the negotiations, but now that figure is closer to 40%.

    Not surprisingly, the Turkish government has also lost its appetite for EU-related reforms. For more than two years now, the European Commission has been hard pressed to find anything positive to say in its annual progress reports on political reform developments. In short, Turkey’s European future is today as clouded as at any point in its contemporary history.

    Yet just as Europe is looking more distant, the Middle East is looming larger on Ankara’s radar screen. Turkey is shifting its attention from west to south, from Brussels to Beirut and beyond. The question is whether this turnround is a structural phenomenon – a sign of a fundamental shift in Turkey’s – or just a temporary and transitional phase.

    Turkey has traditionally remained a bystander in Middle Eastern politics. It was thought the country had little to contribute to or gain from getting involved in the problems that beset Middle Eastern countries. The Ottoman legacy was often used to justify this stance, with the argument being that as long as the legacy endures Turkey will be viewed by its Arab neighbours with suspicion. Developments in recent years have seriously challenged this perception, with Turkey becoming a much more active and visible player in the Middle East.

    Turkish diplomacy has scored a number of successes in the region. Ankara played an instrumental role in bringing about an end to the factional strife in Lebanon and its policy on Syria also produced tangible results. Turkish overtures to Syria, undertaken in spite of warnings from Washington, have paid off handsomely. Turkey was able not only to defuse the international tensions surrounding its Arab neighbour, but also to engineer the start of direct talks between Syria and Israel, a crucial contribution to the elusive Middle East peace process. Ankara obtained this result by investing in its relationship with Damascus and eventually gaining the trust of the Assad regime. Turkey’s strong relations with Israel then enabled Ankara to bring the two rivals to the table.

    On Iran, Turkish activism has been even more pronounced. In recent months, Turkey has multiplied its diplomatic efforts to help ease the nuclear stand-off between Iran and the west. Ankara went as far as hosting a visit from Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmedinejad in August of last year. Turkey does not want to see a nuclear Iran, but that’s chiefly because Turks are more afraid of the regional repercussions of such a development than of the threat it would pose to their own country.

    Turkey’s growing activism in the Middle East is now being underpinned by a confluence of regional factors and geopolitical shifts. Turkey has been able to make headway in the turbulent waters of the Middle East because of the growing lack of U.S. legitimacy and lack of EU influence. In other words, as a rising regional power, Turkey has benefited from the handicaps of the global powers.

    The U.S. lost its ability to play a more constructive role in the Middle East following its ill-fated intervention in Iraq. With anti-American sentiments reaching new heights, the ability of many Arab governments to collaborate with the U.S. has been severely impaired. The Bush Administration’s neo-conservative agenda of bringing democracy to the Arab world has also backfired. The U.S. first distanced itself from the more autocratic Arab leaders in a bid to support home-grown democratic alternatives, only to find that the only realistic political alternative to these regimes was to be found in the territory of political Islam. Given the lack of appetite in a U.S. administration conditioned by the “war on terror” for such an option, a return to the traditional policy of supporting the status quo was inevitable.

    The EU has faced a different dilemma. Unlike the U.S., the EU’s difficulty stems not from a perceived lack of legitimacy or crude attempts at promoting democracy, but a real lack of unity and, therefore, influence. The quest for a common denominator between the positions of different EU governments has hardly been conducive to the emergence of the sort of cogent and reliable diplomacy needed to address the deep problems of the Middle East. Individual EU countries continue to maintain high national profiles in the region than the sum of countries that the EU purports to be.

    In light of these serious deficiencies on the part of the main western powers, Turkey has been able to leverage both its regional ties and its standing in the transatlantic community to play a more instrumental role vis-à-vis its southern neighbours. And Turkey’s potential for influence has been further enhanced by opportune demand and supply conditions. On the demand side, the main structural barrier that traditionally prevented Turkish involvement in the Middle East has been eroding. Arab nationalists are fast becoming an endangered species, replaced by a rising political class more influenced by religion – a supranational ideology. As a result, the Ottoman legacy of a working state structure, tolerant of religion, was beginning to be viewed in a more favourable light. The Turkish model, whose particularity for many Middle Eastern observers was its ability to nurture a democracy-friendly political Islam, was suddenly in demand. And too is Turkey.

    On the supply side, Turkey has been more prepared than ever to take advantage of these fundamental shifts. The ruling AKP party traces its roots to political Islam, and many of its leaders have their social networks in Islamic countries – in stark contrast to the secular style of Turkey’s previous leaders, who had proudly displayed their western identity. The result is that formal and informal links between the new Turkish political élite and the Arab world have been considerably easier. Decades-old trust and confidence deficits between Turkey and Middle Eastern countries are thus gradually being overcome.

    The frustrations of dealing with an undecided Europe have led Turkish policy-makers to focus their efforts on an area where the expected return on their investment was more immediate and more concrete. Prime Minister Erdoğan has recently visited many countries in the Middle East – Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, Algeria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Iran and Iraq – but has not been to Brussels since 2005.

    There can be no doubt that Ankara’s growing activism in its foreign policy, especially in relation to the Middle East, has begun to enhance the role and influence of Turkey in its own region. Turkey is now firmly set to become a regional power, with its recent election to the UN Security Council a further testimony to Ankara’s diplomatic prowess.

    The question is whether this shift of focus towards the south and towards Turkey’s status as a regional power comes at the expense of the country’s EU ambitions. With so much of the country’s diplomatic and political energy now focused on regional issues, that seems to leave little room for advancing its EU membership ambitions. It is no coincidence that Turkey’s failure to implement a long-term communications strategy with Brussels comes in the face of ever-falling public support in EU countries for enlargement of the common area to include Turkey.

    For optimists, Turkey’s growing regional influence is seen as a sure way of enhancing its asset value for the EU. The multi-faceted diplomacy of Ankara and the strengthening of Turkey’s status as a soft power in the region are not necessarily at odds with its EU membership objective. On the contrary, it should facilitate Turkey’s European bid.

    Yet this claim is predicated on the assumption that Europe has the capacity and the willingness to benefit from what Turkey has to offer. In other words, this strategy can only pay off if the EU is able to strengthen its own capacity for concerted action on foreign policy. So Turkish accession would not, as European federalists like to argue, lead to a weaker Europe. On the contrary, Turkey’s membership would make Europe a more influential and capable world power.

    > Email à Sinan Ülgen
  • Mustafa Kabakci: “There are no changes in Turkey’s policy regarding Azerbaijan, it is impossible”

    Mustafa Kabakci: “There are no changes in Turkey’s policy regarding Azerbaijan, it is impossible”

     

     
     

    Baku. Gulshen Hajiyeva –APA. “There are no changes in the Turkey’s policy regarding Azerbaijan, it is impossible”, said Mustafa Kabakci, member of Turkish Parliament and head of the Turkey-Azerbaijan friendship group, in his exclusive interview with APA.

    MP denied the reports about the Turkey’s retracting of demand for withdrawal of Armenian troops from the Azerbaijani land instead of improvement of Turkish-Armenian relations. “I called the Turkey’s foreign ministry after that I saw these reports. They told me that there were no changes in the Turkey’s Azerbaijan policy. Being the head of Azerbaijan-Turkey friendship group, I am expressing the Turkey’s opinion. The Nagorno Karabakh problem is the issue of not only Azerbaijan, but Turkey too. There is an injustice against Azerbaijan. Nagorno Karabakh was occupied. It is impossible that we retracted the demand for withdrawal of Armenian invaders from the Azerbaijani lands”.
    Radio Liberty’s Armenian service spread reports about the Turkey’s retracting the demand of Armenian withdrawal from the Azerbaijani lands, but Turkey’s Foreign Ministry didn’t make announcement denying that.

  • Turkish Parliament to hold hearing on Khojali Genocide

    Turkish Parliament to hold hearing on Khojali Genocide

    Baku. Gulshen Hajiyeva–APA. Turkish Parliament will hold hearing on Khojali Genocide, Member of the Parliament and Head of the Turkey-Azerbaijan Friendship group Mustafa Kabakci told APA. Kabakci said he would made report during the hearings behind the closed doors to be held on February 25 on the occasion of 17th anniversary of the Khojali Genocide.

    Massacres committed by Armenians in Azerbaijan and Turkey, occupation of Azerbaijani territories and other issues will be discussed during the hearings.

  • Azerbaijani People’s Poet Bakhtiyar Vahabzadeh dies

    Azerbaijani People’s Poet Bakhtiyar Vahabzadeh dies

     
     

    [Baku–APA. Azerbaijani People’s Poet Bakhtiyar Vahabzadeh died on Friday. The poet died after a siege of illness, APA reports.

    Azerbaijani People’s Poet Bakhtiyar Mahmoud oglu Vahabzadeh was born in 1925 in Shaki. He migrated to Baku in 1934 and studied philology at Azerbaijan State University (1947). He became an assistant at the same department and completed his doctorate with his thesis on the famous Azerbaijani poet Samed Vurgun. He became a member of Azerbaijan Writers Union in 1945, honorary art figure in 1974. He was awarded with the Republican State Prize in 1975 and USSR State Prize in 1984. He was elected a corresponding member of Azerbaijan National Academy of Sciences. He received the honorary title of Azerbaijani People’s Poet in 1985. He was awarded the Independence Medal in 1995 for his special contribution to the national-freedom movement of Azerbaijan.
    Vahabzadeh was an author of more than 70 poetry books, two monographs, 11 scientific-publicist books, more than 20 large poems and hundreds of articles. Vahabzadeh was a member of Azerbaijan Supreme Soviet (1980-1995) and Milli Majlis, Azerbaijani Parliament (1995-2000).
    Vahabzadeh was known not only in Azerbaijan, but also outside the country. His works were translated into Russian, Turkish, English French, German, Persian, Spanish, Hungarian, as well as to the languages of peoples of former USSR.

  • Friends of Turkey group founded in EP

    Friends of Turkey group founded in EP

    BRUSSELS – Members of the European Parliament from the Labor Party of Britain have established a Friends of Turkey group in parliament. Speaking at the reception held to welcome the new group, the chairman of Turkey’s main opposition Republican People’s Party, or CHP, Deniz Baykal said everyone should preserve optimism at a time when Turkey was also experiencing difficulties.

    “The Friends of Turkey Group will contribute to this optimism,” Baykal said.

    Source:  www.hurriyet.com.tr, February 13, 2009

  • Georgia’s reaction

    Georgia’s reaction

    Georgia Overreacts to Defeat in War Against South Ossetia by Resorting to Harassment, Political Repression Against Javakheti Armenians

    By Appo Jabarian
    Executive Publisher / Managing Editor
    USA Armenian Life Magazine
    Friday,  February 6, 2009 

    On January 27, the Virk Party in Samtskhe-Javakheti released a statement concerning recent developments in the region referring to arrests of prominent Georgian Armenians, saying: “It is not the first time such incidents have occurred in Javakhk,” and that “they clearly have an anti-Armenian subtext.” Virk urged the Georgian authorities to release Grigor Minasian and Sarkis Hakobjanian immediately. They are a youth club director and local representative of Aznavour pour l’Arménie, respectively, in the town of Akhaltsikhe. 

    These two Armenian leaders’ arrests were preceded by:
    – The March 9, 2006 murder of an ethnic Armenian, Gevorg Gevorgyan in Tsalka region; and
    – The July 21, 2008 illegal arrest of the leader of the United Javakhk Democratic Alliance Vahagn Chakhalian. Chakhalian is credited for having led the protest rallies condemning the brutal murder of Gevorgyan in Tsalka.
    Chakhalian, the leader of the United Javakhk Democratic Alliance said in a statement issued on 28 January: “The Georgian authorities undertake successive actions to encourage the immigration of the Javakheti Armenians and to change the ethnic picture of the region. Thus … attempts to georgianize the Armenian churches are made… In Javakheti there is no alternative to using the Georgian language, which is imposed at all levels of social life. The Javakheti Armenians are refused the right to establish an Armenian language based university.”
    He continued: “After the murder of the ethnic Armenian – Gevorg Gevorgyan in Tsalka region on March 9, 2006, his relatives and friends organized a protest action which was forcefully broken up by the police. This caused a well-grounded discontent of the Javakheti Armenians. The ‘United Javakhk Democratic Alliance’ placed itself at the head of this wave of protests.”
    He added: “After each protest action I, as a leader of the ‘United Javakhk Democratic Alliance,’ had a meeting with the Georgian authorities. The latter kept on promising to solve the problems regarding the Javakheti Armenians, however, the promises remained unfulfilled. The authorities advised us to refrain from mass protest actions and to pursue our objectives through participation in elections and other democratic processes. The ‘United Javakhk Democratic Alliance’ followed this advice. In October 2006 we took part in the elections to the local self-administration bodies, however blatant falsifications of the voting results by the authorities deprived the ‘United Javakhk Democratic Alliance’ of the opportunity to have any visible participation in the local self-administration bodies. The protest action organized by the ‘United Javakhk Democratic Alliance’ was put down by police by means of provocation and use of force. Throughout the year 2007 the Georgian authorities had been undertaking successive actions to liquidate the ‘United Javakhk Democratic Alliance’ and to ensure my political isolation and neutralization. The culmination of these actions became the events that took place in July 17-21, 2008.”
    Chakhalian concluded: “Today, 6 months after my imprisonment, the Georgian authorities charge me with organizing protest actions in Akhalkalaki in 2006, – the actions by means of which the Javakheti Armenians voiced the problems and issues they were concerned about and requested the Georgian authorities to solve them; -the protest actions during which the Javakheti Armenians voiced their discontent about the blatant falsifications made by the authorities during the elections to the local self-administration bodies, claiming to declare the election results invalid. Thus, in this courtroom I am stating the following: this lawsuit is a farce, and the reason for continuously delaying the trial lies in the fact that the Georgian authorities are afraid of me, as a political activist, who is a mouthpiece for the rights of the Javakheti Armenians. By charging me you charge the Armenian minority of your country. The arrests of Akhaltsikha Armenian activists Grigor Minasyan, and Sargis Hakobjanyan are also the result of this fear. This is a new provocation, which aims to impel the Javakheti Armenians to extremist actions and by this to discredit the peaceful struggle of Javakheti Armenians for their language, educational and religious rights.”
    This writer along with other peace- and freedom-loving activists worldwide, joins Mr. Chakhalian in urging the Georgian authorities to:
    – Stop all the fabricated criminal cases brought against the members of the “United Javakhk Democratic Alliance;”
    – Stop all illegal political and economic persecutions. Release all political prisoners who were arrested for their activities aimed at protection of the rights of the Armenian minority, including those arrested in Akhaltsikhe;
    – Cease all the undemocratic programs aimed at the artificial change of the demographic picture of the Samtskhe-Javakheti and Tsalka regions;
    – Solve all the linguistic-educational, socio-economic and cultural problems the Armenian minority of Georgia is concerned about;
    Register the Armenian Apostolic Church and return to its jurisdiction all the churches that have been confiscated during the Soviet era;
    – Legally authorize the use of the Armenian language in the work of the local self-administration bodies and in general office work in Samtskhe-Javakheti and Tsalka regions;
    – Respect the right of the Georgian-Armenian community to establishing an Armenian university in Akhalkalaki.
    Armenians are the largest ethnic minority in Georgia at about 10% of the population. The Armenian community is mostly concentrated in the capital Tbilisi and the Samtskhe-Javakheti region, which borders Armenia to the south. Armenians form the clear majority (over 58%) in this region. Javakhk is the historic name of the region in the southwest of Georgia, where 3 regions out of 6 are mainly Armenian populated, with some 100,000 Armenians living there. Another 100,000 or more Armenians live in Tbilisi and elsewhere in Georgia.
    Armenians living in Georgia demand respect for their rights as a national minority which they claim are being violated by the Georgian authorities.
    Minasian and Hakobjanian remain in detention in Tbilisi on fabricated and politically motivated charges of “espionage” among others. So far, the Georgian authorities have given no information about what country they had “spied for” and what kind of “armed group they had formed.”
    Yerevan-based Doctor of Philology Haykazun Alvrtsyan said the accusations of the Georgian authorities were nonsense. The Georgian authorities “want to give a criminal implication to a political problem,” in order to justify a witch-hunt.
    According to Alvrtsyan, the Georgian officials are trying to destabilize the situation and to ultimately cleanse Javakhk from Armenians, thus allowing Turkey to surround Armenia. He said: “Let’s not forget that Javakhk is the only link connecting Armenia” with the outside world and Europe.
    Spokesperson for the Interior Ministry Shota Khizanishvili told Civil.ge on January 23 “further statements on the matter will be made later.” According to Armenian Public Radio, those statements were expected on January 26. No statements were made as of press time on Monday Feb. 2.
    Following the separation of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, many Georgians have suspected the country’s other ethnic minorities – currently comprising about 22 percent of the population and living outside the Georgian mainstream – of harboring separatist intentions.
    Shirak Torosian is a parliament member from the governing Republican Party and leader of the Javakhk Compatriotic Union. He visited Akhhaltsikhe in late January.
    Torosian, a proponent of Georgian-Armenian cooperation, reportedly warned that “Javakhk would not become another Nakhichevan,” referring to the Azerbaijani-controlled region from which all ethnic Armenians were expelled in the 19th century.
    He said that either Javakheti’s issues are addressed through Armenian-Georgian cooperation, or the current tensions could lead to an outright war. He urged immediate involvement of the Armenian government.
    The arrests were intended to “cement” Tbilisi’s control in Armenian-populated territories in the aftermath of Georgian reversals in South Ossetia and Abkhazia last August, Vahe Sargsian of the Yerevan-based Mitq analytical center suggested on January 26.
    On Aug 29, 2008 F. William Engdahl, the author of A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics and the New World Order (Pluto Press), and Seeds of Destruction: The Hidden Agenda of Genetic Manipulation (www.globalresearch.ca), and a contributing writer of Online Journal wrote: “An examination shows 41-year-old Mikheil Saakashvili to be a ruthless and corrupt totalitarian who is tied to not only the US- NATO establishment, but also to the Israeli military and intelligence establishment. The famous ‘Rose Revolution’ of November 2003 that forced the aging Edouard Shevardnadze from power and swept the then 36-year-old US university graduate into power was run and financed by the US State Department, the Soros Foundations, and agencies tied to the Pentagon and US intelligence community.”
    Further bringing the controversial Georgian Pres. Saakashvili’s real persona to light, Engdahl reported: “Since coming to power in 2004 with US aid, Saakashvili has led a policy of large-scale arrests, imprisonment, torture and deepened corruption. Saakashvili has presided over the creation of a de facto one-party state, with a dummy opposition occupying a tiny portion of seats in the parliament, and this public servant is building a Ceausescu-style palace for himself on the outskirts of Tbilisi. According to the magazine, Civil Georgia (Mar. 22, 2004), until 2005, the salaries of Saakashvili and many of his ministers were reportedly paid by the NGO network of New York-based currency speculator Soros — along with the United Nations Development Program.” 

    Engdahl ominously noted that “With Russia openly backing and training the indigenous military in South Ossetia and Abkhazia to maintain Russian presence in the region, especially since the US-backed pro-NATO Saakashvili regime took power in 2004, the Caucasus is rapidly coming to resemble Spain in the Civil War from 1936-1939, where the Soviet Union, Nazi Germany and others poured money and weapons and volunteers into Spain in a devastating war that was a precursor to the Second World War.”

    Back in August 2008, by his misguided military move against Russia/South Ossetia, Saakashvili has triggered Russia’s trashing of Georgia’s army. One hopes that he does not commit a new set of political mistakes that can cause Georgia’s international isolation and further dismemberment.

    Saakashvili’s mishandling of the Georgian-Armenians’ case is among other problems faced by his embattled presidency. The leaders of around a dozen opposition parties, in a rare show of unity, issued a joint declaration on Thursday (29 January), calling on Saakashvili to quit and hold free and fair elections for president and parliament.  “Mikheil Saakashvili and his team, in their five years in power, have led the country to catastrophe,” it read.

    The Georgian authorities can ill afford to cause the West yet a new political embarrassment with another poorly devised decision igniting yet another losing war which could threaten its very existence. Obviously Georgia is over-reacting to its defeat in its war against Russia/South Ossetia by resorting to increasing judicial harassment and intensifying political repression against the Javakheti Armenians.
    The politically-driven Georgian abuse of power against its own ethnic Armenian citizens will surely augment the level of discontent not only in Georgia but also around the world and will enable the Javakheti Armenians to earn worldwide empathetic understanding for their political struggle for cultural survival.
    If Georgia continues its reprehensible policies, it will re-enforce its critics’ assertions that contrary to the Washington neo-cons’ propaganda, Georgia is not a beacon of democracy. And as such it shall pay the price by way of reduced foreign aid flowing from the United States and Europe.
    Additionally, Georgia’s membership to world bodies, including Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly, should be suspended for the mistreatment of its ethnic minorities, and especially the Georgian Armenians. 

    In a Feb 3 commentary in The Daily Star of Lebanon, Joseph S. Nye, a professor at Harvard and author of “The Powers to Lead,” wrote: “”In situations where groups have difficulties living together, it may be possible to allow a degree of autonomy in the determination of internal affairs. Internal self-determination could allow degrees of cultural, economic, and political autonomy similar to that which exists in countries like Switzerland or Belgium. Where such loosening of the bonds is still not enough, it may be possible in some cases to arrange an amicable divorce, as happened when Czechoslovakia peacefully divided into two sovereign countries in 1993.”

    But will Georgia learn from Czech Republic’s and Slovakia’s wise handling of their political problem?
    Not Saakashvili’s Georgia.
    Change is needed in Tbilisi.