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From now on whenever Halacoglu makes a public statement I think we have to insist that he put a jester hat (with bells) on and do a little entertaining dance to go along with his funny statements...
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SARKOZY'S INTENTION TO HINDER FROM TURKEY'S MEMBERSHIP CAN BECOME
REASON FOR EU PARTITION, TURK HISTORIAN THINKS
ISTANBUL, MAY 14, NOYAN TAPAN. "Sarkozy in reality is not a Frenchman
by origin. He is a son of a family lived in the Ottaman lands, and in
opposite to it, is full of much hatred towards Turks." Doctor,
professor Yusuf Halacoglu, the Chairman of the Turkish Historic
Association made such a statement, commenting upon French President
Nicolas Sarkozy's statements addressed to Turkey as well as made in
the direction of assisting adoption of the law making denial of the
Armenian Genocide a crime.
Yusuf Halacoglu drew attention to newly-elected President of France
Nicolas Sarkozy's statements addressed to Turkey and, mentioning that
at the same time with Sarkozy's being elected the President, a new era
will start in Europe, stated: "If Sarkozy does not refuse that idea
(to hinder from Turkey's membership to the EU - N.T.), it is possible
that it becomes a reason for partition of the EU."
Halacoglu insisted that Sarkozy, instead of drawing forward the
interests of the country, is carried away by his feelings.
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Originally posted by Joseph View PostMeanwhile,
several Turkish websites and lobbying groups have started an e-mail campaign in
defense of Frantz. By sending such e-mails, the Turks are inadvertently helping
to keep the Frantz fiasco alive. It is clearly counter-productive for Turks
to be rushing to the aid of Frantz. The Turkish support of Frantz only serves
to confirm the accusations that he is a Turkophile and not an independent
journalist.
And good news concerning the Armenian elections...still much more to Democracy (and functional government) then just elections...a great deal more...
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Armenia Finally Holds
Mostly Fair Elections
By Harut Sassounian
Publisher, The California Courier
Armenians worldwide can now breathe a big sigh of relief after months of
speculation, fears of domestic turmoil, and threats by the U.S. and Europeans of canceling multi-million dollar assistance programs in Armenia in the event thatthey judged the elections to be tainted. Armenia has finally succeeded in holding mostly fair parliamentary elections. International observers, while pointing out some irregularities, were unanimous in confirming that the May 12 elections were "a step forward," "aclear
improvement over previous elections" and "in compliance with international
standards."
More than 20 political parties fielded candidates in this election, while
several others did not participate either to protest previous unfair elections or
to avoid the embarrassment of an expected poor showing.
In the parliamentary elections, citizens may cast two votes: the first vote
is to elect candidates that represent them in their home districts, similarto
U.S. congressional elections; and the second is a nationwide vote for
political parties. Of the 131 seats in Parliament, 90 are allocated for political
parties that receive more than 5% of the total national vote, while the remaining 41seats are for individual representatives. Five parties, three pro-government and two from the opposition, surpassed the required minimum threshold of 5%: the Republican Party of Armenia (won 33% of the national vote) led by Serge Sarkisian who is the leading contender in
next February˘s presidential election; the recently-formed Prosperous Armenia Party (won 15% of the vote) led by wealthy businessman Gagik Tsarukian; theARF
won 13% of the vote; the Country of Laws Party (7% of the vote) led by Artur
Baghdasarian, former Chairman of the Parliament who left the ruling coalition
and joined the ranks of the opposition; and finally, the opposition Heritage
Party (6% of the vote), led by U.S.-born former Foreign Minister Raffi
Hovannisian, made its maiden entry into the Parliament.
The Republican Party (RPA), having won most of the 41 single mandate seats in
addition to capturing one-third of the national vote, has registered a
landslide victory. It now holds close to one half of all the seats in Parliament. In
the coming days, RPA will probably form a coalition with the Prosperous
Armenia Party and the ARF which will give the new ruling coalition control of more
than 80% of the parliamentary seats.
Most of the opposition parties did not exceed the required 5% threshold
because they had failed to form an anti-government coalition and put forward a
joint slate of candidates. It would not be surprising if these opposition parties
are either disbanded or reconstituted under new leadership. On the other hand,
the very impressive success of Serge Sarkisian˘s Republican Party is expected
to catapult him to the presidency in February 2008.
We now would like to update our readers on two other on-going issues:
The first deals with "sensitive" internal State Department documents obtained
by the Armenian National Committee through the Freedom of Information Act.
They cover the forced early retirement of Amb. John Evans for having uttered the
words Armenian Genocide during his appearances in California in February
2005. These documents show that while State Department officials were publicly
praising Amb. Evans and expressing their wishes that he would serve as ambassador
in Armenia as long as possible, in fact they were ordering him to leave his
post and return to the U.S immediately. By doing so, U.S. officials could then
tell the Senators that since Armenia did not have a U.S. ambassador, the
Senate must ratify the nomination of his successor, Richard Hoagland. This
underhanded tactic was a complete failure. Amb. Hoagland is still waiting to be
confirmed more than a year after he was first nominated, because of the hold placed
on his confirmation by Sen. Robert Menendez.
Secondly, based on copies of the e-mails received by this writer, the Los
Angeles Times is continuing to receive a steady stream of complaints from
Armenians worldwide. They are calling for the dismissal of Managing Editor Douglas
Frantz because of his discrimination against Armenian-American reporter Mark
Arax whose article on the Armenian Genocide was blocked by Frantz. Meanwhile,
several Turkish websites and lobbying groups have started an e-mail campaign in
defense of Frantz. By sending such e-mails, the Turks are inadvertently helping
to keep the Frantz fiasco alive. It is clearly counter-productive for Turks
to be rushing to the aid of Frantz. The Turkish support of Frantz only serves
to confirm the accusations that he is a Turkophile and not an independent
journalist.
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Originally posted by steph View PostThe beauty of it all is that it does give us something to smile about.in an otherwise sh*tty world.
I imagine many unintentional Borats performing.
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Originally posted by steph View PostTurkey sent Armenia a political message via Eurovision?
14.05.2007 19:19 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ It attracted the interest of many that Turkey only gave the maximum 12 points to Armenian singer Hayko’s “Anytime You Need.” Musical tastes aside, most people believe this is a political message.
“We are neighbors. We need to be friends. It goes to show how prominent a role music, friendship, and art play,” said Sezen Cumhur Onal, a celebrated music critic in Turkey. He believes the votes cast from Turkey for the Armenian contestant to be political and said there could not have been a better Mothers’ Day present.
On the other hand, Alin Tasciyan an Armenian-Turkish journalist and acclaimed film critic believes that political messages given through the Eurovision song contest fall short, as the contest itself has no political significance. She does not believe it is possible for Armenia to receive so many votes from only the Armenian community in Turkey. “I do not believe it is a high probability Because the number of Armenian living in Turkey is not that high,” she said, Turkish daily News reports.
Hayko with his song “Anytime You Need” took the 8th place in Eurovision 2007. He got 138 points. The highest 12 points he got from Turkey and Georgia.
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Originally posted by steph View PostThe BBC commentator is Terry Wogan, an Irish DJ from BBC 2 Radio, famous now for 30 odd years, definitely the only reason the show is watched in the UK and he's completely unbiased as he is equally caustic in his comments about everyone and everything, but always with a smile !
We had a whole thread about the Eurovision contest last year and about how much a joke it is. The Northern/Western Europeans seem to regard it as a farce-high on the unintentional comedy meter- (much like some Americans regard "American Idol"), which I also feel it is. If I lived in the UK, I'd probably have my friends over, have a few brews, and watch in absolute amusement. I'm jeaous of you guys.
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????
Turkey sent Armenia a political message via Eurovision?
14.05.2007 19:19 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ It attracted the interest of many that Turkey only gave the maximum 12 points to Armenian singer Hayko’s “Anytime You Need.” Musical tastes aside, most people believe this is a political message.
“We are neighbors. We need to be friends. It goes to show how prominent a role music, friendship, and art play,” said Sezen Cumhur Onal, a celebrated music critic in Turkey. He believes the votes cast from Turkey for the Armenian contestant to be political and said there could not have been a better Mothers’ Day present.
On the other hand, Alin Tasciyan an Armenian-Turkish journalist and acclaimed film critic believes that political messages given through the Eurovision song contest fall short, as the contest itself has no political significance. She does not believe it is possible for Armenia to receive so many votes from only the Armenian community in Turkey. “I do not believe it is a high probability Because the number of Armenian living in Turkey is not that high,” she said, Turkish daily News reports.
Hayko with his song “Anytime You Need” took the 8th place in Eurovision 2007. He got 138 points. The highest 12 points he got from Turkey and Georgia.
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Indeed it is!
By the way Steph thanks so much for the info! I've been dying to find out who the BBC guy wasNow I'll go and google him
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