BAKU, April 3—
	"Deputy Chairman of the House of Commons of the Canadian
	Parliament and Chairman of the Canadian-Azerbaijan Parliamentary
	Friendship Group Barry Devolin will discuss the issue of adopting a
	resolution by the Canadian Parliament in connection with the Khojaly
	genocide in Baku. Devolin made his statement for [sic] journalists in
	Baku. A Canadian delegation began its visit to Azerbaijan today."
	— E. Mehdiyev, Trend
	From Parliament Hill in Ottawa to the University of Utah, to Texas,
	Iowa, and the Carolinas, the descendants of the Seljuks and the
	Ottomans are on the move. But unlike their yataghan-wielding ancestors,
	contemporary Seljuks and Ottomans (aka Turks and Azeris) are engaged in
	a PR war fuelled by Ankara’s economic upsurge and Baku’s
	petrodollars.
	The Turkic clans, with the expensive input of high-end PR
	agencies, are determined to change "Turkbeijan"’s justly deplorable
	image. They perceive the Armenian Diaspora as the spoiler of their
	cosmetic duplicities and chicanery. Rather than admit their
	millennia-long barbarian legacy, Turkbeijan leaders, such as absurd
	Baby Aliyev, bray that the Armenian lobby is the real enemy. It would
	surprise no one if one of these days a paranoid Baku publishes “The
	Protocols of the Elders of Armen”.
	To take on the Armenian lobby, Azerbaijan and Turkey have launched a
	multi-pronged “information” campaign. One strand of it extols Turkic
	“contributions” to history and the other promotes instantaneous
	friendship with North Americans. In either case, the idée fixe is to
	deny the depredations Turkic people have inflicted upon Arabs,
	Armenians, Assyrians, Bulgarians, Greeks, Kurds, Serbs…. The
	multifaceted global campaign includes falsification through academia,
	vanity press books, letter-writing campaigns, “student” rallies,
	receptions at four-star hotels, and the funding of junkets for
	politicians with flexible morals.
	The University of Utah in Salt LakeCity (pop. 90,000) is the ground
	zero of Turkbeijan “scholarly” propaganda. The tertiary campus,
	away from the demanding academic standards of metropolitan
	universities, has a misleadingly named “Middle East Centre”. Its board
	includes Dr. Sukru Elekdag (former Turkish MP), Rifat Hisarciklioglu
	(head of the Turkish Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges),
	and the notorious Genocide denier Norman Stone. There are no Arabs,
	Iranians, Kurds or other Middle Eastern Muslims on the board.
	The University of Utah Press has published—under the duplicitous title
	of “Meaningful Middle East Books”—14 books featuring such scabrous
	“historians” as Gunter Lewy, egregious Justin McCarthy, and half-a-dozen
	Turkish “historians”, including M. Hakan Yavuz who has close ties to
	Turkish government intelligence. The infamous Lewy’s opus calls the
	Genocide “disputed genocide”. Hired-hand McCarthy pitches in with
	“The Armenian Rebellion in Van” and “The Turk in America—The Creation
	of an Enduring Prejudice”. Guess who is blamed for the negative image
	of the Turks? The books, by Turks or computer-for-hire American
	“scholars”, are unofficially commissioned by Ankara which buys most of
	the output of the hick university and distributes it, gratis, to
	politicians, diplomats, opinion leaders, and through new-fandangle
	Turkish organizations.
	One such group is the Anatolian Heritage Federation (AHF). It’s an
	umbrella entity of Turkish and Azeri organizations. In Canada it hosts
	public programs, private events, and sponsors “study” trips to Turkey
	and Azerbaijan. In early April, it sent a dozen Canadian members of
	parliament and a senator on two tours of Turkey and Azerbaijan. The
	date is no accident. When the polls return, gorged on falsehood and
	brainwashed with dubious facts, they will—presumably–deny the Genocide
	later in the month.
	Another tactic is to push for the acknowledgement of the Khojali battle
	as genocide by Armenians. In their room-temperature IQs, they hope such
	proclamations would neutralize the slaying of 1.5 million Armenians.
	Yet another Turkic gimmick is to push for Anatolian Heritage Days in
	Canada. What’s the reason for this recherché tribute? Because,
	Turkbaijanis say, “the ancient region of Anatolia, which is also known
	as ‘Asia Minor’, was the cradle of some of the greatest civilizations
	of world history. These include those of the Hittites, Lydians,
	Persians, Greeks, Romans, Byzantines, Seljuks and Ottomans, among
	others…” Armenians must be the “among others”.
	There you are: after destroying Asia Minor indigenous civilizations and
	killing millions of natives, Turks demand credit for being the
	descendants of their victims. To paraphrase an Arabic saying: “After
	killing the man, he joined the funeral cortege to honor his victim”.
	Turks brazenly and risibly claim ownership of the civilizations they
	buried and somehow “forget” the Asia Minor’s ur-people—the Armenians.
	Also “Anatolia” has become a loaded word in Turkish parlance. Although
	it’s an ancient Greek name for Asia Minor, Turkey studiously uses the
	word to erase “Western Armenia” from maps and history. According to
	pro-Turkish MP Bob Dechert (parliamentary assistant to Canada’s
	foreign ministry), Anatolia includes Turkey, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan,
	Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan, but not Armenia. This must be
	news to mapmakers everywhere. The other mendacious Ankara
	sleight-of-hand is the corruption of Anatolia’s etymology from its
	Greek meaning (“Sunrise”) to the Turkish concoction Ana Dolou
	(“Pregnant Mother”). Armenians are familiar with the ploy as Turks have
	distorted the toponyms of countless Armenian place names—from Ararad
	(“Agri Dagh”) to Sis (“Kozan”).
	Through the financial support of the questionable Gulen
	movement and the government, the AHF is constructing an $8-million
	centre in Ottawa called Intercultural Dialogue Institute. It’s a
	meaningless and sham name for an “institute” which will surely promote
	Genocide denial.
	Two years ago the AHF tried to proclaim March 23 as Anatolian Heritage
	Day in Ontario. The bill failed to pass not because of Canadian-Armenian
	lobby’s efforts, but because the premier prorogued (postponed) the
	session. The Armenian lobby was dormant at the wheel when the Turks
	sprung the heritage day stunt on Ontario’s parliament. It’s certain that
	Turkbeijanis will revive the project.
	The Canadian-Armenian lobby has been tardy and complacent in other ways.
	Last year when the Turkish embassy managed to erect, with great
	fanfare, its statue in Ottawa, there was no peep from the Armenian
	lobby that the statue is anti-Armenian propaganda and has nothing to do
	with honoring international diplomats, as the Turkish ambassador
	alleged. After the statue was in place our lobby made no attempt to
	obtain return concessions from the government.
	Meanwhile, Turkey’s consul of Toronto lobbies at the Ontario
	legislature, holding receptions for politicians and ethnic leaders,
	organizes junkets to Turkey and utilizes the internal mail of the
	legislature through Turcophile mercenary politicians. He distributes
	pamphlets which deny the Genocide. Our lobby has not protested
	against these shenanigans.
	How does the Canadian-Armenian lobby combat Turkbeijan propaganda?
	By pretending the grey wolf is not there. During the last federal
	election, Prime Minister Stephen Harper promised to establish an Office
	of Religious Freedoms. Two months ago the government launched the
	promised office. About 300 religious and ethnic group representatives,
	including Armenian, were invited to the opening. No Armenian
	representative attended the event. Among other goals, the office is to
	help the persecuted Christians of the Middle East. The Armenian lobby’s
	no-show must be something new in politics: lobbying through
	invisibility.
	Meanwhile, the “Anatolians”, who have been courting the Liberal Party
	for some time, seem to be changing horses as they might have concluded
	the rival Conservatives will remain in power for a while. Thus, when
	the AHF took seven MPs to Turkey and Azerbaijan on a “study tour”, six
	were Conservatives. A second Canadian delegation, including
	Pakistani-born Senator Salma Ataullahjan (Conservative), met Aliyev
	and Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov. The trips were organized
	by the Azeri embassy in Canada, the ruling New Azerbaijan Party
	and the Azeri Parliament.
	What ails our lobby in Canada is obvious. It’s fragmented, inchoate,
	lackadaisical, and suffers from the absence of a full-time information
	officer in Ottawa. From 2006 to 2009 we had a full-time officer. He was
	effective. Now we have one person who is there two days a week.
	PR is not a part-time enterprise. To bear fruit, it includes attendance
	of after-hour receptions/dinners, bonding with politicians, civil
	servants, and media representatives.
	With the centenary of the Genocide around the corner, we can’t afford
	half-hearted PR. The centenary is a sacred opportunity to tell our
	story with resonance. We have to get serious about our lobbying in
	Canada and elsewhere. Half-hearted PR efforts give our communities a
	false sense that everything is under control… that is, until one
	morning we wake up and learn that the Canadian Parliament has
	recognized the Khojalu as genocide.
	
http://www.keghart.com/Editorial-LobbyWars
	—
	La Rédaction
	Nouvel Hay – Le Magazine sans Frontières






 
							 
                    