No obstacle in the way of Iran’s gas export to Armenia

ISNA, Iran
Iranian Students News Agency
Nov 25 2006

No obstacle in the way of Iran’s gas export to Armenia Service:
Economy

ISNA – Tehran
Service: Economy

TEHRAN, Nov. 25 (ISNA)-A member of Iran’s parliament energy
commission, Hussein Afarideh, commented that winter and internal gas
consumption increase, posed no obstacle in the way of Iran’s gas
export to Armenia.

"We can not stop export due to excuses such as internal high
consumption rate in this season of the year; Iran has various rich
gas resources and in addition to this fact we have access to other
gas markets, therefore we are easily able to buy and sell gas," he
explained.

Boxing: Darchinyan’s quandary: should I stay or should I go?

The Age, Australia
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia
Nov 26 2006

Darchinyan’s quandary: should I stay or should I go?
Email Print Normal font Large font Winsor Dobbin
November 26, 2006

VIC Darchinyan is perplexed by his options. Having vowed
to remain an Australian, our only world boxing champion has been
wooed by lucrative offers to base himself overseas permanently.

Darchinyan’s American promoter Gary Shaw has urged him to move to the
US to lift his profile in the most lucrative market in the world and
sign with either HBO or Showtime.

A group of influential Armenians has made him a massive offer to
return permanently to his homeland and fight under the Armenian flag.

Darchinyan has lived in Australia since the 2000 Sydney Olympics and
took out citizenship in 2004. He has been frustrated by a lack of
recognition here since winning the IBF and IBO world flyweight titles
and successfully defending them five times.

The tiny powerhouse, who is 27-0 with 21 wins inside the distance, is
one of the best pound-for-pound fighters in the world but there is no
Australian promoter with the financial muscle to put on unification
bouts against WBC champion Pongsaklek Wonjongkam or interim champion
Jorge Arce.

Despite resigning himself to fighting three or four times a year in
the US, Darchinyan and his fiancee Olga recently moved into a new
apartment in the Sydney suburb of Zetland. He is busy with what he
hopes will be the first in a chain of Vic’s Raging Bull cafes, so is
loath to uproot himself.

"I love living here in Australia and I hope the time will soon come
when all Australians learn to love me, too," he said. "All Australia
will be proud of me, but these things take time.

"Kostya Tszyu has told me it took several years for people to get to
know him. At the moment I’m not very popular here because people
haven’t seen me on TV.

"I think people love to see someone who is a good boxer who is also a
really big puncher and I am both of those things. I show nice style
and then knock them out and it is a pity that more people do not get
the chance to see it.

"Gary Shaw keeps telling me I should move to the US, but I’m happy to
live in Sydney and fight over there. I go over three or four weeks
before each fight and I fight three or four times a year, so I spend
enough time in the US.

"Life is good here. Beautiful. I do my job. I love it. I have a
future here."

But there is also the temptation of that big-money Armenian offer,
put together by politicians and businessmen when Darchinyan made a
recent trip back home.

He’s already been given a house, and land on which he will eventually
build a gymnasium to encourage young Armenian boxers, but the money
he was offered to return home and fight for Armenia blew him away.
"If I went back to Armenia I’d make a lot more money," he said.

"You wouldn’t believe how much I was offered. There are only two
Armenian-born world champions and I am in Australia and Arthur
Abraham is in Germany. The people there are very keen to have their
own world champion.

"People want to see me fight for Armenia. They want me to live there.

"I became world champion in Australia, Australia gave me opportunity
and I’m happy I’m an Australian world champion."

But a fight back home is definitely on the agenda.

"It is possible I could fight there, Gary Shaw would be happy to
co-promote, and many people are interested. Ideally I’d like to have
big fights in Sydney, Armenia and in Moscow before I retire. "

Multilingual and university educated, Darchinyan was treated like a
returning hero on his recent trip home, where he also intends to
eventually invest in a business.

Darchinyan will be on the road to the US again soon with a title
defence against formidable Mexican Victor Burgos, the former IBF
light-flyweight champion, scheduled for January 7 in Las Vegas.

"Christmas will be a little late for me this year," Darchinyan said.
"But I can celebrate after the fight."

Armenian joy but genocide row continues

Edinburgh Evening News, UK
Scotsman, United Kingdom
Nov 25 2006

Armenian joy but genocide row continues
MICHAEL BLACKLEY
([email protected])

ARMENIANS in the Capital are celebrating after councillors stood by
their decision to class a campaign against their countrymen during
the First World War as genocide.

The city council voted to back an original motion passed last year
regarding the deaths of up to 1.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman
Empire in 1915 stating "it was indeed genocide".

Debate on the matter raged for an hour at a stormy meeting of the
full council in the City Chambers – but Councillor Phil Attridge’s
attempts to approve a new motion were rebuffed. He wanted a motion
that supported plans by Turkey to set up an independent investigation
and make a verdict on whether it was genocide. He claimed the snub
"reeked of Turkophobia".

Today, the Morningside-based man leading the Scottish arm of the
campaign to have the deaths recognised as genocide said he was
"proud" that his local authority had made the decision.

Armenian Dr Hagop Bessos, 55, chairman of the Scottish branch of UK
organisation The Campaign for Recognition of Armenian Genocide, said:
"I am extremely proud and moved that the council in Edinburgh have
stuck by this decision. Although the genocide was 91 years ago, the
consequences for Armenians continue today."

The council first passed a motion on the matter last August after it
was presented by then city leader Donald Anderson.

But the decision led to a number of complaints to councillors and
Cllr Attridge put forward the new motion in support of Turkish Prime
Minister Tayyip Erdogan’s call for an international commission to
carry out a probe. But it was widely rejected by councillors, with
only two people backing it. Instead, they passed a new motion that
reaffirms the original decision.

Cllr Attridge said: "In Britain we always seem to support the
minority and the Armenians make it seem like the only people that
died during the war were Armenian. The reek of Turkophobia in that
room was extreme."

The British wing of the Citizens Proclamation of Turkish Rights group
had arranged for a Turkish history professor from the University of
Ankara to make a 3500-mile round trip to give evidence at the City
Chambers.

Its chair, Hal Sausas, said: "The whole thing is absurd. Nobody on
that council has the power to judge something like this. Most of the
people on the council don’t know anything about this. They couldn’t
even tell you where Armenia is."

burgh.cfm?id=1749922006

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://edinburghnews.scotsman.com/edin

BAKU: Divisions of Armenian Armed Forces Broke the Ceasefire Regime

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
Nov 25 2006

Divisions of Armenian Armed Forces Broke the Ceasefire Regime Again

Source: Trend
Author: Sh.Jaliloglu

25.11.2006

The divisions of the Armenian Armed Forces broke the ceasefire regime
on the frontline again, Trend Regional Correspondent reports. On
November 24 at 20:30, the divisions of the Armenian Armed Forces,
located in the occupied Seyddulan village of Tartar district of
Azerbaijan, fired the positions of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces, with
submachine guns and machine-guns. The enemy was made silent with
response shot and there is no losses.

BAKU: Mironov: Russia appreciates OSCE role in NK settlement effort

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Nov 25 2006

Sergey Mironov: Russia appreciates OSCE MG’s role in settlement of
Karabakh Conflict

[ 25 Nov. 2006 12:36 ]

Russia highly appreciates the OSCE Minsk Group’s role in the
settlement of Nagorno Karabakh Conflict, Speaker of the Federation
Council of Russia Sergey Mironov said in the meeting with Speaker of
the Armenian Parliament Tigram Torossyan.

`Russia is ready to play a guarantee role for implementation of any
decisions adopted by the conflicting sides,’ Mironov said.
Torossyan said it was impossible to solve Nagorno Karabkh Conflict
through the power of weapons, finance and military forces. `It is
also impossible today to settle the conflict by these means,’ he
said. /APA/

Parents give in daughter’s memory providing coats for Armenians

Akron Beacon Journal, OH
Nov 25 2006

Parents give in daughter’s memory
They work with their church to provide coats for Armenians

By Colette M. Jenkins
Beacon Journal religion writer

Carl and Patsy Dulin planted seeds of caring in their daughter and
they blossomed.

Now, they are following her example of caring for people halfway
around the world, in Armenia.

“She loved working to help people in that small part of the world,”
Carl Dulin said. “She was the most giving person I ever knew and we
want to honor her memory by doing things in her name.”

The Dulins’ daughter, Carrie Jane, died in a car crash on her 28th
birthday, Aug. 5, 2003, en route to a new assignment in Nigeria. She
had spent five years as a Peace Corps and World Vision worker in
Armenia.

A year after her death, the Dulins took a trip to Armenia to deliver
money donated in their daughter’s name to two orphanages in Sissian
and Spitak. They purchased appliances for the kitchen in Spitak and
an organ for the orphanage in Sissian.

They also took part of Carrie’s ashes and spread them at a deserted
monastery near Sissian.

095571.htm
As they left the orphanages, they asked the directors what they could
do to make a difference in the lives of the children there. They were
told that the children at both orphanages needed warm clothing for
the winter, when they are forced to bundle up in bed and stay home
from school because the buildings aren’t heated.

Last year, the Dulins’ church, Doylestown United Methodist, organized
a coat campaign and collected about 30 boxes of coats that were
shipped to Armenia through the United Methodist Committee on Relief,
just after Hurricane Katrina. But the orphanages never received the
coats because they were lost in transit through the depot in New
Orleans.

“The other side of that is somebody got those coats who needed
them,” Carl Dulin said. “Now, we’re doing it again but a little
differently.”

Church collecting money

This time, the church is collecting money to send with the Dulins
when they leave for Armenia on Dec. 4. The plan is to buy the coats
in Armenia.

“It’s easy to see why Carrie loved the Armenian people because they
are such gentle, kind-hearted people,” Patsy Dulin said. “If it had
not been for Carrie, we would never have gotten to know the people
there.”

The Dulins made their first trip to Armenia two years before Carrie
was killed. Carrie introduced her parents to the people she had come
to know and love and showed them her work.

When they returned in 2004, they ate apples from the orchard Carrie
helped the Armenian people plant in front of one of the orphanages.

“Carrie did a lot of neat things for the people there because she
loved them. She was a fierce fighter for the underdog and people who
are oppressed,” Carl Dulin said. “It was her seed planting that has
us doing what we’re doing now.

“What we’re doing is what God commands of us — helping those in
need. But at the same time it’s our way of dealing with our grief.”

Donations to the Coats for Armenia Fund can be sent to Doylestown
United Methodist Church, 153 Church St., Doylestown 44230.

http://www.ohio.com/mld/beaconjournal/16

Opening Eyes To Plight Of Assyrians

Hartford Courant,
Nov 25 2006

Opening Eyes To Plight Of Assyrians
November 25, 2006

By LORETTA WALDMAN, Courant Staff Writer

Growing up in Iran, Sharokin Betgevargiz remembers diving into ditches
at the sound of approaching MiGs during the Iran/Iraq War. In the
apartment she shared with her parents in a Tehran suburb, shelter was
found under beds and in doorways. Black tape crisscrossed the windows
in case of flying glass.

Now 36, Betgevargiz lives in New Britain and teaches the history of
graphic design at Central Connecticut State University. She has not
forgotten her childhood terror, nor how she says it felt growing up
as a Christian in a mostly Muslim world.

That is how she explains her passion for calling attention to the
plight of Assyrians: a less visible, seldom mentioned group than the
Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds now caught up in the bloodshed ravaging
Iraq.

Yet these mostly Christian descendants of the ancient Mesopotamians
are frequent targets of fundamentalist Islamists who see them as the
face of the West. Abductions and beheadings are common, she says. Men
go to work and never return. Women are terrified to leave their
homes.

"We equal George Bush" in the eyes of the enemies, said Betgevargiz.

She and other Assyrian Americans living in New Britain have organized
events on Sunday and Monday to highlight the struggles of Assyrians
in Iraq. Both events will feature films by Lina Yakubova, an Assyrian
ethnographer and documentary filmmaker living in Armenia.

The first, scheduled Sunday at 12:30 p.m., is at the Assyrian St.
Thomas Cultural Center, 92 McClintock St., New Britain. The second is
set for Monday at 7 p.m. at the Torp Theater at Davidson Hall at
CCSU.

New Britain has one of the largest Assyrian communities in the
Northeast, with 250 households. In Connecticut there are about 5,000
Assyrians, representing about 10,000 estimated to be living in the
region, according to the Assyrian National News Agency.

Nationwide, there are an estimated 300,000 Assyrians, the agency
says. Most are concentrated in Chicago, Detroit and California. Many
are doctors, lawyers, engineers and other professionals who have fled
the numerous conflicts in the Middle East since World War II.

Atrocities against Assyrians in the latest Iraq war include the
decapitation of a priest last month, the abduction and murder of 15
women and the crucifixion of a 14-year-old boy, according to news
reports and local Assyrians.

The origin of the community in New Britain dates to the arrival of 70
Assyrian families sponsored by Presbyterian missionaries at South
Church in 1904, Betgevarigiz and others say. Today, this thriving but
low-profile community boasts a church, St. Thomas Church of the East,
and its own cemetery.

The events Sunday and Monday are part of an effort to establish a
safe zone in northern Iraq. A march in Washington is planned Dec. 4;
Assyrians from throughout the U.S. are expected.

"When you talk about Iraq, it’s not just Muslims," Betgevargiz said.
"These are real people with real differences. I don’t just want
Assyrians to come to these talks. I want everyone."

125.artnov25,0,3414998.story?coll=hc-headlines-loc al

http://www.courant.com/news/local/hc-assyriadoc1

BAKU: 1st Forum of Azerbaijani & Turkish Diasporas leaders in Baku

Today, Azerbaijan
Nov 25 2006

1st Forum of Azerbaijani and Turkish Diasporas leaders to be held in
Baku

25 November 2006 [10:15] – Today.Az

Azerbaijani and Turkish Diasporas leaders 1st forum will be held in
Baku in March, 2007.

Chief of State Committee on work with Azerbaijanis Living Abroad
Nazim Ibrahimov told APA that, they hold consultations with Turkish
authorities and non-governmental organizations. "Turkey highly
appreciates this initiative and is ready to organize the forum.
Azerbaijani and Turkish communities abroad, representatives of other
Turkish nations and states will also be invited to the forum.
Appropriate commissions will be established to discuss various
issues," he said.

Nazim Ibrahimov noted that a number of documents, including the
strategy of Azerbaijani and Turkish Diasporas will be adopted in the
forum.

He pointed out that preliminary version of the draft document has
been submitted to Turkey.

The document reflects historical, political, economical and social
factors of Azerbaijani and Turkish Diasporas joint activities,
principles and scopes of cooperation.

Participants of the forum will appeal to Presidents of Azerbaijan and
Turkey, Turkish nations and Azerbaijani and Turkish youth.

A joint statement concerning Armenia’s aggression, terrorism and
genocide against Azerbaijan and protest letter to countries
recognizing "Armenian genocide" will be adopted at the forum.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/society/33088.html

ANKARA: Kocharyan: We’ll give full support to our Greek brothers

Turkish Press
Nov 25 2006

Press Review

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT: `WE’LL GIVE FULL SUPPORT TO OUR GREEK BROTHERS
OVER CYPRUS’

Armenian President Robert Kocharian, currently in Greek Cyprus for an
official visit, said that they took a strong interest in Turkey’s
European Union bid and they would support solving the Cyprus issue in
accordance with Greek Cypriot interests. After meeting with Greek
Cypriot administration leader Tassos Papadopoulos, the two leaders
said that they would give mutual support to their national cases.
/Hurriyet/

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

The Anti-Empire Report: Would Jesus Get Out of Iraq?

Dissident Voice, CA
Nov 25 2006

The Anti-Empire Report
Would Jesus Get Out of Iraq?
by William Blum

November 24, 2006

The good news is that the Republicans lost.

The bad news is that the Democrats won.

The burning issue — US withdrawal from Iraq — remains as far from
resolution as before.

A clear majority of Americans are opposed to the war and almost all
of them would be very happy if the US military began the process of
leaving Iraq tomorrow, if not today. The rest of the world would
breathe a great sigh of relief and their long-running love affair
with the storybook place called "America" could begin to come back to
life.

A State Department poll conducted in Iraq this past summer dealt with
the population’s attitude toward the American occupation. Apart from
the Kurds — who assisted the US military before, during, and after
the invasion and occupation, and don’t think of themselves as Iraqis
— most people favored an immediate withdrawal, ranging from 56% to
80% depending on the area.

The State Department report added that majorities in all regions
except Kurdish areas said that the departure of coalition forces
would make them feel safer and decrease violence. [1]

George W. is on record declaring that if the people of Iraq ask the
United States to leave, the US will leave. He also has declared that
the Iraqis are "not happy they’re occupied. I wouldn’t be happy if I
were occupied either." [2]

Yet, despite all this, and much more, the United States remains, with
predictions from Pentagon officials that American forces will be in
Iraq for years. Large US military bases are being constructed there;
they’re not designed as temporary structures. Remember that 61 years
after the end of World War II the United States still has major bases
in Germany. Fifty-three years after the end of the Korean War the US
has tens of thousands of troops in South Korea.

Washington insists that it can’t leave Iraq until it has completed
training and arming a police force and army which will keep order.
Not only does this inject thousands more armed men — often while in
uniform — into the raging daily atrocities, it implies that the
United States is concerned about the welfare and happiness of the
Iraqi people, a proposition rendered bizarre by almost four years of
inflicting upon those same people a thousand and one varieties of
hell on earth, literally destroying their ancient and modern
civilization. We are being asked to believe that the American
military resists leaving because some terrible thing will befall
their beloved Iraqi brethren. ("We bomb you because we care about
you" … suitable to be inscribed on the side of a cruise missile.)
Even as I write this, on November 14, I read: "An overnight US raid
killed six people in mainly-Shia east Baghdad, sparking angry anti-US
protests. Thirty died in a US raid on the Sunni stronghold of Ramadi,
Iraqi officials said." [3]

At the same time, the American occupation fuels hostility by the
Sunnis toward Shiite "collaborators" with the occupation, and
vice-versa. If the Americans left, both sides could negotiate and
participate in the reconstruction of Iraq without fear of being
branded traitors. The Iraqi government would lose its quisling
stigma. And Iraq’s security forces would no longer have the handicap
of being seen to be working on behalf of foreign infidels against
fellow Iraqis.

So why don’t the Yanquis just go home? Is all this not rather odd?
Three thousand of their own dead, tens of thousands critically
maimed. And still they stay. Why, they absolutely refuse to even
offer a timetable for withdrawal. No exit plan. No nothing.

No, it’s not odd. It’s oil.

Oil was not the only motivation for the American invasion and
occupation, but the other goals have already been achieved —
eliminating Saddam Hussein for Israel’s sake, canceling the Iraqi use
of the euro in place of the dollar for oil transactions, expansion of
the empire in the middle east with new bases.

American oil companies have been busy under the occupation, and even
before the US invasion, preparing for a major exploitation of Iraq’s
huge oil reserves. Chevron, ExxonMobil and others are all set to go.
Four years of preparation are coming to a head now. Iraq’s new
national petroleum law — written in a place called Washington, DC —
is about to be implemented. It will establish agreements with foreign
oil companies, privatizing much of Iraq’s oil reserves under
exceedingly lucrative terms. Security will be the only problem,
protecting the oil companies’ investments in a lawless country. For
that they need the American military close by. [4]

What a mad raving dinosaur am I!

Democratic Party leaders think that the election validates their
pursuing a centrist path. Arnold Schwarzenegger credits his
re-election as California governor to his moving to the center (or at
least pretending to do so). They and their colleagues would have us
all believe that the American people have resolutely moved to the
center, abandoning the "extremes". But is that really so? I maintain
that most Americans are liberal, and many even further left. I think
that this would be revealed if the public was asked questions along
the following lines?

Would you like to have a government-run health care system, which put
an end to the for-profit health care corporations and hospitals, and
which covered all residents for all ailments at very affordable
premiums?

Do you think that when corporations are faced with a choice between
optimizing their revenue and doing what’s best for the environment
and public health, that they should always choose in favor of the
environment?

Do you think that abortion is a question best left up to a woman and
her doctor?

Do you think that the United States should officially be a totally
secular nation or one based on religious beliefs?

Do you think that big corporations and their political action
committees exercise too much political power?

Do you think that corporate executive salaries are highly excessive?

Do you think that the tax cuts for the super rich instituted by the
Bush administration should be cancelled and their taxes then
increased?

Do you think that the minimum wage should be increased to what is
called a "living wage", which would be at least $10 per hour?

Do you think that all education, including medical school and law
school, should be free, subsidized by the government?

Do you think that the government should take all measures necessary
to guarantee that corporations have retirement plans for all workers
and that the retirement funds are safeguarded?

Do you think that the invasion and occupation of Iraq was a mistake?

Do you think that United States support of Israel is excessive?

Do you approve of the treatment of people captured by the United
States as part of its so-called War on Terror — the complete loss of
legal and human rights, and subjected to torture?

For those readers who think that I’m presuming too much about
Americans’ disenchantment with their economic system, I suggest they
have a look at my essay: "The United States invades, bombs, and kills
for it, but do Americans really believe in free enterprise?" [5]

And for those readers who wonder where all the money would come from
to pay for the education, medical care, etc., keep in mind that one
year of the US military budget — that’s one year — is equal to more
than $30,000 per hour for every hour since Jesus Christ was born.

The Great Decider

Earlier this month the US State Department dropped Vietnam from its
blacklist of nations that it judges to be serious violators of
religious freedom. This occurred just days before a visit to Vietnam
by President Bush. The Department denied any connection between the
two events. However, to quote George Bernard Shaw: "Not bloody
likely."

In removing Vietnam from the list, the State Department was ignoring
the US government’s own Commission on International Religious
Freedom, a congressionally mandated advisory body, which had called
for Vietnam to be kept on the list. The Commission also called for
Pakistan and Turkmenistan to be added. This, too, was ignored by the
White House. [6]

Foreign policy considerations routinely play a decisive role in
determining who’s included and who’s not on various State Department
lists. This is no small matter, for inclusion on one of the lists can
lead to economic and other sanctions. It’s thus another weapon
Washington has available to bend the world to its will.

In addition to the report on religious freedom, the State Department
self-righteously issues annual reports which rate the countries of
the world on human rights, the war on drugs, trafficking in persons,
and the war on terrorism, as well as maintaining a list of
"terrorist" groups. The Department has placed Venezuela in the worst
category on the trafficking-in-persons list, stating that "Venezuela
is a source, transit, and destination country for women and children
trafficked for the purposes of sexual exploitation and forced labor"
and that "The Government of Venezuela does not fully comply with the
minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking and is not
making significant efforts to do so." [7]

It’s all rather arbitrary and most of what the State Department
report says about Venezuela could be said as well about the United
States and other developed countries. In Washington, DC, for many
years, there have regularly been cases of foreign diplomats
"enslaving" and sexually abusing young women whom they brought with
them from abroad to work in their home. This keeps happening again
and again and there does not appear to be a clear and tough policy of
the State Department to make sure it doesn’t happen again. The
stories are reported each time a young woman, after years of
"slavery" in a Washington suburb, escapes. "Slavery" is indeed the
term used by the legal authorities.

Categorizing Venezuelan thusly is as arbitrary as including Cuba on
the list of state supporters of terrorism because a few American
Black Panthers hijacked planes to Cuba 25 or 30 years ago, and a
Basque activist lives in Cuba, which Spain has no problem with, but
which the US wants to make political capital of.

Caution: extremist statement ahead (You may never see this in print
again, so clip and save)

France is on the verge of approving legislation which makes it a
crime to deny the Turkish genocide of Armenians at the time of the
First World War.

Denying the German Holocaust of Jews is a crime in Germany, Belgium,
the Czech Republic, France, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Poland,
Romania, Slovakia, Spain, Switzerland, and Israel.

In the United States it’s not a crime to deny the American holocaust,
although this particular historical phenomenon encompasses Vietnam,
Laos, Cambodia, North Korea, Guatemala, El Salvador, Grenada,
Indonesia, Iraq, Brazil, Chile, Cuba, Greece, East Timor, Angola,
Nicaragua, Afghanistan, Haiti, Yugoslavia, Colombia, and several
other countries upon whom Washington has bestowed its precious gifts
of freedom and democracy.

But how long before the neo-Cons and the neo-Dems of America put
their heads together and make it a crime to affirm the American
holocaust? Politicians and media people carry around ten-foot poles
to not touch this with.

The case that is still not closed

I have closely followed and often written about the case of Pan Am
Flight 103, blown out of the sky by a terrorist bomb over Lockerbie,
Scotland in 1988, taking the lives of 270 people. For well over a
year afterward, the US and the UK insisted that Iran, Syria, and a
Palestinian group had been behind the bombing, until the buildup to
the Gulf War came along in 1990 and the support of Iran and Syria was
desired for the operation. Suddenly, in October 1990, the US declared
that it was Libya — the Arab state least supportive of the US
build-up to the Gulf War and the sanctions imposed against Iraq —
that was behind the bombing after all.

Eventually, in 2001, a Libyan, Abdelbaset al Megrahi, was sentenced
to life in prison for the crime, although his Libyan co-defendant,
charged with the same crime and with the same evidence, was
acquitted. The trial was the proverbial travesty of justice, which
I’ve discussed in detail elsewhere. ("I am absolutely astounded,
astonished," said the Scottish law professor who was the architect of
the trial. "I was extremely reluctant to believe that any Scottish
judge would convict anyone, even a Libyan, on the basis of such
evidence.") [8] The prosecution’s star witness, Libyan defector Abdul
Majid Giaka, groomed and presented by the CIA, was a thoroughly
dubious character who didn’t know much or have access to much, and
who pretended to be otherwise just to get more CIA payments. And the
CIA knew it. The Agency refused to fully declassify documents about
him, using their standard excuse — that it would reveal confidential
sources and methods. It turned out they were reluctant because the
documents showed that the CIA thought him unreliable.

Then, in 2005, we learned that a key piece of evidence linking Libya
to the crime had been planted by the CIA. [9] Just like in movie
thrillers. Just like in conspiracy theories.

For anyone still in doubt about the farcical nature of the trial, now
comes along Michael Scharf, an attorney who worked on the 103 case at
the State Department and was the counsel to the counter-terrorism
bureau when the two Libyans were indicted for the bombing. In the
past year he trained judges and prosecutors in Iraq in the case that
led to the conviction and death sentence of Saddam Hussein. Scharf
recently stated that the Panam case "was largely based on this inside
guy [Giaka]. It wasn’t until the trial that I learned this guy was a
nut-job and that the CIA had absolutely no confidence in him and that
they knew he was a liar. It was a case that was so full of holes it
was like Swiss cheese." He says that the case had a "diplomatic
rather than a purely legal goal." [10]

Victor Ostrovsky, formerly with the Israeli intelligence service,
Mossad, has written of Mossad what one could just as correctly say of
the CIA: "This feeling that you can do anything you want to whomever
you want for as long as you want because you have the power." [11]

So, let’s hope that Abdelbaset al Megrahi is really guilty. It would
be a terrible shame if he spends the rest of his life in prison
simply because back in 1990 Washington’s hegemonic plans for the
Middle East needed a convenient scapegoat, which just happened to be
his country. However, the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission
is to report in the coming months on whether it believes there was a
miscarriage of justice in the case.

And by the way, my usual reminder, Libya has never confessed to
having carried out the act. They’ve only taken "responsibility", in
the hope of getting various sanctions against them lifted.

William Blum is the author of: Killing Hope: US Military and CIA
Interventions Since World War 2, Rogue State: A Guide to the World’s
Only Superpower, Freeing the World to Death: Essays on the American
Empire, and West-Bloc Dissident: A Cold War Memoir. Visit his
website: He can be reached at: [email protected].

http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Nov06/Blum24.htm
www.dissidentvoice.org
www.killinghope.org.