More Thrills Than Skills – A Half-Life In Journalism, Part 84

MORE THRILLS THAN SKILLS – A HALF-LIFE IN JOURNALISM, PART 84

Allmediascotland
24/10/2008
UK

Over the next few weeks, allmediascotland.com is to publish, each
weekday, extracts from the memoirs of Scottish war correspondent,
Paul Harris. ‘More Thrills than Skills: A Half-life in Journalism’,
is being scheduled for publication next year.

I traveled several times to Kosovo during 1993 and 1994 predicting,
as most journalists did, that the repressed province of Serbia would,
in the end, explode with dire consequences.

After I had written this a couple of times, editors asked me to give
Kosovo a miss until Armageddon might eventually arrive. It wasn’t
until 1999 that Kosovo ultimately imploded and that year I had other
commitments.

I crossed the Pacific at the beginning of the year and returned to the
UK to go to Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh, a tiny Christian enclave
in the Caucuses, together with a team from Christian Solidarity,
led by the leader of The House of Lords, Baroness Cox. She is a
remarkable lady who spends what free time she has with threatened
Christian communities wherever they might be in the world.

I first met her in Lokichokkio, in northern Kenya, as she came
out of Sudan where she had uncovered evidence of the massacres of
Christians. She told me of her experiences and I wrote them up for
The Scotsman which made the story their front page ‘splash’.

During 1988, I had done a lot of work in Africa. The World Food
Programme had ferried me around southern Sudan, where hundreds of
thousands of people were starving largely as a result of the food
insecurity caused by civil war, and Somalia, where the picture was
much the same: famine had come with war and flooding had compounded
the problems.

War with Ethiopia took me to Eritrea. Quite apart from the border
conflicts which mar life there, Eritrea is one of the most charming,
and safe, countries in the whole of Africa. A former Italian colony,
it boasts a pleasant capital in the city of Asmara replete with
coffee shops and ice cream parlors. Amnesty International will tell
you of the country’s poor human rights record. But it is, at least,
completely safe to walk the streets at night. I enjoyed my time there.

I had gone to Uganda to visit Acholiland, in the very north of the
country, which was being ravaged by a particularly unpleasant character
called Joseph Kony who headed something up called The Lord’s Resistance
Army. He saw himself as a religious prophet. Quite how, beats me.

His specialty was kidnapping and brutalizing children: the boys were
turned into fighters and the girls into sex slaves. One night he took
more than 100 girls from St Mary’s School, a Roman Catholic boarding
school in Aboke. I went to the school and interviewed the sisters and
three girls who had managed to escape the clutches of Kony. Theirs
was a remarkable tale of survival.

These competing ‘attractions’ meant that my attention had shifted away
from the Balkans, where I had served my apprenticeship. I didn’t ‘do’
the war in Kosovo, although, in advance of NATO involvement, I received
an invitation to address some unspecified ‘key’ people and brief them
on Kosovo and journalistic techniques of intelligence gathering.

Prior to the West’s involvement in Kosovo, the buzzword, in
intelligence circles, was ‘HUMINT’: human intelligence. Previously,
far too much emphasis had been placed on satellite-provided information
and electronic interception. As a result of the development of ‘hot’
conflict in places like Bosnia and Somalia, where western interests
were directly threatened, it was realised that on-the-ground knowledge
and ability to gather information was of inestimable value.

Of course, the people who are best at that are . . . journalists.

Azerbaijan: Army Hazing Scandal

AZERBAIJAN: ARMY HAZING SCANDAL

Human Rights Tribune
24 October 08
Switzerland

Violence in the Azerbaijani army, from a video posted on You Tube

– Two video-clips posted on the Internet showing brutality in the
ranks of the Azerbaijani army have fueled allegations that hazing is
rife, despite unprecedented increases on spending on the military in
recent years.

Jasur Sumerenli*/IWPR, Baku – Azerbaijani prosecutors have made
arrests and launched an enquiry after two video clips were posted on
Internet showing brutality in the army. They initially denied that
the clips were authentic. In one of the videos, recorded on a mobile
phone, a soldier who has completed most of his military service –
still known in Azerbaijan by the Russian word "dembel" – forces five
younger conscripts into a contest in which they are forced to beat
each other in pairs.

The video shows how one soldier has lost his hearing because of a sharp
blow and is clutching his ears with pain on his face, while another
has a big bruise on his face. The dembel watches them, laughing. The
soldiers’ clothing suggests that all this is happening in a military
hospital or in the medical facility of a military unit.

An earlier clip posted on YouTube on October 4 shows two dembels
savagely beating 20 or 25 new recruits lined up in front of their
beds in a barracks. The clip caused outrage and angry reactions in
the Azerbaijani press.

The security agencies and military prosecutors began to investigate
the incident and it was revealed that the clip had been filmed in
an interior ministry forces unit in the Hajigabul region. This was
confirmed to IWPR by the interior ministry press office.

The press office said that the soldiers who were beaten up had been
called up in July this year. Two sergeants, Vugar Agayev and Eldaniz
Ragimov, who allegedly carried out the beatings have been arrested
and are now in Baili prison in Baku. The commander of the unit,
lieutenant-colonel Gamlet Gurbanov and his deputy responsible for
education, Beiler Eminov, have been reprimanded and relieved of
their posts.

The military prosecutor’s office has also opened a criminal case into
the staged fights recorded on the other clip. It said one person had
been arrested and an investigation was underway.

Before this scandal broke, the security structures had consistently
denied that hazing was a problem in the Azerbaijani armed forces. When
the first film appeared on the Internet, defence ministry spokesman
Eldar Sabirogly said it was a fabrication and a "provocation".

Yet independent research suggests that these kinds of incidents are
actually on the rise. According to a study conducted by the military
think-tank Doktrina in the first nine months of 2008, around 50
military servicemen died in Azerbaijan, with 35 of those deaths
occurring off the battlefield. The centre says that the number of
suicides and irregular deaths is greater than last year – and this
at a time when the military budget has been increasing by more than
50 per cent a year and now stands at over one billion dollars.

Military analyst Uzeir Jafarov says that there are three main reasons
why hazing is rife in the army.

"The first reason is that the conscription age has been raised to
35," he said. "People with such a big age gap between them are very
different both physically and in their outlook. And that leads to
illegal actions by the strong over the weak. A 35-year-old draftee
instantly becomes a figure of authority in a military unit."

The second reason, he said, was that there is no protection of the
rights of soldiers written into military legal documents. He also
blamed the poor food conscripts are given. "Soldiers often resort to
breaking the law because they are so badly fed," he said.

Another military expert, retired colonel Ildyrym Mamedov said that
the Azerbaijani army had inherited hazing from Soviet times.

"This problem was here before – it is now and it will continue to
exist," said Mamedov, who said that the army was still working "under
the laws of the old Soviet Union".

"There is a double centre of power in the Azerbaijan army nowadays," he
said. "Everyone knows that our country when it became a member of the
Council of Europe took on obligations with regard to human rights. And
Azerbaijan also signed international human rights conventions. But
today despite all the international conventions, commanders in the army
have the right to detain servicemen subordinate to them for ten days."

The Public Union of Officers, which comprises officers who are in
reserve or retirement, has also issued a report which is strongly
critical of hazing and corruption in the army and an official failure
to combat them.

The head of the organisation, Yashar Jafarli, said that in the past
five years more soldiers had died as a result of irregular behaviour
in the army than on the ceasefire line near Nagorny Karabakh that
divides Armenian and Azerbaijani forces.

"In the last few years, cases of suicide in the army have sharply
increased," said Jafarli. "It is quite possible that hazing is at the
root of this. The reasons for the absolute majority of suicides that
take place in the army since the truce [over Nagorny Karabakh in 1994]
are unknown. But we can suppose that in most cases soldiers are pushed
to suicide by the men they are serving with."

Jafarli said that there was evidence that hazing had "national
characteristics", in other words being linked to discrimination
against different ethnic groups.

The military prosecutor’s office says that a series of meetings will
be held to discuss the state of the army and that the procedures
whereby servicemen could lodge complaints would be simplified.

For the past few years, the telephone numbers of military prosecutors
have been hung on the walls of most military units. Every soldier
has been told that if he complains about a problem, it will be
investigated. But soldiers have been afraid to do so. The new proposal
is for soldiers to be able to lodge their complaints anonymously.

*Jasur Sumerenli is editor-in-chief of the military website,
, and a military observer with the Aina and Zerkalo
newspapers in Baku.

www.milaz.info

Ilham Aliyev Fait Voeu De Reprendre Le Haut-Karabakh

ILHAM ALIYEV FAIT VOEU DE REPRENDRE LE HAUT-KARABAKH

Le Point
24/10/2008 a 18:31
France

Ilham Aliyev, reelu le 15 octobre dernier a la presidence de
l’Azerbaïdjan, a promis, lors de son investiture, de reprendre le
contrôle de la region separatiste du Haut-Karabakh. /Photo prise le
24 octobre 2008/REUTERS/Irakly Gedenidze Imprimez Reagissez Classez
Ilham Aliyev, reelu a la presidence de l’Azerbaïdjan, a ete investi
vendredi et a promis de reprendre le contrôle de la region separatiste
du Haut-Karabakh.

Aliyev a ete reelu le 15 octobre avec plus de 89% des voix, alors
que l’opposition avait refuse de participer au scrutin et que
les observateurs de l’OSCE ont evoque des manquements aux règles
democratiques malgre quelques progrès.

Il s’est fait le defenseur d’une ligne dure au sujet du Haut-Karabakh,
region peuplee en majorite d’Armeniens qui s’est separee de
l’Azerbaïdjan au debut des annees 1990.

L’independance autoproclamee du Haut-Karabakh n’a ete reconnue par
aucun Etat mais l’Armenie accorde son soutien a la region.

"L’integrite territoriale de l’Azerbaïdjan n’est pas, n’a jamais ete
et ne sera jamais negociable", a dit Aliyev.

"L’Azerbaïdjan est toujours pret a poursuivre les pourparlers, et
nous gardons espoir", a-t-il toutefois ajoute, tout en soulignant que
l’independance de la region ne serait jamais reconnue par Bakou. "Nous
renforcerons l’independance de l’Etat et retablirons notre integrite
territoriale."

Le president russe Dmitri Medvedev a fait part cette semaine de
son espoir d’organiser prochainement un sommet entre Aliyev et son
homologue armenien Serj Sarksyan.

La main posee sur le Coran et la constitution azerbaïdjanaise,
Aliyev a fait serment de poursuivre l’oeuvre de son père Heydar,
qui a dirige le pays trente ans durant.

"Je mettrai en oeuvre le programme d’Heydar Aliyev, qui est le seul
possible pour le developpement futur de l’Azerbaïdjan."

Afet Mehdiyeva, version francaise Gregory Schwartz

–Boundary_(ID_B17URP5EVlQmKPAfiLxh1g)–

Republic Of Armenia Defense Minister Departing For Kosovo On Working

RA DEFENSE MINISTER DEPARTING FOR KOSOVO ON WORKING VISIT

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.10.2008 13:29 GMT+04:00

Armenian Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan is departing for Kosovo on
a working visit October 29 to meet with the Armenian peacekeepers
performing their mission within a multinational battalion, the
Minister’s spokesman, col. Seyran Shahsuvaryan told PanARMENIAN.Net.

The delegation led by Minister Ohanyan will meet with the Greek
battalion command and KFOR Commander Giuseppe Emilio Gay. The
delegation will be back in Yerevan on October 30.

Republic Of Armenia President Visiting Karabakh

RA PRESIDENT VISITING KARABAKH

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.10.2008 13:44 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan is currently in
Nagorno Karabakh on a 2-day visit. The President is accompanied by
Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan. Near Shoushi President Sargsyan was
welcomed by NKR President Bako Sahakyan, NA Speaker Ashot Ghulyan
and Prime Minister Ara Harutyunyan.

Clocks Go 1 Hour Back Tonight

CLOCKS GO 1 HOUR BACK TONIGHT

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.10.2008 13:55 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On the night of October 26, Armenia will switch
the clocks to the winter time. The clocks will be set an hour back
at 03:00 local time on the night of Sunday.

This change is believed to save energy and is applied in 110 countries
throughout the globe.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Nalbandian To Pay 2-Day Visit To UK

NALBANDIAN TO PAY 2-DAY VISIT TO UK

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.10.2008 14:14 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian will
depart for UK on a 2-day visit Oct. 26, the RA MFA press office
reported.

In London, Minister Nalbandian is scheduled to meet with Foreign
Secretary David Miliband and Minister for Europe Caroline Flint as well
as with members of the Armenian-British parliamentary friendship group.

He is also expected to address Chatham House, home of the Royal
Institute of International Affairs, and meet with the Armenian
community of the UK.

Obama-Biden: The Better Team For Armenians, The Nation, And The Worl

OBAMA-BIDEN: THE BETTER TEAM FOR ARMENIANS, THE NATION, AND THE WORLD
By Harut Sassounian

AZG Armenian Daily
25/10/2008

Armenian-Americans – US presidential elections

The long and painful tenure of one of the most anti-Armenian
U.S. administrations is finally coming to an end. Armenian-Americans,
along with most Americans and the rest of the world, are fed up with
the Bush-Cheney team and their bellicose neo-con agenda.

The list of blunders committed by the Bush administration is very
long: the invasion of Iraq based on false premises, mismanaging the
U.S. economy with the national debt reaching ten trillion dollars,
and taking deeply offensive positions on key Armenian issues.

After promising to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide during his first
campaign, Pres. Bush failed to keep his word. In fact, when the House
of Representatives was considering a commemorative resolution on the
Armenian Genocide, Pres. Bush personally lobbied members of Congress
to block its consideration. Furthermore, he recalled U.S. Ambassador
John Evans from Armenia, simply because he had the courage to tell
the truth about the Armenian Genocide. Despite repeated requests by
Armenian-American organizations to meet and discuss these serious
issues, Pres. Bush refused to receive them even once in eight years!

Armenian-Americans have a clear choice. Do they want more of the
same anti-Armenian policies for the next four or eight years with
McCain-Palin or do they prefer to change the disastrous last eight
years by supporting Obama-Biden — the most pro-Armenian team in the
history of U.S. Presidential elections!

Sen. Obama, long before running for the Presidency, was making
supportive statements on Armenian issues. He called for Turkey’s
acknowledgment of the Armenian Genocide and criticized the Secretary
of State for dismissing Amb. Evans. Sen. Obama declared: "The Armenian
Genocide is not an allegation, a personal opinion, or a point of view,
but rather a widely documented fact supported by an overwhelming body
of historical evidence. The facts are undeniable…. As a senator,
I strongly support passage of the Armenian Genocide Resolution, and as
President I will recognize the Armenian Genocide…. America deserves
a leader who speaks truthfully about the Armenian Genocide and responds
forcefully to all genocides. I intend to be that President."

Sen. Obama also pledged to seek "an end to the Turkish and Azerbaijani
blockades" of Armenia; to try to bring "a lasting and durable peace
settlement of the Nagorno-Karabagh conflict that is agreeable to all
parties, and based upon America’s founding commitment to the principles
of democracy and self determination."; to expand "trade and targeted
aid" to Armenia; and to strengthen "commercial, political, military,
developmental, and cultural relationships between the U.S. and
Armenian governments."

Sen. Biden, who has served in the U.S. Senate since 1972, has
an even more extensive record of support for various Armenian
causes. Sen. Biden has co-sponsored every Armenian Genocide resolution
going back to 1984. He is one of the staunchest supporters of Armenia
and Armenians in the Senate.

Sen. McCain, on the other hand, has opposed all congressional
resolutions on the Armenian Genocide over the years and has remained
silent on the Artsakh (Karabagh) conflict, Turkish and Azerbaijani
blockades of Armenia, U.S. aid to Armenia, and U.S.-Armenia
relations. In other words, a vote for Sen. McCain is simply a vote
for the continuation of Pres. Bush’s anti-Armenian policies.

Even though most Armenian-Americans are justifiably skeptical,
given their many disappointments with promises made by previous
presidential candidates, they can take comfort from the fact that
Senators Obama and Biden have repeatedly acknowledged the Armenian
Genocide, while Sen. McCain has consistently and strongly opposed
this critical issue. If statements by presidential candidates are not
politically significant, why are then various Turkish and Azerbaijani
analysts angrily denouncing Senators Obama and Biden, while heaping
lavish praise on Sen. McCain? And why are Greeks and Greek Cypriots
pleased with Obama and Biden and not McCain and Palin?

Assuming that Obama-Biden are planning to keep their promises on the
Armenian Genocide, even then, Armenian-Americans must not sit on their
hands for the next six months waiting to see what Pres. Obama will
say on April 24. Instead, they need to immediately start preparing
for the inevitable onslaught by the Turkish government with the
help of its highly paid lobbyists in Washington. As in the past,
Turkey is expected to unleash a massive public relations campaign
and a steady barrage of threats against the United States trying to
convince American officials and the public at large that "now is not
the right time to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide!"

To defuse the Turkish threats and make the new administration less
apprehensive about any possible consequences of acknowledging the
Armenian Genocide, Armenian-American organizations should advise
the Obama-Biden team that they would be simply reconfirming what
Pres. Ronald Reagan recognized in his Presidential Proclamation
in 1981.

One of the reasons to secure such a repeat statement from the next
U.S. President is to undermine the joint historical commission that
has been proposed by the Turkish government, aiming to impede third
parties from acknowledging the Armenian Genocide.

The victory of the Obama-Biden ticket would obviously have a
far-reaching impact on many national and international issues. The
Obama administration would withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq, concentrate
on fighting terrorism in Afghanistan, and reverse the growing trend
of anti-Americanism around the globe by using a less confrontational
approach than Bush or McCain. The tens of billions of dollars saved
by staying out of unnecessary military engagements could be put
to better use by helping create new jobs, reduce taxes, and bring
economic prosperity to America and the world!

Haigazian University Celebrates The Naming Of The "Derian Armenologi

HAIGAZIAN UNIVERSITY CELEBRATES THE NAMING OF THE "DERIAN ARMENOLOGICAL LIBRARY"
By Mira Yardemian

AZG Armenian Daily
25/10/2008

Diaspora

On Friday, October 13, Haigazian University named its Armenian Library
as the "Derian Armenological Library", in honor of Mrs. Anahis Derian
and her late husband Henry, from Pasadena, California. They had donated
$500,000 to the University, on the occasion of its 50th anniversary,
back in the year 2005.

The ceremony, attended by prominent Armenian officials, intellectuals,
editors, publishers, and friends of the library, opened with the
unveiling of the Henry & Anahis Derian memorial plaque by the President
of the Union of the Armenian Evangelical Churches in the Near East,
the Rev. Megrdich Karagoezian, University President Rev. Dr. Paul
Haidostian, and University Librarian Ms. Sonia Sislian.

Sislian welcomed the audience and gave a brief overview of the Derian
Armenological Library.

"Founded in 1955 by the special efforts of Rev. Dikran Kherlopian, the
Derian Library holds one of the richest collections in the Armenian
Diaspora, including a number of rare books, and a selection of the
18th and 19th century publications", Sislian said.

She added that the Derian Library constitutes an Armenian research
center, which serves not only students, but many scholars, editors,
and researchers from around the world. "The library also includes
the private collections of prominent Armenian intellectuals, like
Siran Seza, Kersam Aharonian, Dr. Antranig Manouguian, and Krikor
Bogharian", Sislian concluded.

Bibliographer, scholar, and school principal, Mr. Jirair Tanielian
shared with the audience his experience of more than 20 years as
the librarian of the Armenian Library. "Many important delegations,
historians, and prominent Armenian figures passed from here, especially
after the University decided to render the Library public", Tanialian
noted. "At a time of severe political divisions, the Armenian Library
witnessed the regroupment of Armenians of different political parties
and ideologies, something that was impossible to find elsewhere",
Tanielian explained.

In his closing word, President Haidostian expressed his special
gratitude to Mrs. Derian, and noted that while Henry Derian had
passed away a year ago, Mrs. Anahis Derian had sent a kind message
apologizing for not being able to attend the event and that she was
in prayer for the Haigazian University community. Haidostian stated
that the ceremony is the celebration of three inspiring realities:

The Derians’ generosity and benevolence that arises out of a deep
Christian spirit;

The Derians’ meaningful input to the vibrant Lebanese community; and,

The Derians’ choice of associating their name with what is Armenian,
in this case, the Armenological Library.

Afterwards, the audience enjoyed a tour in the "Derian Armenological
Library", and had a look at its latest acquisitions from Turkey
and Armenia.

The ceremony concluded with cutting a celebratory cake on this
special occasion.

Armenian-Azeri Relationship To Be Regulated

ARMENIAN-AZERI RELATIONSHIP TO BE REGULATED

Panorama.am
14:54 25/10/2008

The Prime Minister of Great Britain Gordon Brown announced the UK is
ready to support regulating South Caucasus conflicts, and added that
they are pro to the regulation of Armenian-Azeri relationship.

"United Kingdom will continue supporting South Caucasus to meet
the local conflicts. I am quite conscious of the strictness of
the situation, but I hope that you’ll find ways to regulate the
relationship with Armenia and every possibility will be used to do
that," said the British Prime Minister.