EU In Armenia Quiz 2013: Win A Free Laptop, Notebook Or Kindle

EU IN ARMENIA QUIZ 2013: WIN A FREE LAPTOP, NOTEBOOK OR KINDLE

ENPI Info Centre
Sept 17 2013

17-09-2013

What do you know about the cooperation between the European Union and
Armenia? Take a short quiz on the website of the EU Centre in Armenia,
test your EU knowledge and win a free laptop, notebook or Kindle!

The EU Centre is the new European Union information and communication
hub in Armenia that aims to promote EU development cooperation in
the country and raise awareness about the importance of EU-Armenia
relations.

The Centre provides the wider public with information about how the
EU supports reforms in Armenia; it assists the EU-funded projects
in Armeniaby sharing expertise, organising events and activities to
support project communication; it helps students to get information
about the EU and opportunities for studying in Europe; journalists
can benefit by getting accessible and timely information about EU
projects in Armenia.

The EU Centre is a professional communication facility that
coordinates the communication activities of EU funded projects in
Armenia. “It provides quality assurance of the publicity materials
of the projects and assists them in their communication efforts,
while ensuring editorial support and guidance on event management,”
the Centre’s mission statement says.

The names of the winners will be published on the website of the EU
Centre after the official draw in the beginning of December 2013. (EU
Neighbourhood Info)

From: A. Papazian

http://enpi-info.eu/maineast.php?id=34447&id_type=1&lang_id=450

Turkey Begins Retrial Over Scribe’s Killing

TURKEY BEGINS RETRIAL OVER SCRIBE’S KILLING

Peninsula On-line, Qatar
Sept 18 2013

Wednesday, 18 September 2013

ISTANBUL: A court in Istanbul began a retrial yesterday over the
murder of an ethnic Armenian journalist.

Hrant Dink, who incurred the wrath of Turkish nationalists for calling
the World War I massacre of Armenians a genocide, was shot dead in
broad daylight in 2007 outside the offices of his bilingual weekly
newspaper Agos.

The killing of the 52-year-old sent shock waves across Turkey and
triggered a wider scandal after reports that state security forces
had known of the murder plot but failed to act.

An Istanbul court in 2011 sentenced Dink’s self-confessed killer Ogun
Samast to 23 years in jail. He was tried as a juvenile as he was only
17 at the time of the murder.

A year later, the court sentenced the so-called mastermind of the
murder, Yasin Hayal, to life in prison for inciting the killing but
acquitted 18 defendants, ruling that there was no conspiracy.

In May, Turkey’s appeals court ordered a retrial to look into whether
he and another 18 acquitted defendants belonged to a criminal network.

Hayal and another seven of the defendants are being retried.

http://thepeninsulaqatar.com/middle-east/253534-turkey-begins-retrial-over-scribe%E2%80%99s-killing.html

Gerard Cafesjian, Philanthropist And Como Carousel Namesake, Dies At

GERARD CAFESJIAN, PHILANTHROPIST AND COMO CAROUSEL NAMESAKE, DIES AT 88

Pioneer Press
Sept 17 2013

By Elizabeth Mohr

Gerard Leon Cafesjian, the benefactor who helped save the famed Como
Park carousel, has passed away, according to Armenian news reports.

Cafesjian amassed his wealth as an executive at West Publishing,
where he worked from 1952 until 1996. His philanthropic pursuits went
well beyond the salvage and restoration of the Cafesjian Carousel,
as it’s now known. He also founded the Cafesjian Family Foundation,
the Cafesjian Museum Foundation and the Cafesjian Center for the Arts.

Cafesjian, 88, formerly of Roseville, had retired and was living in
Naples, Fla.

Messages for family members were not immediately returned Tuesday.

Cafesjian’s attorney said he was not authorized to speak on behalf of
the family. And a woman who answered the phone at the Cafesjian Family
Foundation said no one there was taking media calls at that time.

Several Armenian news outlets were reporting Cafesjian’s death
Tuesday. Some said Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan had issued a
message of condolence to Cafesjian’s family.

Cafesjian was born in 1925 in Brooklyn, N.Y., to Armenian parents who
immigrated to the United States in 1915, according to a biography on
the Cafesjian Center for the Arts website. He served in the U.S. Navy
during World War II and later earned a degree in economics from Hunter
College and a law degree from St. John’s University Law School. He
began working for West Publishing in New York City and was later
transferred to the St. Paul office.

In 1988 Cafesjian led an effort to save a 1914 merry-go-round that had
spun at the Minnesota State Fairgrounds for 75 years. He and others
contributed more than $2 million to save the 68-horse carousel from
being broken apart and auctioned off.

The Cafesjian Carousel, which was named in honor of its major
benefactor, was restored and initially installed in Town Square in
downtown St. Paul.

“I knew it was worth saving and had to be saved,” Cafesjian told the
Pioneer Press in 1990, just days before the refurbished carousel
was set to make its public debut. “We can all be proud of the way
everybody got behind it.”

When the carousel was unveiled, Cafesjian reportedly bought 100
tickets to give away to children who wanted to ride it and sat on a
park bench to observe the event.

“I can’t think of getting more pleasure per dollar than what I’ve
gotten already,” Cafesjian told reporters at the time.

The carousel was moved to storage in 1996 and found its permanent
home in Como Park in 2000.

Through his philanthropic organizations, Cafesjian sought to bring
economic relief and artistic venues to Armenia, and to promote Armenian
art and history to the rest of the world.

He was most recently mentioned in local news in August when one of his
former employees was indicted on federal fraud charges for allegedly
embezzling millions of dollars from Cafesjian and his companies.

Cafesjian’s wife, Cleo, died in March. The couple met during WWII and
were married in July 1947. At the time of Cleo’s death, they had two
adult children, one granddaughter and three great-grandchildren.

http://www.twincities.com/stpaul/ci_24115379/gerard-cafesjian-philanthropist-and-como-carousel-namesake-dies

Threats Against Women’s Rights Groups Escalate In Armenia

THREATS AGAINST WOMEN’S RIGHTS GROUPS ESCALATE IN ARMENIA

Targeted News Service
September 16, 2013 Monday 11:26 PM EST

WASHINGTON

The Freedom House issued the following news release:

Freedom House is deeply concerned by threats against Armenian NGOs
working on women’s rights and gender-equality issues, and calls upon
the Armenian authorities to conduct thorough investigations of the
incidents.

President Serzh Sargsyan signed the “Law on Equal Rights and Equal
Opportunities for Men and Women” in June 2013, prompting extremists
groups to launch a smear campaign with calls for violence against
women’s rights NGOs, activists, and human rights defenders working
on gender equality and gender-based violence in Armenia.

According to the Human Rights House Network, the Women’s Resource
Center of Armenia specifically became a target on various extremists’
websites with users threatening violence against the NGO. This ongoing
campaign of violent rhetoric on such websites has labeled women’s
human rights activists as “destroyers of families” and “traitors
of the nation.” Further attempts to discredit their work have tied
those working on gender equality with the promotion of homosexuality
and pedophilia.

While these threats have been reported to the police, authorities have
taken no investigative action or any efforts to ensure protection
for the NGOs that have been targeted. Furthermore, some members of
the National Assembly indirectly endorsed the attacks on the Women’s
Resource Center by invoking defense of traditional Armenian values.

“Taking no action in investigating the threats against gender equality
activists, and specifically the Women’s Resource Center Armenia,
not to mention endorsement by members of the National Assembly
of such attacks, sends a message that the government is complicit
in supporting gender-based violence, gender inequality and gender
discrimination in Armenia,” commented Chloe Schwenke, vice president
for global programs at Freedom House.

Freedom House calls on the Armenian government both to conduct a
full and transparent investigation into the threats against the
Women’s Resource Center Armenia and other groups and also to ensure
their protection in line with domestic law as well as international
commitments to which Armenia is a signatory.

Armenia is rated Partly Free in Freedom in the World 2013 and Not
Free in Freedom of the Press 2013.

To learn more about Armenia, visit:

Freedom in the World 2013: Armenia
()

Freedom of the Press 2013: Armenia
()

Nations in Transit 2013: Armenia
()

Blog: Freedom at Issue ()

Freedom House is an independent watchdog organization that supports
democratic change, monitors the status of freedom around the world,
and advocates for democracy in human rights.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.freedomhouse.org/report/freedom-world/2013/armenia
http://www.freedomhouse.org/report/freedom-press/2013/armenia
http://www.freedomhouse.org/report/nations-transit/2013/armenia
http://www.freedomhouse.org/blog

Turkey To Hold Retrial In Murder Of Turk Armenian Journalist

TURKEY TO HOLD RETRIAL IN MURDER OF TURK ARMENIAN JOURNALIST

Agence France Presse
September 16, 2013 Monday 6:10 PM GMT

ISTANBUL, Sept 16 2013

The man accused of instigating the 2007 murder of ethnic Armenian
journalist Hrant Dink in Turkey, along with 18 other suspects, will
go back to court on Tuesday after an earlier verdict was overturned.

A hearing on the retrial will take place at a high criminal court in
Istanbul where a large crowd is expected to gather to pay tribute
and demand justice for Dink, who was a leading member of Turkey’s
tiny Armenian community, Garo Paylan of the Association of Friends
of Hrant Dink told AFP.

Dink, 52, was shot dead in broad daylight outside the offices of his
bilingual weekly newspaper Agos, sending shock waves across Turkey
and triggering a wider scandal after reports that state security
forces had known of the murder plot, but failed to act.

An Istanbul court in 2011 had sentenced Dink’s self-confessed killer
Ogun Samast, who was tried separately as he was juvenile at the time,
to 23 years in jail.

A year later, the court sentenced the so-called mastermind of the
murder, Yasin Hayal, to life imprisonment for inciting the killing
but acquitted 18 other defendants, ruling that there was no conspiracy.

In May, Turkey’s appeals court partially overturned the 2012 verdict.

It upheld the conviction for Hayal but ordered a retrial to look into
whether Hayal and the other 18 acquitted defendants belonged to a
criminal network.

>From the onset, Dink’s lawyers had demanded a new investigation
and a retrial to determine if there was a conspiracy behind the
journalist’s killing.

The appeals court in May acknowledged that there was a conspiracy
behind the murder but stopped short of launching a deeper investigation
into the potential involvement of Turkey’s powerful institutions.

Dink’s lawyers and human rights defenders believe that those behind
the murder were protected by the state because Dink had received
threats for a long time before he was killed, often writing about
them in his columns published in Agos.

Every year since Dink’s murder on January 19, 2007, thousands have
gathered in front of the Agos offices on that date to remember the
journalist, whose life-long campaign for reconciliation between Turks
and Armenians won him as many enemies as admirers.

nc-fo/boc

From: Baghdasarian

‘Kardashian Bonds’ Are Now A Thing

‘KARDASHIAN BONDS’ ARE NOW A THING

Business Insider
Sept 17 2013

Sam Ro

Globalization has come with an increasingly interconnected system of
capital markets.

This has made way for government bonds denominated in foreign
currencies.

And those bonds have come with memorable nicknames.

Korea offers “kimchi” bonds. Turkey offers “baklava” bonds. Japan
offers “samurai” bonds. And Australia offers “kangaroo” bonds.

One new foreign bond offering is attracting tons of attention for
its bonds’ nickname.

Armenia.

Why?

Because, people are calling Armenia’s new dollar-denominated bonds
“Kardashian” bonds.

And bond investors can thank Standard Bank’s Tim Ash who coined it
in a note to clients earlier this month.

“Jim O’Neill gave the world BRICS, I can retire now having given the
world the Kardashian “bottom” bond,” said Ash according to the Wall
Street Journal’s Katie Martin. Martin has a post about it on WSJ.com.

“Public finances are a lot stronger in Armenia than Serbia, but par
with Georgia,” Ash said today. “Political stability – stronger in
Armenia these days than either Georgia or Serbia. Net-net, Armenia
probably should price wide to Georgia (new issue premium/ lack of
market support/knowledge) but inside Serbia.”

But what might’ve began as a joke nickname may actually have some
significant parallels

“[A]t present I would price these guys to yield around the 6.5-6.6%
level for a 10Y,” added Ash. “Interestingly, much might be made of the
“Kardashian” angle, i.e. a strong Western diaspora in the US/France
which might support such a new issue.”

The emerging markets have spent much of the year in turmoil. But
surprisingly, frontier markets like Armenia have been remarkably
resilient.

“Frontier Market funds ($1.5bn inflows YTD) have decoupled from
Emerging Markets ($2.1bn outflows YTD),” noted Bank of America Merrill
Lynch’s Michael Hartnett in a note to clients last month.

“These so-called “emerging markets of the future” have enjoyed strong
growth from low base effects, abundant natural and human resources,
the availability of easy gains from market reforms and injections
of technology into relatively low-wage economies,” said Franklin
Templeton’s Mark Mobius in June. “Compared with more mature emerging
markets, frontier markets are relatively under-researched, and we
believe that this lack of familiarity could lead to undervaluation and
pricing anomalies that we could seek to exploit through our extensive
research resources.”

With interest rates low and money flowing into the frontier markets,
these new “Kardashian” bonds might be the sexiest new bonds in
the market.

http://www.businessinsider.com/armenia-offering-kardashian-bonds-2013-9

Book: The Hunger Artist

THE HUNGER ARTIST

The New Republic
September 16, 2013

By Michael Ignatieff

The unsung hero of modern humanitarianism.

Totally Unofficial:
The Autobiography of Raphael Lemkin
Edited by Donna-Lee Frieze
Yale University Press, 293 pp.

If the history of the Western moral imagination is the story of an
enduring and unending revolt against human cruelty, there are few more
consequential figures than Raphael Lemkin–and few whose achievements
have been more ignored by the general public. It was he who coined
the word “genocide.” He was also its victim. Forty-nine members of
Lemkin’s family, including his mother and father, were rounded up
in eastern Poland and gassed in Treblinka in 1943. Lemkin escaped
to America, and in wartime Washington gave a name to Hitler’s crimes
in his monumental study of the jurisprudence of Nazi occupation, Axis
Rule in Occupied Europe, published in 1944. He understood, earlier than
almost anybody, that genocide was the darker purpose of Hitler’s war:
“genocide is a new technique of occupation aimed at winning the peace
even though the war itself is lost.” After the war, thanks largely
to his efforts, the United Nations approved the Genocide Convention,
and thanks to his crusade a sufficient number of states had ratified
the convention by the early 1950s for it to enter into force. He
never lived to see a conviction for the crime he was the first to name.

Lemkin’s campaign to promote the convention became an all-consuming
obsession: he left adjunct posts at Yale and New York University,
neglected himself, forgot to pay his rent, was evicted, went without
food while spending all his days lobbying, cajoling, and brow-beating
diplomats, politicians, public figures, and newspapermen about
genocide. Unfinished fragments of autobiography poignantly document
his decline:

As I am devoting all my time to the Genocide Convention, I have
no time to take a paying job, and consequently suffer fierce
privations…. Poverty and starvation. My health deteriorates. Living
in hotels and furnished rooms. Destruction of my clothes. Increased
number of ratifications…. The labors of Sisyphus. I work in
isolation, which protects me.

He collapsed at a bus stop on 42nd Street in New York in August
1959 and died at the age of 59, friendless, penniless, and alone,
leaving behind a bare rented room, some clothes, and a chaos of
unsorted papers.

Lemkin belongs historically to a select list of humanitarians such as
Henri Dunant, who founded the Red Cross in 1863, and Eglantyne Jebb,
who created Save the Children after World War I–or going farther
back, to John Howard, the eighteenth-century sheriff of Bedfordshire
who single-handedly awoke Europeans to the cruelty of their prison
systems. These were all people who by their own solitary efforts,
with an obsessional devotion to a private cause, changed the moral
climate of their times. But unlike Dunant, the wealthy son of Swiss
merchants, and Jebb, the gifted daughter of a distinguished English
landed family, Lemkin achieved what he did without the backing of
private wealth: he was a penniless Polish Jewish refugee in America.

Donna-Lee Frieze, an Australian scholar, spent four years in the
New York Public Library, where the Lemkin papers are deposited,
reading faded typescripts, collating different drafts, deciphering
illegible scribbles, and occasionally filling in gaps between or
within sentences. Now she has published Lemkin’s autobiography under
his chosen title, Totally Unofficial, a phrase from a New York Times
editorial that praised him for what made his campaign unique: he
did it purely as a private citizen, without foundational, academic,
or institutional support of any kind. Frieze has performed a labor of
love with the materials that Lemkin left behind, but her best efforts
cannot manage to turn the fragments into a complete and coherent book.

Important chunks of the narrative are missing. We can only guess why
Lemkin omitted to discuss his life between 1943 and 1945, when he
worked in the Board of Economic Warfare in Washington and wrote Axis
Rule in Occupied Europe. Similarly missing is any treatment of his
successful attempt to get genocide included in the official indictment
of the Nazi war criminals at Nuremberg in 1945. Lemkin consigns these
achievements to silence, leaving us to ponder his deeper motivations.

The final decline of lonely men is often a chronicle of self-delusion,
persecution, mania, and paranoia. Lemkin’s final years had their share
of these afflictions, but they were also marked by an aching awareness
of the damage he was doing to himself. He appears to have been one
of Kafka’s hunger artists, those moving, self-punishing creatures who
cut themselves off from the world, preyed upon by a guilt they cannot
name, making their misery into their life’s work. In some deep sense,
Lemkin chose his own destruction, and refused consolations that less
complex characters would have easily embraced. In his strangely lucid
refusal of the available consolations of career and company, Lemkin
recalls another hunger artist of the same period, the young French
philosopher Simone Weil. She starved herself so as not to eat more
than the citizens of occupied Europe and died of tuberculosis in a
sanatorium in England in 1943, at the age of 34, after completing
what she called her “war work” for the free French, a transcendent
Declaration of the Duties of Mankind.

Other pioneers in the battle to rebuild the European conscience
after World War II–RenŽ Cassin, who helped to draft the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, and Hersch Lauterpacht, who wrote the
first treatise calling for an enforceable international convention
on human rights–would have regarded these Jewish hunger artists with
baffled pity. Cassin, from an assimilated and republican Jewish family
in the south of France, joined De Gaulle’s Free French in London like
Weil, but unlike her, he never took it upon himself to suffer for
others. Cassin went on to help to draft the U.N. Declaration of Human
Rights, and served as a judge on the European Court of Human Rights.

In 1968, he won the Nobel Prize for his work. Lauterpacht, a Polish
Jew from the same region of eastern Poland as Lemkin, left before
the killing began in the early 1920s, and went to England, where he
enjoyed a triumphant academic career, culminating as Whewell Professor
of International Law at Cambridge and a judge on the International
Court of Justice. Like Lemkin, Lauterpacht watched helplessly from
abroad as his entire Jewish family was destroyed in the Holocaust.

Like Lemkin, he played an important role in the Nuremberg trials.

Unlike Lemkin, he did not rage at Nuremberg’s limitations and proved
capable of working in a team, helping to write the briefs that Hartley
Shawcross, the British prosecutor at the Nuremberg Tribunals, used to
frame the indictment against the Nazi war criminals. As Jay Winter has
argued in a fine recent study, both Cassin and Lauterpacht were Jewish
insiders, while Lemkin remained an outsider, unmarried, untenured,
unattached, and ultimately alone. His work on genocide finally became
a trap from which he could not–and in the end did not wish to–escape.

Lemkin’s autobiography resists easy explanations as to why this
should have been so. All one can see clearly is that he had a perverse
genius for steering away from available safe harbors. He was a Jew who
resisted full identification with his people, so he was never a part of
any of the Jewish communities or organizations that might have taken
him in. He was a proud Pole who kept apart from Polish communities
in the United States. He was a legal scholar too grimly obsessed with
genocide to settle down with a stable academic career, though several
beckoned, at Yale and at Rutgers. He was a human rights pioneer who
quarreled with human rights advocates; a man who longed for company
but had no time for small talk; a man who, as he ruefully confessed,
always wanted to avoid three things in life–“to wear eyeglasses, to
lose my hair and to become a refugee.” Now all three things, he said,
“had come to me in implacable succession.”

>From earliest childhood, Lemkin admitted to a peculiar fascination
with tales of horror: the savagery of the Mongols, the cannibalistic
rituals of primitive tribes, the brutal punishment that the Romans
meted out to slave revolts. This obsession with human cruelty gave
him the raison d’tre of his life, but it could only have deepened his
crippling isolation. One of the weirder and more poignant moments in
his autobiography occurs when he meets a diminutive Chilean dancer
in a half-empty ballroom of the Casino in Montreux in 1948, while he
was working on the Genocide Convention. After dancing with her (“she
danced with an exquisite slant, her eyes half closed”), he spent the
night bizarrely regaling her with gruesome stories of the cruelties
inflicted by the Spaniards on her Aztec ancestors.

This was a pattern. Potential friends drew away from him because his
normal conversation was apt to dwell at unsavory length on horrible
punishments and excruciating cruelties. He was a man who could not
desist from telling strangers his nightmares. He devoted every spare
minute of his final years to a world history of genocide. This project,
mad in its Borgesian determination to create a total encyclopedia
of world cruelty, lay unfinished at his death. It would be easy
to turn aside from Lemkin’s bleak obsessions or to dismiss them as
sadomasochistic were they not paired with a redeeming belief that
fate had chosen him to save future generations from the genocidal
furies that had claimed his own family.

The question that the autobiography raises but leaves unanswered is
how he chose for himself the role of the humanitarian hunger artist.

Extreme moral careers often have aesthetic roots: people choose
their lives as dramatic acts of self-creation. There is something
childlike, and also as unyielding as a child’s desire, in Lemkin’s
self-dramatization. From an early age, he imagined himself as a hero
in the popular turn-of-the-century Polish romantic novel Quo Vadis,
with its kitsch world of noble slaves and lasciviously corrupt Roman
owners. At the height of his influence right after World War II, he
struck the disabused and cynical diplomats at the United Nations as “an
agreeable fanatic,” but by the end of his life, his self-dramatization
was a crippling caricature of lonely defiance, surrounded by imagined
enemies bent on his humiliation and defeat.

Totally Unofficial, which he wrote in these final years, offered him
an escape backward into his past. It is at its most alive when he
evokes his childhood in the Jewish world of Eastern Europe before
World War I. He was not from a shtetl family or an Orthodox one;
and though he went to Hebrew school, his culture was always Polish
and Russian as well as Jewish–which helps to explain why, in his
writings on genocide, he never isolated the Jews from the fate of
others, insisting that the Nazis were as bent on the destruction
of the Polish nation as they were on the extermination of his own
people. His self-identification as a Jew was always relatively weak,
and his objective was to save from genocide not the Jewish people
but mankind as a whole. This is why, when other Jews who survived the
Holocaust became Zionists and put their faith in a defensible state
of their own, Lemkin put his faith instead in international law,
and in a convention that would proscribe the crime forever for every
victim group.

But he was shaped, of course, by Jewish fate–in his case, by the
glory and the burden of being born a Jew in what Timothy Snyder has
taught us to call the bloodlands, the killing fields of Belorussia,
Lithuania, and eastern Poland. When Lemkin was born in Wolkowysk in
1900, these lands were the Pale of Settlement and under the rule of
the Russian czar. Jews were forbidden to own or farm land, to study
in Russian cities, or to trade in alcohol. Lemkin’s father persisted
as a small-holding farmer nonetheless, and Lemkin remembered when the
local Russian policeman arrived at the house on horseback, tied his
horse to a fence, and waited until Lemkin’s mother and father came
up with the bribe that would make him go away again. When Lemkin was
nearly six, pogroms broke out in Bialystok, several miles away. While
his family was never in danger, Lemkin remembered being told that
the anti-Semitic mobs slit open the stomachs of some of their victims
and stuffed them with feathers from pillows seized from their bedding.

>From early in childhood, Lemkin learned to think of history as a
bleak tale of torture and suffering. “A line, red from blood,” he
writes in his memoir, “led from the Roman arena through the gallows
of France to the pogrom of Bialystok.”

When Lemkin was a young law student in Germany in the 1920s, his
heroes were two moral assassins. The first was the young Armenian
who gunned down in the streets of Berlin one of the Turkish pashas
responsible for the Armenian massacres. The young Lemkin thrilled
to the assassin’s reported remark, as he watched his victim fall,
that “this is for my mother.” The second was a Jewish tailor named
Shalom Schwarzbard, who also used a pistol, this time in the streets
of Paris, to gun down Symon Petliura, a Ukrainian minister of war who
was responsible for the pogroms in the Ukraine that claimed the lives
of Schwarzbard’s parents. Both assassins were arrested, went to trial,
and were acquitted on grounds of insanity. Lemkin, still a student,
wrote an article for a Polish magazine calling Schwarzbard’s act “a
beautiful crime.” The phrase reveals how strongly Lemkin’s imagination
was shaped by a romantic aesthetic of vengeance.

Vengeance contended with the law in the young lawyer’s imagination,
but the law finally won. Like the other young Jewish lawyers Cassin
and Lauterpacht, who came out of World War I determined to rein in
the murderous propensities of the nation state, Lemkin held fast to
a faith in international law that the brutal advance of Nazism and
communist dictatorship did nothing to dispel. He put his faith, first,
in the League of Nations and the League’s minority-rights regimes. As
Mark Mazower has shown, those were pioneering first attempts to ensure
that national minorities in Eastern Europe would not fall prey to
the vengeance of newly self-determining national majorities.

The minority-rights framework decisively shaped Lemkin’s approach
to genocide. Unlike Lauterpacht, who came to see the individual
as the primary subject requiring protection in international law,
Lemkin remained wedded to the older League idea that it was groups
who required protection from the murdering state. For Lemkin,
the religious, ethnic, and national group was the bearer of the
individual’s language, culture, and self-understanding. To destroy
the group was to destroy the individual. This vision helps to explain
his otherwise inexplicable hostility to the idea of human rights, his
belief that Cassin’s Universal Declaration, passed in the same year
as the Genocide Convention, offered no protection against genocide.

Back in Warsaw in the 1920s after studies abroad, now working as a
public prosecutor and building a prosperous private practice, Lemkin
began to seek a role for himself beyond the confines of Poland. In
1933, working through the institutions of the League of Nations,
Lemkin, then in his early thirties, proposed the adoption of two new
international crimes of war–barbarity and vandalism–the destruction
of collective groups and the destruction of cultural heritage. This
contained the kernel of his vision of genocide. He was about to
present these new ideas in person at a conference in Madrid when his
proposals were denounced in a Polish paper for protecting Jews only
and hence for being un-Polish. The head of the Polish delegation,
Emil Rappaport, later a long-serving judge in communist Poland,
decided that Lemkin should withdraw.

Such experience of anti-Semitism often sundered Jews’ connection to
their place of birth, but not in Lemkin’s case. He always saw himself
as a Pole–one reason, perhaps, why since 2008 there has been a plaque
commemorating him on the site where his house stood in Warsaw. The
house was bombed and destroyed when Germany invaded Poland in 1939.

The most vivid chapters of Lemkin’s autobiography describe the
incredible odyssey of his escape. He survived a German dive-bombing
attack on the train carrying him out of Warsaw, and after eluding
capture by the Russians, who invaded from the east, he made his way
on foot, along with thousands of other refugees, back to the still
untouched Jewish villages of eastern Poland.

There he lodged for a few nights with a young Jewish baker and his
family. Not for the first time, Lemkin was tormented by his inability
to shake his own people awake to the dangers that lay in store for
them. He asked the young baker whether he had heard of Mein Kampf. Did
he not know that Hitler had boasted he would kill the Jews like rats?

The baker replied, “How can Hitler destroy the Jews if he must trade
with them?” The baker had been under German occupation during World
War I, in 1915. “I sold bread to the Germans; we baked for them from
their flour. We Jews are an eternal people. We cannot be destroyed. We
can only suffer.”

Lemkin sat with the baker’s family at their Sabbath meal on that autumn
night in 1939, watching the baker’s wife with her “air of solemnity,
self-assurance and discreet kindliness” light the candles.

He joined the family in their prayers, the deep serenity and dignity
of the occasion shadowed by his own premonitory dread. The night
before, he had heard the baker praying by himself in the next
room, “a crescendo: persuasion, solicitation, a delicate murmur
of explanation.” From the next room, Lemkin listened to a dialogue
with God, based in a covenant of deepest faith. After the Sabbath,
however, the baker’s son, “a youth of about twenty,” said bitterly
that his parents’ faith was inexplicable to him. “They would all make
marvelous corpses: disciplined, obedient, they would all move like
one and die silently, in order and solemnity.”

It was only in 1945 at Nuremberg that Lemkin established for certain
what had happened to the baker’s family, and to his own. There among
the thousands of witness affidavits prepared for the trial of the Nazi
war criminals, he found the one that described the final moments of
the baker, his family, and their village in 1942: “Without screaming
or crying, these people undressed, stood around by families, kissed
each other, said farewells, and waited for the command of [the]
SS Man who stood near the excavation also with a whip in his hand.”

Unable to rouse the baker to the danger ahead, unable even to persuade
his own mother and father to leave their homes, Lemkin escaped to
unoccupied Lithuania and then to Riga in Latvia, where he met Simon
Dubnow, the great historian of eastern European Jewry. (A year and
a half later, Dubnow would be led to his death in the dark forests
outside of Riga. His last words were “Write it down! Write it down!”)
>From Riga, Lemkin secured an exit visa and flew to Stockholm, where
scholars he had met at international law conferences in the 1930s gave
him refuge and work at the university. There he persuaded officials in
the Swedish government to get their consulates and businesses across
Europe to send him the regulations, decrees, and laws that the Nazis
were promulgating throughout their zones of occupation. Studying
them in the Stockholm University library, Lemkin became almost
the first legal scholar in safety abroad to detect the racialized
and exterminatory logic behind Nazi jurisprudence: the dismissal of
non-Aryans from all posts in occupied countries; the proscription of
interracial marriage; the systematic destruction of Polish religious,
cultural, and social institutions; the proscription of the Jews;
the regime of the yellow star; the creation of ghettos in Warsaw,
Amsterdam, and L–dz.

Believing that he could act on what he had learned only if he could
get himself to the United States, Lemkin contacted Malcolm McDermott,
a Duke University law professor who had visited Lemkin in Warsaw and
had helped him to translate and publish an English version of the
Polish penal code. McDermott arranged an appointment for Lemkin at
Duke, and armed with this letter Lemkin secured an American visa.

(Even now Duke University, to judge by a recent visit of mine,
seems barely aware of its historic role in enabling Lemkin’s escape.)
Lemkin’s only available route to the United States took him by plane
from Stockholm to Moscow, then across Siberia by rail to Vladivostok,
then by boat to Japan, followed by a Pacific crossing to Vancouver and
Seattle, followed by a train journey that ended finally in Durham,
North Carolina in April 1941. When McDermott met him and drove him
around the city of Durham, “a lively, bustling city smelling of tobacco
and human perspiration,” full of people waving greetings to each other,
the exhausted Polish refugee burst into tears.

America in the spring and summer of 1941 was still neutral, still
observing the Nazi occupation of Europe from a safe distance.

McDermott paraded Lemkin to audiences throughout North Carolina and
neighboring states, and everywhere he encountered genial, kindly
incomprehension when he talked about the exterminatory intentions of
the German regime. This remained the case even after June 1941, when
the Germans invaded Russia and the S.S. and their killing units began
to scythe through the Jewish communities of eastern Poland. It was at
Duke Station that Lemkin received a final letter from his parents,
written on a scrap of paper inside a battered envelope, saying only
that “we are well and happy that the letter will find you in America.”

He understood that his parents were doomed. Driving to yet another
Chamber of Commerce talk in the byways of North Carolina, he shook
his fist at the windscreen in helpless rage. He was “ashamed of my
helplessness … a shame that has not left me to this day. Guilt
without guilt is more destructive to us than justified guilt, because
in the first case catharsis is impossible.” Guilt without guilt:
this phrase comes as close as this memoir ever gets to explaining
the self-lacerating obsession that gripped Lemkin until the end.

After America did enter the war in December 1941, Lemkin went up to
Washington to work in the Bureau of Economic Warfare. Even Archibald
King, a colonel in the judge advocate general’s department of the Army,
had trouble grasping that the German occupiers were not observing
the Hague Convention on Land Warfare. “This is completely new to our
constitutional thinking,” King said, when Lemkin tried to lay out
Hitler’s philosophy of occupation.

Lemkin wrote President Roosevelt urging him to issue a public
condemnation of genocide in occupied Europe, but he hit the same
wall of incomprehension that Jan Karski, the envoy from the Polish
underground, encountered when he met the president at the White House
in 1943, and later Felix Frankfurter at the Supreme Court. Frankfurter
said of his meeting with Karski: “I did not say that this young man
is lying. I said I am unable to believe him.” Lemkin was certainly
the one person in Washington in 1943 who could have believed Karski,
but the two Poles never met.

Unable to secure a hearing in official Washington, Lemkin persuaded
the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace to fund and publish
in late 1944 the great book that he had begun in Sweden on the law
of occupation under Nazi rule. It was in this work that he gave what
Winston Churchill had called a “crime without a name” the name by which
it has been known ever since. A frenetic decade of activity followed,
as Lemkin crisscrossed the Atlantic, successfully arguing for the
inclusion of the new word–genocide–in the Nuremberg indictments,
and then campaigning in Paris, London, New York, and Washington
for the passage of the Genocide Convention. He took up residence in
the corridors of the United Nations, camping out in the delegates’
lounge, a lonely, balding refugee with an overstuffed briefcase and
a fanatical mastery of every comma in the convention draft. Diplomats
came to dread his approach.

It is typical of Lemkin’s method that one decisive breakthrough in
his campaign occurred at one o’clock in the morning in a Geneva park
when, unable to sleep, he accosted another insomniac, who happened
to be the Canadian ambassador, and persuaded the ambassador to
arrange an appointment for him with the Australian president of the
General Assembly in order to place the Genocide Convention on the
U.N.’s agenda. This was how he worked, cadging meetings and cajoling
the powerful until finally, on December 10, 1948, the U.N. General
Assembly, then meeting in Paris, passed the Convention. Instead of
celebrating, Lemkin checked himself into a Paris hospital, suffering
from exhaustion.

In retrospect, what seems extraordinary is that foreign ministers,
diplomats, and statesmen were willing to listen to him at all. He
benefited from a very brief window of historical opportunity,
when utopian plans for global order and global justice could get
a hearing and the wartime unity of the victorious allies had not
yet collapsed into the acrimony of the Cold War. By 1948, the tide
of commitment to justice for Nazi war crimes was ebbing. The British
were already objecting to the Genocide Convention on the grounds that,
surely, Nuremberg was enough. The Russians were becoming adamantly
opposed to any inclusion of political groups in the definition of
genocide’s victims. The Cold War was squeezing shut the narrow space
in which the victorious superpowers could cooperate on projects
of international legal reconstruction. By 1949, the U.N. Charter,
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Geneva Conventions,
and the Genocide Convention–the four basic pillars of the postwar
legal order–had been erected. Lemkin could justly claim to have been
responsible for one of them.

For the remainder of his life, Lemkin defended his definition of
genocide against all comers, while extending it to cases, like the
organized famine of the Ukrainian peasants, which in those days were
still awaiting recognition as genocidal crimes. He was always indignant
that genocide was associated solely with physical extermination. He
believed that genocide could take also non-exterminatory forms,
as in the determined attempt he had seen in his native Poland to
crush Polish language, culture, and faith and turn a people into
slaves. That, too, he regarded as an attempt at genocide.

Lemkin would have been astonished and indignant at the afterlife
of his word–how victim groups of all kinds have pressed it into
service to validate their victimization, and how powerful states
have eschewed the word lest it entrain an obligation to act. The
most shameful example of this came in 1994, when the government of
the United States refused to use the word to describe the killings in
Rwanda lest it trigger a legal obligation to intervene. Lemkin would
have been dismayed that it took until Rwanda for an international
tribunal to secure the first conviction under his convention.

We can only hope that Lemkin’s deepest conviction–that genocide runs
like a red thread through human history, past, present, and future–is
wrong. Hitler’s dark appeal, and Stalin’s, as well as the Khmer Rouge
killers of Cambodia and the gŽnocidaires of Rwanda, lay in offering
their people a final solution: a world without enemies. Genocide is
not just a murderous madness; it is, more deeply, a politics that
promises a utopia beyond politics–one people, one land, one truth,
the end of difference. Since genocide is a form of political utopia,
it remains an enduring temptation in any multiethnic and multicultural
society in crisis.

Lemkin did not live to see that the solution to genocide is not
a convention in international law, or a change in the dark hearts
of men, but something simpler and more fundamental–democracy and
political liberty. Free societies, which allow differences to speak
and be heard, and live by intermarriage, commerce, and free migration,
and democratic societies, which convert enemies into adversaries and
reconcile differences without resort to violence, are societies in
which the genocidal temptation is unlikely and even inconceivable. The
red thread can be snapped. We can awake from nightmare. We are not
compelled to repeat evil and we are not required to become angels. We
are simply required to live and let live, to embrace the minority
competition of free societies. The solution to genocide lay closer
to Lemkin than he ever realized: in the teeming streets of New York
where he collapsed and died, in the wild and exuberant jostling of
peoples and races that only a few generations after his death became
the new world we take too glibly for granted.

Michael Ignatieff teaches at the Kennedy School of Government at
Harvard University and at the Munk School of Global Affairs at the
University of Toronto.

Oscars: Ukraine Enters ‘Parajanov’ In Foreign Language Race

OSCARS: UKRAINE ENTERS ‘PARAJANOV’ IN FOREIGN LANGUAGE RACE

hollywoodreporter.com
September 16, 2013 Monday

Vladimir Kozlov

MOSCOW — Ukraine has nominated a biopic on Soviet-era director Sergei
Paradjanov for the Academy Award in the foreign language film category.

Paradjanov, directed by first-time feature directors Olena Fetisova
and Serge Avedikian, who starred as the renowned director, was made
as a co-production between Ukraine, Georgia and Armenia – the three
countries in which Paradjanov worked – and France.

The Euro2 million biopic had its world premiere as part of the Karlovy
Vary Film Festival’s program East of West last July. It was later
screened at the Odessa International Film Festival and collected
the Golden Duke award for the best Ukrainian film. It had a general
Ukrainian release on Sept. 12.

“I believe that Paradjanov is more than a worthy Ukrainian entry in
the Oscar race,” Denis Rzhavsky, a member of the Ukrainian Committee,
said in a statement. “However, what made me glad was not the selection
of that film, but the quality and quantity of its competitors. It is
already clear that in 2014, we will have premieres that will change
audiences’ perceptions of the Ukrainian cinema.”

Paradjanov, an ethnic Armenian born and raised in Georgia, came
to prominence with his 1965 historic drama Tini zabutykh predkiv
(Shadows of the Forgotten Ancestors), which collected the Critics
Grand Prize and the Special Jury Award at the Mar del Plata Film
Festival and was released in more than a dozen countries.

However, despite the international success, Paradjanov was soon banned
from filmmaking by Soviet ideologues and later thrown into prison on
what is widely believed to be fabricated charges and spent several
years behind bars.

After being released, he made three more features, Ambavi Suramis
tsikhitsa (The Legend of the Suram Fortress) and Ashug-Karibi (The
Hoary Legends of the Caucasus), and died in 1990.

ANKARA: Family To Protest Hearings As New Dink Trial Begins

FAMILY TO PROTEST HEARINGS AS NEW DINK TRIAL BEGINS

, Turkey
Sept 17 2013

A written statement sent to press by the Dink family said the family
will no longer attend the hearings to avoid being part of the “games
played by the state mechanisms.”

The İstanbul 14th High Criminal Court on Tuesday began a review of
the trial of the 2007 killing of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
Dink after a decision by the Supreme Court of Appeals overturned
the İstanbul court’s first ruling on the murder, while the Dink
family protested the judiciary system and said it would not attend
the hearings.

A written statement sent to press by the Dink family on Tuesday said
the family will no longer attend the hearings to avoid being part of
the “games played by the state mechanisms.”

Dink, the late editor-in-chief of the Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos,
was shot dead on Jan. 19, 2007, by ultranationalist teenager Ogun
Samast outside the newspaper’s offices in İstanbul in broad daylight.

The Dink family said during the past six years, the Turkish judiciary,
state security, “civil and armed bureaucracy,” political institutions
have all “played around with us,” and added that “this coalition”
is the criminal organization which has planned and then covered up
the murder.

The statement added that when the investigation first started, the
Dink family had requested that the prosecutors interrogate a number of
people but none of them were questioned and they were later sentenced
in the trial of Ergenekon — a clandestine and terrorist gang guilty
of attempting to overthrow the government.

Samast, tried in a juvenile court because he was a minor at the time
of the crime, was sentenced to nearly 23 years in prison. On Jan. 17,
2012, the İstanbul 14th High Criminal Court gave another suspect in
the case, Yasin Hayal, a life sentence for inciting Samast to commit
murder. Erhan Tuncel, who worked as an informant for the Trabzon
Police Department, was found not guilty of the murder and acquitted.

The prosecutor of the first trial said that the murder was planned
and carried out by the Ergenekon terrorist organization, but the court
denied the existence of organized criminal activity in the murder.

The prosecutor of the Supreme Court of Appeals later said that there
was a terrorist organization involved and that the state should
investigate it.

The 9th Chamber of the Supreme Court of Appeals in May ruled that there
was an organization involved, but said that it was a simple crime ring,
effectively denying that Ergenekon played any role in the murder.

Dink’s lawyers had submitted a petition to the Supreme Court of
Appeals, arguing that the lower court’s ruling violated the Turkish
Penal Code (TCK) by acknowledging the existence of a criminal
organization but declining to investigate it, and that the court
ignored evidence of a terrorist organization.

As the verdict of the lower court was met with outrage by civil
society groups, politicians and others, tens of thousands of people
marched in protest in İstanbul.

http://www.worldbulletin.net/?aType=haber&ArticleID=118191
www.worldbulletin.net

ANKARA: Arrest Warrant Issued For Key Suspect In Restarted Dink Case

ARREST WARRANT ISSUED FOR KEY SUSPECT IN RESTARTED DINK CASE

Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
Sept 17 2013

ISTANBUL

One of the most controversial cases of recent Turkish history,
murder of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink, restarts. Dink
family denies to attend trials of ‘crime coalition’s game’ as court
issues an arrest warrant for the key suspect Erhan Tuncel

An Istanbul court has issued an arrest warrant for Erhan Tuncel,
a former police informant and suspect in the resumed murder case of
Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink.

Tuncel had been released with the first verdict, which has now been
overturned. Dink’s family protested the trial and refused to attend,
saying “they are not a part of this game.”

“As the Dink family, we will no more be tools to the state mechanisms
that have been mocking us and we will not attend the hearings of the
retrial,” Dink’s family said in a letter published on the website of
the Armenian-Turkish daily Agos.

“The crime coalition that is called the state recommitted the murder
in every hearing, every day while it presented itself as if seeking
justice. That coalition is the crime gang itself that planned the
murder and then covered it up.”

Tuncel is a key suspect

Tuncel is seen as a key in linking the murder to the state institutions
as members of the Police Department in the Black Sea province of
Trabzon, the suspects’ hometown, have been accused of failing to relay
intelligence provided by Tuncel to the Trabzon Gendarmerie Command
in a report prepared by Turkey’s State Supervisory Council (DDK).

Dink, the renowned editor-in-chief of Agos, was shot in front of his
office in Istanbul on Jan. 19, 2007, after being repeatedly prosecuted
for “insulting Turkishness.”

The triggerman, Ogun Samast, who was 17 years old at the time of the
murder, and Yasin Hayal, who was charged with being the instigator
of the assassination, were convicted of the murder.

However, a high criminal court dismissed charges related to “armed
terrorist organization.” The Supreme Court of Appeals verdict defined
the acts of all suspects in the case under “an organization formed to
commit crime” according to the Turkish Penal Code Article 220. Hayal
yesterday denied that he was involved in any criminal organization
involved in the murder.

Around 200 demonstrators gathered outside the Istanbul court where
eight defendants were being retried after an appeals court deemed
they were part of a criminal conspiracy. Crowds accused authorities
of covering up a conspiracy by nationalist elements in the state
apparatus.

The crowd chanted “the murderer state will give account” and “we are
all Hrant, we are all Armenians,” holding up banners in Turkish,
Armenian and Kurdish. They see Dink as the victim of a shadowy
“deep state” network of nationalist militants accused of killings of
prominent liberals and Kurdish nationalists.

“This show must end, the real perpetrators must be brought to justice,”
Gulten Kaya, the widow of well-known Kurdish singer Ahmet Kaya,
told reporters outside the court.

Dink’s family and his supporters reject the premise of the retrial
that the defendants were part of a criminal conspiracy and argue that
the state was involved in what amounted to a terrorist conspiracy.

The case was adjourned to December 3.

September/17/2013

From: A. Papazian

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/arrest-warrant-issued-for-key-suspect-in-restarted-dink-case.aspx?pageID=238&nID=54593&NewsCatID=339