BAKU: Gov’t calls on Georgia to honor cargo transport obligations

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
Jan 27 2005

Gov’t calls on Georgia to honor cargo transport obligations

The cargo transported by railway from Azerbaijan to Georgia is not to
be passed on further to Armenia, as this is prohibited by the
existing legal framework between the two countries, Transport
Minister Ziya Mammadov told journalists. Georgia must comply with the
documents it signed, he said.

Mammadov noted that the consignments that Azerbaijan is withholding
on the Azeri-Georgian border are released only after it makes sure
they are not bound for Armenia.
“Both foreign and local companies must realize that any cooperation
with Armenia, which has occupied Azerbaijan’s lands is out of the
question and everyone should comply with this.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Russian co-chair says NK conflict won’t be settled in 2005

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Jan 27 2005

OSCE MG Russian co-chair says Garabagh conflict won’t be settled this
year

Yuri Merzlyakov, Russian co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group in charge
of the mediating mission on the Upper Garabagh conflict, told
Armenian Regnum news agency that the conflict will not be resolved
this year and only certain progress will be achieved in this area.
Commenting on the recent PACE resolution, Merzlyakov said that he
recognizes Upper Garabagh as a party to the conflict.
With regard to the provision of the resolution calling on the OSCE
Minsk Group to take certain steps at resolving the conflict
peacefully, he said that `they call us for active steps, but we are
not responsible for resolving the conflict instead of the conflicting
sides’.
Another provision of the PACE resolution says that if the OSCE
MG-mediated talks turn out unsuccessful, Azerbaijan and Armenia may
take the matter to the International Court of Justice, Merzlyakov
said. However, the conflicting sides tend not to do so as they are
aware that the issue may be interpreted differently by the court.
Therefore, the conflict should be resolved not through legal but
political means, he added.*

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Azerbaijan cheered by PACE resolution on Nagorno-Karabakh

Agence France Presse
Jan 26 2005

Azerbaijan cheered by PACE resolution on Nagorno-Karabakh
AFP: 1/26/2005

BAKU, Jan 26 (AFP) – A strongly-worded resolution on Nagorno-Karabakh
from the Council of Europe will help lead to a settlement of the
decade-old dispute over the territory between Azerbaijan and Armenia,
Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev said Wednesday.

“This doesn`t mean that our territories will be freed immediately,
however it is an important political step towards their being freed,”
Aliyev said in televised remarks, referring to the resolution passed
Tuesday by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
(PACE).

In some of the strongest language it has used to describe the 1990s
Nagorno-Karabakh war, the assembly said the conflict led to
“large-scale ethnic expulsion and the creation of mono-ethnic areas
which resemble the terrible concept of ethnic cleansing.”

An ethnic Armenian enclave that had a 25 percent Azeri population
before the conflict, Nagorno-Karabakh was the object of a war between
Armenia and Azerbaijan until 1994 when the active phase of the
conflict ended with Armenia in control of the territory inside
Azerbaijan`s borders.

It resulted in an uneasy truce with about a dozen soldiers along the
ceasefire line still killed each year by sniper fire and mines.

A 19-year-old Azeri soldier, Elhan Feizullayev, died along the
Azeri-Armenian ceasefire line Wednesday, Azerbaijan`s ANS television
reported.

“The resolution`s approval is a great victory for Azerbaijan. This
document has partially satisfied Azerbaijan`s interests… look at
Armenia`s reaction and you will see how it was defied,” Aliyev said.

In Yerevan, Armenia`s foreign ministry said the resolution was not
drafted objectively because of interference by the head of PACE`s
legislative committee, a citizen of Armenia`s other long-time
adversary, Turkey.

“Nevertheless we support the reaffirmation of a host of principles
which in particular affirm that independence and secession may only
be achieved through a lawful and peaceful process based on democratic
support by the inhabitants of that territory,” the foreign ministry
said its statement.

Azerbaijan`s foreign ministry hailed the PACE resolution.

“Azerbaijan has always considered the actions of Armenia to be a
typical example of ethnic cleansing… . Although the resolution does
not reflect this in a categorical way, it is still positive,” an
Azeri foreign ministry spokesman told AFP.

The PACE resolution urged the parties concerned to comply with UN
Security Council resolutions by refraining from any armed hostilities
and “by withdrawing military forces from any occupied territories”.

Azerbaijan`s foreign ministry said it viewed the passage of the PACE
non-binding resolution as a sign of the international community`s
keen interest in a resolution of the Karabakh conflict.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: ‘Armenian Minister not Based in Reality’

Zaman, Turkey
Jan 26 2005

‘Armenian Minister not Based in Reality’
By Ali Pektas

The Director of Ataturk University’s Turkey-Armenia Relations
Research Institute, Assistant Professor Erol Kurkcuoglu, said he did
not find the statement by Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanyan
that was published in Zaman yesterday regarding their recognition of
the Kars Agreement to be in earnest.

According to Kurkcuoglu, Armenia has followed hostile policies
against Turkey so far and said Armenia should prove it recognizes the
Kars Agreement by withdrawing from the occupied Azerbaijani
territories and making necessary amendments to the constitution. Some
eastern Turkish provinces such as Erzurum, Kars, Agri, Igdi, Ardahan,
and Van are still called West Armenia in the constitution, said
Kurkcuoglu, and this should be corrected. He also said that Armenians
must withdraw immediately from the territory of Karabag (Karabakh)
from which 1.5 million Azerbaijanis had to emigrate. “If Armenia
recognizes the Kars Agreement, it has to give up the so-called
genocide claims,” Kurkcuoglu said. The Director also clarified that
Armenians killed 519,000 civilians in Eastern Anatolia between 1914
and 1919 contrary to their claims and said they have been inviting
Armenian scientists to their panels and symposiums, but that they
decline to attend.

Erzurum

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: USAID to Cut Allocations To Azerbaijan

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Jan 26 2005

USAID to Cut Allocations To Azerbaijan

The US Agency for International Development (USAID) plans to allocate
less funds to Azerbaijan than Georgia and Armenia in 2005, the
National NGO Forum president Azay Guliyev told journalists.

USAID will disburse $48 million to Georgia, $43 million to Armenia
and $18 million to Azerbaijan this year, Guliyev said.

`Such distribution of allocations is unfair, considering that
Azerbaijan’s population and territory are greater and the country has
over a million refugees and displaced persons.’

Guliyev said that grants allocated by international donor
organizations are the only source of funds for local NGOs. He also
noted that several NGOs have suspended their activity due to the
large number of such organizations, increasing competition among them
in grant projects and dwindling donor programs.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Murder by assembly line

Socialist Worker, UK
Jan 26 2005

Murder by assembly line

Holocaust Memorial Day commemorates the greatest crime of the 20th
century. Henry Maitles has written extensively on the Holocaust,
which claimed the lives of members of his family in Lithuania and
Poland. Here he spells out a warning from history

THE LAST century was the bloodiest in history. The Holocaust, the
Nazis’ attempted annihilation of Jews and other `sub-humans’, claimed
12 million victims and was its most brutal act. It was not the only
genocide. There was the attempt by the fledgling Turkish state to
wipe out the Armenians from within its borders in the second decade
of the 20th century. In the last decade there was the slaughter in
Rwanda.

There were other barbarities too – the use of atomic weapons against
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, imperialist wars such as in Vietnam, and
appalling conflicts such as in Congo.

Yet the Holocaust rightly evokes for most people the ultimate in
inhumanity. Hence the outrage and revulsion when David Irving and
other Holocaust deniers claim that it was `a detail in history’.
However, it was not just the scale and savagery of the slaughter, but
the thoroughly capitalist nature of the Holocaust – both in its
planning and implementation – that makes it unique.

This shone through in the recent BBC2 series on Auschwitz. One Nazi
officer at the death camp even described it as `murder by assembly
line’, as the most advanced industrial methods were turned to
killing.

In essence, we are dealing with an attempt to strip humans of their
humanity, to justify the idea that they are subhuman as a prelude to
their extermination.

As Primo Levi, the Italian Auschwitz survivor put it: `Imagine now a
man who is deprived of everyone he loves, and at the same time of his
house, his clothes, in short, of everything he possesses: he will be
a hollow man, reduced to suffering and needs, forgetful of dignity
and restraint, for he who loses all often easily loses himself.

`He will be a man whose life and death can be lightly decided with no
sense of human affinity, in the most fortunate of cases, on the basis
of a pure judgment of utility. It is in this way that one can
understand the double sense of the term `extermination camp’, and it
is now clear what we seek to express by the phrase `to lie on the
bottom’.’

The capitalist nature of the Holocaust ran through from the
conference that planned the slaughter at Wannsee in January 1942
through to the role of industrialists and the civil servants. Jews
were not only exterminated immediately, but could, particularly in
times of labour shortage, be worked to death as slave labour.

Yet unlike previous barbarities, such as the slave trade, there was
no overriding economic logic to the death camps and the mass murder.

It often appeared irrational – industrial managers using slave labour
complained of how wasteful it was to constantly have to train up new
workers as the SS ensured that Jewish slave labour did not live too
long.

On occasion the transport of Jews ran counter to the war effort. On
D-Day itself, in June 1944, the main worry of the German High
Command, faced with the Allied invasion of Europe, was the transport
of a few hundred Greek Jews to Auschwitz.

Yet as the German army was thrown back on the Eastern and Western
Fronts, the Nazis’ commitment to wiping out the Jews of Europe
remained. The one thing holding the Nazi cadre together was the
belief that as they went down they would take millions of Jews and
other `subhumans’ with them. This has encouraged some to argue that
the Holocaust was some inexplicable outburst of `evil’ with no
connection to the capitalist system.

The connection is there. Germany’s leading engineering firms competed
for the contract to build the most efficient crematoria. However, the
link is not primarily through the complicity of firms such as IG
Farben or IBM in the execution of the Holocaust, but in the way the
Nazis came to power and maintained their rule in alliance with big
business.

Historian Ian Kershaw, who was adviser to the BBC series on
Auschwitz, has described how Germany’s elites hoisted the Nazis into
power in January 1933.

Hitler did not win a majority of seats in the German parliament. For
all the Nazis’ rhetoric of standing up for the `little man’ on the
street, Hitler required the support of the representatives of the
capitalist class to seize power.

They saw in him a force that could destroy working class resistance.
His programme of military expansion, particularly into eastern
Europe, chimed with the historic aims of German imperialism.

The Nazis were the barbaric product of the crisis of capitalism in
Germany between the wars and the Holocaust was a product of their
twisted world outlook which had at its heart the notion that the Jews
were a subhuman enemy. The Holocaust became central to the Nazis,
while the Nazis and the successful outcome of the war were central to
the interests of German capital.

The German invasion of the USSR in 1941 unleashed murder on a vast
scale. The Nazis found they now controlled areas with many millions
of Jews – there were less than half a million within the borders of
Germany itself. Forced Jewish emigration from the lands the Nazis
controlled was no longer an issue. The `solution to the Jewish
problem’ was to murder them.

In the first week of the invasion more Jews were killed by the
Einsatzgruppen (the SS killing squads) than in the previous eight
years of Nazi rule in Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia and half of
Poland.

Indeed, until mid-1941, there were more communists and socialists in
Nazi concentration camps than Jews.

The Einsatzgruppen moved in behind the German army. One historian
summed up what happened in the city of Bialystok, which had some
50,000 Jews, when the Nazis entered on 27 June 1941: `Dante-esque
scenes took place in these streets. Jews were taken out of the
houses, put against the walls and shot… At least 800 Jews had been
locked in the Great Synagogue before it had been set on fire…the
soldiers were throwing hand grenades into the houses.’

The Einsatzgruppen also attempted to involve indigenous populations
in doing their killing. Often they were successful and many of those
accused of war crimes were Latvian, Lithuanian or Ukranian.

In other places, though, the Nazis couldn’t make the locals into
murderers. For example, a report prepared in October 1941 complained
that Einsatzgruppen A operating in Estonia could not `provoke
spontaneous anti-Jewish demonstrations with ensuing pogroms’ because
the population in their area lacked `sufficient enlightenment’ to
murder the Jews.

The need to kill Jews more efficiently and quickly, and the effects
of face to face slaughter on the German soldiers, persuaded the Nazi
leadership that a more impersonal method of slaughter was preferable.

The Nazis went to great lengths to keep the extermination camps
secret from both the Jews and the German population. The Allies did
get to know about the death camps. But Allied leaders told
delegations asking them to bomb the railway into Auschwitz and the
crematoria blocks that they had no proof of mass murder. Saving the
Jews of Europe was not an Allied war aim.

We should remember all this as we commemorate the Holocaust this
week. Keeping the memory of the Holocaust alive will not by itself
stop the rise of fascism in the 21st century. But it does make the
Nazis’ job harder, which is why BNP leader Nick Griffin and the rest
go to such lengths to deny it. The Holocaust also stands as a
terrible warning of the barbaric forces capitalism can unleash when
it goes into a deep crisis and its existence is at stake.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Mazandaran delegation in Armenia

IranMania News, Iran
Jan 26 2005

Mazandaran delegation in Armenia: IRNA

LONDON, Jan 26 (IranMania) – Deputy Governor General of Mazandaran
province Ali Akbar Mirlouhi met in Yerevan with Head of Armenian
Presidential Office Artashes Toumanian to discuss issues of mutual
interest, IRNA reported.

At the meeting, Toumanian, who is also the Armenian head of the
Iran-Armenia Economic Commission, expressed satisfaction over
establishment of ties and cooperation with the northern Iranian
province and underlined the need to expand cooperation in
agriculture, animal husbandry, fisheries and tourism sectors.

Elaborating on potentials and abilities of Mazandaran province,
Mirlouhi expressed the province readiness to expand cooperation with
Armenia in various fields.

Mirlouhi also met the Head of Merchants and Industrialists Union
Arsen Ghazarian on Monday evening.

The two sides called for promoting and expanding private sectors’
ties for effective cooperation. Mirlouhi is visiting Armenia at the
head of an economic and commercial delegation from Mazandaran.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Aliyev: whether peaceful of military settlement depends on talks

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
January 26, 2005, Wednesday

ILHAM ALIYEV: WHETHER PEACEFUL OR MILITARY SETTLEMENT OF THE KARABAKH
CONFLICT IS TAKEN DEPENDS ON THE TALKS

“Azerbaijan would never reconcile itself to the loss of territories;
we’d reclaim them at any cost. Whether peaceful or military ways are
used, it depends on the talks, as well as other factors,” President
Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan stated at the media briefing for Russian
journalists in Baku last Saturday. According to the president, the
world community finally recognizes now that Armenia has occupied the
territories of Azerbaijan. “The fact of occupation has been
recognized, the UN and almost all the world has recognized the
territorial integrity of Azerbaijan. We think this problem should be
settled in compliance with international laws, rather than according
to someone’s fantasies, wishes or assumptions,” Aliyev said. (…)

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Unique reminder of inhumanity that should never be forgotten

The Independent
January 27, 2005

UNIQUE REMINDER OF INHUMANITY THAT SHOULD NEVER BE FORGOTTEN

THE SIXTIETH anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz today has a
special sense of dignity. As with the D-Day anniversary last year,
there is inevitably a sense of a passing of the generation who
remembered and were part of it, a thinning of the cord that connects
the past with new generations who must learn about it afresh.

This is reason perhaps to feel a particular solemnity this year, to
stand in sorrow at the loss of so many lives and in appalled
knowledge of what man is capable of doing to man. Only those who
survived, those who witnessed the death camps or who had relations
who died there, can know the full extent of grief that the Holocaust
brought. But it remains in its scale and its full bureaucratic
ruthlessness a crime that had, and must continue to have,
reverberations through all humanity.

Auschwitz itself was not only an extermination camp for Jews, of
course. Tens of thousands of Poles, Russians, gypsies, homosexuals
and others whom the Nazis defined as subhuman, also died there. But
it has come to have a special meaning in the Holocaust, accounting
for up to 1 million of the 6 million Jews who died as victims of the
world’s most horrendous genocide.

Was the Holocaust then a unique event, an “exceptional” act of mass
murder that can only be understood in Jewish historical terms, or was
it part of a wider pattern of brutality, a peculiarly brutal part to
be sure, but one with implications for us all?

The answer must be that it was – and is – both. The anti-Semitism
that encouraged the persecution of Jews throughout Europe in the
Middle Ages and beyond and allowed the Nazis to define them as a
sub-species of mankind to be wiped off their lands has not
disappeared. It did not start with the rise to power of Hitler and it
did not end with his fall. Given that history, Jews have a special
reason for feeling that the Holocaust should be invoked as a constant
rallying cry to stamp out even the most isolated signs of a
resurgence in anti-Semitic propaganda and assault.

But the Holocaust was not alone as an act of genocide in a century
filled with massacres of civilians and ethnic violence. Armenians,
Tutsi, Chechens, Aborigines, Marsh Arabs, Nubian tribesmen – the list
of victims of race or colour is endless, not to mention the millions
of their own countrymen killed or starved by Stalin, Mao Zedong and
Pol Pot. In that sense the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz
cannot be just an occasion to remember a uniquely horrifying episode
in history. Within five years millions of Hindus and Muslims were
being killed for their religion in the break-up of India. Half a
century later, Rwanda proved that virtually an entire people could be
slaughtered – and the world would let it happen.

There is reason for optimism as well as gloom. The reaction to the
horrors of Nazism and the World War it unleashed led to the creation
of both the United Nations and then the European Common Market. It is
now impossible to conceive of any resurgence of the national conflict
in Europe that brought with it two world wars. The collapse of the
Soviet Union has also brought with it an opportunity for countries
such as Poland, Hungary and Romania to face up to their past, and
particularly the Holocaust.

But faced with the ethnic violence and civilian massacres in Darfur,
no one could say that the lessons of the last century have been
learnt, or that the international community has yet found a way of
preventing them. Nor, listening to the debate about immigration, can
anyone say that all people have learnt generosity towards their
fellow men. Fear of the foreigner, suspicion of the outsider, lies
close to the surface of every society, ready to break out in calls
for action when pressures seem threatening. One man’s concern about
security all too easily becomes a crowd’s call to imprison or reject
a whole group. We will need to remember Auschwitz long after its last
survivor has gone.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Foreign Ministry Comments on Atkinson Report

PRESS RELEASE
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia
Contact: Information Desk
Tel: (374-1) 52-35-31
Email: [email protected]
Web:

Question by Armenpress:

Yesterday the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe heard the
³Atkinson Report² on the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, and passed a resolution.
What is your assessment?

Answer by Ministry of Foreign Affairs Spokesman Hamlet Gasparian:

At the outset, it must be said that we value highly the Council of Europe¹s
efforts aimed at the South Caucasus, and in particular, at establishing
stability and long-term peace in the region. At the same time,
notwithstanding its positive points, the Atkinson Report was, in our view,
generally faulty, since it focused on the consequences of the conflict,
without delving into its causes. Further, we believe that the process of
amending the report was not an objective one. One of our amendments, which
even had the support of the Rapporteur himself, did not pass because of the
Turkish chairman of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
Political Affairs Committee.

Nevertheless, we welcome the various principles which are reaffirmed in the
document by PACE. Specifically, that Resolution reaffirms that independence
and secession of a regional territory ³may only be achieved through a lawful
and peaceful process based on democratic support by the inhabitants of such
territory² as well as that ³the problem cannot be resolved by use of
military force, that the status and future of a population must be
determined by that population.²

We also consider important the amendment (which was our proposal) where PACE
recalled the obligation which Armenia assumed upon Council of Europe
membership – to use its influence with the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh in
order to achieve a resolution to the conflict. This effectively reinforces
the understanding that the conflict is between Azerbaijan and Nagorno
Karabakh.

Still, this document is not a binding document. It is of an advisory and
declarative nature. The negotiations will continue within the Minsk Group
framework, and we believe that the positive and negative aspects of the
Resolution cannot have a specific affect on the actual negotiations.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.ArmeniaForeignMinistry.am