Armenia to seek support for ‘genocide’ charges at CIS

Armenia to seek support for ‘genocide’ charges at CIS

Turkish Daily News
09 December 2004

Yerevan is planning to push for a discussion on the alleged genocide at the
Parliamentary Assembly of the former Soviet Union countries next year

ANKARA – Turkish Daily News

Armenia is planning to take the issue of recognition of an alleged
genocide against Armenians at the hands of the late Ottoman Empire
to the Parliamentary Assembly of the former Soviet Union states,
a senior Armenian official said.

Deputy Speaker of the Armenian Parliament Vahan Oganesian said Armenia
would bring the issue to the attention of parliamentarians of the
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) in 2005, the year that marks
the 90th anniversary of the alleged genocide.

“This would be of significant benefit to us,” he was quoted as saying
in Yerevan by the Anatolia news agency.

Turkey, which was created following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire,
categorically rejects “genocide” charges and says there were killings
on both Turkish and Armenian sides as the Ottoman Empire was trying to
quell civil unrest caused by an Armenian uprising in Eastern Anatolia
during World War I.

Influential Armenian diaspora has successfully pushed for recognition
of the alleged genocide in several European countries and in the
European Parliament. The European Union, however, has dismissed calls
to recognize the alleged genocide as a condition for Turkey to open
EU accession talks.

Oganesian, in a press statement in Yerevan, said there could be
different consequences of bringing the issue onto the CIS agenda,
emphasizing that there was no guarantee that the outcome would
necessarily be in favor of Armenia.

Turkey says Yerevan’s cessation of support of Armenian diaspora
efforts for worldwide recognition of the alleged genocide is one of
the conditions for the normalization of ties with the land-locked
country. Ankara is also in solidarity with Azerbaijan, whose territory
in Nagorno-Karabakh is held under Armenian occupation, and keeps its
border gate with Armenia closed.

–Boundary_(ID_VNhKsX6g6VPJNyyQduRZCA)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian Constitutional Court approves memorandum on sending troops

Armenian Constitutional Court approves memorandum on sending troops to Iraq

Mediamax news agency
8 Dec 04

Yerevan, 8 December: Armenia’s Constitutional Court said today
that the memorandum “On sending a multinational division as part of
stabilizing forces to Iraq and on solving other issues of this kind”
is in line with the republic’s basic law [constitution].

This means that the memorandum will be submitted to parliament for
ratification in the near future, Mediamax reports. After the memorandum
is ratified, Armenia plans to send to Iraq up to 50 military doctors,
drivers and sappers who will be handpicked among military contractors.

Armenian Defence Minister Serzh Sarkisyan said that Armenian troops
will be used exclusively for humanitarian purposes in Iraq.

“This position is dictated by the interests of Iraq’s Armenian
community and their scientific, cultural and historical centres,”
Sarkisyan said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Iraqi TV reports anger by Mosul residents over church attacks

Iraqi TV reports anger by Mosul residents over church attacks

Al-Sharqiyah, Baghdad
8 Dec 04

Al-Sharqiyah correspondent in Mosul reported that Mosul city today woke
up to a strong wave of anger and condemnation following the criminal
attack against the Chaldean and Armenian churches last evening.

The correspondent said that there was sadness and anger among the
Muslim and Christian residents of Mosul, adding that the residents
expressed denunciation of this criminal act, which was strange to
the Iraqi people’s ethics and brotherly coexistence. The residents
of the city stressed that only external parties would carry out such
an act because they hated Iraq and were trying through such criminal
acts to sabotage the country and its strong national structure.

The correspondent added that nobody stopped the thieves who stole the
contents of the Armenian church this morning following yesterday’s
explosion. He added that no Iraqi police forces or US troops were
present to protect the two churches after they were blown up.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Powell considers new impulse in conflict settlement necessary

COLIN POWELL CONSIDERS NEW IMPULSE IN CONFLICT SETTLEMENT NECESSARY

PanArmenian News
Dec 7 2004

07.12.2004 18:54

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ “The frozen conflicts in rebel regions of Georgia,
Moldova and Nagorno Karabakh remain frozen even 15 years after the
end of the Cold War,” the US State Secretary Colin Powell stated. In
the territory of the former Soviet Union recently “little headway was
made toward resolution of the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh and in
breakaway regions of Moldova and Georgia”, he considers. In Powell’s
opinion, “a new push” by the OSCE to solve those conflicts. It may be
interesting that in the State Secretary’s speech Nagorno Karabakh is
mentioned by its name and not as a part of Azerbaijan, as different
from the “breakaway territories” of Georgia and Moldova.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Teenagers Act Out Tragedy to Reduce Tensions

Teenagers Act Out Tragedy to Reduce Tensions
By Anna Smolchenko, Special to The Moscow Times

Moscow Times
Dec 8 2004

Mike Solovyanov / MT

Actors performing the scene where a Russian boy, Yasha, is killed
trying to stop fighting between his Ingush and Ossetian friends.

A diverse group of teenagers with no acting experience has taken to
the Moscow stage with a play aimed at overcoming ethnic tensions
between Ingush and Ossetians.

They came from Ingushetia, North Ossetia, Moscow and St. Petersburg
— and had only met one week before the show.

The play, “The Time Is Right,” staged at the Central House of Artists
on Stary Arbat on Nov. 26 was no commercial production, but a drama
therapy project organized by the nonprofit Podval theater studio.

The 15- to 19-year-olds first met in a recreation center near Moscow,
where they got to know each other and took a crash course in acting.

“I don’t know how much it has to do with theater, but I do know it
has to do with love and faith,” said Yulia Shevelyova, the director
of Podval, introducing the teenagers’ performance.

The group uses art therapy techniques, role-play and training to
reach out to children and teenagers.

Podval takes its name from its home in the basement of an old
building on Ostozhenka. Shevelyova, a singer by training, and Vitaly
Vorobyov, a former engineer, founded the group in 1986. For the last
11 years Podval has been using drama to break down barriers between
Lithuanians, Poles and Russians living in Lithuania; Azeris and
Armenians; Jews and Russians; Catholics and Protestants in Northern
Ireland; and most recently, Chechens, Ingush and Ossetians.

The Beslan school attack in September that left more than 330 people
dead, including many children, reopened old wounds between the
Ossetian and Ingush peoples, who share bitter memories of interethnic
clashes in 1992. According to Podval, in that conflict 350 Ingush and
192 Ossetians were killed and more than 30,000 Ingush and 5,000
Ossetians were displaced from their homes.

The play, staged three months after the Beslan tragedy, brought
together Ingush and Ossetian teenagers to speak out against hate and
violence. Wearing blue, white and red T-shirts, the colors of
Russia’s national flag, they sang and danced variations of the
Caucasus lezghinka, at times intertwined with rap, and Russian round
dances.

The play’s storyline begins in August this year, just before the
Beslan school attack. On a trip to Moscow an Ingush boy, Amir, meets
Astemir and Ezira, a brother and sister from North Ossetia, through
his Russian friend Yasha. Amir falls in love with Ezira and is eager
to win her heart.

The tension between Amir and the girl’s brother is palpable, and when
the Beslan tragedy unfolds, it crushes the last hopes of the Ingush
Romeo. Fueled by mutual suspicion and grief, the Ingush and Ossetian
characters resort to threats and violence. They only stop when their
Russian friend, Yasha, is killed after trying to stop the fighting.

“Yulia Semyonovna [Shevelyova] prepared the play’s basic storyline,
but the words and dances were ours,” said 16-year-old Amir Matiyev,
from Nazran, Ingushetia, who played Amir.

Onstage the teenage actors, in lines they wrote themselves for the
play, slammed police corruption and posed several searching
questions.

“Why do we have to feel like foreigners in our own country’s
capital?” asked one actor, who played an Ingush in the play.

“As long as you pay, you can smuggle whatever you like, including a
nuclear warhead,” said another character.

“Why did television lie about the number of hostages?” asked a third.

“What else can a man do who has lost everyone overnight?” asked
15-year-old Ezira Dzioyeva from Beslan, playing the part of Ezira,
referring to the North Ossetians who have said they are ready to take
up arms to avenge their relatives.

Matiyev said that two of his friends had died in Beslan, but he had
never felt any hatred toward Ossetians, Russians or any other ethnic
group.

After finishing the performance, Dzioyeva started to cry. “I played
myself,” she said in the wings. “It wasn’t hard.” She said that she
and the other actors had tried to express what they felt and that the
play “reflects all our realities.”

Like some of the other teenagers in the play, she said it was her
first time in Moscow. “Tomorrow we are leaving,” she said with tears
in her eyes.

Vladimir Pozner, Channel One television anchor and president of the
Russian Television Academy, told the audience before the performance
that the play hoped to show a way to heal ethnic divides. “There is
nothing sillier, more stupid and shameful than rejecting or disliking
another person because he speaks a different language or has a
different skin color,” he said.

Pozner, who is a Podval trustee, hosted two television programs in
the early 1990s that brought together teenagers from different parts
of the Soviet Union affected by ethnic conflict, including witnesses
of a tank incursion into Lithuania and pogroms in Baku, Azerbaijan,
and Osh, Kyrgyzstan. “It’s through the kids that we can find
solutions that adults fail to find,” Pozner said.

The play was sponsored by Charities Aid Foundation, a British-based
charity that has been working in Russia since 1993, as part of its
response to the Beslan tragedy.

Through its LifeLine program, CAF has raised some $2.5 million for
medical treatment for victims of the Beslan tragedy, including
plastic surgery and the purchase of artificial limbs. It is also
offering longer-term help, such as psychological counseling.

More than $53,000 was raised for the Beslan LifeLine drive by
Independent Media, the parent company of The Moscow Times.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Outside View: Kofi Annan — time to go

United Press International
Dec 7 2004

Outside View: Kofi Annan — time to go

By Youssef M. Ibrahim
Outside View Commentator

Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Dec. 7 (UPI) — U.N. Secretary-General
Kofi Annan is the uppermost utopian model of international public
servants, a Nobel Prize laureate, a pride to his native Africa. These
are all the reasons he needs to leave the United Nations now.

Annan has been mortally wounded by allegations that his son, Koju,
and close U.N. associates profited from the United Nations’
oil-for-food program.

The program was put in place in 1996 for the purpose of feeding the
Iraqi people during the harsh regime of economic sanctions imposed on
Iraq.

While the program has probably saved millions of Iraqis from
starvation, it was allegedly badly misused by some U.N. officials in
collusion with hordes of oil merchants as well as senior Iraqis,
including Saddam Hussein himself, to steal at least $10 billion.

Annan almost certainly had nothing to do with either the alleged
misbehavior of his son or the manipulation of the entire oil-for-food
program by Saddam, the oil merchants and their suspected U.N.
accomplices.

The U.N. officials who ran the undertaking reported not to Kofi
Annan, but rather to the Security Council. Why the Security Council
members, particularly the United States, did not do more at the time
is a question indeed.

But the harm was done at the expense of the Iraqi people, and — just
as distressing — it all happened on Kofi Annan’s watch. The suspects
are now under an independent investigation conducted by the former
chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve Paul Volcker.

But we already know that Koju Annan is accused of using his father’s
name to extract at least $130,000 from a Swiss company involved in
the oil-for-food deal. Compared with the others, it seems he was not
a smart manipulator, but rather a small player.

One undersecretary-general of the United Nations, Benon Savan, an
Armenian Cypriot who has largely disappeared from public view and is
on leave from the United Nations, is being investigated for allegedly
realizing illicit profits in the tens of millions of dollars, perhaps
as much as $100 million, in return for turning a blind eye to
Saddam’s scheme of using discounted oil sales to hoard his billions
outside the sanctions system.

I met Savan three times in Vienna as a reporter covering OPEC
meetings of oil ministers as well as in New York at his U.N. office.

By virtue of his job, I have no doubt, he had access to these “oil
vouchers,” which are tickets to buy Iraqi oil at discounted prices.

It remains for the investigation to determine if he and others
resisted the temptation to sell those vouchers to oil traders who
then lifted the oil and paid the U.N. guys a cut.

Since 1996, when the oil-for-food came into effect, we suspected that
a lot of cuts, a lot of vouchers and a lot of money was tucked into
the pockets of some officials.

Still we have to wait for due process. Annan does not have to wait.
The buck stops at his office door on the 38th floor of the United
Nations tower building. He must assume responsibility.

Given the ferocity of his and the United Nations’ enemies — centered
in the George W. Bush past and future administration along with
American jingoistic neo-conservatives — Annan should be in no doubt
he will have to go eventually.

When the previous Bill Clinton administration went after Boutros
Boutros-Ghali, Annan’s predecessor, it did not relent until he left.

Compared to the current gang in the White House, the Pentagon,
Congress, the Senate and the various right-wing think tanks, the
Clinton folks were nice guys.

Here are some thoughts for Kofi Annan: One has to fight fire with
fire. If I were he, I would have the following quiet reflection:

“For reasons including Machiavellian twisted ones, it would be far
better for me, Kofi Annan, to leave sooner rather than later. I am
facing a feeding frenzy by these sharks that this White House is only
going to agitate among its media friends, administration and think
tanks.

“If I left now, however, I would pull the carpet. For starters, my
departure would be dignified and principled. Second, the world will
hold it against those barbarians who time and again have tried to
come after the United Nations to paralyze it and run amok with their
unilateral policies of world domination.

“I, Kofi Annan, do not need the United Nations now. It is the United
Nations that now needs my help. I am in a position to save it from
this abuse. I can more effectively fight those guys from outside the
United Nations.

“The gang of George W. Bush will persist in their misadventure in
Iraq, which I, Kofi Annan, denounced a few months ago as an ‘illegal
war.’ This they have not forgiven me for. But the charge stuck, and I
can continue my denunciations as I have all the files and facts.

“The gang will pursue its war against multilateral organizations,
agreements and their quest for unilateral power. The United Nations
is right, front and center in their effort.

“I can be a goalkeeper preventing, deflecting, these attacks. By
staying at the helm I’ll make myself a distraction, give them a
target and be quiet.

“By stepping down now, the world will see these sharks for what they
are. The U.N. membership, if anything, will become ever more hostile
to hegemonic policies. Other world coalitions can emerge, with which
I can help.

“My life’s work speaks for itself. I will be leaving as one of the
most respected, most admired and most appreciated secretary-generals
of the United Nations ever. I have much more to do, as my hero Nelson
Mandela of South Africa has proven after leaving office.”

Bon voyage, Kofi, and God speed.

Youssef M. Ibrahim, a former Middle East correspondent for the New
York Times and Energy Editor of the Wall Street Journal, is Managing
Director of the Dubai-based Strategic Energy Investment Group. He can
be contacted at [email protected]

This essay first appeared in Gulf News

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

“The Quake Is Still Fresh In Our Minds”

“THE QUAKE IS STILL FRESH IN OUR MINDS”

Azg/arm
8 Dec 04

The second edifice of Erebuni hotel has become the home of the
people who moved to Yerevan after the quake 16 years ago. Many Gyumri
families are living in the rooms situated next to each other in the
long corridor. But after this edifice was sold the dwellers donâ~@~Yt
know whether they will stay here or not.

Marieta Manukian and her son have been living in Erebuni hotel for
15 years. She moved to Yerevan with her family in 1988. “I was at
my office when the earthquake began, my husband was in the street,
my son was at school and my girl was in Yerevan. The greater part
of my sonâ~@~Ys school was destroyed. His classes were in the part
of the school that didnâ~@~Yt ruin. None of our family members
died on December 7, but we lost our apartment and the hope for a
better future,” Mrs. Marieta says. The members of this family face
the consequences of the devastating earthquake till now. Marieta
Manukian is a second class disabled and receives pension amounting to
5000 AMD. Marieta is a widow, her husband perished in Artsakh war in
1992. Her son is a worker and can pay only for electricity. They live
in a small room and their clothes and the beds are the only property
of this family. “We are registered for receiving an apartment in
Gyumri, but only God knows when we will get it. It is not clear how
long we shall be living in this room, either. We live without hoping
for tomorrow. I only wish to have my own corner, I wish my son had
a job and marries,” Mrs. Marieta says.

Mariam and Aram met and fell in love with each other, got married
in Erebuni hotel. Aram Karapetian was saved out of the school ruins
after the quake. Mariam was playing in the yard at the moment of the
tragedy. “I was 9 in 1988, while my husband was 12. I became a third
class disabled, while my husband is a second class disabled after the
quake. Together we receive about 6000 AMD pension. My husband has no
permanent job,” Mariam says. They have two children, 7-year-old Sveta
and 5-year-old Vrezh. They live in the small room they received after
the marriage. “We are also registered for an apartment in Gyumri. We
have no idea when we will get it. We donâ~@~Yt know for how long we
will be able to live in this hotel, either,” Mariam says.

When we tried to find out from the leadership of the hotel about the
future fate of Gyumri residents living in Yerevan, they said that
the edifice is sold and they canâ~@~Yt provide any information.

“In 1988 I was 15, but till now I see that terrible day in my
nightmares. The entire city was buried in dust and ruins were
everywhere. One could hear people cry and moan in all the corners
of the city. The peopleâ~@~Ys faces bore the reflection of horror
on their faces. Sometimes I think that the quake didnâ~@~Yt stop
for us and it continues to break our lives in another image,” Artur,
the son of Mrs. Marieta says.

By Arevik Badalian

–Boundary_(ID_UUJU3vVdD/4Rag90FKMKdw)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Iraq, fatta saltare una seconda chiesa cristiana in=?UNKNOWN?Q?citt=

Iraq, fatta saltare una seconda chiesa cristiana in città

KataWeb, Italia
martedì 07 dicembre 2004

Quasi contemporaneamente all’attentato dinamitardo che ha fatto saltare
questo pomeriggio la chiesa caldea di Mosul (leggi qui), un altro
attacco è stato condotto, con modalità quasi identiche, contro una
chiesa armena della città. Anche qui, un gruppo di uomini armati ha
fatto uscire tutti i presenti, poi ha piazzato e fatto brillare dverse
cariche esplosive. Entrambi gli edifici hanno subito gravi danni.

–Boundary_(ID_+/xwcCgeLf6R+jJftUoD+Q)–

Armenian foreign minister denies “humanitarian crisis” in Karabakh

Armenian foreign minister denies “humanitarian crisis” in Karabakh

Arminfo
Dec 07, 2004

Yerevan, 7 December: In the process of the peaceful settlement of the
Nagornyy Karabakh conflict, Armenia remains loyal to the Minsk process
[OSCE Minsk Group] and expects the same attitude from Azerbaijan,
Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan said while touching on the
problem of settling the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict in his address to
the 12th session of the OSCE Council of Ministers in Sofia.

In this connection, Oskanyan recalled the four meetings between
the Armenian and Azerbaijani ministers and the Astana meeting of
the two countries’ presidents where certain progress was made,
the public relations department of the Armenian Foreign Ministry
told Arminfo news agency. Vardan Oskanyan expressed his regret
that Azerbaijan, having raised the issue of refugees with the UN,
shifted the problem from the constructive path. In counterbalance
to Azerbaijani propaganda which presents Azerbaijan as a victim, the
Armenian foreign minister recalled the roots of the conflict and the
causes of today’s realities. A group of Council of Europe deputies who
visited Nagornyy Karabakh during fierce fighting in 1992 noted that
“villages were completely destroyed, thousands of people were killed
and children were subjected to violence as a result of Azerbaijani
attacks. Taking account of Azerbaijan’s military advantage, we can
presume that only a few weeks are left to the catastrophe of Nagornyy
Karabakh, which will be followed by genocide and forced eviction,”
Vardan Oskanyan quoted the aforesaid group as saying in a statement.

He also recalled the 500,000 Armenians forced to leave Baku and
the conflict zone who are also waiting for the settlement of
the conflict. As for the settlement of the territories [by ethnic
Armenians], Vardan Oskanyan pointed out again that neither Armenia nor
Nagornyy Karabakh are conducting a state policy in this sphere. On the
contrary, such a policy is being conducted in Azerbaijan, the minister
stressed, recalling relevant decrees by the Azerbaijani president
to settle previously Armenian-populated territories in Shaumyan ,
Getashen and northern Mardakert occupied by Azerbaijan. According to
the same decree, the Oil Fund of Azerbaijan allocated 18m dollars for
settling Azerbaijanis in the aforesaid districts, although Armenians
waiting for the settlement of the conflict are still living there. The
UN has issued a report instructing Azerbaijan to find alternative
places of residence for them, Vardan Oskanyan recalled.

In other words, there is no humanitarian crisis today, the minister
stressed. The situation is equally complex for both sides, which
should not be used for speculative purposes, but should be seen
as part of the complex process. For this reason, Armenia continues
to remain loyal to the Minsk process and expects the same attitude
from Azerbaijan, the Armenian foreign minister said at the end of
his speech.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

MP rejects talks between Karabakh’s Armenian, Azeri communities

MP rejects talks between Karabakh’s Armenian, Azeri communities

Arminfo
7 Dec 04

Yerevan, 7 December: Armenian Deputy Speaker Vaan Ovanesyan today
described as “unacceptable” the proposal to hold talks between
“the Armenian and Azerbaijani communities” of Nagornyy Karabakh put
forward in the preliminary draft report of the PACE [Parliamentary
Assembly of the Council of Europe] rapporteur [on Nagornyy Karabakh],
David Atkinson.

Ovanesyan said that a similar provision was absent from the previous
draft report prepared by Terry Davis, incumbent secretary-general of
the Council of Europe.

The deputy speaker recalled that Davis had mentioned the need to hold
talks between the Azerbaijani and Karabakh sides.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress