Losing Mosul?

Losing Mosul?

AINA – Assyrian Int’l News Agency, CA
Nov 11 2004

Mosul, Iraq — The northern Iraqi city once hailed as a post-war
model is on a perilous backslide

Khalid Moustafa’s family has no idea who killed him, or why.
Moustafa, a Kurd, was a yogurt seller and taxi driver, the husband
of an Arab woman and the father of five children, with a sixth on
the way. He was found in pieces, his head near his home, his body
left by a highway. “Mosul is a butchery,” says the victim’s father,
asking that his name be withheld to protect the rest of his family.

Moustafa’s murder is part of a recent wave of killings that threatens
to turn this multiethnic, Arab-dominated northern gateway city into
the next Fallujah, as areas of the city are slipping out of the
control of U.S. forces and the Iraqi government.

Life still appears normal in many parts of Mosul, especially in the
Kurdish neighborhoods on the eastern side of the Tigris River. Stores
are open, traffic is thick and the Iraqi National Guard patrols
the streets. But much of Mosul has become an incubator for regional
terrorist groups like Ansar al-Islam, the Kurdish fundamentalists,
and for foreign fighters crossing the still unsecured border from
Syria, according to U.S. and Iraqi security officials. “Many kinds
of criminals and terrorists come into Mosul from Syria. It’s like the
Super Bowl for them,” says Salim Kako, a top official of the Assyrian
Democratic Movement, which represents many Christians in Mosul. The
outsiders have mixed with Mosul’s homegrown fundamentalist Islamic
opposition and a potent Baathist resistance fueled by the city’s
large number of unemployed soldiers. This stew of local and outside
insurgents is stepping up attacks on American and Iraqi security forces
— and anyone suspected of collaborating with them. Week after week,
car bombings, improvised explosives and shootings take a steady toll
of Iraqi National Guard and U.S. personnel

The insurgents hope to pull Mosul apart by targeting those people
best-placed to help unify it. Threats and assassinations often target
the city’s professional classes, workers in its economically vital oil
industry and known political moderates. “Anyone who advocates freedom
and democracy is considered to be publicly for America and a target,”
says Rooa al-Zrary, a Mosul journalist whose father, the editor of
a moderate newspaper, was murdered last year. Doctors are fleeing,
finding work in Erbil. “The situation is bad and getting worse,” says
a surgeon at Salaam Hospital, the city’s largest. Adds a colleague:
“We feel like there are eyes watching everyone, and that the resistance
is growing stronger every day.” At Mosul University, teaching is now
a dangerous occupation. The dean of the college of law was found dead
outside her home, along with her husband. And three professors have
been murdered, including the head of the political science and the
translation departments.

Mosul’s cosmopolitan character is also under attack. “The mosaic
of Mosul is a miniature Iraq: Arabs, Kurds, Turkomans, Assyrian
Christians, Nestorian Christians, Muslim Sunnis, Muslim Shi?ites,
Yezidis and Armenians,” says Sadi Ahmed Pire, the Mosul chief of the
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, one of Kurdish Iraq’s two governing
parties. By attacking this mosaic, he says, “the Syrians and the
resistance are trying to create anarchy.” Minority groups viewed as
sympathetic to the Americans are particularly vulnerable. A Christian
church was bombed in early August, and Christians have been among those
murdered. Pire says he has survived several assassination attempts.

Tal Afar, a city 30 miles west of Mosul populated almost entirely
by Iraqi Turkoman, was overrun by terrorist groups this summer. In
early September, the U.S. Army laid siege to the town and the ensuing
two-week battle was so fierce that the Turkish government complained
that Americans were killing innocent Turkoman civilians. Many Mosul
residents worry that Tal Afar was a dry run for their city.

The sad irony is that Mosul had once been a postwar model for U.S.
involvement in Iraq. From April 2003 until last February, the city
was under the command of the 101st Airborne Division, led by Lieut.
General David Petraeus, who tried to be sensitive to local concerns.
Several residents fondly recall particular soldiers by name. “Tell
Mr. Anderson of the 101st Airborne that a Moslawi girl salutes him,”
says a schoolteacher. The 101st devoted itself to economic-development
projects, including restarting a cement factory that had been one
of the city’s biggest employers. These days the local economy has
stalled as foreign companies have fled. According to Pire, about
600,000 breadwinners are unemployed in a city of somewhere between
2.6 million and 3 million people.

The 20,000-strong 101st is gone, replaced last February by the 8,700
soldiers of Task Force Olympia, a multinational brigade of coalition
troops. Although they include a large number of U.S. National Guard
reservists, American soldiers have largely taken a backseat to the
Iraqi National Guard. So far, as in the rest of Iraq, the performance
of these new units has been mixed. “The current invisibility of
American soldiers has made people happier. People feel more comfortable
with Iraqi soldiers,” says Dindar Doskar, head of the Mosul office
of the Kurdish Islamic Union (KIU). “But there are not enough Iraqi
soldiers and police, and the terrorists have better weapons.” Because
of that threat, politicians in Mosul say the nationwide elections
scheduled for January are likely to be turbulent there. “Who is going
to vote under these conditions?” asks the KIU’s Doskar. The offices
of the major political parties have already been attacked. Predicts
Doskar: “There will be car bombs at voting stations just like there
are car bombs at police-recruiting stations.” And perhaps heads left
on the sidewalks to give awful testimony to Mosul’s deepening crisis.

By Andrew Lee Butters

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Language shows EU-Russia gulf on rights, actions

Reuters AlertNet, UK
Nov 11 2004

Language shows EU-Russia gulf on rights, actions
11 Nov 2004 16:33:07 GMT

Source: Reuters

BRUSSELS, Nov 11 (Reuters) – A gulf between Russia and the European
Union over any EU role in Moscow’s backyard is likely to dominate
summit talks between Moscow and the bloc following its expansion to
Russian frontiers.

Wrangling over the wording of an EU document setting out a “joint
EU-Russia road map” for external security shows from the first
sentence the gap between them over human rights and conflicts in
ex-Soviet states such as Georgia and Azerbaijan.

The summit was originally scheduled for this week but Moscow asked at
the last minute for a postponement, saying it wanted to wait for the
EU’s new executive Commission to take office. It was rescheduled on
Thursday for Nov. 25.

Russia denies suggestions of a fundamental problem over ties with the
25-nation bloc, its largest trading partner.

But exchanges over a draft of the EU document, obtained by Reuters,
suggest otherwise.

One passage of the EU proposal sent to Moscow read:

“The EU and Russia share responsibility for an international order
based on effective multilateralism, notably the upholding and
developing of international law and the respect for democratic
principles and human rights.”

Russia sent an amended version back, deleting all references to
democracy or rights.

“The EU and Russia share common values and responsibility for an
international order based on effective multilateralism and
international law,” said the reply.

The two sides are seeking to build a new relationship based on four
“common spaces” — on the economy; justice and human rights;
education, science and culture; and external security.

EX-SOVIET FLASHPOINTS

The language on external security is causing the most problems, since
it refers to conflicts in ex-Soviet states like Moldova, Azerbaijan
and Georgia with which the EU wants to step up ties but which Moscow
sees as firmly in its backyard.

An EU line calling for “specific and result orientated cooperation to
resolve existing conflicts in Moldova and the Southern Caucasus” was
ruled out by Russia and changed to “working together to address
crisis situations with the aim of achieving concrete results.”

The EU language would, diplomats say, imply Russian recognition the
bloc had a role to play in ending the “frozen conflict” in Moldova,
where pro-Moscow rebels set up a ministate in the Dnestr region,
known to Russia as Pridnestrovie, in 1990.

It would also give the EU a role in the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute
between Azerbaijan and Armenia, over an area populated by ethnic
Armenians but wholly within Azerbaijan. The area broke with Baku’s
rule as the Soviet Union collapsed in the 1980s.

Azeri President Ilham Aliyev called on the EU in May to be more
active in demanding the withdrawal of Armenian forces.

Russia is already alarmed by Georgia’s President Mikhail Saakashvili,
who overthrew veteran leader Eduard Shevardnadze in a bloodless coup
last year and is moving fast to develop closer ties with the West and
trying to close Russian military bases.

Moscow supports two breakaway enclaves in Georgia, Abkhazia and South
Ossetia, which have been de facto independent of Tbilisi since civil
war following the Soviet collapse, and has no desire to see the EU
helping Saakashvili to win them back.

When the EU, in the EU-Russia road map, said one priority was
“promotion of security, stability, democracy and human rights in the
common neighbourhood,” the amended version came back: “promotion of
security and stability in the world.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Dashnaks Support Amendments To Electoral Code While Their CoalitionF

DASHNAKS SUPPORT AMENDMENTS TO ELECTORAL CODE WHILE THEIR COALITION FELLOW MEMBERS OPPOSED

A1+
11-11-2004

On Wednesday, Armenian PM Andranik Margaryan told journalists the
government has no intention to change the ratio of the parliamentary
seats filled through party lists to those chosen in individual races.

It is known that Dashnaktsutyun, one of the ruling coalition parties,
supports the idea of holding parliamentary election on party lists
to increase parties â~@~Y role in parliament in order to increase
partiesâ~@~Y role in parliament. It means all candidates should be
partiesâ~@~Y nominees.

Improvement of the electoral code was the partyâ~@~Ys key objective
mentioned in the coalition memorandum.

Dashnak Levon Lazarian said Thursday it isnâ~@~Yt ruled out the party
can quit the coalition if it fails to reach accord on the amending
the code.

Karen Karapetyan, the head of the People Elective Representative
parliamentary fraction, said some concession can me made: the ratio
can be changed slightly by lessening the number of non-partisans
in parliament.

He voiced skepticism over necessity to alter the code saying greater
number of partisans in parliament might pave the way for corruption.

–Boundary_(ID_HJZg9izJElUQHNj/YYh3uQ)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian leader offers condolences on Arafat’s death

Armenian leader offers condolences on Arafat’s death

Mediamax news agency
11 Nov 04

Yerevan, 11 November: Armenian President Robert Kocharyan has sent
a telegram of condolences to the interim chairman of the Palestinian
Authority, Rawhi Fattuh, on the death of Yasir Arafat.

“Speaking highly about Yasir Arafat’s contribution to the cause of
defending the national rights of the Palestinians, Robert Kocharyan
expressed his condolences to the people of Palestine and Yasir Arafat’s
family,” the press service of the Armenian president told Mediamax
news agency today.

[Passage omitted: Details of meetings between Kocharyan and Arafat]

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Karabakh separatist leader visiting USA to raise charity funds

Karabakh separatist leader visiting USA to raise charity funds

Mediamax news agency
11 Nov 04

Yerevan, 11 November: The president of the Nagornyy Karabakh Republic
[NKR], Arkadiy Gukasyan, left for the USA today.

NKR President Arkadiy Gukasyan will take part in a telethon scheduled
for 25 November to raise money for the continuation of construction
work on the strategically important North-South highway.

Within the framework of the visit, the NKR president will meet
representatives of the business, political, public and religious
circles of the Armenian diaspora in the USA.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

NKR President Met With Representatives Of Armenia’s Business Circles

NKR President Met With Representatives Of Armenia’s Business Circles

MFO
Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR)
11 Nov 04

As it was already informed, today, November 11, President of the
Nagorno Karabakh Republic Arkady Ghoukassian has left for the United
States of America for the participation in the telethon planned for
November 25 in the USA, and aimed at fund raising for the development
of Artsakh.

On November 10, in Yerevan, Arkady Ghoukassian met with representatives
of the business circles of Armenia. The meeting, initiated by the
Armenian Development Agency, was dedicated to the coming telethon.

It was noted that the raised funds, first of all, would be directed to
the construction of the “North-South” highway, strategically important
for the NKR. Arkady Ghoukassian emphasized the significance of the
road, both for the security guarantee and economic development of
Artsakh. He noted with satisfaction the readiness of the business
circles of Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh to contribute actively to
the construction of the highway. The NKR President expressed his
confidence that this activity would also encourage the Armenian
Diasporaâ~@~Y s representatives.

The majority of those, who made speeches at the meeting, expressed
their opinion that the construction of the “North-South” highway was
a nation-wide goal. They expressed their readiness to contribute to
the programâ~@~Ys realization.

Issues related to the economic cooperation between Armenia and
Nagorno Karabakh were touched upon at the meeting. In particular,
the necessity of a clear definition of the relations in the legal
field was stressed. A proposal on organizing a business forum in the
NKR was also made.

–Boundary_(ID_+pbNyRqWCkWaMb4A28ZLKg)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Foreign Ambassadors praise Turkmen amnesty

FOREIGN AMBASSADORS PRAISE TURKMEN AMNESTY

Turkmenistan.ru, Turkmenistan
Nov 10 2004

Foreign ambassadors accredited to Turkmenistan have highly rated
the republic’s amnesty act that granted freedom to 9,000 inmates,
including 150 foreign nationals, the Ashgabat correspondent of
Turkmenistan.ru reports.

It should be recalled that in 1999 Turkmenistan adopted the law,
“On the annual amnesty and pardon on the occasion of the holy “Gadyr
Gijesi” (the Night of Omnipotence), according to which inmates
convicted for minor crimes are released from jails every year under
the amnesty and pardon.

In an interview to the State news service (TDH) published in today’s
newspapers Ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Iran to Turkmenistan
Golamreza Ansari said in particular that a tradition set by Saparmurat
Niyazov to release inmates right on the night of “Gadyr Gijei” “is
one more evidence of the friendly Turkmen people’s true spirituality
and commitment to the Islamic values, affirmation of high principles
of humanism and justice in the modern Turkmen society.”

The Iranian Ambassador expressed appreciation of the policy pursued
by the Turkmen leader as well as hope that the amnesty act, thanks
to which there were also released citizens of Iran, would further
strengthen ties of friendship and understanding between the two
friendly peoples.

Ambassador of Turkey to Turkmenistan Bahaddin Gursoz said in an
interview to the TDH that there were four Turkish citizens among
inmates pardoned by Saparmurat Niiyazov. “All of them are impressed
by humanity and mercy demonstrated to them, and they keep thanking
President Saparmurat Niyazov for allowing them to return to their
families,” Bahaddin Gursoz said.

Armenian Ambassador to Turkmenistan Aram Grigoryan said in an interview
to the TDH that there also were four citizens of this Caucasian
country. Expressing hearty gratitude to President Saparmurat Niyazov,
the head of diplomatic mission noted that preparation work by the
Armenian Embassy together with the Turkmen Foreign Ministry to send
pardoned Armenian citizens back home is currently under way. The
diplomat also said that the President of Turkmenistan “is equally
merciful toward its own people and citizens of foreign countries.”

Another representative of the diplomatic corps accredited to Ashgabat,
Ambassador of Kazakhstan Vyacheslav Gizzatov, said in an interview to
the TDH that the amnesty is “the expression of high generosity and
humanism.” According to him, several citizens of Kazakhstan will
“return to their families” as a result of this action and “will
be able to take on the path of repent and get down to creative
work.” The Ambassador also stressed that “clemency granted by the
head of Turkmenistan will be never forgotten by relatives and close
friends of the pardoned” and the act of humanism by Saparmyrat Niyazov
“will further strengthen traditional bonds of friendship and good
neighborhood that connect our two friendly peoples from the ancient
times.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Aliyev on Nagorny

Moscow Times
Nov 10 2004

News in Brief

Aliyev on Nagorny

BAKU, Azerbaijan (AP) — Azeri President Ilham Aliyev said Tuesday
that ethnic Armenian forces in Nagorny Karabakh must withdraw before
a peace deal can be signed.

“We demand with justification that the seized territory be freed and
the occupation forces withdraw,” Aliyev said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Japanese Investors Interested In Yerevan’s Landfill

JAPANESE INVESTORS INTERESTED IN YEREVAN’S LANDFILL

Azg/Arm
10 Nov 04

The negotiations with the Japanese investors are on, at present. The
Japanese envisage to get additional energy sources through biogas. By
the end of the year the details of the program will be specified. It
is envisaged to build a plant in the territory of the landfill.

By the way, it is high time to regulate the household rubbish
accumulated in Yerevan. Perhaps, the situation will change after the
adoption of the law on garbage management. Even in the center of the
city we may come across piles of rubbish. The rubbish is not always
taken away to the landfill.

This is the beginning. Perhaps, this will create grounds for
construction of rubbish proceeding plant.

By Karine Danielian

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: EU deeply interested in Azerbaijan

AzerTag, Azerbaijan State Info Agency
Nov 10 2004

EUROPEAN UNION DEEPLY INTERESTED IN AZERBAIJAN
[November 10, 2004, 12:24:07]

Political affairs director of the foreign ministry of Germany Michael
Scheffer and his French colleague Stanisilav Lefevr in the frame of
visit to the South Caucasus have been in Baku and met the foreign
minister of Azerbaijan Elmar Mammadyarov and other officials, AzerTAj
said. On 9 November, the visitors have held a news conference on
conclusions of negotiations, assessing their visit as the token of
interest of the European Union in Azerbaijan.

Mr. Michael Scheffer noted that Azerbaijan as a part of the South
Caucasus is an important state and stability in Azerbaijan for the
European Union means stability in Europe. At his words, the European
countries will make every effort for settlement of conflict in Nagorny
Karabakh, as well as in Georgia.

Stanislav Lefevr stated that Azerbaijan’s participation at the
“New Neighboring policy” of Europe provides supremacy of law and
development of democracy, Germany and France welcomes the steps made
in this direction.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress