Tjeknavorian receives Austria’s gold medal of merit

Tehran Times, Iran

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Tjeknavorian receives Austria’s gold medal of merit
Tehran Times Art Desk

TEHRAN — Iranian-born Armenian composer and conductor Loris
Tjeknavorian received Austria’s gold medal of merit in a ceremony held
at the Austria’s embassy here on Thursday evening.

The ceremony was arranged on the occasion of Austria’s National Day
(October 26) in which guests from Iran, Austria and several other
embassies in Tehran took part.

Several pieces by world famous musicians including Johann Strauss were
performed by musicians from Austria’s Cultural Association Orchestra
conducted by Tjeknavorian.

Tjeknavorian later made a short speech in Persian, English and German
and said, `I am proud that I was born in Iran and that I have an
Iranian nationality. I am also happy to be attending this ceremony on
the occasion of Austria’s National Day.’

He also remarked that he has always attempted to bring the arts and
cultures of different nations closer to one another, adding, `I have
always tried to familiarize the Iranian nation with world famous
classical music and also to familiarize the world with the riches of
Persian literature and music.’

Afterward, he was handed a gold medal and an honorary plaque.

Loris Tjeknavorian was born in 1937 in Borujerd in the southwestern
Iranian Province of Lorestan and was educated in Tehran.

After he studied violin and piano at the Tehran Conservatory of Music,
he studied composition at the Vienna Music Academy, where he graduated
with honors in 1961.

Tjeknavorian has performed throughout the world, having conducted
international orchestras in Austria, Britain, the United States,
Canada, Hungary, Iran, Finland, the former Soviet Union, Armenia,
Thailand, Hong Kong, South Africa, and Denmark.

His own compositions have been performed by major orchestras,
including the London Symphony Orchestra, the Helsinki Philharmonic
Orchestra, the American Symphony Orchestra in New York, and the Tehran
Symphony Orchestra.

Konstantin Zatulin: Russia Cannot Recognize Nkr Until Armenia Does I

KONSTANTIN ZATULIN: RUSSIA CANNOT RECOGNIZE NKR UNTIL ARMENIA DOES IT

Noyan Tapan
Oct 23, 2008

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 23, NOYAN TAPAN. "Quite lately the United States
seeked to take the initiative of solving the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict into its hand, while Russia is not different to that
subject, either." Vladimir Zakharov, the Deputy Director of Moscow
State Institute of International Relations, stated at the October 22
Yerevan-Moscow TV bridge organized at the Novosti-Armenia information
center. According to his observation, the main goal of Russian
President Dmitry Medvedev’s visit to Armenia was discussion of the
Nagorno Karabakh settlement and preparation for tripartite meeting
of Presidents of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Russia.

Konstantin Zatulin, the Director of the Institute of CIS Countries,
said that Armenia holds the opinion that the Nagorno Karabakh conflict
in its nature differs from other similar conflicts and the problem
may be solved with the mediation of the West, with the influence of
the Armenian diaspora.

K. Zatulin also stressed that it will be a serious damage for Russia
unless Armenia and Azerbaijan come to agreement in a peaceful way. In
that case, according to K. Zatulin, the August events of Georgia
will recur.

Alexander Iskandarian, the Director of the Caucasian Media Institute,
in his turn, reminded that 3/4 Armenia’s commodity circulation is done
through the territory of Georgia, and Yerevan has no other outlet to
the outer world except Georgia and Iran. In response to it K. Zatulin
said that everything should be done "to liquidate Armenia’s dependence
on Georgia." "Otherwise it comes that even in case when it is in
Armenia’s interests to recognize South Ossetia and Abkhazia Armenia
does not do it only due to Georgian dependence," K. Zatulin said. He
also stated that Russia cannot recognize NKR until Armenia does it.

RA National Assembly deputy Armen Ashotian added that Armenia will
recognize NKR in case a danger of military operations emerges.

Hrant Margarian: It Is Unacceptable To Us That Armenia Should Yield

HRANT MARGARIAN: IT IS UNACCEPTABLE TO US THAT ARMENIA SHOULD YIELD BEFORE PRECONDITIONS TO HAVE BORDER OPENED

Yerkir
23.10.2008 17:02

Yerevan (Yerkir) – ARF Bureau representative Hrant Margarian, who
was in Tehran on a three-day visit, spoke on October 22 at the Nairi
Union hall.

His speech referred to two key issues: the domestic tension and the
foreign relations, spoke about the regional situation. He said that
after the collapse of the Soviet Union, a one-polar world emerged and
the West tried to enter this region via various methods, including
the colored revolutions.

The West was trying to do the same thing in Armenia too during the past
presidential election. He also covered the recent events in Georgia,
ARF’s participation in the ruling coalition, the Artsakh conflict,
the Javakhk situation and the Armenian-Turkish relations.

He said: "The Armenian-Turkish border was open until 1993, and Turkey,
after closing it, put forward three preconditions: withdrawal of the
Armenian forces from Azerbaijan; shelving of the Armenian genocide
issue in the international arena; recognition of Turkey’s borders
by Armenia." He added that the Armenian authorities were always for
opening the border without preconditions.

"It is unacceptable to us that Armenia should yield before
preconditions to have the border opened, any concession at the
expense of generations is unacceptable to us, it is unacceptable to
us for Turkey to assume brokering role in the Armenian-Azerbaijani
relations or in the Karabakh issue. It is unacceptable to us that
join the Caucasus project proposed by Turkey without Iran because we
believe that such an alliance would be one-sided without Iran."

According To Levon Zurabian, If Opposition Took Part In Work Of NA A

ACCORDING TO LEVON ZURABIAN, IF OPPOSITION TOOK PART IN WORK OF NA AD-HOC COMMITTEE ON EVENTS OCCURRED ON 1-2 MARCH, NO FACT-FINDING GROUP WOULD BE CREATED

Noyan Tapan
Oct 22, 2008

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 22, NOYAN TAPAN. "The NA Ad-hoc Committee on the
Events Occurred on 1-2 March 2008 in Yerevan and Their Reasons is
a failure: it has made no disclosure except the version about the
piglet," Levon Zurabian, the Coordinator of the Armenian National
Congress (ANC) stated at the October 22 press conference. He reminded
the conviction voiced by People’s Movement leaders when the Committee
was just being created that the Committee’s main "mission" will be
to slur over the March 1 crime of the authorities. L. Zurabian said
that not participating in Committee’s work was a right decision, as
otherwise creation of a fact-finding group could not be spoken about.

ANC will take part in the work of the fact-finding group without
fail, as the number of power and opposition representatives in it
will be equal.

However oppositionists have another three conditions for working
in the fact-finding group. According to L. Zurabian, the first
condition is that the group should have the right to interrogate any
person irrespective of the position he takes. According to the second
condition, the group should be able to receive all necessary documents
from state bodies. And the third condition is that all March 1 video
materials and recordings made by the National Security Service and
Police should be accessible for the fact-finding group.

Ilham Aliyev Fait Voeu De Reprendre Le Haut-Karabakh

ILHAM ALIYEV FAIT VOEU DE REPRENDRE LE HAUT-KARABAKH

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Afet Mehdiyeva, version francaise Gregory Schwartz

–Boundary_(ID_B17URP5EVlQmKPAfiLxh1g)–

Russia To Keep Independent Policies From OPEC

RUSSIA TO KEEP INDEPENDENT POLICIES FROM OPEC

Budapest Business Journal
October 22nd, 2008
Hungary

Russia will stick to constructive dialogue with OPEC but keep its
policies independent, its energy minister said on Tuesday after OPEC
called on producers like Russia to join production cuts.

Russian Energy Minister Sergei Shmatko was speaking just before OPEC
Secretary General Abdullah al-Badri landed in Moscow for talks with
top Russian officials. "I know they (OPEC) are very interested that
we cooperate with them as closely as possibly," Shmatko told Reuters
in the Armenian capital, Yerevan, where he was traveling with the
delegation of Russian President Dmitry Medvedev. "We will stick to the
formula of bilateral strategic partnership between Russia and OPEC. We
see a lot of positive things (in this partnership) but we want to
have the possibility of having fairly independent policies," he said.

OPEC countries, which pump about 40% of the oil produced globally,
are widely expected to agree on cutting output at an emergency meeting
on Friday in an attempt to support oil prices that have halved since
peaking in July. OPEC President Chakib Khelil said on Monday non-OPEC
oil producers like Russia, Norway and Mexico should contribute to
production cuts because, if oil prices fall below $70 a barrel,
many international oil projects "will be delayed or die."

Shmatko said he was aware that OPEC would decide to cut production
but could not say by how much. "This is an extraordinary meeting and
it may take some important decisions, maybe (to cut) in two stages,"
he said. He added that Russia would rather cooperate with OPEC on
research and technology issues. â~@~^It is one thing cutting or not
cutting oil output. But there is also the general assessment of the
production sector, of new technologies that need to be developed and
investment that is required," Shmatko said. "Possible international
cooperation in order to share these technologies and mutually develop
is what we are really interested in."

Russia’s prospects

Shmatko said falling oil prices and the global financial crisis
were likely to persuade Russian oil companies to cut spending
significantly. "The oil price is now falling. I think investment
programs will of course be revised … I also think there will be
a significant correction in the oil sector as far as the current
spending is concerned," he said. Shmatko said his ministry was not
going to revise its positive oil production forecast for this year,
despite a 0.8% year-on-year decline in the first nine months of
2008. He said his ministry had started talks with companies on the
possible impact of the financial crisis on production). â~@~^So far,
there’s been no panic," he said.

Oil production in Russia, the world’s second-largest oil exporter
and the largest producer outside OPEC, rose rapidly in the first
part of the decade, including a record 11% increase in 2003. Growth
has slowed in the last few years as oil deposits in western Siberia
become depleted and companies switch their attention to developing
hard-to-reach deposits further east. "Everyone is talking about slowing
demand. This is what automakers, metal producers are suffering from,"
said Shmatko. "But oil is always sold. There’s the question of price,
but we had this price 18 months ago and nothing happened. We were
increasing production." (Reuters)

–Boundary_(ID_WXmznYbIZFooTVNVGSRBhA)- –

BAKU: Presidents of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia to Discuss NK

TREND news Agency – Baku, Azerbaijan
Presidents of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia to Discuss Nagorno-Karabakh
Problem

21.10.08

The meeting of the Presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia may take place in
Russia soon, where the State Heads will discuss the question of
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement, the President of Russia, Dmitry
Medvedev, said in Yerevan, ITAR-TASS reported.
`The meeting of three Presidents must take place soon. This meeting will be
held in Russia,’ Russian State Head said.
Formerly the President of Armenia, Serj Sarkisyan, stated that his country
`positively assesses the mediation mission of Russia in the OSCE Minsk
Group’ on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Together with other co-chairmen –
France and the USA, Russia `contributes to the process of peaceful
settlement of the Karabakh conflict’. ` Armenia again confirmed its
readiness for search for the solution on the basis of Madrid principles,’
said Sarkisyan after negotiations with Dmitriy Medvedev.
The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries appeared in 1988 due
to Armenian territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenia has occupied 20%
of the Azerbaijani lands including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and its seven
surrounding districts. Since 1992 to the present time, these territories
have been under Armenian occupation. In 1994, Azerbaijan and Armenia signed
a cease-fire agreement at which time the active hostilities ended. The
Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group ( Russia, France and USA) are holding
peaceful negotiations.

Azerbaijan Cuts Defense And Security Spending Outlook

AZERBAIJAN CUTS DEFENSE AND SECURITY SPENDING OUTLOOK

ArmInfo
2008-10-20 17:15:00

ArmInfo. Azerbaijan has cut defense and security spending outlook by
10.3% in the 2009 state budget blueprint, compared to the approved
forecast for 2008, APA reports. Zahid Oruj, member of a parliamentary
commission for defense and security, told APA-ECONOMICS that AZN 1
205.520 million is earmarked for next year.

"Of this, AZN 1 115.948 million will go to defense forces, AZN 84.561
million to national security, AZN 2.633 million to applied research and
AZN 2.379 million to other expenses. The reason for a year-over-year
decline in defense spending is that fixed capital investment was made
in previous years. However, the defense sector will be in the focus of
attention and social security of service men will be further improved,"
he added.

In the category of Defense Expenditures, the year-over-year decline
was 19% for defense forces, 12% for national security, 31% for other
subcategories and 2% for applied research.

The draft budget has been submitted to the parliament for approval
last week.

The Train For Europe

THE TRAIN FOR EUROPE
Srda Popovich

Bosnian Institute News
Monday, 20 October, 2008
UK

Forthright overview of some current issues ranging from the tendency
of Serbian politicians to blame Dutch government obduracy rather than
their own failure to arrest Ratko Mladic for the EU’s decision not
to unfreeze the SAA, via the B-H genocide case against Serbia, to the
‘victory of the pro-European option’ under Tadic and the issues raised
by the Ã~Pindic assassination trial

Svetlana LukiÄ~G: We’re now more or less over our anger and sense
of humiliation at the fact that the notorious Stabilization and
Association Agreement hasn’t been unfrozen. Everybody has been wailing
about the injustice done to us by Holland, because of some business of
theirs about some battalion. But let’s not forget what that battalion
business was all about. The Dutch battalion didn’t manage to prevent,
didn’t do enough to prevent, the genocide at Srebrenica – or what
President TadiÄ~G has recently been calling the well-known Srebrenica
‘incident’ or ‘tragedy’… TadiÄ~G and other politicians mention the
Dutch battalion en passant, as if it were of no importance.

SrÄ’a PopoviÄ~G: That’s because otherwise they’d have to explain it
all, and the explanation is quite crazy: that the Dutch are greatly
frustrated because they let MladiÄ~G disarm them, because they weren’t
capable of preventing genocide, and they can’t forgive themselves
for that, whereas we’ve forgiven ourselves for everything. And
[our politicians] don’t dare, of course, to mention what it’s
about. Given our moral flexibility, we can’t quite understand that
the Dutch really do blame themselves greatly, whereas in our view
MladiÄ~G himself is not responsible, let alone the Dutch. That’s why
[our politicians] say nothing. When Ä~PeliÄ~G then starts complaining
about injustice, I can’t understand how he can possible use the word
in this context, given what MladiÄ~G did, and that we’ve spent years
lying and protecting him, and are probably still protecting him. We
recently had the anniversary of the crime at TopÄ~Mider, and I’m sure
it’s generally believed that those soldiers were killed by MladiÄ~G’s
bodyguards, because he was hiding in that building. Never mind, we
pass over all that, and when the Dutch show what we see as excessive
moral concern, we cry ‘injustice’.

It’s quite shameful how brazen we’ve become. Those who think the
Dutch will give up are wrong; it was a great shock to that society,
their government fell as a result, what more need we say? They can’t
absolve themselves, for having been involved in the event. It doesn’t
matter how marginally they were involved in the event, they can’t
pretend to themselves that they have a certain understanding for what
happened in Srebrenica, and don’t take it all that seriously. No,
they take it very seriously, and no one will make them waver, that’s
for sure. It must have been very difficult for them when the Agreement
was being signed too, but they were promised then that it was simply
a matter of signing the Agreement, that ratification still lay ahead,
that candidature lay ahead, and that if MladiÄ~G was not surrendered by
then, they could stick to their position. There’s a cynical explanation
– in which I don’t believe – which is that they serve as a handbrake
within the European Union, that can be put on at any time and that
can always serve as an alibi in case things do not progress. I don’t
believe that, but I’ve heard such cynical explanations, which seem
plausible because they’re in line with our own political practice.

People can’t understand how a society like the Dutch functions. It’s
a Protestant society, people there take moral issues seriously, they
have a high standard for human rights, all those institutions like
the International Court of Justice or the Hague tribunal are located
there, and these are very serious subjects for them.

I don’t normally read Politika, but I looked at today’s on-line edition
and read a text by one columnist, the name’s not important but he
writes for Politika, which is partly government-owned, isn’t it? He
writes about the Dutch position, which he characterises as peevish
– just like that: peevish, insolent, contemptuous. And offers as a
comfort that, if we do one day get accepted into the European Union,
we’ll be able to place conditions on the entry of others, and make them
pay for all this. This is in line with KoÅ¡tunica’s line about making
things difficult – we’ll get in, and then we’ll make things difficult;
then you’ll see, when we begin imposing vetoes! Then at the end of
his text that same columnist moans and says: but maybe we’ll be the
last to enter, and we won’t be able to make fun of anyone. Well,
what kind of attitude is this, towards a European Union that we
supposedly wish to join? What sort of position is this, in our main
daily, partly owned by our government, which talks in this way about
the European Union, where the EU is seen in this manner? You can see
that we’re really not ready for it. What Holland? It has nothing to
do with Holland! I go back to what Ä~Leda JovanoviÄ~G speaks about –
the system of values. How we see ourselves in a community of nations
towards which we display such a hostile attitude? That’s why I say
the Netherlands is not the problem.

I’d always welcome, of course, Toma NikoliÄ~G’s vote in favour of
ratification, and DaÄ~GiÄ~G’s too; it’s good even if someone does
it without believing in it, because it technically puts us onto
a railroad from which there’s later no departure. But then again,
motives are important too, our true feelings are also important, and it
seems that we’re not ready. And then we have the interpretation – I’m
quoting Sonja Biserko now – that perhaps Russia has even welcomed our
orientation towards the European Union, precisely because it believes
we’ll cause problems there. For then they’ll have a vote of their
own there, to impose a veto on every decision that Russia doesn’t like.

Svetlana LukiÄ~G: A Trojan horse?

SrÄ’a PopoviÄ~G: That’s right, but [Sonja] brings it up only to
explain why it may be in the Russian interest to support something
like this. She’s not saying that such an idea exists on the Serbian
side too, but our politics have shown that it does indeed exist,
and that the two motivations can be in harmony, our own and the
Russian. For the nationalism of resentment, what you might also call
the nationalism of the Serb loser, has been defeated; but it still
exists as a kind of spite, as rage, as a thirst for moral revenge
and belated satisfaction for that defeat. This does happen. I often
cite Isidora SekuliÄ~G, she knew this about small nations when she
wrote that they’re affected by periods of euphoria, arrogance, and
megalomania which comes crashing down, and then come – this is what
I like – ‘the bitter tears after’. You suddenly become transformed
into an embittered victim, forget what you yourself have done,
start insisting on international law and talking about the injustice
committed by the big against the small. So what we have here is a
disinclination to take one’s own responsibility into account, and a
stubborn need to blame someone else for everything that happens to you.

Svetlana VukoviÄ~G: Their advice to us is that, although we haven’t
signed the Agreement because of the Netherlands, we should start
behaving as if we had, nobody’s stopping us.

SrÄ’a PopoviÄ~G: And has anyone ever prevented us from arresting and
trying MladiÄ~G? Who has tried to stop us? We remain perplexed why they
insist so much on MladiÄ~G, and never ask ourselves why we ourselves
didn’t arrest him when we had him here – for we did have him, and
indeed I think we still do. They say: we had him up to 2005. But what
were you waiting for up to 2005? And now it’s the fault of the Hague
tribunal, for insisting you should hand him over! The Hague tribunal
is acting like a subsidiary body here: it will ask for him if you
don’t put him on trial, so the situation is of your own making. But
there was no political courage, so we always come to the same point,
that the residues of the 1990s are still very much present, not only
in terms of cadres, but also in people’s heads. But nobody else is
to blame for that either.

I might mention, even though it’s a private matter, that I always used
to tell my children when they started complaining about some teacher
or friend: there’s nothing you can do about it, you can only change
your own behaviour. Did you do something that helped it happen? If so,
then change that, that’s something you can do, while the rest you can’t
change, it’s something you have to put up with. But no, we [Serbians]
never think about our own responsibility, we constantly seek to shift
the blame onto someone else, so that we’ll appear as victims. This
is precisely why we sank so low in the 1990s. When Koštunica starts
talking about how he’s defending our dignity, you can be sure that
we’ve lost it. We’ve lost even the self-respect that would permit
us to turn our attention to ourselves, to our own responsibility,
we don’t have the strength to do that; it has weakened us to such an
extent, and worn down our moral fibre so much, that we no longer have
the strength to think about our own responsibility. That’s something
that hardly occurs to us: that we should change the way we are. No,
we’re waiting to join the European Union, so that they can change
us. It really is a true capitulation, a moral surrender and total
lack of self-respect, when you say: I can’t do what needs to be done,
please try somehow to force me.

The treatment of Florence Hartmann appears cynical in the
extreme. For the fact is she revealed that The Hague tribunal, by a
wrong interpretation of its own rights, allowed the Serbian state to
censor part of the minutes of meetings of the Supreme Defence Council
[of FRY] which made it clear that Serbia participated in genocide
[in Bosnia-Herzegovina]. The vice-president of the appeal chamber,
who submitted a separate judgement to the International Court of
Justice in The Hague, also took this view, since the tribunal did
not demand of the Serbian side to provide uncensored minutes of the
meetings. The Bosnian side too asked for these and did not get them,
but it was The Hague tribunal that first allowed the censoring.

Florence Hartmann describes very precisely how this happened: how
at some point in 2004, during MiloÅ¡eviÄ~G’s trial, Carla del Ponte
demanded that the Serbian state hand over the minutes; how this led to
much dispute; and how an agreement was ultimately reached – she says
with SvilanoviÄ~G – that Serbia would make the minutes available,
but that in line with Hague tribunal rules parts of them that might
affect Serbia’s national security could be crossed out. What happened
was that the Hague tribunal’s understanding of what constitutes
national security was extremely wide, with an interpretation that
lawyers call contra leges, i.e. an interpretation that contradicts
the letter of the law. In other words, something that might endanger
Serbia’s vital interests – and it was even said that it might cause
severe financial, moral and political repercussions. Which means
that on the basis of those minutes we might have been condemned for
perpetrating genocide and asked to pay reparations, which the Court
judged would have endangered Serbia’s vital interests.

In 2005, another court concluded that it was true that the law was
wrongly applied here; that the rules of The Hague tribunal say nothing
about a country’s vital interests, but talk only of national security
interests, which in this case were not threatened. In other words, the
Hague tribunal decided that the minutes should not have been censored,
yet in the end they were censored, in line with the logic that the
first decision had created an expectation on the Serbian side that
they could have crossed out whatever they wanted to in these minutes,
and that it would not look good if minutes submitted in this form
and with these expectations were nevertheless to be made public. But
when you look at the whole thing, it is clear that behind it lies the
political logic that the full force of the law could not and should
not be applied to Serbia, because to do so would be fatal for it,
so we should be forgiven. It was thus a political decision. And now
you see the paradox: the Serb nationalists call the Hague tribunal
a political court, and so do I, because we were forgiven even though
according to the law we shouldn’t have been forgiven.

Svetlana VukoviÄ~G: This has to do with the charge filed against us
by Bosnia-Herzegovina before the International Court of Justice in
The Hague.

SrÄ’a PopoviÄ~G: Right. You can always demand on the basis of newly
revealed facts and evidence that a trial be repeated, because it is
evident that if the court had known these facts its decision would
have been different.

Svetlana VukoviÄ~G: It is interesting that, when we look at the
reaction of Bosnian public opinion to the Florence Hartmann case
that has now opened, the Bosnians did not as expected say: great,
we are now in a position to ask for a new trial.

SrÄ’a PopoviÄ~G: I feel that they have become so exhausted by all
these shenanigans – I cannot describe them otherwise – surrounding
the whole question of genocide that they simply don’t believe that it
can have any effect. But there will be future generations. The same
happened with the Armenians: the first generation was so destroyed
and depressed that it wished only to forget it all, and for people
to stop talking about the genocide; but the grandchildren of the
people who had been exposed to genocide said: wait, let’s see what
happened, this thing has to be properly examined. And now, of course,
KaradžiÄ~G too will be charged with genocide.

A strange situation has come about. Technically speaking, the
pro-European option has won; but the margin of victory is very thin,
numerically thin, and it’s even worse when you weigh it up together
with the understanding and the mind-set on each side. You must not
forget that Ivica DaÄ~MiÄ~G, who still swears by MiloÅ¡eviÄ~G, voted
for it; that Toma NikoliÄ~G – who calls Ä~PinÄ’iÄ~G a mafia-linked
prime minister, who is not sorry about Ä~Luruvija, for whom DuliÄ~G
is an Ustasha and so is TadiÄ~G – has also said that he would vote
for it. In other words, at a technical level, if you look only at
the result of e.g. the vote on ratification of the Agreement [with
the EU], you can say that the [European] option won. But if you look
at the values behind it, what ideologically stands behind it, then
it’s all very murky. There is still a lot of confusion on both sides.

Turning toBoris TadiÄ~G, it’s a matter of perception how strong he
really feels, and how much he only seeks to give that impression. I
can see that he doesn’t feel as strong as he likes to pretend when
he comes out so energetically with some striking phrase, and that
he thinks he has to be very cautious with the other side, and must
content himself with their superficial and declaratory support. I’m
not in a position to be absolutely sure about this, but what’s certain
is that the actual balance of forces is not yet clear. I think that
in the parliamentary and presidential elections all that has been
created in part is the illusion that one side has won. It did win,
but in my view the quality of its victory is open to doubt. And I
think TadiÄ~G knows that, so he has to be content with appearances,
and perhaps goes too far. I certainly think it is too much when
DuliÄ~G says that a coalition between the Democratic Party and the
Radical Party is not excluded. Well, I say…

Svetlana LukiÄ~G: With Toma NikoliÄ~G?

SrÄ’a PopoviÄ~G: Yes, with Toma NikoliÄ~G. It is as if everything that
Toma NikoliÄ~G said in the past, and the policy he has conducted for
seventeen years, were suddenly forgotten. But that’s impossible.

Svetlana LukiÄ~G: What the Socialist Party of Serbia did isn’t
forgotten either. But they’ve told us: it’s a matter of life and death,
we must have DaÄ~MiÄ~G. And when on 21 October a new Radical Party is
formed, the moment will come when they’ll say: you know, we must go
with the Radical Party, because it’s a life-and-death issue. What I
mean is that they constantly produce the life- and-death situation,
and then appeal to it. In 2011 TadiÄ~G will once again tell us that
it’s a matter of to be or not to be.

SrÄ’a PopoviÄ~G: In the short run, it can all be just as you say. I’m
not sure about the medium run, but it’s quite clear how it will end
in the long run. I’m not speaking about whether it’s good or not to
join the European Union; I myself think it’s good, but that’s not
the question. The fact is that no other end is possible. It’s all a
question of the tempo, rather than simply of the speed; because we
live lives that are of a certain duration, and it’s important how we
live them. For example, whether I shall spend my whole life waiting
for the European Union, and whether even you will perhaps have to
wait for that, is not unimportant.

Svetlana VukoviÄ~G: It’s an upward spiral.

SrÄ’a PopoviÄ~G: It’s an upward spiral. It’s moving very slowly,
though; it’s like watching grass grow: you watch and say ‘nothing is
happening’, but that’s not so, all you need is a larger time frame.

Svetlana LukiÄ~G: We’ll need at least 600 years, like the Serbian
Orthodox Church.

SrÄ’a PopoviÄ~G: Maybe not so long. […] I always say, rightly or
wrongly, that my greatest hope lies with civil society. And people
askl me: why, when you know how weak civil society is. Well, fine,
my hope may be weak then, but I do have it, because society must be
changed from below. That’s why I was surprised to hear Boris TadiÄ~G
say a few days ago that a good state creates good citizens. I think
the opposite is true, you must first have good citizens, the state
will follow. But I can see that he still thinks in the categories of
social engineering; that he too is forging a new man, as his father
used to do.

I have a collection of the statements made by the special prosecutor,
from the first one when he said: ‘we shall initiate that as soon as
you have completed your presentation’, which was a year and a half
ago, to others about how history will decide, and on to ones that look
forward to final confirmation of the verdict… And then it turned out
that when they spoke about the political background they were in fact
thinking about TerziÄ~G, who freed Legija even though he knew he would
kill Ä~PinÄ’iÄ~G; or that the political background was TijaniÄ~G’s
story that Beba already knew two hours later who the killers were,
so it was only logical to conclude that he had also engaged them. So
I don’t believe in those stories about the special prosecutor doing
anything. But I would like the political background to be examined, and
perhaps it would be a good idea, for that background was in fact the
criminal act of armed rebellion [by the Red Berets in November 2001],
in which Koštunica played a very dubious role, and for which we have
all manner of evidence that KljajeviÄ~G gathered for the Ä~PinÄ’iÄ~G
trial. And it wouldn’t need any prolonged investigation to prove and
establish all that. This for me is the political background. Why
political background? For the reasons which PrijiÄ~G cited in the
indictment: that the armed rebellion was the first step that led to
the assassination, that the two matters were very closely related, and
that it created the conditions and the means, under the control of the
state security service, that enabled the latter to murder Ä~PinÄ’iÄ~G.

This incidentally is why it’s forever being said that the Zemun
[mafia] clan killed Ä~PinÄ’iÄ~G, and that the Zemun clan had nothing
to do with it [the armed rebellion]. Ä~PinÄ’iÄ~G was killed by state
officials, people who worked in the state security service killed him,
and the weapons were theirs, according to information coming from
the service itself. General use of the phrase ‘political background’
only obscures these facts. It was a matter of armed rebellion, a
serious crime against the constitutional order and security, and
numerous witnesses have been heard about the circumstances under
which that crime was committed; the statements made by the accused
themselves show that it was a case of an armed rebellion, and there
are even tapes with intercepted conversations in which Koštunica
is frequently mentioned, among other things. So this for me is the
political background. But no one speaks about the armed rebellion,
always and only about some vague background. People then rightly say
that this is no legal description, that there’s no such expression
in criminal law – ‘political background’ means nothing. That’s true,
and the fact that the prosecutor constantly speaks about it is unclear
and confusing.

Svetlana LukiÄ~G: As Rade BulatoviÄ~G says, there is no political
will to arrest MladiÄ~G.

SrÄ’a PopoviÄ~G: Right. His own political party entered into a
cohabitation immediately after the assassination. How then can one
investigate the political background, where there is a justified
suspicion that the DSS and Koštunica were somehow involved. I
don’t say what their role was, but KoÅ¡tunica certainly played some
role in it, given that the plotters said ‘only KoÅ¡tunica can stop
this’. If SpasojeviÄ~G says ‘don’t tell Å  eÅ¡elj, we’re in contact
with KoÅ¡tunica’, if they meet with TomiÄ~G and BulatoviÄ~G, if the
latter promises that they won’t stop them, if KoÅ¡tunica doesn’t
meet his constitutional obligation as commander-in-chief to suppress
the rebellion, then it’s clear that he did play a role, but that
it has not been investigated. I think that this will be confirmed
only in order to remove the issue from the agenda, so that it’s no
longer mentioned, because every time 12 March comes round I think
they start to worry and fear that the story will resurface. They’re
waiting for it to sink into the past, to become a historical mystery,
and some have even said that we shall never know. Of course, you’ll
never know if you don’t want to know.

I believe that this case will be reopened at some point in the
future. It was promptly closed, and for the same reasons that we
were forgiven the genocide. When during [Operation] Sabre it appeared
that the investigation was leading to Koštunica, the people in the
European Union immediately cried out: don’t touch it, you don’t have
the strength for it, you’ll simply cause chaos, you’re not strong
enough to investigate this, he has the army behind him and you may
even cause civil war. Don’t ask anything, pretend to be stupid, you
have the plotters, try the plotters and be happy with that… We
are thus always treated like children, like some riffraff who are
unable to establish what happened, who don’t deserve any justice,
and who rather than bothering with it should seek instead to muddy
the whole thing and move on.

That’s how they treat us: let them be, they don’t know any better,
let’s just try to contain and minimise it, or let them carry on,
what do they know about justice. This stance offends my personal
sense of national dignity.

Translated from the PeÅ¡Ä~Manik (Hourglass) website of Belgrade’s
Radio B92,

–Boundary_(ID_cc1lbY6nIXHxGbMawzc4Lg)–

Agenda – Conference In The European Parliament "Armenian Heritage In

AGENDA – CONFERENCE IN THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT "ARMENIAN HERITAGE IN TURKEY"

CollectifVAN.org
Publie le : 21-10-2008
France

On November 13 from 9.30am to 1.00pm AGBU Europe will host a conference
in the European Parliament entitled "A Journey of Cultural Rediscovery:
Armenian Heritage in Turkey ".

The conference, which is part of the official European Year for
Intercultural Dialogue, will review the recent public debate in Turkey
on the country’s forgotten Armenian Heritage in the light of recent
groundbreaking artistic and intellectual contributions on the subject
and will examine the significance of Armenian cultural heritage in
Turkey from a European perspective.

Speakers at the conference will include Fethiye Cetin, author of the
book "My Grandmother", Osman Koker, creator of the groundbreaking
exhibition "My Dear Brother", art historian Professor Patrick
Donabedian as well as historians Vahe Tachjian and Ara Sarafian.

The conference will be opened by Michael Leigh, Director General at
the European Commission in charge of enlargement. The conference will
conclude with a panel debate. A reception will follow the conference.

This events is organized under the Aegis of Bernard Lehideux MEP,
with the support of the Heinrich Boll Foundation’s Brussels office.

The conference is open to all but prior registration is indispensable
to access the European Parliament’s building.

Registration deadline: 4 November 2008.

The conference brochure and registration form can be downloaded at:
<;

(Direct access:

For registration and further information, please contact AGBU at:
Tel +331 45 20 03 18. Email: [email protected]

Conference location: European Parliament, Room ASP 3G3 Rue
Wiertz/Wiertzstraat 60 B-1047 Brussels

http://www.agbueurope.org/&gt
http://en.ugab.fr/2008/10/02/conference-brussels/
www.agbueurope.org