BAKU: Azerbaijani President’s Paris Visit Successful

Turan Agency, Azerbaijan
Feb 1 2007

Azerbaijani President’s Paris Visit Successful

Turan 01/02/2007 23:39

Azerbaijani president’s press secretary Azer Gasimov held today a
briefing on the results of Ilham Aliyev’s visit to Paris.

He said that official Baku was happy with the results of the state
visit to Paris, which confirmed the strategic character of relations
between the two countries.

During the meetings the two presidents discussed a broad range of
questions, including the Karabakh conflict. A joint declaration of
the two presidents notes that France recognized and supported the
sovereignty and territorial integrity of Azerbaijan.

"President Chirac said that he would do his best to speed up soon
resolution of the conflict," Gasimov said.

Ilham Aliyev appreciated France’s position on the Karabakh question.

Concerning economic cooperation, France is interested in the
expansion of cooperation in the energy and non-oils sector. Paris
would like coming of such companies as Gas de France, Vinchi and
others to Azerbaijan. There is an agreement on bilateral cooperation
in the non-oil sector, in the sphere of tourism, the press-secretary
said.

CRU Founder Promises to Revamp the Party

Armenpress

CRU FOUNDER PROMISES TO REVAMP THE PARTY

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS: Acting on an
appeal of three members of the Constitutional Right
Union (CRU) party an Armenian review court ruled today
to annul the results of a September 16, 2006 election
of members of its ruling board and oversight
commission.
The appeal had been turned down by a lower court in
October. Speaking to a news conference today CRU
chairman and founder Hrant Khachatrian said the review
court decision came as ‘a big surprise."
Khachatrian, a parliament member, elected on the
opposition Ardarutyun’s (Justice) slate in 2003
elections, said today he will be back to revamp the
party, but said he will hardly get engaged in active
politics.
He assured there will be no ‘witch hunting’ in the
party and no taking revenge on disloyal members. He
said the party’s ruling board will decide whether its
current chairman Hayk Babukhanian will remain in it or
will be asked to leave it.

Democratic Processes in Nagorno Karabakh without External Pressures

Panorama.am

18:30 30/01/2007

DEMOCRATIC PROCESSES IN NAGORNO KARABAKH WITHOUT EXTERNAL PRESSURES,
PARTY LEADER SAYS

Democratic processes in Nagorno Karabakh take place without external
pressures and without the assistance of grant programs, Shavarsh
Kocharyan, Armenian Democratic Party leader, said.

In his words, the Azeris try to divert the attention of European
institutes from the content of the new constitution of Karabakh which
is very close to European standards. `What did they want – field
commanders like in Chechnya?’ Kocharyan poses a rhetoric question.

Kocharyan raised the issues at the meeting with lord Rasel Jonston,
chairman of the special committee on Nagorno Karabakh in the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. Lord Rasel promised
to visit Karabakh in summer.

Source: Panorama.am

Recurrent Sitting of CIS Council of Commanders of Frontier Troops

Recurrent sitting of the CIS Council of Commanders of Frontier Troops to be
held in Yerevan

ArmRadio.am
30.01.2007 17:39

The recurrent sitting of the Council of Commanders of Frontier Troops
of CIS countries will be held in Yerevan April 12-13. The Secretariat
of CIS Affairs informs that during the sitting the report of the
Council’s activity in 2006 will be discussed, the plan of further
development of cooperation of CIS countries will be ratified.

To note, the decision to establish the CIS Council of Commanders of
Frontier Troops was taken in 1992. The sittings of the Council are
held at least once in three months.

Far Finances 160 Scientific Works Providing $800K

FAR FINANCES 160 SCIENTIFIC WORKS PROVIDING 800 THOUSAND USD

YEREVAN, JANUARY 30, NOYAN TAPAN. This year the Armenian National Fund
of Science and Education finctioning under the patronage of Fund for
Armenian Relief (FAR) will finance 20 scientific themes providing
grants of 5000 USD to each. As Director of FAR Armenian branch, Bagrat
Sargsian said at the January 30 solemn ceremony of giving grants, the
program’s goal is to contribute to progress of young scientists,
preservation and development of rich traditions of Armenian science.

It was mentioned that several hundreds of scientific works had been
presented at the competition announced in 2006, 20 out of which were
chosen by the authoritative expert commission working in U.S. under
the leadership of prominent American Armenian scientist, professor
Yervand Terzian. The scientific works presented by scientific groups
of the National Academy of Sciences, various universities and Byurakan
Observatory mainly relate to spheres of physics, chemistry and
biotechnology.

In the words of FAR Spokesperson Levon Lachikian, within the framework
of this program being implemented for the seventh year FAR has
financed 160 scientific works providing 800 thousand USD.

Armenia’s first DM: `Army became a toy in the hands of leadership’

Regnum, Russia
Jan 30 2007

Armenia’s first defense minister: `Army became a toy in the hands of
leadership’

The Armenian Army is the strongest and effective in South Caucasus
region, MP, Armenia’s former defense minister and premier, leader of
the National Democratic Union Vazgen Manukyan announced at a news
conference on January 30.

According to him, recently they celebrated 15th anniversary of
establishing the Armenian Armed Forces and facts provided by the
leadership were scanty. `It was interpreted as there had been
voluntary brigades, then they allied and established the ministry,
but practically it is not that really. In reality, agencies,
representatives of the home front, particularly, engineers, mechanics
took part in establishing the army and the defense ministry,’ Vazgen
Manukyan said adding that in the coverage names of people who
participated in forming the army were mentioned, but by unknown
reason `Samvel Babayan’s name or my name were not mentioned,’ (Samvel
Babayan – Nagorno Karabakh Defense Minister, Vazgen Manukyan-
Armenia’s first defense minister – REGNUM).

The MP noted that the Armenian Army has become a toy in the hands of
leadership. In 1995, its units were used to suppress protests in the
country, the army unanimously votes at elections for candidatures or
political forces supported by the government. `I wish the army to be
the most progressive part of society,’ Vazgen Manukyan concluded.

Who are the Turks and who are Armenians?

Who are the Turks and who are Armenians?

Yerkir.am
January 26, 2007

The Turkish handwriting is the same everywhere ` it is written in red
and you read it in black. Does the Turkish people’s and intellectuals’
massive participation in Hrant Dink’s funeral mean that they realize
and accept the unquestionable truth of the Armenian Genocide? This does
not reflect Ankara’s official position.

Wasn’t Hrant Dink’s murder another act of Genocide? Wasn’t the Turkish
people’s participation in the funeral an affirmation of this fact? One
thing is clear ` in the context of the Armenian question Turkey’s
nature does not change, it remains the same when killing, it is the
same when mourning, it changes neither when laughing nor when crying.

Who are the Turks? Who are we? They are `special’, they can even call
themselves `Armenian’. But you cannot become Armenian simply by
shouting and applauding.

You can only be born Armenian. And if you consider yourselves Armenian,
can you manage to live with it? We couldn’t live with you. Dink
couldn’t live with you because he lived in a country where he was
hated. How long can you live with self-denial when there is nothing to
deny?

But this is an issue of identity for the Turks: they are Turks but they
consider themselves `Armenian’, they call themselves `Armenian’ but
continue thinking like Turks, they officially deny the Genocide but
follow the funeral procession mourning, they kill with one hand and put
flowers with the other. This is the peculiarity of the Turkish
identity.

Turkey, stop living with recirculation of your historical poison! Tell
your people the truth! You have been lying for ninety years and they
believed you. Do not be afraid and tell the truth and they will believe
you again.

Wasn’t Hrant Dink a citizen of Turkey? He was a citizen but he was an
ethnic Armenian. He was a citizen but his views did not coincide with
the historical and political perspective of the government. So what?

Does this mean that he should be murdered because he lived in an
environment that falsifies the reality and reinvents history? `We are
all Armenians, we are all Dink,’ the Turkish public shouted. Was this a
revolution in the Turkish society? Listen, Hrant Dink, they are ready
to even reject their nationality if only they can avoid recognizing the
Genocide, and this is your victory.

Hrant Dink is the only bright trace in Turkey’s modern history. If
official Ankara is smart enough, it will not lose this trace, it will
re-examine its past and present and not build the future of the Turkish
people on Genocides. Let Ankara cry out loud as much as it wants `
every tear will burn with the fate of an Armenian family, and the red
color will be reflected in these tears so vividly as the blood on the
ground.

The Armenian question was raised and solved in Istanbul in 1915 ` the
Genocide of 1.5 million Armenians was organized. In 2007 the same
continues in Istanbul in a more `civilized’ manner.

Didn’t Turkey understand that the problem is not the Armenian question
but Turkey itself? Didn’t it understand that the struggle is not about
exterminating the Armenian identity but re-evaluation and recreation of
its own identity? Is it too difficult to understand that we are more
interested in your Europeanization than you yourselves since if you get
civilized you might realize that what you did was a Genocide.

Tell the truth with the same enthusiasm with which you are knocking on
Europe’s doors. Turkey is looking for its salvation in Europe ` the
latter does not promise any miracles but state it cannot save someone
whose problem lies in his identity, in his genetic inferiority complex
and barbarism, in the inherited capacity to commit genocides.

By Areg SAVGULIAN

Armenian community mounts global effort for "Hrant Dink Foundation"

Yevrobatsi
Saturday, Jan. 27, 2007
Armenian community mounts global effort to create the "Hrant Dink Fondation"
php?r=10&id=2563

As Armenians throughout the world mourn the senseless murder of
journalist Hrant Dink, community leaders have vowed to keep his name
and ideals alive with the establishment of the "Hrant Dink Foundation."
The primary purpose of the foundation will be to disseminate the
message and vision of Mr. Dink and support the continued efforts of
Agos newspaper, of which Dink was the founder and editor-in-chief.

A coalition of Armenian community organizations spearheaded by the
Organizations of Istanbul Armenians gathered at the Western Diocese of
the Armenian Church to launch the Foundation. They are in the process
of collecting donations to fund it. Those interested in contributing
to the Hrant Dink Foundation can call 818-641-1059 or visit the
Foundation’s web site at: .

"We feel it is our duty to continue the struggle of Hrant Dink, who
died fighting for the right of free speech," said Hovsep Tokat, Chair
of the Committee establishing the Foundation. "His only crime was that
he was an Armenian living in Turkey . The response of hundreds of
thousands of people throughout the world is a testament to the support
of his ideals," he said.

Dink was a champion of the right of free speech. He was a fearless
leader and proponent of free expression and democracy. This stand was
particularly difficult for the native of Turkey , due to Turkey ‘s
policy of suppressing and punishing those who engage in free speech
with ideas contrary to government opinion. Dink’s dream was to achieve
better understanding between Armenians and Turks. He believed he could
succeed if he could reach the average Turkish citizen. This is why he
chose to stay in Turkey even when he knew that his life was in danger.

In 2005, Dink was prosecuted in Turkey for violating article 301 of
Turkey ‘s penal code, which states that open reference to the Armenian
Genocide equals "insulting Turkishness" and is punishable as a
crime. While Dink was convicted under this article, he was given a
6-month suspended sentence. In September, 2006, a prosecutor in
Istanbul opened a new case against Dink for the same crime, due to his
statement to a foreign news agency that the mass killings of Armenians
in Turkey was Genocide. His trial was still pending when he was
assassinated in front of his newspaper office on January 19, 2007
. Despite numerous death threats, Turkish authorities did not provide
any protection or investigate the threats.

"Of course I say it was Genocide. With these events, you see the
disappearance of people who lived on these lands for 4,000 years,"
Dink said. Despite the new charges, Dink remained determined, and
vowed to continue to speak the truth regardless of the consequences.

Other Turkish journalists have come under fire by the Turkish
government and have been prosecuted under Article 301, including Orhan
Pamuk. Despite heavy criticism none were convicted. Pamuk went on to
receive the Nobel prize in literature, becoming the first Turk in
history to be so honored.

Turkey denies that the Ottoman regime committed Genocide during World
War I despite voluminous evidence to the contrary.

"In addition to his principled stand on free speech, Dink was an
advocate of educating the Turkish population of its own history," said
Tokat. "He did not blame the general population for denial of the
Genocide, rather he criticized the government for not educating its
citizens about the truth of its past. His progressive thoughts and
opinions are what the foundation hopes to keep alive," he said.

http://www.yevrobatsi.org/st/item.
www.HrantDinkFoundation.com

Kocharian discusses Karabakh settlement with mediators

Interfax News Agency
Russia & CIS General Newswire
January 26, 2007 Friday

Kocharian discusses Karabakh settlement with mediators

Armenian President Robert Kocharian met with the co-chairmen of the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk
Group for the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict from
Russia, France and the United States on Friday in Yerevan, the
presidential press service told Interfax.

The parties discussed the current state of affairs and prospects for
the development of the Karabakh peace process, as well as certain
issues related to the settlement, the press service said.

Earlier, Kocharian stated that talks on the Karabakh settlement will
remained stalled until Armenia holds parliamentary elections in May.
Nevertheless, Yerevan claims that this does not mean the end of
talks.

Rwanda: Genocide Will Be Stopped If Perpetrators Are Punished

The New Times (Kigali)
Jan 24 2007

Rwanda: Genocide Will Be Stopped If Perpetrators Are Punished – Wallis

INTERVIEW

Gaaki Kigambo & George Kagame
Kigali

Andrew Wallis is the author of Silent Accomplice, The Untold Story of
The Role of France in the Rwandan Genocide, a new book detailed in
research and unwavering in pointing out the role of the French in the
Rwandan Genocide.

He was recently in Rwanda to continue his research into the truth
behind why the French were here and what their aims and objectives
were and how these aims impacted on the Rwandan people. The New Times
GAAKI KIGAMBO and GEORGE KAGAME caught up with him for an interview.
Below are the excerpts.

TNT: Your book has been published 12 years after the genocide and
behind so many others books about Rwanda. Don’t you think it’s a
little bit too late?

AW: You would hope that after 12 years lessons have been learned by
some of the western powers but as the current events in Darfur prove
genocide is still very much a reality and looking at the French
involvement in other Francophone countries and their heavy support
for dictators with appalling human rights records France seems to
have learnt very little. In fact it still denies heavily its
responsibility of what happened in Rwanda where some nations like
Belgium have made attempts to apologise. It’s still shocking 12 years
they are yet to admit in any way at all what actually they were doing
here and how their policies implicated in allowing the genocide to
happen.

TNT: Silent Accomplice has been launched in London and is scheduled
to be launched in the US this week. How has it been received?

AW: There has been shock from those who reviewed the book and people
have read articles in some of the newspapers I’ve written for. People
who knew very little about the genocide and certainly have no
suspicion at all that one of the five permanent members of the
Security Council could have been heavily involved in arming and
training those responsible for it. So the reaction has been really
absolute shock and almost all editors have taken the view that France
should not be allowed to get away with it and France has serious
questions it needs to ask itself and to come back and attempt in any
way possible to make amends.

TNT: Your book is detailed in research about the role of France in
the genocide unwavering in accusing France of aiding and abetting the
genocide. What has been the French response ever since the book came
out?

AW: There’s certainly been unofficial response; their ambassador in
London was very unhappy about the book and the articles in the
newspapers which proceeded it. However, I’m well aware that this book
is in no way meant to be anti-French. I have great regard for the
French nation but its politicians have for 40-50 years trampled
roughshod over the rights of African nations they say they are
serving. I have French friends who are working as hard as I am to
uncover the truth about what their politicians got up to in 1990-94.
Many of those politicians now incidentally are serving time in prison
or have been implicated in various corruption scandals in France
itself.

TNT: The French government passed a law which would penalise anyone
who failed to recognise the 1915 Armenian massacre in Turkey. It has
also acknowledged its folly in deporting Jews to their death back in
the 1950s. Why is it so silent on Rwanda even every voice out of
Rwanda implicates it?

AW: Genocide is a political crime and if it in any way admits its
responsibility here it would damage the French standing in other
African nations and it’s after all Africa that’s still France feels
makes it a great nation today. So to admit the reality of what
happened in Rwanda would impact on several other francophone
countries. It makes it easy to apologise for its role in deporting
over 100,000 Jews in the Second World War because that was 60 years
ago and most people involved are almost dead. It is also easy to talk
about the Armenian crisis but again that is a political issue and
should be seen in light of France’s bad relations with the Turkish
government and it’s using that particular issue to knock the Turkish
government out [of the EU]. It’s quite another thing to actually
admit something in such recent memory where most of the politicians
involved, apart from Mitterrand himself, are still alive. And for
them to admit that they had a hand in helping to train and arm a
genocide regime is not even something they want to lay in their
consciences. So it is easier to deny it at whatever cost to Rwanda
and its people…

I think after some of the leading players are no longer here it will
be much easier for a French President in 2050 or 2060 to admit the
reality of Rwanda in 1994. But I think while there are so many
strident players in the French military and politicians who are so
stridently anti the present government in Rwanda, it will be
impossible to admit their faults.

TNT: The French-Rwanda relations have soured in the recent months.
None of the western countries has said anything leaving Rwanda to
battle France in a scenario reminiscent of the biblical David and
Goliath epic. Is this another sense of betrayal and abandonment?

AW: In the West, I think that unfortunately Africa is a bit of a lost
continent. Certainly in the UK today Africa is little known about.
When people do find out about it, when it turns up in the news,
people show interest. But it is important that the West puts up its
hands and takes responsibility this is after all the 21st Century we
talk about globalisation and we talk about the world being a smaller
village with telecommunications and satellites maybe that now should
go into politics as well. The West should take the initiative on
this.

TNT: According to your book that the International Criminal Tribunal
for Rwanda (ICTR) operations need viewing. It has handled a few cases
since its inception and some of its judgments leave a lot to be
desired. It has become a source of minting huge sums of money. Are
you suggesting the UN is just trying to be seen to be delivering
justice when actually it has moved on to more serious matters?

AW: Unfortunately, the ICTR is just another institution and like all
institutions it rarely quite manages to hold up to the ideal that it
should be holding up to. It must first of all bring justice to those
who suffered appallingly in 1994. The fact that in many cases
justice, as people would say, has failed. For example, in the very
recent case of Fr Seromba who was convicted of knocking his church on
top of his congregation and killing several thousand people, and he
received a meagre 15 years in prison. There has to be a degree of
thought that the court is bowing to political pressure from outside
countries. In some of the sentencing, sentencing guidelines don’t
seem to count for anything; sometimes people [are] getting life other
times getting 10 years for the same crime. So the problem is politics
coming before justice that cannot always make a right outcome.

TNT: Rwanda is in advanced stages of scrapping the death penalty.
Wouldn’t it be right for some of the cases in Arusha to be
transferred here since the death penalty has been cited as a
hindrance?

AW: The court’s ends it mandate in 2008 so certainly some cases will
now comeback to Rwanda. That’s good; they should face justice in the
country before the countrymen and women where they perpetrated their
alleged crimes. For example, last month four alleged genocide
suspects were arrested in London and the chances are now because of
the removal of the death penalty they will come to stand trial in
Rwanda, which is good for everyone. The Rwandan people can see
justice before their own eyes. Most Rwandans do not know what happens
at the court in Arusha. They’ve never been there. They hear news
reports. In a way justice is denied if you cannot see it happening.

TNT: What is the inspiration of your book?

AW: I was in Rwanda in 1991 just as a tourist going to see the
gorillas and I got fascinated by the country then and indeed fell in
love with the country and its people. Later I went on to do a masters
degree [and] the subject of Rwanda and France relations [came up] and
I think the more I learned about what had happened the more shocked I
was and even more shocked by the fact that there was nothing written
in English about this matter and there was almost complete ignorance
about this matter of injustice. So to me it is a matter of justice
that it is on record what happened. And I think there’s alot more
information still to come out on this matter both in France and
people who witnessed what happened in this country. So it’s an
ongoing project. Genocide can only be stopped if the perpetrators
cannot get away with it anymore. It is very necessary for western
countries to understand that to arm and train people far away still
implicates them. The fact they cannot see the killing doesn’t make
their implication what happened any less.