Conflict Settlement and State Building

CONFLICT SETTLEMENT AND STATE BUILDING

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR)
10 March 05

On March 5 the political party â~@~Movement 88â~@~] conducted
a round-table meeting at the City Hall of Stepanakert on the topic
â~@~Settlement of Karabakh Conflict and State Building: Problems
and Relationsâ~@~]. At the meeting the political forces of Karabakh,
representatives of the authorities and experts were present. By this
kind of undertaking â~@~Movement 88â~@~] aimed to promote the
political settlement of the Karabakh issue and effective participation
of the public in the solution of urgent problems of state building in
Artsakh. The leader of the political party â~@~Movement 88â~@~]
Edward Aghabekian mentioned that the public has the right to take
part in the discussion and solution of problems of people living
in the country, and on the political stage of Karabakh there is an
urgent need for such discussions. Commending these discussions in
the political life of Armenia, the vice chairman of â~@~Movement
88â~@~] Gegham Baghdassarian gave some information on the first
round-table meeting held in Yerevan in the month of February to
which experts from Karabakh were invited too; at the meeting it was
arranged to organize a round-table meeting of the political forces
of Armenia and Karabakh in Stepanakert. Touching upon the current
problems discussed at the meeting Gegham Baghdassarian pointed out
the importance of the problem of devising an operating model of
interrelations in the Diaspora. According to him, the Diaspora pays
serious attention to the policy of the genocide only, whereas it would
be preferable if the Diaspora was interested in the problem of Karabakh
as seriously. According to Member of Parliament Maxim Mirzoyan,
Karabakh adopted two historical documents: the document on unification
with Armenian in February 1988 and the Declaration of Independence in
September 1991. According to him, the adoption of those two documents
was from the legal aspect correct and pertinent. â~@~The problem
is that we ourselves must recognize our independence and only then
the Diaspora. It was our lot to build an independent state with all
its attributes,â~@~] said the member of the National Assembly. The
chairman of the NA committee of foreign relations Vahram Atanessian
commented on the topic of the meeting in reference to Karabakh having
been left out of the negotiation process. Giving facts on the typical
features of the stages of settlement of the Karabakh conflict, Vahram
Atanessian emphasized that the principles of Paris meetings between
Kocharian and Aliev have been circulated since 2001, whereas the
public is not acquainted with the details of the meeting of the two
presidents. â~@~We must find out what status the Armenian diplomacy
considers as preferable for Karabakh, and whether the option acceptable
for Armenia is acceptable for Karabakh as well,â~@~] said the head
of the committee of foreign relations. According to the co-chairman
of the political party â~@~Azat Hayrenikâ~@~] Artur Tovmassian,
presently Baku is much more interested in the construction of the oil
pipeline Baku â~@~S Geihan than in the settlement of the Karabakh
conflict. Aliev Junior is convinced that foreign investors will
invest money only in stable regions, in other words, the resumption
of military actions in Karabakh by Azerbaijan is excluded because
economic growth is the problem N 1 in Azerbaijan. Member of Parliament
Vahram Balayan stressed the idea that a country which won the war
does not have the right to beg. â~@~From the very beginning we
had assumed a yielding position, whereas Azerbaijan demands,â~@~]
he mentioned adding that the international community had from the
very beginning given a chance to Karabakh to do its first steps in
diplomacy. The proof to this is the signature of the Karabakh party on
the document of armistice. As the leader of the National Democratic
Party Murad Petrossian characterized it, national interests underlie
the settlement of the Karabakh conflict. Naturally, it should be
found out what interests the super powers pursue. The co-chairman of
the political party â~@~Azat Hayrenikâ~@~] Rudik Hiusnunts thinks,
it is necessary for the political forces to unite and have a common
standpoint. â~@~The problem of Karabakh is the problem of all the
Armenians but it must be solved in Karabakh. This means that there is
need for continuity of similar meetings of political forces,â~@~]
said R. Hiusnunts. The meeting was concluded by the assertion that
similar meetings should be organized more frequently.

NVARD OHANJANIAN. 10-03-2005 [spacer.gif] [spacer.gif]

–Boundary_(ID_jkCYZrTPPceYQUGGF018JQ)–

Armenian minister denies plan to sign deal with Azerbaijan

Armenian minister denies plan to sign deal with Azerbaijan

Mediamax news agency
9 Mar 05

Yerevan, 9 March: Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan has
described as “absolutely false” the statement that in the near future
Armenia and Azerbaijan will sign an agreement on the settlement of
the Nagornyy Karabakh problem.

Vardan Oskanyan said in Yerevan today that there is no concrete
agreement yet regarding the meeting between the Armenian and
Azerbaijani presidents, Mediamax reports. As to a dialogue at the
level of the two countries’ foreign ministers, Oskanyan said that the
date of a regular meeting will be specified over the next several days.

A regular round of talks between the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign
ministers was supposed to take place in Prague on 2 March, however
because of the Armenian foreign minister’s illness, it was not held.
Oskanyan had a pneumonia.

The Armenian foreign minister expressed his disagreement today
with the statements that the Armenian side “suffers defeats in the
settlement process”. Vardan Oskanyan pointed out that the issue of
self-determination of the Nagornyy Karabakh people continues to be
most important for Yerevan. However, the minister said, “there is also
the territorial component, since the territory on which the people of
Nagornyy Karabakh achieved their self-determination has never been
a part of independent Azerbaijan.” According to Vardan Oskanyan, “a
hybrid of these two approaches strengthens our negotiating position.”

The Armenian foreign minister said that the Armenian and Nagornyy
Karabakh authorities have no disagreement over the settlement issue.
“Although, representatives of Stepanakert [Xankandi] do not take part
in the talks directly, they are well informed about their content,”
Oskanyan said.

Venice Commission discusses Armenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia

Venice Commission discusses Armenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia,
Italy and Serbia

Strasbourg, 9 March 2005 – The constitutional situation in Bosnia and
Herzegovina and the powers of the High Representative, judicial
reform in Georgia and the status of South Ossetia, media freedom in
Italy – these are among the items on the agenda of the plenary
session of the Council of Europe’s Venice Commission which will take
place on 11 and 12 March in Venice, in the Scuola Grande di San
Giovanni Evangelista.

The efficiency and rationality of current constitutional arrangements
in Bosnia and Herzegovina, resulting from the Dayton Peace Agreement,
are the subject of a comprehensive document to be adopted by the
Commission. This opinion will outline major changes required if the
country wants to make further progress, and examine whether the
present practice of decisions by the High Representative is
compatible with European standards. A further opinion on Bosnia and
Herzegovina concerns the responsibility of the United Nations for the
dismissal of former police officers.

The Deputy Minister of Justice of Georgia, Mr Konstantin
Vardzelashvili, will inform the Commission on further developments on
the status of South Ossetia, following the recent visit of the
Commission to Georgia. In addition, the Commission will adopt its
opinion on the latest draft constitutional amendments relating to the
reform of the judiciary in Georgia.

The laws on the conflict of interest and on principles governing the
broadcasting system of Italy and the draft law on religious
organisations of Serbia are also on the agenda of the 62nd plenary of
the Venice Commission. It will also express its opinion on the law on
public meetings and on draft amendments to the electoral code of
Armenia.

All adopted opinions will be available on the website of the Venice
Commission shortly after the session:

Press contacts:
Ms Tatyana Mychelova, External Relations Officer, Venice Commission:

in Strasbourg (until 10 March 2005, 12:00) : + 33 388 41 38 68 / +33
67672 0402
in Venice (11-12 March 2005) +39 340 15 77 931

1

1

Press Release
Council of Europe Press Division
Ref: 115a05
Tel: +33 (0)3 88 41 25 60
Fax:+33 (0)3 88 41 39 11
[email protected]
internet:

To receive our press releases by e-mail, contact :
[email protected]

A political organisation set up in 1949, the Council of Europe works
to promote democracy and human rights continent-wide. It also
develops common responses to social, cultural and legal challenges in
its 46 member states.

www.venice.coe.int
www.coe.int/press

History of Government Provocations in Russia

History of Government Provocations in Russia
By Antero Leitzinger

Global Politician
3/10/2005

The use of provocations as casus belli or as legitimisation of
violence, pogroms and propaganda against ethnic and religious groups,
and disinformation in order to lead the media astray both at home
and abroad are not new phenomena in the political arena. They have a
long tradition especially in Russia, from the anti-Semitic propaganda
that once spread all over Europe to the present-day disinformation
concerning the Chechens. The extraordinarily strong position of the
secret police in Russian political culture can partly explain this
gloomy side of Moscow’s policies. This article enlightens the use of
these methods against Jews and Muslims throughout history.

Western political scholarship has been credulous of ostensibly
democratising societies, such as Russia. In reality, a political
culture does not change in a moment, and cannot easily be released
from old habits and customs. Russia is still governed by the secret
police, although its leader now uses the more democratic titles of
prime minister and, since the New Year, acting president. Also among
the other presidential candidates former KGB officials are strongly
represented. Does this signal a return to totalitarianism?

Russia has governed her people through provocations, pogroms against
minorities, and interventions against neighbours. All these methods
have been used to gain hegemony over the Chechens since the 1860s, when
the conquest of Caucasia was “completed”. The strategy has been based
on the “divide and conquer” method, used already by the ancient Romans,
but every now and then the method has been completed with direct
military aggressions (1939-40, 1994-96, 1999-) and with genocide.

History of Provocations in Russia

The goal of provocations is to infiltrate political oppositions, to
reconstruct their image as criminals, and to agitate common hysteria.
As early as 200 years ago, Joseph Fouché, the police chief of the
French Emperor Napoleon I, had become acquainted with the practical
skills of politics: “A real police chief must always have at least
two or three conspiracies in his suitcase.” The use of provocations
spread in the 1820s to other parts of Europe, too, as an effective
weapon against revolutionary movements. The Prussian espionage chief
Wilhelm Stieber imported this ‘knowledge’ also to Russia, where a
strong attraction to conspiracy theories has prevailed ever since.
(Deacon 1972, 67-68.)

“In May 1862 a series of devastating fires broke out in St.
Petersburg. Their origin remains obscure, but they were widely
attributed to Nihilist students. The Nihilists for their part blamed
the fires on police ‘provocation’ – a word which becomes increasingly
common from now onwards to describe acts undertaken or instigated
by the police in order to discredit and trap revolutionaries. That
the fires were started by the police was maintained on the pages of
Herzen’s Bell. Whoever did or did not ignite the tinder, the result
was a wave of revulsion against the Nihilists, which made it easier
for the government to impose repressive measures… against freedom
of speech.” (Hingley 1990, 51-52)

The provocations reached their climax in the late czarist period,
when the Bolsheviks were especially subject to the plots of the
secret police, Ohrana – yet the Bolsheviks also took the lesson of
the use of provocations. “Chekists very quickly learned to keep one
step ahead of their quarry by resorting to the tactic of provocation,
which indeed became standard Cheka practice, and a most effective
one… In this, as in other techniques, the Vecheka modelled itself
on the Okhrana, which had penetrated some of the main revolutionary
parties – and especially the Bolsheviks – so competently through its
agents provocateurs.” (Leggett 1981, 302)

Also in Finland, the Investigating Central Criminal Police (“Etsivä
Keskusrikospoliisi”, EK) was in trouble in the 1920s, when the Cheka
infiltrated agents across the border among refugees, pretending to
be supporters of czarist rule. In 1921-1927 a feigned conspiracy
called the “Trust” managed to damage the reputation of the emigrants
permanently. (Leggett, 1981, 297.) The later president of Finland
Urho Kekkonen, who was in the service of the EK at the time, planned
to make the use of provocateurs the subject of his doctorate thesis.
(Simola & Salovaara 1994, 55.)

History of Pogroms in Russia

Besides political parties, whole groups of people were branded
by using provocations. In the 1800s, the most opportune ones for
such branding were the Jews. People were commonly led to imagine
that the Jews were planning a world revolution, and to prove this
claim, the Ohrana falsified a document called “Protocols of the
Elders of Zion”. This provocation is still inspiring anti-Semitic
organisations around the world. (It must be remembered that in the
1800s the propaganda against the Jews, albeit it would sound absurd
today, was taken seriously by large share of the population, in the
same way that the anti-Muslim propaganda has spread today.) “A more
serious by-product… was the outbreak, in spring 1881, of anti-Jewish
pogroms, largely in the Ukraine. For these the Imperial authorities,
including local police organisations, were partly to blame – if not
for directly instigating such outrages, at least for conniving at
them. … Pogroms recurred over several years, but the nation as
a whole seemed… relapsing into political apathy…” (Hingley,
1990, 70.)

In Odessa, in October 1905, hundreds of Jews were massacred in a pogrom
provoked by the Ohrana. This incident has been studied thoroughly by
Robert Weinbert (Weinbert 1902, 248-289). In February of the same
year, the same methods were used in Baku, in order to provoke the
Muslims and the Armenians against each other. (Deutscher 1967, 68.)

After the World War II, mainly the Americans have ensured that
anti-Semitism does not reach the stage of fomenting pogroms. Russian
economic dependency on United States support has effected a shift in
the Jews’ position as favourite target of hate-agitating allowing them
to be replaced by the Caucasians, whom the Russians contemptuously call
“the Blacks”, and whom they accuse of all kinds of criminality.

Mysterious Bomb Explosions

According to Russian research, the ‘mafia’ reputation of the Caucasians
is heavily exaggerated. In August 1995, the Caucasians were responsible
for only 4,4 per cent of Moscow’s total crime – in which number the
share of the Chechens was only 0,18 per cent. (Moskovskiy Komsomolets,
13th August 1996.) It may tell something about the situation, that
one year earlier the Caucasian share of persons formally accused of
crimes in Moscow was, however, as high as 20,6 per cent. (Argumenty
i fakty, 10th August 1995.) At the same time, investigation, solving,
bringing the guilty to court, and conviction for crimes committed by
ethnic Russians is relatively rare.

The Russian literature has constructed an image of savage and cruel
Chechens already since the 1800s. The image was reinforced when Stalin
deported the whole nation from its homeland, falsely claiming them
to be loyal to the Germans, although the war had not even reached
as far as Chechnya. A new slander campaign began after the fall
of the Soviet Union. The targets were two prominent Chechens, yet
politically totally opposed to each other, who had both in their own
ways developed a hatred of Boris Yeltsin’s regime: Dzohar Dudayev,
who had declared his country independent in autumn 1991, and Ruslan
Hasbulatov, who led a rebellion in Moscow one year later. Both their
reputations could be damaged by fomenting fear and hatred against
the Chechens both in Russia and abroad. The bloody invasion and
humiliation of the Russian army, as the Chechen guerrillas liberated
their capital in August 1996 – soon after Yeltsin’s inauguration –
left a desire for revenge to smoulder.

Last September, bombs exploded in a shopping centre and in apartment
blocks in Moscow. The culprits were never found, but it was not long
before everyone “knew” that they were Chechens. The militia arrested
tens of thousands of people, judged on the grounds of being “dark”
by looks, and when the arrested proved to be largely Caucasians,
the arrests were used as further “evidence” of the “natural” criminal
tendencies of Chechens.

As early as in the summer of 1998, the Muscovian researcher Andrei
Piontkovsky had been able to predict, that the next Chechen war would
follow a number of explosions in Moscow. (Suomen Kuvalehti 48/ 3rd
December 1999, p. 12.) In July 1999, Moskovskaya Pravda published
a secret plan (operation ‘Storm in Moscow’), which predicted bombs
preceding the Duma election. (Novaya Gazeta, 20th November 1999.)

Besides their prophetic function, the Moscow bombs seemed to have
imitators. In the city of Ryazan, on 23rd September, three sugar
sacks containing hidden explosives and a timer were discovered in
an apartment block. At first the FSB (Russian secret service, former
KGB) announced that the incident was undoubtedly connected with the
earlier bomb blasts. (Fakty i kommentarii 24th September 1999.) Then
it was discovered that the bomb had been installed by agents of the
FSB! At the same time it was remarked that in the sacks there was
too much sugar for the bombs to have exploded in full intensity.
(Kommersant, 24th September 1999.) Finally the FSB admitted that
it had installed the bomb for practice purposes, in order to test
the alertness of the inhabitants. The local authorities, however,
wondered why there was a bomb at all in the sack, and why nobody had
been informed of any such so-called ‘practice’. (Nezavisimaya Gazeta,
25th September and 12th October 1999.)

The whole thing remained an enigma, whether the wave of terror in
September ended with the embarrassing “bomb simulation” of Ryazan,
or with the war in Chechnya, which Russia was suddenly perfectly
prepared to start and maintain. The Russian press gave in to the
power of war fanaticism, and it was mainly foreigners who wondered
who and what the actual motives of the terrorists were. The only
one benefiting from the bomb incidents was the chief of the FSB,
the newly appointed Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, whose popularity
as Yeltsin’s successor was established from scratch. Through Putin,
also the new party that had been founded to back the regime (‘Unity
Block’, or Medved, ‘the Bear’), benefited, and won the Duma election.
The traces of the bomb explosions in Moscow were patched up so quickly
that any more serious investigating could not take place.

But even conspiracy theories are not necessary to explain the
mysterious bomb blasts of autumn 1999. Since 1995, there have been
over 40 bomb blasts in apartment blocks in Russia, none of which has
been followed by a successful investigation. (Der Spiegel 37/1999, p.
197.) If the apparent ‘series’ of bomb blasts is just a coincidence,
the FSB has practised rather disinformation than provocation.

Disinformation in Russia

Disinformation is a form of propaganda, which the KGB had mastered par
excellence. It involves the spreading of false information, and leading
the media astray. At its most accomplished level, the disinformation
is indirect and aims at diverting the discussion in an unnoticed way
rather than crude lying. For example, the information centre founded
by Russia (RosInformTsentr) began its tour in Helsinki on 21st October
by spreading various papers, whose purpose was offering journalists
suitable subjects to write about. One such paper was a list of bomb
blasts that had taken place in Moscow underground stations. Yet there
was not a single attempt at establishing some sort of connection
with Chechens. The first incident dates back to the 1970s, when,
among others, an Armenian dissident Stepan Zatikyan was executed on
terrorist grounds, although he had an alibi and lacked a motive. At
the time, both Andrei Sakharov and Amnesty International appealed
for Zatikyan. When the KGB was formally abolished, the case proved
an excellent means of demonstrating the arbitrariness of KGB terror,
and got publicity. According to the present FSB, however, the KGB
never acted incorrectly, and the innocent victims of that judicial
murder were proved guilty, “dangerous recidivists”.

Another paper consisted of a vague and chaotic overview of Islamic
extremist movements, but the paper aimed at exposing their heinous
plans for the destruction of not only Russia, but also Europe.
According to this disinformation, the Islamist goals include, among
others, a) “to make Islam the second state church in France”, and b)
“to lobby laws favouring Moslems in the West German parliament”.
These are quite lofty goals, concerning the absence of any state
church in France, and a West German parliament has ceased to exist
ten years ago!

A third paper constituted a document of the Russian “Ministry
for the Federation and Nationalities of the Russian Federation”,
which, in its history of Chechnya, totally ignored the last war, and
skipped the years between 1991 and 1997. Meanwhile, the population of
Chechnya, it seemed had collapsed “due to the prevailing criminality
and emigration”. The majority of Chechens is said to have “absolutely
supported the war that will promote the social and spiritual revival
of the Chechen people”.

Finally, a fourth paper attempted to connect Islamism, terrorism, and
Chechnya with one another. Naturally it referred to Osama bin Laden,
who is claimed to have been sighted, alone during the past year,
everywhere on the globe from Kosovo all the way to Cambodia. It seems
the goal is to make the Western public believe that bin Laden travels
freely from Afghanistan to any spot around the world he chooses in
order to plant bombs for the destruction of the French state church
and West Germany, and that the Russian army is undertaking a crusade
for the European civilisation in Chechnya!

Naturally the disinformation campaign of Russia actively neglects all
questions about the relationship of the KGB with the terrorism in the
1970s, and the radical Islamism of 1980s. It mentions nothing about
the support that the representatives of Iraq and Iran declare for
the Russian war campaign in Chechnya, nor about the warm relations
between Russia/Turkmenistan and the Taliban. It does not tell,
why Osama bin Laden is known for his attacks against American, not
Russian, targets. For the support of their disinformation campaign,
the Russians have presented violence videos, which are claimed to
present the cruelty of Chechen kidnappers against their hostages. It
remains totally unclear, where and when the videos have been recorded,
by whom, and for what possible purpose. Why would Chechens have wanted
to frighten representatives of international help organisations and
foreign reporters out of their territory after the last war? Why
was the city of Urus-Martan, where the inhabitants are known to have
been relatively loyal to Russia, the base of the groups running the
hostage taking business? Why did Yeltsin release the Urus-Martanian
politician Bislan Gantamirov from a prison in November: Gantamirov,
who was convicted in Moscow for embezzlement, but who promised to
serve Russia – after having rebelled against Dudayev more than five
years ago?

It may be that the FSB is only guilty of mere disinformation,
exploiting suitable “evidence” or misunderstandings. However, it is
equally possible that the FSB, like its predecessor the KGB, has also
created “evidence” wherever necessary. The activity, then, is better
understood as provocation, where some human lives are sacrificed
for advocating some ‘greater purpose’ – isolation of the Chechens,
and Russian victory. Would that be too shocking to be credible?

At any rate, the September bomb blasts of Moscow, and the video tapes
on so-called Chechen cruelties that have been produced during these
few years, fulfilled their purpose as a most successful provocation.
Nobody asks how safe life in loyal Dagestan or elsewhere in the
Caucasus is, although some released hostages did remark that their
kidnappers were not at all (only) Chechens.

Truths and Tales on the Chechnya War

According to a Russian general, a body of a Finnish “mercenary”
was also found in the battlefields of Chechnya. When this claim was
investigated, it was rejected. What are we to understand by the almost
legendary “battalion of Baltic female ski snipers” (also known as
‘White Tights’ by the sarcastic journalists who find the same peace of
disinformation popping up again every now and then), who, according
to the same sources, are making their adventures among the foreign
“mercenaries” of the Caucasian side? However, the soldiers of the
Russian army cannot be thought of as mercenaries, as they are not
paid any salary?

The bad tangle of lies has yet again achieved such a scale that the
Western public has difficulty believing what it sees and what it hears
where Russian representatives’ claims are concerned. The army is not
going to attack Chechnya, we are told – but it attacks. The army is not
going to seize Dzoxar-Kala (former Grozny), we are told – and yet it
rushes directly into ambuscade. Hundreds of corpses lie on the ground,
but ‘nobody is killed’. There are no refugees – there are just people
displaced from one place in Russia to another. Chechnya is a part
of Russia, and the Chechens are ‘equal’ citizens of Russia, but they
can still be enclosed in “filtration camps”, and they can be bombed.

Somehow Western reporters, researchers, and politicians still find
it difficult to believe the “conspiracy theories”, when the theories
hint that the FSB is capable of what its predecessor, the KGB, by
the very same officials, was certainly capable of. In spite of that,
Russia seems to believe that it is the rest of the world that is in
a conspiracy against Russia, and that the international news agencies
are working for this Jewish-bourgeois-Islamist conspiracy, when they
find official Russian information suspicious.

Unfortunately history teaches that in Russia, things are often
precisely as bad as they are feared to be. This is not only due
to Russians, and due to the lack of democratic traditions, but due
to problems of the same nature as those that are encounterable in
Western attitudes at Germany in the 1930s. The outside world did not
‘believe’ – and neither did the Germans themselves at the time –
before it was too late for millions of people.

“Protocols of the Elders of Zion”

A lesson on disinformation is offered by the Neue Zürcher Zeitung
issue of 17th December 1999 in an article that recounts the history
of the notorious “Protocols of the Elders of Zion”. The sensation of
last century shift, anti-Semitic conspiracy theories inspired by the
“Protocols”, has many similar features with the anti-Muslim images
and myths challenging objectivity in the present media.

The “Protocols of the Elders of Zion” was based on an 1864 text by a
Frenchman named Maurice Joly, attacked the Emperor Napoleon III. In
the Russian version “Napoleon” has been replaced with “the Jews”. Who
had a Russian version made of the book, and why? Can it be proved
that Joly did not, on the contrary, modify some genuine, common,
original source? A St. Petersburg researcher Mikhail Lepekhin has
investigated the issue in the Russian archives, and published the
results in November 1999:

In 1899 the ultra-reactionary Ivan Goremykin, who had been fired from
the post of minister of internal affairs, decided together with the
co-ordinator of foreign espionage, Pyotr Rachkovsky, to convince Czar
Nicholas II of their view by writing a “document” that would show that
industrialisation of the country, privatisation of state monopolies,
use of foreign capital loan, relaxation of censorship, and education
of the people, was a “conspiracy of Jews and Freemasons”. Rachkovsky
gave the task to his agent Matvei Golovinsky, stationed in Paris,
as the latter had some experience on literary falsifications.

This was how the “Protocols of the Elders of Zion” came to existence
– at first as a copy, which the confessor priest of the Czar was
meant to bring to the Czar’s attention personally. The Czar family
was well-known for its prejudice, suspiciousness, and fondness of
mysticism. The plan, however, failed, as suddenly a wrong man was
appointed to the confessor priest, and not the theologist publisher
Sergei Nilus (Goremykin and Rachkovsky’s man). Now it became necessary
for the conspirators to spread the idea to a larger publicity, and so
Nilus published the “Protocols” as an appendix to his own book’s second
edition in 1905. The book itself did not attract much attention, but
its appendix became a bestseller that found its way to the library
of the Czar family, too. The “Protocols” outlived both Nilus, who
died in 1912, and the Czar family, whose members died in 1918.

After the revolution Golovinsky became a passionate communist, but he
died as early as in 1920. Alfred Rosenberg had the text translated into
German, and the car industrialist Henry Ford into English. Thereafter,
the “Protocols of the Elders of Zion” served the aims of the German
national socialists and other anti-Semitic conspiracy theorists.

A Hidden Hand of Provocation

The British newspaper ‘The Independent’ recently published an article,
which claimed that it was the Russian military intelligence, the GRU,
together with the FSB, that organised the September bomb blasts. This
claim is not a new one, and it has yet to be backed by some evidence
(this, of course, applies equally to all claims). According to
the author, in the video recorded by a Turkish reporter, other GRU
officers are also mentioned by name, but it seems the newspaper
did not wish to publish them at the time. The incapability of the
Russian authorities to prove any of their own accusation has fomented
suspicions of the possibility of a provocation. Among others the
Duma Representative Konstantin Borovoi believes in the possibility
of provocation. Borovoi stated that he had got similar information
from GRU inside sources. (Monitor, 11th January 2000.)

The credibility of the Russian authorities hardly improved when
Colonel Yakov Firsov objected: “The Russian military is protecting
the people. It is impossible that they would attack against their
own people.” (The Independent, 6th January 2000.) At the same time
Russia rejected the Chechen President Aslan Maskhadov’s offer for
a cease-fire, during which foreign experts could have investigated,
who had used chemical weapons.

The last president of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev, admitted
in an interview, that clarity of the matter of the responsibility for
the bombings had not been achieved. For him, however, it suffices
that some Chechens invaded Dagestan in August. (Der Spiegel 2/
10th Jan. 2000.) In fact also this too has been questioned lately
and has been a subject of debate since. Helen Womack, reporter of
the British newspaper, speaks of a meeting of Putin’s election team,
where Grigory Amnouel boasted that it was Moscow’s disinformation that
had deceitfully convinced Shamil Basayev of invading Dagestan: “They
were made to think that it would be easy, but it was a trap.” (The
Independent, 9th Jan. 2000.)

SOURCES

Deacon, 1972: Richard Deacon: “A History of the Russian Secret
Service”, London 1972.

Deutscher, 1967: Isaac Deutscher: “Stalin”, London 1967.

Hingley, 1990: Ronald Hingley: “The Russian Secret Police”, New
York 1990.

Leggett, 1981: George Leggett: “The Cheka – Lenin’s Political Police”,
Oxford 1981.

Simola & Salovaara, 1994: Matti Simola & Jukka Salovaara:
“Turvallisuuspoliisi 75 vuotta 1919-1994”, Helsinki 1994.

Weinbert, 1902: Robert Weinbert: “Pogroms – Anti-Jewish Violence in
Modern Russian History”, Cambridge 1902.

Antero Leitzinger is a political historian and a researcher for the
Finnish Directorate of Immigration. He wrote several books on Turkey,
the Middle East and the Caucasus.

–Boundary_(ID_YQnBh/5cLm7utVnmQ9NihQ)–

Young people from throughout Diocese turn out for ACYOA

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

March 8, 2005
___________________

ACYOA LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE FOCUSES ON FELLOWSHIP

For each of the past six years, at a modest conference center just north
of New York City, the future of the Armenian Church has been shaped.

Since 1999, dozens of young people from parishes throughout the Diocese
attended the Young Adult Leadership Conference hosted by the Armenian
Church Youth Organization of America (ACYOA). This year 49 young
people, with an average age of 22, attended the conference at the Don
Bosco Retreat Center in Stony Point, NY, from February 18 to 20, 2005.

On the agenda for the conference: Building future leaders for the
Armenian Church.

“There are times, I’ll admit, that my hopes for the future of Armenian
youth in our church is low, but after this weekend, I am reassured,”
said participant Karinne Hovnanian from the Holy Trinity Church of
Cheltenham, PA. “The leadership instilled in this weekend will,
prayerfully, lead our youth back to Christ.”

LAYING THE FOUNDATION

The goal of the ACYOA is to give participants in the Young Adult
Leadership Conference the tools, drive, and determination to be
dedicated and knowledgeable leaders to their Armenian Church
communities. Since it was invigorated, the weekend has led a number of
young people to seek leadership positions in their home parishes.

“The ACYOA has shown itself to be the training ground for our future lay
and ordained leaders and ministers,” said Fr. Daniel Findikyan, the dean
of St. Nersess Seminary who served as chaplain for this year’s
conference and lead an open question-and-answer session for
participants. “These young men and women — so creative, so energetic,
so devoted to Christ and to our church — reminded me once again that
the future of our church and people in America is bright.”

Each year, the ACYOA Central Council asks parishes in the Diocese to
send two representatives to the free conference, the cost of which is
covered by ACYOA. This year, 22 parishes in 14 states sent delegates to
take advantage of the workshops, seminars, worship services, and
fellowship opportunities.

“Every year it never ceases to amaze me how, gathered in Christ’s name,
strangers can form bonds and learn so much from each other in such a
short period of time,” said Karen Khatchadourian, an ACYOA Central
Council member who helped design this year’s program. “I hope
participants maintain the energy from the conference and create similar
opportunities for Christian fellowship in their own ACYOA chapters.”

FOCUS ON FELLOWSHIP

This year the Young Adult Leadership Conference focused on “fellowship”,
with the theme, “A Common Life in Christ.” “Fellowship” is one of the
five “Circles of the Cross,” which represents the platform of the ACYOA.
Previous conferences have focused on the other ideas represented in that
cross: worship, service, education, and witness.

Highlights of the weekend included a session facilitated by St. Nersess
seminarian Daron Bolat entitled, “Church Fellowship: Charting Our
Experience,” during which participants were asked to reflect on and
share their experiences of fellowship in their local parish. Also, a
role-playing session lead by Saro Kalayjian, from the ACYOA Chapter at
the St. Mary Church of Washington, D.C., asked participants to exchange
ideas on ways to foster fellowship in their local parish.

“Every year, this weekend renews my spirit and gives me new ideas to
return to my parish. This year only enlightened me further,” said
Maggie Merdjanian, a participant from the St. Sahag and St. Mesrob
Church of Wynnewood, PA.

Six members of the clergy joined the young adults during the weekend,
with many leading sessions. An interactive Bible study was lead by Fr.
Yeprem Kelegian, pastor of the St. Mesrob Church of Racine, WI, who
focused on themes of love in the New Testament. Another informative
Bible-based presentation was organized by Fr. Vahan Hovhanessian, pastor
of the Holy Martyrs Church of Bayside, NY, who discussed membership,
friendship, partnership, and kinship as the requirements for fellowship,
with examples from Scripture and daily life. Also participating in the
weekend were Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Diocese; Fr.
Aren Jebejian from the St. Gregory the Illuminator Church in Chicago,
IL; and Fr. Untzag Nalbandian of the Church of the Holy Ascension in
Trumbull, CT.

“The weekend provided a comforting environment for us to reflect on our
faith, both within ourselves and among our peers,” said Ani Tovar from
the St. Sarkis Church of Dallas, TX.

Several members of the Diocesan staff also helped lead sessions during
the weekend, which was organized by ACYOA Executive Secretary Nancy
Basmajian. Jason Demerjian, the Diocese’s college ministry facilitator,
led a multi-media workshop on the many dimensions of love: family
affection, friendship, erotic love, and the unconditional love of God.
Yn. Arpi Kouzouian, coordinator of youth outreach ministry, delivered a
thought-provoking PowerPoint presentation, designed especially for young
audiences, dealing with the challenges of morality in the 21st century.

“The weekend made me think about what it really means to be a young
Christian Armenian and how important it is for us to be part of the
church because we are the church,” said participant Sarine Zenian from
the St. Mary Church of Washington, D.C.

The Primate had lunch with the group and later spoke to them, saying he
was pleased and proud to see so many young people.

“I can see the fellowship here in this room as you share your thoughts,
ideas, and even your frustrations as Armenian Christians,” the Primate
told the young participants. “You are here to receive knowledge and
guidance this weekend, but you are also here to give, you are here to
give of yourselves as leaders. Each of you has the gifts you need to be
leaders in your own parishes and in the Diocese. It is in your hands.
Now your turn is coming. In you, I see the quality of leadership. I am
very proud of the youth of our Diocese.”

NEW EFFORTS

During the Young Adult Leadership Conference, members of the ACYOA
Central Council announced two new initiatives for 2005.

The first is a major fundraising effort, which will be launched this
month: a raffle with 500 tickets, each to be sold for $100. The money
will benefit new and existing ACYOA projects. A portion of the proceeds
will benefit relief efforts to help victims of last December’s Asian
tsunami.

The second initiative is called Giving the Bread of Life: ACYOA Fast for
Armenia. The Central Council wants local ACYOA chapters to commemorate
the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide by holding a group fast
from Saturday, April 23, until the Divine Liturgy on April 24.
Additionally, ACYOA members on the East Coast were encouraged to come to
New York City on April 24 and participate in the large joint
commemoration of the anniversary.

The ACYOA Central Council includes Chair Jennifer Morris (St. John
Church of Southfield, MI); Vice Chair Dn. Diran Jebejian (St. Leon
Church of Fair Lawn, NJ); Treasurer Rita Akaraz (St. John Church in
Southfield, MI); Secretary Tammy Bagdigian (Church of the Holy
Resurrection in New Britain, CT); Public Relations Coordinator Maria
Derderian (Sts. Sahag and Mesrob Church of Wynnewood, PA); Programming
Coordinator Karen Khatchadourian (St. Thomas Church of Tenafly, NJ); and
Chapter Relations Coordinator Christopher Tashjian (Holy Trinity Church
of Cambridge, MA).

“I fondly remember attending the first National Young Adult Leadership
Conference six years ago as a participant,” ACYOA Chair Morris said. “I
came away from that conference with a yearning to strengthen my faith as
an Armenian Christian and to create Christ-centered programming within
my own parish. That first conference, and others since, laid the
foundation for me and many other young adults throughout the Eastern
Diocese, who have become successful leaders within in their own
communities.”

— 3/8/05

E-mail photos available on request. Photos also viewable in the News
and Events section of the Eastern Diocese’s website,

PHOTO CAPTION (1): Fr. Yeprem Kelegian, pastor of the St. Mesrob Church
of Racine, WI, addresses the attendees of the 2005 ACYOA National Young
Adult Leadership Conference.

PHOTO CAPTION (2): Fr. Aren Jebejian from the St. Gregory the
Illuminator Church in Chicago, IL, speaks with a small workgroup during
the 2005 ACYOA National Young Adult Leadership Conference, held from
February 18 to 20, 2005.

PHOTO CAPTION (3): Members of the ACYOA Central Council join some of
the participants of the 2005 ACYOA National Young Adult Leadership
Conference, organized each year by the ACYOA to promote leadership in
the next generation.

# # #

www.armenianchurch.org
www.armenianchurch.org.

Round Table “Settlement Of Karabakh Conlfict and State Construction

ROUND TABLE “SETTLEMENT OF KARABAKH CONLFICT AND STATE
CONSTRUCTION” IN NKR

STEPANAKERT, MARCH 7. ARMINFO. A round table on the topic “Settlement
of
Karabakh problem and state construction” was held in NKR capital of
Stepanakert on the initiative of a newly established party
“Movement-88.”

According to ARMINFO’s special correspondent to Stepanakert,
participating
in the event were political figures of NKR, experts, public
representatives
and journalists. In particular, the diplomatic aspect of Karabakh
conflict’s
settlement was discussed.

NKR MP Maxim Mirzoyan pointed out with regret that independence must
be
built strictly in conformity with the regulations. One should not
speculate
on our victory in the war. He came out for existence of a health
opposition
in the country. One of the promoters of the newly established party
“Free
Motherland” Artur Tovmasyan stated that the parties must not have
disagreements in the key issues of Karabakh conflict’s settlement. He
said
that David Atkinson’s report has an economic hidden motives and
“smells with
oil.”

Chairman of the Parliamentary Foreign Relations Commission Vahram
Atanesyan
came out for openness of discussions on Karabakh problem; in
particular,
Karabakh party must be more informed of the negotiations between the
foreign
political departments of Armenia and Azerbaijan. Representative of
ARFD
Vahram Balayan said that the international community allowed Karabakh
to
development in conformity with international standards and finally
the two
Armenian states must unite. Similar discussions will be organized in
future
as well.

BAKU: Biased report on Canadian website warns against traveling toAz

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
March 7 2005

Biased report on Canadian website warns against traveling to
Azerbaijan

Baku, March 4, AssA-Irada
A biased report about Azerbaijan has been published on Canadian Live
Travel Internet site, warning Canadians against coming to Azerbaijan.
It said that instances of arbitrariness against foreign citizens are
allegedly commonplace in the country.
~SCivilians in police uniform stop foreigners and demand money. One
should not travel to Upper Garabagh, as it is a disputed territory.
Ceasefire on the frontline is violated all the time and the political
situation in Azerbaijan is very complex~T, the report said.
Commenting on the matter, the Foreign Ministry spokesman Matin Mirza
said that the Azerbaijani ambassador to Canada Fahraddin Gurbanov has
received relevant instructions to look into the problem.
A while ago, a similar report was published on Azerbaijan on the
official website of the British Foreign Office.*

Grounded in Richmond

TimesDispatch.com
Tuesday, Mar. 8, 2005

Grounded in Richmond

Coffee-shop owner traveled the world, then landed in West End to build a
business and a family

BY MELANIE MAYHEW

TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER Mar 8, 2005

Owner Jerry Epstein strives for eclecticism and comfort in his shop, Grove
Avenue Coffee and Tea.

MARK GORMUS/TIMES-DISPATCH

He speaks three languages, which he perfected while traveling or living in
37 countries.

And although he’s fluent in Spanish, Russian and his native English, one
language prevails at his coffee shop in the West End: “fluent delicious.”

Jerry Epstein, the owner of Grove Avenue Coffee and Tea, strives for
eclecticism and comfort in his shop and in his life.

Dog-eared children’s books and stacks of magazines chaotically crowd the
windows of his shop, leaving little room for the playfully scrawled, “fluent
delicious spoken here,” a phrase that Epstein penned to indicate that his
food speaks for itself.

A clash of blue, mustard-yellow and maroon paint decorates the shop’s
facade; inside, lime- and clementine-colored stripes race down two walls and
contrast with the purple-blue of the opposing walls. Each blink of the eye
offers a new image, images that deny the possibility that this is a
cookie-cutter corporate coffee shop.

The goal of Grove Avenue Coffee and Tea is to be like “everyone’s living
room on Sunday,” said Epstein, balancing a red-and-green espresso cup in his
hand. The mismatched furniture and a smattering of local art pieces reflect
Epstein’s homegrown, low-key approach.

A bumper sticker on his truck reads, “Friends don’t let friends drink
Starbucks.”

Epstein’s peculiar personality, as his employ PROFILE ees attest, is perhaps
the greatest contribution to the shop’s ambiance.

“Jerry is eccentric,” said Hali Emminger, a 21-year-old Virginia
Commonwealth University student and one of Epstein’s four part-time
employees, “and he’s highly caffeinated. He’s in a lot of places at once,
he’s very perky and is a real people person. He makes getting coffee here a
personal experience.”

The 59-year-old world traveler, a self-described comic, knows most of his
customers by name. When they greet him with, “Hi, how are you?” Epstein
answers, “I wish I was.”

He balances his off-beat humor with a commitment to customer satisfaction, a
goal that began years before he moved from Armenia to the United States in
1997.

Epstein, a native of Denver, worked abroad for several decades after earning
an accounting degree from Austin Peay State University in Clarksville, Tenn.

A series of jobs in production and quality control in the garment industry
took him to 15 countries where he learned about the importance of the
service economy. After several decades in Europe, and with a toddler and
then-wife, he decided to return to America.

The family flew to California and then drove cross-country. North Carolina
and its garment industry was the family’s original destination. Epstein, who
had previously lived in Richmond, decided that the family should settle in
the city because of its cultural and geographical offerings.

“Of all the places I’ve lived, I wanted to be here,” Epstein said. “I wanted
my daughter to grow up in the U.S. and for her to have some of the
experiences I had.”

His now 8-year-old daughter, Emily, is the center of his life. Epstein
begins preparing the shop’s food at 2:30 a.m.; he arrives home about 2 p.m.
to meet his daughter at the bus, a commitment he refuses to break.

Renting the coffee shop, which was then owned by someone else, was a way for
Epstein to secure a place in the Richmond community and take a break from
constant, tiresome travel, he said.

“I had to do something that would tie me here,” he said. “After you’ve
traveled all of your life, you better get your roots and tie yourself down.”

He knew nothing about running a coffee shop, but he knew everything about
coffee.

He had sampled coffee in 37 different countries. The difference was the
service that accompanied the coffee in the United States, he said.

“I always heard that the U.S. had a service economy, but I couldn’t find the
service,” Epstein said.

He wants his customers to get a good value at his shop, Epstein said.

Other coffee shops “give you a vision,” he said. “When you bite into me,
I’ve given you the product.”

Epstein frequently changes his menu, yet keeps a number of items that are
particularly popular. The “Eggspresso” is a blend of two eggs and Parmesan,
provolone, Asiago and Romano cheeses. Epstein steams the eggs and cheese
using the shop’s espresso machine, creating a spongy soufflé that’s in
constant demand, he said.

Customers also fill up on chai tea and lattes.

The quality of these products and the laid-back, spunky atmosphere keep Dana
Lascu coming back to the cozy shop, which features local music on the
weekends.

“It’s really quite a fun place and on the weekends, it’s really quite a
dynamic place,” said Lascu, 45, chairwoman of the University of Richmond
marketing department. She and her husband, who live in the Fan District,
frequently bring their two boys to the shop. “It’s more of what I would
expect to find in the Fan than here.”

After traveling around the world for the past few decades, Epstein has
cultivated an optimistic outlook.

“I’ve seen people come out of mud-floored places, wash their bodies at a
central hose in a village, and then go dancing and smile. In Vietnam, I saw
a girl on a crutch who was hobbling along with a smile on her face,” said
Epstein, who served in the U.S. military during the Vietnam War. “And I’ve
seen people who are colder than hell in some countries offer me a cup of
tea.

“If they can be optimistic, so can I.”

Any ideas? Staff writer Melanie Mayhew can be reached at (804) 649-6495 or
[email protected]

–Boundary_(ID_huAUudzaV7IQag0tK0RDcw)–

Glendale: Attempted-murder charges added to case

Glendale News Press
LATimes.com
March 5 2005

Attempted-murder charges added to case

The grandson of a 94-year-old Glendale woman whose body was found
inside a torched hillside home faces capital-murder charges,
prosecutors said Friday.

Antranik Khajarian, 37, of Glendale was also charged with two counts
of attempted murder of his mother and father, according to a press
release from the Los Angeles district attorney’s office. The murder
count carries a special circumstance of arson, which makes Khajarian
eligible for the death penalty, prosecutors said.

Prosecutors also identified the grandmother as Arpine Demerjian.

Khajarian was scheduled to be arraigned Friday at Glendale Superior
Court, but his plea was postponed, prosecutors said. It has been
rescheduled to March 24 in Burbank Superior Court, prosecutors said.
The defendant on Tuesday allegedly set fire to the home he shared
with his parents and grandparents in the 200 block of Wonderview
Drive, police said. He was found crossing the Mexican border midnight
Tuesday, police said. Khajarian is being held in county jail on no
bail, prosecutors said.

ARF: Considerable Progress in International Recognition of Genocide

CONSIDERABLE PROGRESS IS REACHED IN ISSUE OF INTERNATIONAL RECOGNITION
OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE: ARFD PARTY

YEREVAN, MARCH 4. ARMINFO. Considerable progress is reached during the
last years in the issues of international recognition of Armenian
Genocide in Ottoman Turkey, said Leader of ARFD party Levon Lazarian
at today’s briefing in Armenia’s National Assembly.

“We should not stop on what we have reached and should stir up our
activity in this direction”, Lazarian noted. In his words, the ARFD
has elaborated a draft on “Proclamation of a day of the Sumgaitian
massacres the Day of Commemoration and Deportation of Armenian Peoples
from the Soviet Azerbaijan”.

He stressed that the Armenian party only should represent actively and
consecutively the true essence and the genesis of the Karabakh
conflict in international structures to reach the support of the their
community in this issue. Whereas, Azerbaijan is forced to falsify and
think out facts favorable for itself. Lazarian also said that the
ARFD welcomes the recent statement of the USA Ambassador to Armenia
John Evans and stressed that it is significant, in particular, on the
threshold of the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. -r-