Armenia to benefit from IFAD funds

ARMENIA TO BENEFIT FROM IFAD FUNDS

ArmenPress
Dec 8 2004

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS: Armenia is among 17 developing
countries, which will benefit from nearly $320 million in UN loans
and $6.4 million in grants next year. The International Fund for
Agricultural Development (IFAD), meeting at its headquarters in
Rome, approved the loans and grants for rural development projects
in Algeria, Argentina, Armenia, Bangladesh, Brazil, Burkina Faso,
Ecuador, Ethiopia, Guatemala, Indonesia, Jordan, Lesotho, Nepal,
Sudan, Tanzania, Viet Nam and Zambia.

In the Near East and North Africa region, IFAD will provide $64
million in loans to help rural communities in the Tlemcen mountainous
northern region of Algeria, rural mountain districts in Armenia and
poor households in Kordofan, western Sudan, among other projects.

ANKARA: Neighbors Need Each Other’s Ashes

Neighbors Need Each Other’s Ashes
By ALI H. ASLAN

Zaman, Turkey
Dec 8 2004

Last week, when U.S. -Turkish relations were tense because of the
controversial operation in Fallujah, Turkish Ambassador to Washington
Faruk Logoglu was a guest at a live broadcast on C-Span, one of
the most respected news channels in the United States. During the
program called the “Washington Journal,” where listeners are able to
ask questions on the phone, two people brought Iraq and Fallujah to
the agenda.

While Bush administration were being criticized by the Turkish public
because of Fallujah, these American citizens put the blame on Turkey
for what is happening there. “If Turkey had allowed the U.S. 4th
Infantry Division to enter Iraq through its territory, Fallujah would
not have been the central base for insurgency and terror.”

This was not the first time I heard this argument. It is particularly
widespread in military circles. As a matter of fact, one of those who
called Ambassador Logoglu, was a former member of the 4th Infantry
Division. Logoglu tried to show his American collocutors the full part
of the glass in relations between the two countries, particularly on
Iraq. Just as his American counterparts in Turkey do…

Public diplomacy, which is aimed at explaining official policies to
peoples and creating a positive image about one’s country, is one
of the indispensable elements of international relations. However,
despite efforts by both parties since the Iraq war process, serious
difficulties among others have been experienced in the public diplomacy
aspect of U. S. -Turkish relations. The big difference of opinion on
Fallujah, constitute a dramatic example to that.

In the US public opinion, Fallujah operation is mostly portrayed as a
means of fighting against terror and securing the upcoming elections.
As for Turkey, the matter is often viewed from the angle of human
rights and civilian casualties. The differences of opinion stem mostly
from the manner which the governments and the media reflect the issues
to their publics. “Strategic partners” normally confer with their
public policies as well. The lack of a strategic partnership between
the United States and Turkey, at least on Iraq, is obvious since
reactions against Fallujah have turned into such a diplomatic crisis.

It all started when Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan brought
Fallujah to the agenda, during his phone call to U. S. Vice
President Dick Cheney, to convey his congratulations over the
elections. The stunned White House was further saddened because the
phone conversation was leaked to the Turkish public. The chairman
of the Turkish Parliamentary Human Rights Investigation Commission,
Mehmet Elkatmis of the Justice and Development Party (AKP), likening
what is being done in Fallujah to “genocide,” tested the limits
of patience. Our guys had the “You cannot prevent people from
talking” approach. Americans, on the other hand, viewed the incident
as follows: Parliament is under the control of the ruling party; if
the government wishes, it could shape the discourse. Foreign Minister
Abdullah Gul, perhaps unaware of the scope of the problem, concurred
with Elkatmis’ remarks on his return from an overseas trip. However,
he later put reservations on the expression “genocide.” This was the
right attitude. Don’t we expect the same attitude from the U. S.
administration when the so-called Armenian genocide is brought to
the agenda in the U. S. Congress?

Today, the U. S. has the same nationalist reflexes on Iraq similar
to our sensitivities on Armenian and Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK)
issues. Even those who are aware of their mistakes do not like them to
be pointed out to them by putting a finger in the eye. The politicians
of both countries, in particular, should make their rightful and
democratic criticisms in a manner that would not pave the way for an
international crisis and fuel hatred. Otherwise, mutual indignations
could increase, open deep wounds in public conscience and even the
most successful public diplomacy may not be able heal them.

Besides, excessive emotional outbursts do not serve the purpose
of helping Iraq. They weaken the hands of those, already limited
in number, who defend our views in Washington. They also shake the
Americans’ trust in us more, reduce the chance that they would listen
our advice and thus correct their mistakes.

The significance Turkey gives to regional neighborhood and the empathy
it feels for the sufferings of the Iraqi people deserve appreciation;
however, whether we like it or not, we need good relations with the
United States, our possible neighbor in the foreseeable future. As
expressed in a Turkish saying, “A neighbor needs even the ashes of
a neighbor…”

–Boundary_(ID_4VabWICHUdCa+9fLiR0rQw)–

Explosions strike 2 churches in Mosul

Explosions strike 2 churches in Mosul

International Herald Tribune, France
Dec 8 2004

MOSUL, Iraq — Gunmen bombed two churches in the tense city of Mosul
on Tuesday, stoking fears of ethnic and sectarian unrest ahead of an
election next month.

The insurgent war of attrition against U.S. forces and their Iraqi
supporters claimed another American life in Baghdad, taking the U.S.
combat death toll to 1,000 since last year’s invasion.

At least four Iraqi National Guard soldiers were also killed in two
incidents, one in the capital and another farther south.

No one was killed nor, it appeared, wounded, in the bombings in
Mosul. Smoke billowed from one of the northern city’s Armenian
churches and one of its oldest Chaldean churches was ablaze and a
wall shattered. The attackers were not identified.

In a city of 1.2 million where the two main Sunni Muslim communities,
Arabs and Kurds, are already on edge following a rout of U.S.-trained
police last month by Sunni Arab insurgents, the strikes were the
latest in a series of attacks on Christians.

The small Christian community of about 650,000, or 3 percent of the
population, has suffered from a surge in militant Islam since the
fall of Saddam Hussein’s secular regime. Some people have fled or
closed down traditional businesses, notably selling liquor, which
flourished in Iraq despite a Muslim religious ban.

At least one Christian leader has been quoted recently as saying he
would form an armed militia to protect the community.

“There were two or three families in the church,” a frightened
worshiper from Mosul’s ancient Tahira Chaldean church said after the
attack on the white stone building, parts of which are said to date
from the seventh century. “Gunmen came in, took the guard’s weapon
and a couple of mobile phones. Then they made everybody leave the
church. After that there was an explosion that did a lot of damage,”
said the man, who asked not to be named.

Christians have been attacked several times in the past four months.
Coordinated car bombings, four in Baghdad and one in Mosul, killed at
least 12 people in August; five Baghdad churches were bombed on Oct.
16 at the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. At least eight
people were killed in two church bombings in the capital on Nov. 8,
and a car bomber attacked police guarding the hospital where the
wounded had been taken.

The unidentified American soldier killed on Tuesday was on patrol in
Baghdad when guerrillas opened fire with rifles. Earlier in the day,
the Pentagon had issued a revised combat casualty toll of 999 and
the death thus took the toll since the invasion on March 20 last year
to 1,000. A further 275 U.S. troops have died in accidents or other
incidents not classified as being killed in action.

The American death toll rose sharply last month during the U.S.
assault on Sunni insurgents in the city of Falluja. At least 71
Americans were killed there.

A total of 9,765 U.S. troops have been wounded.

No official figures are available for the numbers of Iraqi dead.
Estimates have ranged from about 14,000 to tens of thousands of
civilians and about 5,000 troops in the war.

Separately, a two-day military court hearing closed Tuesday into the
case of a U.S. soldier charged with murdering an Iraqi man and making
a false statement regarding the incident.

Specialist Brent May, 22, of Salem, Ohio, is charged with the August
murder of an Iraqi civilian in Baghdad’s impoverished Sadr City,
the scene of fierce clashes between American-led coalition forces
and Shiite rebels allied to the firebrand cleric Moktada al-Sadr.

May also faces one charge of falsifying an official statement, or
deposition, regarding the alleged murder.

Azeri Consul General To Kars On Possible Opening Of Armenian-Turkish

AZERI CONSUL GENERAL TO KARS ON POSSIBLE OPENING OF ARMENIAN-TURKISH BORDER

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 7. ARMINFO. There actually are forces in Turkey
that want the Armenian-Turkish border to be opened, says Azeri Consul
General to Kars (Turkey) Gasan Zeynalov.

It was due to these forces that the 2nd congress in Kars discussed the
border opening issue. On the second day one could already feel that
the organizers were pushing the audience towards the discussion. The
topic of the congress was peace in the Caucasus and the region’s
economic development but being the leading state of the region
Azerbaijan was not even mentioned – the whole economic development
of the region was presented as heavily depending on the opening of
the Armenian-Turkish border.

In his report the cochairman of the Turkish-Armenian business council
Kaan Soyak said that Kars is closed for the world and the only way for
the region’s further development is the opening of the Armenian-turkish
border which is the demand of th Armenian lobby and the Armenians in
Georgia and Armenia.

Zeynalov is not very much concerned as “the above plans are made by
NGOs while the Turkish and Azeri states are true brothers.” The recent
visits of Turkish state ministers to Azerbaijan and their statements
on the subject have shown that the border will not be opened until
Ankara’s requirements are fulfilled.

Zeynalov is against the Jan 2005 tour of friendship by a
non-governmental delegation of Kars to Armenia, Georgia, Azerbaijan and
Nakhichevan. Soyak is planning to be in this delegation consisting
mostly of border opening advocates. “Influential international
organizations are settling the Armenian-Azeri conflict. No NGO can
solve it,” says Zeynalov noting that one of the key obstacles to the
border opening is the Armenian Genocide issue and territorial claims
against Turkey.

Oskanian: If UN adopts Azer. resolution Armenia will refuse bilatera

IF THE UN ADOPTS AZERBAIJANI RESOLUTION ARMENIA WILL REFUSE BILATERAL
NEGOTIATIONS ON KARABAKH

ARKA News Agency
Dec 6 2004

YEREVAN, December 6. /ARKA/. If the UN adopts the Azerbaijani
resolution “on the situation on the controlled territories”, Armenia
will refuse bilateral negotiations on Karabakh, as Armenian Foreign
Minister Vardan Oskanian said in his interview to local TV company
Kentron. In his words, in this case Armenia will demand Nagorno
Karbakh’s participation in the negotiating process as a party of the
negotiations, as after adoption of such a resolution the issue will
go beyond the Minsk Group and partially will go to other
international organization, in which Amenia may not have any separate
negotiations. “We really will not continue bilateral negotiations. If
Azerbaijan will agree to Arkadi Ghukasyan’s participation in them,
the process will continue, otherwise Azerbaijan will be responsible
for the consequences”, he stated adding that the Con-Chairs were
warning Azerbaijan that inclusion of the issue in the UN agenda will
break the negotiations. Also Armenia will seriously change its policy
regarding the Karabakh problem. Particularly, in his words, the
problem will be publicly announced as a conflict between Azerbaijan
and Nagorno Karabakh in which Amenia plays a role of guarantor. Also,
Armenia will refer the issue to 1992, it will accent the reason of
the situation and true responsible of militarization of the conflict.
“And finally we will put the issue on self-determination of Karabakh
strongly”, he stressed, adding that Azerbaijan understands all this.
In Oskanian’s opinion, the danger of the adoption of the resolution
by the UN in the circumstance that this organization can consider
this issue as a conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan . At that in
his words, the probability of adoption of this issue exists as the
OSCE Minsk Group member states will refrain from voting and most of
the countries will follow their examples. In this case as he
mentioned, the procedure of the adoption of the decision in the UN
will allow Azerbaijan to pass the resolution having support of 5-10
states. At the same time, Oskanian added that he does not see a
tragedy in it, as the issue discussed in UN concerns the issue of
settlement of the controlled territories and does not solve the issue
of the status of Nagorno Karabakh. T.M. –0–

–Boundary_(ID_OhzEDWv1BQhd8cCKe+FVLQ)–

Anglo-American “democratic imperialism” and .9 billion infant deaths

Media Monitors Network
Dec 5 2004

Anglo-American “democratic imperialism” and 0.9 billion infant deaths
by Gideon Polya

“The British, in addition to their invasive contributions in South
America, Africa, Central Asia, East Asia, South East Asia, the
Pacific and the Middle East, left the South Asian subcontinent
crippled by colonialism and helped impose a further burden of
militarization, economic exclusion, debt and war. The total post-1950
under-5 infant mortality in South Asia has been 281.5 million.”

An aggressive, militaristic, imperial US dominates the new world
order

There is a new world order that is dominated by one superpower, the
US. This US hegemony is backed by its Anglo-Celtic cousins, Australia
and the UK. It is vitally important for the world to consider the
human cost of this régime.

The Anglo-American Coalition commenced war against Iraq in 1991,
conquered Afghanistan in 2001 and finally occupied all of Iraq in
2003. The human cost has been horrendous – the `excess mortality’
(avoidable mortality) in Iraq has been estimated from UN data to be
1.5 million since 1991 and about 0.3 million since the US invasion in
2003, these estimates being consonant with estimates of under-5
infant mortality there totalling 1.2 million since 1991 and about 0.2
million since the final invasion. The `excess mortality’ and under-5
infant mortality in Afghanistan have been 1.2 million and 0.9
million, respectively, since the invasion in 2001.

The obscenity of such impositions by fabulously wealthy countries on
wretchedly poor, fragile countries is illustrated powerfully by the
following UNICEF statistics: in 2001 the under-5 infant mortality was
1000 in Australia (population 20 million), 109,000 in Iraq
(population 24 million) and 277,000 in Afghanistan (population 22
million). In 2002 these statistics were 1000, 108,000 and 283,000,
respectively.

What more can the world expect from this Anglo-American Coalition
that is evidently picking up from where the brutal British Empire
left off? A good guide can be obtained from an analysis of post-1950
under-5 infant mortality that is made possible by detailed statistics
publicly available from the UN and UNICEF. These statistics provide a
`smoking gun’ for an immense crime that has been committed over the
last half century – the largely avoidable death of about 0.9 billion
infants throughout the world. This effective mass murder of innocents
has gone unreported by Anglo-American-dominated world media.

Decent humans love kids

A commonality among decent human beings is affection for children.
Thus even in some relatively violent, male-dominated societies there
are conventions prohibiting male violence against other men in the
presence of women and children. Further, young children such as those
under the age of five are utterly blameless – they have not yet
developed the disagreeable attributes of so many adults. At the very
worst, such kids could be a nuisance by demanding too much love and
affection from their families.

The bottom line is that ill-treatment or murder of infants is utterly
unacceptable to decent humans. Historically, mass mortality of
infants was associated with the genocidal European invasions of North
America, South America, Australasia and the Pacific in which
introduced disease was more important than conventional violence in
decimating native populations. In the last century explicit, violent
mass murder of infants (as well as of adults) occurred repeatedly,
for example during the genocides applied to the Hereros of Namibia,
the Armenians of Anatolia, the Jews of Europe, the Tutsis of Rwanda
and the Cambodian civilian victims of the Khmer Rouge.

Whether a child dies a violent death or dies of deprivation or
malnourishment-exacerbated disease, the end result is the same.
Accordingly, to this list of infanticidal horrors of the last century
we should add the victims of enormous man-made famines in Russia (the
early 1920s), the Ukraine (early 1930s), British-occupied Bengal
(during World War 2) and China (during the Great Leap Forward). Major
wars such as the Japanese invasion of China, World War 1 and World
War 2 have been major killers of civilians through the accompanying
social and economic dislocation. Notwithstanding the creation of the
UN after World War 2, there has been immense avoidable infant
mortality over the last half century that is closely linked to First
World-derived militarization and war.

The global post-1950 under-5 infant mortality totals over 900 million

Using publicly-available UN and UNICEF data on populations, birth
rates, death rates and under-5 infant mortality rates, it has been
possible to simply calculate the total number of children under the
age of 5 years who have died in virtually every country of the world
since 1950. The results are horrendous – the global post-1950 under-5
infant mortality totals over 900 million.

In order to simply present and compare the data it is useful to use
some abbreviations and transformations. Thus for the major `overseas’
European colonies (the US, Canada, Israel, Australia and New Zealand)
the post-1950 under-5 infant mortality totals 5.3 million
(abbreviated as `5.3m’). The post-1950 under-5 infant mortality is
4.1% of the total mortality in these countries since 1950 (`4.1%
mort’) i.e. in these rich countries under-5 infant mortality has been
a very small proportion of overall mortality. Expressed as a
percentage of the total present day population of this grouping of
countries, the post-1950 under-5 infant mortality is 1.5% (`1.5%
pop’) or 1.5 dead infants for every 100 people alive today in these
countries i.e. very few people in this group carry the traumatic
burden of an infant death. For simplicity I will summarize the
post-1950 under-5 infant mortality statistics for this group as `5.3
m, 4.1% mort, 1.5% pop’.

With rounding-off of the data, the total post-1950 under-5 infant
mortality has been 912 million, this being made up of the following
components:

`Overseas’ European countries [5.3m, 4.1% mort, 1.5 % pop],

Western Europe [6.8m, 3.4% mort, 1.7% pop],

Eastern Europe [12.7m, 7.3% mort, 3.7% pop],

Latin America and Caribbean [51.9m, 32.0% mort, 10.0% pop],

East Asia [199.4m, 35.1% mort, 12.9% pop],

South East Asia [70.9m, 32.2% mort, 12.9% pop],

Turkey, Iran & Central Asia [40.0m, 46.2% mort, 17.1% pop],

Arab North Africa & Middle East [46.7m, 44.4% mort, 15.6% pop],

South Asia [281.5m, 42.8% mort, 20.0% pop],

Pacific [1.1m, 31.9% mort, 13% pop], and

Non-Arab Africa [195.9m, 52.9% mort, 29.1% pop].

You will immediately see that for the various groupings of European
countries the post-1950 under-5 infant mortality is on the average
about 3-7% of the total mortality within each group and less than 4%
of the current population. However for the non-European world the
post-1950 under-5 infant mortality is on average about 32-53% of
total mortality and 10-29% of total current population for the
various regional groupings.

Thus in European countries post-1950 under-5 infant mortality has
been a very small proportion of deaths whereas in non-European
countries it represents a very high proportion. Similarly, in
European countries on average only several under-5 infant deaths have
occurred for every 100 people alive today – whereas on average such
infant death has been tragically commonplace in the various regions
of the non-European world.

At this point a European neo-con will declare that surely such
elevated infant mortality is only to be expected for non-European
countries that are typically tropical or semi-tropical, fecund,
`backward’ and incompetently governed by authoritarian governments
i.e. that elevated infant mortality is `normal’ for such countries.
However many examples throughout the world demonstrate the fallacy of
such intrinsically racist assertions. Further, closer examination of
the data country-by-country reveals that the First World bears a
major responsibility for this largely avoidable infant mortality.
Many examples can be given to illustrate First World involvement in
this carnage and Anglo-American involvement in particular.

Anglo-American hegemony and militarism is linked to global mass
infant mortality

Latin America plus the Caribbean (i.e. the Americas minus Canada and
the US) has been dominated by the US for over a century. The
post-1950 under-5 infant mortality statistics for Latin America plus
the Caribbean [51.9m, 32.0% mort, 10.0% pop] present a dismal picture
but communist Cuba [0.3m, 9.6% mort, 3.1% pop] is a remarkable
exception because of high literacy and excellent primary health care
– notwithstanding 4 decades of US hostility, threats and sanctions.
It can be readily calculated that if the outcome for Cuba {3.1% pop)
is applied to the whole Latin America and the Caribbean grouping then
the post-1950 under-5 infant mortality would be reduced by 36 million
– US hegemony is thus a major factor in this appalling infanticide.

The British (as well as the French, Spanish, Portuguese, Belgians,
Germans and Italians) conquered, enslaved and exploited Africa for
centuries and left a crippled continent in a neo-colonial nightmare
of militarization, debt, economic exclusion, corrupt governments and
war that is presently compounded by HIV/AIDS. However the post-1950
under-5 infant mortality in peaceful, democratic Afro-Indian
Mauritius [0.08m, 21% mort, 6.3% pop] has been a lovely exception –
if the `6.3% pop’ stat is applied to all of non-Arab Africa then
notionally 153 million infants would have survived.

The post-1950 under-5 infant mortality in the modestly endowed but
peaceful and democratic Muslim country of Malaysia has not been too
bad [1.2m, 20.2% mort, 4.7% pop]. If the Malaysian stat of `4.7% pop’
is notionally applied to the Muslim countries of Turkey and Iran
(subject to massive US interference), formerly Soviet-occupied
Central Asia and Afghanistan (subject to UK, Russian and thence US
intervention) then we can calculate a `saving’ of 29 million infant
lives since 1950.

Similar country-by-country quantitative analysis indicates major US
contribution (through interference, threat, militarization and war)
to the horrendous post-1950 under-5 infant mortality in East Asia
(notably in China, North Korea, South Korea and Mongolia), in South
East Asia (notably in Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, Indonesia and East
Timor) and in Arab North Africa and the Middle East (notably in
Libya, Iraq and in Israel’s neighbours). The post-1950 under-5 infant
mortality in all of Israel’s immediate neighbours totals 16.6
million.

The British, in addition to their invasive contributions in South
America, Africa, Central Asia, East Asia, South East Asia, the
Pacific and the Middle East, left the South Asian subcontinent
crippled by colonialism and helped impose a further burden of
militarization, economic exclusion, debt and war. The total post-1950
under-5 infant mortality in South Asia has been 281.5 million.

Australia as a genocidal junior imperialist

Australia, having historically been involved in the decimation of the
indigenous populations of Australia, Tasmania, New Zealand and the
South Pacific, is proud of its 2 century record of military service
throughout the world for the British Empire `on which the sun never
set’. Since 1950 Australia has been militarily involved in UK and/or
US military adventures in Iraq, Afghanistan, Malaysia, Indonesia,
East Timor, Korea and Indo-China and hence complicit in the
horrendous infant mortalities in those countries.

The South Pacific is Australia’s `patch’ and the post-1950 under-5
infant mortality in the Pacific has been 1.1 million, with 0.9
million of this contributed by the former Australian colonial
possession of Papua New Guinea. The unilateral retention by Australia
of most of East Timor’s off-shore oil and gas reserves will ensure
continuing poverty and elevated infant mortality in that much-abused
country.

In 2004 the present Australian Government indicated that if deemed
necessary it would engage in pre-emptive strikes against neighbouring
countries and has refused to sign a Treaty of Amity and Cooperation
that bans such attacks and which is adhered to by the Association of
South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) and various East Asian powers.
Australia has certainly learned well from its big Anglo-American
cousins.

Boycotting the Anglo-American Coalition to end global mass
infanticide

Peace is the only sensible way forward. Indeed violent opposition to
the US has brought appalling civilian suffering. Thus the under-5
infant mortality in Iraq since 1991 and in Afghanistan since 2001
totals 2.1 million as compared to about 1100 US military deaths in
combat in those theatres – a death ratio of about 2000 Muslim infants
per US soldier. This arises because major Anglo-American casualties
are unacceptable in domestic politics and accordingly any target must
be bombed and shelled from a distance before occupation – but at the
cost of enormous civilian casualties. Thus Fallujah has been
`destroyed in order to liberate it’ with over 0.2 million of its
former citizens now refugees in their own land.

The world must apply sensible feedback to halt the carnage. The
military-industrial complexes of the US and the UK have benefited
enormously from massive global military expenditure that now totals
$800 billion per year (with half of this being that of the US alone).
The extra funding of the US military-industrial complex since 9/11
has been about $400 billion and it is evident that the endless `War
on Terror’ in response to jihadist atrocities (5000 Western deaths in
the last 20 years) will continue to be immensely profitable to the US
and UK war industries. Feedback through economic boycotts would seem
appropriate for stopping imperial wars fought for economic benefit.

The world can only respond sensibly to continuing Anglo-American
Coalition war crimes by exposure, condemnation, boycotts, sanctions,
legal actions and bans applied to Coalition countries – and by making
“ethical purchases” from and “ethical investments” in non-involved
countries such as China, France, and Germany. Already formal
complaints over Coalition war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan have
been made to the International Criminal Court. The sheer magnitude of
the continuing Anglo-American crimes against the innocent must be
kept before the world – it is inconceivable that this mass
infanticide can continue unabated. Silence kills. Silence is
complicity. Inform everyone. Save the children.

http://usa.mediamonitors.net/content/view/full/11785/

In January-October, Number of Economic Crimes Doubles in Armenia

IN JANUARY-OCTOBER, NUMBER OF ECONOMIC CRIMES DOUBLES IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, December 3 (Noyan Tapan). In January-October 2004, 237 crimes
against economic activities were registered in Armenia, which is about
twice as many as the number of such crimes in the same period of
2003. According to the RA National Statistical Service, 37 cases of
selling, manufacturing and keeping fake money and securities were
registered (42 cases in January-July 2003), and 200 cases of other
crimes against economic activities, including false and illegal
entrepreneurship.

Ministro Fini, vuole l’europa o l’eurasia?

ANSA Notiziario Generale in Italiano
December 4, 2004

MINISTRO FINI, VUOLE L’EUROPA O L’EURASIA? ;
INTERVENTO SULLA PADANIA

ROMA

(ANSA) – ROMA, 4 DIC – “Personalmente, credo che lei, signor
ministro, abbia in testa un’Eurasia, piu’ che un’Europa”. Lo
scrive in un intervento su LA PADANIA Alessandro Ce rivolto al
ministro degli Esteri Gianfranco Fini. “Lei afferma in modo
perentorio – dice l’esponente della Lega – che la Turchia
costituira’ un valore aggiunto all’Europa. Credo che questo
giudizio dipenda dal tipo di idea di Europa che si ha: se si
pensa cioe a un’Europa tradizionalmente intesa o a un’Eurasia.
(…) La Turchia non ha riconosciuto lo sterminio degli armeni.
E noi apriamo un percorso di adesione all’Unione europea senza
che la Turchia abbia effettuato tale riconoscimento? (…) Ci
sono questioni culturali sulle quali (lei) ha sorvolato: in
Turchia non e’ garantita la liberta’ di professare una
religione. E’ garantita all’interno delle chiese, ma non puo
dirsi lo stesso al di fuori delle medesime e noi stiamo aprendo
un percorso di adesione della Turchia nell’Unione europea. Vi
sono questioni identitarie fondamentali: la Turchia, nel 2015,
quando probabilmente sara’ entrata in Europa, avra’ 90 milioni
di abitanti, tutti islamici. Vogliamo un’Europa che abbia ancora
un qualche riferimento ad una matrice cristiana oppure un’Europa
islamica? Tale questione non e’ stata assolutamente affrontata
dal governo”.(ANSA).

Jailed Armenian pilots may be extradited from Equatorial Guinea

Jailed Armenian pilots may be extradited from Equatorial Guinea

Noyan Tapan news agency
2 Dec 04

YEREVAN

The Armenian authorities will continue providing every support to the
six Armenian pilots convicted of attempting to stage a coup d’etat in
Equatorial Guinea.

Ambassador Sergey Manaseryan, who has received the text of the
sentence handed down on 26 November, is expected to return to Yerevan
from Malabo today, the press secretary of the Armenian Foreign
Ministry, Gamlet Gasparyan, has told Noyan Tapan.

It must be remembered that the captain of the aircraft has been
sentenced to 24 years’ imprisonment, while other pilots to 14 years.

Speaking about further steps by the Armenian side, the press secretary
pointed to the importance of signing an agreement on extradition
between the two countries, adding that such a document is already
being prepared. Only after that, will it be possible to negotiate the
handover of the Armenian pilots. At the same time, the pilots’ lawyer
will continue taking steps to appeal against the sentence to the
Supreme Court of Equatorial Guinea.

Gasparyan said Armenia’s confidence of the pilots’ innocence is not
abstract, but based on specific facts. As for the sentence, the
Foreign Ministry spokesman said it was purely political given
Equatorial Guinea’s domestic problems.

BAKU: Azeri spiritual leader hails Islamic organization’s support

Azeri spiritual leader hails Islamic organization’s support

MPA news agency
1 Dec 04

BAKU

“The Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) is the only
international organization that defends Azerbaijan’s position on the
Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict,” the head of the Spiritual Board of the
Muslims of the Caucasus, Allahsukur Pasazada, has told an OIC meeting
under way in Qatar.

The OIC meeting is being attended by Azerbaijani President Ilham
Aliyev.

Without denying the fact that even within the OIC there are countries
supporting Azerbaijan rather weakly, the sheikh explained this by
their fear of the world’s superpowers.