Azerbaijan Makes Row Before Every Election in NKR

AZERBAIJAN MAKES ROW BEFORE EVERY ELECTION IN NKR

STEPANAKERT, MARCH 12. ARMINFO. Azerbaijan considers it its duty to
make illegitimacy row every time Nagorno Karabakh Republic is going to
hold an election, says Sergey Nasibyan, Chairman of NKR Central
Electoral Commission, commenting on the recent statement of Azeri FM
official Tair Tagizade.

He says that Karabakh Armenians have resolved their problem in
compliance with the international law by proclaiming independence in
1991 and by regularly holding presidential, parliamentary and
municipal elections. Many observers say that elections in NKR are much
better organized than in Azerbaijan.

The June 19 parliamentary elections are the fourth such elections in
NKR. It will be one more step towards strong statehood and democracy
in NKR, says Nasibyan. He calls groundless Azerbaijan’s concern that
the elections can hinder the Karabakh peace process. The presence of
legal authorities in NKR will only stimulate the process. “I would
advise the Azeri authorities not to deceive themselves but to search
for ways to reconcile the two peoples,” says Nasibyan.

No place like home

Sunday Mail (Queensland, Australia)
March 13, 2005

No place like home

Anthony Browne

The world is becoming less multiracial and less multicultural, says
ANTHONY BROWNE. People like to live among their own kind.

MANY on the Left believe that the only way to end racism is to end
races. The only way to conquer Nazism, they argue, is mass
miscegenation — interracial love, rather than war.

The champions of diversity believe our future is not as a species
with many races, but with one race — a quarter Chinese, a quarter
Indian, a quarter African and a quarter European.

There are a lot of good things to say about a future of mixed-race
people such as champion golfer Tiger Woods and actor Halle Berry.

Ever since I fell in love with a beautiful woman who was half
Scottish, a quarter Thai and a quarter Jamaican, I have been
convinced that mixed-race people combine the best of all their parts.

As the Mayor of Vancouver said, reacting to public concern about the
extent of Chinese immigration: “We’re going to have a generation of
the most beautiful babies.”

The developed world’s immigration industry insists opposition to mass
immigration is futile because it has been made inevitable by
revolutions in transport, communications and human rights.

There is only one future for human society, they insist, and it is
multiracial and multicultural.

But this is looking at the world and history from the little bubble
of the contemporary “West” — the island of prosperity and tolerance
encompassing just one eighth of humanity in North America, Europe and
Australasia.

Surrounded by a world of deprivation and tyranny, it has become far
more diverse.

However, the rest of the world, over the past hundred years has
become less diverse, with multiracial societies turning into
monoracial ones, and multicultural societies turning into
monocultural ones.

It is not inevitable that societies will become more diverse.
Although emigration may be easier for more people, there may be fewer
people wanting to do it.

The urge for self-segregation — surrounding yourself with people
like you — is likely to triumph over the more ephemeral economic and
political incentives to leave what you know.

The great engines of multiracialism over the past few centuries were
the empires of Britain, France, Spain and Portugal, bringing
Europeans as settlers to the Americas, Africa and Australasia;
bringing Africans as slaves to the Americas; and bringing Indians as
indentured labourers to south and east Africa.

But as the empires unwound, so did the multiracialism they brought,
except in the lands where Europeans became a majority.

After the collapse of the French empire in North Africa, 1.5 million
“pieds noirs” — European settlers in Algeria — returned to France.

East African states reduced their Asian populations by persecution,
or, as with Uganda, expulsion.

White populations in Africa have declined, with the white population
of Zimbabwe dropping from 3 per cent of the population in 1950 to 1.1
per cent now.

In half a century, sub-Saharan Africa has gone from being a
multiracial society to almost monoracial, with only South Africa
holding out.

Across much of what is now the Islamic world, multifaith societies
have become monofaith ones, with Christian and Jewish religious
minorities dwindling to vanishing point.

Afghanistan’s Jewish community has fallen from 30,000 to just one —
Zebulon Simentov.

In Morocco, tour guides show off the ghost towns where the Jews used
to live. A hundred years ago, Baghdad was half Jewish, but now there
are only a few dozen Jews in all Iraq.

In what is now Turkey, the Christian minorities have been all but
wiped out by the genocide in 1915 of 1.5 million Armenian Christians,
and the expelling in 1923 of almost the entire Greek population,
inhabitants of Asia Minor since before Troy. During the 12th century,
Turkey went from being a quarter Christian to 99.8 per cent Muslim,
while Syria has gone from 15 per cent Christian to 5 per cent.

David Coleman, a professor of demography at Oxford University in
England, said: “There is a simplification of the Third World while
the industrial world gets more complex.”

The trend towards diversity is a uniquely Western phenomenon. Few in
Japan are remotely bothered that, outside a couple of districts of
Tokyo, you never see any whites or blacks, and the Ghanaians are
unperturbed that white people there are as rare as snow.

The Japanese emigrated in large numbers during their turbulent and
impoverished period last century, notably to North and South America.
But as Japan became peaceful and prosperous, emigration all but
stopped.

The Japanese like being in Japan because they can speak Japanese,
measure their homes in tatami mats, and eat Japanese food. And they
don’t have to catch a plane to visit relatives.

SHARING the same language, culture and values as the people you come
into daily contact with may not be excitingly multicultural, but it
means you end up with deeper relationships, a sense of community,
belonging and security.

>>From the English in the south of France and the Canaries, to the
Bangladeshis in London, the Jews in Israel, the African-Americans in
Harlem, and the whites in South Africa, self-segregation is one of
the most powerful forces in human communities.

The white flight — or white self-segregation — which is such a
feature of US cities is now endemic in the UK, with hundreds of
thousands of white Britons fleeing the effects of the Government’s
open border policy.

Self-segregation is apparent all around us, but there is a reluctance
to accept it because it mocks multiculturalism.

And as minorities keep telling us, it is not easy being a minority,
since in democracies it is the majority that sets the rules.

Despite all the celebrations of diversity, people prefer the
familiar. We are a world of stick-in-the-muds.

In the late 20th century, the desire for the familiar was overcome by
the desire to escape poverty, hopelessness and tyranny.

Tens of millions left their languages, cultures, families and
communities to seek money, hope and safety.

It may seem unlikely now, but the era when the world went to the West
to escape their problems is coming to an end. With prosperity,
democracy and declining birth rates spreading around the world, the
desire for the familiar will bring the age of mass migration to a
halt.

We have been here before: Europe stopped unloading its demographic
surplus on the New World — the 19th century’s so-called golden age
for migration — when it could start offering hope to all its
citizens.

As China hurtles towards becoming the world’s largest economy, the
economic incentive to emigrate is shrinking.

There is still mass poverty, but no one will escape it by paying a
people-trafficker to take them to the other side of the world to work
illegally in an alien culture where they don’t speak the language, if
they can just take the bus to Shanghai instead.

Asia, with its rapidly developing economies, powerful culture and
traditional family values, is likely to stop being a major exporter
of people in the near future.

With their economic and population growth going in opposite
directions, Africa and the Islamic world will be a source of
push-migration for a long time to come, but they will be the
exceptions, and not for ever.

The West is likely to harden its attitude to multiculturalism even
further than it already has. As it begins to lose its dominance to
China and India, it will lose the guilt that provided the
psychological drive for diversity.

INSTEAD, Westerners are likely to rediscover the historic and
cultural identities they have been so busy trying to forget, as is
happening in the UK.

Not only will migration slow, there could also be returns, as the
factors that originally drove people from their homelands disappear.

When Spain and Portugal stopped being impoverished tyrannies, their
diaspora returned from northern Europe.

Ireland, whose historic export has been its people, is now welcoming
many back.

With startling economic growth, India is now seeing its
20-million-strong diaspora return. An Indian industrialist told me
last month how he was stunned on a recent trip to the US at being
mobbed by Indian professionals asking about opportunities to work in
the mother country.

“Back to India” job fairs are spreading across the US, offering a
better quality of life, and fuelling a reverse brain drain that has
seen 35,000 emigres return to Bangalore alone.

India has speeded up the process by adopting a racist policy of
giving the right to live and work in India to any “person of Indian
origin”, carefully drafting the legislation to exclude any white
Britons whose family spent generations there. (Ghana has an even more
blatantly racist policy, offering citizenship to “any black person
living in the West”.)

The slowing of mass migration is good for those who appreciate real
diversity. The decline of diversity within countries preserves the
diversity between them.

As Russian writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn said in his Nobel Prize
acceptance speech attacking multiculturalism, “the disappearance of
nations would have impoverished us no less than if all men had become
alike, with one personality and one face.

“Nations are the wealth of mankind, its collective personalities.”

Armenian Gas Operator Vows To Rebuild Network By 2008

ARMENIAN GAS OPERATOR VOWS TO REBUILD NETWORK BY 2008
By Atom Markarian
RFE/RL

YEREVAN, 12.03.05. A Russian-Armenian joint venture that runs Armenia`s gas
infrastructure pledged on Friday to complete the long-running restoration of
centralized gas supplies to individual consumers within the next three
years.

`We plan to complete the gasification and have more subscribers than in
Soviet times in 2007,` Karen Karapetian, chairman of the Armrosgazprom
operator, told a news conference. `We will invest 21.5 billion drams ($45
million) from 2005 through 2007 for that purpose.`

Armenian households, overwhelmingly connected to the network in Soviet
times, stopped receiving natural gas in 1992 following the outbreak of the
war in Nagorno-Karabakh and the resulting blockade imposed by Azerbaijan.
Ethnic conflicts and civil strife in neighboring Georgia also contributed to
the disruption.

It was not until 1997 that the gas supplies began to be slowly restored.
Armrosgazprom, concluded that at the time the old network of underground
pipes was eroded by years of disuse and decided to build a new one. Much of
the bill has been footed by consumers, with an average family in Yerevan
having to pay an equivalent of at least $150 to buy gas meters and connect
their homes to the network anew.

Karapetian said 57 percent of Armenian families already have access to gas.
The fuel is increasingly used for household heating with widespread
disregard for safety standards. Carbon monoxide emissions from faulty
homemade heaters have killed dozens of people in mostly rural parts of the
country this winter.

Armrosgazprom has been blamed by consumer groups for failing to ensure the
safety of gas use. But the company partly owned by Russia`s Gazprom giant
lays the blame on its private contractors rebuilding its gas infrastructure.

Former Soviet republics plan joint military exercises Tajikistan

Former Soviet republics plan joint military exercises Tajikistan

AP Worldstream
Mar 11, 2005

More than 3,000 troops from several ex-Soviet republics will hold
joint military exercises in early April in Tajikistan, a Defense
Ministry official said Friday.

The five-day war games will involve troops from Russia, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, said Defense Ministry spokesman Zarobiddin
Sirodjev.

The countries are members of the Collective Security Treaty
Organization, the security arm of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, a loose 12-nation grouping of former Soviet republics.

Two other treaty members, Belarus and Armenia, will send observers
to the exercises, Sirodjev said.

Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow and All Russia warns against attempts t

Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow and All Russia warns against attempts to revise results of WWII

ITAR-TASS
09.03.2005, 18.18

MOSCOW, March 9 (Itar-Tass) — Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow and All
Russia warned against attempts to revise the results of World War II.

Speaking at the opening of the 9th World Russian People~Rs Assembly
on Wednesday, Alexy II said, ~SToday some are trying to slander and
bury in oblivion the feat of our people and to equalise aggressors
and those who fought them.~T

He believes it necessary to ~Sdo everything possible to ensure that
these attempts do not succeed and that the thankful memory of those
who fought against the strongest army of the world safeguarded mankind
from a new mutual extermination.~T

The patriarch stressed, ~SThe idea of the global dictatorship of
terrorism still dominates many minds. We must think about how to
counter terrorism, how to preserve the greatest achievement of the
victory ~V lasting peace between nations, how to revive the ideal of
unity and spiritual strength that were shown in those years so that
the lessons of the great victory were not forgotten but would serve
for the future of mankind.~T

The World Russian People~Rs Assembly, which opened at Moscow~Rs Christ
the Saviour Cathedral on Wednesday, is devoted to the unity of peoples
as a guarantee of the victory over fascism and terrorism.

Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, officials from the Defence Ministry,
politicians, statesmen, public and religious figures addressed the
congress.

The religious delegates include the chairman of the Central Moslem
Board, Talgat Tadzhutdin, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church of
Old Believers, Metropolitan Andrian, the head of the Russian eparchy of
the Armenian Apostolic Church, Archbishop Ezras, the chairman of the
Congress of the Jewish Religious Communities of Russia, Rabbi Zinovy
Kogan, and a representative of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad,
Archbishop Mark of Germany.

Lebanon’s many mansions

Lebanon’s many mansions
 
Salim Mansur
National Post

Wednesday, March 09, 2005

A Lebanese demonstrator makes his desires clear during an anti-Syrian
demonstration on Monday in Beirut.

After the Valentine’s Day murder of former Lebanese Prime Minister
Rafik Hariri, there was a stunning display of patriotism on the
streets of Beirut. Tens of thousands of ordinary Lebanese people
demonstrated to protest the presence of Syrian forces in their
country. Though the nation became a byword for civil war in the 1970s
and ’80s, the plethora of Lebanese flags on parade suggests many
citizens now share an overarching national identity.

But Tuesday’s massive pro-Syrian counterdemonstration showed that
large fissures remain in Lebanon’s body politic. Once Syria
withdraws, will the country move forward on the path to democracy? Or
will it slide into the infernal politics of warlordism, leading to a
sort of Levantine Somalia?

As Kamal Salibi wrote in his authoritative 1988 book, A House Of Many
Mansions, Lebanon is a nation divided by allegiance to faith, tribe
and clan. The main divide is Christian-Muslim, but that cleavage is
complicated by further subgroupings of Christian Maronites, Greek
Catholics, Greek Orthodox and Armenians; as well as Sunni, Shiite and
Druze Muslims — the many mansions of Salibi’s metaphor.

The state of Lebanon is a creature of the 20th century. After the
First World War, the French obtained the mandate to rule the Syrian
provinces of the former Ottoman empire. They expanded an autonomous
Maronite-dominated province into other parts of Syria, in large part
so that the Maronites — an ancient community with longstanding
connections to France and the Roman Catholic Church — could protect
their culture. To this day, Damascus does not accept Lebanon’s
separate statehood.

The inclusion of so many Syrian Muslims presented the Maronites with
a demographic problem: They were in danger of becoming a minority
within Lebanon. Looking ahead, the Maronite leadership in 1943
reached an agreement, known as the National Pact, under which the
president is a Maronite, the prime minister is a Sunni, and MPs are
fixed in a ratio of six Christians to every five Muslims, thereby
making Lebanon a uniquely confessional state.

The National Pact first came under serious strain in the 1950s, when
a tide of Arab nationalism swept the Middle East. The Maronites
turned to the United States, and in 1958 Dwight Eisenhower dispatched
the Marines at the invitation of a Maronite president. The U.S.
intervention illustrated how Lebanon’s delicate arrangement was
viable only if a foreign power propped it up.

In 1970, Hafez Assad became the new strongman in Damascus, and
claimed the mantle of Arab nationalism. Like his predecessors in
Syria, he did not see his country as an outside power where Lebanon
was concerned.

Assad got his chance to safeguard — or dominate — his neighbour in
1975, when an alliance of Sunni nationalists, Druze radicals,
dispossessed Shiites and Palestinian fighters joined to reconfigure
Lebanon’s political status quo at the expense of the Maronites.
Syrian troops poured in and became embroiled in the nation’s civil
war.

In 1989, Saudi Arabia brokered the Taif Agreement, which led to the
war’s end and mandated an incremental withdrawal of Syrian forces.
But Assad dragged his feet for years, justifying himself by pointing
to the continuing presence in southern Lebanon of Israeli troops,
who’d invaded the country in 1982 to expel the PLO. When the Israelis
withdrew in 2000, the remaining justification was the claim that
Syria’s forces were there at Lebanon’s request. The pro-Syrian puppet
government in Beirut did in fact support the occupation, but a
growing number of Lebanese people did not.

In September, 2004, the UN Security Council passed Resolution 1559,
demanding the withdrawal of all “foreign forces” from Lebanon, and
“the disbanding and disarmament of all Lebanese and non-Lebanese
militias.”Without naming Syria, the resolution was clearly aimed at
that country, and at the Hezbollah militia backed by both Syria and
Iran. Bashar Assad, who assumed power in Damascus when his father
died in 2000, ignored the resolution. He did not realize his position
was untenable until the outrage that followed the murder of
Hariri.Behind the inspiring display of national pride in Beirut lies
a disturbing reminder of traditional differences. The country’s
Christian and Druze leaders have been leading the anti-Syrian
protests, while Hezbollah and other Shiite groups lead the pro-Syrian
demonstrations . The dispute over Syria’s presence has become a proxy
struggle between those Lebanese who see their destiny tied with the
West and those who see their place within the fold of Damascus and
Tehran.Rafik Hariri was an influential power-broker who sought to
bridge differences between these two sides, and help Lebanon create a
new political identity that doesn’t need propping up by Syria or any
other outside power.His dream was noble. But his murder has exposed
vulnerabilities that no amount of patriotism or sunny talk of a
“cedar revolution” can disguise. Once Syria has fully withdrawn,
Lebanon may well disintegrate — as it did 30 years ago — into a war
among its various mansions.

–Boundary_(ID_51OIAbodKxKUecbf4xXPlA)–

The Washington Post Confirms Fact Of Armenian Genocide

THE WASHINGTON POST CONFIRMS FACT OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
By Hakob Chakrian

Azg/arm
8 March 05

According to the March 6 issue of CNN-Turk, The Washington Post,
referring to the Committee of Conscience at the Washington Museum of
Genocide published the “List of the Genocides and the Crimes against
Humanity.” It is stated in the preface of the publication that the
mass genocides of civilians and the other crimes against humanity were
committed in the course of bloody wars in the last century. Here is the
probable number of the victims. We can never know the real indicators.”

The abovementioned list was published after the preface. Turkey
occupied the first place in the list. It was written in the first
place of the victimsâ~@~Y list: “Turkishâ~@~SArmenians, 1915-18. 1,5
million.” In other words, The Washington Post recognized the Armenian
Genocide through this publication. The genocide in Ukraine in 1923-33
when 7 million people died of hunger occupied the second place in
the list. Next comes the genocide of 300.000 Chinese in Japan in 1937
and the Genocide of 6 millions of Jews in Nazi Germany in 1938-45.

The list also includes the genocide of 2 million people in Cambodia
in 1975-79, the Genocide of 200 thousand people in Bosnia, in 1992-95,
as well as the Genocide of 800 thousand people in Rwanda in 1994.

–Boundary_(ID_6qwrljGg4+qJ9lw8TZkLOA)–

War Transferred To The Internet

WAR TRANSFERRED TO THE INTERNET

A1+
07-03-2005

For the last few days the Azerbaijani hackers have been attacking the
Armenian internet sited. Armenianhouse.org, Genocide.ru, Hayastan.com
sites have suffered from their interference. In the latter the hackers
had introduced changes â~@~S deleted the pages about the Armenian
Genocide, inserted pro-Azerbaijani mottoes.

It must be mentioned that the Armenian sites have already been
restored. The Azerbaijanis had already managed to hinder the work of
the site Armnet.ru.

It is known that the Armenian hackers have also tried to counter-attack
the Azerbaijani sited. They have managed to destroy several Azerbaijani
forums.

–Boundary_(ID_8bC0BgcOhoFDSY+g+aAjzQ)–

Hoss praises national diversity despite quest for harmony

Hoss praises national diversity despite quest for harmony

By Leila Hatoum

Daily Star staff
Saturday, March 05, 2005

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s multiple religions and ethnic groups are both its
strength and its weakness, according to former Prime Minister Salim
Hoss.Hoss was speaking at a press conference held Friday by the
Catholic Patriarchs and Bishops Council on the importance of dialogue
in the country at the Press Club in Beirut’s Al-Azariah area.

Father Antoine Daw also delivered a statement from Maronite Cardinal
Patriarch Nasrallah Butros Sfeir during the conference, in which he
stressed the importance of discussing relations between Christianity
and Islam.

Hoss, who formed a national unity party Tuesday called the “Third
Force,” explained that the country’s strength came from the fact that
“Muslims, Christians and Jews – until the Arab-Israeli conflict of
1948 – have dwelled together in harmony. The same thing goes for
ethnic groups such as Armenians, Assyrians and Kurds.”

This fact, according to Hoss, makes Lebanon a country open to all
religions and ideologies.

However, despite all their diversity, the Lebanese “have failed to
find a common coexistence formula since Lebanon’s independence in
1943.”

Hoss cited the 1952 riots that ended President Beshara Khoury’s reign,
the civil war of 1975-1990 and divided opinions regarding United
Nations Resolution 1559 as examples of the country’s failure at
coexistence.

He also stressed that Lebanon is an Arab country.

Lebanon has come together in the wake of the assassination of former
Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, with citizens of different religions
uniting in peaceful demonstrations and demanding to know who was
behind the assassination.

BAKU: Georgian Prime Minister to visit Baku

Baku Today, Azerbaijan
March 4 2005

Georgian Prime Minister to visit Baku

Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Nugaideli is scheduled to arrive in
Baku on Friday.

Nugaideli will meet with President Ilham Aliyev, Prime Minister Artur
Rasizada, Speaker of the Milli Majlis (parliament) Murtuz Alasgarov
and other officials.

One of the issues to be discussed will be the tensions over the
detention of freight carriages on the Georgian-Azerbaijani border.

The Azerbaijani government suspects that some of the detained
consignments were intended to be illegally sent to Armenia through
Georgia.