Fisk: Sinister efforts to minimise Japanese war crimes and portray t

Robert Fisk: Sinister efforts to minimise Japanese war crimes and
portray the empire as a victim must be exposed

The man known as Abe’s ‘brain’ says Japan has become ‘a hopelessly
pacifist nation’

ROBERT FISK
Sunday 6 April 2014

I had to go to California to learn that Michiko Shiota Gingery, who
lives in the Central Park area of Glendale City, suffers “feelings of
exclusion, discomfort and anger” because her local authority unveiled
a memorial to the innocent Asian women turned into sex slaves by the
Japanese Imperial Army.

These “comfort women”, the Japanese military’s repulsive euphemism for
the victims they turned upon with such sexual sadism, were gang-raped,
used as prostitutes and often butchered by Japanese soldiers during
their occupation of Korea and China in the late 1930s, in the early
years of what was for them – but not for us – the Second World War.
These women – the few ageing survivors and the many dead – are a
symbol of Japan’s wartime disgrace.

Now you would have thought, wouldn’t you, that these poor women
(forced into mass prostitution by the Japanese army and government
over many years) had themselves suffered “feelings of exclusion,
discomfort and anger”? But no, it’s poor Michiko Shiota Gingery,
presumably of Japanese origin, who’s all upset at the Glendale
monument to this most appalling of Japanese war crimes. Furthermore (a
gritting of teeth is necessary here), a joint lawsuit claims that
Glendale City – a peaceful and intensely boring suburb of greater Los
Angeles – has exceeded its power by infringing on the US government’s
right to conduct America’s foreign policy; thus “the monument
threatens to negatively affect US relations with Japan, one of this
nation’s most important allies…”

Since we are a family paper, I will merely say that statements of this
kind are identical to the material that comes out of the rear end of a
bull. But it’s all of a kind. Turkish Americans bleat that
Armenian-American monuments to the 1915 Armenian genocide – the
world’s first holocaust – upset good “relations” between the US and
Turkey. Which is why the spineless Obama still, despite his
pre-election promises, will not acknowledge that the Turks
deliberately killed one and a half million Christian citizens of the
Ottoman empire.

If the Germans started to deny the truth of the Jewish Holocaust, I
suppose it would only be a matter of time before the anti-Semites of
Europe lined up to express their “feelings of exclusion” every time
they saw a memorial to Hitler’s war crimes.

But when Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe shames himself and his
country by wandering through the Tokyo Yasukuni shrine, what else can
we expect? I’ve been to Yasukuni myself, a place of cherry trees and
blossoms and a museum to honour the memory of the 2.5 million Japanese
soldiers, kamikaze pilots, rapists and war criminals who died in the
Second World War. I had a cousin who died building the Burma railway
and so I was greatly interested in the real steam loco shunted into
Yasukuni, the very first engine to use that infamous track. It carried
home the ashes of the first Japanese soldiers to die in Burma. No
doubt Abe enjoyed his little trip to honour the murderers of Imperial
Japan.

Sure, Japan has apologised for the little matter of the “comfort
women”. But why, according to the Chinese, has Yasukuni received 60
visits from Japanese prime ministers between 1945 and 1985, including
six visits made on 15 August, to mark the date of Japan’s surrender?
The 1937 rape of Nanking – in which tens of thousands of Chinese women
were raped and at least 100,000 killed – is being turned into part of
“a self-defensive holy war”; school textbooks now try to depict
Japanese aggression in the 1930s as the “liberation of backward
nations”. The Japanese Education Minister is proposing to reject
textbooks that do not adopt a “patriotic tone”. When the US hears that
Palestinian textbooks include Israel as part of “Palestine”, American
officials roar like bears. But when the Japanese do far worse, the
Americans turn into mice.

Yasukuni’s purpose is to minimise Japanese war crimes and portray the
expansionist Japanese empire as a victim. That’s what Abe wants do to.
He’s spending more on his country’s military. The man referred to as
Abe’s “brain”, the former diplomat Hisahiko Okazaki, says that Japan
has become “a hopelessly pacifist nation”. Now that China is a newly
emergent military power – and challenging Japanese ownership of the
Senkaku Islands – Abe’s rewriting of his country’s outrageous
occupation of China takes on a far more sinister quality.

One of the best British political scientists on Japan, James Stockwin,
has expressed grave concern at Abe’s visit to Yasukuni. A retired
Oxford academic, Stockwin is no Japan-hater; just a decade ago, the
Emperor of Japan awarded him the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays
(with neck ribbon), no less. But he speaks frankly of Japan’s
atrocities in the Second World War and finds it “quite extraordinary …
that Abe should use this juncture to visit the Yasukuni shrine, a
gesture he must know would be regarded as highly provocative by
China”.

In an iconoclastic moment, Stockwin suggested that China and Japan
should jointly bulldoze into the sea “these useless pieces of real
estate”.

But there is a far darker side. Last year, the Japanese passed the
Designated Secrets Act, which applies a prison sentence of 10 years to
journalists and whistleblowers who give publicity to “state secrets” –
and five years for those who ask questions about secrets! This
document, as Stockwin says, “runs counter to some of the most basic
principles of democracy”. There have been protests against it. And how
did the secretary general of the governing party characterise the
protesters? They were “terrorists”, of course.

Emperor Hirohito himself – along with Admiral Yamamoto and all the old
war-mongers – would have approved. Long live the Greater South-east
Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere. Speak not of Nanking. Set course for Pearl
Harbour. That should put paid to all that exclusion, discomfort and
anger in Glendale City.

A reminder that Russia was once the good guy

Staying with World War Two, “Stalingrad the movie” has an American
version (Enemy at the Gates), a German version (Stalingrad) and now
Fyodor Bondarchuk’s Russian version (Stalingrad again).

Jude Law’s portrayal of sniper Zaitsev and his love affair with a
Soviet radio translator got howled down in the Russian Duma. The
German film showed the Nazis at their worst but had the Wehrmacht
leave Italy for Russia on a modern electric train.

Bondarchuk’s fearful 130-minute epic, which I watched in Canada last
week, beats them both. Partly based on the diaries of Vasily Grossman
– by far the finest Soviet writer of the Second World War, way ahead
of anything by Solzhenitsyn – it follows the last days of a platoon
of Red Army soldiers and seamen confronting Friedrich von Paulus’s
Sixth Army in the wrecked home of a lone Russian girl.

Her family have all died but she refuses to leave her bombed house;
Mariya Smolnikova’s portrayal of 19-year-old Katya is breathtaking.

In a war movie of immense violence, she is as close to perfect as a
refugee whose soul is both mutilated by war and ennobled by struggle –
because she underplays every moment.

At a time when we all hate Russians again – Ukraine, the Crimea – it’s
worth being reminded of a time when they were the good guys and when
Hitler thought he represented “Western civilisation”.

Not a bad film then, especially – as someone said – if you want to
know what it’s like to be shot in the throat.

Roskosmos va étudier la capacité d’exploration spatiale de l’Arménie

ARMENIE
Roskosmos va étudier la capacité d’exploration spatiale de l’Arménie

Un groupe est mis en place à Roskosmos, Agence spatiale fédérale
russe, pour étudier la capacité de l’Arménie à utiliser l’espace à des
fins pacifiques a annoncé le bureau de presse du Conseil national de
sécurité d’Arménie qui a précisé qu’Arthur Baghdasaryan, le secrétaire
du conseil, a rencontré une délégation de l’agence dirigée par Sergey
Seredin.

Le groupe a été mis en place dans le cadre de l’accord conclu entre
Arthur Baghdasaryan et Oleg Ostapenko, le chef de Roskosmos.

Lors de cette réunion, le secrétaire du Conseil national de sécurité
d’Arménie, a déclaré que la création de ce groupe est en phase avec la
coopération des deux pays dans les domaines scientifiques, techniques
et industriels.

Il a dit que l’Arménie a déjà coopéré avec Roskosmos et a souligné la
modernisation substantielle de l’Observatoire de Byurakan dans le
cadre du programme de coopération entre les conseils de sécurité des
deux pays de 2012 et 2013.

Baghdasaryan a souligné que l’Arménie a une énorme capacité qui peut
être utilisé efficacement dans l’exploration de l’espace.

Il a également dit que l’Arménie a des entreprises qui sont en mesure
de fournir aux entreprises russes des dispositifs électroniques de
radio de l’espace.

dimanche 6 avril 2014,
Stéphane (c)armenews.com

Plus de 1000 arméniens de Sydney protestent dans le cadre de la camp

AUSTRALIE
Plus de 1000 arméniens de Sydney protestent dans le cadre de la
campagne # SaveKessab

Les Arméniens de Sydney se sont rassemblés mercredi dans ce qui était
l’une des plus grandes manifestations de la campagne de # SaveKessab
dans le monde, organisé par la Fédération de la jeunesse arménienne
d’Australie (AYF Australie). Plus de 1000 militants, principalement
des jeunes, ont exigé que la Turquie soit tenu pour responsable
d’avoir permis l’accès aux rebelles syriens, qui ont envahi la ville
peuplée d’Arméniens de Kessab en Syrie le mois dernier.

Les chaînes de télévision australienne ABC et Channel 10 ont couvert
la manifestation sur le réseau de télévision, tandis que SBS Radio, la
radio ABC et 2 GB en ont fait écho sur les ondes de l’Australie. Un
lecteur des médias sociaux de Twitter et Facebook a attiré le soutien
du député fédéral et ancien ministre de la Défense d’Australie, Joel
Fitzgibbon, et du membre du Conseil législatif de la Nouvelle-Galles
du Sud, le Révérend Fred Nile.

Les manifestants étaient en colère contre la Turquie, qui après avoir
commis le génocide arménien encore impuni en 1915, pourrait de nouveau
être responsable de la persécution de civils arméniens, vivant
paisiblement dans Kessab au cours des siècles.

> a déclaré le président de
l’AYF Australie, Aram Tufenkjian. >.

Il a ajouté :

‘Hotel Rwanda’ Manager: We’ve Failed To Learn From History

NPR – National Public Radio
April 5 2014

‘Hotel Rwanda’ Manager: We’ve Failed To Learn From History

by NPR Staff

Paul Rusesabagina is a figure from history — a terrible history.

He was the manager of the Diplomat Hotel in Kigali, Rwanda, 20 years
ago, when the genocide of Rwanda’s Tutsi people began. More than
800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus would be killed in just three
months.

While most of the world took no action to stop the killing,
Rusesabagina sheltered more than 1,000 people inside his hotel. He
gave them water from the pool so they wouldn’t die from dehydration,
smuggled in food so they wouldn’t starve, and held off the militia who
came to the hotel by bribing them with alcohol and cigars.

His story was turned into an award-winning movie in 2004, Hotel
Rwanda, starring Don Cheadle as Rusesabagina.

Today, Rusesabagina lives in San Antonio, Texas. He’s the founder of
the Hotel Rwanda Rusesabagina Foundation, which advocates for human
rights internationally.

Rusesabagina tells NPR’s Scott Simon that he no longer lives in Rwanda
because after speaking out against people doing evil, he became a
target of that evil. “Having no other choice, I just fled the
country,” he says.

Interview Highlights

On what drives people to commit genocide

There are many reasons why people kill each other. One of those
reasons is, of course, bad leadership. When leaders teach the people
they lead to kill others, then people go ahead and do what their
leaders tell them. A second reason is because people are poor and are
not educated well enough. They always, as I said, tend to trust their
leaders.

The worst reason, this is impunity. In Rwanda, for instance … since
I was a young kid, late ’50s, early ’60s, we saw people killing their
neighbors and getting their cars, getting their properties — houses,
plantations and so on. Until just recently, in the late ’90s,
immediately after the genocide, those people were still living in
houses they never built, they were still living in plantations which
were never theirs, with the cattle which never belonged to them.

On his anger at the Western world for not doing more to stop the genocide

History always keeps repeating itself. We saw this happening with the
Armenians, the Armenian genocide, the Holocaust. I remember in 1994, I
was very angry with … everybody in the international community,
because when people were being butchered, they were there, and they
never did anything.

On recent violence in Syria, Darfur and the Central African Republic

This recalls exactly what we were going through in 1994. This recalls
what also has been going on in the Congo, on our own watch. That
recalls me that history repeats itself, and does not teach human
beings any lessons.

http://www.npr.org/2014/04/05/299338156/hotel-rwanda-manager-weve-failed-to-learn-from-history

Aram Gharibyan va présider le conseil d’administration du programme

ARMENIE
Aram Gharibyan va présider le conseil d’administration du programme de
développement de la pisciculture

Le gouvernement arménien a nommé Aram Gharibyan, conseiller en chef du
président arménien, en tant que président du Conseil d’administration
du programme visant à développer l’élevage de poissons en Arménie et
la constitution de réserves de truites dans le lac Sevan.

Le programme de développement de la pisciculture a été approuvé par le
gouvernement le 19 Décembre 2013 et est estimé à 66 milliards de
drams. Le gouvernement investira 24,9 milliards de drams dans le
programme et les investisseurs privés le reste.

Environ 75% de la production sera exportée. Le programme implique que
la production de truites de Sevan sera de 50 000 tonnes par an pendant
une décennie.

samedi 5 avril 2014,
Stéphane (c)armenews.com

Gaguik Barseghian (57 kg, lutte libre) offre la première médaille à

LUTTE LIBRE
Gaguik Barseghian (57 kg, lutte libre) offre la première médaille à
l’Arménie aux championnats d’Europe de lutte libre

Lors des championnats d’Europe de lutte libre qui se déroulent du 1er
au 6 avril à Vantaa (Finlande), l’Arménie a remporté une médaille de
bronze. Gaguik Barseghian (57 kg) a ainsi offert la première médaille
à l’Arménie. Il avait perdu 14-13 face à Genady Toulbea (Monténégro),
mais ce dernier arrivant en finale Gaguik Barseghian fut repêché pour
une médaille de bronze. L’Arménien s’est alors imposé face à l’Azéri
Calig Aliev et au Roumain Andreï Toukov.

Krikor Amirzayan

samedi 5 avril 2014,
Krikor Amirzayan (c)armenews.com

BAKU: Armenia Aims To Tarnish Turkey’s Image: Turkish Expert

ARMENIA AIMS TO TARNISH TURKEY’S IMAGE: TURKISH EXPERT

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
April 4 2014

4 April 2014, 15:10 (GMT+05:00)
By Jamila Babayeva

The Armenian authorities have again failed in their efforts to tarnish
Turkey’s image by selling the second so-called “Armenian genocide”
to the world community.

The Armenian authorities continue to blame Turkey for “Armenian
massacre” in Syria’s Kesab town. This comes as the town’s Mayor
Vazgen Chaparyan has rejected as baseless any reports on “massacre”
in the region.

“Armenia’s groundless claims cannot be accepted as they are absolutely
false,” Head of the Center for International Strategy and Security
Studies, Turkish expert Dr. Mehmet Seyfettin Erol told AzerNews.

“Armenia’s aim is just to present Turkey – a country which
has repeatedly suffered from terror attacks – as a supporter
of terrorists,” he said. “Armenia intends to tarnish Turkey’s
international image,” he added.

The Armenian authorities claim that Armenians in Kesab were allegedly
forced to migrate a century after the so- called “Armenian genocide”,
a claim which has not been historically proved.

Armenia and the Armenian lobby groups claim that the predecessor of
modern Turkey, the Ottoman Empire allegedly carried out “genocide”
against the Armenians living in Anadolu in 1915.

Erol believes that Armenian authorities’ efforts are part of the
psychological war against Turkey.

“Yerevan intends to strengthen its positions on the eve of
100th anniversary of so-called “Armenian genocide” and to garner
international community’s support,” he said.

He added that Armenia also aims to depict Turkey as a supporter of
war in Syria and to limit Ankara’s initiation in the war-torn country.

ANKARA: Armenian PM Steps Down, Gov’t Ministers To Follow Suit

ARMENIAN PM STEPS DOWN, GOV’T MINISTERS TO FOLLOW SUIT

World Bulletin, Turkey
April 4 2014

Although it is not yet entirely clear why he resigned, many speculate
it is related to a controversial pension plan that saw masses of
people protest in the streets of the capital Yerevan.

World Bulletin / News Desk

Armenia’s ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) has announced that
Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian has stepped down unexpectedly after
6 years in office for undisclosed reasons.

HHK spokesman Eduard Sharmazanov told a press conference that the
prime minister said that it is his “personal decision” and had asked
for his request to be granted.

Sarkisian also confirmed his resignation on his Facebook page where
he wrote “I wish the new government productive work for the good of
the country”.

Although it is not yet entirely clear why he resigned, many speculate
it is related to a controversial pension plan that saw masses of
people protest in the streets of the capital Yerevan.

His resignation also obliges all government ministers to resign as
well in accordance with the Armenian constitution.

Resignation Of Armenian PM First Step Towards Power Change – Opposit

RESIGNATION OF ARMENIAN PM FIRST STEP TOWARDS POWER CHANGE – OPPOSITION

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
April 4 2014

4 April 2014 – 9:16am

Levon Ter-Petrosyan, leader of the Armenian National Congress
opposition party, said that the resignation of Prime Minister Tigran
Sargsyan would be the first step towards a change of power in Armenia,
as stated by Levon Zurabyan, head of the party’s fraction in the
parliament, Interfax reports.

Opposition parties the Armenian National Congress, Prosperous Armenia,
Heritage and Dashnaktsutyun said that they will declare the vote
of censure to the government and demand resignation of the prime
minister on April 28. They accuse him of inefficient economic policy
and implementation of accumulative pensions. Protests will also be
organized on April 28.

Armenia: New Prime Minister Wanted

ARMENIA: NEW PRIME MINISTER WANTED

EurasiaNet.org
April 4 2014

April 4, 2014 – 9:01am, by Giorgi Lomsadze

The surprise April 3 resignation of Armenian Prime Minister Tigran
Sarkisian and possible options for his replacement have sparked much
speculation in Armenia.

In a valedictory Facebook message, Tigran Sarkisian said that he
actually had tendered his resignation back in February — his reasons
for staying on were not specified — and wished the best of luck to
the government team. That team, led by President Serzh Sargsyan, might
well need it, for their economic policies, including pension-reform,
energy and public-transportation fees, have been putting an increasing
number of Armenians on edge.

Under the Constitution, though, the cabinet must step down now that
the prime minister has.

Few are buying that 54-year-old Sarkisian quit because he wants,
as the line goes, to spend more time with his family. Most reports
link Sarkisian’s departure after six years in office to the looming
collapse of his controversial pet project on pension reform.

On April 2, the Constitutional Court scrapped a controversial,
mandatory retirement savings policy, that might have been dubbed
“Sarkisiancare.” The ex-prime minister had pulled the US-advised
reform through fire and water as hundreds fiercely protested
against the law in Yerevan. Failing to defeat it in the legislature,
Armenian opposition parties took the case to the Court, which deemed
it unconstitutional. The government insists that the policy can be
saved despite the court ruling. That was, in fact, one of the last
points that Sarkisian made in his official capacity.

Deputy Parliamentary Speaker Eduard Sharmazanov claimed that Sarkisian
has wanted to retire for quite a while now, but that President
Sargsyan (also spelled Sarkisian) asked him to stick around for
another month. Some news outlets suggested that the prime minister’s
resignation was a face-saving move by the president.

Potential replacement candidates floated in the media include Defense
Minister Serzh Oganian, Parliament Speaker Hovik Abrahamian and even
Yerevan’s police chief, Vladimir Gasparian.

http://www.eurasianet.org/node/68235