Green activists again find violations at small hydro power plants (H

Green activists again find violations at small hydro power plants
(HPP) “Khachaghbyur-1” and “Khachaghbyur-2”

by Karina Manukyan
Friday, November 21, 17:35

The Pan-Armenian Environmental Front has again revealed violations at
the small hydro power plants (HPP) “Khachaghbyur-1” and
“Khachaghbyur-2,” the Organization says in a statement provided to
ArmInfo. Activists who have visited Tavush region lately found out
that the fish passes at both the HPPs were dry. In addition, the
activists alarm that Megaenergy LLC that is exploiting
“Khachaghbyur-2” HPP has again cut off the flow of the River of
Paghjur. The activists informed the Nature Protection Ministry of the
violations.

“In 1.5 hours, some people approached the HPP and resumed the flow.
So, the employees of the Nature Protection Inspectorate would see
quite different picture when arriving at the spot,” the Pan-Armenian
Environmental Front says in the statement.

The activists call on the Ministry of Nature Protection to reckon with
the facts and violations revealed by the public when adopting
decisions on violations, as well as to raise the fines and other
punishment measures against the economic entities that repeatedly
violate relevant rules and laws.

The Organization recalls that the companies exploiting
“Khachaghbyur-1” and “Getik-4” HPPs were fined in the amount of
100,000 drams each after alarms of activists in August. Violations at
“Khachaghbyur-2” were neglected then.

Meanwhile, public in different regions of Armenia is outraged at some
small HPP construction projects. To that end, large-scale protest
actions are held regularly. Experts say small HPPs in Armenia threaten
the ecosystems.

8C7570-718B-11E4-B6900EB7C0D21663

http://www.arminfo.am/index.cfm?objectid

BAKU: Azerbaijan dismisses info on operation in Armenian helicopter’

Trend, Azerbaijan
Nov 22 2014

Azerbaijan dismisses info on operation in Armenian helicopter’s destruction zone

22 November 2014, 12:48 (GMT+04:00)

By Elchin Mehdiyev – Trend:

The information about holding a special operation by Armenian armed
forces in the zone of destruction of the Armenian military helicopter
and the losses of Azerbaijani armed forces is absolutely unfounded and
is another Armenian provocation, Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said on
Nov.22.

An Armenian Mi-24 military helicopter flying 1,700 meters northeast of
the Kengerli village of Azerbaijan’s Aghdam district attacked the
Azerbaijani army positions on Nov. 12. The helicopter was shot down by
the Azerbaijani side.

The Azerbaijani ministry presumes that the Armenian side may present
the remains of the previous losses as the remains of the helicopter’s
pilots in order to deceive the Armenian people.

Unlike the Armenian side, Azerbaijani Defense Ministry immediately
provides information about any casualties on the front line and holds
solemn funeral of martyrs, according to the ministry.

Moreover, Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said that the Armenian side
constantly creates tension in the zone of the helicopter’s destruction
and tries to involve the international structures in this issue.

Azerbaijani army hasn’t suffered any losses in this direction and the
territory is under the full control, said the ministry.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan.

As a result of the ensuing war, in 1992 Armenian armed forces occupied
20 percent of Azerbaijan, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and
seven surrounding districts.

Photography: Nanda Gonzague: Alessandra Capodacqua and Lorenza Brave

The Eye of Photography
Nov 22 2014

Nanda Gonzague: Alessandra Capodacqua and Lorenza Bravetta’s pick

The series Hayastan, l’Arménie retrouvée by Nanda Gonzague were
selected by Alessandra Capodacqua (Curator) and Lorenza Bravetta
(Magnum Photo) during portfolio review at the Gaite Lyrique on the 15
and 16 November 2014.

Armenia is mostly known for the 1915 genocide and the earthquake of
1988. I wanted to explore another aspect of this land where power,
hope and disillusion have been found in equal measure since its
independence twenty years ago. On the ruins of communism, Armenian
youth, filled with dreams, look to the future, while older generations
often display a nostalgia for the past.

Between 2007 and 2010, I traveled across Armenia, from the Iranian
border to the Turkish border, passing through the autonomous region of
Nagorno-Karabakh, in an attempt to understand what was at stake for
its people after 3,000 years of history, 1,500 years of domination and
20 years of independence.

http://www.transit-photo.com
http://www.freelens.fr
http://www.loeildelaphotographie.com/2014/11/22/portfolio/26685/nanda-gonzague-alessandra-capodacqua-and-lorenza-bravetta-s-pick
www.nanda-gonzague.com

Senator Cools Blows Hot Air…As Usual

Senator Cools Blows Hot Air…As Usual

Editorial, 22 November 2014

Since Canada recognized the Genocide of Armenians nearly a decade ago,
the Turkish Embassy in Ottawa has worked diligently behind the scenes
to have the decision reversed. The Turkish lobby has developed a
higher profile in Ottawa by sponsoring and hosting cultural and social
events; it has helped establish Turkish-Canadian “friendship” groups,
boosted Turkish community organizations, erected several monuments of
some propaganda value, courted politicians and sent them on
“familiarization” junkets to Turkey. Embassy officials have haunted
Parliament Hill corridors with increasing frequency. Meanwhile, the
Armenians have assumed Canada’s decision is carved in stone. They have
thus ignored the insidious Turkish threat.

Enter Senator Anne Cools.

Earlier this year, during her speech as part of the senate’s “Building
Bridges: Canada-Turkey Relations and Beyond” debate, Senator Cools
called on Canada to repeal its recognition of the Genocide. Has the
longest-serving senator joined the tin foil-hat brigade?

Who is Senator Cools and why she’s become an apparent mouthpiece for
the Turkish lobby?

>From the first day she came to the notice of Canadians, Ms. Cools has
been a controversial figure. Older Canadians remember the dramatic and
violent launch of her “career” when she was one of the ringleaders of
a radical posse which occupied Montreal’s Sir George Williams
University. During the nearly two-week sit-in her fellow radicals
destroyed the computer centre causing $3-million (almost $13-million
in today’s value) in damages. After the riot police put an end to the
varsity insurrection, Cools’ “Canadian-style Black Panther” stunt got
her convicted and jailed for four months. One of her
fellow-conspirators was the son of Guyanese firebrand Chedi Jagan.
Another one was from Dominica. Cools herself is from Barbados.

What was Cools’ beef? She and her cohorts alleged their teacher was
racist who gave them low marks because of their skin color. Following
the outrage, the committee appointed by the university found “there
was nothing in the evidence to substantiate a general charge of
racism” on the part of the teacher. He was also found not guilty of
racism towards Cools and her gang.

What made Cools crime worse was that the university was celebrated for
its accessibility to a wide range of students from different
backgrounds and social standing. It’s possible that the university’s
easy-going philosophy enabled Cools and her fellow firebrands gain
admission. Despite the university’s generosity, Cools and her arsonist
pals went on a rampage because they felt entitled to higher marks.

Gnawing the hand that feeds her became a habit for Cools. The ingrate
senator crossed swords with Prime Ministers Jean Chretien and Paul
Martin of the Liberal Party–the same party whose leader (Pierre
Elliott Trudeau) had, years earlier, appointed Cools to the senate,
despite her lack of qualification.

While playing the race card got her nowhere first time around, Cools
benefited big time when she was–incredibly and
controversially–appointed senator by Trudeau, the mercurial prime
minister of Canada. Why did Trudeau hand her the sinecure? Was it
because Trudeau wooed Jamaican leaders in Cuba and in Jamaica? Was it
because she was black, a woman, and an immigrant? A hat trick in
Canadian hockey parlance. Prior to getting the cushy appointment,
Cools had been unsuccessful in her attempts to get elected to the
legislature.

In 2007 Liberal Party appointee Ms. Cools jumped ship and joined the
Conservative Party. Three years later the peripatetic senator was on
the road again… this time she crossed the floor to become
“non-aligned”. That wasn’t the last of her peregrinations: in 2010 she
declared herself Independent.

Throughout her senate career Ms. Cools has tangled with feminists,
called for the resignation of Prime Minister Paul Martin, claimed to
have been assaulted by fellow senators, and exchanged words with Prime
Minister Stephen Harper on same-sex marriage. She was finally turfed
from the Tory caucus after she denounced Mr. Harper and bad-mouthed
the government’s Accountability Act. Upon her forced departure Mr.
Harper said she had not attended party caucus meetings “for a long
time.” Leaving no stone unturned, Cools also attacked senate
government leader Marjory LeBreton.

Columnist Michele Landsberg of the “Toronto Star” (Canada’s
largest-circulation daily) described Ms. Cool’s performance during a
widely-publicized hearing with these words: “…when representatives of
women’s services and shelters began their allotted five minutes of
testimony, Senator Anne Cools smiled sarcastically rolled her eyes,
and then got up to stroll the room and work the crowd, chatting and
joking with her supporters.” She was also accused of brow-beating
presenters to her committee.

Ms. Cools also famously said: “Abusive mothers are responsible for
creating violent sons…Behind every abusing husband is an abusing
mother.” It’s all your fault, Ma.

Predictably, Ms. Cools has been described as a renegade, anti-feminist
maverick, fruitcake, wing nut, loose cannon, among other epithets. Her
long tenure has elevated her superior airs. Cools carries the
distinction of being the longest-serving senator of recent decades.
Why would anyone loiter at Canada’s Foggy Bottom for four decades? In
Cools’ case, why not? Considering the perks, pomp and power… and
considering her non-existent political career prior to the Trudeau
gift. Her mandated retirement comes up in four years. There’s no doubt
she wouldn’t leave a minute sooner. Then, of course, she will
luxuriate in her generous pension, if not become consultant to… say,
Turkey?

There you have it: the life and times of the notorious senator who
wants Canada to repeal its recognition of the Armenian Genocide.

Her recent pitch on behalf of the Turkish lobby is, of course, full of
untruths and misdirection. To be kind Ms. Cools is simply ignorant.

Item:

She said that she had doubts about the resolution which recognized the
Genocide. But she was a senator then. Why didn’t she raise her voice
when the senate voted? The Armenian National Committee of Canada
(ANCC) met her at least twice. She didn’t object to the motion or
raise any concern.

Item:

In her recent pronuncimento (the Latin word is apt since Ms. Cools
likes to impress people by tossing Latin words) she alleged that when
the government was considering the Genocide resolution, Liberal leader
in parliament Sharon Carstairs had opposed its passage. Contrary to
what Ms. Cools alleges, Ms. Carstairs met the ANCC delegation and said
she would talk to the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) regarding the
issue. On a subsequent meeting Carstairs’ senior policy advisor told
the ANCC that the PMO did not have any objection to the motion.

Item:

In her anti-Armenian outburst Ms. Cools uttered: “The resolution was
adopted, though it was never referred to or studied in a Senate
committee. No witnesses were heard and no evidence was received or
tested.” This is also far from the truth. Otherwise why would the
motion “languish” in the senate for over six months? The fact is the
motion was debated, studied, and evidence was presented. As well, the
ANCC representatives were called to the senate’s Liberal caucus to
examine the motion with the senators and answer their questions.
Senator and lawyer Jerry Grafstein, one of the most trusted and
experienced legal minds in the senate and in the Liberal Party, was
the lead legal expert in the Liberal caucus who examined the legal
aspects of the recognition. He was supportive of the motion. Serge
Joyal, another leading senator, worked hard for the motion’s approval.

Item:

The motion was also debated in the Conservative Party and caucus.
Raynell Andreychuck and Consiglio Di Nino were the lead MPs who
handled the file on behalf of their party. They were powerful
supporters of the motion. The PMO and Foreign Affairs also debated the
issue. Foreign Minister Lloyd Axworthy told ANCC representatives in
his office: “If you are coming to convince me with historical facts of
the Armenian Genocide, don’t waste your time. I know it happened.” He
then added: “Unfortunately, there are other players in town [Ottawa]
and they are very influential.” It’s a safe bet he was referring to
the Turkish lobby.

Item:

Rather than encountering difficulties, the motion passed almost
unanimously. The single objection came from Liberal senator (Lorna
Milne) who was involved with the Canada-Turkey Friendship Group.

Item:

Hard to believe but in her misguided mission on behalf of Turkey, Ms.
Cools incredibly said Canada is the only country in the world which
recognizes the Genocide.

Item:

Ms. Cools also insulted Senator Raymond Setlakwe when she alleged the
senator was a crypto-Armenian who had lobbied Prime Minister Chretien
without identifying his ethnic origins.

Item:

Describing the Genocide resolution, Ms. Cools said: “This is not
proper, fair, just, or consistent with our common law.” What, pray
tell, is not proper, fair or just in calling a spade a spade or should
it be yataghan?

Item:

The resolution “was driven by local politics at the riding levels…”
said the voluble senator. So…fewer than 70,000 Canadian-Armenians had
a decisive voice in Canada’s relations with Turkey. Perhaps it’s the
same omnipotent Canadian-Armenians who have failed, after years of
effort, to persuade Ottawa to establish an embassy in Armenia.

Item:

Ms. Cools quoted Raphael Lemkin to define “genocide”, but somehow
didn’t mention that the Polish juror had coined the word to describe
what Turkey had done to Armenians.

Item:

Ms. Cools went on to narrate Dogu Perincek’s case at the European
Court of Human Rights. This is opportunism par excellence. She didn’t
mention that the case has been appealed by the Swiss government and
that many international human rights and genocide experts, including
Turkish organizations, have condemned Perincek. She didn’t mention
that Perincek is a notorious racist. Ms. Cools’ champion was
convicted in Turkey for his ultra-nationalist and racist activities.
The 60,000-page transcript of his trial is replete with his venomous
declarations against Armenians and other minorities.

And what’s the superannuated senator’s reason for repealing the
Genocide resolution? Why, to avoid “future conflict and pain.” The
arsonist senator has a burning desire for peace.

The ball is in the Canadian-Armenian community’s court. In addition to
a collective effort to discourage Ms. Cools from fronting–knowingly or
unknowingly– the Turkish lobby, Canadian-Armenians should make
certain no opportunistic politician will ever contemplate repeating
the erratic senator’s outburst to repeal the Canadian government’s
honorable and courageous decision to stand firm against Turkey’s
blackmail.

It’s redundant to mention the damage to Canada’s image if a future
government contemplates reversing its decision which the erstwhile
convict is preaching.

http://www.keghart.com/Editorial-Semator-Cools

Armenian Special Forces’ actions excite admiration but they do not j

Armenian Special Forces’ actions excite admiration but they do not
justify the criminal negligence of Armenian leadership, Artsakh war
veteran says

by Ashot Safaryan

Saturday, November 22, 15:06

The Armenian Special Forces’ actions excite admiration but they do not
justify the criminal negligence of Armenian leadership, Suren
Sargsyan, member of the Council of Field Commanders, Artsakh war
veteran, has told ArmInfo’s correspondent.

“I think that the bodies of our guys could and should have been taken
half an hour after the tragic incident. We, the veterans of the
Artsakh war, also could do that, but I know that there are
well-trained people in the Armed Forces. I regret to say that the
bodies of our guys have been recovered so tardily. One should not have
turned the tragedy of these people into a subject for political
speculations”, says Sargsyan.

He strongly criticizes the actions of the Armenian military and
political leadership, which, in his opinion, has not only sent the
pilots of the unarmed helicopter to their doom but has also built its
personal PR on this tragedy. “I do not understand the behavior of
Serzh Sargsyan, who has declared himself as the supreme
commander-in-chief. While the bodies of our pilots were lying in the
open field and might fall prey to the beasts, Serzh Sargsyan flew to
Karabakh by helicopter and uttered some senseless speeches.

These speeches are not worth a dime. I am also extremely indignant at
the stupidity of our military leadership”, says Sargsyan.

When considering the incident in the light of the ongoing political
processes, Sargsyan says that the tragic incidents along the Line of
Contact occur when Serzh Sargsyan and Ilham Aliyev feel that their
regimes are endangered. “I even suspect that Sargsyan and Aliyev have
come to some agreement”, he says.

To note, the NKR Defense Army Special Forces have recovered the body
of a crewmember and the remains of the two pilots of Mi-24 helicopter
that was downed by Azerbaijani forces on 12 November. The necessary
wreckage was recovered too. Two Azerbaijani militaries were killed in
the course of the special operation. The NKR Defense Army suffered no
losses.

To remind, the Azerbaijani armed forces downed an Armenian Mi-24 while
it was conducting a training flight near the Line on Contact on 12
November. Three officers of the NKR Armed Forces, Sergey Sahakyan,
Sargis Nazaryan and Azat Sahakyan, were on board. The Azeri officer
that shot the helicopter down has been awarded a medal.

http://www.arminfo.am/index.cfm?objectid=116A4C90-7240-11E4-8C0F0EB7C0D21663

Festival international du cinéma du Caire : Ode à la Souffrance

REVUE DE PRESSE
Festival international du cinéma du Caire : Ode à la Souffrance

Le film d’ouverture du Festival du film du Caire, The Cut (la
blessure), oblige son réalisateur Fatih Akin à être en butte aux
ultranationalistes de son pays d’origine, la Turquie. Une oeuvre sur
le génocide arménien commis en 1915, mais aussi sur les guerres et
conflits politiques contemporains

Un sujet tabou, interdit et dangereux, mais j’ai le cou-rage de
l’aborder sur les écrans, en faveur de ceux qui ont perdu gratuitement
leur vie >>. C’est ainsi que le réalisateur allemand d’origine turque,
Fatih Akin, décrit son film, The Cut (la blessure), pro-jeté à
l’ouverture de cette 36e édition du Festival international du film du
Caire.

The Cut est le troisième volet de la trilogie de Fatih Akin sur
l’Amour, la Mort et le Diable, après Head On et De l’autre côté, primé
au Festival de Cannes. Faisant sa première interna-tionale cette année
à la Mostra de Venise, The Cut revient sur le géno-cide arménien de
1915 qui a causé la mort de près d’un million et demi de chrétiens,
majoritairement armé-niens, mais aussi grecs.

Pendant la Première Guerre mon-diale, les Ottomans ont tué 1,5
mil-lion d’Arméniens, selon eux et qui parlent de >. La
Turquie, elle, refuse ce terme et dément ce chiffre, avançant qu’il y
a eu au maximum 500 000 victimes armé-niennes, et elles ont péri dans
les combats ou sont mortes de faim. The Cut raconte alors l’histoire
d’un homme qui vit à Mardin, une ville du sud-est de la Turquie,
lequel a échap-pé au massacre des Arméniens en 1915 et est parti à la
recherche de ses filles.

Dans la presse internationale, Fatih Akin a souligné que la Turquie
est > pour recevoir et accepter ce film. . >,
a-t-il indiqué.

Mais finalement, il a renoncé à confier le rôle principal à un Turc,
se trouvant dans l’obligation de céder celui-ci à Tahar Rahim, jeune
comé-dien français d’origine algérienne. Ce dernier a excellé à
incarner Nazaret, jeune maréchal-ferrant, vic-time de l’armée turque
en 1915.

Comme l’indique son nom, Nazaret Manoogian a le malheur de faire
par-tie des Arméniens chrétiens. Une nuit, l’armée frappe à sa porte
pour l’incor-porer de force. Après quelques dizaines de mois à casser
des pierres dans le désert, on lui propose comme à d’autres
prisonniers de se convertir à l’islam. Les désobéissants comme lui
sont malheureusement égorgés, mais Nazaret tombe sur un bourreau
sen-sible qui lui laisse la vie sauve, non sans lui avoir quand même
scindé les cordes vocales, ce qui le réduira au silence pour le reste
du film.

Libéré, Nazaret découvre que seules ses filles jumelles ont survé-cu
aux horreurs de la guerre, et il entreprend de les retrouver au cours
d’un déplacement qui le mènera à Cuba puis dans différents Etats
d’Amérique par la Floride.

Illustration somptueuse mais fade

Côté forme, le scénario co-écrit par Mardik Martin rassemble une
certaine beauté visuelle et une belle photo panoramique en 35 mm, pour
donner au film des touches de superproduc-tion hollywoodienne.
Toutefois, on a parfois, durant les 140 minutes du film, l’impression
d’une succession de scènes d’exposition, presque toutes sur le même
rythme. D’ailleurs, le dialogue s’avère parfois trop simpli-fié, et le
fait de faire parler les person-nages arméniens en anglais, alors que
toutes les autres langues sont sous-titrées, n’était pas la bonne
solution pour rendre le public attaché ou proche du contenu.

Akin cherche clairement à s’adres-ser à un public contemporain, que ce
soit à travers le dialogue ou à travers une bande musicale électrique,
qui ne va pas avec ce genre de films histo-riques. Par ailleurs,
certaines images rappellent les guerres actuellement en cours au
Moyen-Orient, avec les camps de réfugiés et la souffrance gratuite des
citoyens, mais d’un point de vue propre au réalisateur.

En ce qui concerne l’interprétation dans cette épopée, Tahar Rahim
prouve une fois de plus ses grandes capacités de changer de peau selon
le personnage, ou plutôt selon le défi. Il excelle à se servir de son
talent face à ce rôle presque muet, exigeant donc un jeu physique bien
travaillé, malgré certains moments de platitude dans le rythme. Car le
scénario se résume en une série de témoignages parfois excessifs.
Toutefois, cela ne change rien à la qualité du film, saisi comme une
belle illustration, bien perfection-née quoique directe .

samedi 22 novembre 2014,
Stéphane (c)armenews.com

http://hebdo.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/0/5/25/7457/Festival-international-du-cin%C3%A9ma-du-Caire–Ode-%C3%A0–.aspx
http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=105316

Les Arméniens et les autres habitants d’Alep (Syrie) s’apprêtent à p

ARMENIENS-ALEP (SYRIE)
Les Arméniens et les autres habitants d’Alep (Syrie) s’apprêtent à
passer un hiver difficile

L’hiver pour les Arméniens et les autres habitants d’Alep (Syrie) sera
difficile selon Jiraïr Reyisian le représentant de presse du bureau de
l’Eglise arménienne d’Alep. Selon ce dernier le manque de chauffage
sera en première ligne des difficultés des habitants d’Alep.

Affaire Safarov : l’APCE condamne l’utilisation par l’Azerbaïdjan de

CONSEIL DE L’EUROPE
Affaire Safarov : l’APCE condamne l’utilisation par l’Azerbaïdjan de
la Convention sur le transfèrement de détenus

La Commission permanente de l’Assemblée parlementaire du Conseil de
l’Europe (APCE) a condamné l’utilisation par l’Azerbaïdjan d’un traité
du Conseil de l’Europe sur le transfèrement de détenus pour justifier
la libération immédiate, une fois de retour dans son pays d’origine,
d’un militaire azerbaïdjanais condamné pour le meurtre d’un collègue
arménien commis en Hongrie en 2004.

Dans une résolution adoptée le 19 novembre lors de sa réunion à
Bruxelles et basée sur un rapport de Christopher Chope (Royaume-Uni,
CE), la Commission permanente – qui réunit une soixantaine des
principaux membres de l’Assemblée et agit au nom de celle-ci – a
qualifié

Incumbent authorities unable to solve state and national issues only

Incumbent authorities unable to solve state and national issues, only
personal – Garnik Isagulyan

17:00 / 21.11.2014

Nyut.am conducted an interview with the leader of the National
Security party Garnik Isagulyan over the activities of the three
political forces.

– In your opinion, why the three political forces refused to negotiate
with the authorities?

– First of all I would say that the 12 points and the opinions about
them have been voiced by both the president and spokesman for the
ruling party Eduard Sharmazanov who stressed that the way of
presentation was not appropriate and they do not need to be discussed
but the government will somehow refer to them and respond to it. Then
the government referred to it, saying that it does not find it
purposeful to implement these points. This was followed by certain
domestic political processes, and two serious rallies after which the
authorities understood that a quite serious potential is being
assembled against them and it is necessary to extinguish it somehow.
And happened the same as it happened in case of Mashtots park when the
authorities were trying to place pavilions there until the time when
president appeared there and said that it is not beautiful.
Naturally the president himself told the government what attitude must
be displayed toward the 12 points. Rallies, big pressure took place
after which again the president appeared and told the government to
review the 12 points.

– Do you have any positive expectations from the authorities regarding
the implementation of the 12 points?

– One of the most important points among these 12 is passing to the
100% proportional system and publication of voters’ lists after the
polls. If the government or the president want to show that they are
ready to make a step and are not just winning time must show that they
are ready to pass to the 100% proportional system. It will show
whether they are really ready to implement steps. I think the three
forces understand what it means to negotiate with the authorities over
points the solution of which would not take even a week. The
authorities have one issue to win time and solve their personal
issues. The incumbent authorities do not have ability to solve state
and national issues.

Nyut.am

Caltech professor claims Israeli spy infiltrated JPL

Caltech professor claims Israeli spy infiltrated JPL

Two civil rights firms filed a lawsuit Thursday, November 13, 2014,
morning against Caltech in Los Angeles Superior Court alleging that
high-level Caltech administrators retaliated against senior Caltech
Professor Dr. Sandra M. Troian and have made her working conditions
intolerable because she reported violations of federal export laws to
the FBI concerning the handling of sensitive information at the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, which is managed by Caltech. She is
photographed with her attorney Dan Stormer. (Photo by Dean Musgrove /
Pasadena Star News)

By Zen Vuong, Pasadena Star-News
POSTED: 11/13/14, 10:49 AM PST

PASADENA >> A physics professor at the California Institute of
Technology filed a lawsuit against the university Thursday, alleging
it allowed a potential Israeli spy on campus for two years even after
she reported that he violated federal laws and shared classified
information with his home country and on the Internet.

Sandra Troian alleges Caltech administrators ignored the school’s
whistleblower policy and retaliated against her for the past four
years because if they had documented her concern, they could have put
an $8 billion contract with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory at risk
and put the school in a bad light. Troian said she is frightened for
her career.

“I’m shocked at what happened because I know that I did the right
thing, and I absolutely refuse to break the law,” Troian said. “I’ve
done the right thing all my life. I thought Caltech would appreciate
knowing about certain problems and security leaks. … Caltech is filled
with very many good scientists and very honorable people. I think the
group that decided to come after me — they themselves are very
unethical.”

The lawsuit claims Caltech’s campaign against her started in the
summer of 2010 and revved up soon after June 2012 when FBI agents
interviewed Troian about security breaches at JPL. The federal agents
said her former assistant was the subject of International Traffic in
Arms Regulations (ITAR) violations and possibly espionage acts from
his time at JPL and Caltech, according to the complaint.

In a statement issued late Thursday, Caltech called Troian’s lawsuit
meritless and said the institution always abides by export control
laws and ITAR. It also regularly cooperates with government agencies
such as the FBI, the statement said.

“The plaintiff, who was dissatisfied with the outcome of a recent
internal campus investigation into her decision to list her cat as the
author of a published abstract and omit recognitio of a postdoctoral
scholar who performed related research, suffered no retaliation and
remains an active faculty member of the institution,” the Caltech
statement said.

In her complaint, Troian said she used her cat’s name as a placeholder
because she hoped to find a co-author before she had to present a
10-minute talk. She said using pets’ names was a regular jest among
the scientific community and listed a Nobel Prize-winning physicist
who had his hamster co-author a scientific paper in 2001.

Caltech officials, the suit alleges, threatened to terminate the
tenured professor, denied her about $1.1 million in research funding,
accused her of plagiarism and research falsification, accused her of
mistreating former postdoctoral research scholars, and added
fictitious negative reports in her personnel file, among other things.

The lawsuit, filed in Los Angeles County Superior court, demands a
jury trial because Caltech retaliated against Troian, performed a
breach of contract and violated an implied covenant of good faith and
fair dealing.

Pasadena-based attorney Dan Stormer said national security concerns
are at stake. He wants Caltech to remove “false and slanderous
defamatory comments” from Troian’s professional record. Additionally,
he seeks punitive damages because “they’ve got to be held publicly
accountable for their conduct.”

Plaintiffs in similar cases have been awarded multibillion-dollar
verdicts, he said.

“JPL is the cornerstone of Caltech’s financial security,” Stormer
said. “It makes them one of the foremost research institutions in the
world. Without it, Caltech is just a backwater institution with very
bright people. They could not get the people here that they have
without the access to the research facilities at JPL. It is what makes
Caltech Caltech.”

Edward Stolper, Caltech’s provost, allegedly told Troian that if she
did not cooperate with him, he would help make her “miserable,” the
suit says.

“God, if you think you’ve had a bad two years, wait for the next two
years of being confrontational with Caltech. It just won’t be fun,” he
allegedly said according to the suit.

The former Caltech research scholar who is the catalyst for the
lawsuit is identified as Amir Gat. He is in Israel and employed as an
assistant professor of mechanical engineering at ITT, an Israeli
government institution, according to the complaint.

Troian alleges a virus attack in May 2010 caused hundreds of project
files on her computer to be uploaded to an unknown IP address outside
of Caltech. She later discovered the virus originated from Gat’s
laptop and repeatedly notified Caltech officials about her findings,
according to the lawsuit.

Gat admitted he shared details of a top-secret new space
micropropulsion system with his doctorate advisor, Daniel Weihs, at
ITT without first getting permission from the U.S. government. Weihs
is a member of Israel’s National Steering Committee for Space
Infrastructure of the Ministry of Science, chair of Israel’s National
Committee for Space Research and chief scientist at the Ministry of
Science and Technology, according to the suit.

Also without proper approval from the U.S. Department of State, Gat
allegedly made 65 online postings about key operating principles for
the micropropulsion device, according to the lawsuit.

In another breach of federal privacy procedure, Caltech is accused of
knowingly imaging Troian’s entire laptop even after she protested that
it “contained personal medical records, Department of Defense
materials that federal law prohibited from further distribution and
materials pertaining to Dr. Troian’s conversations with the FBI,” the
suit says.

Stormer said Troian has never tried to hide anything, yet Caltech has
done its best to hide everything.

“This is simply an affront to concepts of fairness,” Stormer said.
“She committed her life to science and to Caltech. She is the person
who recognized Caltech’s obligations under the espionage laws, and she
is egregiously punished for her honesty when questioned by the FBI.”

Troian, who has been employed at Caltech for eight years, is the only
female faculty member in applied physics and is one of four female
physicist faculty members on campus, according to the suit.

Women make up nearly 19 percent of professorial faculty at Caltech.

As a faculty member, Troian said her career depends on her reputation
and integrity, which she said Caltech has sought to impugn.

“This has been very humiliating and degrading to me. I’ve been subject
to the most invasive interrogation you can imagine,” she said. “JPL
acted honorably throughout. They did the right thing and filed the
right report. That part of the system worked well. …My complaint is
strictly with Caltech.”

http://www.pasadenastarnews.com/general-news/20141113/caltech-professor-claims-israeli-spy-infiltrated-jpl