British Ex-Spy Chief Accuses US Of Hiding Torture

BRITISH EX-SPY CHIEF ACCUSES US OF HIDING TORTURE

Agence France Presse
Wednesday, March 10, 2010

LONDON – A former head of Britain’s domestic spy agency has accused
the US of concealing its abuse of terror suspects, stepping up an
MI5 fightback over accusations that it colluded in torture.

Eliza Manningham-Buller said Tuesday she had not understood why
alleged 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed had been willing to
talk to American interrogators.

She said she only discovered he had been waterboarded when she read
about it after her retirement in 2007.

"The Americans were very keen that people like us did not discover
what they were doing," she said in a specially arranged lecture at
Britain’s upper house of parliament in London.

The US had been "very keen to conceal from us what was happening."

Her comments come as the spy agency hits back at claims it colluded
with US counterparts in the torture of terror suspects.

The allegations were sparked by a British court’s decision last month
to release details of US torture of a former Guantanamo Bay inmate.

Ex-prisoner Binyam Mohamed — who was born in Ethiopia but is a British
resident — has charged he was asked questions by US interrogators
that could only have come from the British intelligence services.

Ministers and current MI5 head Jonathan Evans have strongly denied
the accusations of collusion, but there were still question marks
over when Britain knew about the US apparently changing its rules on
torture following the 9/11 attacks.

Manningham-Buller’s remarks could put the intelligence-sharing
relationship between Washington and London, already strained by last
month’s court decision which angered the US, under further pressure.

In her comments Tuesday, she did not mention the recent case, but
focused on the treatment by the US of the alleged mastermind of the
September 11, 2001 attacks on New York and Washington that killed
nearly 3,000 people.

She said she had wondered how, in 2002 and 2003, the US had been able
to supply Britain with intelligence from Mohammed.

"I said to my staff, ‘Why is he talking?’ because our experience of
Irish prisoners, Irish terrorists, was that they never said anything,"
she said.

"They said, ‘Well, the Americans say he is very proud of his
achievements’ when questioned about it.

"It wasn’t actually until after I retired that I read that, in fact,
he had been waterboarded 160 times."

She said Britain had lodged "protests" with the Americans about its
treatment of detainees, but gave no further details.

Demirchian: US Congress Will Hardly Hold Discussions On Res.252

DEMIRCHIAN: US CONGRESS WILL HARDLY HOLD DISCUSSIONS ON RES.252

Aysor
March 10 2010
Armenia

Chairman of the Popular Party of Armenia Stepan Demirchian said that
the U.S. Congress will hardly hold discussions on the Resolution
on Genocide.

"I welcome the U.S. Congressional House of Representatives Foreign
Affairs Committee’s a decision to approve the resolution; however, I
think the U.S. Congress will hardly hold on the resolution’s passage,"
he said.

Stepan Demirchian also pointed that U.S. President Barack Obama will
not use the word "genocide" on the April 24 remembrance day, and said
that Turkey’s Parliament will not ratify the Armenia-Turkey protocols.

Armenian President Invites French Leader To Armenia

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT INVITES FRENCH LEADER TO ARMENIA

news.am
March 10 2010
Armenia

RA President Serzh Sargsyan invited his French counterpart Nicolas
Sarkozy to pay a state visit to Armenia.

The NEWS.am correspondent reported that the French leader, in turn,
invited the Armenian President to pay a state visit to France.

RA Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian told reporters that the visit
is scheduled for the immediate future.

"Armenian-French friendship is not mere words, the bilateral relations
are really friendly," Nalbandian said. He stressed that it is the
third meeting between the Armenian and French leaders. The meeting
was held in a warm atmosphere of mutual confidence.

Speculations On Armenian Genocide Recognition Do No Credit To USA

SPECULATIONS ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RECOGNITION DO NO CREDIT TO USA

ArmInfo
2010-03-09 14:52:00

ArmInfo. Speculations on the issue of recognition of the Armenian
Genocide do no credit to the USA, Director of the Analytic Center on
Globalization and Regional Cooperation Stepan Grigoryan told ArmInfo.

"Permanently peddling threat of the Genocide recognition and via
political blackmail, Washington strives not to admit change of
Turkey’s foreign policy at any cost. However, this way may lead to an
adverse effect in form of creation of a firm union between Moscow and
Ankara. As our recent history shows, this union can forebode nothing
good for the Armenian people", the political expert said. Moreover,
Grigoryan thinks that the process of putting pressure on Turkey by the
USA contains much danger for Armenia, as Turkey has lately changed its
foreign political preferences, striving for rapprochement with Russia
and eastern countries and moving away from the USA at the same time.

"If there is no permanent collision of interests of the superpowers
and military-political blocks in the South Caucasus, this may lead
to very undesirable impulses for Armenia", he resumed.

On March 4 2010 the House Committee on Foreign Affairs affirmed House
Resolution 252, or the non- binding Armenian Genocide Resolution, that
calls upon the President to recognize the death of 1.5 million ethnic
Armenians as genocide in his annual remembrance on April 24. The
committee split 23 yes votes to 22 no votes. For final adoption,
the resolution requires approval by the House of Representatives. No
approval by the Senate or the President is required. Earlier Turkish
Parliament addressed a letter to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs
saying that affirmation of the Resolution may impede the Armenian-
Turkish normalization.

Medvedev Not Expected To Visit Armenia This Week

MEDVEDEV NOT EXPECTED TO VISIT ARMENIA THIS WEEK

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.03.2010 13:48 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Russian President Dmitry Medvedev is not expected to
pay a visit to Armenia this week. The Kremlin’s press office neither
denied nor confirmed the possibility of the Russian President’s visit
to Yerevan.

Earlier, an informed sourced in Moscow told PanARMENIAN.Net that Mr.

Medvedev is planning a visit to Armenia. The source said that
"currently the Russian leader is in Sochi and his visit to Yerevan
is very likely."

Armenian, Russian Foreign Ministers Discuss International Issues

ARMENIAN, RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTERS DISCUSS INTERNATIONAL ISSUES

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.03.2010 14:01 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov met with
visiting Edward Nalbandian in Moscow, March 8.

The parties discussed a number of international issues, as well as
development of Armenia-Russia relations.

Edward Nalbandian and Sergey Lavrov focused on further process of
Karabakh conflict settlement, RA Foreign Ministry press service
reported.

BAKU: Turkey calls on Armenia to open all archives and negotiate f2f

Trend, Azerbaijan
March 5 2010

Turkey calls on Armenia to open all archives and negotiate face to
face (UPDATED)

Turkey calls on Armenia to open all archives and not to exert pressure
through the U.S. Congress, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu
said.

"The adoption of the resolution on the Armenian genocide is comical,
as the difference in one voice seems very strange," he added.

U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs adopted Thursday a resolution
recognizing the so-called Armenian genocide with 23 votes to 22.

Armenia claims that the Ottoman Empire committed genocide against
Armenians living in Anatolia in 1915. Making greater efforts to
promote the issue internationally, Armenians have achieved its
recognition by parliaments of some countries.

Signing the protocols with Armenia, Turkey sought to bequeath to
future generations of peace and stability among nations, but the
adoption of this resolution by the U.S. Congress committee shows that
Yerevan does not act openly in this matter, he added.

The minister considers the view that the adoption of the resolution
could put pressure on Ankara to ratify the Armenian-Turkish protocols
erroneous.

"The fact is that Turkey has taken a decision on this issue ten years
ago, Armenia only four months ago," he said.

The intervention of a third party, in this case the United States, in
the relations between Armenia and Turkey complicates the process of
reconciliation between the countries, he said.

The adoption of a resolution recognizing the Armenian genocide
indicates that the U.S. Congress is very weak in developing a future
political strategy, the Turkish minister said.

Azerbaijan: Baku Debates Ditching Russian-Origin Last Names

EURASIA INSIGHT
AZERBAIJAN: BAKU DEBATES DITCHING RUSSIAN-ORIGIN LAST NAMES

htb/articles/eav030210.shtml
Mina Miradova 3/02/10

A draft law on dropping Russian endings from Azeri last names is
fueling debate in Azerbaijan about how best to define the country’s
national identity.

As elsewhere in the South Caucasus, Russia’s cultural influence has
been receding rapidly since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.
In Azerbaijan, that change coincides with the country’s emergence as a
regional energy power.

Many believe that ethnic Azeri last names better suit Azerbaijan’s
status as an independent state with an identity of its own, rather
than names with Russian-origin endings.

Such a changeover, however, would be no small task. A six-month
research study done by a special commission under the National Academy
of Sciences shows that nearly 80 percent of Azerbaijan’s population of
8.3 million has last names with the Russian endings of "-ov/ova" or
"-ev/eva." Among that number is Azerbaijan’s president, Ilham Aliyev,
whose administration is now reviewing the name-change legislation.

Under the proposal, submitted by parliament’s Culture Committee
chairman, Nizami Jafarov, a member of the governing Yeni Azerbaijan
Party, the name change will be obligatory for all newborns; others
will only be recommended to drop the Russian last name endings of
"-ov/ova" and "-ev/eva." Participants would then choose one of four
Azeri endings for their new last names: "-ly", "-oglu", "-gil" or
"-soy."

Debate still persists about names ending with "-zade," an ending
derived from Persian; Jafarov, though, believes the ending could make
the cut "because people perceive it as a national [ethnic Azeri] one."

The name-change requirement would not apply to Azerbaijani citizens of
non-Azeri ethnic origin, he said. While conceding that some
Azerbaijanis will not be eager to change their names, he put the
number at no more than 10 percent of population, the APA news agency
reported.

One leader of Azerbaijan’s movement for independence from the Soviet
Union characterizes the proposal as a chance to wipe out an
"historical injustice."

"We did not accept the ‘-ov’ and ‘-ev’ endings voluntarily," said poet
Sabir Rustamhanly, a member of parliament. "Without asking anybody’s
wish, these endings were added to everybody’s last name. ? The change
in the endings of our last names was part of the [Russian] policy to
influence our national consciousness and to distort our history."

Tsarist Russia gained control over modern-day Azerbaijan in 1828, as
part of a treaty with Persia that ceded Persian-held territories in
the Caucasus to Russia. Azerbaijan declared its independence in 1918
with the creation of the Azerbaijani Democratic Republic, but again
fell under Russian suzerainty in 1920 following the invasion of the
Red Army.

Two years after Azerbaijan declared its independence from the Soviet
Union in 1991, parliament issued a decree on the voluntary change of
last names, but few changes were made. Russian language influence has
since declined sharply, as Azerbaijan has opened up more widely to the
outside world.

Promoting Azeri last names over names with Russian endings will do
little to complete the independence process, believes one journalist.
Elchin Shikhlinsky, editor-in-chief of Baku’s Russian-language daily
Zerkalo (Mirror), argues that forcing people to change their last
names would potentially constitute a human rights violation.

"The commission can only work out proposals and recommend that people
change [their names], but it can’t force them," said Shikhlinsky, who
does not plan to drop his last name’s Russian ending. Newborns given a
last name with an Azeri ending should "be able to make a decision
independently" about their names when they receive their
identification cards, he added.

The prospect of a name change confuses 35-year-old mother Rena
Abilova, now in her sixth month of pregnancy. "So, my baby will have a
last name different from ours," she sighed. "My husband and I tried to
replace our last name’s ending with the suggested ones, but none of
them sound right. I . . . do not know what we will do."

The Academy of Sciences commission has proposed the creation of a
state-run database to keep track of Azeri first and last names.

Greater enthusiasm for taking a new, Azeri-only last name can be found
among Azerbaijanis who are too young to remember the Soviet Union and
want a more Turkic-sounding last name, commented Vafa Jafarova, the
former head of the youth movement Dalga. The support, though, is "not
massive," she added.

Political analyst Zardusht Alizade calls the name-change proposal
"cheap populism."

"These people are playing the worthless role of pseudo-patriots who
allegedly are looking for their own national roots and want to restore
the integrity of their national pride," Alizade contended. "[But] by
changing [our] last names, nothing positive and progressive will
happen in society. To be free from outside influence, we should change
our mindset and implement independent [government] policies."

Zerkalo Editor-in-Chief Shikhlinsky seconds that opinion, calling for
the government and society to "grow out of their short pants."

Other Azerbaijanis say they will make the name change only when senior
government officials take the first step. So far, no such decision has
been announced.

Editor’s Note: Mina Miradova is a freelance reporter based in Baku.

Posted March 2, 2010 © Eurasianet

http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insig
http://www.eurasianet.org

Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee Releases Statement on H. Res. 252

Targeted News Service
March 5, 2010 Friday 7:44 PM EST

Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee Releases Statement on H. Res. 252

WASHINGTON

Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas (18th CD), issued the following new release:

Congresswoman Jackson Lee condemns the Armenian genocide that occurred
from 1915 to 1923 against the Armenian people. During this time the
Ottoman Empire killed an estimated 1.5 million Armenians and deported
an additional 2 million Armenians.

Yesterday Congresswoman Jackson Lee decided to give peace a chance.
Although she continues to condemn these heinous acts, she hopes that
she can work on legislation as this is the time to work with the
Turkish government to encourage voluntary action.

In her statement for the record, Congresswoman Jackson Lee stated:

"Throughout this debate, Turkey has maintained that it seeks
reconciliation and historical truth-finding. If these commitments are
to be believed, now is the time for Turkey to take meaningful steps
forward. At the same time, Turkey and Armenia must work together to
eliminate the climate of mistrust that is impeding normalization."

After the vote, Congresswoman Jackson Lee stated: "I am a friend of
both the Turkish and the Armenian people. We need to find a way to
foster collaboration, normalization, and reconciliation. To that end,
I will continue to work on the legislation going forward so that we
can address these concerns and help bring an agreeable resolution to
this issue for both Turkey and Armenia."

On March 4, 2010 the House Foreign Affairs Committee voted (23-22) to
send H.Res. 252: "Calling upon the President to ensure that the
foreign policy of the United States reflects appropriate understanding
and sensitivity concerning issues related to human rights, ethnic
cleansing, and genocide documented in the United States record
relating to the Armenian Genocide, and for other purposes." to the
floor.

Contact: Sam Rosmarin, 202/225-3816

TRNC leader Mehmet Ali Talat to run for Northern Cyprus president

TRNC leader Mehmet Ali Talat to run for Northern Cyprus president

07.03.2010 17:11 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ President of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus
(TRNC) Mehmet Ali Talat officially announced he is to run at the
upcoming president elections scheduled for April 18, iKypros reports.

Talat explained that he will run as a non-attached candidate and not
as a nominee of the Republican Party.

The Turkish invasion of Cyprus launched on 20 July 1974. The Turkish
invasion took place in two stages and ended in August 1974, when
Turkish troops occupied 37% of the island’s territory, which was
followed by the establishment of the de facto Turkish Republic of
Northern Cyprus that only Turkey recognizes.
UK’s Sovereign Base Areas make up about 3 percent of the island. They
were retained by the UK as sovereign territory when the Republic of
Cyprus was established in 1960. On November 11, 2009, an offer was
made to the United Nations to make available just under 50% of the
territory of the UK’s Sovereign Base Areas (SBAs) to a unified Cyprus
in the event of a solution of the issue.