Minister Nalbandian Invited To Norway

MINISTER NALBANDIAN INVITED TO NORWAY

A1+
[04:00 pm] 29 September, 2008

On September 29 Armenia’s Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian received
Raymond Johansen, State Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
of Norway.

Greeting the Norwegian delegation, Minister Nalbandian said Armenians
remember with gratitude and highly appreciate the support of the
Norwegian people to the process of reconstruction of the earthquake
zone after 1988. State Secretary Raymond Johansen had his personal
participation, working at the Red Cross Organization in Armenia and
the hospital after Frityof Nansen in Spitak.

Underlining the necessity of development of bilateral relations, Edward
Nalbandian attached importance to expanding the contractual-legal
field.

For his part, Raymond Johansen noted that Norway emphasises the
development of all-inclusive relations with Armenia and is willing
to undertake practical steps in this direction.

The interlocutors exchanged views on the latest developments in
the region.

At the request of the guest, Minister Nalbandian presented the
developments of the negotiation process within the framework of the
OSCE Minsk Group.

Raymond Johansen conveyed to Edward Nalbandian the invitation of the
Foreign Minister of Norway Jonas Gahr Støre to visit his country.

–Boundary_(ID_xxSmS8PqeBxY85uySYT25A)–

Blue Cross resists pressure on ADL

Boston Globe, United States

Watertown

Blue Cross resists pressure on ADL

By Christina Pazzanese
Globe Correspondent / September 28, 2008

The state’s largest health insurer is under mounting pressure to
withdraw its support of the Anti-Defamation League’s No Place for Hate
program, but is showing no signs of backing down.

At a meeting Tuesday night, the Watertown Town Council unanimously
backed a resolution urging Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Massachusetts
to stop supporting the program. It also voted to send a letter to
Abraham Foxman, the ADL’s national head, requesting he appear before
the council to discuss whether his organization considers the deaths
of 1.5 million Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman Turks from 1915
to 1923 as genocide.

Meantime, a collection of 25 Armenian groups from the area last week
sent a letter to Blue Cross-Blue Shield CEO Cleve Killingsworth also
urging the company to drop its support. "Blue Cross-Blue Shield should
not be associated with genocide denial," the letter said.

John J. Curley, a senior vice president of government affairs for Blue
Cross-Blue Shield, told town officials and a crowd of 60 at the Town
Council meeting that the company does not intend to end its
relationship with the No Place for Hate program, which promotes
antiracism and other antiviolence efforts.

Curley said he and company executives met with leaders from the ADL’s
New England office last month seeking clarity on the issue, and now
feel comfortable with the assurances they received over the league’s
position on the Armenian genocide.

"Our relationship is with the local ADL, and we’re very satisfied with
the response we got," said Curley. "If it was ambiguous, we would have
ended our partnership." Robert Crestan, civil rights counsel for the
ADL’s New England office, said in a telephone interview Thursday that
the Watertown Town Council’s resolution was "unfair."

"I think it’s disturbing that Blue Cross is being targeted since
they’ve done such good work in the community," Crestan said.

Curley said the company provided money to No Place for Hate from 2001
through 2006, but since then has offered only space at its
headquarters for meetings and functions. The current absence of
financial assistance "shouldn’t be a reflection" on the company’s
continuing interest in the program, said Curley, who added it "may"
resume funding the program in the future.

The developments are the latest chapter in a controversy that flared
up in the summer of 2007, when Watertown, home to a large and vocal
Armenian population, pulled out of the No Place for Hate program
because of what critics said was the ADL’s refusal to acknowledge the
genocide. Other towns followed.

Under pressure from local ADL leaders and the Armenian community,
Foxman last year called the atrocities "tantamount to genocide." But
that has not entirely quieted critics.

The Town Council’s president, Clyde L. Younger, vice president Mark
Sideris, and Councilor Jonathan Hecht implored Blue Cross-Blue Shield
to join the Watertown board in approaching national ADL leaders for
clarification on the league’s stance.

"Getting involved in national and international politics is not
something we do," said Curley.

Curley did say the company was "not pleased with the tone and tenor"
of an Aug. 22 statement by Foxman that was posted briefly on the New
England chapter’s website.

"There is simply no basis for the false accusation that we engage in
any form of genocide denial, and we believe this characterization of
ADL crosses the boundary of acceptable criticism and falls into the
category of demonization," Foxman’s statement read.

"It was not helpful," Curley said.

Councilor Vincent Piccirilli said many local Armenian-Americans and
their supporters feel there is a gap between what the local ADL
leaders and its national leadership have said about the deaths.

"Most of the citizens of Watertown are somewhat dismayed with the
talking around the issue and the failure to come clean," said
Piccirilli. "This kind of two-faced action and statement" is not
helpful to resolving the dispute, he said.

"I am disappointed at your lack of concern about the difference
between the oral assurances you’ve received locally and the national
ADL," Hecht told Curley.

But the ADL’s national office insisted there is no division between
the organization’s local and national entities.

"There’s only one position: there is no ‘one position in Boston and
one position in New York,’ " said Crestan, civil rights counsel for
the ADL’s New England office. "We think it’s a clear statement."

David Boyajian, an activist from Newton, said he was pleased with the
council’s unrelenting posture. "I’m very happy they passed the
resolution and I hope Blue Cross-Blue Shield will follow the
principled actions of the 13 towns," as well as the Massachusetts
Municipal Association, he said, "and sever ties with No Place for Hate
and any other ADL-sponsored program."

Councilor Stephen Corbett, who drafted the resolution, expressed
frustration that the issue was still being debated more than a year
after Watertown dropped its participation in the No Place for Hate
program as a protest against the ADL’s stance.

"I see the situation as not having changed at all," said
Corbett. "It’s a fairly straightforward thing we’re looking for. This
is a matter of principle."

© Copyright 2008 Globe Newspaper Company.

Museum Of Fine Arts Celebrates The Photography Of Yousuf Karsh

MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS CELEBRATES THE PHOTOGRAPHY OF YOUSUF KARSH
By Chris Bergeron

Taunton Daily Gazette
Sep 26, 2008 @ 09:09 PM
USA

Self-portrait Yousuf Karsh, Canadian (born in Turkish Armenia),
1908�002 about 1962 Photograph, gelatin silver print *Lent by the
photographer estate *Photograph c Estate of Yousuf Karsh *Photograph
courtesy, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

BOSTON — When taking his world-famous portraits, Yousuf Karsh sought
to reveal his subject’s "hidden" character by capturing ephemeral
emotions concealed beneath the mask of celebrity.

Combining a courtly demeanor with darkroom brilliance, the Armenia
native photographed royalty and despots, starlets and artists
transforming their public faces into iconic images.

In celebration of the 100th anniversary of Karsh’s birth, the Museum of
Fine Arts is exhibiting a broad sampling of memorable black-and-white
photographs that display his eye-catching artistry throughout the
arc of his career.

Pablo Picasso gazes with penetrating eyes past a vase bearing the
figure of an amply endowed nude. Regal yet reserved beneath her
crown, Princess Elizabeth stands at rest in her royal gown. Pale as a
corpse, a cadaverous Andy Warhol holds a paintbrush in his delicate,
hairy hands.

The just-opened exhibit, "Karsh 100: A Biography in Images," comprises
about 100 images including famous personalities and lesser-known
landscapes, experimental shots and photos of Canadian laborers and
landscapes that show another side of the artist.

Organized by curator Anne Havinga, the exhibit presents a balanced,
visually pleasing portrait of one of the 20th century’s great portrait
photographers.

The MFA’s Estrellita and Yousuf Karsh senior curator of photographs,
she attributed Karsh’s ability to freeze a subject’s character in
memorable images to "his uncanny ability to make people feel at ease."

Born in 1908 in the former Eastern Ottoman Empire, now present day
Turkey, Karsh achieved international recognition following decades of
diligent preparation. After relatives were killed during the Armenian
genocide, his family moved to Syria and Karsh was sent in 1924 to live
in Canada with an uncle who was a professional photographer. Impressed
by his nephew’s ability, his uncle sent Karsh to Boston to serve as
an apprentice with John Garo, an experienced photographer who became
his mentor.

Karsh’s best-known work, a portrait of a defiant Winston Churchill
that launched his career, resulted from a fortunate mix of the
photographer’s determination and instinctive professionalism, Havinga
said. Allowed only two minutes to photograph Churchill, who was
visiting Canada just weeks after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, she
said Karsh "respectfully" plucked a cigar from his lips, prompting
an expression of indomitable will that came to represent British
resistance.

Opening the exhibit, Estrellita Karsh said her late husband
photographed "people who mattered, people who left their mark on
the world."

"I hope this exhibit shows what kind of person Yousuf was. I think
it shows the intertwining of his personality and work because they
are one and the same thing," she said.

Shedding a different sort of light on Karsh’s personal and technical
approach, the exhibit also includes one of his large-format cameras,
preparatory studies for his portraits and a revealing transcript of
a conversation with Albert Einstein during a 1948 photo session that
clearly intended to put the great man into a pensive mood.

In a revealing back-and-forth, Karsh asked Einstein about possible
connections between music and mathematics, the likelihood of Russian
imperialism and whether he felt optimistic about the future during
the atomic age.

Throughout the mid-20th century, Havinga said, "Karsh’s name became
synonymous with the highest level of photographic portraiture and being
‘Karshed’ was an honor for sitters."

Visitors to the show will feel as if they’re viewing a cavalcade
of 20th century stars such as Audrey Hepburn, Ernest Hemingway,
Jacqueline Kennedy, Mother Theresa, Rudolf Nureyev, the Duchess of
Windsor, Harry Truman, Georgia O’Keeffe and Ronald Reagan.

Jerry Fielder, who served as a consultant for the show, praised Karsh
for his meticulous preparation for each photo session and expertise
editing his images. The curator and director of Karsh’s estate,
he explained the artist typically shot with a large-format camera
that used an 8-by-10-inch negative that captured his subjects in
remarkable detail.

Fielder said Karsh usually shot about 15 negatives for every two-hour
session. "Yousuf researched his subjects for talking points during
the session. And he had an extraordinary control of light. In the
dark room, he was the master of light and composition," he said.

But in the act of shooting, Karsh aimed to capture on film "the vision
of people he saw," said Fielder. "He was always looking for what was
natural in his subjects."

Karsh’s images became so ingrained in the popular mind that viewers
passing through the galleries may have the curious sensation of seeing
famous people who looked just like they thought they would.

Sitting beneath a horned elk skull, a black-clad Georgia O’Keeffe
resembles a monk meditating in an austere cell. Wearing a dark burnoose
and white hood, Ibn Abdul Aziz Faisal, who became king of Saudi Arabia,
appears to be lost in deep thought. Practically spilling out of her
gown, sexy Swedish starlet Anita Ekberg purses her lips and closes
her eyes in a seemingly private rapture.

Many of Karsh’s best-known portraits feature a subject whose features
are illuminated by studio lights set against a dark background.

Sometimes that format contributes to a posture or expression that
belies our expectations.

Shot in extreme close-up, Fidel Castro’s deep-eyed gaze exudes a
somber gravitas. Boris Karloff sits pensively, looking tired rather
than monstrous. Appearing atypically nervous in a strapless gown,
28-year-old Jacqueline Kennedy looks quizzically into the camera.

A viewer might reasonably wonder did Karsh actually "capture" his
subjects’ true characters or merely confirm public expectations of what
a statesman, Hollywood ingenue or tormented artist would look like?

In a memoir titled "Portfolio," Karsh wrote of photographing the
famous: "The endless fascination of these people for me lies in their
inward power."

"It is part of the elusive secret that hides in everyone and it has
been my life’s work to catch on film. The mask we present to others,
and too often to ourself, may lift only for a second – to reveal that
power in an unconscious gesture, a raised brow, a surprise response,
a moment of repose. This is the moment to record," Karsh said.

Estrellita Karsh expressed hopes the exhibit conveys her late husband’s
abiding affection for Boston as a place where he established his
signature style while living in difficult conditions.

"For Yousuf, it began in Boston. It happened in Boston. He called
Boston his spiritual home. He called this museum his university," she
said. "The man who lived in the YMCA now has works in the permanent
collection of the MFA. The wheel has turned full circle."

THE ESSENTIALS:

The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, is open seven days a week. Hours:
Saturday through Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 4:45 p.m.; and Wednesday through
Friday, 10 a.m. to 9:45 p.m.; (Thursday and Friday after 5 p.m. only
the West Wing is open).

General admission (which includes two visits in a 10-day period) is
$17 for adults; $15 for seniors and students 18 and older. Admission
for students who are university members is free as is admission for
children under 17 during non-school hours.

The MFA is offering several courses, events and activities in
conjunction with this exhibit.

A 4-course session on "Photography: People, Places and Points of
View" will be offered Tuesdays, Nov. 11 and 18, Dec. 2 and 9, from
10:30 a.m. to noon in the Remis Auditorium. The course will also be
offered on Wednesdays, Nov. 13 and 19, and Thursdays, Dec. 4 and 11,
from 7 to 9:30 p.m. in the Riley Seminar Room. The course is $72 for
MFA members; $88 for non-members; for single sessions, MFA members,
$20 and non-members $25.

On Thursday, Nov. 20 at 7 p.m., Sally Mann will discuss her
award-winning photography in the Remis Auditorium. MFA members $18;
non-members, $22.

On Thursday, Oct. 16 at 11 a.m., curator Anne Havinga will discuss
the exhibit.

A series of nine movies, "Photography on Film," will begin Nov. 13
and run through Dec. 18. Call for details.

–Boundary_(ID_0RNSqwgHWsPFKOjFNIoqBw)–

Opposition To Engage In Dialog If Authorities Display Will To Reveal

OPPOSITION TO ENGAGE IN DIALOG IF AUTHORITIES DISPLAY WILL TO REVEAL TRUTH

Noyan Tapan

Se p 26, 2008

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 26, NOYAN TAPAN. The opposition is prepared to
engage in dialog if the authorities display a will to reveal the truth,
member of the Armenian National Movement (ANM) Aram Manukian declared
at the September 26 diccussion at the National Press Club.

In his words, it has been a year that the country’s society has been
split, but the authorities have not revealed the truth which would
allow the rebellious section of the society to believe the authorities.

A. Manukian said that at the February 19, 2008 presidential election,
power was usurped by means of rigging, violence and slaughter. The
March 1 events were the derivative of the February 19 election,
and the existence of political prisoners is the consequence of the
March 2 events. In his opinion, each step of the authorities is aimed
at covering up their previous step, and this practice is continuing
today: the police are terrorizing the relatives and friends of the
political prisoners in Northern Avenue.

According to the speaker, the authorities do not display any will to
eliminate the main cause of the current situation. Until now it has
not been announced what happened in Liberty Square on the morning
of March 1st, who gave that order and at what hour, and whether the
demonstrators were warned in advance or not. A. Manukian said that
the authorities have claimed for 7 months that the demonstrators were
armed but no concrete fact has been made public so far. There are
policemen who are suspected of committing murders but none of them
has been arrested, whereas 75 innocent people have been imprisoned,
29 of whom were convicted based on the evidence of policemen only.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=117734

Germany Willing To Share The Experience Of Its Constitutional Court

GERMANY WILLING TO SHARE THE EXPERIENCE OF ITS CONSTITUTIONAL COURT WITH ARMENIA

armradio.am
23.09.2008 14:55

RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan today received the delegation headed
by the President of the Constitutional Court of the Federal Republic
of Germany Hans-Jurgen Papier. Tigran Sargsyan attached importance
to the cooperation of the Constitutional Court of Armenia with the
Constitutional Court of Germany, which has an experience and traditions
of sixty years. "The Constitutional Court of Armenia is younger, but
has passed through rather serious trials," said the Prime Minister,
presenting to the guests the way Armenia has passed since gaining
independence: development of statehood, formation of authorities,
establishment of the Constitutional Court. "If during the first years
of development of statehood it was important to create necessary legal
bases, then today it is already important to ensure the maintenance of
the adopted laws and constitutional norms," Tigran Sargsyan underlined.

The President of the Constitutional Court of Germany Hans-Jurgen
Papier expressed willingness to share the experience of his country’s
Constitutional Court with the Republic of Armenia, noting that Germany
is interested in passing this experience to the Constitutional Courts
of Eastern and South-Eastern countries.

At the end of the meeting Tigran Sargsyan thanked the President of
the German Constitutional Court for the willingness to cooperate,
expressing hope that the visit will be useful and productive. Availing
himself of the opportunity, PM Tigran Sargsyan turned to the
cooperation between the Governments of Armenia and Germany, highly
appreciating the technical assistance Germany has rendered to our
country.

Council Of Europe Congress To Observe Local Elections In Armenia

COUNCIL OF EUROPE CONGRESS TO OBSERVE LOCAL ELECTIONS IN ARMENIA

armradio.am
23.09.2008 16:10

A delegation of the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of
the Council of Europe will pay a visit to Armenia, from 25 to 29
September, to observe the local elections for the renewal of the
municipal Councils, which will be held on 28 September. The Congress
delegation will be headed by Véronique Moreira, Regional Councillor
of Rhône Alpes (NR, France, R).

Prior to election day, the delegation will meet with the Human
Rights Ombudsman, Armen Harutyunyan, the Chairman of the Central
Electoral Commission of Armenia, Garegin Azaryan, the Armenian
delegation to the Congress, the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for
Territorial Administration, Armen Gevorgyan, the Mayor of Yerevan,
Yervand Zakharyan, the President of the National Assembly of the
Republic of Armenia, the representatives of the 5 political parties
in the Parliament, the candidates to the election, as well as some
representatives of the media and of NGOs.

On 28 September the delegation will be deployed in different polling
stations to observe the voting.

–Boundary_(ID_KhxLMRuJM5hHa07O93814A)–

Gas Price To Rise To $200 Per 1,000 Cubic Meters In Armenia From Apr

GAS PRICE TO RISE TO $200 PER 1,000 CUBIC METERS IN ARMENIA FROM APRIL 2010

ARKA
Sep 23, 2008

YEREVAN, September 23. /ARKA/. Armenia will pay $200 (VAT inclusive)
per 1,000 cubic meters of gas starting from April 2010, said Karen
Karapetyan, president of the ArmRosGasProm Company.

As from April 1, 2009, gas price will be $154 (VAT inclusive) per
1,000 cubic meters, compared with current $110 (VAT inclusive).

Karapetyan believes the Armenian government-Gazprom agreement 2009-2015
is mutually beneficial.

Gazprom agreed to sign a mid-term contract with Armenia, taking into
account strategic cooperation between Armenia and Russia, as well as
Gazprom’s successful business in Armenia.

The agreement helps Armenia avoid hikes in gas price.

20th Anniversary Of Nagorno Karabagh Movement Marked At Capitol Hill

20th ANNIVERSARY OF NAGORNO KARABAGH MOVEMENT MARKED AT CAPITOL HILL PROGRAM

Noyan Tapan

Se p 22, 2008

WASHINGTON, SEPTEMBER 22, ARMENIANS TODAY – NOYAN TAPAN. The 20th
anniversary of the Nagorno Karabagh Republic (Artsakh) freedom movement
was marked at a Capitol Hill program headlined by prominent lawyer
and humanitarian Mark Geragos.

The evening, titled "Nagorno Karabakh Republic/Artsakh: 20 Years of
Freedom, Democracy and Progress," was hosted by the Congressional
Caucus of Armenian Issues in cooperation with the Embassy of the
Republic of Armenia, the Nagorno Karabagh Representation in the U.S.,
and Armenian American organizations, reported the Armenian National
Committee of America (ANCA).

In his keynote address, Geragos challenged Members of Congress to
increase their support for Nagorno Karabagh, calling the million in
U.S. assistance allocated to date to Nagorno Karabagh insufficient,
and asserting that this aid package, to a democratic nation in a
troubled region, should be at least at the 0 million level.

Armenian Ambassador to the U.S. Tatoul Markarian and NKR Representative
in the U.S. Vardan Barseghian provided insight on the current peace
talks over Nagorno Karabagh and the ongoing commitment of both
countries to a peaceful resolution of the conflict. A special video
marking the 20th anniversary of the Artsakh movement highlighted the
economic progress and strengthening of democracy in the Republic.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=117614

Bigotry Monitor: Volume 8, Number 38

BIGOTRY MONITOR: VOLUME 8, NUMBER 38

Union of Councils for Jews in the Former Soviet Union
September 19, 2008
DC

DEADLY INTERETHNIC BRAWL OUTSIDE MOSCOW. Police are on alert after a
massive inter-ethnic brawl led to two deaths in the village of Lunevo,
Russia (Moscow Region), according to a September 16 report by the
Regions.ru news web site. On September 15, two Uzbek construction
workers got into a verbal altercation with a female employee in
a late-night store, prompting some Russian customers to stand up
for her. The conflict escalated into a brawl involving more than 40
people. At least ten were injured and two on the Russian side were
killed. Police detained about 20 people and have so far charged one
Uzbek man with murder.

In the wake of the 2006 Kondopoga race riot, which began as a bar
fight and escalated into a mass expulsion of non-Russians from
the town, local police beefed up their presence in and around the
village. A television news report on Russia’s 5th channel showed
witnesses charging that the Uzbeks killed two unarmed and outnumbered
Russians. Rumors are circulating that a Tajik man was later killed in
retaliation, but the television crew was unable to find any Uzbeks
or Tajiks to interview. Apparently, they have left town, fearful of
further violence. A September 17 article posted on the web site of the
national daily "Komsomolskaya Pravda" added that some local residents
are calling for an expulsion of all migrants. The article’s subtitle
reads: "Local Residents Intend Fierce Revenge Against the Asians and
Will Resort to Lynch Law in Lunevo."

MOSCOW HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT DETAINED, SUSPECTED OF RACIST
MURDERS. Police in Moscow detained an 11th grader in connection
with two racist murders, according to a September 15 report by the
Rosbalt news agency. Mikhail Merchuk allegedly belonged to a gang
of neo-Nazis. On August 21, the suspect and his comrades allegedly
stabbed to death a man identified only by his last name, Adzulaev. The
second murder he is charged with is the August 27 killing of a 20
year old migrant named Bakhtemirov in the Moscow Region town of
Zelenograd. Investigators are looking into the student’s possible
connection with other racist murders.

JAPANESE DIPLOMAT ATTACKED IN MOSCOW. Three men attacked a Japanese
diplomat in Moscow, according to a September 15 report by the RIA
Novosti news agency. The attack on the Japanese embassy’s first
secretary took place the previous evening in Gorky Park. The report
does not mention if the attackers robbed their victim, which suggests
a hate crime.

IN INGUSHETIA, STORES SELLING ALCOHOL SET ON FIRE. Three stores and
one cafe that sell alcohol were burned down in Russia’s turbulent
region of Ingushetia, according to a September 9 report by the Sova
Information-Analytical Center. A sign of increasing Islamic radicalism
in the region, the arsons took place during Ramadan. No one was hurt
as a result of the fires. The report offered no information about
arrests in connection with the arsons.

VORONEZH PROSECUTORS FILE HATE CRIME CHARGE. Prosecutors in Voronezh,
Russia charged a 20-year-old suspect with aggravated assault motivated
by ethnic hatred, according to a September 12 report by the news web
site Gazeta.ru. The suspect, along with two other men who have not yet
been charged, allegedly beat and stabbed an ethnic Armenian man on the
night of September 2 while shouting the far-right slogan "Russia for
Russians!" The victim, who was hospitalized, and the young woman he
was walking with reported that seven young men attacked him. Police
detained suspects three days later.

Earlier this month, Voronezh prosecutors filed hate crimes murder
charges against another group of neo-Nazis.

TWO BOROVICHI RESIDENTS FOUND GUILTY OF HATE CRIME. A court in
Borovichi, Russia (Novgorod Region), found two local residents
guilty of a hate crime, according to a September 16 report by the
Sova Information-Analytical Center. Sova cited the local prosecutor’s
web site, which just released details about the June 10 sentencing,
as the source for its report. The defendants got six years and two
years in prison respectively for attacking a man from the Caucasus.

ULYANOVSK COURT SENTENCES ANTISEMITIC VANDALS. A court in Ulyanovsk,
Russia sentenced four local residents to prison and fines after
finding them guilty of painting antisemitic death threats on the
building of the Jewish Community Center, according to a September
17 report by the Sem40.ru news web site which specializes in news
pertaining to the Russian Jewish community. The four were convicted of
illegal hate speech after an expert study found that the graffiti was
"an open call to kill Jews." The defendants were sentenced to three
years in prison, one year in prison, and 84 and 80 hours of community
service, respectively.

RUSSIA’S MAIN FAR-RIGHT GROUP SPLITS. A split has occurred in the
ranks of Russia’s main far-right group, the Movement Against Illegal
Immigration (DPNI), according to the national daily "Kommersant"
dated September 15. A meeting of 30 regional branches of the DPNI–a
group linked with anti-migrant violence in Kondopoga and other
cities–rejected the proposal of its leader Aleksandr Belov to ally
with "respectable" political parties. The delegates then declared that
Belov is no longer the DPNI’s leader because he allied the group with
members of the small party "Narod" which has taken part in liberal
opposition rallies.

Since July, Belov has been trying to turn the DPNI into a mainstream
party, allying it with the Narod party and the extreme nationalist
Great Russia party of Dmitry Rogozin, Russia’s ambassador to
NATO. Belov blamed the split on Russia’s secret services which he
claimed "hired about 30 skinheads for a little bit of money" to
engineer his ouster.

Both sides of the dispute blame the government, which they accuse of
engineering the split.

YOUTHS ATTACK UKRAINIAN RABBI AND HIS 3-YEAR-OLD SON. Antisemites
attacked the chief rabbi of Vinnitsa, Ukraine, a friend of his from
Canada, and the rabbi’s three year old son, according to a report by
local Jewish activist Boris Chizman. On September 11, the three went
out shopping to prepare for the child’s birthday party when a group
of youths started shouting "Heil Hitler!" and "We’ll kill all the
Jews!" The assailants punched the child in the face, and assaulted the
adults as well until some people in a passing car chased the attackers
away. Rabbi Shaul Govoritz called the police, who detained a group
of suspects shortly afterwards. He characterized the youths as more
than typical "hooligans" saying that "They weren’t drunk or crazy. The
young people looked completely normal. They simply hate Jews."

UKRAINIAN POLITICIAN ACCUSED OF ANTISEMITIC AGITATION. Two local Jewish
leaders in Kherson, Ukraine accused a member of the city council of
spreading antisemitic propaganda, according to a September 17 report by
the AEN news agency. Aleksandr Vayner, director of the Kherson Jewish
Charitable-Community Center, and Vitaly Bronshtein, chairman of the
Kherson branch of the Council of Regions of the Jewish Conference
of Ukraine, accused Sergey Kirichenko, a member of the Kherson city
council, of antisemitic incitement. According to their accusation,
Kirichenko has made several appearances on the local radio show "Vik"
accusing Jews of robbing the Ukrainian people, plotting to enslave
Ukrainians, and exterminate Slavs. The deputy allegedly posted
"Catechism of a Jew in the USSR"–a slightly updated version of the
"Protocols of the Elders of Zion"–on his web site. On September 6,
Kirichenko allegedly praised the Nazi occupation of Kherson during
World War II on the "Vik" radio program. Hate speech is illegal in
Ukraine but it is not clear if local authorities will bring charges
against Kirichenko.

POPE STIRS CONTROVERSY IN FRANCE. Pope Benedict XVI’s four-day visit,
his first trip to France since his election in 2005, has stirred
political controversy across France, Deutsche Welle reported. "It
would be a folly to deprive ourselves of religion," President
Nicolas Sarkozy said in his greetings and called for a principle of
"positive laicity, open laicity, an invitation to dialogue, tolerance
and respect." Laicity is what the French call their principle of the
separation of church and state, made into a law in 1905 and considered
part of the country’s identity. Socialist Party boss Francois Holland
struck back: "There is no positive or negative laicity, no open or
closed laicity, no tolerant or intolerant laicity. There is only
laicity."

In his unusually warm welcome, Sarkozy applauded the pontiff’s
thoughts on religion and freedom. Sarkozy declared that religion does
not represent a danger for any democracy and that Christian values
constituted a "living patrimony" for the entire society. Benedict,
81, warned that Western cultural efforts to marginalize religion and
believers would bring disaster for humanity and ultimately "play into
the hands of fanaticism."

In an address to academics including Muslims at the College des
Bernardins, a 13th century landmark confiscated during the French
Revolution and reacquired by the Church recently, the pontiff
denounced "fundamentalist fanaticism." "It would be a disaster if
today’s European culture could only conceive freedom as absence
of obligation, which would invariably play into the hands of
fanaticism and arbitrariness," he said. In reporting on Benedict’s
"multi-dimensional" approach to different elements in French
society, the Catholic News Service (CNS) also praised his summary
"in 20 graceful lines the Church’s respect for Judaism and its firm
rejection of antisemitism." According to CNS, the pontiff "attempted
to build on the new openness shown the Church by President Sarkozy."

Speaking on Sunday at the famous pilgrimage site Lourdes, the pontiff
said that to "emphasize the Christian roots of France… a new way
must be found to interpret and experience every day the fundamental
values on which a nation’s identity is built." He then praised Sarkozy,
saying: "Your president has described a way."

* * * QUOTE OF THE WEEK, RUSSIA’S RETURN TO DEMOCRACY MUST BE OUR
FOCUS * * * "Restoring Georgian independence and the confidence of
Russia’s other democratic neighbors is critical," wrote ex-gulag
prisoner Natan Sharansky in an opinion piece in "The Washington
Post" dated September 14. "But if the root of the problem is to be
addressed strategically, the focus must return not to this or that
specific foreign policy action by Russia but rather to the matter of
democracy within Russia itself. This linkage must be broad and deep,
and it must be reinforced by an international community willing to
shine a light on Russia’s retreat from democracy."

EU WALKS A TIGHTROPE IN GEORGIA Caught Between Anger and Fear, EU Is
Finding Its Way While NATO and U.S. Talk Tough

On September 14, Russia completed the withdrawal of its troops
from western Georgia, including the key Black Sea port of Poti, in
accordance with the ceasefire agreement reached on September 8. That
agreement also stipulated that the EU must have at least 200 observers
in place in Georgia by October 1 if Russia is to withdraw its troops
from the "buffer zones" it set up unilaterally, following the original
ceasefire agreement.

1. EU MOVES QUICKLY WITH OBSERVER MISSION. Angered by Russia’s
tactics but worried about their dependence on Russian energy, the
Europeans moved quickly. On September 15, EU foreign ministers gave
the go-ahead for a 200-strong observer mission to Georgia, and 11
EU countries–the Baltic states, Belgium, Britain, France, Germany,
Italy, Poland, Spain, and Sweden–pledged support for the mission. But
the question remains whether the observers will be deployed in the
breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, as well. EU foreign
policy chief Javier Solana said that the bloc’s priority is to deploy
200 observers in Georgia before October 1. "After that, we will see how
the situation evolves," Solana said. British Foreign Minister David
Miliband sounded more resolute, saying that "We are very committed
to making sure that we play our full part in that important mission,
meeting the deadline and getting the right number of people in at
the right time to the right places." In addition, the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) has a mandate to post
observers in South Ossetia, and talks are under way to boost their
number by another 80, said Finnish Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb
who holds the OSCE’s rotating presidency.

Moscow has announced that it will maintain close to 8,000 troops in
South Ossetia and Abkhazia in the foreseeable future, even though
the EU and the United States charge a flagrant violation of Russia’s
commitment to withdraw to pre-war positions. Russia has rejected
any suggestion that the EU send its own observers into the breakaway
regions, leaving EU foreign ministers walking a tight-rope as they
define the mission’s mandate. Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini
explained: "We need the agreement of all sides involved, because we
do not want to act as an occupying force." While some member states
are pushing for a specific reference to the breakaway regions, others
argue that the wording should be left ambiguous to avoid antagonizing
Moscow, diplomats told reporters.

On September 17, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev signed friendship
treaties with Abkhazia and South Ossetia and pledged them Russia’s
military backing. The treaties formalize military, diplomatic, and
economic cooperation between Moscow and the separatist regions,
which Russia has recognized as independent states though so far,
only Nicaragua has followed.

However, on September 18, talks on sending more monitors to Georgia
broke down because of disputes with Russia about where they should be
deployed, the OSCE announced. "We don’t see the point of continuing
negotiations in Vienna at this stage," Antti Turunen of Finland,
current chairman of the OSCE’s Permanent Council, was quoted by Reuters
as saying. "They have been put on hold. The area of responsibility
for monitors is the main sticking point." Georgia’s OSCE envoy cited
Moscow’s "absolutely non-constructive" demand that South Ossetian
authorities should decide the future OSCE mandate because the region
is now independent.

2. EU TO SEND MORE AID TO GEORGIA. More important in the long run,
the EU Commission is ready to provide "up to 500 million euros"
($714 million) in additional aid to Georgia, Deutsche Welle quoted
Benita Ferrero-Waldner as saying on September 15. That money comes on
top of the roughly 100 million euros already authorized for Georgia
this year and the bilateral aid provided separately by individual EU
member states. The money is intended for 2008-2010, to be used in four
areas: refugees and internally displaced people, economic recovery,
financial stabilization, and infrastructure. The package will be
conditional on Georgia enforcing democracy and political reform,
Ferrero-Waldner said. "The European Commission is at the heart of
efforts to rebuild stability and shattered confidence in Georgia,"
the commissioner added. Though the package is intended to cover
Georgia’s breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia as well,
a decision on that issue will be taken "in phases," she said. She
stressed that the commission will ensure that Georgia will not use
the money to buy weapons. Some recent reports have claimed that the
Georgian authorities are using EU funding to buy arms.

3. RUSSIA HAS NO VETO ON NATO MEMBERSHIP APPLICATIONS, NATO CHIEF
SAYS. On September 16, NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer
issued an unambiguous statement to the effect that the Western alliance
will continue its expansion program despite Russian opposition
and warned Moscow that it has no veto on Georgia’s bid to become a
member. In a speech at Tbilisi State University, NATO chief Scheffer
said that "the road to NATO is still wide open" and Russia could not
break the alliance’s ties with the former Soviet republic through
military action. "The process of NATO enlargement will continue, with
due caution but also with a clear purpose–to help create a stable,
undivided Europe," he said. He was accompanied by the NATO ambassadors
of all 26 allies member states that news agencies interpreted as an
unusual display of unity.

Scheffer condemned Russia’s recognition of the two separatist regions
in Georgia, saying its sovereignty and territorial integrity must be
respected. He also called on Moscow to tone down its rhetoric in the
wake of the war. He pointed out that NATO is "not in the business of
punishing Russia" and does not want to be. "Punishing Russia is not
the way forward. The way forward, really, is to help Georgia," he said.

NATO would not accept Russian demands that it choose between Russia
and Georgia, Scheffer added.

On September 17, Russia’s Foreign Ministry condemned a visit to
Georgia by senior NATO officials as "anti-Russian" and confirming
NATO’s "Cold War-era reflexes."

On September 18, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice declared that
Russian leaders will not accomplish "their primary war aim of removing
Georgia’s government." She said that Russia’s military action failed
to achieve its objectives and has put Russia on a path to "self-imposed
isolation and international irrelevance." The following day, President
Medvedev charged that Russia is being forced behind an Iron Curtain
and blamed NATO for "provoking" the Georgia conflict. "This is not
our path," he said. "For us there is no sense going back to the past."

4. NEW CLAIMS ABOUT THE WAR’S START AND MEANING. Russia only sent
troops and tanks to drive Georgian forces out of South Ossetia after
President George Bush failed to pressure Georgian President Mikheil
Saakashvili to stop his attack, Russian Premier Vladimir Putin told
Western journalists and Russia experts on September 11 in Sochi. He
claimed that during two meetings at the Beijing Olympics Bush failed
to give him sufficient assurances on halting the war in Georgia.

Putin assured the annual gathering organized by the Valday
international debate club that Russia has no "imperial ambitions"
and that another Cold War is not on the way. He also claimed that
his government "determined that nongovernmental organizations had
been formed in some republics of the North Caucasus that, under the
pretext that South Ossetia was not protected, had begun raising the
question of separating from Russia."

Speaking with the same group in Moscow on September 12, President
Medvedev characterized NATO’s promise to eventually extend membership
to Georgia "unjust," "humiliating," and "intolerable" for Moscow.

However, the basic message that Putin and Medvedev delivered to Valday
was that Russia wants to return to business-as-usual relations with
the West, "The Moscow Times" quoted Alexander Rahr, a leading Russia
expert at Germany’s Council on Foreign Relations, as saying.

Medvedev called on Western elites to stop thinking of Russia as an
ideological heir of the Soviet Union and expressed the hope that
the current escalation of tensions in Russia’s relations with the
West would be brief. But, according to Jonathan Steele of Britain’s
"Guardian," "not everyone present [at the Valday meetings] was
convinced that this was the direction developments would take."

On September 16, Georgian authorities released recordings of cellphone
calls that allegedly prove that Russian troops began moving into
South Ossetia on August 6, a day before Georgia attacked. Both "The
New York Times" and "The Washington Post" seemed inclined to accept
the authenticity of the intercepts that Russia’s Foreign Ministry
promptly fobbed off as "not serious."

5. GEORGIA WAR SWELLED THE NUMBER OF RUSSIANS DISLIKING U.S., POLL
SAYS. Russians do not expect the current deterioration of relations
with the West to evolve into another Cold War, the Kremlin-controlled
polling agency All-Russian Public Opinion Research Center (VTsIOM)
found, according to "Vremya Novostei" dated September 12. Valery
Fedorov of VTsIOM also disclosed opinion polls that suggest that the
old Soviet thesis "War is peace" is deeply implanted in the Russian
consciousness.

According to VTsIOM, two months ago–before the war in the
Caucasus–49% of respondents admitted that they liked America "just
fine." But their number has dropped to 22% these days. The ranks of
those who dislike the United States in the meantime swelled from 29%
to 65%. Asked what they thought about Russian-U.S. relations, 37%
found them strained, 11% hostile, and 29% cold.

6. LAVROV WORRIED ABOUT SPREAD OF ‘ANTI-RUSSIAN VIRUS.’ Russian Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov is concerned about the trend of worsening
relations not only between the leaders of the Russian Federation and
Georgia but also between the peoples of the two countries, Interfax
reported on September 15. In a meeting with journalists following
his visits to Abkhazia and South Ossetia, Lavrov called the trend
"dangerous" and argued that "the anti-Russian virus" has found "its
way into the collective mentality."

Turkey Is Benefiting From Armenia’s Diplomatic Gesture, Says Hovanes

TURKEY IS BENEFITING FROM ARMENIA’S DIPLOMATIC GESTURE, SAYS HOVANESSIAN

Yerkir
Thursday, September 18, 2008

YEREVAN (Yerkir)–Turkey is reaping the benefits of Armenia’s
diplomatic gesture toward establishing friendly relations with its
neighbors, said Armenian Revolutionary Federation Parliamentary
Bloc chairman and Bureau member Vahan Hovanessian during a press
conference Thursday.

The ARF leader said the invitation from President Serzh Sarkisian
was a prudent effort to demonstrate to the international community
that Armenia was willing to establish relations with all its neighbors.

However, Hovanessian said, Turkey is utilizing that effort for its
own gain by mounting an aggressive campaign to claim the recognition
of the Armenian Genocide is not part of Armenia’s agenda.

Such efforts by Turkey will slow the international recognition process,
said Hovannesian who wondered why Armenia’s leadership has been
silent on that front. He urged Armenia’s government to immediately
counteract Turkey’s effort by expressing confidence that Armenia has
not made any agreements with Turkey on any matter, including the swap
of lands for the resolution of the Karabakh conflict.

"I consider that it is the expression of the frequently noticed
passivity of our diplomacy. We have seen a lot of this," he said.

Hovannisian said that the ARF discusses these issues with its coalition
partners, but added that it is more advisable that such issues should
be discussed by the National Security Council.

"If political forces see that no common approach emerges within the
coalition regarding these issues, they may draw their conclusions. But
I must say that there is no such issue yet," Hovannisian concluded.

"Not only the ARF, but all political forces and the entire Armenian
nation is opposed to Turkey having any role in the Karabakh conflict
resolution," added Hovanessian when speaking about recent overtures
by Turkey and Azerbaijan for including Turkey in the Minsk Group or
allowing Turkey to lead the resolution process.

Hovanessian said Turkey has always had a pro-Azerbaijan policy and the
blockade of Armenia was the most glaring example of that policy. With
the blockade Turkey has already become a non-objective side to the
conflict, therefore its participation in the process is unacceptable.

"Armenia’s leadership must to everything possible to ensure that
the Minsk Group continues its efforts toward the resolution of the
conflict," said Hovanessian.

In addressing Turkey’s proposed Caucasus stability pact, Hovanessian
said that while efforts to establish peace and stability were
admirable, the entity proposing such a pact must have an objective
approach to all players in the region. Turkey, he said, has not
demonstrated that.