Not Only Armenia Has Communication Problems In Region, Alexander Isk

NOT ONLY ARMENIA HAS COMMUNICATION PROBLEMS IN REGION, ALEXANDER ISKANDARIAN EMPHASIZES

Noyan Tapan
Feb 12 2007

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 12, NOYAN TAPAN. "The project on contsruction of
the Kars-Akhalkalak-Tbilisi-Baku (KATB) railway transport corridor is
a political project. And such projects, as we know, are implemented
as there is the political will of countries, in the given case,
of Georgia, Azerbaijan and Turkey."

Alexander Iskandarian, the Caucasus Media Institute Director informed
about it in the interview to the Noyan Tapan correspondent. He
mentioned that it would be impossible to counteract that project,
one can only delay it but not stop. A.Iskandarian reminded that the
Baku-Jeyhan oil project was implemented in the conditions when it was
only politically beneficial. It became economically beneficial after
increase of oil prices. The project on construction of the Iran-Armenia
gas pipeline was already implemented in spite of primordial great
resistance of Russia and U.S. As for the issue if implementation
of the KATB can have negative influence on Armenia, particularly,
decrease its significance in the region, A.Iskandarian mentioned:
"What is said in political discussion both in Azerbaijan and Armenia,
in my opinion, is absolutely wrong: roads can not isolate, walls
can isolate. What a road is broken, it will not isolate Armenia. The
close border with Turkey isolates Armenia. In the expert’s opinion,
closing of the border with Turkey will have political meaning, besides,
the communication meaning is also great. "We shall stop considering
ourselves a dead-lock. One must work on it, and if the Azerbaijani
direction has no perspective, the Turkish one is not so hopeless,
and maybe, changes will take place here, though I do not think that
they will happen very quickly."

A.Iskandarian did not agree that only Armenia has communication
problems in the region. In his words, it is a myth: "For some reason
Azerbaijan, having problems with Iran, insignificant trade exchange
with Georgia and periodically close border with Russia, does not
consider itself isolated. Georgia, isolated from Russia, names itself
cross-roads. And Armenia, having active cooperation with Georgia and
Iran, names itself dead-lock."

TEHRAN: Armenian Community To Renew Allegiance To Supreme Leader

ARMENIAN COMMUNITY TO RENEW ALLEGIANCE TO SUPREME LEADER

Islamic Republic News Agency, Iran
Feb 10 2007

The Armenian Community of Iran will take part in rallies on February
11 to mark anniversary of victory of the Islamic Revolution.

"The Armenian Community of Iran will celebrate anniversary of victory
of the Islamic Revolution to renew allegiance to Supreme Leader of
the Islamic Revolution," the Archdiocese Council of Armenians said
in a statement on Saturday.

"Once again it is an occasion for anniversary of victory of the Islamic
Revolution and the nation are going to admire the achievements of
the Islamic Revolution in the past 28 years," the statement said.

The statement, signed by Archbishop Sibveh Sarkisyan, said that the
nation has been inspired by the Islamic Revolution and has bright
prospects for future.

"The late Imam Khomeini led the Islamic Revolution in good faith and
commitments to the religious principles," it said.

The statement said that the Armenian community of Iran has a history
of 2,000 years in Iran and is a good witness to the progress Iran
has made in the past 28 years in different fields.

ANKARA: Mutafyan: I’ve been threatened since Dink killing

New Anatolian, Turkey
Feb 9 2007

Mutafyan: I’ve been threatened since Dink killing

The New Anatolian / Ankara
09 February 2007

Turkish-Armenian community head Patriarch Mesrob II Mutafyan
yesterday expressed growing concerns after last month’s killing of
Armenian origin Turkish journalist Hrant Dink.

Mutafyan revealed that he has been receiving threats, which,
according to the police, are from the same sources who threatened
Dink, adding that the state appointed guards for him after last
year’s murder of Catholic Priest Andrea Santoro in the northern
province of Trabzon.

Mesrob underlined that the killing of Dink seems to continue to
occupy a significant place in both domestic and world politics.

"It would certainly be a very optimistic view to deny the security
concerns of the Armenian community in Turkey, but until the Dink
assassination, no Armenian had been subjected to a serious attack for
years," Mesrob said.

On his concerns following the latest developments, he said that
Turkish Armenians fear being seen as potential domestic enemies in
the European Union process, which has swelled extremist nationalist
feelings.

He also added that he is opposed to attempts to cut dialogue between
the Turkish and Armenian people.

Regarding the developments following Dink’s murder, he said that the
members of the public, both Turkish or Armenian, expect to see the
perpetrators of the killing and those who incited the murder behind
bars.

"We are deeply concerned about the confrontation between different
sectors of society after the killing," said the patriarch.

"The slogans at the funeral saying ‘We’re all Hrant, we’re all
Armenians,’ should not be linked to the Armenian community," he said,
but added that he views criticism of the slogans as unhelpful, given
that these were a manifestation of sentiments after the killing, not
attempts to spark a clash regarding ethnic identities.

He declined to comment on the investigation process, but reiterated
his wish to learn who or which circles incited the murder. Mesrob
also called on state authorities to take necessary measures to put an
end to unwanted social developments greatly upsetting the community.

Dink’s autopsy completed

In related news, the murdered journalist’s autopsy report had been
completed and sent to the Sisli Public Prosecutor’s Office.

The reports said that Dink was shot twice in the head at short range
by one person.

It was also reported yesterday that Yasin Hayal, the alleged second
man behind the Dink murder who provided the murder weapon and money
to gunman Ogun Samast, claimed he learned that Erhan Tuncel, the
third man alleged to have engineered the attack, was a police
informant, from the press.

Hayal, commenting on reports of Tuncel being an informant, during his
testimony given at an F-type prison in the western city of Tekirdag,
said, "If I knew that, I would have killed him."

Ex-convict Hayal on Wednesday claimed that Tuncel gave him the bomb
for a McDonald’s attack in Trabzon in 2004.

The prison administration also said that Hayal regularly follows
newspaper reports and that he has reclaimed a Koran seized by police
when he was detained.

Another suspect, Tuncay Uzundal, also a housemate of Tuncel, was
quoted as saying in his testimony that he has doubts as to whether
Tuncel incited the murder.

Screamers at KSG – Harvard

genocide.html

Powerful documentary on genocide screened at Kennedy School
By Thomas Caywood
Special to the Harvard News Office

Those who loudly refused to let the world turn a blind eye or feign
helplessness as genocides ravaged millions of lives this century and last
are sometimes dubbed "screamers."

The Harvard community got an earful Monday evening (Feb. 5) from an
unlikely quartet of modern screamers – the chart-topping, earsplitting
heavy metal band System of a Down – during an advance screening of the new
documentary "Screamers" at the John F. Kennedy School of Government’s Starr
Auditorium.

The band members, like filmmaker Carla Garapedian, are the grandchildren of
survivors of the Ottoman Empire’s slaughter of more than a million
Armenians from 1915 to 1917.

Garapedian’s powerful film weaves together blaring concert footage of
System of a Down, screamers in both senses of the word, with horrifying
images of bloody or decomposing genocide victims sprawled grotesquely
across the ground in Iraqi Kurdistan, Turkey, Germany, Bosnia, Rwanda, and
the Darfur region of Sudan. The extraordinary juxtaposition of a raucous,
sweaty, heavy-metal concert with talking-head segments of activists and
scholars, including Samantha Power, Anna Lindh Professor of Practice of
Global Leadership and Public Policy at the Kennedy School, went over well
with the overflow crowd at the screening.

One teenage System of a Down fan said the film helped him grasp the meaning
and emotion behind the songs he loves. Meanwhile, a woman who described
herself as a senior citizen said during the discussion after the film that
she found the dark, angry hard rock a perfect complement to the film’s
unflinching examination of genocide.

"It may not be the sort of music you normally hear in the Kennedy School of
Government," Garapedian quipped, adding that the audience’s hearing likely
would be restored about a half-hour after the film ended.

The three-year documentary project began in 2004 after Garapedian was asked
by the band along with other human rights activists and organizations to
set up information booths outside a Los Angeles concert.

"The fans came over and said they knew about the Armenian genocide. These
were 16- and 17-year-old kids from every ethnic group and every
socioeconomic group you can think of in Los Angeles. They weren’t
Armenians," Garapedian recalled. "They had been politicized by the band,
and that impressed me."

System of a Down’s success in bringing the largely forgotten story of the
Armenian slaughter to legions of pierced and black-clad young hard rock
fans around the globe came as Samantha Power’s Pulitzer Prize-winning book
"A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide" continued to garner
critical acclaim. The two events coupled with Turkey’s ongoing efforts to
join the European Union while stridently denying the Armenian genocide
convinced an editor at BBC Television to back the film, Garapedian said.

In one scene, Power explains the origin of the term "screamer" as it
relates to genocide. "When you actually allow it all in. There’s no other
alternative but to go up to people and to scream, and to say, ‘The sky is
falling. The sky is falling. People are being systematically butchered, and
we can stop it.’ "

System of a Down frontman Serj Tankian, a wiry man with a mane of thick
black hair and a long chin beard, muses at one point during the film: "It’s
so crazy how men could be so cruel to men. It’s hard for the mind to
process."

During the discussion, Garapedian said that genocide continues, despite our
frequent pledges of "Never again," in part because people don’t feel a
connection to nameless victims on the other side of the world.

"Somehow our outrage is not there. There’s a lot of reasons for that, but
it’s not there. It’s missing," she said. "But the rage of the music allows
us to access it in some way. That was my hope with this film, that people
who see it in the movie theaters, especially young people, will feel they
can do something."

The audience erupted in an incredulous chuckle during the movie’s montage
of press conference footage in which U.S. government officials and
spokespeople sputter and stammer while carefully avoiding saying the word
"genocide" while discussing variously ongoing massacres in Bosnia, Rwanda,
and Darfur. Activist wags have dubbed the verbal gymnastics the "Genocide
Jig," Power said.

Among the members of the audience were Henry Morgenthau III, the grandson
of the U.S. Ambassador to Ottoman Turkey who tried unsuccessfully at the
time of the genocide to mobilize world opinion against it. The elderly
Morgenthau expressed hope after the screening that the film’s focus on a
multi-platinum-selling heavy metal band would help raise the profile of the
Armenian genocide for a new generation.

"The Armenian genocide has become forgotten as other genocides continue to
take place. We have to remember that we haven’t really given any meaning to
‘Never again,’" he said.

Omar Ishmael of the Darfur Peace and Development Organization later echoed
that sentiment.

"It’s about Armenia," Ishmael said, "but it tells the story of what is
happening today."

"Screamers" opens Feb. 9 at the Fresh Pond 10 cinema on Alewife Brook
Parkway and at the Showcase Cinema Worcester North 18 on Brooks St.

Copyright 2007 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College

http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2007/02.08/05-

Cinema: Italian Filmmakers Take To Berlin

CINEMA: ITALIAN FILMMAKERS TAKE TO BERLIN

ANSA English Media Service
February 8, 2007

(ANSA) – Rome, February 8 – A selection of Italian movies are bidding
for honours at the 57th Berlin Film festival, which kicks off Thursday.

The Italian contingent is led by promising young director Saverio
Costanzo, whose film In Memoria di Me (In Memory Of Myself) is taking
part in the main competition.

It is the follow-up to Costanzo’s debut feature, Private (2004), the
story of a Palestinian family trapped inside a house commandeered by
Israeli soldiers.

That movie enjoyed considerable international success and won Costanzo
a Best Film Golden Leopard at the Locarno Film Festival.

In Memoria di Me revolves around a novitiate on an island monastery
and his bid to discover the mystery behind a locked door.

Italian critics who have had sneak previews say the film could be a
dark horse and take the Golden Bear by surprise or earn Costanzo the
Best Director Silver Bear award.

Festival director Dieter Kosslick has paid tribute to veteran
filmmaking brothers Paolo and Vittorio Taviani by screening their
latest picture, La Masseria delle Allodole (The Lark Farm) in the
Berlinale Special section.

The Italian duo’s 21st production is about the Ottoman Turks’ mass
killings of Armenians at the end of World War I – which Turkey denies.

The international cast includes Spanish actresses Paz Vega, Angela
Molina and Lebanese star Arsinee Khanjian.

Another Italian feature film, Riparo (Shelter) by Marco Simon Puccioni,
is taking part in the Panorama section.

It is the intense story of an illegal immigrant who works his way into
the lives of two women. Puccioni said the film seeks to touch on the
"raw nerves" of today’s multicultural society.

The festival is also shining the spotlight on Italian documentary-maker
Gianni Mina’, showing two of his films about Fidel Castro.

Furthermore, two of the competition favourites are co-produced by
Italian companies.

They are French director Jacques Rivette’s Don’t Touch The Axe
and Goodbye Bafana, the story of Nelson Mandela’s prison guard,
by Denmark’s Bille August.

(photo: Italian director Marco Simon Puccioni)

Russia Set To Expand Economic Presence In Armenia

RUSSIA SET TO EXPAND ECONOMIC PRESENCE IN ARMENIA
By Emil Danielyan

Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
Feb 6 2007

Russia looks set to enhance its already strong economic presence in
Armenia by capitalizing on Armenian President Robert Kocharian’s
apparent desire to secure his political future with the Kremlin’s
backing. The two governments have indicated that Russian companies
will soon get hold of more chunks of the Armenian economy involving
transportation and mining. They are also considering building a big
Russian-owned oil refinery on Armenia’s border with Iran.

The developments result from Kocharian’s latest talks with President
Vladimir Putin, which took place in the southern Russian city of
Sochi on January 24. Putin was visibly satisfied with the outcome
during an ensuing joint news conference, praising a major increase
in Russian-Armenian trade in 2006 and the absence of "unresolved
problems or difficult issues in our relationship."

Kocharian, for his part, recalled Putin’s earlier public complaint
that Russia is only Armenia’s third-largest foreign investor. "I have
a sense that Russia will definitely hold the honorable first place
by next March," he said. He noted in particular that he and Putin
had discussed Russian involvement in the Armenian mining industry,
which is currently dominated by non-Russian foreign investors.

Kocharian’s press secretary, Victor Soghomonian, told reporters in
Yerevan on January 29 that Russia would specifically like to help
Armenia develop its uranium deposits, which were first discovered
in Soviet times. Last year a U.S. mining company began exploratory
work in a northeastern Armenian region that geologists say is rich
in the radioactive metal. It is not clear if the Russians have set
their sights on the same area.

Citing unnamed government sources, the Armenian newspaper 168 Zham
said on February 1 that Yerevan has also decided to place Armenia’s
largest gold mines under Russian control. The paper claimed that an
Indian company that operates those mines along with a gold-recovery
plant is being forced out of the country. The Armenian authorities
recently accused the company, Vedanta Resources, of large-scale tax
evasion, and it is currently under investigation.

Kocharian also referred to Russian-Armenian cooperation in the area of
transport, widely understood to be a confirmation of earlier reports
that Russia’s state-run railway company will run Armenia’s moribund
rail network. The takeover is expected to take the form of a long-term
management contract.

In addition, it emerged after the Sochi talks that the oil division
of the Gazprom monopoly is in talks with the Armenian government
to explore the possibility of building a refinery in southeastern
Armenia that would process oil from neighboring Iran. The ambitious
project envisages shipping Iranian crude to the Armenian border town
of Meghri through a 200-kilometer pipeline and transporting refined
oil products back to Iran by rail. According to Kocharian’s spokesman
Soghomonian, Armenian, Iranian, and Russian officials will meet soon
to discuss the project in greater detail.

Despite its vast oil reserves, Iran lacks refining facilities and has
to import gasoline to meet domestic demand. Nonetheless, some Russian
experts question the economic wisdom of building such a facility in
the most remote and least accessible part of Armenia, saying that
it would cost a staggering $1.7 billion. Soghomonian dismissed the
estimate as "grossly exaggerated" and insisted that the project
"makes economic sense to all three parties."

The latest Russian-Armenian talks come on the heels of highly
controversial deals that gave Moscow near total control over the
Armenian energy sector. The most recent of those deals, finalized in
April 2006, enabled Armenia to avoid a hike in the price of Russian
natural gas until January 2009 in exchange for ceding more energy
assets to Gazprom. Those included an incomplete but modern thermal
power plant and a considerably higher stake in the South Caucasus
state’s gas distribution network. The Russian giant will also likely
get a controlling share in a gas pipeline from Iran that is due to
come on stream this spring. In addition, Kocharian’s late October
visit to Moscow was followed by the $500 million sale of ArmenTel,
the Greek-owned national telecommunication company, to Russia’s
VimpelCom mobile phone operator.

Many commentators in Yerevan view Kocharian’s willingness to place
more Armenian industries under Russian control as being part of
his strategy to retain a key role in the country’s government after
completing his second and final term in office in March 2008.

Throughout his nine-year rule the Armenian leader has sought the
Kremlin’s backing to neutralize political opponents challenging his
legitimacy. Significantly, Kocharian was received by Putin in Sochi
just one week after paying a confidential visit to Moscow. Armenia’s
upcoming parliamentary elections were reportedly high on the agenda
of that trip. The outcome of the vote, slated for May 12, will be
vital for his political future.

Whatever Kocharian’s real motives, there are mounting concerns about
the implications of the ruling regime’s economic dealings with Moscow
— arguably the least transparent area of governance in Armenia —
that are not overseen by parliament or even the cabinet of ministers.

"Many economists consider Russia’s presence in the Armenian economy
to be dangerous," commented 168 Zham. Another paper critical of the
government, Haykakan Zhamanak, accused Kocharian of "playing with our
country’s sovereignty." "The problem is that Russian companies are
acquiring not just Armenian enterprises but whole infrastructures,"
it wrote on January 26. "And that is a matter of national sovereignty."

(168 Zham, February 1; Azg, January 30; Kommersant, January 26;
Haykakan Zhamanak, January 26; RFE/RL Armenia Report, January 24,
January 17)

Karen Samargashian’s Marine Pictures’ Exhibition Opens In Yerevan

KAREN SAMARGASHIAN’S MARINE PICTURES’ EXHIBITION OPENS IN YEREVAN

Noyan Tapan
Feb 06 2007

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 6, NOYAN TAPAN. Painter-designer Karen
Samargashian’s private exhibition opened on February 6 at Armenian
State Museum of Nature where 45 marine pictures and 7 models of
ships were presented. According to museum Director Vahagn Minasian,
K.Samargashian’s art is unique and exclusive. "He has an excellent
feeling of color, which permits to suppose that his art will be more
popular in the future," the museum director said. He also stated that
currently few Armenian painters are engaged in marine painting. As
Karen Samargashian said to NT correspondent, this is his fourth
private exhibition and his marine pictures and models of many ships
were also displayed at his previous exhibitions. "I have often been
at sea in Soviet years and sea has become the call of my soul. Sea
is as if my continuation," the painter said.

270,835 Dollars Transferred To MCA-Armenia Program

270,835 DOLLARS TRANSFERRED TO MCA-ARMENIA PROGRAM

Noyan Tapan
Feb 05 2007

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 5, NOYAN TAPAN. The Millennium Challenge Corporation
(MCC), on behalf of the US government, has transferred the second
tranche of 270 thousand 835 USD from the second disbursement to the
Millennium Challenge Account (MCA) – Armenia Program. NT was informed
about it from the MCA-Armenia’s press service.

To recap, the first transfer of 1 million 456 thousand 112 USD was
received in January.

Hrant Dink’s Murder Is A Shame For Turkey, Serge Sargsian Says

HRANT DINK’S MURDER IS A SHAME FOR TURKEY, SERGE SARGSIAN SAYS

Noyan Tapan
Feb 05 2007

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 5, NOYAN TAPAN. Connected with Hrant Dink’s murder,
the Armenian-Turkish relations are today at the focus of the world
community’s interest, and we are simply obliged to use the chance and
again to make our viewpoints reachable to everybody. Serge Sargsian,
the RA Defence Minister stated about it during the February 4 interview
to the "Armenia" TV.

Responding the question about his oftenly touching upon recently
H.Dink’s murder and the Armenian-Turkish relations, S.Sargsian
mentioned that Armenia has balanced approaches concerning those issue,
and he finds purposeful at the moment to again state loudly about
those approaches with the help of authoritative mass media.

"Hrant Dink’s murder is a shame for Turkey, and Turkey is obliged to
succeed in carrying out this shame: this murder again proved that not
everything is all right in Turkey," the Defence Minister stated. In his
opinion, if Turkey is not able to take adequate steps and "gradually
slips towards the swamp of chauvinism," it will be dangerous both
for Turkey and Armenia.

In standing up for truth, Hrant Dink no longer stands alone

February 05, 2007 edition

-coop.html

In standing up for truth, Hrant Dink no longer stands alone

The 100,000 mourners of the murdered Armenian-Turkish journalist showed how truth triumphs over censorship.

By Garin K. Hovannisian

LOS ANGELES

"We are all Hrant Dink." That was the appropriate, if not very
accurate, placard held aloft by tens of thousands of mourners last
month when Istanbul buried its famed – and defamed – slain hero.

Mr. Dink was an Armenian-Turkish editor of the weekly newspaper Agos,
but it was not as an editor that he won lasting honors. He will be
remembered by Armenians as the gentle usher on the bridge from
Istanbul’s Armenian community to its Turkish commonwealth – and
ambassador to both from the democratic dream. He should be remembered
by all as an intellectual warrior leading the fight against
censorship.

Even the Turkish government, which convicted Dink in 2005 of
"insulting Turkishness" for writing about the Armenian genocide of
1915, splashed its imperial tears – sourced in self-pity though they
were. From the government’s perspective, the confessed killer, 17-year
old Ogun Samast, had just issued an inconvenient press release on the
eve of Turkey’s accession talks with the European Union. "I shot the
infidel," Samast reportedly yelled after shooting Dink in the
back. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s strange lament on "the
attack on our peace and stability" bemoaned not the dead Armenian, but
the afternoon’s collateral casualty: the illusion of Turkey’s
democratic revival.

Official Turkey may condemn Samast as an ultranationalist vigilante,
but it can’t in good faith call him a traitor. If the mention of
genocide was an act of sedition under Article 301 of the country’s
penal code, then Samast had delivered the just punishment to its
violator. The killer had merely packed Turkey’s state spirit into a
bullet and sent it to its final destination.

Indeed, video footage shows Turkish security officers giving Samast a
hero’s treatment as they posed with him in front of a Turkish flag
shortly after his arrest.

Dink, on the other hand, was found guilty of treason and denied police
protection even as he reported death threats. For his commentaries on
the Armenian genocide, Dink was labeled an enemy to the Turkish
people. He took on that role with understanding but not acquiescence,
defying injustice with truth – and censorship with incorruptible free
speech.

Of a character in Dink’s position, Henrik Ibsen has written, "The
strongest man in the world is he who stands alone." Raised in an
Istanbul orphanage, almost trained for the lonely task of bringing
truth to power in Turkey, Dink often stood alone outside Turkey.

When I first saw Dink in November 2006 at a lecture in Los Angeles – a
great outpost of the Armenian diaspora – he was chatting his way
politely through a crowd of Armenians. The gray-haired and spectacled
journalist, unlike many writers, looked at home in the mass, treating
each nameless face with refreshed interest and respect. But what first
seemed a fitting capture of his timid mannerism, the surname "Dink"
was really a highly misleading onomatopoeia – both to his personality
and to his role in history. Underneath the gentle erudite exterior was
the chiseled soul of a warrior.

By large margin, Armenian communities had celebrated France’s bill
last year to criminalize denial of the Armenian genocide. But Dink, a
luminary of genocide recognition, explained to his compatriots why the
bill (still not law) was wrong, why freedom of speech and truth must
be championed together – the first upheld to guarantee the permanence
of the second.

Damned by Turkey for crying the truth and damned by some Armenians for
tying truth to justice, the man who stood alone was right. The 100,000
attendees at Dink’s funeral were the final proof that censorship could
not cover Turkey’s lie – and it would not protect Armenia’s truth.

But in life, against the myopia of his people abroad and the brute
fascism of his countrymen at home, Dink held out hope. The death of
Hrant Dink is the tragic spectacle of a clash of civilizations at the
confluence of civilizations.

On one end, the Turkish state insists on being angered at Dink’s
assassin, as its laws continue to punish speech and its textbooks
stifle truth. On the other, freethinking Turks joined their Armenian
countrymen at the funeral of their unlikely insurgent who, now passed,
no longer stands alone. A combustion is coming. It is Dink’s legacy
that he yelled fire in Istanbul – and charged the world with
extinguishing it.

* Garin K. Hovannisian is a writer living in Yerevan, Armenia; and Los
Angeles.

Copyright © 2007 The Christian Science Monitor. All rights reserved.

http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0205/p09s02