BAKU: Gyoko Hajievski: There Is A Conflict Between Azerbaijan And Ar

GYOKO HAJIEVSKI: THERE IS A CONFLICT BETWEEN AZERBAIJAN AND ARMENIA, IT IS ALL THAT I KNEW ABOUT AZERBAIJAN

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Sept 5 2007

I had no imagination about Azerbaijan, I only knew that there is a
conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia. When I arrived in Azerbaijan
and got acquainted with the situation I was surprised and was glad.

My friend said that Azerbaijani football was developing. Azerbaijani
national team’s defeating Finland in March this year was unexpected
result, new head coach of "Baku" f/c Gyoko Hajievski said, APA Sport
Agency reports.

Macedonian specialist today said in the presentation ceremony held
with the participation of general manager of the football club Zeynal
Mammadov and executive-director Yashar Seyidov that Azerbaijani
football is in satisfactory level.

"Baku f/c won golden medal and cup of country championship. This team
is also famous in Europe. I heard about Baku f/c before visiting
the country. There are enough football-players in the team. When I
watched the match between Standard and Baku f/c I witnessed it. But
achievement of a whole team is important for us. I will do my best
for it," he said.

Hajievski saying that he will pay special attention to discipline
issues stressed that the team will succeed soon.

"President of the club Hafiz Mammadov, general manager of the club
Zeynal Mammadov is very kind. I got acquainted with everything
regarding Baku f/c and I know that the football team will succeed
soon. I have been working coach for already 20 years. I worked in 6
countries before coming here. I was the head coach of Macedonia team
and I had never failed seriously within this period. My homeland does
not know that I am working in Azerbaijan," he said.

Macedonian specialist said that he was not acquainted with the former
head coach of Baku f/c Boyukaga Hajiyev.

"I heard that he worked in several teams. Baku f/c was champion of
Azerbaijan. I had no other information about Hajiyev. I will try
to do my best for succession. But I can not say that we will become
champion beforehand," he said.

Principals Have No Right To Demand Money

PRINCIPALS HAVE NO RIGHT TO DEMAND MONEY

Panorama.am
19:27 04/09/2007

For several days following the September 1 Day of Knowledge, the
offices of panorama.am have been receiving calls in which parents
were expressing their dissatisfaction with the fact that teachers
were separating their English and Russian classes into two groups
depending on "parents’ donations." The thing is that for best results,
small group teaching is preferred. This is a proven fact. But parents
report that for this purpose the students are required to pay 500 dram
per month. And, the Russian and English classes are being conducted
with entire classrooms of 35 students.

To clarify these reports, panorma.am journalists visited Sylva Achoyan
of the city hall education department.

Achoyan reported that the school principals are allowed, according
to the current education plan, to decide whether or not to divide
their classes into two groups.

Achoyan added that principals decide on dividing the classes into
groups or not depending on funds available to pay teachers. She says
that if the principal divides the class and then demands money from
pupils, it is a criminally punishable offense.

Achoyan states that a teacher has the right to ask for money from a
pupil only if teaching takes place outside of regular class hours.

According to what we found out, the news about demanding money from
pupils was a surprise for Achoyan and her staff, and that such a
thing couldn’t be taking place. For the proper teaching of languages,
in small groups, to take place, must a parent lighten his pocketbook?

Customs: Criminal Green And White

CUSTOMS: CRIMINAL GREEN AND WHITE

Panorama.am
20:39 03/09/2007

These past days, the customs division of Zvartnots airport, while
x-raying luggage of the Amsterdam-Yerevan flight, discovered a
"not-uniform object" in one of the passenger’s suitcases.

As informed by the custom agency’s information department, the
passenger was allowed to leave the customs area, where in the arrival
section another citizen had been called for a customs search. During
the search, 16 packages of green objects were found, and one package
of a white powder-like substance, which were hidden in five bags of
"Wriglis" potato chips.

Chemical analysis of the 16 packages revealed 235.65 grams of pure
marijuana, while in the other package 33.83 grams of cocaine were
found.

Government agencies have labeled this a crime under article 215,
part 2. The two individuals have been arrested for obstruction of
justice. Preliminary investigations are ongoing.

Cash Flows Into Armenia’s Banking System Reach AMD891.6 Bln In Jan-J

CASH FLOWS INTO ARMENIA’S BANKING SYSTEM REACH AMD 891.6BLN IN JAN-JULY 2007

ARKA News Agency
Sept 4 2007
Armenia

YEREVAN, September 4. /ARKA/. Cash flows into Armenia’s banking
system reached to AMD 891.6bln by late July after growing 40.86%
or by AMD 258.6bln between January and July 2007, compared with the
same period a year earlier.

Central Bank of Armenia told ARKA News Agency referring to National
Statistical Service’s figures that AMD 128.3bln or 14.39% of total
receipts came from currency sales.

According to the report, cash inflows received from currency sales grew
14.42% or by AMD 16.2bln and their quota in total receipts reduced by
3.33 percentage points, compared with the same period a year earlier.

In Jan-July 2007, cash expenses totaled AMD 930.7bln, of which 327.8bln
or 35.22% was spent for currency purchase.

Compared with Jan-July 2006, expenses grew by 287.6bln or 44.72%.

Expenses for buying currency grew 73.75% or by AMD139.1bln.

Cash expenses exceeded income by AMD 24.2bln in Jan-July 2007 while at
the same period of 2006 income exceeded expenditure by AMD 10.2bln. In
Jan-July 2007 currency purchase/sale deals brought the amount smaller
by AMD 262.6bln than expenses. At the same period of 2006, expenses
exceeded income by AMD 76.5bln. ($1 – AMD 336.48).

ANKARA: Turkish Historical Society Revives Plans To Create Kurdology

TURKISH HISTORICAL SOCIETY REVIVES PLANS TO CREATE KURDOLOGY INSTITUTE

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Sept 3 2007

Turkish Historical Society (TTK) Chairman Professor Yusuf Halacoðlu,
speaking to Zaman daily, said recent statements about the possible
Turkoman genealogy of Turkey’s Kurds and the Armenian ancestry of
Kurdish Alevis were deliberately misrepresented in the Turkish press.

Yusuf Halacoðlu Halacoðlu clarified his use of the word
"unfortunately," while referring to his research on the ethnicity of
Kurdish Alevis, whom he claims have Armenian ethnicity. The professor,
whose controversial comments have been the subject of heated debate,
noted that "unfortunately" refers not to the "fact" that Kurdish Alevis
are Armenian but to the implied fact that Armenians had to convert
or pretend to have converted. "There are a good number of Armenians
who have become Muslim. These people are accepted as Muslims and have
been incorporated into society. But these [Kurdish Alevis] could not
integrate; hence, my use of the term ‘unfortunate’," Halacoðlu said
while speaking to Zaman’s Nuriye Akman.

The TTK chairman spoke about the lack of academic institutions in
Turkey devoted to studying "Kurdology" and Armenian issues. Claiming
that he was a ahead of his time in freely using the term "Kurdish"
in his articles when use of the term was regarded as taboo in Turkey,
Halacoðlu said he had floated a proposition to the National Security
Council (MGK) to establish a Kurdology and Armenian Studies Institute
in 1988. "When I voiced this [proposal] at a meeting, everybody
looked at me in a very unimpressed fashion," Halacoðlu said. The MGK
secretary-general at the time, Teoman Koman, was interested in the idea
and had called the professor to his office and asked him to start work,
he explained, and added: "A month later he became undersecretary of the
National Intelligence Organization (MIT). And this task was abandoned."

The TTK chairman also informed Akman that as soon as a bill relating
to the TTK is passed by Parliament, he will establish a Kurdology
Institute, to include desks for the Caucasus, Black Sea region,
Balkans, Middle East, Iran and Asia. Halacoðlu said the Kurdology
Institute would deal with archeological, social anthropological,
linguistic, cultural and ethnographic research.

–Boundary_(ID_0Tnyx18uqNp37iq2QmxkbA)- –

Entrance exams will be eliminated in a few years

Entrance exams will be eliminated in a few years

01-09-2007 11:22:54 – KarabakhOpen

This year 62 students from Artsakh entered the state universities of
Armenia, although the Armenian government had provided 60 scholarships
for Artsakh. `The Armenian ministry of education met our request and
provided 2 more scholarships for the region of Kashatagh. Another 15
have entered the universities,’ said the NKR minister of education,
culture and sport Kamo Atayan in an interview with Karabakh-Open.com.
The minister voiced concern regarding the small number of students at
the departments of physics, mathematics, radiophysics, geography,
agriculture and architecture at Artsakh State University. `If we hold
the exams without differentiated liberalization, these departments will
remain empty. We even had to admit 18 students by only an interview,’
the minister said. On the whole, Artsakh State has 766 students, 220
got scholarships, the government pays the tuition fee of 46 children of
killed azatamartiks.
This year the first integrated state exams in Armenian were held in
Karabakh. Kamo Atayan says next year the exam in mathematics and
English will be launched. `We may also hold integrated exams in other
foreign languages and natural sciences. The students will learn about
changes in the upcoming 1 or 2 months,’ Kamo Atayan said.
In answer to the question if an applicant can go to universities if he
or she had low marks at school, the minister said it is possible. `I
think in a couple of years the entrance exams will not be practiced at
all, and the students will take all the exams at school, but next year
the centralized system of entrance will remain,’ the minister of
education said.

BAKU: Armenians Break Cease-Fire In Terter

ARMENIANS BREAK CEASE-FIRE IN TERTER

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Aug 31 2007

Azmernian Armed Forces kept violating ceasefire in Terter.

The Defense Ministry press service told APA-Economics that Armenian
military units fired on the opposite positions of Azerbaijani Armed
Forces from their posts at northeast of Borsunlu village of Terter
from 22.45 to 23.00 last night.

They also fired on Azerbaijani army’s positions from their positions
located at southwest of Hasangaya village of Terter from 05.20am
to 06.10. The enemy was silenced by response fire, no casualties
reported.

Turkey Is Typing….WordPress Still Blocked

TURKEY IS TYPING….WORDPRESS STILL BLOCKED
by Deborah Ann Dilley

Global Voices Online, MA
Aug 31 2007

Last week Sami Ben Gharbia did an excellent posting about the blockage
of the WordPress blogging platform in Turkey, this week we will examine
what Turkish bloggers have to say about it. There is anger, resentment,
and sense of utter amazement at the absurdness of the situation. And
yet, there is a powerful spirit of strength in combating this ban.

Many Turkish bloggers and expat bloggers feel that the recent banning
of WordPress in Turkey is not only a sign of things to come, but
a cause for embarrassment. James in Turkey sums up the history of
Turkish censorship well:

Turkey has banned WordPress, the blogging platform. This is not
a move without precedent; the popular definitions site ekºisozluk
and, more famously, YouTube have both been blocked in the past. Turk
Telekom’s virtual monopoly on internet access in Turkey makes a ban
an easy thing to enforce. There is, after all, just the one service
provider to submit a court order to. Such a ban wouldn’t be as easy in
a place like Britain, where multiple companies maintain the country’s
internet infrastructure.

The man behind this ban is the Turkish creationist Adnan Oktar, more
popularly known by his pen name Harun Yahya. It seems Mr Oktar took
offence at some sentiments express about his person on a certain
WordPress blog, and proceeded to have his lawyers ban the entire
platform. Mr Oktar’s lawyers were also behind the ekºisozluk ban,
which was only lifted after the entires about him were deleted.

Censorship in Turkey has long been extensive. When it comes to certain
sensitive subjects – be it the Kurds, the Armenians, the hidden state
or the military – Turkish journalists have always exercised a degree
of self-censorship. Even ordinary Turks have a habit of lowering
their voices when talking politics, lest they be overheard. In such
an environment, the mere recalling of books and banning of websites
can be almost second nature.

But despite its long history of censorship, the Turkish state has yet
to realise that it just doesn’t work. When YouTube was banned for an
anti-Ataturk video that appeared in its wares, every other Turkish
internet user found a way of watching the video to see out what the
fuss was about. I myself have met authors who are delighted when
their books are banned and taken away by the police. It makes people
want to read them. Surely it’s like dealing with a spoilt child –
giving attention only makes it worse.

I have very little time for Mr Oktar. He is not an intelligent man.

The legal action he has taken against certain WordPress blogs
are completely in character and, as far as I can see, without much
justification. I don’t see how a tiny blog can do much personal harm
to him.

But my personal thoughts aside, there is a bigger issue here – the fact
that it is possible to ban parts of the Internet in Turkey. The courts
should not be able to close entire websites in responsible to a single
libel claim. More important than that, though, the internet access of
an entire country should not rest in the hands of one single company,
however privatised it might be. It’s time to break up Turk Telekom.

As James points out, the ease in which this ban was implemented is of
some concern, however with this ease also comes the resourcefulness
of Turkish internet users to work around the ban. Erkan from Erkan’s
Field Diary notes that he uses his RSS feed from Bloglines to read
Wordpress blogs.

Other bloggers have compared the decision to ban WordPress to a fatwa
rather than a court decision, from Internations Musings:

What I simply don’t understand is why nobody knows why this court
decision is made. Looks fair to me that when a court makes a
decision, it issues also a statement why the decision is made…or
am I wrong? Now leaving so many people in limbo, it also creates
space for speculations, conspiracy theories and gossip. I think that
after 5 years, I still have a lot to learn about how Turkey is ruled,
but this court issued rather a fatwa than a decision…

As to the type of the ban, Living in Turkey cites Turkey as joining
the ranks of North Korea and Iran:

The Turkish Courts sometime around last Friday put forth an order
that blocks WordPress from any internet user inside Turkey.

Apparently, according to Photo Matt’s blog, it is a DNS block. His
site also provides tips for proxy servers around this block. Because
of the nature of the domain, Turk Telecom banned the WordPress domain,
which includes all subdomains.

So, when I went to visit my good buddy, fellow expat and blogger,
Jake at his Foreign Perspective Blog, I was shocked to see this:

It basically says, "Access to this site has been suspended in
accordance with decision no: 2007/195 of T.C. Fatih 2.Civil Court of
First Instance." This is the same thing that occurred to YouTube. It
is too bad that a simple prosecutor and a judge that only uses the
internet for email and to read the newspaper decided this was ok. Of
course the judge is only following the law, the prosecutor is to
blame. Most likely a wordpress blog published controversial material
either insulting Turkey, Turkishness, the military, the courts, or
Ataturk – all are possible. No word yet on who the real culprit is –
and also no word from the media yet either.

I guess Turkey just likes to join the ranks of firewall enthusiasts
like Iran, China and North Korea. Of course, with the most recent
elections, Iran is not far off. It is also a shame, because Turkey,
a country of 70+ million people, has about 15 million ADSL users and
still growing.

Erkan’s Field Diary writes about his frustration in trying to find
out more about the actual court decision:

I actually called the largest service provider, TTnet Customer Service
as a mere citizen. The call person in the service call repetad that
"they don’t know any information about the ban. The court demanded and
they banned, that’s it." So as a citizen i cannot learn why i cannot
have access to the site. I later surfed in the Ministry of Justice site
in order to find if court decisions are published here. No chance. So
there is an accountability question here too. The banners are not
accountable to citizens. If only mainstream media takes the issue at
hand, we might have a chance. In the mean time, you can change open
DNS numbers and you can try different proxies in ”
or ” to overcome the ban and have access:)

Frustration is also mounting by Turkish bloggers and readers as they
are discovering that more and more sites are blocked because of their
use of WordPress platform like the Flickr blog and the political
ticker blog from CNN.

So what is being done? Good question. Many Turks are getting around
the ban by using RSS feeds and proxy servers, others are signing
petitions to unblock WordPress, such as the petition from MidEast
Youth, and still others are using their own sites as a protest such
as Great Firewall of Turkey.

In any case, the one to blame this all on was the one man who had his
lawyers block WordPress to begin with, Adnan Oktar, a creationist and
(according to bloggers) a cult leader. Hans from Internations Musings,
give a brief introduction to the man:

Apparently this is what happened: the attorneys of the cult leader
Adnan Oktar aka Harun Yahya, a 51 year old former interior design
student known in Turkey as "Adnan Hoca", who founded in 1990 the
foundation known as BAV (Bilim Arastirma Vakfi-Scientific Research
Foundation), had applied to WordPress for removal of what they
described as "unlawful statements regarding their client". "As most
of our attempts were unanswered" alleged the attorneys, they applied
to Turkish judicial courts "to stop the defamation executed through
Wordpress services". Hence, by the decision of Fatih 2nd Civil Court
of First Instance, number 2007/195, access to WordPress.com was then
blocked in Turkey by TTNET, an Internet network that covers all Turkey.

We learned that the sites which Adnan Oktar’s attorneys wanted removed
are run by an Islamic Reformer Edip Yuksel, who wrote an article
criticizing Oktar and his movement where he seems to be trying to
expose Oktar and his followers as a fundamentalist movement with dark
secrets. Edip Yuksel published this message of rebuttal.

Started as a religious cult that preyed on wealthy members of Turkish
society, the BAV has appeared in lurid media tales about sex rings,
a blackmail prosecution and speculation about its charismatic leader.

But if BAV’s notoriety has been burnished by a sensationalist
Turkish media, the secretive group has earned its reputation as a
prodigious publisher of inexpensive ideological paperbacks. BAV has
put out hundreds of titles written by "Harun Yahya" (a pseudonym)
on various topics, but most of them are Islamic-based attacks on the
theory of evolution. His book, Atlas Of Creation, decrying evolution
is now aggressively promoted well beyond the borders of Turkey to
the Middle East, Europe, and even the United States. The book is
turning up, unsolicited, in the mailboxes of scientists and members
of the US Congress, and at science museums around USA. In France,
the Harun Yahya book offensive led the government to issue a warning
for schools to be on the look out for the "Atlas" before it makes it
into their classrooms. Meanwhile, the increasing European activity of
BAV, as well as of Christian creationist groups, recently prompted a
committee of the Council of Europe – a 47-nation group that acts as
a kind of continental watchdog – to issue a report strongly warning
about its dangers to education.

The lavishly illustrated 800-page book is one of the most significant
creationist challenge to Charles Darwin’s theory, which Yahya calls a
feeble and perverted ideology contradicted by the Koran. The books are
slick, but BAV has had plenty of help. Creationism in Turkey got key
support in the 1980s and 1990s from American creationist organizations,
and BAV’s Yahya books resemble the same sorts of works put out by
California’s Institute for Creation Research. Except in Yahya’s books,
it’s Allah that’s doing the creating. Unlike fundamentalist Christian
creationists, Oktar does not claim the earth was created only a few
thousand years ago. Instead, he argues that fossils show that creatures
from millions of years ago looked just like the creatures of today,
thus disproving evolution. Also, Oktar’s brand of creationism is not
only religious, but political and even messianic, seeing most of the
world’s ills – terrorism and fascism among them – as stemming from
Darwin’s theory of evolution. In 2001, Science magazine called BAV
"one of the world’s strongest anti-evolution movements outside of
North America".

I think that most readers would agree that the WordPress ban is not
helping Adnan Oktar’s public image one bit. We can only hope that
sanity will prevail and that this ban will be lifted soon.

–Boundary_(ID_Kdl7kZ4R6A3ucX523Hzqxw)–

www.anonymouse.com
www.ninjaproxy.com

Armenian President Congratulates Turkish Counterpart

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT CONGRATULATES TURKISH COUNTERPART

EurasiaNet, NY
A EurasiaNet Partner Post from RFE/RL
Aug 30 2007

Robert Kocharian has written to former Turkish Foreign Minister
Abdullah Gul to congratulate him on his election as president,
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service reported.

The text of the message was not made public. Armenian Foreign Minister
Vartan Oskanian, who has met on several occasions in recent years
with Gul, sent a similar message.

Analysts in Yerevan do not anticipate any fundamental change in Turkish
foreign policy as a result of Gul’s election since, as Giro Manoyan
of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation-Dashnaktsutiun pointed out,
foreign policy is the prerogative of Turkey’s government, not of
the president.

Russia Bans Armenian Meat Amid Disease Outbreak

RUSSIA BANS ARMENIAN MEAT AMID DISEASE OUTBREAK
By Irina Hovannisian

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Aug 29 2007

Russia banned imports of meat from Armenia on Wednesday, citing an
outbreak of African Swine Fever (ASF) registered in the country’s
northern regions late last week.

Russian authorities also restricted imports of some Armenian
agricultural products for the same reason.

According to the Itar-Tass news agency, the ban followed the release
of the results of laboratory tests conducted in Armenia by Russian
food safety experts. They concluded that ASF, which rarely occurs
outside Africa, was the cause of mass deaths of pigs reported from
several villages in the Lori and Tavush provinces bordering Georgia.

The Armenian Agriculture Ministry arrived at the same conclusion at
the weekend, quarantining the affected communities. "Transport of
pork, live pigs and animal fodder from those communities is banned,"
Grigor Baghian, head of the ministry’s Food Safety and Veterinary
Inspectorate, told RFE/RL.

Baghian said police and veterinary services have set up roadblocks
outside those villages to enforce the quarantine. The authorities have
also ordered a mandatory cull of all local pigs, he said, adding that
more than a thousand of them have already been killed.

Baghian said his agency believes that the disease spilled into Armenia
from Georgia where an ASF outbreak occurred on a larger scale earlier
this summer. Tens of thousands of pigs have died or been culled there
as a result.

Although the disease poses little danger to humans, it seems to have
already reduced pork consumption in Armenia. Pork was not available
for sale in one of central Yerevan’s main markets on Wednesday.

"People don’t buy pork, and so we stopped selling it," one meat trader
told RFE/RL.

Traders in another market did sell pork which they said is supplied
from the country’s southern regions and closely inspected by food
safety experts. But they said pork sales have dropped considerably
in the past few days.