Turkey Vows Sanctions If France Adopts Genocide Bill

TURKEY VOWS SANCTIONS IF FRANCE ADOPTS GENOCIDE BILL

The News – International, Pakistan
Oct 9 2006

ANKARA: France risks being barred from economic projects in Turkey
if it adopts a controversial bill on the massacre of Armenians under
the Ottoman Empire, Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said in
remarks published on Sunday. The draft law, to be debated in the
French parliament Thursday, calls for five years in prison and a fine
of 45,000 euros (57,000 dollars) for anyone who denies that the World
War I massacres constituted a genocide.

If the bill is passed, Gul said, French participation in major
economic projects in Turkey, including the planned construction of a
nuclear plant for which the tender process is expected to soon begin,
will suffer.

"We will be absolutely unable to have (such cooperation) in big
tenders," he told the popular Hurriyet daily, adding that he had
"openly" warned his French counterpart Philippe Douste-Blazy about
the repercussions of the bill.

"The French will lose Turkey," Gul warned in further remarks, to the
Yeni Safak newspaper. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan was also
furious. "This is an issue between Turkey and Armenia. It is none
of France’s business," he said late Saturday in Istanbul, quoted by
Anatolia news agency.

"If Turkey’s prime minister-or any other minister, a historian or an
intellectual-goes to France one day and says it was not a genocide,
what are you going to do? Throw that person in jail?" Erdogan asked.

Ankara says the bill is designed as a political gesture to

France’s Armenian community. Many here also see it as a punch below
the belt by opponents of Turkey’s European Union membership that will
tarnish the country’s image in Europe and fan anti-Western sentiment
among Turks.

Faced with increasing EU warnings that it is failing to ensure
freedom of expression, Turkey has accused the bloc of applying double
standards, arguing that France itself was blocking free debate on a
historical subject by criminalizing genocide denial. About 500 people,
activists from a small left-wing party, took to the streets in Istanbul
Sunday to protest the bill, laying a black wreath outside the French
consulate. "France stop! A boycott is coming," they chanted. "The
genocide is a lie," their banners read.

The Ankara Trade Chamber, which groups about 3,000 businesses,
threatened to boycott French goods, calling EU countries
"hypocritical."

A senior lawmaker has also warned that the Turkish parliament may
retaliate with a law branding the killings of Algerians under French
colonial rule as genocide and introducing prison terms for those who
deny it.

On Saturday, Erdogan met with representatives of French companies
doing business in Turkey, among them industrial giants such as
carmaker Renault and food group Danone, urging them to lobby French
MPs to vote down the bill. The draft was first submitted in May but
the debate ran out of parliamentary time before a vote could be held.

In 2001 France adopted a resolution recognizing the massacres of
Armenians as genocide, prompting Ankara to retaliate by sidelining
French companies from public tenders and cancelling several projects
awarded to French firms.

The massacres are one of most controversial episodes in Turkish
history and open debate on the issue has only recently begun in Turkey,
often sending nationalist sentiment into frenzy. Armenians claim up
to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered in orchestrated killings
between 1915 and 1917.

Turkey categorically rejects the genocide label, arguing that
300,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife
when Armenians rose for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided
with invading Russian troops as the Ottoman Empire was falling apart.

ANKARA: Restoration of Armenian church in Van complete

Turkish Daily News
Oct 7 2006

Restoration of Armenian church in Van complete
Saturday, October 7, 2006

With the church refurbished, the number of tourists to the province
will increase, says the provincial culture manager

ANKARA – Turkish Daily News

A project to restore the Armenian church on the island of Akdamar
in Lake Van is complete, according to reports.

Cahit Zeydanlý, the owner of the company that restored the church,
said the restoration process began in May 2005. The process involved
the cleaning of the roof and the frescos and figures inside and
outside the church, laying floorboards and putting in windows, he
said, noting that they had found 34 rooms in the church during the
restoration.

He said the rooms were cleaned up but were not restored because
they weren’t included in the project.

"The restoration was finished on Aug. 30 at a cost of YTL 2.6
million," said Zeydanlý, noting that five experts supervised the
efforts.

"Right now, we are in the process of refurbishing the environs of
the church. We built a pier and walkways on the island. Toilets,
guard posts, ticket booths and gift shops were built. We are also
building a cafeteria behind the church. These will be complete soon
too."

He said the church on Akdamar was the second Armenian church he had
restored, noting that the Armenian church in Bitlis his company had
rebuilt was now being used as a house of worship.

Zeydanlý said they were aware of the dangers of restoring the
church and consequently were in constant contact with the government,
Armenian officials in Turkey and around the world. He said an
Armenian architect had helped them throughout the process.

"The church is a registered work of art. That’s why it was very
important to pay the utmost care on the rehabilitation of the
church."

He had talked to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan about the
church, said Zeydanlý, noting that Erdoðan was very interested in the
process. "The past problems between Armenians and Turks are harming
the current state of relations. I hope this church will help in
finding a common ground. This restoration is the proof that Turkey
can handle such projects. The opening ceremony may take place on Nov.
4. We are expecting the prime minister at the ceremony."

A tourism boost to the region:

Van Culture and Tourism Manager Ýzzet Kutuoðlu said a science board
and their bureaus had constantly checked the progress of the
restoration process and were pleased with the end result.

"The number of tourists coming to Van will increase with the
completion of this project. There are some groups who want to come
even now. However, we don’t want anyone here before the restoration
is complete."

–Boundary_(ID_l6ZeCoo24Wx+azbSo BEflg)–

Yourlife: We Love Telly! – Documentary Who Do You Think You Are?

YOURLIFE: WE LOVE TELLY! – DOCUMENTARY WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE?
By Jane Simon

The Mirror, UK
October 4, 2006 Wednesday
3 Star Edition

DAVID DICKINSON BBC1, 9PM

"WHAT can you say when you find out your grandmother was a bit of
a tart?" muses David Dickinson as he trips over one more unexpected
skeleton in his family’s closet.

Adopted as a baby, Dickinson only found out the truth about his
biological parents when he was 11, and his search for his own heritage
uncovers a sentimental side to the jovial Bargain Hunt presenter that
viewers won’t have guessed at.

Although he wrote to his mother, Eugenie Gulessarian for 20 years,
she refused to ever meet him. Tonight, he begins to understand why
and he also discovers that he has more in common with his Armenian
ancestors than he ever imagined, as his quest takes him to Istanbul,
and a house that looks unchanged since the day when his great
grandfather lived in it.

The Next War Of The World: One Hundred Years Of Butchery

THE NEXT WAR OF THE WORLD: ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF BUTCHERY
by Niall Ferguson

Foreign Affairs
September 2006 – October 2006

In 1898, H. G. Wells wrote The War of the Worlds, a novel that
imagined the destruction of a great city and the extermination
of its inhabitants by ruthless invaders. The invaders in Wells’
story were, of course, Martians. But no aliens were needed to make
such devastation a reality. In the decades that followed the book’s
publication, human beings repeatedly played the part of the inhuman
marauders, devastating city after city in what may justly be regarded
as a single hundred-year "war of the world."

The twentieth century was the bloodiest era in history. World War I
killed between 9 million and 10 million people, more if the influenza
pandemic of 1918­19 is seen as a consequence of the war. Another
59 million died in World War II. And those conflicts were only two
of the more deadly ones in the last hundred years. By one estimate,
there were 16 conflicts throughout the last century that cost more
than a million lives, a further six that claimed between 500,000 and
a million, and 14 that killed between 250,000 and 500,000. In all,
between 167 million and 188 million people died because of organized
violence in the twentieth century — as many as one in every 22 deaths
in that period.

Other periods matched the twentieth century’s rate of killing, if not
its magnitude: consider the reigns of tyrants such as Genghis Khan
and Tamerlane; some crises in imperial China, such as the An Lushan
Rebellion in the eighth century and the Taiping Rebellion in the
mid-nineteenth century; and some cases of Western imperial conquest,
such as Belgian rule in the Congo and the German war against the
Herero in German Southwest Africa. Yet the twentieth century differs
from those earlier ages in one key way: it was supposed to be — and
in a great many ways was — a time of unparalleled material progress.

In real terms, average per capita gdp roughly quadrupled between
1913 and 1998. By the end of the twentieth century, human beings
in many parts of the world enjoyed longer and better lives than had
been possible at any time before, thanks mainly to improved nutrition
and health care. Rising wealth meant that more and more people were
able to flee what Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels had called "the
idiocy of rural life": between 1900 and 1980, the proportion of the
world’s population that lived in large cities more than doubled. And
by working more productively, people had more time available for
leisure. Some spent their free time successfully campaigning for
political representation and the redistribution of income. As a result,
governments ceased to confine themselves to providing only basic
public goods, such as national defense and a fair judicial system,
but instead became welfare states that sought nothing less than the
elimination of poverty.

It might have been expected that such prosperity would eliminate
the causes of war. But much of the worst violence of the twentieth
century involved the relatively wealthy countries at the opposite
ends of Eurasia. The chief lesson of the twentieth century is that
countries can provide their citizens with wealth, longevity, literacy,
and even democracy but still descend into lethal conflict.

Leon Trotsky nicely summed up the paradox when reflecting on the First
Balkan War of 1912-­13, which he covered as a reporter. The conflict,
Trotsky wrote, "shows that we still haven’t crawled out on all fours
from the barbaric stage of our history. We have learned to wear
suspenders, to write clever editorials, and to make chocolate milk,
but when we have to decide seriously a question of the coexistence
of a few tribes on a rich peninsula of Europe, we are helpless to
find a way other than mutual mass slaughter." Trotsky later made his
own contribution to the history of mass slaughter as the people’s
commissar for war and as the commander of the Red Army during the
Russian Civil War.

Will the twenty-first century be as bloody as the twentieth? The
answer depends partly on whether or not we can understand the causes
of the last century’s violence. Only if we can will we have a chance
of avoiding a repetition of its horrors. If we cannot, there is a
real possibility that we will relive the nightmare.

BLAME GAME

There are many unsatisfactory explanations for why the twentieth
century was so destructive. One is the assertion that the availability
of more powerful weapons caused bloodier conflicts. But there is no
correlation between the sophistication of military technology and the
lethality of conflict. Some of the worst violence of the century —
the genocides in Cambodia in the 1970s and central Africa in the 1990s,
for instance — was perpetrated with the crudest of weapons: rifles,
axes, machetes, and knives.

Nor can economic crises explain the bloodshed. What may be the
most familiar causal chain in modern historiography links the Great
Depression to the rise of fascism and the outbreak of World War II.

But that simple story leaves too much out. Nazi Germany started the war
in Europe only after its economy had recovered. Not all the countries
affected by the Great Depression were taken over by fascist regimes,
nor did all such regimes start wars of aggression. In fact, no general
relationship between economics and conflict is discernible for the
century as a whole. Some wars came after periods of growth, others
were the causes rather than the consequences of economic catastrophe,
and some severe economic crises were not followed by wars.

Many trace responsibility for the butchery to extreme ideologies. The
Marxist historian Eric Hobsbawm calls the years between 1914 and 1991
"an era of religious wars" but argues that "the most militant and
bloodthirsty religions were secular ideologies." At the other end
of the political spectrum, the conservative historian Paul Johnson
blames the violence on "the rise of moral relativism, the decline
of personal responsibility [and] the repudiation of Judeo-Christian
values." But the rise of new ideologies or the decline of old values
cannot be regarded as causes of violence in their own right. Extreme
belief systems, such as anti-Semitism, have existed for most of modern
history, but only at certain times and in certain places have they
been widely embraced and translated into violence.

And as tempting as it is to blame tyrants such as Hitler, Stalin,
and Mao for the century’s bloodletting, to do so is to repeat the
error on which Leo Tolstoy heaped so much scorn in War and Peace.

Megalomaniacs may order men to invade Russia, but why do the men
obey? Some historians have attempted to answer the novelist’s question
by indicting the modern nation-state. The nation-state does indeed
possess unprecedented capabilities for mobilizing masses of people,
but those means could just as easily be harnessed, and have been,
to peaceful ends.

Others seek the cause of conflict in the internal political
arrangements of states. It has become fashionable among political
scientists to posit a causal link between democracy and peace,
extrapolating from the observation that democracies tend not
to go to war with one another. The corollary, of course, is that
dictatorships generally are more bellicose. By that logic, the rise
of democracy during the twentieth century should have made the world
more peaceful. Democratization may well have reduced the incidence of
war between states. But waves of democratization in the 1920s, 1960s,
and 1980s seem to have multiplied the number of civil wars. Some
of those (such as the conflicts in Afghanistan, Burundi, China,
Korea, Mexico, Mozambique, Nigeria, Russia, Rwanda, and Vietnam) were
among the deadliest conflicts of the century. Horrendous numbers of
fatalities were also caused by genocidal or "politicidal" campaigns
waged against civilian populations, such as those carried out by the
Young Turks against the Armenians and the Greeks during World War I,
the Soviet government from the 1920s until the 1950s, and the Nazis
between 1933 and 1945 — to say nothing of those perpetrated by the
communist tyrannies of Mao in China and Pol Pot in Cambodia. Indeed,
such civil strife has been the most common form of conflict during
the past 50 years. Of the 24 armed conflicts recorded as "ongoing"
by the University of Maryland’s Ted Robert Gurr and George Mason
University’s Monty Marshall in early 2005, nearly all were civil wars.

Conventional explanations for the violence of the twentieth century
are inadequate for another important reason. None is able to explain
convincingly why lethal conflict happened when and where it did.

Ultimately, the interesting question is not, Why was the twentieth
century more violent than the eighteenth or the nineteenth? but,
Why did extreme violence happen in Poland and Serbia more than in
Portugal and Sweden, and why was it more likely to happen between
1939 and 1945 than between 1959 and 1965?

In relative terms, Poland and Serbia were exceptionally prone to the
ravages of warfare in the first half of the twentieth century. Polish
Galicia was one of the killing fields of the eastern front between 1914
and 1917. Serbia had the highest mortality rate of any country during
World War I; the war killed just under 6 percent of the country’s
prewar population. Far worse, the Polish mortality rate in World
War II amounted to just under 19 percent; Polish Jews killed in the
Holocaust accounted for a large share of that number. The Soviet rate
was 11 percent, although the figure for Russians and Ukrainians,
who dominated the ranks of the Red Army, was higher. Among other
combatant countries, only Germany (including Austria) and Yugoslavia
suffered war-induced mortality rates close to 10 percent. The next
highest rates were for Hungary (8 percent) and Romania (6 percent).

In no other country for which figures have been published did war
mortality rise above 3 percent. Indeed, for four of the principal
combatants — France, Italy, the United Kingdom, and the United
States — total wartime mortality was less than 1 percent of the
prewar population.

These figures give a good indication of the location and the timing
of the worst twentieth-century violence. From around 1904 to 1953,
the most dangerous place in the world was the triangle that lies
between the Balkans, the Baltic Sea, and the Black Sea. Only slightly
less dangerous over the same period was the region at the other end
of Eurasia comprising Manchuria and the neighboring Korean Peninsula.

Indeed, it was there that the era of large-scale modern warfare began,
when Japan attacked Russia in 1904. It was also there that the era
came to a close 50 years later, with the end of the Korean War.

Thereafter, the location and the type of violence changed. Despite
its reputation as having been a "long peace," the Cold War sparked a
series of bitter proxy wars around the world, particularly in Central
America, sub-Saharan Africa, and Indochina. Those conflicts in effect
constituted a Third World War — or, more aptly, the Third World’s War.

THE THREE E’S

Three factors explain the timing and the location of the extreme
violence of the twentieth century: ethnic disintegration, economic
volatility, and empires in decline.

Patterns of migration combined with the persistence of religious and
cultural traditions have always made some areas of human settlement
more ethnically homogeneous than others. In 1900, in parts of the
world such as England or France it was possible to travel hundreds
of miles without encountering anyone who looked, spoke, dressed,
or worshiped in significantly different ways from everyone else. But
an ethnic and linguistic map of central and eastern Europe at that
time would have resembled a patchwork quilt, reflecting the region’s
diversity. There, ethnic groups lived next door to one another —
sometimes literally. The many-named town known variously as Czernowitz,
Cernauti, and Chernivtsi is a case in point. Located in what is now
Ukraine, Chernivtsi was once a multiethnic city inhabited by German
professors, Austrian civil servants, Jewish merchants, and workers
from many other ethnicities. To the nineteenth-century poet Karl
Emil Franzos, Chernivtsi was Czernowitz, "the courtyard of the German
paradise," an island of Kultur within "Half Asia." Yet the multiethnic
balance on which such places rested tipped over disastrously in the
three decades after 1914.

Conflict in multiethnic societies was not and is not inevitable. In
fact, central and eastern Europe in the early 1900s saw remarkable
advances in the integration and assimilation of ethnic minorities.

People of different ethnicities not only lived near one another but
also worked, played, and studied together. They even intermarried.

For example, in cities such as Hamburg and Trieste, rates of
intermarriage between Jews and non-Jews reached remarkable heights.

The same trend was apparent after the 1917 revolution in what soon
became the Soviet Union, particularly in big cities.

Assimilation, however, can be violently reversed. It is no accident
that ethnic tensions increased in places such as the then Romanian
city Cernauti in the interwar period. Before World War I, four
dynasties — the Hapsburg, the Hohenzollern, the Ottoman, and the
Romanov — had governed central and eastern Europe. Such regimes cared
less about their subjects’ nationality than about their subjects’
loyalty. After 1918, the political map of the region was redrawn to
create or re-create nation-states. Yet the region’s ethnic diversity
made it impossible to set up homogeneous polities. As a result,
in Czechoslovakia, Poland, Romania, and Yugoslavia, the majority
population in each accounted for less than 80 percent of the total
population. Ethnic minorities in such countries suddenly found
themselves treated as second-class citizens. As part of postwar
Romania, for instance, Cernauti became the scene of escalating
ethnic conflict because of systematic discrimination against German
educational institutions and landowners by the Romanian authorities.

This was how ethnic disintegration happened.

Economic volatility exacerbated political frictions. The frequency and
the amplitude of changes in output and prices peaked between 1919 and
1939. During those years, measures of standard deviation for growth
and inflation were nearly double what they were in the preceding
and succeeding periods and roughly seven times what they have been
since 1990. From the mid-1920s to the mid-1930s, stock markets also
experienced their highest levels of volatility of the century. Although
it is obvious that low growth or a recession contributes to social
instability, rapid growth can also be destabilizing. This is
especially true in multiethnic societies, where booms can appear to
benefit market-dominant minorities disproportionately, such as the
Armenians in Turkey in the early 1900s or the Jews in central and
eastern Europe. When booms turn to busts, the prosperous minority
can become the target of reprisals by the impoverished majority. As
Gregor von Rezzori recalled of his youth in Cernauti during this
period, all of the city’s other ethnic groups "despised the Jews,
notwithstanding that Jews played an economically decisive role." If
they could agree on nothing else, Germans and Romanians could agree
that Jews were "the natural target of their aggression," Rezzori
wrote in his memoir The Snows of Yesteryear.

Of course, not all multiethnic societies that experienced economic
volatility in those years descended into sectarian violence. In the
still relatively segregated United States, for example, the number of
violent acts of racial hatred, such as lynchings, declined between the
world wars. The critical third factor determining both the location
and the timing of twentieth-century violence was the decline and fall
of empires.

The twentieth century was characterized by a remarkably high rate of
imperial dissolution. In 1913, around 65 percent of the world’s land
and 82 percent of its population were under some kind of imperial
rule. Those empires soon disintegrated. The Qing dynasty in China
was overthrown before World War I, and in 1917 the Romanov dynasty
fell from power. They were quickly followed by the Hapsburgs, the
Hohenzollerns, and the Ottomans. Little more than two decades later,
the British, Dutch, and French empires in Asia were dealt heavy blows
by imperial Japan, leaving damage that not even the Allied victory
in World War II could repair. The Portuguese empire limped on, but
by the early 1970s it too had collapsed. The new empires that grew
among the ruins of the old were shorter lived than their predecessors.

Whereas some early modern empires lasted for centuries (Ottoman rule,
for instance, endured for 469 years), the Soviet Union fell apart
after only 69 years, the Japanese overseas empire crumbled after just
50 years, and Hitler’s empire beyond Germany’s borders hung on for
barely six years.

Violence is most likely to occur as empires decline. The late
Romans understood well the unpleasantness associated with imperial
dissolution. Modern commentators, on the other hand, have generally
been too eager to see empires end and too credulous about the benefits
of "self-determination" to realize the potentially high costs of
any transition from a multiethnic polity to a homogeneous one. As
imperial authority crumbles, local elites compete for the perquisites
of power. The stakes are particularly high in ethnically heterogeneous
provinces. From the point of view of minorities, the prospect of a
new political order can be deeply alarming; members of a minority
group that has collaborated with the imperial power frequently find
that the empire’s disappearance leaves them vulnerable to reprisals.

Anyone who doubts whether imperial decline can foment conflict
need only reflect on how rarely empires broke up peacefully in the
twentieth century. One of the last acts of the Ottoman Empire was
to attempt genocide against the Armenians. The Austrian, German, and
Russian empires all met bloody ends as World War I drew to a close;
indeed, the civil war and ethnic strife that followed the Russian
Revolution in 1917 was as costly to the tsar’s former subjects as
the preceding war against Austria and Germany was. The most violent
year in the entire history of British India was 1947, when partition
led to the deaths of more than a million people in communal clashes
between Hindus and Muslims. Even the relatively calm dissolution of
the Soviet Union bred bitter conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan
over the mainly Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as the
war between Chechen separatists and the Russian government.

THE ROCKY ROAD AHEAD

If the combination of ethnic disintegration, economic volatility,
and empires in decline is the basic formula for twentieth-century
conflict, then what are the implications for the twenty-first century?

The good news is that global economic volatility has been significantly
lower in recent years than at almost any time in the last century. By
widening and deepening international markets for goods, labor, and
capital, globalization appears to have made the world economy less
prone to crisis. At the same time, financial innovations have improved
the pricing and the distribution of risk, and policy innovations
such as inflation targeting have helped governments to limit rises
in consumer price (if not asset price) inflation. International
organizations such as the World Trade Organization and the
International Monetary Fund have helped to avert trade disputes and
other sources of economic instability.

A second obvious point is that the old zones of conflict are
unlikely to be the new ones. Those who engaged in ethnic cleansing
in the twentieth century, whether by forced migration or genocide,
did their work too well, so that today central and eastern Europe
(and Manchuria and Korea) are no longer ethnically heterogeneous.

Chernivtsi today is overwhelmingly Ukrainian, for instance, with only
a tiny remnant of its once-thriving Jewish community still living
there. And third, the world of 2006 is supposed to be a world without
empires; the danger of imperial decline should accordingly be much
less than in the past century.

Unfortunately, these appearances are deceptive. Today, one region
displays in abundance all of the characteristics of the worst conflict
zones of the twentieth century. Economic volatility has remained
pronounced there even as it has diminished in the rest of the world. An
empire (albeit one that dares not speak its name) is losing its grip
over the region. Worst of all, ethnic disintegration is already well
under way, even though many commentators still conceive of what is
currently the main conflict there as an insurgency against foreign
invaders or a "clash of civilizations" between Islam and the West.

THAT PLACE IS THE MIDDLE EAST.

Iraq has experienced severe economic volatility in recent years,
first as a result of un sanctions and then because of the U.S.

invasion and the subsequent insecurity. Having declined by just
under 8 percent in the last year of Saddam Hussein’s reign, real gdp
plummeted by more than 40 percent in 2003, the year the United States
invaded. In 2004, output bounced back by an estimated 46 percent —
but growth slowed last year to under 4 percent. That is about as
extreme as volatility can get. Since oil production accounts for about
two-thirds of Iraq’s gdp, changes in the production and the price of
oil have been the primary drivers of these economic swings.

Oil prices are now up, meaning Iraq’s exports are worth more, but
inflation is stuck between 20 and 30 percent, and oil production is
running at just 16 percent of its prewar level because of sabotage
and other problems.

Other indicators are only slightly less dire. Power generation remains
28 percent below the target that was supposed to have been achieved
in 2004. And the unemployment rate is estimated to be between 25 and
40 percent. It is true that there has been some economic good news
since the war. More Iraqis now have cars, and many more Iraqis now
have telephones thanks to the creation of a cell-phone network. Iraqis
today also have a free press. Yet these improvements in communications
have also helped insurgents and militias to mobilize.

Iraq is not the only Middle Eastern country with a volatile economy.

All six countries that border Iraq have seen their own share of ups and
downs. In the past five years, per capita gdp growth in Iran has ranged
between 0.3 and 7.3 percent; in Jordan, between 0.3 and 5.1 percent;
in Kuwait, between -5.5 and 6.9 percent; in Saudi Arabia, between -6.0
and 3.3 percent; in Syria, between -0.4 and 3.3 percent; and in Turkey,
between -9.0 and 7.4 percent. Over the past decade, Kuwait’s average
annual gdp performance was the lowest (-0.9 percent), while Iran’s
was the highest (3.0 percent). On the other hand, the average Kuwaiti
is nearly ten times richer than the average Iranian. Inflation in
the region in 2004 ranged from 0.3 percent in Saudi Arabia to nearly
15 percent in Iran. Unemployment rates are in the low double digits
everywhere but in Saudi Arabia (where it is around 5 percent), but
youth unemployment rates are generally twice as high — just under
20 percent in Turkey, for example, compared with an overall rate of
10 percent. Youth unemployment matters because these are relatively
youthful societies. Roughly 20 percent of the population of Iraq and
its neighbors is between 15 and 24 years old; the equivalent figure
for Europe and the United States is about 14 percent.

The Middle East also has the misfortune to be a zone of imperial
conflict. Most Americans will probably always reject the proposition
that the United States is (or operates) a de facto empire. Such
squeamishness may be an integral part of the U.S. empire’s problem.

To be an empire in denial means resenting the costs of intervening
in the affairs of foreign peoples and underestimating the benefits of
doing so. It is remarkable that in June 2004, just over a year after
U.S. troops toppled Saddam, a majority of Americans already said they
regarded the invasion of Iraq as a mistake. Although support for the
war has vacillated since then, at no time since September 2004 have
more than 55 percent of poll respondents said they approved of it.

What makes the U.S. public’s misgivings especially remarkable is
that the number of U.S. military personnel who have died in this war
has been very small by historical standards. The total as of mid-July
2006 was 2,544, of whom 525 had died as a result of non-combat-related
causes.

The Islamic Republic of Iran, by contrast, is heir to an imperial
tradition dating back to the time of the Safavid dynasty, which
ruled Persia from 1501, and beyond. Although Iran’s leaders prefer
the rhetoric of religious revolution and national liberation,
the historian cannot fail to detect in their long-held ambition to
acquire nuclear weapons — and thereby dominate the Middle East —
a legacy of Persia’s imperial past. The Iranian president, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, is not only a devotee of the Hidden, or Twelfth, Imam
(who devout Shiites believe will return to the world as the Mahdi,
or messiah, for a final confrontation with the forces of evil); he
is also a war veteran at the head of a youthful nation. It is not
wholly fanciful to see in him a potential Caesar or Bonaparte.

The third and most striking feature of the Middle East today is the
acceleration of ethnic disintegration, which is most obvious in Iraq.

In 1993, Harvard’s Samuel Huntington predicted that in the post­Cold
War world, "the principal conflicts of global politics [would] occur
between nations and groups of different civilizations," particularly
between a decadent "Judeo-Christian" West and a demographically
ascendant Islamic civilization. For a time, events seemed to be
fulfilling his prophecy. Many Americans interpreted the terrorist
attacks of September 11, 2001, in Huntington’s terms, while Islamists
interpreted the U.S. invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq as wars by
Christian "crusaders" against Muslims.

Yet a closer inspection of events since 1993 suggests a post­Cold
War trend of clashes within, rather than between, civilizations. Of
the 30 major armed conflicts that either are going on now or have
recently ended, only nine can be regarded as being in any sense
between civilizations. But 19 are in some measure ethnic conflicts,
the worst being the wars that continue to bedevil central Africa.

Moreover, most of those conflicts that have a religious dimension
are also ethnic conflicts.

Events in Iraq suggest that there, too, what is unfolding is not
a clash between the West and Islam but, increasingly, a clash
within Islamic civilization itself. By some accounts, ethnic
disintegration there is already well under way. In a June 6, 2006,
cable to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, which was leaked to the
press, Zalmay Khalilzad, the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, cataloged the
evidence of mounting sectarian tension in and around the Green Zone
in Baghdad. "Personal fears are reinforcing divisive or sectarian
channels," Khalilzad wrote. "Ethnic and sectarian faultlines are
becoming part of the daily media fare. One Shia employee told us she
can no longer watch TV news with her mother, who is a Sunni, because
her mother blamed all the government failings on the fact that the
Shia are in charge." Even more worrisome, Khalilzad reported that
U.S. embassy employees had "become adept in modifying [their] behavior
to avoid Alasas, informants who keep an eye out for ‘outsiders’ in
neighborhoods. The Alasa mentality is becoming entrenched as Iraqi
security forces fail to gain public confidence."

Such news should come as no surprise. Baghdad and the provinces
around it — Babil, Diyala, and Salahuddin — are precisely the
regions of Iraq where ethnic conflict could have been predicted
to occur given the current conditions of economic volatility and
imperial crisis. They are the most ethnically mixed parts of the
country, where Sunnis and Shiites or Sunnis and Kurds live cheek by
jowl. Under Saddam’s secular tyranny, these communities coexisted
more or less peacefully. Anecdotal evidence even suggests that there
was some intermarriage. Since Saddam’s fall, however, integration
has been reversed. Around 92 percent of the votes in the December
2005 election were cast for sectarian parties. In such a fractious
atmosphere, the odds seem dangerously stacked against the once-dominant
Sunni Arab minority. Not only do current constitutional arrangements
raise the prospect that Iraq’s oil revenue will flow largely to Shiite
and Kurdish provinces, but the Sunnis are badly underrepresented in
the Iraqi security forces. According to the Brookings Institution,
Sunnis make up less than ten percent of the enlisted forces.

Although the atmosphere has cooled somewhat since the Askariya shrine
bombing in February, the trend is clearly toward ethnic or sectarian
conflict. The number of incidents of sectarian violence recorded in
May 2006 was 250, compared with just 20 in the same month the year
before and ten in May 2004. There has been a threefold increase in the
homicide rate in Baghdad since February 2006, much of it the result
of sectarian violence. The assassination of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the
leader of al Qaeda in Iraq, in June was therefore less of a milestone
than President George W. Bush had hoped. As insurgency has given way
to civil war, Zarqawi had already ceased to be a key player.

THE FIRE NEXT TIME

What makes the escalating civil war in Iraq so disturbing is that
it has the potential to spill over into neighboring countries. The
Iranian government is already taking more than a casual interest in
the politics of post-Saddam Iraq. And yet Iran, with its Sunni and
Kurdish minorities, is no more homogeneous than Iraq. Jordan, Saudi
Arabia, and Syria cannot be expected to look on insouciantly if the
Sunni minority in central Iraq begins to lose out to what may seem to
be an Iranian-backed tyranny of the majority. The recent history of
Lebanon offers a reminder that in the Middle East there is no such
thing as a contained civil war. Neighbors are always likely to take
an unhealthy interest in any country with fissiparous tendencies.

The obvious conclusion is that a new "war of the world" may already
be brewing in a region that, incredible though it may seem, has yet
to sate its appetite for violence. And the ramifications of such a
Middle Eastern conflagration would be truly global. Economically,
the world would have to contend with oil at above $100 a barrel.

Politically, those countries in western Europe with substantial
Muslim populations might also find themselves affected as sectarian
tensions radiated outward. Meanwhile, the ethnic war between Jews and
Arabs in Israel, the Gaza Strip, and the West Bank shows no sign of
abating. Is it credible that the United States will remain unscathed
if the Middle East erupts?

Although such an outcome may seem to be a low-probability, nightmare
scenario, it is already more likely than the scenario of enduring peace
in the region. If the history of the twentieth century is any guide,
only economic stabilization and a credible reassertion of U.S.

authority are likely to halt the drift toward chaos. Neither is a
likely prospect. On the contrary, the speed with which responsibility
for security in Iraq is being handed over to the predominantly
Shiite and Kurdish security forces may accelerate the descent into
internecine strife. Significantly, the audio statement released
by Osama bin Laden in June excoriated not only the American-led
"occupiers" of Iraq but also "certain sectors of the Iraqi people —
those who refused [neutrality] and stood to fight on the side of the
crusaders." His allusions to "rejectionists," "traitors," and "agents
of the Americans" were clearly intended to justify al Qaeda’s policy
of targeting Iraq’s Shiites.

The war of the worlds that H. G. Wells imagined never came to pass.

But a war of the world did. The sobering possibility we urgently
need to confront is that another global conflict is brewing today —
centered not on Poland or Manchuria, but more likely on Palestine
and Mesopotamia.

–Boundary_(ID_lT5N6lOt7jemtGGR7xIZ4 w)–

EU Troika Delegation Arrived In Armenia

EU TROIKA DELEGATION ARRIVED IN ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
02.10.2006 12:47 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today within the framework of a regional visit
EU Troika delegation arrived in Armenia. The delegation is led by
Erkki Tuomioja, the Foreign Minister of Finland, which presides
the EU currently. We note that EU Special Representative for the
Caucasus Peter Semenby arrived along with the delegation. The Troika
is scheduled to meet with Armenian President Kocharian and FM Oskanian
within the visit.

Turkey’s Restriction, Europe’s Problem

TURKEY’S RESTRICTION, EUROPE’S PROBLEM
Daria Vaisman

Open Democracy, UK
Sept 29 2006

Orhan Pamuk, Elif Shafak, Hrant Dink, and other leading Turkish
intellectuals face prosecution for writings that push the boundaries
of legal censorship and cultural policing. Daria Vaisman reflects on
their struggle to speak and live in truth, and says it is Europe’s too.

In 1997, Saddam Hussein decided to sue French journalist Jean Daniel
for the offence of having written that the then Iraqi president was a
"Caligula-style tyrant" who had allowed thousands of children to die.

Hussein was surprised to be informed by the Parisian courts that he
could sue Daniel not merely (as he had planned) under the civil law,
but under a French press law of 1881 which makes it a crime to insult
foreign heads of state, whether or not the insult is true.

In 2004, the king of Morocco sued Spanish journalists Rosa Maria
Lopez and Josè Luís Gutierrez under a 1982 Protection of Honor,
Privacy and Right to a Respectful Image Law. Lopez had written that
one of the king’s trucks had been seized at a Spanish port and found
to be carrying five tons of hashish. Spain’s supreme court rejected
the journalists’ appeal – even though the claim was accurate – on
grounds that her article "illegally disturbed His Majesty Hassan II’s
right to keep his honour."

These trials should sound vaguely familiar to anyone who had followed
the case against Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk (which was eventually
dismissed on a legal technicality) or the less-publicised trials
against other Turkish writers: among them novelist Elif Shafak
(acquitted on 21 September 2006) and Armenian-Turkish journalist
Hrant Dink (given a six-month suspended sentence in October 2005,
and arraigned on a new set of charges on 25 September 2006).

All have been accused of "insulting Turkishness" under Article 301
of the Turkish penal code, which states that insulting Turkey or its
institutions is a crime. Pamuk had mentioned the mass killings of
Armenians in 1915 – a Turkish national taboo – in a Swiss newspaper,
and Dink had written a newspaper article calling on Armenians to reject
"the adulterated part of their Turkish blood."

Daria Vaisman is Caucasus correspondent for Christian Science Monitor
and a freelance writer based in Tbilisi and Moscow. She has written
for Slate, International Herald Tribune, Foreign Policy, New Republic,
and other publications

Also in openDemocracy on writers and politics in Turkey:

Murat Belge, "Love me, or leave me?" The strange case of Orhan Pamuk"
(October 2005)

Gunes Murat Tezcur, "The Armenian shadow over Turkey’s democratisation"
(October 2005)

Hrant Dink, "The water finds its crack: an Armenian in Turkey"
(December 2005)

Ustun Bilgen-Reinart, "Hrant Dink: forging an Armenian identity in
Turkey" (February 2006)

Anthony Barnett, "Turkish freedom: a report from the frontline"
(20 February 2006)

Elif Shahak, "Turkey’s home truths" (25 July 2006)

The landscape of insult

The trials in Istanbul expose political and cultural divisions within
Turkey over nationalism, secularism, the understanding of the past
and the shape of the future. But they also illustrate an even more
fundamental gap: between Turkey and Europe. This has to do both with
the principle of freedom of speech, and with Europe’s own perception
of what it means to be European. That is, the trials of Turkish
writers are also about Europe. For they highlight the ongoing – if
largely unreported – campaign to persuade European states to repeal
defamation laws in their own criminal codes.

This campaign has been pursued by a wide range of organisations:
the Organisation of Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE),
the new Human Rights Committee of the United Nations, the European
Court of Human Rights, and pressure-groups such as Article 19, the
International Press Institute (IPI), and Reporters Without Borders.

They invoke the joint declarations (issued in 1999 and 2002) calling
for the removal of these laws by three international bodies concerned
with freedom of expression: the UN special rapporteur, the OSCE
representative on freedom of the media, and the Organisation of
American States special rapporteur on freedom of expression.

The campaign continues. An OSCE roundtable in 2003 entitled Ending the
Chilling Effect: Working to Repeal Criminal Libel and Insult Laws,
saw various experts offer specific recommendations for governments,
officials, and legislative and judicial bodies. So far, only one EU
country – Cyprus, a member since 2004 – has managed the task. More
recently, Article 19 hosted a workshop for European Union justice
ministers, explaining to them why the laws should be repealed.

The background of these laws clarifies what is at stake. Insult laws
– which the Coordinating Committee of Press Freedom Organisations
(CCPFO) refers to as "legal anachronisms" – protect the "honour and
dignity" of public officials and representatives of foreign countries
(as in the French and Spanish cases), as well as of state symbols and
institutions. These laws fall under a broader category of defamation
laws that includes not cases of libel. Such defamation laws, with
all the criminal sanctions they carry, are used (the CCPFO says)
to restrict investigative reporting and "deprive the public of their
right to be fully informed". The CCPFO argues that defamation should
always be a matter for civil rather than criminal courts, and be
punishable by fines rather than imprisonment.

Europe has inherited these laws from the Roman empire via centuries of
feudalism in its heartland territories. In the feudal era, to commit
lèse majestè was to insult the state itself as well as its head, the
two being synonymous. Since the monarch received his powers from god,
he demanded "extraordinary" protection. Over the centuries, an adapted,
secularised version of insult laws worked its way into the legislation
of all the European monarchies.

Cases brought under these laws were often prosecuted alongside those
of treason; the common factor being the fact that the accused citizen
has violated the responsibility to protect his country’s (monarch’s,
state’s) image. This connection is also apparent in the way that most
insult laws came to include a provision that increases the punishment’s
terms if the insult is uttered outside the country.

(This, in fact, is what happened to Orhan Pamuk, whose potential
sentence was increased because he had made his remarks while in
Switzerland).

In their defence, European Union member-states point out that in
the modern era these laws are rarely, if ever, used. Ronald Koven,
European representative on the World Press Freedom Committee, told
the 2003 roundtable that democratic countries keep these laws on
their books as a kind of "sword of Damocles" on the off-chance that
they will need them one day. Miklos Haraszti, the well-known Hungarian
dissident of the late-communist era who serves as OSCE representative
on freedom of the media, says that many the countries just "can’t be
bothered" to remove them.

Old vs new Europe

But the existence of these laws points to another fundamental
divide within Europe: between the established fifteen member-states
and the ten which joined in May 2004. Many of the latter (Cyprus,
Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland,
Slovakia and Slovenia) routinely use criminal defamation laws to
prosecute freedom of speech. "In central Asia and in eastern Europe,
this is the single biggest reason for jailing journalists", says
Haraszti. "What we want to do is make it an issue of solidarity
(with other EU countries)."

In contrast to Turkey, these cases do not receive serious publicity,
nor have they served as a deterrent for these countries’ EU
membership. Prosecutions that were already underway at their
accession are still continuing. "I get letters from people in these
countries pointing out that other EU countries still have (such laws)
on their books", says Haraszti. The point is echoed by Toby Mendel,
law-programme director of Article 19, who comments that "transition
countries" say in effect: "Oh, yes, we have an oppressive law, but
that’s all right because Germany has it, and France has it, too."

Even Ader Sozuer, one of the drafters of the Turkish penal code,
responded to questions about Pamuk by highlighting the insult laws
still on the statute books of European countries.

The cases come to court with surprising frequency. OSCE’s 2005 Libel
and Insult Laws: a matrix on where we stand and what we would like
to achieve, reports that fifteen people in Estonia and sixty-five in
Hungary served prison sentences for defamation, libel, or insult in
2002-04. In Poland, reputedly the most restrictive country in the
European Union over freedom of speech, the numbers accused under
defamation laws increased from 6,272 in 2002 to 7,218 people in 2003.

The legislative processes also give grounds for concern. In 1996,
Croatia introduced an insult law, stipulating both fines and jail
sentences for slandering or insulting the national president or other
heads of states. In 2001, Slovakia’s parliament rejected an amendment
that would have removed existing insult laws from its penal code
(a move said to be have been pushed by the president himself).

A clearer parallel to the Turkish cases is that of the Polish
communist-era media apparatchik turned acerbic satirist, and editor
of the satirical weekly Nie, Jerzy Urban. Urban was prosecuted
for writing an article about Pope John Paul II (entitled "Walking
Sado-Masochism"), and faced between three months and three years in
jail. Haraszti tells me that Urban had written the article with the
specific goal of highlighting Poland’s restrictions on speech. "He
said, ‘I did it so that the human-rights world would defend me.’ It
was a clear provocation, and yet Poland went ahead and prosecuted him."

"It’s hugely embarrassing", says IPI’s David Dadge. "The EU is actually
weakening its argument in its negotiation with Turkey as it starts
the accension process. It is very difficult that Turkey should meet
benchmarks in regards to human rights while (other European states)
flaunt those very benchmarks."

Europe’s past, Turkey’s future

The EU seems to be asking Turkey to play by rules that its own members
break, and thus be guilty of hypocrisy. This implies that influential
elements within the EU have as little real interest in seeing Turkey
join as some factions in Turkey itself, and are simply using the
freedom-of-speech cases to undermine Turkey’s credentials.

But there is another explanation for Europe’s approach: that it both
genuinely believes that Turkey’s record on free speech and human rights
is severely deficient, but that what really angers it is the content of
what’s being restricted rather than the principle of freedom of speech.

The David Irving case is evidence for this point. Irving, a British
historian who has made a high-profile career from casting doubts about
the Nazi holocaust and Hitler’s knowledge of and responsibility for it,
was sentenced to three years in an Austrian jail for holocaust-denial
in February 2006. This was at the very time when Orhan Pamuk and Hrant
Dink were being tried effectively for stating that another genocide
(of Armenians) had occurred. The contradiction between Europe’s
protests and the actions of one of its member-states seemed stark,
and shaming. But the Irving-Pamuk "contradiction", when more closely
inspected, reveals the more fundamental dilemma of free speech in
a democracy that Europe is grappling with: that free speech as a
principle undermines the impulse to forbid what is deemed abhorrent.

In this light, the more deeply shared element of the Irving and the
Pamuk-Dinki-Shafak cases is Europe’s discomfort with denial of the
past. The idea that atonement for sins is an essential qualification
to be a democracy (as evidenced in notions of "collective guilt",
the genre of holocaust studies, and even the fashion among some
young Germans to wear the Star of David symbol) may owe as much to
modern, collective psychological conditions as to a true engagement
with history, but it is effective nonetheless. After all, Germany’s
readiness to accept responsibility for the holocaust was the key to
its rehabilitation in post-war Europe.

Against this background, official Turkey’s adamant and consistent
refusal openly to discuss the events of 1915 challenges a formative
tenet of the EU, a shared commitment to defend a series of core human
rights and to denounce their violation. Even more penetratingly,
Turkey’s attitude reminds Europe of its own history of colonisation,
slavery, war, and genocide.

Europe can dismiss or ignore the ongoing criminal defamation cases
in the newer EU countries (most of which involve accusations of
corruption) as minor; but the denial of genocide is far more serious.

Corruption is regrettable, a social ill – but prosecutions that
appear to endorse official suppression of the past and discussion of
it strike at the heart of modern European values.

In protecting its history from scrutiny as much as in restricting free
speech, Turkey will have its work cut out. "(Article 301) has become
a symbolic fight inside Turkey, the same way that flag-burning is
an issue in the United States", says Miklos Haraszti. It is a fight
that Turkey, if it wants to be part of the European club, won’t be
able to win.

y/free_speech_3952.jsp

–Boundary_(ID_0bha3lRTfUR xQ4kUhYCmcA)–

http://www.opendemocracy.net/democracy-turke

Lavrov: Humanitarian Cooperation With CIS Is Russia’s Priority

LAVROV: HUMANITARIAN COOPERATION WITH CIS IS RUSSIA’S PRIORITY

Regnum, Russia
Sept 30 2006

"Russia regards developing humanitarian cooperation within the CIS
space as its priority," Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov said in
his welcome message to participants of scholarly and expert conference
"Mass media and new state relations in the Caucasus region."

"Common humanitarian space is called to preserve and to consolidate
diverse human ties among our peoples, including civil society
institutes, to strengthen adherence to fundamental values, such as
tolerance and mutual respect. Member states of the commonwealth
for centuries have been at the turn of civilizations from time
immemorial. Our common historical and cultural heritage creates
good preconditions for us to make our common unique contribution
to supporting inter-civilization accord in the world. I wish to the
forum’s participants fruitful work aimed at developing cooperation
between Russia and other Caucasian states in the spheres of culture,
education, science, information, and the whole complex of humanitarian
ties;" Sergey Lavrov said in his message read out to the conference
participants by Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Ambassador of Russia
to Armenia Nikolay Pavlov.

Representatives of mass media, analysts from Russia, Georgia, Armenia,
and Azerbaijan participated in the conference, which took place at
the Russian-Armenian (Slavic) state university.

Russian Fortress In Gyumri Being Remodelled Into Festival Center

RUSSIAN FORTRESS IN GYUMRI BEING REMODELED INTO FESTIVAL CENTER

Armenpress
Sept 28 2006

GYUMRI, SEPTEMBER 28, ARMENPRESS: Authorities in the second-largest
town of Gyumri in north-western Armenian Shirak province hope to
accomplish remodeling of a 19-th century Russian fortress into a
modern art and culture center by 2007 November.

The fortress that was inaugurated by the Russian tsar Nikolay I
will have 1,500 seats. It will host film, theatrical and circus
festivals and also folk and modern music concerts. The fortress is
being reconstructed and remodeled by Hayk Hayrapetian, an Armenian
based in the Russian Saint Petersburg. He said to Armenpress the
center will also have a museum.

Hayrapetian said remodeling of the fortress is just half of the
idea. Later he wants to build a pagan village nearby. He says Gyumri
is perhaps the only Armenian town where one can restore an old Armenian
settlement with its everyday life and traditions. All this is expected
to make Gyumri more attractive for local and foreign tourists. The
project’s cost is about $2,2 million.

New EU warning on Turkey reforms / Genocide clause dropped

The European Parliament has adopted a report warning that the pace of
reform in Turkey has slowed, jeopardising Ankara’s EU membership bid.
X-Sender: Asbed Bedrossian <[email protected]>
X-Listprocessor-Version: 8.1 — ListProcessor(tm) by CREN

But MEPs dropped a clause demanding that Turkey recognise as
"genocide" the mass killings of Armenians in 1915.

Turkey maintains that the Armenians were casualties of turmoil as the
Ottoman empire crumbled. Armenians say up to 1.5 million died in a
"genocide".

The non-binding report said Turkey had failed to ensure freedom of
expression.

It called for the abolition or amendment of Turkish laws such as
Article 301 "which threaten European free speech norms".

Article 301 of the Turkish penal code has been used to prosecute
several well-known authors for "insulting Turkishness".

Cyprus deadlock

The MEPs also called on Turkey to recognise the Republic of Cyprus and
lift its embargo on Cypriot ships and planes, saying continued failure
to do so "will have serious implications for the [EU] negotiation
process and could even bring it to a halt".

The report was adopted by 429 votes in favour to 71 against, with 125
abstentions.

It said the European Parliament "regrets the slowing down of the
reform process" in Turkey, though it welcomed some recent Turkish
steps to crack down on torture and corruption and to extend women’s
rights.

On the Armenian question, MEPs said Turkey must come to terms with its
past, although recognition of the "genocide" was not a condition for
EU accession.

The European Commission is to publish its next annual report on
Turkey’s progress on 8 November.

The parliament’s report came a day after Bulgaria and Romania were
given the go-ahead to join the EU on 1 January 2007.

In Ankara, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned the EU
against introducing any new entrance criteria.

Last Updated: Wednesday, 27 September 2006, 16:04 GMT 17:04 UK

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/5385954.stm

BAKU: "Right Of Choice": "We Will Have To Liberate Our Territories,

"RIGHT OF CHOICE": "WE WILL HAVE TO LIBERATE OUR TERRITORIES, RESORTING TO ALL MEANS"
Interviewed by Iskender Guliyev

Democratic Azerbaijan
Sept 26 2006

Accordingly to the member of Milli Mejlis Standing Commission on
Security and Defense, Adil Aliyev, Azerbaijan has right to liberate its
territories within the frames of international standards and UN Charter

– Isn’t it difficult for you to fulfill obligations of elected
representative of the people?

– It isn’t right to restrict oneself to votes of people in order to
be their elected representatives. It is necessary to represent every
voter who votes for you. Representatives of intelligentsia, science
and culture, specialists of different fields and representatives of
senior generation, the unemployed, not sufficiently provided people
are referred to the election district wherefrom I was elected. Every
electorate has problems. First of all, elected representative of people
is obliged to individually approach the problems of every voter. He
should strive to solve them. I’m very pleased when people’s problems
are solved. However, there are moments when I feel unrest.

That is why being representative of people is very responsible and
difficult task.

– Being deputy of Milli Mejlis, what processes going on within society
seem to you more attractive?

– Citizens of every country have problems. If you think that Azerbaijan
has problem of unemployment and the other countries haven’t, then
you are mistaken. This problem is crucial in post-Soviet countries
and in Europe. Maybe the problem of unemployment in CIS countries is
somewhat different from the same one in Azerbaijan. However, the state
program to prevent unemployment shows that Azerbaijan government takes
appropriate measures to solve the problem. Apart from the problem of
unemployment there is another crucial problem which troubles our state
and people – it is Nagorno Garabagh conflict. Over 16 years have passed
since the day of violation of territorial integrity of Azerbaijan,
during this period 1 mln. people lost their homes having gained the
status of refugees and IDP. Because of occupation and terrorist policy
of Armenia, hundreds of Azerbaijanis were taken prisoner. Despite
the number of resolutions adopted by international organizations,
Armenian aggressors don’t want to leave territories of Azerbaijan.

Nevertheless having over 1 mln. refugees and IPD, Azerbaijan continues
developing its economic potential in the region and using all means
for improvement of living standard of population.

Owing to successful reforms hundreds of new institutions were founded
in the country, thousands of our citizens were provided with work.

Moreover, for the first half year of 2006, GDP increased by 36%, and
stable economic development is observed in all fields of economy. For
example, for the last 6 months, level of industrial production has
increased by 41%. For this period over 3 bn. US dollars have been
invested in Azerbaijani economy, which is key showing of dynamic
economic development of our country.

It is known that at present Azerbaijan is taking leading position in
the region on foreign investments per head. One of the main directions
of economic policy of Azerbaijan apart from complete adherence
to the principles of market economy is solving social problems of
population. In this direction many efforts were made. For the first
6 months of 2006, population incomes have increased by 18%.

Moreover, in comparison with previous months inflation has been
reduced. At present real incomes of population make up 12%, average
salary increased by 20%. It should be underlined that raise of economic
development promotes improvement of welfare of people. For the recent
years important steps are taken not only to prevent unemployment but
to improve provision of pensions of people.

Following decrees of President, in 2006 pension provision will be
increased several times more. It’s known that President repeatedly
declared that soon pensions will be increased. Taking it into account
I would say that in Azerbaijan the work to solve economic and social
problems of citizens and for improvement of living standards of people
is carried out.

– You are member of Standing Commission on Security and Defense. How
do you evaluate your work from the point of view of professionalism?

– During the meetings of Standing Commission on Security and Defense I
make a number of proposals, as I make during the meetings of Milli
Mejlis. Only my voters and people of Azerbaijan can evaluate my
activity in the parliament. Every taken measure or developed law
should serve for the interests of state and nation.

– Today, after a number of actions of person we know, some negative
view is formed relating to Azerbaijani police. What can you propose
to change this view, and what measures must be taken?

– In my speeches I repeatedly touched upon this issue. Azerbaijani
police duly fulfills its obligations, that is why it is wrong to
underestimate the work of police because of some persons who defiled
it. From this point of view I hold that such attitude to police
is not right. Police of our country not only fights with crimes,
policemen actively partook in bloody battles for restoration of
territorial integrity of our country. We are proud of many policemen
who demonstrated heroism. Of course, we should recognize that police
structures have demerits and they must be removed. For example Police
Academy. I expressed my negative view on Police Academy and I think
that there are persons who are not deserving to study their. Police
Academy leadership can’t be blamed for it, as it doesn’t hold exams.

But persons responsible for the given work are holding exams. In turn
they approve those young people whom they think fit. Of course no one
can deny that some people misuse their authorities in this matter. I
believe that as in every field, reforms should be implemented within
the structures of internal affairs and Police Academy. They will lead
to changes in activity of police of Azerbaijan.

– Do you hold meetings with your voters?

– Yes, I do.

– What issues are most frequently discussed?

– I’ve already touched upon this issue. Most frequently voters are
concerned about problems of unemployment, water, gas and energy supply
etc. It is necessary to solve all these problems, as electricity,
water and gas are necessary for normal living. Moreover, if citizen
is unemployed he or she can’t pay for electricity and the rest of
public utilities. Thus, first of all citizens must be provided with
work for he or she could solve all these problems.

During my pre-election campaign I promised people: if I am elected as
Milli Mejlis deputy, my headquarter will be functioning at election
district for holding meetings with voters. I kept my promise.

Headquarter is functioning, it carries out appropriate work to solve
the problems of tens of voters. No barrier exists between me and
my voters.

– How do you evaluate mission of Azerbaijani soldier within
international peacemaking forces?

– Azerbaijan is peace loving country. Despite violation of
territorial integrity and occupation of 20% of our territories,
our state continues its peacemaking policy. If Azerbaijani soldiers
serve for international peacemaking forces in Afghanistan, Iraq,
and Balkans it means that international community trusts Azerbaijani
army. Being citizen and Parliament member I support activity of
Azerbaijani soldiers within international forces. It is important not
only for our state but for our army as well. As you know Azerbaijan
carries out works on creation of peacemaking military forces within
the frames of GUAM. Member-states of this structure are determined in
this matter. Cease-fire in Middle East after Israel-Lebanon war was
reached owing to mediation of UN. This structure decided to dispatch
its peacemaking forces in the region. Perhaps Azerbaijani soldier will
partake in peacemaking mission of international forces in this region.

– What can you say about ways of regulation of Nagorni Garabagh
Conflict?

– OSCE and OSCE Minsk Group member states are responsible for peaceful
regulation of the conflict. However up to now Minsk Group hasn’t
fulfilled its obligations concerning this matter. Recent statement of
OSCE special representative, A. Kasprshik, concerning conflagration
committed on occupied territories as well as reaction of co-chair
states to this issue manifested that it is naïve to expect activities
for regulation of conflict from OSCE and Minsk Group. During their
meetings and while making documents co-chair states demand more
compromises from Azerbaijan, but not from Armenia.

If we consider statements of US co-chair, M. Brayza, we will be
convinced once again that there is no point to expect regulation
of conflict from this structure. If international community cannot
define the status of aggressor-country and the country that suffers
from aggression, no real results can be expected. I believe that it
is necessary to regulate Nagorni Garabagh conflict within the frames
of UN, appropriate measures should be taken to realize 4 resolutions
adopted by above international structure. At the same time Azerbaijan
can effectively use potential of international organizations,
including GUAM. Unfortunately, despite efforts made by Azerbaijan,
official Yerevan shows no will to take serious measures for conflict
regulation. GUAM member-states applied to UN with the purpose of
taking appropriate measures for conflict regulation in the countries
of GUAM. Russia and Armenia were against inclusion of the issue in
the agenda of UN Security Council, USA was neutral, and France didn’t
joined voting. If all three countries, members of UN Security Council
and having the right to veto, did so, nothing can be expected from
OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs. President of the Republic of Azerbaijan,
Ilham Aliyev, declared that Azerbaijan advocates peaceful regulation
of this conflict. If negotiations have no effect, we will have to
liberate our territories resorting to all means. Azerbaijan has
right to liberate its territories within the frames of international
standards and UN Charter.

–Boundary_(ID_aAUYCRmodQklMHyYTC1O/A)–