Ripped Armenian Genocide Billboard on Arsenal Street is Up Again

PRESS RELEASE

From:
Rosario Teixeira
[email protected]
Peace of Art, Inc.

Fort Point P.O. Box 51660
Boston, MA 02205

May 1, 2006

Ripped Armenian Genocide Billboard on Arsenal Street is Up Again
by Rosario Teixeira

Watertown, MA – The Armenian Genocide commemorative billboard that
was up on the week of March 13th on Arsenal Street, Watertown, MA,
on Saturday April 22nd, was found ripped eliminating the message that
read “Join us recognize the Armenian Genocide.” Initially it seemed to
have been an act of vandalism, but the police investigated the matter
and concluded that the damage on the poster was weather related. Peace
of Art, Inc., the organization that sponsored the billboard, replaced
the poster on April 27th with a new one that reads “A poster may be
ripped but history remains.” The new poster will be up until May 15th.

For the last ten years, since 1996, the artist Daniel Varoujan Hejinian
has been sponsoring the Armenian Genocide commemorative billboards,
to honor the survivors and bring awareness to the genocide. “I feel
sorrow in my heart to see the billboard destroyed” he said on WCVB
Channel 5 news story on Sunday, April 23rd. In the last three years,the
Armenian Genocide commemorative billboards have been sponsored by Peace
of Art,Inc., a non-profit organization founded by
Mr.Hejinian which uses art as an educational tool to bring awareness
to the universal human condition.

On Monday, April 24th on my way home during the evening commute,
I noticed a little boy with big sad eyes holding onto his mother
riding the train seated across from me. As he looked at me, thoughts
raced through my mind faster than the evening train. Through the sad
eyes of the little boy, I saw the eyes of a nation, whose houses were
destroyed,their churches were burned, masses marching barefoot through
hot desert sand to an unknown destination. Images of Armenians who
were forced out of their homes, killed, deported to die of starvation.
Innocent children without mothers to cling onto and without homes.
contrary to that little boy with large sad eyes seated across from me
with a mother to hug and a home to return. I felt a deep sadness for
the loss of a nation, and for the loss of the billboard on Arsenal
Street with a symbolic message of remembrance.

It didn’t matter if it was the weather, unseasonably hot sun, or the
soft wind, the cold April rain or an act of vandalism that ripped
the billboard. What maters is that the poster was destroyed two
days before the official 91st anniversary of the Armenian Genocide,
at a time when the community comes together to remember the loss
of 1.5 million Armenians. As it didn’t matter ninety one years
ago that the extermination of the Armenian population during the
turmoil of World War I, was the result of forced evacuation across
Anatolia to the Syrian desert of Dayr al Zawr or was the result of
a state-sponsored plan of mass destruction. What matters is that it
was the first Genocide of the 20th Century, and it will remain in
the history as a crime against humanity.

History can not be rewritten, the pages off the history books may be
ripped, leaving the book with ripped pages but history remains, just
like the ripped poster on Arsenal Street in Watertown. April 24,
1915,is a dark date in the history of Armenians, that is engraved
in the collective memory of a nation, it molded the psych of every
generation even since, and became part of the Armenian heritage.
However, the indomitable spirit of Armenians has prevailed in spite of
it all, and it has flourished through five continents. Peace of Art
Inc., will continue calling for recognition of the Armenian Genocide.
For more information visit

www.PeaceofArt.org
www.PeaceofArt.org
www.PeaceofArt.org

Chinese police delegation watches Russian Interior Ministry drills

Chinese police delegation watches Russian Interior Ministry drills

RIA Novosti
28 Apr 06

Moscow, 28 April: The forces of the special subunits from the Russian
Interior Ministry carry out over 230 operations of various kinds every
day, the Russian deputy interior minister, Police Maj-Gen Mikhail
Sukhodolskiy, has told representatives from the antiterrorist
department of China’s Public Security Ministry at a meeting.

The Chinese delegation, which arrived in Russia at the invitation of
Russian Interior Minister Army-Gen Rashid Nurgaliyev, attended a
number of events. In particular, they participated as observers in an
antiterrorist command-staff exercise held in the Southern Federal
District by the forces of the Russian Interior Ministry.

Afterwards the observers from China took part in tactical exercises at
which officers practised the use of forces and assets of the federal
executive authorities to free hostages and prevent the hijacking of an
airliner seized by a bandit group.

Then the Chinese delegation went to the Daryal range in the Republic
of North Ossetia – Alania, where a tactical specialist exercise was
held to deal with bandit formations that had broken through the state
border. The forces and assets of the group of operational command,
according to the scenario, searched an area near the border, found
terrorists and destroyed them, thus foiling a terrorist act involving
sabotage at a water infrastructure facility.

According to Sukhodolskiy, the participation of foreign specialists in
antiterrorist exercises by Russian law-enforcement agencies is not
uncommon. “Last year we met specialists from Austria, Armenia and
Belarus,” Sukhodolskiy stressed.

He noted that experience is constantly being exchanged with foreign
special subunits. During these meetings, all forms and methods of
foreign colleagues’ work are studied and their positive aspects are
introduced into the daily activities of the groups of special forces
of the police.

OSCE PA Rapporteur On Karabakh To Arrive In Azerbaijan May 5

OSCE PA RAPPORTEUR ON KARABAKH TO ARRIVE IN AZERBAIJAN MAY 5

PanARMENIAN.Net
26.04.2006 23:34 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The OSCE parliamentary assembly rapporteur on
Nagorno Karabakh, Goran Lennmarker will arrive to Azerbaijan on May
5, Milli Mejlis vice speaker Bahar Muradova stated. “We have already
received a letter from Lennmarker, he will arrive in the first decade
of May. Here, he will prepare for the report on Nagorno-Karabakh and
have a number of meetings. During the previous meeting we requested him
to visit areas of residence of forcibly displaced persons,” she said.

“Karabakh was discussed at every OSCE meeting, as the Minsk group is
a mediator of the peaceful resolution of the conflict. Introducing
this question to the OSCE agenda will depend on development of the
negotiating process. Meetings of Azerbaijani and Armenian heads of
state and Foreign Ministers hint that the settlement process keeps
on moving forward. However, only in case if some positive results are
achieved the OSCE will start talking about Nagorno Karabakh. Otherwise,
discussions will be fruitless as we have already raised this question
previously,” she said.

“The given question has to be reviewed in the similar order in
Azerbaijani parliament too. Talks are held behind the closed doors
and their details are not disclosed. If there are no exact results,
we have nothing to discuss. Parliament can only discuss the exact
results,” she concluded, reported Trend.

Lithuanian President Arrives In Armenia

LITHUANIAN PRESIDENT ARRIVES IN ARMENIA

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
25 Apr 06

Lithuanian President Valdas Adamkus arrived on a two-day official
visit in Yerevan today. The main purpose of the visit is to strengthen
ties between the two countries, discuss future directions of economic
cooperation and encourage scientific and cultural relations.

The Armenian and Lithuanian presidents will have a one-to-one meeting
at the presidential residency after an official reception.

An agreement on encouraging investments and improving mutual defence
will be signed between the two countries. The Armenian and Lithuanian
presidents are expected to give a joint news conference.

Montreal: Armenians Gather For Anniversary

ARMENIANS GATHER FOR ANNIVERSARY

Montreal Gazette, Canada
April 24, 2006 Monday

Members of Montreal’s Armenian community met yesterday to commemorate
the 91st anniversary of the Armenian genocide. More than 250 people
gathered at the Armenian Community Centre in the city’s north end
for the ceremony. A vigil also was held at nearby Marcelin-Wilson Park.

In 2004, the Canadian government voted to recognize as genocide
the mass murders of Armenians perpetrated by Ottoman troops between
1915 and 1923. Canada is home to more than 60,000 people of Armenian
descent.

Russian Ambassador Laid Wreath To Armenian Genocide Victims Monument

RUSSIAN AMBASSADOR LAID WREATH TO ARMENIAN GENOCIDE VICTIMS MONUMENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.04.2006 00:44 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today Russian Ambassador to Armenia Nikolay Pavlov
and the Embassy members laid wreaths to the memorial to the Armenian
Genocide victims, reported the RF Embassy in Yerevan.

The Ambassador said various events will be held in Russian towns
on April 24. “Conferences, round-table discussions dedicated
to the Armenian Genocide will be held in Moscow and Saint
Petersburg. Amb. Pavlov reminded that the Russian State Duma recognized
the Armenian Genocide in 1995.

RA President: Ottoman Turkey And Its Assignees Are Responsible ForAr

RA PRESIDENT: OTTOMAN TURKEY AND ITS ASSIGNEES ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
April 24 2006

YEREVAN, April 24. /ARKA/. Ottoman Turkey and its assignees are
responsible for Armenian Genocide in 1915, according to the message of
the RA President Robert Kocharyan regarding 91-year of commemoration
of Armenian Genocide throughout the world on April 24.

According to the Press Service of the RA President, Kocharyan appealed
to honour memory of victims of the Armenian Genocide, emphasizing that
all the posterior history of Armenian nation that suffered genocide
bared traces of that evil deed.

“Our sorrow and pain is all the bigger, since we have to struggle
for recognition and condemnation of this black page of the history”,
Kocharyan stated and emphasized that Armenia representing interests
of its citizens and Armenian Diaspora will continue this struggle.

Kocharyan also expressed gratitude to countries, organizations and
people, who support Armenian nation in its quest to achieve recognition
of the Genocide.

“Every year perception of the fact that it is a problem common to
all mankind and most effective way of preventing such crimes becomes
deeper and deeper”, he finds.

Kocharyan emphasized that, there is no vengeance implication in the
struggle of the Armenian nation. “We are looking into the future,
since strong state structure, prosperity and progress of Armenia must
become the best answer to denial of the Genocide”, he emphasized.

Armenian Genocide in 1915 – 1923 is considered to be the first
genocide of the XX century, organized and systematically conducted
by the government of Young Turks. In 1915, in Western Armenia, which
was part of Ottoman Empire, more than 1,5 mln Armenians were massacred.

The fact of genocide has been already recognized by many countries,
namely Uruguay (first in 1965 officially recognized the Armenian
Genocide), Russia, France, Argentina, Greece, Low Chamber of the
Italian Parliament, majority of states of the USA, Parliaments
of Greece, Cyprus, Argentina, Belgium, Wales, National Council of
Switzerland, Chamber of Communities of the Canadian Parliament and
Seim of Poland.

Kocharian Blames Turkey As Armenians Mark Genocide Anniversary

KOCHARIAN BLAMES TURKEY AS ARMENIANS MARK GENOCIDE ANNIVERSARY
By Emil Danielyan and Astghik Bedevian

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep
April 24 2006

President Robert Kocharian said on Monday that modern-day Turkey is
responsible for the 1915 genocide of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire
as Armenia somberly marked the 91st anniversary of the start of the
mass killings and deportations.

Hundreds of thousands of people silently marched to a hilltop
memorial in Yerevan and laid flowers by its eternal fire in an annual
remembrance of some 1.5 million victims of what many historians believe
was the first genocide of the 20th century. Some of them carried
Armenian flags and banners denouncing Turkey’s long-standing claims
that the massacres occurred on a much smaller scale and therefore
did not constitute a genocide.

The day-long procession began, as usual, with a prayer service in
memory of the dead that was led by the head of the Armenian Apostolic
Church, Catholicos Garegin II, in the presence of President Robert
Kocharian, members of his government and other senior officials.

The heads of foreign diplomatic missions in Yerevan were the next to
lay wreathes at twelve bending columns that encircle the eternal fire
on Tsitsernakabert Hill overlooking the city center. Among them was
U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Evans, the first American official
since President Ronald Reagan to publicly refer to the 1915-1918
massacres as genocide. “The Armenian Genocide was the first genocide of
the 20th century,” he declared in a February 2005 speech in California.

The U.S. government, which has so far avoided officially recognizing
the genocide for fear of antagonizing Turkey, disavowed Evans’s
remarks, saying that they reflected only his personal opinion. The
State Department reportedly plans to recall the envoy, a move which
would enrage the influential Armenian community in the United States.

Armenia’s leadership, meanwhile, reaffirmed its pledge to seek
worldwide recognition of the genocide in collaboration with Diaspora
Armenian lobbying groups in the West and to continue to raise the
issue in its dealings Turkey. “Our pain is all the more intense as we
are forced to struggle for the recognition and condemnation of that
black page of our history,” Kocharian said in a traditional April
24 written address to the nation. “As the defender of the interests
of the Armenians living in the homeland and around the world, the
Republic of Armenia will continue that struggle.”

Kocharian indicated that Ankara’s unrepentant stance on the issue
amounts to complicity in the genocide. “Ottoman Turkey and its legal
successor bear full responsibility for this crime,” he said.

Armenian leaders have refrained in the past from implicating the
existing Turkish state in the 1915 genocide. Kocharian’s statement
was welcomed as an “interesting news” by a spokesman for the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation, a nationalist governing party that favors
a firm Armenian stand on the issue. Giro Manoyan told RFE/RL that he
thinks Kocharian thus held Ankara responsible for “carrying out the
final phase of the genocide.”

Armenia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Arman Kirakosian, for his part
was quoted on Monday by the Turkish daily “Zaman” as saying that the
authorities in Yerevan “believe the Turkish people are not responsible
for the events of 1915.” “The Turkish administration at that time is
the responsible party,” Kirakosian said, according to “Zaman.”

In a famous 1987 resolution, the European Parliament denounced the
mass killings as a genocide but said “the present Turkey cannot be
held responsible for the tragedy experienced by the Armenians of the
Ottoman Empire.”

The `Great Kurdistan’ threat

Center for Research on Globalization, Canada
April 22 2006

The `Great Kurdistan’ threat

by Gilles Munier

April 22, 2006
uruknet.info

Numbering 30 millions, Kurds are distributed over four countries,
Turkey, Iran, Iraq and Syria. In Iraq, Massud Bargain and Jalal
Talabani are said to be in a position to declare the independence of
Kurdistan. The map of the new State as submitted last July to the
“National Assembly” comprises territories over which the Kurds cannot
have any claim…but which are oil-soaked. No doubt that such a “Great
Kurdistan” if unilaterally founded would generate a string of
conflicts which will destabilize the whole of the Middle East. Nobody
save the United States and Israel has nothing to gain, least of all,
the Kurds.

The 1920 Treaty of Sevres, art 62, repealed by the Lausanne Treaty in
July 1923, made provision for “local self-rule” of territories “where
the Kurdish element was dominant”. A map of Kurdistan, which could be
to-day labelled as “the Very Large Kurdistan” and was handed over at
Sevres by the Kurdish delegation extended from the coastline of the
Mediterranean to the Arab Gulf….Something totally unacceptable for
the big powers of the days -France, Great Britain- for Turkey, the
Arabs and the Armenians who claim lands which the Kurds wished to lay
their hands on.

In Mesopotamia, it incorporated the Willayet of Mossul, the Sindjar
close to the Syrian border, the Sulimaniya region, Kirkuk and stopped
at Qanaqin, in the north-east of Baghdad on the border with Persia.
As an answer to that claim, the British planned to set up a Kurdish
kingdom in the north of the Mossul Willayet only. In doing so they
intended to undermine the Turks who had their eyes locked on Mossul.
The project was abandoned after the creation of Iraq (1) because the
north of Iraq had revealed huge oil resources.

Kurdish revolts in Iraq

Ever since all Kurdish revolts in Iraq have erupted in the name of
home rule but the question of the administrative borders has scarcely
been tackled.

For the pro-British Prime Minister Nouri Said, born by a Kurdish
mother, home rule was not the prime goal of the insurgents. In
October 1930, he reported the results of talks with them to the High
Commissioner in Baghdad : ” First, it was a question of guarantees
…then the Kurds showed their discontent at the existing
administration,…then they demanded a quasi autonomy and now it comes
to secession”(2).

Never during the Ottoman Empire has Iraqi Kurdistan existed as a
State in the Western sense of the word. There were Kurdish
principalities more or less dependent on the Sultan in Istanbul, but
they covered a very small part of Kurdistan.

The Sheikh Mahmud Berzendji, self-proclaimed “humkudar” (king) of
Kurdistan in 1922 ruled over the Sulumanyia region and the Kirkuk
members of his council, actually his henchmen- were all…Turkmen. His
rebellion was crashed in a heavy-handed manner by the British and he
was deported to the south of Iraq.

Another revolt in 1931: Sheikh Ahmed Barzani, – a colourful man who
had in mind to go over to Christianity with his tribe- succeeded in
gaining control of a territory stretching from the Turkish border to
Aqra, in the north of Mossul. The RAF shelled his HQ and he fled to
Turkey.

His brother, Mustapha Barzani took over and went to Iran with over a
thousand fighters eager to assist the small Republic of Mahabad born
on January 22, 1946. Deserted by its Soviet ally, Mahabad fell less
than a year later. Its President Qazi Muhammad was sentenced to
death and hanged. Mustapha Barzani took shelter in the Soviet Union.

Mustapha Barzani ” Kassem’s Soldier”

Barzani’s return to Baghdad eleven years later, after the overthrow
of the Hashemite monarchy by General Abdel Karim Kassem was a
triumph. Several Kurdish ministers among them Sheikh Mahmud’s son
joined the government. Against the commitment that the Kurds
“national rights” within the “Iraqi entity” would be guaranteed
alongside with the publishing of Kurdish newspapers, Barzani branded
himself ” Kassem’s Soldier” and helped the “Zaim” (the Leader) as
Kassem was named to repress in a bloodbath an Arab nationalist revolt
led by Colonel Abdel Wahab Chawaf in Mossul. The colonel was given
the fatal blow on his hospital bed. Four hundred of his followers –
in particular Shammar Beduins – were massacred in a mosque by Kurdish
militias and the “People’s Resistance Forces”.

But Barzani’s support went farther. In May 1959, he lent a hand to
the Iraqi army in quashing a revolt of Kurds chiefs in the Rawanduz
area. More than 24 000 Kurds fled to Turkey and Iran!

Relationships between Barzani and General Kassem deteriorated after a
long stay of Barzani in Moscow, the Soviets signalling thus that
they did not appreciate the “Zaim” decision to evict the Iraqi
Communist Party from power. Once Barzani back in the mountains, the
war flared up again. However, the demands that he put forward to
Kassem in March 1962 were strangely mild. They dealt with the opening
of schools, agricultural and industrial development, and the
recognition of the Kurdish language. No question of self-rule or
borders.

Self-rule demands

On February 8th,, 1963, the Baathists and the Nasserians toppled
Kassem and Abdul Salam Aref came to power. On March 4th,1963,
Barzani handed over a list of claims with an ultimatum to a
delegation from Baghdad at the meeting of Kani Maran (the Snakes
spring) in which he made a demand for self-rule for a region composed
of the liwas (provinces) of Sulamayia, Kirkuk, Arbil and the
districts of the liwas of Mossul and Diyala as well as the share-out
of the oil income among Arabs and Kurds. If this was rejected, he
threatened to resume the fighting within three days.

As foreseen, Baghdad did not meet the unrealistic demands of Barzani
which was what he wanted. General Aref however did concede to the
“national rights of the Kurdish people” on the basis of
decentralisation. It was a tremendous progress given the then
political environment in the Middle East. However, the bidding went
up. In April 1963, Jalal Talabani, head of the progressive current
within the Democratic Party of Kurdistan, demanded the replacement of
Iraq by a bi-national State. For Baghdad, it was a provocation. The
Kurds blew up oil installations in Kirkuk !

In November 1963, Aref removed the Baathists from power and Barzani’s
claims suddenly became less urgent. The DPK accused him of softening
and Talabani had to run away to Iran. His followers were chased by
Obeidollah Barzani.

In 1964, new turnabout: Mustapha Barzani rejected the return of
“liberated zones” under the control of Baghdad. He concluded a secret
alliance with the Shah of Iran, the financial and military assistance
of which – as well as the United States’ and Israel’- enabled him to
control a mountainous territory from the Syrian border to Qabaqin ,
leaving out the big Kurdish cities. Jalal Talabani sided with Baghdad
and took part with his Kurdish units of mercenaries in the battle of
Hendrin Mount (2875m) against Idriss Barzani and his 1700
pershmergas.

Self-rule for the Kurds in the offing

On July 1968, 17, General Abdel Rahman Aref -who took over after the
death of his brother in a helicopter crash- is overthrown. The Baath
led by General Hassan al Bakr came to power and as a start, decided
to support Jalal Talabani who was hunting down the Barzanists for the
Baathists. …The fighting was fierce against the background of the
latent Iraqo-Iranian conflict until Saddam Hussein then Vice
President of the Revolutionary Command Council (RCC) was put in
charge of negotiating with the insurgents.

On March 1970, 11 Arabs and Kurds reached a historical agreement
whereby self-rule would be granted, within four years, to
governorates inhabited mainly by Kurds. The Kurdish language was to
become one of the official language along with Arabic in the
autonomous region, the Vice President of the Republic of Iraq had to
be a Kurd and the mercenary units of Talabani, be decommissioned. At
last, the DPK was allowed to resume its activities and publish his
mouthpiece “Al Taakki”.

During the four ensuing years, the administrative borderline and the
statute of the autonomous region were heatedly discussed by Saddam
Hussein and the DPK. Idriss Barzani, in the name of his father, using
a XVIIIth century map demanded the integration to the future
autonomous region of the Sindjar -including the Aïn Zaleh oilfield-
Kirkuk and Kanaqin. Saddam Hussein could not agree to granting
territorial rights to Kurds in the regions where they did not compose
the majority of inhabitants, even it had been so in the past (3).

Finally, the selected governorates were: Dohuk, Arbil, Sulimayia.
Kirkuk governorate with its numerous “multiethnic sectors” that is
composed of “several non-Kurdish minorities, such as the Turkmen”-
was excluded from the blueprint for an autonomous province.

The Autonomous Region of Kurdistan

Despite this obvious progress, Mustapha Barzani held his ground as he
feared that the autonomy would jeopardize the power of the feudal
chiefs which the peasants served like in the Middle Ages. He
certainly did not favour the implementation in Kurdistan of the
agrarian reform carried out in the rest of the country. As usual, he
bid further by reiterating his demand over Kirkuk and the share-out
of oil income in relation with the number of people in those regions.
Financial autonomy he said is more vital than administrative
autonomy. Saddam Hussein refused again saying that a State has to
treat all regions equally in terms of development regardless of the
number of its inhabitants. For Saddam Hussein, Barzani spoke of a
confederation no longer of a autonomy.

The signing of the Iraqi-Soviet friendship Treaty in April 1972 and
the nationalisation of the Iraq Petroleum Company( IPC) brought
about a change and gave Barzani an other opportunity to resume the
fighting. As soon as May 1972, the CIA covertly financed his
activities. Therefore, when on March, 11th, 1974, self-rule was
granted to the Kurds, he dispelled it. He later acknowledged before
Paul Balta, journalist with Le Monde, : ” that Israel, the Shah of
Iran and the United States had strongly convinced him to refuse the
agreement in the belief that the Kurds would launch a guerrilla
warfare to weaken Saddam Hussein whose modernisation plan for Iraq
was a serious concern for the United States and their great ally
Israel” (4). In an interview with the Washington Post, June 22, 1973,
he pledged to serve the US policy in the region and if the US aid was
“substantial” “to take control of the Kirkuk oilfields and entrust
their exploitation to an US company”. According to the 1975 Pike
Report of the CIA, he was prepared to register Kurdistan as the 51the
State of the United States!

The DPK split. Obeidallah Barzani, “sell out” for his father was
tempted by the autonomy experience as negotiated and was therefore
made minister of State in April 1974. Several members of the DPK
politburo set up a rival party in Baghdad and until April 2003, the
question of the Kurdistan borders lie dormant.

The Kurdish insurgency held its ground up to the Algiers Agreement
signed by Saddam Hussein and the Shah whereby they secretly agreed to
stop supporting their respective opposition groups. Within a short
period, the Kurdish guerrilla collapsed. Mustapha Barzani died of a
cancer in the US where he has taken up residence with his son.

De facto independence

With the outbreak of the First Gulf War (1980-1988) so called
Iraq-Iran War, the insurgency was afresh but the repression is
horrendous. With the Anfal operation of Ali Hass Al Majidi, a
security zone is secured along the borders: villages are destroyed
and their population displaced and regrouped. Every encroachment of
the Iranian army is met with combat gas by each waring side like at
the very controversial battle of Hallabja. All through, the regional
government based in Arbil kept on his normal activities.

After the cease-fire signed by Iran on July 18th, 1988, the lull was
short-lived. Iraqi divisions entered Koweit in August 1990, and this
led to the Second Gulf War and to the setting up in April 1991 of an
illegitimate free-zone north of the 36th parallel. Massoud Barzani
and Jalal Talabani were free to do as they pleased for the next 13
years.

The unacceptable borders of the Iraqi “Great Kurdistan”

To-day, Barzani’s son, is the President of the Autonomous Region and
Jala Talabani , the “President of the Republic”. They have for a
while kept their squabbling down and have annexed lands outside the
Autonomous Region. They do not have to fear the Iraqi army,
dismantled by Paul Bremer and they forbid any military force made up
of Arabs to enter the region under their grip. Their militias,
trained, armed and supported by the Americans and the Israelis are
ready to seize by force Kirkuk, the Sindjar and Qanaqin.

The map as submitted to the National Assembly in July 2005 by Mullah
Bakhtiyar, member of the PUK (Patriotic Union of Kurdistan) comprises
the whole governorate of Nineveh, that is to say Mossul, Tell Afar
(5% of Kurds, 75% of Turkmen), the Sindjar (Yezidi) and a large
portion of the Djezire plateau, Kirkuk and Tuz Kurmatu -the whole of
the Turkmeneli, Turkmen country- then it cuts across Baqubah, moves
around Baghdad, fifteen kms north, then down to the south-east to
Jassan and Badra on the border with Iran. The mountain range of
Hamrin serves as a boundary in the north between Arabs and Kurds.
This seems to be not enough for some Kurdish fundamentalists who
argue that Salah Eddine (Saladin) being born in Tikrit (south of
Hamrin) means that the town was Kurdish.

The drawing of Kurdistan based on “historical and geographical facts”
according to Bakhtiyar was approved by the Kurdish Parliament. The
Kurdish people, he said, may be willing to discuss privileges or
ministerial functions, but the borders of Kurdistan are a line not be
crossed. (5). The Kurdish leaders might as well consider that all
Kurds living in Iraq outside Kurdistan be under the jurisdiction of
the Kurdish State and regarded as privileged citizens as requested by
Barzani in his counter-proposal on the autonomous region project.

Jalal Talabani has put forward to the Turkmen an autonomous plan
(7)…within the would-be State of Kurdistan but the mistrust is there
because lands which would be allotted to them were not mentioned. In
the “Great Kurdistan” Project, Yezidis and Shabaks (8) who are
neither Kurds nor Arabs in their opinion are being turned into
“Kurds”. Assyrians are labelled Kurds because they speak the language
and the Chaldeans are said to be Arabs, for the opposite reason, as
if to mean that the religious schism between them bears ethnical
roots.

Barzani and Talabani are asking too much. They should be satisfied
with their own territory and embark on long-pending social reforms.
Otherwise, they can just expect more riots and violence as in Halabja
last March where demonstrators destroyed a shrine.

Who can really believe that Arabs and Turkmen will ratify the policy
of fait accompli ? They will not be ripped off their national rights
or of their lands. There will be more wars and the American and
Israeli ‘friends” may not always be prepared to answer the call of
the feudal Kurds.

Gilles Munier (10/4/06)

Contact : [email protected]

Map : Strafor.com (1) Alerte au Kurdistan, by Edouard Sablier – Le
Monde, 26/9/61 – (2) Lettre du 18 octobre 1930, source : Foreign
Office 371 14 523, Chris Kutschera, Le mouvement national kurde,
Flammarion, 1979 – (3) Compte rendu des négociations – Exposé de
Saddam Hussein, le 11 mars 1975 – Propos sur les problèmes actuels,
Editions Ath-Thawra – Bagdad (sans date) – (4) Le projet politique
des Etats-Unis n’est-il pas d’atomiser le Proche-Orient ? Paul Balta
interview by Saïd Branine (26/3/03)

&var_recherche=paul+balta

(5) Kurdish leaders redrawn map with larger Kurdistan. (6) L’Irak
nouveau et le problème kurde, by Aziz El Hadj, Ed. Khayat, 1977 – (7)
The New Anatolian (30/1/06) – (8) Iraq’s Shabaks are being opressed
by Kurds, by Dr. Hunain Al-Qaddo.

Http://web.krg.org/articles/article_print.asp?Ar ticleNr=4744

http://www.oumma.com/article.php3?id_article=593
Http://web.krg.org/articles/article_print.asp?Ar

Always remember

Always remember
By Joe Piasecki

Pasadena Weekly, CA
April 20 2006

On Monday, Armenian Americans throughout the Southland and around the
world will commemorate the genocide committed against their people
91 years ago in the Ottoman Turkish Empire.

On April 24, 1915, the Ottoman government began the systematic arrest,
deportation and wholesale slaughter of Armenian men, women and children
by seizing hundreds of community leaders under cover of a news blackout
imposed during World War I.

Scholars believe that as many as 1.5 million Armenians perished during
the genocide, which one American ambassador there at the time described
as ~Sa campaign of race extermination.~T

Despite these and other messages to the American government, federal
lawmakers have yet to officially recognize the genocide. For a number
of years, some in Congress ~W including Pasadena Democrat Adam Schiff
~W have pushed for genocide recognition, but such bills have failed
to gain majority support.

Throughout the week, a number of local events will commemorate the
genocide.

On Friday evening, speakers and artists will perform at Glendale
High School. Mass gatherings will take place in LA~Rs Little Armenia
throughout the weekend, and protesters are expected to gather at the
Turkish Consulate in Westwood on Monday.