Hacking Of Internet Site Of Azerbaijan Public TV Studied

HACKING OF INTERNET SITE OF AZERBAIJAN PUBLIC TV STUDIED

Yerevan, January 22. ArmInfo. "We are investigating who and where
the internet site of the public TV of Azerbaijan has been broken,
the technical employee of the site, Jahid Kazimov, informed TREND.

He stated that on January 22nd at 09:45, the server was hacked into
and the activity of the site was terminated. According to Kazimov,
direct hacking of Public TV had not taken place. It is considered
that the site has been purposefully broken because the emblem of
Armenia had been placed on the site of the Public TV.

Kazimov stressed that the security of the site had been ensured at a
high level because the TV channel co-operates with the world popular
internet portal YAHOO. "Only after inspecting the server, we will
discover the emptiness and clear up these problems. In my opinion,
it may have been hacked by Russian supporters of Armenia. We have
begun investigations and will determine which country the hackers
came from. All have been done to clear away because material against
the Armenian had been placed on the site. Activities of the site will
be restored at the end of the day." Kazimov said.

Fact and fiction in articles of warfare

The Irish Times
January 20, 2007 Saturday

Fact and fiction in articles of warfare

by Davin O’Dwyer

Reportage: It is amazing how insulated we now are from the realities
of war. As Iraq and the Middle East rage, and conflict in Africa
remains a commonplace, war for us has assumed a fictional quality: we
consume coverage of the real thing in much the same way as we consume
Vietnam movies or second World War novels.

Watching Hitler’s end in Downfall or the execution of Saddam on Sky
News is not so very different, we find – the grand narratives of war
are familiar and easily digested.

Granta magazine’s editor Ian Jack will soon be departing after 12
years and, in Issue 96: War Zones, he addresses that most extreme and
troubling of subjects. Granta’s famous mix of reportage and fiction
offers an excellent juxtaposition of the fictional depictions of
conflict we so readily consume, and the factual accounts that we
approach in much the same way.

So we get Wendell Steavenson’s Victory in Lebanon, a factual account
of her experiences in Lebanon during the summer war. The brief,
savage conflict has already been reduced to end-of-year news summary
fodder in this part of the world, but, while Steavenson’s piece is no
better or worse than the best news reporting from the time, it
nevertheless gains power from its context. Removed from the daily
updates of casualties and political inertia, and sitting alongside
other reflections on war, Victory in Lebanon crystallises the
Israel-Lebanon war in all its grotesque futility, before it faded
away like any other headline.

Another factual essay is Operation Gomorrah, Marione Ingram’s
description of how she escaped the razing of Hamburg with her mother,
and became one of only 100 Jews in the city to survive the war. Her
piece brings searing, phosphorescent colour to a scenario so often
imagined in grainy black-and-white, as she and her mother pick their
way through burning streets and past bleeding victims. The final
line, however, is one of resignation: "Whatever sparks of penitence
smouldered beneath the ashes of the ruined city, the only expressions
of regret I saw or heard in the streets, shops and schools of Hamburg
were laments for the hardships of defeat."

THE FICTION, INCLUDING pieces by John Burnside and the Bangladeshi
writer Tahmima Anam, understandably offers more filtered reflections
on war. Elif Shafak’s The Bastard of Istanbul, excerpted here, caused
an Orhan Pamuk-style controversy and court case in Turkey last year
for its story of the friendship between two girls, one Turkish, one
Armenian. Marc Slouka’s The Little Museum of History, the tale of a
dimly remembered Czech emigrant who turns out to have been a Gestapo
interpreter during the war, reveals the way in which wartime actions
hang over lives for ever more.

Simon Norfolk’s striking photographs from Scotland initially appear
out of place in a volume on war. Many could be picture postcards,
with glorious sunlight striking calm seas. But the blunt captions
("The ‘Z’ berth for nuclear submarines, off Rothesay, Isle of Bute"),
reveal that Scotland’s barren west coast is home to vast amounts of
British military technology – an RAF Tornado scrapes the clouds, or a
battleship rests on a serene lake. As Ian Jack writes in his
accompanying notes, "The loveliness of the changing light on sea and
mountain makes it hard to imagine the ominous technology buried
beneath." A photo of a heavily camouflaged soldier is the first human
evidence of military activity, his gun threatening a lakeshore.

Guy Tillim’s images from the Congo are far more conventional in their
portrayal of a country rent by long-term conflict.

AM Homes’s Like an Episode of LA Law ends the collection with a
clever illustration of a domestic conflict. It takes the form of a
list of deposition questions posed to the writer’s biological father,
who had deserted the author and her mother, and gradually illustrates
the scale of his duplicity. Its legal form encapsulates our
"civilised" conflict, but also demonstrates quite how far removed we
are from the realities of warfare. Compared to the brutality visited
on the Lebanese, the Armenians, the Jews of Hamburg, where the scale
of destruction is too huge to imagine and the fever pitch of
irrational hatred too alien to countenance, having a deceitful father
is an all-too-understandable sort of strife.

Davin O’Dwyer is a freelance journalist

Granta 96: War Zones Edited by Ian Jack Granta Publications, 256 pp. £9.99

Armenian president to arrive in Russia Jan. 24

RIA Novosti, Russia
January 19, 2007

Armenian president to arrive in Russia Jan. 24

MOSCOW, January 19 (RIA Novosti) – Armenian President Robert
Kocharyan will pay a routine visit to Moscow January 24 at the
Russian president’s invitation, the Kremlin press service said
Friday.

"The agenda of the visit includes talks between the heads of state to
discuss pressing bilateral issues," the service said.

EU Calls Upon Turkey To Take All Steps To Shed Light on Dink murder

PanARMENIAN.Net

EU Calls Upon Turkey To Take All Steps To Shed Light on Dink’s Assassination
20.01.2007 14:55 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In Brussels, European Union
Commissioner for Enlargement Olli Rehn expressed shock
over killing and urged Turkish authorities to carry
out a full probe to shed light on the murder. ‘I am
shocked and saddened by this brutal act of violence. I
trust that the Turkish authorities will fully
investigate this crime and will bring the perpetrators
to justice,’ Olli Rehn stressed, The Zaman reports.

Rally in Support of Armenian Genocide Bill Held in Paris

Armenpress

RALLY IN SUPPORT OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL HELD IN
PARIS

PARIS, JANUARY 18, ARMENPRESS: A council
coordinating the activity of French Armenian
associations held a big rally yesterday in Paris in
support of a bill criminalizing the denial of the
Armenian genocide.
The council told Armenpress that around 2000
people, among them prominent politicians and
intellectuals, took part in the rally. It said
parallels between the Holocaust and the Armenian
genocide were drawn by some of the speakers.
A famous French Armenian singer Charles Aznavour
also attended the rally and addressed its
participants.

BBC: Turkish-Armenian writer shot dead

Turkish-Armenian writer shot dead

m
January 19, 2007

The Turkish-Armenian writer and journalist Hrant Dink has been shot
dead, Turkish media report.

Dink, the high-profile editor of newspaper Agos, was shot three times
outside its offices in Istanbul, the paper said.

Dink was one of the writers who had been prosecuted under Turkey’s
strict laws against "insulting Turkishness".

He was given a six-month suspended sentence in October 2005 after
writing about the Armenian "genocide" of 1915.

Turkey’s NTV television said police were searching for a teenager
wearing a white hat and a denim jacket in connection with the murder.

The channel showed pictures of a white sheet covering the journalist’s
body in front of the newspaper building’s entrance.

Dink, 53, had received threats from nationalists who viewed him as a
traitor, the Associated Press news agency reported.

He was a public figure in Turkey – one of its most prominent Armenian
voices.

He once gave an interview with the Associated Press in which he cried
while describing the hatred some Turks had for him, saying he could
not stay in a country where he was unwanted.

Hundreds of thousands of Armenians died in 1915, in what many
Armenians say was a systematic massacre at the hands of the Ottoman
Turks.

Turkey denies any genocide, saying the deaths were a part of World War
I.

Turkey and neighbouring Armenia still have no official relations.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6279241.st

Parliamentary Election Day To Be Exacted Early February

PARLIAMENTARY ELECTION DAY TO BE EXACTED EARLY FEBRUARY

PanARMENIAN.Net
17.01.2007 14:32 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Early February Armenian President will fix the day
for the parliamentary election, RA NA Speaker Tigran Torosian said
Tuesday during a meeting with Christian Strohal, the President of the
OSCE Office of Democratic Institutes and Human Rights. In Torosian’s
words, upon determination of the date, international organizations will
be addressed invitations to take part in the election as observers.

To raise the efficiency of joint activities the Armenian Speaker
suggested formation of a working group that could quickly react
to shortcomings fixed by the experts. Mr Strohal welcomed Tigran
Torosian’s proposal and stressed the importance of holding the
parliamentary election in accord with international standards. He
said the OSCE is ready to actively cooperate with the political forces
participating in the election.

EU Hopes For Results From Azeri, Armenian Foreign Ministers’ Meeting

EU HOPES FOR RESULTS FROM AZERI, ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTERS’ MEETING – AMBASSADOR

Interfax News Agency
Russia & CIS General Newswire
January 16, 2007 Tuesday 5:30 PM MSK

The European Union hopes that the upcoming talks between the Azeri and
Armenian foreign ministers on the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh
issue will result in progress, German Ambassador to Azerbaijan Per
Stankina said at a press conference on Tuesday.

"We expect positive results from the Moscow meeting," Stankina said.

Nagorno-Karabakh is a serious problem for Azerbaijan and has been
included in both the Action Plan as part of the European Neighborhood
Policy and the Memorandum on mutual understanding on strategic energy
cooperation, he said.

"However, the EU cannot settle this conflict. Only the sides themselves
can do this," he said.

Per Stanchina: Kars-Akhalkalaki-Baku Railway To Become "New Corridor

PER STANCHINA: KARS-AKHALKALAKI-BAKU RAILWAY TO BECOME "NEW CORRIDOR TO EUROPE"

PanARMENIAN.Net
16.01.2007 15:32 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku railroad
will become a new corridor for Asia to Europe, stated German
Ambassador to Baku Per Christopher Stanchina. He said this project
is important for all participants and TRASECA will never object to
it. The ambassador explained European Union’s refusal to finance the
Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku project by saying that such projects
are expensive and the organization just could not provide means for
it. P. Stanchina also stressed how much the project is profitable
will show the future. He also did not exclude the possibility to
finance the railway project by international organizations in future,
‘Trend’ reports.

Number Of Armenian Illegal Migrants In Turkey Much Exaggerated

NUMBER OF ARMENIAN ILLEGAL MIGRANTS IN TURKEY MUCH EXAGGERATED

PanARMENIAN.Net
15.01.2007 13:48 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The number of Armenian illegal migrants in Turkey
makes 10-15 thousand. They are mostly engaged in the social field
looking after children and keeping a household. Some of them have small
business. As a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter came to know from a reliable
source, the Turkish government replicates the number of 70 thousand
Armenian illegal migrants for propagandistic purpose. The source also
noted that Armenians are not involved in prostitution, as it’s often
said. "This field is firmly occupied by Russian and Ukrainian women and
Armenians have nothing to do there. Competition is too high," he said.