Timetable of conducting elections in Armenia approved

PanARMENIAN.Net

Timetable of conducting elections in Armenia approved
01.02.2007 16:11 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian Central Electoral
Commission (CEC) on February 1 approved the timetable
of conducting parliamentary elections. Seven of 9 CEC
members voted `for’ and the two others abstained in
the vote. According to the timetable of measures,
documents of candidates on proportional lists in the
coming parliamentary elections must be presented from
February 26 till March 3. During this period documents
of candidates on majority lists must also be
presented. Electoral commissions must be formed till
March 28. Documents, which are necessary for
registering candidates on proportional lists, must be
presented to the CEC till March 28. During this period
documents of candidates in majority lists must also be
presented.

According to the approved timetable, election campaign
must be conducted from April 8 till May 10. Electoral
lists of parties must be registered from April 2 till
7. During this time registration of candidates on
majority lists will be done. Candidates, parties or
coalitions have the right to withdraw their candidacy
from electoral lists till May 2. The process of
election to the National Assembly is scheduled for
08:00 am till 20:00 pm local time. The polling
stations must publish protocols of results of voting
on May 13 till 06:00 am. Final information on
participants of the election officially must be
declared till 10:00 am of May 13. Preliminary results
on majority lists must be published till 14:00 pm of
May 13. Preliminary results on proportional lists must
be published till 20:00 pm of May 13. Final results of
the voting on majority system will be declared till
May 17 and of proportional system-till May 19.
Observers can register in the CEC till May 2, IA
Regnum reports.

Armenia Solidarity – Armenian Genocide mentioned in UK HMD Event

PRESS RELEASE

Armenia Solidarity
c/o the Temple of Peace, Cathays Park, Cardiff
[email protected]
Tel: 07876561398 (Int:++44 7876561398)

Armenian Genocide Recognised at the Official UK Holocaust Memorial Day Event

The Armenian Genocide was officially recognised at the Holocaust Day
Event in Newcastle, UK at the weekend, following representations from
Armenia Solidarity official John Torosyan,a leading figure in the
Welsh-Armenian Community.(supported by Nor Serount Cultural
Association).

Our original request to the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust was made two
years ago, and their response has been encouraging since then.
(The Welsh Armenian Community were allowed to stage an exhibition on
the Genocide, with music and speeches in the foyer Millennium Centre,
in the fringes of the main event when the 2006 HMD was held in
Cardiff)

This time,though, recognition came from the main stage. It is
significant because the organising body, the Holocaust Day Trust, is
supported by the British government, with a minister usually
participating at the event.

It will now be increasingly difficult for the UK government to keep to
their position of denying the truth of the Armenian Genocide when they
have sponsored an event which has recognised this truth! Speeches are
prepared beforehand, and it was not a question of one speaker speaking
her mind. This was with the full permission of the organisers.

Here is the text of what was said in the National Commemoration. It
was by Mary Blewitt of SURF, the Rwandan survivors fund:

"The only reason I can think I was spared is to help those who, like
me, must live with the legacy of genocide. I represent only the
survivors of the genocide in Rwanda, but try when possible to speak as
well for the survivors of the Holocaust and the genocides in Cambodia,
Kosovo and Armenia. I try to ensure that their voices are heard –
voices that tell the whole truth, that warn us of what humanity is
capable of, that remind us of the suffering that must never again be
permitted to happen to anyone, anywhere in the world."

Confirmation of this may be obtained from:
Chief Executive
Holocaust Memorial Day Trust
PO Box 49743
London
WC1H 9WU
[email protected]

0845 838 1883

——————————————– —————————-

Our hope is that this progress achieved in Genocide Recognition will
persuade more UK Armenians to co-operate with us by contacting your M.P. to
ask him/her to sign Early Day Motion 357, recognising the Genocide in the
House Of Commons. Also, please ask him/her to sign motion 344 on the
blockade of Armenia. Let us know at [email protected] if you
are doing this, and send us the reply, even if it is negative.

www.hmd.org.uk

Journalist murder opens window of opp. for Turk-Armen rapprochement

EurasiaNet, NY
Feb 1 2007

JOURNALIST’S MURDER OPENS WINDOW OF OPPORTUNITY FOR TURKISH-ARMENIAN
RAPPROCHEMENT
Yigal Schleifer 2/01/07

In the days immediately following the shocking murder of outspoken
Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, many observers expressed hope
that the tragedy could serve as a catalyst for reconciliation between
Turkey and Armenia. Initial signals, however, show that a
rapprochement still will not be easily achieved.

Dink was gunned down by a 17-year-old ultranationalist on January 19.
[For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. The journalist’s
January 23 funeral in Istanbul drew over 100,000 mourners, including
– in what was seen as an encouraging sign -Armenia’s deputy foreign
minister, Arman Kirakossian. The occasion marked the first high-level
visit by an Armenian official to Turkey since relations between the
two countries were cut off in 1993. Joining Kirakossian were several
leaders of Armenian diaspora organizations – many making their
first-ever visit to Turkey – as well as the archbishop of the
Armenian Church of America, Khajag Barsamian.

Before leaving Turkey, Kirakossian reiterated his country’s desire to
renew relations with Turkey without "any preconditions."

"It looks as if we have a window of opportunity here because of the
sympathy that was created after [Dink’s] funeral, the new atmosphere
that was created in the country and the fact that the government was
quite resolute on the issue of investigating the murder," says Sami
Kohen, a columnist with the daily Milliyet newspaper and a veteran
observer of Turkish foreign policy.

Many in Turkey compared the aftermath of the murder of Dink, editor
of the bilingual Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos, to the time
following a devastating earthquake in 1999, which saw historic rivals
Turkey and Greece enter a period of rapprochement — brought together
by the shared experience of the temblor’s destruction.

"We are hoping that a tragedy like Hrant’s loss will have the same
effect," says Noyan Soyak, an Istanbul businessman who is vice
chairman of the Turkish-Armenian Business Development Council. "The
will is there in both countries, but what the problem is nobody
knows."

The initial replies from Ankara to the Armenian gesture have not been
positive, though. Turkey’s Foreign Ministry said Kirakossian’s
statements contained "nothing new," while Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan said Yerevan should first reply to his previous offer to set
up a joint commission to study the tragic events of 1915. [For
background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Armenians contend that
the Ottoman Turks committed genocide, while the Turkish government
disputes the genocide assertion, saying that Armenians were largely
victims of a vicious partisan struggle that raged during and after
World War I. "They haven’t responded to my suggestion. These
statements don’t show good will. Therefore, I don’t find their manner
genuine," Erdogan told reporters in Ankara.

Egemen Bagis, a parliamentarian with the governing Justice and
Development Party (AKP), says a foundation exists for rebuilding
relations, but that Yerevan has rebuffed Turkey’s reconciliation
gestures. "Armenia has always played a very cold, non-cooperating
attitude with Turkey," Bagis says. "They should take advantage of
Turkey willingness for dialogue."

Some analysts in Turkey believe that, despite the tough talk, Ankara
may be compelled to make some progress on the Armenia front. The
murder of Dink, who was hauled into court numerous times under a
controversial article in the Turkish penal code which makes it a
crime to "insult" Turkish identity, has placed Turkey in the
international spotlight. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
archive]. An improvement in relations with Yerevan would help ease
some of the pressure Ankara is now facing on the freedom-of-speech
issue.

In addition, the Democrat-controlled US House of Representatives is
likely to vote in the near future on a resolution recognizing the
Armenian genocide. Any positive movement by Turkey regarding its
relations with Armenia would likely assist its lobbying efforts to
defeat the resolution. "Turkey can start a dialogue with Armenia this
time by slightly tuning its attitude. And it must," political analyst
Mehmet Ali Birand wrote in a recent column in the English-language
Turkish Daily News. "Talks should start. A dialogue should begin.
Prerequisites can be brought to the discussions later."

Milliyet’s Kohen suggests the Turkish-Greek model could serve as an
example for fostering a dialogue between Ankara and Yerevan. In the
Turkish-Greek case, thorny issues like territorial and historical
disputes were initially set aside in order to get talks started.
While Turkey and Greece have yet to resolve their territorial
dispute, commercial and cultural relations between the two countries
have taken off since 1999.

"You know that you have differences, but you enter into a dialogue,
you get to being on speaking terms," says Kohen. "The problem right
now is that the two countries aren’t even on speaking terms, and
there is a lot to talk about."

Turkish experts in Turkey believe that, ultimately, any move
regarding relations with Armenia will be determined by domestic
considerations. Turkey is heading towards parliamentary elections in
November and the government, facing a rising wave of nationalism at
home, will find it hard to make any dramatic moves on nationalist
hot-button issues touching on the issues of Armenia and Cyprus.

Soyak, representative of the Turkish-Armenian Business Development
Council, believes opening the border with Armenia, closed since 1993,
would be a step in the right direction, fostering goodwill and
bolstering Turkish trade at the same time. [For additional
information see the Eurasia Insight archive]. "The closed borders
haven’t helped anybody," he says. "They haven’t helped the Azeris
gain back territory. It hasn’t helped Turkey with fighting genocide
resolutions around the world. We should open the borders and see what
happens."

Editor’s Note: Yigal Schleifer is a freelance journalist based in
Istanbul.

BAKU: Putin: Azerbaijan, Armenia can together produce popular wine

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Feb 1 2007

Vladimir Putin: Azerbaijan and Armenia can together produce cheap
`Aghdam’ wine popular in USSR

[ 01 Feb. 2007 17:50 ]

Russian president Vladimir Putin at the press conference held in
Kremlin answered the question about the settlement of Nagorno
Karabakh conflict, APA Russian bureau reports.

Putin said that it is a complicated problem and Russia tries to help
Azerbaijan and Armenia for finding way of solution favorable for both
parties.
`But we can not exert pressure on the parties. Otherwise we will
damage our relations either with Armenian or with Azerbaijani people.
Therefore the parties should themselves find the way out. For
example, Azerbaijan and Armenia can together produce cheap `Aghdam’
wine popular in the USSR,’ he said.
Asked why Russia keeps military bases in Armenia Vladimir Putin said
that Russian military bases abroad left since Soviet period.
`It does not concern only Armenia, but Tajikistan as well. Russian
base in Armenia is not against the interests of any country of the
region, as well as Azerbaijan,’ he said. /APA/

ADP Has No Problems of Getting into Next Parliament, Member Says

Panorama.am

20:04 31/01/2007

ADP HAS NO PROBLEMS OF GETTING INTO NEXT PARLIAMENT, MEMBER SAYS

Armenia managed to overcome both right and left extremism in the
course of the years of independence, Seiran Avagyan, leader of
Armenian People Liberation Union (HJAM) and adviser to the president
of Armenia told a debate with Grigor Harutunyan, member of the
Armenian Democratic Party (ADP).

`Left extremists are communists and the right extremists is
Pan-Armenian National Movement (HHSh),’ he said also saying all
political forces must take this fact into consideration.

Speaking about parliamentary elections 2003, he noted that HJAM
introduced a completely new scheme and was in `exclusive interests of
voters.’ He said they needed 0.3 percent to overcome the 5 percent
requirement.

`We do not have a problem of getting into parliament,’ G. Harutunyan
said speaking about the talk that ADP may have problems in getting
into the next parliament.

Source: Panorama.am

Two funerals, many lessons

Sacramento Bee, CA
Jan 31 2007

Two funerals, many lessons
By Paul Greenberg –
Published 12:00 am PST Wednesday, January 31, 2007

A Russian once told me that the great thing about getting drunk in
the morning was that it cleared your whole day.

How Russian.

That was back when there was still a Soviet Union of unlamented
memory – a regime capable of driving anyone to drink and worse. The
Russian wrote for Novosti, Pravda or some such "news" agency. No
wonder he drank. Poor fellow, he was what we soon learned to call a
Sovjournalist – as opposed to a real one.

There is no more Soviet Union, but one suspects things haven’t
changed all that much under the newest tsar. The suspicion is
confirmed every time a real journalist is killed in Russia.

The great challenge, there and here, remains just to reflect the
ordinary, everyday truths of life. And not let our own journalism
block the view.

In a free country, readers provide a healthy corrective, which is
what letters to the editor are for. In countries not as free, the
criticism takes the form of censorship. Or an assassin’s bullet. Some
killers act under cover of law, others are moved by their own
fanaticism.

In any society riven by hatreds or suppressed by iron rule – the two
tend to go together, like some kind of fatal syndrome – a rare writer
may come along who lets the reader see the ordinary truths of life
through prose as clear as plate glass. And the sight is enough to
enrage those who want him silenced.

Such a writer is living on borrowed time. See the murder of the
Armenian/Turkish/just human Hrant Dink in Istanbul. He knew it would
happen one day or another.

"I feel like a pigeon," he wrote in what would be his last article.
"Like a pigeon I wander uneasily amidst this city, watching my back
constantly, so timid and yet so free."

Fresh flowers now mark the spot on the busy street where he was shot
down. His funeral goes on every day.

If you want to really clear up your day so you really see it, rather
than just go through it in a fog, start it with a funeral. It puts
things in perspective. It carves the rest of the day in bas-relief.
The trivial is gently blown away, no longer worth bothering with. The
vital leaps out: friends, family and those ordinary courtesies and
delights of life that are anything but ordinary, such as the presence
of love. All are heightened after a funeral. How could we ever have
overlooked them, lived without them? At 11 o’clock the other morning,
I was hurrying into Temple B’nai Israel here in Little Rock for the
funeral of a great lady who had no great airs. Yes, there are still
such; just look around. This lady’s name was Beatrice Brint Marks,
and I thought of her as the last Yiddish speaker in Arkansas.

Whenever I saw her, I would try to refresh my poor, neglected,
faded-beyond-hope childhood Yiddish. She was patient but exact. She
expected you to do your part.

Yet the most eloquent thing about Bea was her silent glance, which
took you in at once. If you pleased her, it was apparent, and you
were rewarded by just being able to stand next to such as she, and
share the same wordless bond. If not, poor posturing thing, you could
tell she hoped you would do better in the future.

It was the final tribute to Bea’s presence that the crowded
glass-walled main sanctuary of the temple, which was made to worship
the Lord of Hosts on high holidays with blasts on a ram’s horn and
sonorous injunctions, had the air the other morning of a quiet
conversation around the kitchen table. How very much like Yiddish,
that most diminutive of languages, that kitchen language.

Isaac Bashevis Singer, who received the Nobel Prize for his writings
in Yiddish, said it was the only language on Earth he knew about that
was never spoken by people in power. Naturally most of its speakers,
millions of them, were murdered. There’s a lesson in that: It is a
terrible thing to be powerless. I hope my pacifist friends are
listening.

It is the simple, ordinary human truths that most provoke the
violent, and most alarm the empty, abstract, secretly insecure thing
called The State.

They are also the truths that most affect us, and that we most need
to hear.

Paul Greenberg is the Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial page editor of
the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. His column appears routinely in The
Bee on Wednesdays and occasionally on other days. His e-mail address
is [email protected].

ANKARA: Ashura, pluralism and the creation of a new mosaic

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Jan 30 2007

Ashura, pluralism and the creation of a new mosaic

by KERIM BALCI

Yesterday was the day of Ashura according to the Islamic calendar. In
the Shia world this was a day of mourning commemorating the murder of
Huseyin, the grandson of the Prophet of Islam, Mohammed.
In the northern Sunni world of Turkey, Pakistan, Malaysia and
Indonesia, this was a fasting day. Some Shiites express their
feelings by inflicting pain on themselves, flogging their backs to
the point of bleeding. Sunnis express their feelings at the esoteric
dimension: fasting of the mouth, of the tongue, of the eye.
Fasting in the Sunni world is not only about abstaining from eating,
but also about eating as a congregation. A classic meal for the day
of Ashura is a sweet dessert also called ashura. Probably an Armenian
tradition Islamicized later on, ashura is a mixture of many
ingredients that would not give the sense of a meaningful meal at
first sight. Think of de-husked wheat, chickpeas, white beans, rice,
dried apricots, dried figs, raisins, orange, rose water, walnuts,
pomegranate and sugar in the same cup of sweet! The number of
ingredients are so high that folk legend has it that Noah prepared
this pudding from the last bits of food remaining on the Ark when he
wanted to celebrate the landing of the Ark.
Ashura is a symbol of modern-day life. On December 4, 2004, the
famous Abant Platform was having its eighth meeting in Brussels at
the European Parliament. The topic of discussion was understandably
Turkey’s place in the EU. Then the discussion on Turkey’s bid to join
the EU was concentrated on the `EU’s absorbing capacity.’ Columnist
Hüseyin Gülerce was one of the speakers there and he opened his
speech with a recipe for ashura. Using the symbolism of ashura,
Gülerce told the audience that ingredients that seem to be no match
at first sight might become a delicious delight if put in the hands
of a skilful cook. `Turkey is an ingredient that is hard for the EU
to absorb, but once done, it will enrich the taste of Europe,’ said
Gülerce.
Two years since that speech and today we know that the absorption
issue is a real challenge, not only for Europe but for Turkey too.
Turkey has always been a mosaic of cultures thanks to its Ottoman
past and the central attraction of Anatolia. In the last ten years,
the Aegean and Mediterranean coastlines of Turkey have become
attractions for Northern European ex-pats willing to settle down in a
warm environment. British, Russians, Germans, Dutch and Norwegians
are acquiring houses in Turkey and adding new ingredients into this
mixture of nations, this huge cup of ashura.
The cooks know that ashura is ready to be served by the white beans
in it. This is the most resistant ingredient that needs to be
integrated into the general taste of the delight. Given the perceived
historical realities of the Armenian minority in this country, they
are the white beans of our ashura in this allegory. And on this
Ashura Day, I have more faith in the potential of this nation to
become the tastiest delight of this mosaic world.

Russia considering building oil refinery in Armenia

SKRIN Market & Corporate News
January 29, 2007 Monday 11:44 AM GMT

Russia considering building oil refinery in Armenia

Gazprom Neft confirmed that it is considering building an oil
refinery in Armenia. Kommersant has learned that the proposed plant
would have a capacity of 7 mln tons of oil per year and be located on
the border with Iran. The refinery would cot a minimum of $1.7
billion, not counting transportation infrastructure, which would cost
an additional $1 billion. Industry analysts say that the project is
senseless from an economic point of view and attribute interest in it
to political considerations. An oil refinery in Armenia would indeed
be a political undertaking and provide the participants with
political dividends.

Sources say that the Armenians originally suggested a refinery with a
capacity of 3-4 mln tons per year. The Russians, however, responded
by suggesting that the capacity be doubled, although Armenia’s
consumption of petroleum products does not top 250,000 tons a year.
The location of the plant, on the Armenian-Iranian border near Megri,
explains the excess. Oil would be received by the plant from Iran
through a 200-km. pipeline from Tabriz, where a refinery already
exists. Petroleum products would be transported back to Iran by
train, on a line that, like the pipeline from Tabriz, does not yet
exist Kommersant reported.

Lebanon’s Tenuous Transformation

The Middle East Forum – Promoting American Interests
Jan 28 2007

Lebanon’s Tenuous Transformation
by Michael Rubin
Aspenia
October 2005

This is the original English version of an Italian article in "Pax
Euroislamica," Aspenia (Aspen Institute Italia Review). No. 30,
October 2005.

On June 28, 2005, Lebanon’s parliament selected Fuad Siniora to be
prime minister. Siniora was a close associate of Rafiq al-Hariri, a
former prime minister and Sunni powerbroker who was assassinated on
February 14, 2005 as his motorcade drove down a Beirut street. Like
Hariri in his later years, Siniora has taken an increasingly defiant
stance in opposition to Syrian domination of Lebanon.

While Lebanon’s Cedar Revolution has already reverberated throughout
the region, the transformation it sought to unveil is tenuous.
Syria’s nearly three-decade occupation of Lebanon may have ended, but
the country remains susceptible to Syrian domination. During the
years of occupation, Syrian proxies altered the Lebanese legal system
to undercut the ability of political society to transform through
elections. Syrian intelligence operatives continue to permeate
Lebanon, killing and intimidating dissidents and independent-minded
politicians. Syrian interests continue to dominate Lebanon’s black
market. Lebanon’s political position remains precarious. Hizbullah
remains a Syrian proxy and, flouting U.N. Security Council resolution
1559, has refused to disarm. While many Lebanese officials privately
say they would like the group to lay down its weapons, the Lebanese
government remains too weak to broach the subject publicly.

The triumph of democratic liberalism in Lebanon will depend not only
upon continued European and American assistance to Lebanese
democrats, but also upon the ability of Western governments to
identify and direct pressure upon mechanisms of continued Syrian
control. At stake is more than freedom for Lebanon, but rather the
ability of the Arab world to reform itself. The evaporation of the
Cedar Revolution would embolden autocrats in countries Egypt and
Yemen that they can outlast reformist demands.

Background

Syrian troops entered Lebanon in 1976, a year after the outbreak of
the Lebanese civil war. While the 1989 Ta`if Accords called for the
withdrawal foreign forces from Lebanon, the Syrian occupation
continued with the tacit approval of the George H.W. Bush
administration which saw the Syrian presence as stabilizing.[1]

While the United States and European countries valued stability, the
Syrian government sought to prolong its involvement in Lebanon in
order to fulfill a historical ambition. The French government created
modern Lebanon in 1920 as Paris and London divided up former Ottoman
domains. While France was Mandatory power for both Syria and Lebanon,
the latter’s separate identity helped protect and empower Mount
Lebanon’s large Christian population. Syrian nationalists, though,
never forfeited their claim to Lebanon nor, in some cases, to
Transjordan and Palestine, also considered by some in Damascus to be
part of Greater Syria.[2] In 1946, a Syrian diplomat declared Syria’s
borders with Lebanon, Palestine, and Jordan to be "artificial." In
August 1972, Syrian president Hafez al-Assad said, "Syria and Lebanon
are a single country." Syrian ambition undercut diplomatic
formalities. The Syrian regime does not maintain an embassy in
Beirut; exchange of ambassadors would indicate recognition of
Lebanese independence.

After dispatching the Syrian army into Lebanon, Assad treated Lebanon
as a colony. The late Ghazi Kana`an, chief of Syrian military
intelligence in Lebanon between 1982 and 2002, and his deputy and
successor Rustum Ghazali, acted as if they were colonial high
commissioners. In many ways, they were. Officials in Damascus
determined which Lebanese politicians could run for office and who
could hold ministerial portfolios. Judicial and legal officials
picked for their loyalty to the Syrian regime could silence
independent-minded Lebanese parliamentarians and lawyers by
threatening to have their professional immunity lifted. In 1994, for
example, Lebanese parliamentarian Yahya Shamas had his immunity
stripped and was imprisoned on trumped-up drug charges after a
business deal gone bad with Kana`an.. Likewise, after the Lebanese
human rights lawyer Muhamad Mugraby criticized the Supreme Judicial
Council’s lack of independence, the Beirut Bar Association lifted his
immunity. Lebanese security forces subsequently arrested him.

In August 2004, Syrian disdain for Lebanese sovereignty culminated
when Syrian president Bashar al-Assad ordered the Lebanese
constitution to be amended in order to enable Syrian client Emile
Lahoud to serve a third term as president. According to the United
Nations fact-finder dispatched sent in the wake of Hariri’s
assassination, when Hariri balked, Assad told him that opposition to
Lahoud "is tantamount to opposing Assad himself."

Syrian penetration of Lebanon permeated all aspects of state. On May
20, 1991, the Syrian government and its proxy in Lebanon signed a
Treaty of Brotherhood, Cooperation, and Coordination charging both
countries "to achieve the highest level of cooperation and
coordination in all political, economic, security, cultural,
scientific, and other fields… [and to] expand and strengthen their
common interests as an affirmation of the brotherly relations and
guarantee of their common destiny." In effect, the treaty made Syria
suzerain.

The September 1, 1991 "Lebanon-Syria Defense and Security Agreement"
formalized the domination of Syria’s military and security services
in Lebanon. Two years later, an "Agreement for Economic and Social
Cooperation and Coordination" outlined a program of economic
integration which, in practice, made Lebanon an outlet for Syrian
goods and labor.

While Siniora’s government or that of some future successor might
abrogate the more parasitic treaties, it will be far more difficult
to overcome mechanisms of informal control which the Syrian
government made to Lebanese society. In August 1999, for example, the
director-general of the Syrian Telecommunications Establishment and
his Lebanese counterpart agreed to route Lebanon’s fiber optic
network through Syria, enabling Syrian intelligence to more easily
monitor telephone and internet traffic. Such routing allowed Syrian
officials and their Lebanese allies to bypass embarrassment over
revelations that Lahoud had illegally tapped the phones of Hariri and
more than a dozen parliamentarians.

Electoral Damage

Undoing the damage caused by past Syrian manipulation of the Lebanese
electoral system will be a far greater challenge for renewed
democracy in Lebanon.[3] The 1989 Ta’if Accords stipulated that the
governorate should be the base unit for national elections in
Lebanon. In effect, this split the country into five electoral
districts in which voters could select from slates of parliamentary
candidates. At the urging of Damascus, and in contravention to the Ta
`if Accord, the Lebanese parliament divided the Mount Lebanon
governorate into six separate electoral districts. The narrowing of
pro-Syrian officials’ constituencies facilitated their re-election by
undercutting the formation of opposition coalitions across wider
swaths of territory.

In the 1998 municipal elections, 40 percent of the candidates backed
by the pro-Syrian Lebanese government lost. In the aftermath, Kana`an
and Bashar al-Assad, then his father’s trusted aide, met with the
Lebanese prime minister, parliamentary speaker, and other pro-Syrian
ministers to further gerrymander districts in order to divide the
opposition’s support base. The new law subdivided Northern Lebanon
into two electoral districts. The gerrymandering combined the largely
Maronite Christian town of Bsharre with Muslim towns to which it was
not contiguous, making victory by an independent Christian candidate
impossible. Likewise, the government divided Beirut into three
districts calculated to reduce Hariri’s power. Bolstering the number
of seats in parliament from 108 to 128 seats enabled Damascus to
ensure a pro-Syrian majority. Unable to break an impasse over a new
electoral law, the Lebanese government held its June 2005
parliamentary elections under the 2000 electoral law.

Gerrymandering has amplified the power of pro-Syrian politicians
because, under the Lebanese confessional system, voters cast ballots
for multi-sectarian slates of candidates. While the political
characteristics of the parliament may be in doubt, its sectarian
components are not: Sixty-four seats are reserved for Christian
representatives (34 Maronites, 14 Greek Orthodox, eight Greek
Catholic, five Armenian Orthodox, one seat each for Armenian
Catholics, Evangelical groups, and other minorities), 56 seats are
for Muslim representatives (27 Sunnis, 27 Shi`ites, two Alawites),
and eight seats are slated for Druze candidates.

By placing Maronite communities into more populous Muslim districts,
Muslim voters could determine which slates – and therefore which
Christian representatives – entered parliament. On May 12, 2005, the
League of Maronite Bishops complained that, as the districts were
drawn, "the Christians can elect only 15 MPs out of 64 while the
others, almost 50 MPs, are elected by Muslims."

The electoral system undercut independent Shi`ites for a different
reason. Lebanese law requires citizens to vote in their ancestral
districts, effectively disenfranchising thousands of elderly war
refugees who fled southern Lebanon more than two decades previously
and subsequently settled in Beirut. Unable to cast their ballots, a
slate dominated by Hizbullah won the southern district elections,
ensuring Damascus a strong voice in the Lebanese parliament.

While in the short-term, the electoral law might undercut independent
Lebanese voices, it is in the longer-term in which the danger of the
Syrian-imposed system lies. By seeking to disenfranchise certain
groups based on their ethnicity, the gerrymandered districts amplify
differences and favor either unrepresentative or more extreme voices.
Lebanese surveyed during the June 2005 campaign said that
sectarianism has never been so high and voiced fear that the relative
calm following the Syrian withdrawal might foreshadow renewed
sectarian strife. The gerrymandered districts are geared to prevent
coalition-building, and the inability of many Beirut residents to
vote in the districts in which they reside means gradual migration
and mixing of populations cannot alone mitigate problems.

How the West can help Lebanon

Lebanon’s transformation is far from complete. Western governments
can help the Lebanese people solidify their gains in two ways: First,
they should target mechanisms of Syrian control and second, they
should assist judicial and electoral reform. Weakening Syrian power
in Lebanon will facilitate ability to make the electoral changes
necessary to enable the Lebanese people to translate democratic will
into more permanent political reformation.

Gary Gambill, editor of the Middle East Intelligence Bulletin,
identified several mechanisms of Syrian control in Lebanon which have
continued beyond the military withdrawal.[4] Damascus’ economic grasp
is significant, and may siphon from the Lebanese economy more than
ten billion U.S. dollars annually. While the Lebanese drug trade
declined under international pressure in the early 1990s, drug
cultivation has rebounded since 1997 when, more for diplomatic than
objective reasons, the U.S. State Department removed both Lebanon and
Syria from its list of drug producing and trafficking countries.
Narco-traffic has provided an independent revenue stream for
Hizbullah and other Syrian-backed interests. This undercuts the
Lebanese government’s ability to exert full control over its
territory.

Corruption also cripples Lebanon. A 2001 United Nation-commission
report estimated that Lebanon loses nearly ten percent of its gross
domestic product to corruption. The Administration for Tenders vetted
and approved less than three percent of the Lebanese government’s
reconstruction and development expenditures. Eighty percent of
Lebanese companies acknowledge paying bribes. Many Lebanese
politicians and Syrian security officials enter into silent
partnerships with Lebanese companies. Security services have arrested
parliamentarians and other Lebanese officials who have questioned or
exposed corruption. While the Syrian military has withdrawn from
Lebanon, Assad’s reliance on Lebanese capital to keep the Syrian
economy afloat suggests that Damascus will continue to intervene to
preserve its own interest at the expense of the Lebanese electorate.

There are remedies. On June 30, 2005, the U.S. Treasury Department
announced its decision to freeze the assets of Kena`an and Ghazali.
Any action to undercut Syrian officials’ business interests erodes
their power. Such targeted sanctions should be applied not only upon
Syrian officials, but also on pro-Syrian Lebanese figures who
accumulated wealth in an illegal manner.

Hizbullah will remain a major impediment to Lebanon’s
democratization. A unified American and European approach is needed.
In a March 15, 2005 interview with Beirut’s Daily Star, a senior
Hizbullah official described the group as both "a resistance group
and political party." Western officials should not accept such
rhetoric. The United Nations certified Israel’s complete withdrawal
from Lebanese territory, Hizbullah’s claims notwithstanding. To
accept the group’s claim to legitimate resistance undercuts the
European Union claim to champion international law and undermines the
moral legitimacy of the United Nations in the region.

The State Department and European foreign ministries should instead
insist that the Lebanese government adhere to Security Council
Resolution 1559’s call for "the disbanding and disarmament of all
Lebanese and non-Lebanese militias." While Hizbullah’s leadership
claims that 1559 does not apply because they define Hizbullah as a
political party and not a militia, such distinctions are
disingenuous. Political parties do not maintain armed wings. Foreign
and Defense policy should be the solitary domain of the Lebanese
central government. While Hizbullah might claim an electoral mandate,
its legitimacy as a force for Lebanese sovereignty ended when it
sponsored a March 8, 2005 rally in Beirut endorsing Syrian
occupation. Its showing is as much an artifact of Syrian
gerrymandering as a sign of true popularity. If Lebanon is to become
a stable, multi-confessional democracy, neither Europe nor the United
States should legitimize Hizbullah.

Assisting Reform

In the wake of the Ta`if Accord, U.S. and European policymakers made
an implied bargain with Damascus: In exchange for stability in
Lebanon, the West would turn a blind eye toward Syrian ambitions in
Lebanon. For fifteen years, the Syrian regime eviscerated Lebanese
institutions in order to better control Lebanese society and exploit
its resources. If Western governments wish to solidify Lebanon’s
transformation, then they need to help Lebanon restore the
transparency of government.

Syrian authorities and their Lebanese proxies eviscerated the
Lebanese judiciary. An October 2004 incident symbolized the
subservience of the judiciary to Syrian intelligence when Lebanese
television broadcast the visit of Ghazali to Marwan Hamade, an
opposition parliamentarian who had just survived an assassination
attempt for which many Lebanese believed the Syrians responsible. The
Lebanese Justice Minister trailed behind Ghazali, symbolically
affiliating himself as the Syrian official’s subordinate.

The European Union has already offered to advise and finance judicial
reform through its Neighborhood Program. Such aid should become a
priority so that Lebanon’s judiciary can begin to tackle the
country’s corruption and abuse-of-power problems.

Both Washington and European foreign ministries should also push for
comprehensive electoral reform. While Lebanon’s confessional system
makes tinkering sensitive, Western diplomats should encourage the
repeal of Syrian-sponsored gerrymandering by, for example, reverting
to the governorate-based system agreed to under the Ta`if Accord.
Western governments might support Lebanese reformers who seek to
allow residency-based rather than ancestry-based voting.

In April 2005, the State Department called for the Syrian government
to establish an embassy in Beirut. This demand should be echoed by
European foreign ministries. The refusal of the Syrian government to
recognize the right of Lebanon to exist as a fully independent state
is a problem that should be directly addressed. Diplomatic
obfuscation will fail. There is precedent. After the Iraqi prime
minister recognized Kuwait in 1963, the international community
claimed diplomatic victory and ignored the Iraqi government’
subsequent refusal to ratify the treaty. Twenty-seven years later,
Iraq revived its claims, declared Kuwait an Iraqi province, and
invaded. Neither the United States nor European Union should for
short-term convenience accept anything less than unambiguous Syrian
recognition of Lebanon’s independence.

In the wake of Hariri’s assassination, the Lebanese people
demonstrated their desire for reform. At great danger to themselves,
they demanded a Syrian withdrawal. While the impetus for democracy
was internal, international community pressure was vital to the
Lebanese freedom movement’s success.

The reverberations of the Cedar Revolution extend beyond Lebanon’s
borders. Lebanon is a trend-setter: Racy Lebanese videos and
television shows promote a vision of openness and worldliness which
competes culturally with the resurgence of political Islam. Ideas
spread across social strata. Lebanon’s greatest export is its people.
Among the greatest advocates for reform in Saudi Arabia, for example,
are Lebanese businessmen, long resident in Jeddah and Riyadh. Their
agitation for democracy makes reform an Arab issue, less easily
dismissed as an import from the West.

While the potential of Lebanese transformation is large, the
withdrawal of Syrian troops is not enough to guarantee success. The
Assad regime has ideological and economic motivations to deny Lebanon
its freedom. If the United States and Europe wish the Cedar
Revolution to succeed, they must work together to undercut Syrian
obstructionism and bolster Lebanese reformers.

Michael Rubin, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise
Institute, is editor of the Middle East Quarterly.

[1] For greater background on the Syrian occupation of Lebanon, see:
William Harris. Faces of Lebanon: Sects, Wars, and Global Extensions
(Princeton: Markus Wiener, 1997), pp. 261-2; and William Harris.
"Bashar al-Assad’s Lebanon Gamble." Middle East Quarterly. Summer
2005. pp.33-44.
[2] Daniel Pipes traces pan-Syrian ideology in Greater Syria: The
History of an Ambition. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1990). He
makes a summary of his argument in "Greater Syria: Another Lion Roars
in the Middle East." The Washington Post. October 21, 1990.
[3] Gary C. Gambill provides excellent analysis on this issue in
various Middle East Intelligence Bulletin articles on the subject
from 1999 and 2000.
[4] Gary Gambill. "Hooked on Lebanon." Middle East Quarterly. Autumn
2005.

http://www.meforum.org/article/781

D’Armenie au Quartier: regards critiques d’artistes

From: "Katia M. Peltekian" <[email protected]>
Subject: D’Armenie au Quartier: regards critiques d’artistes

Le Télégramme
27 janvier 2007 samedi

D’Arménie >» au Quartier : regards critiques d’artistes

Conçue à Erevan, avec le critique d’art Nazareth Karoyan,
l’exposition au Quartier rassemble des artistes arméniens de
générations différentes. Ici plus qu’ailleurs, le développement de la
scène artistique est étroitement lié à une situation politique
particulière.

« Ce qui m’a frappé c’est la manière dont les artistes étaient
polyvalents. Ils n’utilisent pas un mais plusieurs moyens
d’expression », souligne Dominique Abensour, directrice du Quartier,
invitée, dans le cadre de l’année de l’Arménie, à explorer la scène
artistique arménienne. Autres particularités : les `uvres procèdent
toutes, d’actions, d’interventions, d’expériences et les artistes
travaillent de façon très isolée. « L’important était de présenter
une expression artistique qui n’est pas toujours bien vue de la part
du gouvernement mais qui a une existence depuis 10 ou 15 ans »,
souligne, quant à lui, Nazareth Karoyan.

Grigor Katchatrian.

Cet artiste occupe la scène médiatique. Il a articulé son travail
autour d’un véritable culte de sa propre personnalité mais aussi
réalisé des films pour la télévision, au milieu des années 90, et a
donné à ce programme le titre : « Les artistes dirigent le pays ».

Arman Grigorian.

Ce peintre a choisi dans les années 80 la voie du pop art et est un
des fondateurs du mouvement 3 e étage qui rompt avec le conformisme
de l’Union des artistes, structure soviétique centrale. Ses fresques
peintes sur les murs du Quartier sont porteuses de la question de
l’utopie dans l’art. Des nudistes dans le quartier de Little Arménie
à Los Angeles, une Love parade à Beyrouth ou des punks à Gumri, la 2
e ville d’Arménie, sont autant de rêves possibles pour l’artiste qui
privilégie aussi, dans ses vidéos, le texte pour s’attaquer aux lieux
communs.

Mher Azatian.

Son regard d’artiste photographe s’attarde sur la partie abandonnée
de la ville en pleine reconstruction, celle qui n’a pas profité du
libéralisme économique. Il y associe des textes qui sont des mots,
des bribes de conversation capturés dans la rue. Il nous apprend
ainsi à ne pas rester étranger à notre quotidien comme ses lumières
qui représentent l’espoir. « On a vécu une époque où pendant 3-4 ans
on n’a pas eu d’électricité. Quand on la recevait tout le quartier
applaudissait », commente le jeune artiste.

Hamlet Hovsepian.

Vivant en autarcie dans le petit village d’Ashnak, les peintures, les
sculptures ou les performances filmées de l’artiste sont liés au
paysage aride et désertique qui entourent sa maison.

Anna Barseghina et Stefan Kristensen.

Leur projet intitulé « Arménogéographie » consiste à réaliser un état
des lieux de la nation arménienne, à travers les rapports entretenus
par la diaspora avec un territoire mais aussi la mémoire. Une série
de témoignages ont ainsi été recueillis à Paris, Venise, en Syrie ou
au Liban mais aussi dans les villes de l’Arménie occidentales
aujourd’hui situées en Turquie ainsi que des entretiens avec des
artistes, ou des intellectuels comme le journaliste turc d’origine
arménienne qui vient d’être assassiné.

Karem Andreassian.

Il a installé son site Internet dans la bibliothèque du Quartier.
Pour parler de la situation actuelle de l’Arménie, il explore et
transplante dans cet espace virtuel un village, ancien lieu de
villégiature de la nomenclature soviétique, aujourd’hui menacé par
des glissements de terrain.

Exposition « D’Arménie » au centre d’art contemporain, le Quartier
ouvert du mardi au samedi de 10 h à 12 h et de 13 h à à 18 h, le
jeudi jusqu’à 19 h 30 et le dimanche de 14 h à 18 h. Entrée : 1,50
EUR. Entrée libre pour les scolaires, étudiants (moins de 26 ans),
demandeurs d’emplois, passeport pour l’art, seniors (plus de 65 ans),
abonnés Quartier, Gros Plan, Thétre de Cornouaille.