Armenian communists against opposition rallies, back dialogue

Armenian communists against opposition rallies, back dialogue
Noyan Tapan news agency
26 Apr 04

YEREVAN
The United Communist Party of Armenia [UCPA] is calling on all
Armenians to be vigilant and abstain from opposition actions because
domestic political tension is threatening the country’s statehood,
Yuriy Manukyan, first secretary of the central committee of the UCPA,
told a press conference on 26 April.
. Yuriy Manukyan said he did not doubt at all that the opposition is
being guided by the [ex-ruling party] Armenian Pan-National Movement
[APNM], warning people against being deceived again. He said that
following the APNM actions, the country had been destroyed and looted
within a few years. Although under pressure and dissatisfaction
nationwide, the APNM was compelled to leave the [political scene], but
unpunished.
The chairman of the UCPA believes that for the time being, those
forces, using money stolen from the people and generous funds from
several forces from the West, are thirsting for “revenge”, are again
plunging the country into chaos with all ensuing consequences.
Manukyan drew attention to the circumstance that, he believes that
calls and slogans of the opposition were coinciding with anti-Armenian
“nonsense” of mass media and external enemies.
The UCPA considers itself the opposition as it is not fighting against
personalities but the system. According to the united communists, a
power shift will not contribute to the settlement of the problem. To
attain it, the country needs stability in the first place.
In order to overcome the domestic tension, the UCPA advises the
opposition to abstain from issuing “ultimatums” and to agree to
dialogue, as political debate creates opportunities to reach the
truth.
The UCPA statement was also supported by the Hayrenik (Motherland) and
Women of Armenian Land parties at the press conference.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Azeri leader off to Warsaw for EU enlargement summit

Azeri leader off to Warsaw for European Union enlargement summit
ANS Radio, Baku
27 Apr 04
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev left for Warsaw today to attend the
European Economic Summit. The summit will discuss tasks of the current
EU members and new member countries and the situation in the South
Caucasus. Let us recall that the presidents and prime ministers of all
European countries are expected to attend the summit.
Ilham Aliyev will address the summit on two subjects: Azerbaijan’s
economic development and its successes and the situation in the South
Caucasus. Aliyev will also focus on the Nagornyy Karabakh problem and
its solution. Aliyev will have tete-a-tete meetings with the Polish
and Georgian presidents. The Azerbaijani president is also expected to
meet his Armenian counterpart Robert Kocharyan.
On 29 April from Warsaw President Aliyev will travel on to Strasbourg
to attend a spring session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Iran releases some Azeris detained over clashes with Armenians

Iran releases some ethnic Azeris detained over clashes with Armenians – TV
ANS TV, Baku
26 Apr 04

[Presenter] Some of our compatriots arrested over clashes in Tehran
between Iran’s Azeris and Armenians, who protested against the 1915
events in Turkey, have already been set free.
[Correspondent, over Iranian footage] Some Azeris arrested after the
Azeri-Armenian clashes in Iran have been released on bail. Ethnic
Azeris had spoken about their plans to stage protest actions outside
international organizations if the detainees were not released. The
correspondent of the Iranian TV channel Sahar-2, Novruz Purmand,
confirmed the report.
[Novruz Purmand, in Azeri] Policemen have so far been investigating
the case in which both Armenians and Azeris were involved. They had a
row. Both sides claim that some of their people were injured in the
clashes. I talked to relatives of those injured today. The policemen
are investigating the case. The injuries are not serious. The
investigation is under way.
[Passage omitted: reported details]
According to the Congress of Azerbaijanis of the World, some members
of the Azerbaijani political committee [as heard] were also
arrested. The congress sent a letter to Iranian officials today
demanding that our compatriots be immediately released and that the
Armenians, who provoked the clashes and injured our compatriots, be
immediately brought to book. The aide to the Azerbaijani ambassador to
Iran, Cavansir Vakiloglu, said that he had found out about this from
local journalists. He added he had no information about those injured
or jailed.
[Vakiloglu, on the phone] We do not have this kind of information. The
duty of the Azerbaijani embassy here is to represent our country’s
policies abroad and to implement the foreign policy tasks set by our
president. We cannot interfere in the internal affairs of our close
neighbour Iran or any other country.
[Correspondent, over video] The Iranian ambassador to Azerbaijan told
ANS that he learnt about the case from the Azerbaijani media. Ahad
Q’azai did not think that the incident was serious. Therefore he had
not got in touch with Tehran to familiarize himself with the
situation.
Leyla Hasanova, ANS.

Parliament approves bill on mass rallies in second reading

ArmenPress
April 27 2004
PARLIAMENT APPROVES BILL ON MASS RALLIES IN SECOND READING
YEREVAN, APRIL 27, ARMENPRESS: By a vote of 79 to 2 with no
abstentions the parliament approved today in the second reading a
government-developed bill “On procedures for holding meetings,
rallies, marches and demonstrations.” Presenting the bill on Monday
justice minister David Harutunian said that the government had taken
into account most of the proposals received from international
organizations. In particular, the minister said, about 90 per cent of
the notes made by the OSCE office in Yerevan were taken into
consideration while preparing the bill for the second reading.
However, on 22 April, the special representative of the
secretary-general of the Council of Europe, Natalya Vutova, said that
the bill “On procedures for holding meetings, rallies, marches and
demonstrations” adopted by the Armenian National Assembly in the
first reading did not correspond to Article 11 of the European
convention on freedom of assembly. Vutova said this referring to the
preliminary conclusion by the Council of Europe Venice Commission.
The parliament also approved in the first reading a bill on making
changes to the criminal code, which are supposed to eliminate a chain
of technical shortcomings and omissions. The bill invalidates,
particularly, a provision of the code which stipulated that convicts
sentenced to life imprisonment for grave crimes did not have the
right to seek pre-term release.

Retail prices of potato, cabbage and grape are down

ArmenPress
April 27 2004
RETAIL PRICES OF POTATO, CABBAGE AND GRAPE ARE DOWN
YEREVAN, APRIL 27, ARMENPRESS: According to Agri-Business
Development Center, retail prices of cabbage, potatoes, grape,
tomatoes are down, prices of flour, barley, wheat, onion, beef and
pork are up and prices of butter, sugar did not change as compared to
the same period last month.
The market price for one kg of pork a year ago was 1200-1300 drams
while its present average price is 1860 drams. Beef is sold at 1400
(2003 – 1200 drams). The present price of poultry is 1200 drams
against 1000 drams in 2003. Egg was sold at 44 drams a year ago,
while in January it increased to 55 and at present is sold at 58
drams.
Potatoes were sold in 2003, April at 200 drams per kilogram while
in January it reduced to 140 and its present price is 80-100 drams.
Last year cucumber was sold at 800 drams while this year it is 500
drams. Average price for apple is 400 drams. It increased by 100
drams as compared to the same period last year.
The highest prices can be observed at Mashtotc avenue market
number 1 and the lowest prices at Malatia market number 4 and in the
markets of Gyumri and Spitak.

Satellite imagery finds extraordinary object on Mount Ararat

ArmenPress
April 27 2004
SATELLITE IMAGERY FINDS EXTRAORDINARY OBJECT ON MOUNT ARARAT
WASHINGTON, APRIL 27, ARMENPRESS: The US Trinity Corporation
announced Monday that they have collected new satellite images taken
over Mount Ararat in Eastern Turkey that will add a new twist to an
exploration that has been going on for centuries, AP reported. The
images, which were revealed at a press conference at the National
Press Club in Washington, DC, reveal a man- made structure at the
site where the Bible states Noah’s Ark came to rest.
The first pictures of the site, taken by the U.S. Air Force in
1949, revealed what seemed to be a structure covered by ice, but were
held in a confidential file labeled “Ararat Anomaly” for years. In
1997, the government released several of these images, but experts
deemed them inconclusive.
The summer of 2003 provided a great opportunity to take a new
series of photographs. It was the hottest summer in Europe since
1500, which caused a massive meltdown on Mount Ararat. Daniel P.
McGivern, president of Shamrock – The Trinity Corporation, who had
been searching for the Ark via satellite for several years, used
Digital Globe’s Quick Bird satellite to collect a new set of
satellite images. Quick Bird is the world’s highest resolution
commercial imaging satellite.
Mr. McGivern has compiled a team of scientists, archaeologists and
forensic experts to excavate the object and collect samples beginning
in August of this year. The goal is o enter what they believe to be a
mammoth structure some 45 feet high, 75 feet wide and up to 450 feet
long that was exposed in part by last summer’s heat wave in Europe.
“We are not excavating it. We are not taking any artifacts. We’re
going to photograph it and, God willing, you’re all going to see it,”
McGivern said.
“These new photos unequivocally show a man-made object,” said Mr.
McGivern. “I am convinced that the excavation of the object and the
results of tests run on any collected samples will prove that it is
Noah’s Ark.” The field manager for the excavation will be Dr. Ahmet
Ali Arslan, a native of Turkey who has traveled up Mount Ararat 50
times in 40 years and formerly worked in the Turkey Prime Minister’s
office. He plans to discuss the details of the excavation with the
Prime Minister next week.
In 1957, Turkish air force pilots spotted a boat-shaped formation
in Agri province. The government did not pursue the sighting,
however. The entire area, including Mount Ararat, was off limits to
foreigners because of Soviet complaints that explorers were U.S.
spies.
That ban was lifted in 1982, and since then teams of explorers
have visited the area but have been unable to substantiate any claim
of an ark. McGivern and Ahmet Ali Arslan, say satellite photos have
helped them pinpoint a more exact location.
The biblical account in the Book of Genesis says that after the
great deluge, the ark came to rest on the mountain with Noah’s family
and a cargo of male and female pairs of every kind of animal.
Geologists say even though there is evidence of a flood in
Mesopotamia in Sumerian times, it is not possible for a ship to make
landfall at an altitude as high as Mount Ararat.

When family history has to be downloaded

When family history has to be downloaded
Chance discovery of a photo on the Internet connects one Armenian to a
painful past
By Houry Mayissian
Special to The Daily Star
Saturday, April 24, 2004
I waited impatiently for the picture that was loading, bit by bit, on
my screen. I felt that it would be a small piece of a big, unsolved
puzzle – my family’s history. After a couple of moments of waiting,
the picture loaded. There they were: My great-grandmother,Aznive
Pootchigian at the age of five, with three of her family members in
Kharpert, Western Armenia, or what is now called Turkey.
The internet is amazing when it comes to the amount of information it
can supply. But I never thought I would find a picture of my
great-grandmother taken in 1912 in her hometown, a couple of years
before it was raided by the Turks.
I sat in front of my computer, unable to move, and examined the
picture -the people in it, the background, the caption – like an
antique. The picture seemed to be taken in a garden with big trees
appearing in the background. All four people carried an object I
couldn’t identify: Something like a plant or flower, but yet seems to
be made up of cloth. My great-grandmother was the youngest in the
picture. She wore a long dress with small flowers on it. Even though
all four of them seemed to look straight into the camera at the time
the picture was taken, my great-grandmother’s look was much more
serious, much more “direct” than the others. It seemed as though she
was looking at me, right into my eyes, rather than at the camera. She
didn’t smile; she didn’t look sad; she just looked serious.
I kept thinking about the strange coincidence that had led me to her
picture. I was using the “Google” search engine to look for Armenian
music. I noticed the family name “Pootchigian” in the description of
one of the Web sites. I had heard from my grandmother that my
great-grandmother’s maiden name was Pootchigian. I also knew that I
had relatives by that name in the United States, but that contact
between our families had long since been lost.
I immediately clicked on the link that transported me to the Web site
of the Pootchigian family currently residing in the States. A whole
“new world” opened in front of me: Pictures, old and new, historic
data, a family tree, in which my mother, father and even big brother
were included. My name wasn’t there, though. Contact between the
families had probably been lost before I was born.
I knew bits of facts about how part of my great-grandmother’s family
had escaped to the US, how she had survived the Armenian genocide. But
I didn’t know all the details. Suddenly I felt the urge to have the
whole story laid out before me like the picture I was looking at.
I printed out the photo and took it to my grandmother. I didn’t know
whether she would recognize her mother at the age of five. The moment
she looked at the picture, however, tears started to come to her eyes.
“Oh my God … It’s my mom,” she exclaimed with a faint voice that
seemed to be suffocated by her tears. I had never seen my grandmother
in such a “lost” state. Her eyes were filled with pain, longing and
confusion. The rosy color of her fleshy cheeks disappeared behind her
tears.
“My uncle and his children live in the States. He has many
grandchildren as well. My mom used to say that my uncle migrated to
the States to work before the massacres started. She had another
brother who was hanged by the Turks.” And so my grandmother started
the story. A story every Armenian family has – one which brings tears
to the eyes of any listener, one which makes people wonder about how
savage humans can be.
My great-grandmother was seven years old when the Armenian genocide
started. It took the lives of more than 1.5 million Armenians and
deprived the rest of their homeland. During the years 1915-1918, amid
the confusion of World War I, the Young Turks carried out the
deliberate deportation and massacre of the entire Armenian population
of the Ottoman Empire. Most of them were massacred along the
road. Those who survived scattered across the globe. Almost nine
decades have passed, but the realization of being descendants of
genocide survivors remains firm in the minds of new Armenian
generations.
My great grandmother was deported with her mother and her two aunts,
like all the Armenians living in Kharpert.
“They spent days walking under the sun, barefoot, without food, water
or proper clothes, stripped of their dignity, stolen of their
possessions,” continued my grandmother.
My great-grandmother had been separated from her mother in Diyarbekir,
somewhere along the endless journey. She was adopted by a Turk and
never saw her mother after that.
“She used to repeat the story over and over again. She remembered the
smell of death lingering in the air, the sight of mutilated corpses on
the sides of the roads they passed by, the savage treatment meted out
by the Turk gendarmes to those who were no longer able to continue
walking, the hunger, the thirst, the rapes, everything. Despite that,
however, despite all the things that terrorized her, as a child at
least she felt secure that her mother was with her to hold her hand,
to carry her, to cover her eyes when necessary. A while later,
however, she lost even that.”
My great-grandmother was raised by the man who adopted her into his
family.”She used to tell me that she secretly kept an Armenian book
from her school books with her. She used to read it secretly when she
had time alone so she wouldn’t forget her mother tongue,” my
grandmother said. With the help of an Armenian lady, my grandmother
was married at the age of 14 to an Armenian. Later, they moved from
Diyarbekir to Aleppo and then Beirut.
After I heard the story, I went back to the Web site to see the
pictures of the relatives I never knew about. The Pootchigians are now
a well-known family in California. One of them, Chuck Pootchigian, is
a member of the State Senate.
Yet the most important thing for me remained the picture. As I looked
at it, I wondered what they knew. Did they have a clue that they would
be victims of such a great crime? Probably not. But I know, and my
children will. So will all the new generations of young Armenians. And
so will the world, despite the ongoing denial by Turkey and the
failure by the international community to properly condemn this crime
against humanity.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Warsaw: Kwasniewski meets president of Azerbaijan

Polish Press Agency
PAP News Wire
April 27, 2004 Tuesday
Kwasniewski meets president of Azerbaijan
Warsaw
President Aleksander Kwasniewski and the visiting President Ilham
Aliev of Azerbaijan discussed the situation in the Caucasus region,
fight against terrorism and bilateral relations in Warsaw Tuesday.
Andrzej Majkowski, head of the presidential International Affairs
Office told PAP that the two presidents discussed the present state of
talks between Azerbaijan and Armenia concerning Nagorno Karabakh.
The European Economic Summit staring Wednesday will provide an
opportunity to hold a bilateral meeting of Aliev with President Robert
Kocharian of Armenia.
In his talks with Kwasniewski Aliev confirmed that the Armenian
contingent of 150 men will stay in Iraq, and expressed readiness to
continue to participate actively in the fight against terrorism,
according to Majkowski.
The Polish president declared that Poland as a European Union member
will strive to continue to develop relations with the Caucasus region
countries.

NKR agriculture: Achievements, problems, prospects

Azat Artsakh – Republic of Nagorno Karabakh (NKR)
April 27, 2004
AGRICULTURE: ACHIEVEMENTS, PROBLEMS, PROSPECTS
Declaring its independence and winning the war, the Republic of
Nagorni Karabakh faced another difficult problem: restoration of the
economy of the country adjusting it to the rules of the market
relationships and achieving tangible results in improving the quality
of life of the population. DATA ON NEAR PAST: in the Soviet years the
autonomous region of Nagorni Karabakh was a rather developed agrarian
region, which supplied raw material. It was developed to such a level
that was the main supplier of grapes, meat and dairy products to
Azerbaijan, naturally with a large net of factories of fabrication of
wine, meat and dairy products. The following are data provided by the
NKR Ministry of Agriculture. The highest rate of productivity of
vineyards was reported in 1980 and 1984: 123.2 and 121.2 centners per
hectare (total volume of harvest was 137 981 tons from 10 954
hectares; 164 227 tons from 13 600 hectares). The harvest was good in
1981-1982 as well (116.4 and 113.8 centners per hectare); in 1976,
1977, 1979 respectively 104.1, 104.8 and 103.4 centners per hectare.
In the postwar years the highest rate of productivity was reported in
2000: 42.4 centners per hectare. According to the data of the NKR
Ministry of Agriculture, in 1985 only through artificial insemination
97 500 head livestock, 282 100 sheep, 93 600 pigs, 575 000 poultry
were bred. Against 1985 in 1993 the number of cattle livestock reduced
by 72 percent, sheep 92 percent, pigs 92 percent; the amount of
poultry and beehives also reduced steeply. In the same period the
production of meat dropped 6.7 times, milk 6.4 times, eggs 83 times.
The situation was comparatively better in the sphere of grain
production. The success of the past two years are almost close to the
highest rates of the last years of the Soviet Union; in 2003 about
85.2 thousand tons of grain was produced in the republic (the
productivity per hectare was 21.2 centners), and in 1988 107.8
thousand tons was produced (productivity per hectare was 27.3
centners). For the government of the newly established republic it was
clear that the development of the country’s economy should be related
to the development of agriculture. The ministry of agriculture was
established on the very first days and was meant to work out strategic
and tactical programs of development of agriculture. LAND FOR THE
FARMERS: The privatization of land was the first strategic
agricultural problem in NKR. And again the same problem occurred: is
the farmer able to work the land alone or is it better to do it
cooperatively? The problems, which occurred in the process of
privatization, were and are discussed in the newspapers. In this
article we wish to speak about the success achieved in the past ten
years. To know what the possibilities the agricultural ministry are to
support the farmer and which branches of agriculture will become
priority, we talked to the NKR minister of agriculture Benik
Bakhshiyan. PRIVATIZATION WITHOUT CONSIDERATION OF THE LEVEL OF
DEVELOPMENT OF THE REGION IS AN OBSTACLE FOR THE NKR AGRICULTURE:
According to the NKR minister of agriculture Benik Bakhshiyan,
privatization of land in Artsakh without the consideration of the
level of development of the region has become an obstacle for the
development of the country’s agriculture. The situation is that land
privatization in Artsakh, as well as in entire Armenia, according to
the minister, was carried out according to the model of Ararat
valley. This region noted for developed viticulture, vegetable
orcharding, with a large irrigation system (confer irrigated land of
Karabakh total 5 percent of the farming land), and what is more
important, the large consumption market of agricultural products
capital city Yerevan is near. In Artsakh there is no efficient system
of irrigation channels, processing factories, in other words
conditions for formation of stable market. According to the minister,
it will take Karabakh time to reach the level of Ararat valley. “It
was not sufficiently studied whether this model of privatization could
be used in Karabakh. In Soviet years we had well-developed complex
cattle breeding. During the war and in the postwar years the situation
changed. If in those times 90 and more percent of products of cattle
breeding was put to market, now despite the absence of statistical
data, production of cattle-breeding products does not exceed 50
percent. Today there are 50 thousand head of cattle. However, almost
there is no production of fodder. And to develop cattle breeding it is
necessary to establish production of at least 30 percent at
home. Mountain sides with growing perennial plants supplied fodder at
the same time preventing erosion of land. Now these lands are
seriously endangered as every year these lands are put under crop. And
all this is the consequence of wrong privatization plan.” “KARABAKH
PEOPLE ARE HARD-WORKING AS ALL THE ARMENIANS”: There is an opinion
that the people of Karabakh are lazy. Therefore, there is an opinion
that there is no local production in the market. According to the
minister, this opinion is wrong. “Simply our market has not been
accomplished yet because of the lack of processing factories. The
farmers in Armenia sell 90 percent of their production at a low price
to the food factories and the remaining 10 percent sell at higher
prices in the market. As the Karabakh farmer does not have the
opportunity of large consumer market, he is compelled to produce as
much as there is demand in the market. And investing labour for a
small amount of production is not profitable. As soon as we do not
have production of tomato paste, local tomatoes will not be cheaper
from the tomatoes imported from Armenia. This year 7000 tons of grapes
was produced. This cannot be consumed by the population, but as there
is already production of vodka and wine, almost the entire harvest is
sold to the factory.” In reference to the question of opening food
factories the minister said, “The government is not to take such steps
but through legislation, finance, loaning and tax policies it favours
development of such productions. There are already facts: factories of
wine, vodka, dairy products, canned food, flour operate in the
republic. Although the volumes are not big.” CONSOLIDATION OF FARMS
WILL SOON OR LATE START IN KARABAKH: This is the opinion of the
minister of agriculture. According to him, production of grain has
moved to vast territories of liberated regions. This was not done in a
regulated manner. According to the minister, it would be better for
the landowners to unite in partnerships and become
shareholders. Although, on the other hand, the possibilities of each
of them should not be restricted. In this self-organization of private
farms the minister ascribes a core function to the local
governments. According to him, a guarantee for development of
agriculture is, in his opinion, cooperation of small farmers in larger
organizations with the principle of common interests. PROGRESS IS
RATHER QUANTITATIVE THAN QUALITATIVE: People are often heard saying
that there are no few small and big rivers in Karabakh but the harvest
of grain suffered from drought. According to the data of the NKR
Ministry of Agriculture the irrigated land totals 5 percent of farming
land in the republic. What does the government undertake to expand
irrigated farming land, to aid the farmer and generally to promote the
development of agriculture? In answer the minister of agriculture
said, “for developing the irrigation system of channels large
investments are required. The financial situation of our country does
not enable us to solve such problems. Nevertheless, the authorities
do everything possible to have as much land irrigated as possible. In
the past ten years the government funded the construction of the
channels Khachen-Martakert and Khachen -Khramort, repaired old
channels and artesian springs. Certain privileges were granted to
those who use land irrigated with artesian waters (14 drams for
electric power instead 25 drams). Investments are made in the sphere
of cattle breeding and protection of plants. Loans are granted in
almost all the branches of agriculture, especially for the development
of wine-growing. In the past two years the Foundation for Small and
Medium-size Business attached to the government was established which
allows to regulate the procedure of loaning. As distinct from the
previous years the foundation (for subjective and objective reasons
from 1998-2000 there remains 1.2 US dollars of loans to be repaid)
provides the loans through the bank, which allows controlling the
procedure of their repayment. By the way, the bank gives preference to
those who have the opportunity of mortgaging. It should be mentioned
that all these actions favoured the growth of gross agricultural
output. Nevertheless, the progress in the sphere of agriculture is
rather quantitative than qualitative. Although in the last years
there was also qualitative progress. I mean in the sphere of
consolidation of agricultural product producers, development of
wine-growing, acquirement of new agricultural machinery without which
it is not possible to expect serious progress in agriculture.”
SUSANNA BALAYAN

Announcement of the NKR government

Azat Artsakh – Republic of Nagorno Karabakh (NKR)
April 27, 2004
ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE NKR GOVERNMENT
Against the background of the recent home political developments in
the capital of the republic of Armenia certain political forces and
mass media serving them try to achieve their selfish ends through
arousing adversities between the different parts of our nation. The
NKR government refuses the manipulation of the factor of Karabakh in
the home political struggle of Armenia and is of the opinion that all
those who speak with the people in that language, “play into the hands
of the enemy”. The evidence to this is that the false rumours
circulated by the same politicians and mass media immediately spread
in the Azerbaijani mass media. In particular, the rumours that the
subdivisions of the NKR police forces led by the head of the Police
Armen Isagulov allegedly participated in the April 13 events in
Yerevan, in Baghramian Street. The NKR government states that the
mentioned rumours have nothing to do with the reality and are spread
deliberately. None of the subdivisions of the NKR police left the
territory of the republic, and the entire personnel including the head
of the police continue to function in normal order. The NKR government
considers such libeling manipulations aimed at dividing the nation
unacceptable and addresses all the political forces and
representatives of the mass media to abstain from circulation of
unverified information, which may obstruct the settlement of national
problems.
AA