ASBAREZ Online [07-18-2005]

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07/18/2005
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1) Putin, Erdogan Discuss Regional Stability from Caucasus to Cyprus
2) Cypriots Warn against Rapprochement between Unrecognized Northern Cyprus
and
Azerbaijan
3) Yerkir Media Recognized for Political Analysis, Freedom of Speech Efforts
4)Armenia’s Main Cellphone Network Paralyzed
5) Armenian Soccer Team in European Championships

1) Putin, Erdogan Discuss Regional Stability from Caucasus to Cyprus

SOCHI (RIA Novosti)–Russian President Vladimir Putin and Turkish Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan discussed stability in the Caucasus, the
situation in Iraq and Iran, and the Cyprus problem. “We focused on the
issue of
strengthening stability in the Caucasus and the Black Sea basin,” Putin said,
at a press conference in Sochi after talks with the Turkish Prime Minister.
Putin gave assurances that Russia would continue to help resolve the Cyprus
problem. “We are absolutely convinced that the UN Secretary General is moving
in the right direction,” he said.
Putin also said everyone knows how the situation is developing on Cyprus.
“First, we must resolve the problem of the economic isolation of a part of the
island, create conditions for normal relations between the two parts, and on
this basis fully normalize the situation in the interests of all people living
there,” he said.
“We will think about what can be done by Russia and the island’s two parts to
resolve these issues,” the Russian president said.
Putin and Erdogan said it was necessary to address the conflict over
Mountainous Karabagh.
“I was satisfied to hear the Russian position that it was time to start
settling the Nagorno-Karabagh conflict,” Erdogan said.
He added that he and Putin also discussed the situation in Iraq, Iran, and
anti-terrorism efforts.
“We expressed once again our resolve to fight international terrorists, who
are carrying out attacks against innocent people, defenseless women, and
children,” Erdogan said.

2) Cypriots Warn against Rapprochement between Unrecognized Northern Cyprus
and
Azerbaijan

ISTANBUL (Combined Sources)The government of Cyprus said that direct flight
between Nicosia and the capital of Mountainous Karabagh Republic (MKR)
would be
established if Azerbaijan does not abandon plans to forge tight relations with
Turkish Republic of Northern Republic (TRNC).
Turkish prime minister Recep Erdogan said last month that Turkey was ready to
do everything possible “to help it [Northern Cyprus] surmount its
international
isolation,” saying a direct flight between Baku and the unrecognized republic
could be the first move.
A prive Azeri airline Imair announced last week it would begin regular
flights
to Turkish-occupied northern Cyprus, becoming the first non-Turkish carrier to
fly direct to the internationally isolated enclave.
Last month Azerbaijan became the second state, after Turkey, to recognize
Turkish Cypriot passport.
Most of Azerbaijan’s eight million population are of Turkic origin, and the
country has very close cultural and political ties with Ankara.

Azeri Delegation in Turkish Cyprus
The first official delegation from Azerbaijan to visit the Turkish Northern
Cyprus arrived in Lefkosa over the weekend to take part in ceremonies marking
Peace and Freedom Day on July 20.
Erdogan said that the visit signifies de facto recognition of the Turkish
Cypriot state.
The eight-person delegation, six of whom are deputies of the Azeri
parliament,
were met by Turkish Cypriot officials at Ercan Airport.
The delegation will be holding discussions with TRNC officials, with a second
delegation scheduled to arrive soon that will be holding talks with Turkish
Cypriot businessmen. Trade issues are also listed to be discussed during a
visit by a third Azeri delegation between July 28 and 31.

3) Yerkir Media Recognized for Political Analysis, Freedom of Speech Efforts

Yerkir Media TV Company clenched two prizes on Monday, at an annual awards
ceremony marking the 10th anniversary of the Yerevan Press Club. Yerkir Media
was recognized for providing outstanding political analysis as well as its
efforts to promote freedom of speech.
The Yerevan Press Club is a non-governmental, non-profit organization, that
aims to create conditions to promote the development of free and responsible
media in Armenia.
Its Chairman Boris Navasardian stressed during the awards that though
Armenia’s mass media has made significant progress in the last decade,
self-censorship still remains a problem.
Navasardian went on to praise journalists for “their readiness to rally in
support of specific issues and fight for their rights.”
He said there still remains a great deal to accomplish in order to help
universities prepare journalists who meet western-style reporting and writing
standards.

4)Armenia’s Main Cellphone Network Paralyzed

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)–Armenia’s Greek-owned telecommunications monopoly claimed on
Monday to have so far failed to fully determine the cause of an almost
three-week mysterious paralysis of its wireless network which has left
hundreds
of thousands of mobile phone users fuming.
The Armenian government, meanwhile, appeared to be losing patience with
ArmenTel’s inability to remedy the situation quickly, with officials speaking
of “sanctions” that could be imposed on the deeply unpopular operator.
The network’s sudden collapse began on July 1, coinciding with the
long-awaited launch of Armenia’s second wireless system, VivaCell. ArmenTel
promptly flew in telecom engineers from Greece and Germany to inspect its
facilities but has still not provided a full and clear explanation for the
breakdown.
ArmenTel’s Thursday statement cited a “flurry of phone calls” which it said
followed a steep reduction of phone tariffs effective from July 1 and put the
network under greater strain. The statement urged the increasingly furious
subscribers to use their handsets more sparingly.
Critics say ArmenTel, which is owned by Greece’s OTE telecom giant, is paying
the price of its gross underinvestment in mobile telephony that has left
Armenia lagging behind neighboring Azerbaijan and Georgia where the service
has
been more affordable and of higher quality.
The Armenian government demanded official explanations from ArmenTel earlier
this month and assured the public that everything is done to get the cellphone
back into shape. Transport and Communications Minister Andranik Manukian
announced on Thursday that the problem will be solved within days.
“It’s hard for me to speak about this,” Manukian said on Monday with a sigh.
“I am now in an awkward situation. I [wrongly] stated that the situation
improved and the crisis is coming to an end.”
The quality of mobile phone service provided by ArmenTel left much to be
desired even before the unprecedented network failure. It was the main reason
why the government decided to partly open the sector to competition last
year.
Exclusive rights to all forms of telecommunication were a key term of
ArmenTel’s 1998 sale to OTE, one of Europe’s largest telecom firms. Some
former
government officials who helped to negotiate the $200 million deal later
admitted that granting the Greeks the monopoly was a serious mistake.

5) Armenian Soccer Team in European Championships

IRELAND–Armenia lost 2-0 to Norway on Monday at the UEFA Under-19 European
Championships underway in Northern Ireland.
It is the first time Armenia is participating in the Semi-Finals of these
championships, and will play England on Wednesday.
Team coach Samvel Petrosian said that his team participation in the final of
the European Football Championship is a great honor and a new experience.
“It is a great football challenge for the small nation we are,” he said.
Group A matches resulted in a 4-2 win for Serbia & Montenegro over Germany,
while Northern Ireland lost 0-1 to Greece. In Group B, France and England drew
1-1. Armenia is playing in Group B.

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Une semaine d’entretiens avec Charles Aznavour sur France Culture

Une semaine d’entretiens avec Charles Aznavour sur France Culture

Agence France Presse
17 juillet 2005 dimanche 8:52 AM GMT

PARIS 17 juil 2005 — France Culture diffusera à partir de lundi,
pendant une semaine, une série d’entretiens avec Charles Aznavour,
alors que sort sur les écrans la comédie “Emmenez-moi” d’Edouard
Bensimon, sur le culte exclusif voué au chanteur par un brave type
(Gérard Darmon).

Hélène Hazera a interviewé à Paris le chanteur, auteur, musicien et
acteur, actuellement l’interprète français de chansons le plus connu
dans le monde.

Durant ces entretiens, diffusés de 17h00 à 17h30, Charles Aznavour
raconte comment le massacre des Arméniens en 1917, a poussé sa famille
à fuir la Turquie (18 juillet). Il évoque aussi le “ghetto de gaieté”
dans lequel a vécu sa famille engagée dans les sociétés culturelles
d’Arméniens de Paris et la personnalité de Mischak Manouchian et son
réseau de résistance pendant la deuxième guerre mondiale (19 juillet).

Dans les émissions suivantes, le chanteur se remémore sa formation
de comédien (20 juillet), sa vie d’auteur (21 juillet) et se révèle
aussi curieux des jeunes générations de chanteurs (22 juillet).

–Boundary_(ID_LpaaqV8VKAnTIXJTZiGIBQ)–

Women Build with Habitat for Humanity Armenia

For immediate release
July 18, 2005

Contact at HFH Armenia:
Haykuhi Khachatryan
Aygestan 8-th str, h 5,
Yerevan-025, Armenia
Tel: (374 10) 556-114
e-mail: [email protected]

Women Build Event is becoming an annual tradition for HFH Armenia.

This year on July 6 -12 a group of women from different part of
Europe joined to Habitat for Humanity Armenia in Vayots Dzor region,
in the village of Aghavnadzor in the context within the “Women Build”
program. Habitat for Humanity Armenia started its activities in this
village this summer and five families from this village were selected
to be HFH Armenia’s beneficiaries.

Emma Pearson from UK, Jeanne Nicolay and Rozen Clech from France,
Laura Ferent from Romania passed hundreds of miles to help those in
need to build simple, decent homes in Armenia.

For the families especially for mothers, who spent most part of their
life in shacks, it is very important to receive this support and care
and build secure homes and lives for their children.

On July 13 to join the “Women Build” events came together several high
ranking women from Vayots Dzor region including regional governor’s
wife, local non profit organizations’ presidents and also HFH Armenia
local women volunteers.

These days were full of experience for all the women who took part
in these building events.

The Women group from Europe and Armenian women shared their perspective
of life and their way of living in different parts of world which
was part of cultural program for Women Build.

Women Built event is a great opportunity to gather female together
for understanding the needs and finding ways to light-heartening
mothers lives. Construction is not only men’s job but also women can
do it as well and help communities. The team worked hard laying the
isolation level and the concrete for the floors of Hovhannisian’s
house. The presence of this women team inspired the whole community
to take part in the building activities: all selected families from
Aghavanadzor, neighbors, local youth group from school, local governor
and PC volunteers.

Such events are aimed to encourage the involvement of women in the
construction of Habitat homes once more. Women Build challenges and
empowers women to build safe, healthy housing where children can
flourish and grow to be all that they can be. We hope this tradition
is going to be enduring in Habitat for Humanity Armenia’s program by
the Women Build project.

“It will remain alive in my heart for a very long time and I hope to
repeat it very soon! “- said Rozenn Clech, “Women Build” team member.

HFH Armenia appreciates all the women who crossed so many miles to be
next to our families to encourage them believe in life again and also
who helped to realize “Women Build” event in Armenia this year too.

To schedule an interview please email Haykuhi Khachatryan,
Communication Coordinator for Habitat for Humanity Armenia
[email protected]. See for more information.

Founded in 1976, Habitat for Humanity International is a
non-denominational Christian, non-governmental, non-profit housing
organization that has helped more than 1000,000 people of all races,
religions and backgrounds to have a simple, decent and affordable place
to live. Habitat for Humanity becomes a global leader in addressing
poverty housing. Habitat for Humanity is active in 100 countries
worldwide, including 19 in Europe and Central Asia.

THE END

www.hfharmenia.org

ANKARA: Erdogan’s Adviser Bagis Sends Letter To U.S. Legislators

Erdogan’s Adviser Bagis Sends Letter To U.S. Legislators

Turkish Press
July 17 2005

ANKARA – Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s foreign policy
adviser Egemen Bagis has sent a letter to members of the U.S. House
of Representatives.

In his letter, Bagis stressed that good relations with the United
States constituted as a basic principle of Turkey’s foreign policy.

Noting that as allies and partners, Turkey and the United States had a
long-standing and robust strategic cooperation on regional and global
issues, Bagis wrote, “our cooperation is driven by our shared vision
and by our joint interests, based on deep-rooted common values.”

Bagis indicated, “given the current regional and global challenges,
Turkish-US relations are more important than ever. Our relations are
based on strong foundations and we are mutually determined against
multi-dimensional threats.”

The letter continues, “as Chairman of the Turkish-U.S. Inter
Parliamentarian Friendship Caucus of the Turkish Grand National
Assembly, it is my duty to uphold the strong ties between our
countries. Similarly, it is my responsibility to act against threats
that may hurt our relations, disrupt our friendly ties and that may
unnecessarily enrage the Turkish public opinion against our good
ally, the USA. It is with this sense of duty that I am addressing
this letter to you on a matter which is of great sensitivity to the
Turkish people and of importance to our relations.”

“We understand some members of the U.S. Congress have submitted
two similar draft resolutions. (H. Res. 316 introduced on June 14,
2005 and H. Res. 195 introduced on June 29, 2005) This has caused
great disappointment and concern in Turkey. The draft resolutions as
they stand contain misinformation, baseless allegations, and false
accusations against my country,” wrote Bagis in his letter.

-“TERRIBLE POLITICAL MISCALCULATIONS”

Bagis indicated, “it also misrepresents a controversial chapter
of Turkish-Armenian relations at a time when our government, led by
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is taking positive steps towards
our neighbor Armenia. Tragic events of 1915 were triggered by a
terrible political miscalculation of the Armenian citizens of the
Ottoman Empire. Encouraged by the Czarist Russia’s imperial policy of
capturing Anatolia and reaching the warm waters of the Mediterranean,
Ottoman Armenians allowed themselves to serve as the fifth column
of Russia in Turkey. As a result they rebelled against the central
government, triggered a civil war and paid a terrible price.”

-BUSH ALSO SUPPORTS ERDOGAN’S PROPOSAL”

Bagis went on saying, “the events of 1915 cannot be labeled as
‘genocide’. Primarily, such a liberal usage of this terrible word is
an insult to Holocaust, which is the gravest crime against humanity.
Turkey has always maintained that parliaments and other political
fora are the most inappropriate venues to discuss and pass judgments
on controversial historic periods. History is a discipline that
should be left to the historians. In order to shed light on this
controversial historic issue, the Turkish Government has opened
all its archives to researchers. Furthermore, Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan has proposed the establishment of a study group of
Turkish and Armenian historians to work study together on the events
of 1915. The proposal not only covers the archives of Turkey and
Armenia but also requires unbiased research in the archives of all
relevant countries, including Russia. Then the plan is to share the
conclusions with the international public. Prime Minister Erdogan’s
proposal was much appreciated and supported by President Bush.”

“Genocide is the most vicious crime against humanity. Accusing a
nation with genocide is a very serious act. Any such act comes with a
responsibility to prove such an accusation and rest it on historical
facts and international legality. We do not wish the U.S. Congress
running a judgment based on one-sided allegations,” stated Bagis.

-HISTORIANS SHOULD ANALYSE-

Bagis went on saying, “Turks and Armenians have lived in peace for
over eight centuries in Anatolia. The Armenian community, dispersed
throughout the Ottoman territories lived as loyal and, in certain
aspects, as privileged citizens of the Ottoman Empire. They served
as ministers, generals, ambassadors, governors, commercial envoys and
in similar other capacities. They were not subject to discrimination
in any shape or form.”

The letter continued, “towards the end of the 19th century, the ‘Great
Powers’ of the time began regarding the Armenians as an important tool
of manipulation against the Ottomans. Their aim was to accelerate the
destruction of the Ottoman Empire. These powers promised the Armenians
a state in Eastern Anatolia where paradoxically the Armenian citizens
were only a minority. As a result of the provocations of ‘Great
Powers’, various Armenian bands began to organize from the 1880s and
onwards. These armed militia staged rebellions in various provinces
and launched an ethnic cleansing campaign. They were trying to force
mass immigration of the local population and to alter the demographic
structure these regions. Their methods were massacres and harassment
of the Turks and other Muslims. The start of World War I and the
entry of the Ottoman state into the War against the Allied Powers
was seen as a great opportunity by the extremist Armenians. They
revolted and collaborated with the invading Russian army and
other foreign forces. As a fifth column of the Russian occupation,
Armenian bandits attacked the Ottoman troops and disrupted the supply
routes. Under these circumstances, the Ottoman government informed
the Armenian Patriarch, Armenian Members of Parliament and other
prominent Armenians that if these activities were to continue, the
government would have to take defensive measures. Armenian activities,
however, continued unabated. In the face of these enormous internal
and external threats, the Ottoman Government, in May 1915 resorted
to a defensive internal security measure, which any country facing
a similar situation would take. Again, the Ottoman government was
facing an armed rebellion by its own citizens who happened to be
members of a certain ethnic group and they were collaborating with
a foreign belligerent. The Ottoman government adopted the Relocation
Law to transfer its Armenian citizens living in the war zone to the
southern territories of the Empire. The Armenian citizens had been
informed well advance about this decision and their transfer started
after necessary preparations. Meanwhile, Armenian citizens living
outside the war zone were excluded from this resettlement process.
Thus, some 200,000 Armenian citizens living in Istanbul, Edirne,
Kutahya, Aydin and Izmir were not affected. The law in question
envisaged every precaution to ensure the security of the Armenian
citizens during the transfer, first and foremost, the safety of their
lives and protection of their assets. The Ottoman central government
instructed the local authorities to take the necessary security and
other measures for the orderly relocation of the Armenian citizens.”

“Relevant documents about these circulars are available in the Ottoman
archives. Despite these measures, war conditions, and local ethnic
animosities prompted attacks against the Armenian convoys during the
transfer process. Due to the limitations of the ongoing World War I,
lack of food supplies and other relief material, as well as harsh
climate and epidemics took their toll on the population. The relocation
was suspended in November 1915. In early 1916 it was brought to an
end. After the war the Ottoman Government issued a decree, allowing
the previously relocated Armenian citizens return to their places of
origin. According to a report prepared by the Armenian Patriarchate,
-and this document is the U.S. archives- 644,900 Armenians returned
to their places of origin, as a result. In the meantime, some 1,390
people were tried in Ottoman courts for attacking the Armenian convoys
and for related criminal acts. Many were convicted, some with death
penalty. At this point, we need to ask: If the Ottoman government had
intended to annihilate its Armenian citizens, why would it prosecute
civilians and officials for mistreatment of Armenian convoys and why
would it later allow the Armenians to return to their towns?”

“According to 1948 UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of
the Crime of Genocide only a competent tribunal can determine whether
genocide is committed or not. As underlined by the same Convention,
the tribunal in charge is either the tribunal of the State in the
territories of which the act was committed or an international penal
tribunal as may have jurisdiction with respect to those Contracting
Parties which have accepted its jurisdiction. 1948 UN Convention does
not grant any competence to national or international parliaments
for the recognition or affirmation of the crime of genocide. Since
so far Armenian genocide claims have never been ascertained in any
competent court ruling it would be highly erroneous to talk about an
international recognition of the so-called Armenian genocide. Again,
the abovementioned attributions to the UN documents are a poor attempt
to add some air of legitimacy to the unfounded, biased and one-sided
allegations. Again, if a tragedy took place in Eastern Anatolia in
1915, it was due to a tragic political miscalculation by a certain
ethnic group against the central government. The result was a civil
war which should be analyzed by historians and not by legislators,”
wrote Bagis.

Bagis added, “I hope my letter will create another opportunity for
you to reexamine the content of the draft resolution H. Res. 316 from
a wider perspective. That perspective is the Turkish-US relations.
The adoption of these resolutions would not facilitate our efforts
to improve Turkish-Armenian relations since the Armenian Government
and Diaspora will feel further encouraged in pursing the policy of
making political gains on this disputed period of history.”

Iranian Lessons

Iranian Lessons
By Michael Ignatieff.

The New York Times
July 17, 2005 Sunday
Late Edition – Final

Michael Ignatieff, a contributing writer, teaches about human rights
at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government. He is the editor of
”American Exceptionalism and Human Rights,” just published by
Princeton University Press.

[I]
In south Tehran there is a huge walled cemetery dedicated to the
martyrs, the young men who died fighting in the 1979 revolution and
the Iran-Iraq war of 1980-1988. This vast city of the dead, complete
with its own subway station and shops, does not share Arlington
National Cemetery’s sublimely stoic aesthetic of identical
tombstones, row upon row. In Tehran’s war cemetery, each of the
fallen is remembered individually with his own martyr’s shrine, a
sealed glass cabinet on a stand. The cabinets are filled with faded
photos of men forever young, some in helmets or red bandannas, some
carrying their weapons, others at home stroking the family cat or
grinning during a meal with friends. Next to the yellowing
photographs might be a Koran, or a faded copy of a Persian poem, or a
set of plastic flowers, or one of the painted eggs that Iranian
families exchange at their New Year. These little shrines seem to go
on forever, each one a family’s attempt to confer immortality on some
young man who died in the trenches at a place like Khorramshahr, the
pinnacle of Iranian resistance to the Iraqi invaders.

More than a million Iranians served in the war with Iraq. Three
hundred thousand died and a larger number came home wounded. Although
the conflict ended in stalemate and disillusion, it remains the
Iranian revolution’s defining moment of sacrifice. Accordingly, the
regime still exploits the martyrs’ sacrifices at every traffic
roundabout in the country, with enormous posters of the bearded,
unsmiling, very young men in uniform, heading off to battle and
divine reward.

The religion of Iran, Shiite Islam, is a martyr’s faith. Shiite
culture has aspects of a death cult, including an obsession with
blood sacrifice. For some surviving veterans, the camaraderie they
experienced on the Iraqi front epitomized not only the patriotic
virtues of the revolution but also the self-sacrificing virtues of
their faith. Any American neoconservative betting on the Iranian
regime to crumble under the impact of isolation, blockade, sanctions
or foreign condemnation ought to pay a visit to the martyrs’
cemetery. Revolutionary regimes anchored in faith and blood sacrifice
have good reason to believe they are impervious to outside pressure.

I visited the cemetery of the martyrs late last month, during a trip
to Iran to lecture on human rights, mostly to reform-minded students
and intellectuals. My arrival fell between rounds of the country’s
presidential election. In the first round of voting, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad — the son of an ironworker, a former Revolutionary Guard
during the war with Iraq and, briefly, the appointed mayor of Tehran
— had come from nowhere to win about 20 percent of the vote. The
former Iranian president Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, the supposedly
reformist candidate, was struggling to hold off Ahmadinejad’s
challenge in the second round. Ahmadinejad is an authoritarian
populist with a base of support among the poor in the shantytowns and
warrens of south Tehran. Unlike Rafsanjani, he is not a mullah, and
he served in the war. This gave him access to the war veterans and
the Basiji, the paramilitary popular militias created during the war,
and he was using them to get out the vote in the poorest
neighborhoods of south Tehran. He promised the poor justice, but most
of all he promised the veterans rewards for their sacrifice.
Immediately labeled a hard-liner by most American commentators,
Ahmadinejad sent out more populist, inclusive signals at home,
leading some Iranians to worry that quick American condemnations of
him as a reactionary might only provoke him into becoming one.

At the beginning of the week that I arrived, there were few
Ahmadinejad posters around Tehran for the presidential runoff. Thanks
to the veterans, by the eve of the final vote, banners and posters
were displayed everywhere. At night, cars would grind to a halt while
Ahmadinejad supporters, with his picture plastered on their
foreheads, danced around the traffic circles. In the end, Ahmadinejad
easily defeated Rafsanjani in the runoff election, winning with about
60 percent of the vote. It was a victory so unexpected that some were
already calling it the second Iranian revolution.

[II]
Ahmadinejad had capitalized not only on his war service but also on
gathering disillusion with the failure of the reformers — nominally
in power since the election of President Mohammad Khatami in 1997 —
to address popular grievances relating to jobs, housing, transport
and, above all, the growing class divide. In leafy north Tehran,
reformers were talking about human rights and democracy, while in
dusty south Tehran, the poor were struggling to hold onto jobs in an
economy in which unemployment was officially 15 percent and probably
twice that. For the reformers, the victory brought home how out of
touch with ordinary Iranians many of them had become.

”That was our chief mistake,” Amir Hossein Barmaki, a middle-class
Tehrani who now works for the United Nations in the city, told me.
”The reformers — Khatami and Rafsanjani — came to power after the
war and they did nothing for the veterans. These boys from the poor
districts came home, having saved the country, and we did nothing for
them. There were some who are dying of Saddam’s poison gas attacks
who didn’t even get a pension.”

”No,” he went on. ”There was worse. None of us actually went to
the war. All the middle class went abroad or stayed in university. We
sent the poor instead. We could even buy our way out of military
service. It is our shame.”

On the nights after Ahmadinejad’s victory, the atmosphere among many
of the liberal Iranians I talked with was reminiscent of another
group of intellectuals: the Russian thinkers of the 1860’s,
Western-educated men and women who had to discover, painfully, just
how out of touch their reformist ideas were with the poor and
burdened of their own society. Barmaki told me mournfully, ”We
reformers have lost five years.”

The political task ahead for the liberal thinkers of Iran is to find
a program that links human rights and democracy to the poor’s
economic grievances.

[III]
I had been invited to lecture on human rights and democracy, but
Ahmadinejad’s unexpected victory changed the agenda of my talks.
Suddenly the question was no longer, What do democracy and human
rights mean in an Islamic society? but, Can democracy and human
rights make any headway at all in a society deeply divided between
rich and poor, included and excluded, educated and uneducated? The
reformers had promoted human rights and democracy as a panacea for
Iran’s poor, and what had been the result? The slums of Tehran voted
for a man who advocated stricter discipline for women, tougher
theocratic rule and state control of the economy.

I was invited not by the mullah-dominated universities but by the
Cultural Research Bureau, an independent center in Tehran that
publishes books and runs its own gift shop, gallery and lecture hall.
My Iranian host, Ramin Jahanbegloo, works in a tiny shared office at
the bureau, inviting foreign guests and building up a small circle of
free-minded students whom he lectures on European thought. He and I
had never met, but he has published a book of conversations he had as
a student with Isaiah Berlin, the Oxford philosopher of liberalism,
and I have written a biography of Berlin. We are Berliners.

Berlin himself visited Tehran in the late 1970’s, during the dying
years of the shah’s regime. He gave a lecture — ”On the Rise of
Cultural Pluralism” — in front of the empress, who, as Berlin later
recounted, fidgeted irritably and then made a sign to a courtier to
get Berlin to cut it short. In midlecture, Berlin sat down, he told a
friend, ”as if stung by several wasps.” All in all it was not a
happy visit. The shah’s Iran, he decided, was the last czarist regime
on earth. Propped up by the Americans and kept in power by a hated
secret police, the shah launched a White Revolution in the 1960’s, a
grandiose modernization program that alienated mullahs, merchants and
students alike. Eventually, street demonstrations forced him to
abdicate, and he fled into exile in 1979. After that came the Shiite
revolution, led by Ayatollah Khomeini. Since then, hundreds of
thousands of Iranians have gone into exile, and the liberal
intelligentsia that remains is both cut off from the mass of the
Iranian population and isolated from the Western universities from
which it draws its inspiration.

Jahanbegloo says he thinks of himself as a bridge between Iran and
those universities. He invites a steady stream of philosophers like
Richard Rorty from Stanford and Agnes Heller from the New School in
New York to give talks to students. He sees some signs that their
ideas are finding a toehold in Tehran. Three decades ago, the
intellectuels du jour were Michel Foucault and fellow radical
theorists. They arrived in Tehran proclaiming their solidarity with a
revolution that actively despised them while persecuting its own
freethinkers. Now the pendulum in Tehran has swung toward pragmatic
liberals like Berlin.

Upon arrival, I was immediately plunged into the kinds of discussions
about democracy and freedom that took place in Prague, Warsaw and
Budapest in the 1980’s. On my first day, young journalists at a
reform-minded newspaper called Shargh quizzed me about the difference
between ”maximal” and ”minimal” democracy. Maximal democracy
means elections plus rule of law, bills of rights and checks and
balances. That is decades away in Iran. Minimal democracy is what
they already have: guided rule by the mullahs that may deliver the
country straight to tyranny under Ahmadinejad.

It became apparent that what I should have been teaching during my
visit was the history of the Protestant Reformation. It’s not just
that Islam badly needs a Reformation. It’s also that Iranians need to
know how the Reformation and the bloody religious wars that followed
it taught the West to put God in his place. Democracy arises, I told
the students, not just to enthrone the people but also to separate
religion and politics, establishing rules of tolerance that allow all
religions to enjoy freedom and creating a political system in which
religious and secular arguments compete on equal ground.

Many young Iranians I talked to were so hostile to clerical rule that
I found myself cautioning them against going too far in the other
direction. Many seemed in favor of a secular republicanism in which
religion was excluded from politics altogether, as it was in Turkey
during the rule of that country’s modernizing dictator, Mustafa Kemal
Ataturk. As Isaiah Berlin warned, however, if you bend the twig too
far, it will snap back in your face. In Turkey, the reaction against
the extremes of Ataturk’s secularism has brought an Islamic
government, though admittedly a moderate one, to power. Secularism, I
argued, doesn’t mean crushing religion, it just means creating a
neutral space in which arguments between religious and secular people
are settled by evidence, not dogma.

”Like in the United States?” a bright female student asked me with
a coy smile. In the United States, I said, God is never out of the
public sphere. The furor over the end of Terri Schiavo’s life and the
Bush administration’s restrictions on federal financing for stem cell
research, among other things, make that obvious. From their vantage
point inside a theocracy, young Iranians long for ”a wall of
separation” between religion and government, as Thomas Jefferson
called it, and they told me they found it puzzling, even
disappointing, that religion and politics are not actually separate
in the United States. I tried to explain that keeping God in his
place in a democracy is work that never ends.

Democracy in Iran also means working free of what one student called
”the culture of dictatorship,” a floating web of patriarchal
controls over private life. All of the young people I talked to were
under 30, invariably were living at home till marriage and were
chafing under restrictions on their personal lives. For young women,
living free means the right to choose whom you marry and how much
hair to display around your hijab; it means leaving to get an M.B.A.
in Australia and then coming back and running a business. For one
young man, struggling to find how he might buy his way out of
compulsory military service, it means the freedom, he confessed in a
whisper, to be gay. Homosexuality is a crime in Iran, and seemingly
the only time when conversations do become furtive, with anxious
looks over shoulders, is when homosexuality is the topic.

The hostility toward homosexuality is not just a reflex of a deeply
traditional family culture. The Shiite regime has waged a 26-year war
on pleasures both homosexual and heterosexual. In Persian culture,
however, the taste for pleasure runs deep. Just think of the
music-making, dancing and the costumed beauty of the men and women in
classical Persian miniatures. During the revolution, many of these
Persian treasures were hacked off the walls of mosques and palaces by
Shiite zealots.

Thankfully, Persian pleasure remains stubbornly alive. When I flew
south from Tehran to Isfahan, the astounding capital of the Safavid
shahs of the 17th century, I spent one night wandering along the
exquisitely lighted vaulted bridges, watching men, not necessarily
gay, stroll hand in hand, singing to each other and dancing beneath
the arches, while families picnicked on the grass by the banks of the
river and men and women passed a water pipe around. Though it cannot
be much comfort to those who have to live, here and now, under public
and private tyrannies, I came away from a night in Isfahan believing
that Persian pleasure, in the long run, would outlast Shiite
puritanism.

[IV]
Like all revolutionary regimes, the Iranian state seems to have
reproduced the ugliness of the regime it overthrew. The shah had a
secret police — Savak — and the mullahs have one, too. One day in
Tehran, on a street corner, I passed a small student demonstration
linked to the elections and watched as a sweaty secret-police
officer, with a gun in his waistband, tried to muscle a demonstrator
away into a car. Other demonstrators started punching the officer,
and he had to call for reinforcements. While he did so, the seized
student wriggled free and disappeared into the crowd.

In a more genuinely fearful police state, he would have gone quietly.
On the other hand, when this regime wants to crush the opposition, it
does so with unflinching ruthlessness. Some religious minorities —
like the Armenian Christians — are not persecuted, but others, like
the Bahais — a schismatic sect of Islam — have been barred from the
universities, and their leaders have been arrested, tortured and, in
some cases, killed. Iranian human rights lawyers told me that they
defend as many political prisoners as they can, but there are
hundreds more held incommunicado. Some go into the prisons and never
emerge alive. In June 2003, Zahra Kazemi, an Iranian holding a
Canadian passport, was taking photographs outside the notorious Evin
prison in Tehran when she was arrested and dragged inside. Three
weeks later, the authorities announced that she had died under
interrogation, and soon after that, evidence came out indicating that
she had been tortured and raped. The Canadian government is demanding
that those responsible be punished or dismissed, but a case in an
Iranian court seems to be going nowhere.

Shirin Ebadi, the lawyer handling the Kazemi case and the regime’s
most visible opponent, is a heroic figure, a physically tiny dynamo,
bursting with scorn for the regime and quick to shed her hijab in
private houses as a sign of her independence. She walks a careful
line, distancing herself from the Bush administration’s criticism of
the presidential elections, but remaining equally dismissive of the
regime’s claims that its guided democracy remains a democracy
nonetheless. Having done time for political offenses herself, she
knows the insides of the prisons where her clients now languish. The
outgoing president, the supposed reformer Khatami, notably failed to
lend Ebadi political cover and support when she came back from Oslo
with the Nobel Peace Prize, the first ever Nobel given to an Iranian.
When I asked her whether the prize and the recognition it brought
protect her, she replied with a quizzical arch of an eyebrow: ”No,
the Nobel does not protect me at all.”

[V]
At Shahid Beheshti University, I gave a seminar on human rights to a
class composed mostly of young women in full-length black robes and
head coverings. When I went up to shake their hands before the
session started, they pulled their hands away. Such contact between
the sexes is frowned upon. But in class, they were anything but
docile. In often fluent English, they asked what I thought about
Islamic Shariah law and its punishments, which can include stoning
women to death for adultery. The challenge, I argued, is not
understanding why these are wrong but prevailing politically against
the religious authorities who believe that their own power depends on
enforcing these penalties. The students replied that they needed help
from Western intellectuals like me to get rid of Islamic punishments.
I replied that while outside pressure can help, Western human rights
advocacy can often have counterproductive results. In Nigeria, for
example, an international letter-writing campaign organized by human
rights advocates did not persuade an Islamic governor in northern
Nigeria to halt the flogging of a teenage girl for having sex (she
says she was raped) — and the campaign might even have persuaded him
to proceed, if reports are to be believed. On the other hand, a group
of female Islamic lawyers worked within the Shariah system to defend
another Nigerian woman who had been sentenced to stoning for
adultery, securing her acquittal on a technicality (which drew
criticism from some Western human rights advocates).

The women in the class were not happy with my suggestion that they
should reform Shariah from within. ”There should be one law for
everybody, not two systems, one of Islamic law and the other of
secular law,” one student argued. I agree, I said, but it’s not
obvious how you are going to get there in Iran. The students found
this too defeatist. ”We are very glad that you come to our class,
professor,” one said to me, ”but you are too nice to the Shariah
law. It must be abolished. It cannot be changed.”

One professor observing these exchanges was a middle-aged man in the
light brown robes and white turban that designate a religious
scholar. Having listened carefully, with his long legs stretched out
beneath the desk, he asked me — in fluent English — why I thought
human rights were universal. I gave the answer I use in my class at
Harvard — that if I were to go up to him, right now, and smack him
across the face, anywhere in the world the act would count as an
injustice and an insult. Human rights law codifies our agreement
about stopping these intuitively obvious injustices.

But why, he pressed further, would an injustice against him also be
perceived by me as an injustice? Because, I replied, human beings are
not closed compartments. We can imagine what it would be like to be
at the receiving end of the very blows we strike.

”You are an intuitionist,” he said with a smile. I countered that
the human capacity to understand the pain of others is a fact, not an
intuition. ”But you need something stronger than this,” he said. We
continued for a while, agreeably disagreeing, but as he gathered up
his papers to depart, he was smiling like someone who thought he had
just won an argument. As far as he was concerned, beneath his belief
in human rights lies the bedrock of the Koran, while beneath mine
lies nothing but hopeful instincts.

[VI]
One day, I paid a call on Saeed Semnanian, the chancellor of one of
Tehran’s most conservative universities. We sat in his spartan
office, while female engineering students walked to and fro in the
gardens outside his window. I began with compliments about the
achievements of the revolution. Female literacy has risen to 70
percent (though male literacy is still higher, at 84 percent), while
income per head has doubled since the end of the war with Iraq. But,
I went on, everyone I talked to in Tehran told me the revolution has
congealed into a corrupt, repressive system of privileges that
exploits Islamic orthodoxy to remain in power.

”Whom do you talk to?” he asked me with a level stare.

”Intellectuals, writers, journalists.”

”You are trying to take the temperature of the revolution, but all
your thermometers are wrong,” he responded.

All this complaining, he implied, is what you would expect from
discontented liberals. The achievement that matters, he said, is that
Iran is independent. In the presidential elections, all the
candidates were pure Iranian. In the shah’s time, nothing was pure
Iranian. Everything was decided in the American or the British
Embassy.

He seemed faintly amused by my failure to understand his country. For
him, the history of Iran is the history of attempts to subvert its
independence. As far as he is concerned, it might be yesterday, and
not in 1953, that Kermit Roosevelt and the C.I.A. organized the coup
that overthrew Mohammed Mossadegh, the prime minister who
nationalized the Iranian oil fields. The seizure of the American
Embassy and the hostage drama were, as Semnanian saw it, an
exquisitely drawn out revenge for the C.I.A.-inspired coup, just as
the regime’s current drive for nuclear weapons is a search for an
ultimate guarantee of its freedom from foreign interference.

Iranian democrats contend that if Iran were a democracy, its nuclear
weapons would not threaten anyone. What makes Iranian weapons
dangerous, they argue, is that the regime is a theocracy with
connections to Hamas and Hezbollah. A democratic Iran that broke with
terrorism would be easier to live with, even if it possessed a
nuclear bomb. As Shirin Ebadi told me, ”Who cares about France’s
force de frappe?”

American neoconservatives also tend to argue that democracy will make
Iran peaceful and pro-American. This might be wishful thinking. Fear
of encirclement by the United States means that the regime’s drive
for weapons has widespread popular support. If a genuine Iranian
democracy were as nationalistic as most new democracies usually are,
a democratic Iran might well remain a bellicose opponent of the
United States and Israel.

In any event, America has almost no capacity to promote democracy
inside Iran, and some capacity to do harm to Iranian democrats. Every
Iranian I met wanted to spend time in the United States — and wished
there were more scholarships to take them to America — but nearly
every one of them laughed when I mentioned the recent Congressional
appropriation of $3 million to support democratic opposition groups
inside and outside the country. Iranian democrats look on American
good intentions with incredulity. It would be fatal for any of them
to accept American dollars. ”Do they want to get us all arrested as
spies?” one said to me.

Hence the paradox: the Middle Eastern Muslim society with the most
pro-American democrats will strenuously resist any American attempt
to promote democracy inside it. It is easy to understand why. ”We
fought for our independence,” Semnanian told me. ”You think when
our people fought to drive out the invaders from Iraq for seven
years, we were fighting only Saddam? We were fighting the U.S.A.,
Britain, the whole world. We saved our country. And now we are
free.”

[VII]
The night before I left Tehran, I had a private conversation about
Ahmadinejad’s political program with one of the new president’s
advisers, A. Asgarkhani, a genial, long-haired professor in his 60’s.
When Asgarkhani, who holds a Western doctorate, first began
predicting victory for his candidate a month ago, nobody believed
him. Even a week before the runoff, nobody took him seriously. Now it
had happened.

The good thing about Ahmadinejad’s victory, Asgarkhani said, is that
it will end the paralysis of the regime, the division between the
reformers and the religious guardians who control the political
system. All power will finally be in one set of hands. So the
president can do something.

But won’t that be bad for human rights? I asked.

Maybe at first, he replied, but then Ahmadinejad will bring human
rights and democracy — here he gestured with his hands — ”from the
top down.”

And how is Ahmadinejad going to change the economy? ”If he listens
to me,” Asgarkhani said, ”he is going to go with
‘techno-nationalism.’ ”

Techno-nationalism, import substitution, new growth theory — all the
catch phrases of Western development economics tumbled out of
Asgarkhani’s mouth, but they still sounded like the Islamic Marxism
that has passed for economic theory in Iran since the revolution:
don’t depend on foreigners; keep the economy in state hands,
otherwise foreign capitalists will get control of it; restrain the
financial sector, because a free financial sector will cause the
economy to melt down.

With oil at about $60 a barrel as I write, there is little likelihood
that the regime will be forced to open up and reform the economy. But
unless it does, there won’t be much democracy or progress for the
poor. One human rights truth, universally acknowledged, is that oil
is an obstacle to democracy in every developing society. When a
government can get what it needs out of oil derricks and ceases to
derive its revenue from taxes, it loses any incentive to respond to
the people. Theocracy in Iran is built on oil and will endure as long
as the oil price holds up.

One young female Iranian economics major had told me wearily that she
wondered why she bothered to study macroeconomics at all, since, in
Iran, all economic decisions are made politically. The incoming
president has promised the desperately poor the better life the
revolution was supposed to deliver. What happens if all that the poor
get are programs and policies like Asgarkhani’s voodoo economics?
Then all that will be left is the iron fist.

When I said this to another young Iranian woman and told her that
when Ahmadinejad fails the poor, the only recourse left will be
further repression, she said, determinedly: ”No, he cannot turn back
the clock. He cannot send us backward.” I hoped she was right, but I
noticed that she made a small involuntary gesture. She pulled her
hijab down and covered her hair entirely. For the first time, she
looked uncertain and concerned.

URL:

GRAPHIC: Photos: Young Iranian men pass the time outside a mall in
Tehran. There is much speculation that under President-elect Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, a conservative former mayor of Tehran, recent freedoms
will be curtailed.
Shirin Ebadi, a human rights lawyer, says her 2003 Nobel Peace Prize
does not make her feel safe in Iran.
Young Iranian women find creative ways to adhere to hijab laws.
(Photographs by Lynsey Addario/Corbis, for The New York Times)

http://www.nytimes.com

Petitions started to intervene in Darfur UA professor leadsanti-geno

Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock)
July 10, 2005 Sunday

Petitions started to intervene in Darfur UA professor leads
anti-genocide drive

BY CHRIS BRANAM ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE

FAYETTEVILLE – It’s been a year since Samuel Totten looked into the
eyes of refugees from the Darfur region of Sudan.

Still, not a day goes by that he doesn’t think about what he saw.

Totten, a professor of education at the University of Arkansas at
Fayetteville, now is circulating an online petition urging military
intervention by the United Nations to stop what was been described as
genocide in Darfur.

Totten hopes to present the petition by September to members of
Congress, President Bush, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan and the
U.N. Security Council. Totten expects the petition to be signed by
more than 100 genocide scholars.

“I’m not going to stop until the attacks stop on the [refugee]
camps,” Totten said.

The petition requests that the European Union, the African Union and
individual nations deploy 12,000 heavy infantry, logistical,
communications and airborne troops in Sudan.

The document is co-authored by Gregory Stanton, a former State
Department official who leads Genocide Watch, a coalition of 20
humanrights groups coordinating an international campaign to stop
genocide; and Joyce Apsel, an advisory board member for the
International Association of Genocide Scholars.

The language in the petition was unanimously approved last month as a
resolution of the International Association of Genocide Scholars at
the association’s biennial conference in Boca Raton, Fla.

“Sam’s initiative led to this resolution and petition,” Stanton said.
“We hope that it will result in first, consciousnessraising among the
people who read it, and secondly, those who do sign it, will send it
along to leaders who make policy.

“It’s a very forward-leaning petition that calls for active
intervention.”

Totten said he decided to draft the petition when he remembered late
U.S. Sen. Paul Simon having said in the mid-1990s that the federal
government would have been pressured to act in Rwanda if every member
of Congress would have received 100 letters in support of
intervention.

He has joined a chorus of human-rights advocates who see echoes in
Darfur of the tribal conflict in Rwanda in 1994, when an estimated
800,000 people were killed.

In Sudan, Arab militia members known as the janjaweed have been
working with the Sudanese government to rid the Darfur region of
black Africans, then-Secretary of State Colin Powell reported to
Congress in September 2004.

Powell told Congress that Sudan’s government is to blame for killing
tens of thousands and uprooting of 1.2 million people who fled across
the border to Chad.

Totten was one of 24 investigators who took part in the Darfur
Atrocities Documentation Project, based in Chad in July 2004. He
interviewed 49 refugees for the project, which documented murders and
rapes against non-Arabs in Darfur.

Powell noted the investigators’ work in his Sept. 9 remarks to the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

The U.S. State Department says that genocide is occurring in Darfur.
The designation marked the first time one sovereign nation has
accused another sovereign nation of genocide. The 1948 genocide
convention defines the act of genocide as a calculated effort to
destroy a national, ethnic, racial or religious group in whole or in
part.

The United Nations passed Resolution 1556 on July 30, 2004, demanding
that the Sudanese government take action to disarm the janjaweed
militia and bring janjaweed leaders to justice. The United States
pledged $299 million in humanitarian aid to Darfur refugees through
fiscal 2005.

But that hasn’t been enough to stop the violence, said Totten, who
served as a co-editor of the Encyclopedia of Genocide, published in
1999. Totten is also cowriting and editing a book about the Darfur
Atrocities Documentation Project with Eric Markusen, a senior
researcher at the Danish Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies.

The janjaweed are now entering Chad and attacking civilian refugee
camps, Totten said.

Totten criticized what he perceives to be indifference by the U.S.
media toward Darfur.

“It’s disheartening. It’s extremely disheartening,” he said. “Unless
it’s on the air and [people] see it in the way they did the tsunami
.. it does seem rather ephemeral in people’s minds. They see it and.
forget about it.

“The coverage just hasn’t been sustained as it could or should be.”

At UA, Totten teaches curriculum and instruction to aspiring middle-
and high-school teachers. But genocide is his chosen field of study.

Reed Greenwood, dean of the UA College of Education and Health
Professions, said Totten goes “above and beyond” as a professor and
researcher.

“He’s probably one of the most hard-working faculty members we have
in the college,” Greenwood said. “It’s been a major accomplishment
and a major achievement to the field, the work he’s done. He’s
established an international reputation.”

Totten is editing a new edition of Century of Genocide, a scholarly
collection of essays accompanied by eyewitness testimonies of
genocide.

Totten will compose the last essay. His focus will be prevention and
intervention of genocide.

In April, Totten traveled to Armenia for an international conference
on genocide that coincided with the 90 th anniversary of what
Armenians claim was the start of genocide at the hands of the Turkish
government.

Armenians say Turkey’s mass deportation of Armenians during World War
I was part of an organized genocide, beginning in 1915, that killed
1.5 million people. Turkey denies there was any systematic attempt to
kill Armenians.

The conference was held in Yerevan, Armenia’s capital. The
proceedings were broadcast locally on live television, Totten said.

“People in the street would see that you were with the conference and
they would come up and thank you,” Totten said.

Totten was one of a handful of Americans at the conference of 700. He
also took part in a Mass at the Martyrs Church in the Syrian desert,
where many refugees from Armenia ended up after being forced to march
out of their country.

His Holiness Catholicos Aram I, the spiritual leader of the Armenian
Church, led the Mass.

“I was moved by how intent people seemed to hang on to every single
word that His Holiness spoke, all of which dealt with some aspect of
the Armenian genocide,” Totten said.

CD Review: New System of a Down disc welds music, message

CD Review: New System of a Down disc welds music, message
by BRENT BALDWIN Satellite Correspondent

Tulsa World (Oklahoma)
July 15, 2005 Friday
Final Home Edition

System of a Down is the pseudonym behind one of the most unique,
high-energy and bizarrely twisted sounds in the music industry today.

The band, four Armenian-Americans hailing from Los Angeles, put
together the finest elements of heavy metal, Armenian folk music,
new wave and pseudo-funk to create an aggressive, hyperactive and at
times mesmerizing sound.

The band’s extremely talented line-up includes
guitarist-songwriter-singer Daron Malakian, lead
vocalist-keyboardist-string arranger Serj Tankian, bassist Shavo
Odadjian and drummer John Dolmayan.

Malakian leads the way on the stunning new release, “Mesmerize,”
writing almost all the lyrics and music, as well as singing more
often than he has on past albums.

“Mesmerize” is a stunning package, even when you first open it. It’s
tough to predict what will capture the buyer first — the astoundingly
creative cover art by Malakian’s father, Vartan Malakian, or the
gigantic parental advisory label on the front that warns of explicit
material, drug references, sexual references and foul language.

Regardless, the music inside of the peculiar package makes this album
one of the best releases of the year.

The political messages System of a Down has recorded in the past are
still prevalent in this effort, and they start right away with a sort
of political lullaby intro named “Soldier Side,” which only has three
lines of lyrics:

“Welcome to the soldier side where there’s no one here but me /
People all grow up to die / There is no one here but me.”

Then the listener is promptly kicked in the face/ears by the
aggressive, electric energy of the (also very political) single
“B.Y.O.B.” Another apt title for this song would be “Schizophrenic
Shuffle.” It changes tempos on a dime, going from metal shredding
to psychotic riffing to its catchy pop chorus: “Everybody’s going to
the party / have a real good time / Dancing in the desert / blowing
up the sunshine.”

It’s a sharp attack on the behind-the-scenes decision-makers for the
Iraq war.

Other political statements can be found in “Sad Statue” and “Cigaro,”
where issues are dramatized and put into guitar-driven tanks of songs.

And this is only the start of the scathing social commentary that
presents itself throughout the album.

Pointed assaults on the seemingly mind-numbing entertainment industry
are laid out like National Enquirers in a grocery store. The band
takes those who believe in a rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle and wake them up
to the real world of nonreality/MTV with songs such as “Radio/Video”
and “Violent Pornography.”

“Radio/Video” is pure mockery at its best, and “Violent Pornography” is
a look at what TV is becoming, with shows like “Desperate Housewives”
and “The O.C.” commercializing sex, a step that System of a Down
feels will lead to widespread XXX television.

“It’s a violent pornography / choking chicks and sodomy / the kind
of (expletive) you get on your TV / it’s a nonstop disco / turn off
the TV.”

The catchiness and absurdly fast tempo of the music makes it sting
with a certain urgency, as if television must be fixed now before
it’s too late.

“Old School Hollywood” is more of a comic relief track on the album,
along with “This Cocaine Makes Me Feel Like I’m on This Song.”

“Old School Hollywood” is about Malakian’s experience at a celebrity
baseball game where he felt completely out of place with washed-up,
stuck-up movie stars. The music is heavy with ’80s new-wave keyboards
and relentlessly paced guitars.

Intensity runs rampant on the album. “Revenga” is a hyped ode to
revenge, while “Question!” is an utterly poetic and spiritual song
with fret-busting, guitar-laden verses and almost Evanescence-esque
dark choruses.

“Lost in Hollywood” closes the album, highlighting Malakian’s
insecurity about being a resident of Hollywood and the false,
dog-eat-dog lifestyle celebrities celebrate:

“Phony people come to pray / Look at all of them beg to stay / You
should’ve never trusted Hollywood.”

Sometime later this year fans will get the follow-up disc, “Hypnotize,”
which is bound to carry just as heavy a message in an impeccable
musical package.

Powerful emotions, political awareness and raw energy make this album
one of the best buys of the year.

In the game of metal, System of a Down makes, bends and breaks the
rules with innovative style, boldness and energy.

Area cities have ‘adopted’ sisters

The Houston Chronicle
July 14, 2005, Thursday 2 STAR EDITION

Area cities have ‘adopted’ sisters;
Galveston has participated in at least eight such agreements

by KELLYE NEUWEILER, HOUSTON CHRONICLE CORRESPONDENT

Though he has lived in Galveston for more than 20 years and considers
himself a Texan, Ray Koshy still feels a strong connection to his
native India.

Realizing that few in his adopted city knew much about Indian
culture, Koshy and others from his home country lobbied Galveston City
Council to forge a partnership of sorts with the city of his birth –
Trivandrum, the capital of the state of Kerala in India.

The group proposed that Galveston make Trivandrum a sister city under
a program introduced in the 1950s by President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

Today, nearly 700 U.S. cities participate in sister-city programs, many
of them partnering with multiple cities, according to Sister Cities
International, a nonprofit organization that oversees sister-city
partnerships.

In Galveston County, a handful of cities, including Seabrook, Nassau
Bay, and Galveston, have active sister-city programs.

In 1994, to the delight of Koshy and his comrades, Galveston City
Council designated Trivandrum a sister city. In Trivandrum, the
program has been well-received.

“The sister-city people from Trivandrum are telling us that they want
to replicate a beautiful Galveston building in Trivandrum and call it
Galveston House. It will be a symbol of America in our sister city,”
said Koshy, 57, a nurse in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.

In addition to Trivandrum, Galveston has sister-city relationships
with at least seven cities, including Nigata, Japan; Veracruz, Mexico;
Stavanger, Norway; Cape Town, South Africa; Tamsui, on the island of
Taiwan; Progreso, Mexico; and Armavir, Armenia.

Galveston may have even more sister cities that city staff are not
aware of, City Secretary Barbara Lawrence said.

The city tracked and administered the programs until the Galveston
Chamber of Commerce took over most administrative duties last year,
Lawrence said. The chamber is still sorting through records.

City officials oversee such official business as greeting dignitaries,
issuing proclamations and accepting and receiving gifts, but beyond
that, sister-city contacts and activities overwhelmingly are fueled
and funded by volunteers such as Koshy, who are interested in keeping
the programs alive.

Society keeps busy

The Galveston-Trivandrum Sister City Society, one of Galveston’s most
active sister-city organizations, sponsors regular educational and
cultural events and goodwill visits between the cities.

Over the past decade, several delegations from Trivandrum have visited
Galveston, and several Galvestonians have visited Trivandrum.

Earlier this year, the Galveston-Trivandrum Sister City Society raised
more than $ 7,000 to aid Indian victims of last year’s tsunami in
Southeast Asia.

Launched three years ago, Seabrook’s partnerships with its sister
city – Santa Cruz, which is in the Galapagos Islands chain that is
part of Ecuador – is young but very active.

That relationship was sparked after Seabrook residents expressed
interest in developing a program, Mayor Robin Riley said.

Because Seabrook has a thriving ecotourism industry, he said, “it was
logical that we partner with a city that had similar interests. The
Galapagos Islands is the pinnacle of all ecotourism sites in the
world.”

Galapagos Island officials, in turn, expressed interest in a
relationship with Seabrook, and “the rest is history,” Riley said.

As similar as the two communities are in terms of industry, Riley
said, they are strikingly different in other areas. Because Seabrook
is much more affluent than Santa Cruz, “we’ve sent them toys (to
distribute) during Christmas, equipment for their small hospital,
toys, and computers.”

During one visit to Santa Cruz, a delegation from Seabrook delivered
computer cameras that were installed at City Hall and the Darwin
Institute, which is an internationally renowned institute for
ecological and environmental studies.

Similar cameras installed at Seabrook Intermediate School allow
students to communicate with their peers in the Galapagos Islands
and learn about environmental issues.

Educational opportunities are a valuable component of sister-city
relationships, volunteers say.

The Galveston-Niigata, Japan sister-city program sponsors a cultural
exchange nearly every year, said Raquel Gonzales, who has been active
in the program for about five years.

This summer, Gonzales will be among a local group visiting Niigata
to commemorate the partnership’s 40th anniversary.

A narrow focus

Other sister-city relationships have narrower, more utilitarian
focuses.

Galveston’s relationship with Armevir, Armenia, for example, is driven
by a group at UTMB committed to helping develop a community-based,
primary-care delivery system in the region.

The program, which was established in 2001, continues to be a catalyst
for improving Armevir’s and all of Armenia’s healthcare system,
said Cissy Yoes, UTMB’s director of community outreach.

UTMB-Galveston operates a “train-the-trainer” program for its Armevir
counterparts. To date, almost 50 physicians and nurses from Armevir
have visited UTMB for hands-on training, which they share with
professionals back home.

Last year, the Armenian government adopted the program as a model for
the entire country, committing to provide funding through the Armenian
Ministry of Health so our partners can use the train-the-trainer
program to train all the doctors and nurses in Armenia, Yoes said.

While sister-city partnerships often are viewed as opportunities
to develop commerce, realizing that goal often proves to be a slow
process.

“We’ve had several parties show interest in opening up Ecuadorian shops
or restaurants, but nothing has come to fruition yet,” Riley said.

In the short time that the chamber has overseen Galveston’s programs,
chamber President Gina Spagnola said she is not aware of any concrete
commercial initiatives that have resulted.

However, she added that because sister cities often are similar
geographically and demographically, “city officials learn a lot from
each other” even in the absence of business partnerships by sharing
their approaches to economic development.

And, according to one of Nassau Bay’s sister-city coordinators,
the partnerships often provide opportunities for businesses to share
ideas and information.

Nassau Bay’s sister city, Star City, Russia, houses the Russian
equivalent of the Johnson Space Center. That relationship, says
sister-city program assistant Thomas Cone, has been an important
springboard for the informal exchange of information between companies
in the aerospace industry.

“There’s no question that the partnership has benefited both cities,”
he said. “I’d say it has enriched everyone involved.”

ANKARA: Turkish P.M. Leaves For Russia

Turkish P.M. Leaves For Russia

Turkish Press
July 17 2005

ISTANBUL – Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan left on Sunday
for Russia.

Before he flew to Sochi, Russia, Erdogan told reporters that he
would meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in dinner today, and in
breakfast tomorrow.

They would have the opportunity to discuss bilateral relations
between Turkey and Russia, which had been speeded up in recent years,
said Erdogan.

Erdogan noted that he would proceed to Mongolia after completing his
talks in Russia, and underlined historic importance of his trip to
Mongolia for being the first Turkish prime minister visiting this
country since June 24th, 1964.

PM Erdogan stated that he would meet president, parliament speaker
and prime minister of Mongolia, visit Orhun Monuments, and lay the
foundation of 40-kilometers of highway, connecting these monuments
with Karakurum city, with his Mongolian counterpart.

AZERBAIJANI-TRNC RELATIONS

Recalling that a group of Azerbaijani parliamentarians would
visit Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), Erdogan said,
“during my recent visit to Azerbaijan, we discussed this matter with
President Ilham Aliyev. That day, he instructed his officials to start
direct flights, join celebrations in TRNC, and take several steps
for investments. And, this is the first step, we are very pleased
with it.”

Expressing belief that such steps would continue, Erdogan said,
“the decision made by the foreign ministers of Organization of the
Islamic Conference (OIC) member states in Yemen is not one that can
be ignored. They have recognized Turkish Cypriot State as an observer
member, and this is important. All member states have made a decision
to end isolation (of TRNC).”

UPPER KARABAKH PROBLEM

Asked if he would discuss Upper Karabakh dispute with Russian
President Putin, Erdogan said, “naturally, we will. As you know,
Russia is in the Minsk Group. I discussed this matter with Putin
in Moscow before. He said that they would extend every support they
could. This is an international problem, not a problem of one country
or a region. We hope we will solve it.”

Educating against violence

Educating against violence
By Nimrod Aloni

Ha’aretz, Israel
July 18 2005

These days everyone is obsessed with stamping out violence. There are
“Giuliani save us” rituals; projects to flood Israel with police and
military to control every bit of our lives; plans to fine parents for
the sins of their children, and proposals for the harsh punishment
of violent pupils.

Even if the intentions are good, when dealing with violence it is
important to think things through before taking action. Maybe severe
discipline can develop humanism, but discipline that fails to make
human dignity its main focus is what creates fascism.

Not every use of force involves violence. Violence is using force
to do evil while trampling on human dignity. It is bullying conduct
that harms the person, soul and dignity of human beings. Violence
has many faces. There is violence between communities or nations
based on religious, national, ethnic or ideological hostility. There
is violence between individuals and within communities according to
different circles of social life.

The most radical example of violence between communities is reflected
in Nazism, which is responsible for the Holocaust of Europe’s Jews and
for many millions of victims of war and oppression. Other examples
include the mass murders of the Armenians by the Turks, the Tutsi
by the Hutus, and of millions of “reactionaries” or “dissidents”
by communist regimes in Russia, China and Cambodia. In the Israeli
context, such violence is reflected in the occupation regime in
the territories, in the Palestinian terror against Israelis and in
persecution of foreign workers.

As for intra-communal and inter-personal violence, the most prominent
examples are murder, rape and battery of women, child abuse, street
thuggery, racial humiliation, corporal punishment in schools – to
which teachers have also been subjected recently – and excessive use
of force by the law authorities.

It is important to mention that although there is no necessary
connection between intra-communal and inter-personal violence, in
many cases the two are bound up with one another. Violence in wars is
usually accompanied by the rape of women, and hooliganism in football
fields is often inflamed by racial hatred.

Violent conduct can certainly be reduced by proper education. The
first principle of such education is recognizing that in order
to avoid such behavior, three elements must be present in the
individual’s consciousness: free will to act nonviolently based on a
moral commitment; self-restraint to curb a violent outburst and fear
of social sanctions.

The second principle of education to prevent violence is the
recognition of three factors conducive to violence. The first factor
is economic distress, especially the despair among the impoverished
and the frustration caused by economic differences. The second factor
is an authoritative, tribal and belligerent world view, which is
also reflected in rigid thought and zealousness favoring a certain
moral code. The third factor is displayed in cultural wantonness,
which attributes no meaning to demanding norms concerning morality,
education and culture.

The third principle, which can be deducted from the first two,
incorporates the pedagogical means to prevent violence. On the one
hand, the pupils’ personality should be fostered within a social
climate of humanism and decency, an intellectual culture of open
minds and critical thought, and a universal value code centering on
human dignity and the equality of man. On the other hand, educational
fostering must include strict standards of respect for human and civil
rights, fair and egalitarian behavior, self-restraint, obedience to the
law and preservation of public property and the natural environment.

To sum up, the combination of proper education, a fair society
and a demanding and humanistic culture could conceivably lead to a
significant reduction of violence in our midst. But there is a price
to pay: To achieve these goals we must renounce nationalistic and
religious ethnocentricity, all-devouring capitalism and abandonment
of culture.

Anyone want to pick up the gauntlet?

Dr. Nimrod Aloni is head of the Institute for Educational Thought at
the Seminar Hakibbutzim Teachers College, and the academic chairman
of the HAMA network for state-humanistic education.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress