Orange Revolution eyes Belarus

The Globe and Mail, Canada
Dec 29 2004

Orange Revolution eyes Belarus

Activist recruiting Yushchenko backers to help in campaign against
President

By MARK MacKINNON

KIEV — Ukraine’s Orange Revolution is not over yet, but Denis
Buinitsky already is recruiting for what he hopes will be Eastern
Europe’s next popular uprising.

“Who’s coming to the revolution in Belarus?” the activist shouted,
waving his arms to draw a crowd to a list he had mounted last night
in the tent city that still blocks traffic on Kiev’s Khreshchatyk
Street.

Within minutes, a short line of orange-clad students forms to write
their names, addresses and cellphone numbers in red ink on the long,
white piece of paper. They are the young foot soldiers of the
movement that brought Ukraine’s pro-Western opposition leader, Viktor
Yushchenko, to the brink of the presidency.

And like modern-day Che Guevaras, they say they are ready to march on
to the next revolution as soon as their cellphones ring to tell them
where it is.

Four years ago, it happened in Serbia, where student-led street
protests brought down Slobodan Milosevic. Last year, it was the Rose
Revolution in Georgia, when Eduard Shevardnadze was forced from power
after a rigged election.

Then came the recent weeks of protests in Kiev, triggered by a
falsified presidential vote on Nov. 21, that forced the regime of
President Leonid Kuchma and his clique to the brink.

Ukraine’s Central Election Commission said yesterday that with all
votes from Sunday’s election rerun counted, Mr. Yushchenko has 52 per
cent of the vote to 44 per cent for Mr. Kuchma’s hand-picked
successor, Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovich.

The results are not official until all complaints of fraud are
studied, a process expected to last into the new year.

Mr. Yanukovich, citing alleged irregularities, has said he will
challenge the vote count in court. However, the Council of Europe,
pointing to reports from international observers who say the election
was relatively free and fair, called yesterday for him to concede
defeat.

Although critics, notably in the Kremlin, argue that all three
uprisings were designed and paid for by Washington, there is no
question they had massive support among people who longed for
something better.

Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili, the young reformer who led
the demonstrations in Tbilisi last year and succeeded Mr.
Shevardnadze as President, said that what happened in Serbia, Georgia
and Ukraine is the leading edge of a third wave of European
liberation — the first being after the defeat of Nazi Germany in the
Second World War, the second after the fall of the Berlin Wall.

Mr. Buinitsky hopes the wave will next hit his native Belarus, a
country of 10 million in the centre of Europe that has been ruled for
a decade by the dictatorial President Alexander Lukashenko.

During those 10 years, the country lapsed into economic backwardness
and become an international pariah for its poor human-rights record.

“People in Kiev have freedom now; this isn’t the case in Minsk.
Lukashenko has made it impossible to hold such a demonstration there
because people know if they go into the streets they will go to
prison. But maybe it will be possible some day soon,” Mr. Buinitsky
said, standing outside a tent erected in the centre of Kiev for
Belarussian activists. “This has given us hope.”

It’s not just Belarussians who suddenly talk of peaceful revolution.
Activists from pro-democracy movements across the former Soviet Union
joined the protests in Kiev, anxious to show their support and,
perhaps, learn a few tricks.

The flags of Russia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Armenia were flown
above the orange-clad crowd on Independence Square. Boris Nemtsov, a
co-leader of the liberal Union of Right Forces party in Russia, said
from the stage in the early days after the Nov. 21 vote: “We need to
have freedom and democracy in Ukraine so that we can have freedom and
democracy in Russia.”

Moscow-based political analysts said the regimes in Russia and other
former Soviet states can be expected to tighten, rather than loosen,
the controls, in an effort to prevent the Georgian and Ukrainian
examples from being repeated in their backyards.

The authorities in faraway Kyrgyzstan, part of which was Soviet
Central Asia, are nervous and warn that their country is facing an
“orange danger” ahead of a parliamentary election in February.

Belarus’s opposition is calling on its supporters to gather on March
25 in Minsk’s central October Square to demand that Mr. Lukashenko
step down.

If he rejects this ultimatum, organizers said, they will prepare for
their own Orange Revolution around the presidential vote scheduled
for the same date in 2006.

“If there will be too few of us, the regime won’t hesitate,” reads a
leaflet delivered to 500,000 homes in Minsk this month.

“If tens of thousands go onto the streets, as in Kiev, it will not
dare to shoot at people.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

With Iraq vote in a month, every day crucial to success

USA Today
Dec 29 2004

With Iraq vote in a month, every day crucial to success

By Steven Komarow, USA TODAY

BAGHDAD – The white bed sheet, punctured and strung between a tree
and a utility pole, carries just a few words of hand-painted Arabic
script. “Every vote is more precious than gold,” it says – common
words in a normal election campaign.

But White House political guru Karl Rove would abandon his TV ad
budget for the power in this banner and thousands more like it.

It’s not just words but a fatwa, a decree, from Grand Ayatollah Ali
al-Sistani, spiritual leader of Iraq’s majority Shiite Muslims. Vote,
it says, or you have shirked your religious duty.

Forget blue states and red states. Allegiances in Iraq are in a
completely different league. In a country where Shiite Arabs are 60%
of the population – three times that of the next largest religious or
ethnic group – a slate of Shiite Muslim candidates associated with
Sistani is virtually certain to win control of Iraq’s new national
assembly in elections scheduled for Jan. 30.

A month before Iraqis take the biggest step yet in President Bush’s
plan to plant democracy in the former dictatorship, the eventual
tally is overshadowed by larger questions:

– Can free, fair elections be held in the midst of a violent
insurgency?

– Will a broad swath of Iraqi factions, including the Sunnis who
formed the backbone of Saddam Hussein’s regime but now threaten to
boycott, actually vote on Jan. 30 and thus make the results
legitimate?

– Will Iraqis abide by the popular vote and unite behind a Shiite-led
government? Or will Iraq succumb to what interim Prime Minister Ayad
Allawi warns is the insurgents’ plan to “create ethnic and religious
tensions” and possibly civil war?

The Bush administration predicts success. “People will be able to
look back and know that they’ve been involved … in something truly
historic,” Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said last week during a
visit with some of the 148,000 U.S. troops stationed here.

A successful election also could let those troops start a withdrawal
from Iraq.

But even moderate Iraqis, such as Sunni elder statesman Adnan
Pachachi, say violence or a boycott jeopardizes the process. “A
non-inclusive election that leaves large parts of the country
unrepresented and millions of Iraqis disenfranchised, an election
like this, is worse than no election at all,” he says.

Ready or not

Iraq is not accustomed to elections. Since a monarchy was overthrown
in a 1958 coup, it’s seen little except tallies like the 100% vote
won by Saddam in 2002.

The Jan. 30 ballot, by contrast, could leave Iraqi voters dazzled by
choice: 230 slates representing more than 7,000 candidates for a
275-seat national assembly. It would name a new interim government to
replace the U.S.-backed one now in power. By mid-2005 the assembly
would draft a constitution. Election of a permanent government would
be held by year’s end.

>From an office inside the U.S.-military-protected Green Zone, Abdul
Hussein al-Hindawi, head of the Iraqi election commission, and a team
of United Nations advisers are overseeing the production of ballots,
the training of 150,000 poll workers and the management of a host of
details that must be in place by election day.

Asked how things look a month away, he interrupts: “Not a month – 35
days! Every day is needed.”

But, he insists, the election will happen. On his table, he assembles
four sheets of paper into a larger square to show how big the ballot
will be. Each slate will get a single line, with its name, the party
symbol and a commission-assigned number that also identifies it. Next
to each will be an empty box for the voter to mark his or her choice.

No machines and no hanging chads here. Counting the votes will be
done by hand and take two or three days, he predicts.

To deter people from voting twice, poll workers will stamp hands with
indelible ink.

Hindawi acknowledges that’s a risk to voters if anti-election
insurgents want to punish them. But for now that’s the plan.

To prevent counterfeit ballots, Hindawi says the 14 million sheets
are being printed with currency-style security paper. Hindawi says
he’s recruiting students, teachers, lawyers and other educated Iraqis
to work at the thousands of polling places.

Up to 1 million Iraqi exiles will be eligible to cast ballots in 15
countries including the USA.

Working as an election official is one of the highest-risk jobs in
the annals of bureaucracy.

In Baghdad last week, in one of the most brazen attacks of the
insurgency, election workers were dragged from their car and three
executed on a downtown street. Unable to find enough security for
election day, U.N. monitoring will largely be conducted from
neighboring Jordan.

The danger to poll workers and voters on election day could force the
government to set up precincts outside of neighborhoods where people
could safely vote.

The commission has brushed aside a suggestion by Allawi to spread the
election over days or weeks to allow for more concentrated use of
Iraq’s inadequate security forces.

Iraqis will vote, Hindawi predicts, and perhaps astonish the
doubters.

Already, he says, the election is changing Iraq: “All the people
speak of elections. Open any newspaper and you read pages about the
elections, even newspapers which are against the elections. The
people see it happening.”

“This is not something really strange” for the cradle of
civilization, he adds. Iraqi archaeologists “consider us the first
democracy in the world, even before the Greeks.” he says.

Legitimacy in the balance

Violent attacks by insurgents are one threat to a revival of Iraq’s
long-dormant democratic heritage. Another, potentially more
devastating, is a boycott by Sunnis, Iraq’s second-largest faction.

Sunnis are only about 20% of the country’s 25 million people, but
they controlled Iraq for more than 40 years, mostly through Saddam’s
now banned Baath Party. The United States and interim Iraqi
government managed to lure several other Sunni groups to enter
candidate slates.

But on Monday, the largest Sunni political party pulled out, arguing
that poor security in Sunni cities such as Fallujah and Ramadi make a
legitimate outcome impossible. “Delaying would make a better and more
comprehensive process,” said Muhsin Abdul Hamid, secretary of the
Iraqi Islamic Party. He joined other Sunni leaders in demanding a
six-month delay.

Bush has ruled that out, concerned that a delay would encourage the
insurgents.

Just hours before Hamid’s news conference, a car bomb exploded
outside the Baghdad residence of Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, the head of the
most prominent Shiite slate and a close associate of Sistani. Hakim
was not hurt, but 15 people were killed, including some of his
guards.

On Tuesday, insurgents killed at least 25 people, mostly Iraqi
police, in attacks across the Sunni Triangle, as a militant group
claimed to have executed eight Iraqi employees of a U.S. security
company.

Secretary of State Colin Powell has stressed the importance of having
Sunnis represented in a new Iraqi government.

Even Shiites, hungry for power after decades of oppression under
Saddam, say Iraq will fail without Sunnis in a power-sharing
government.

The Sunnis “must participate no matter what the results of the
election,” says Saad Jawad Qindeel, acting head of the political
bureau of Hakim’s party, the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution
in Iraq, or SCIRI. “Even if we get 70% of the seats of the national
assembly, we still believe that the transition government cannot be
made from one component” of Iraq.

Those words seem especially moderate given SCIRI’s history of
fighting Saddam. Still hanging in the entrance to the SCIRI office in
Baghdad is a small sign: “Every Baathist is a criminal until proven
otherwise.”

Optimism vs. history

Such views raise the chilling prospect of unrelenting conflict
erupting into civil war, something the CIA warned of in an analysis
that became public this year. It was based partly on the stated goals
of terrorists such as Osama bin Laden and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi,
Iraq’s most prominent al-Qaeda associate, and partly on history.

Monday, a man claiming to be bin Laden called for a boycott of the
elections in an audiotape broadcast. He also called Zarqawi, who has
claimed responsibility for kidnappings, beheadings and suicide
attacks, a true “soldier of God” and anointed him al-Qaeda’s leader
in Iraq.

For centuries, Iraq’s history of violence and oppression has pitted
one ethnic group against another. Saddam’s ruthless regime was only
the latest.

Sunnis and Shiites “have massacred and oppressed each other in Iraq
since the seventh century, taking time off to do the same for the
country’s Armenians, Assyrians, Chaldeans, Jews, Kurds and other
minorities,” writes Edwin Black, author of a history on Iraq. The
election “guarantees that the Shiite majority will once again control
the nation, settling old scores and disenfranchising everyone else,
and laying the groundwork for another civil war.”

The Bush administration has begun trying to tamp down hopes that the
election will end Iraq’s insurgency. “Elections are an event, and
democracy is a process,” says Bob Callahan, spokesman for the U.S.
Embassy here. A stable and democratic society will come, but “nobody
thinks it’s going to happen in a year or two.”

But Iraq’s new politics are not only a power play between Sunni
extremists and American idealists. The prospect of free elections has
energized niches in Iraqi society, represented by scores of virtually
unknown political groups that registered slates. They seek a voice,
if not power.

“This is our country, and we have to contribute in building and
establishing freedom and democracy,” says Yon’adam Kan’na, head of a
Christian coalition slate. “People are scared because of terrorists
and Saddam Hussein’s regime remains, but I will say that we have to
be confident that peace and stability will succeed.”

“The idea of an election is quite modern, and I love to see our
country’s politics the same as in civilized nations and no
dictatorship,” says Said Sara Ahmed, a university student who favors
U.S. ally Allawi as someone strong enough for the job.

When the official campaign season kicked off Dec. 15, Iraq’s
Communists, powerful before Saddam took over, held a rally at a
soccer stadium. In Iraq’s south, Hindawi says, there’s even some
Western-style campaigning with candidates meeting voters. In addition
to the national assembly, each Iraqi province has municipal elections
Jan. 30. Kurdistan, the semi-autonomous province in the north, also
elects its regional assembly.

In Baghdad, open campaigning is dangerous, but thousands of posters
are scattered across city walls. Most are simple, with maps of Iraq
and lists of candidates. There are pictures of peace doves, scales of
justice and other symbols of a better Iraq.

Perhaps because the concept of representative democracy is so new, or
because the situation is so dire, even major parties like SCIRI shy
away from U.S.-style pork-barrel promises. Instead they discuss
ideals such as justice, peace and religious rights.

Holding elected officials accountable to the people’s material needs
will come later, Qindeel says.

“Having elections, having a constitution, getting the people to
exercise their rights, all … are important steps toward providing
solutions to the daily problems they suffer,” from gas lines to power
outages to unemployment. “There are no magic solutions to these
problems, but it starts with having a representative government that
comes from the election boxes.”

Contributing: Sabah al-Anbaki and Charles Crain in Baghdad; wire
reports

New Hope of Syrian Minorities: Ripple Effect of Iraqi Politics

New York Times
Dec 29 2004

New Hope of Syrian Minorities: Ripple Effect of Iraqi Politics

By KATHERINE ZOEPF

QAMISHLI, Syria, Dec. 28 – The Iraqi election next month may be
evoking skepticism in much of the world, but here in northeastern
Syria, home to concentrations of several ethnic minorities, it is
evoking a kind of earnest hope.

“I believe democracy in Iraq must succeed,” Vahan Kirakos, a Syrian
of Armenian ethnicity, said recently. “Iraq is like the stone thrown
into the pool.”

Though Syria’s Constitution grants equal opportunity to all ethnic
and religious groups in this very diverse country, minority activists
say their rights are far from equal. They may not form legal
political parties or publish newspapers in minority languages. More
than 150,000 members of Syria’s largest minority, the Kurds, are
denied citizenship.

Minority issues remain one of the infamous “red lines,” the litany of
forbidden topics that Syrians have long avoided mentioning in public.

But in the year and a half since Saddam Hussein was removed from
power in Iraq, that has begun to change, with minority activists
beginning to speak openly of their hopes that a ripple effect from
next door may bring changes at home.

And here in Syria’s far northeastern province of Hasakah, which
borders Turkey and Iraq, there are signs of a new restlessness.

In March, more than 3,000 Kurds in Qamishli, a city in Hasakah
Province on the Turkish border, took part in antigovernment protests,
which led to clashes with Syrian security forces and more than 25
deaths.

In late October, more than 2,000 Assyrian Christians in the
provincial capital, Hasakah City, held a demonstration calling for
equal treatment by the local police. The demonstration, which Hasakah
residents say was the first time Assyrians in Syria held a public
protest, followed an episode in which two Christians were killed by
Muslims who called them “Bush supporters,” and “Christian dogs.”

Nimrod Sulayman, a former member of the Syrian Communist Party’s
central committee, said Hasakah’s proximity to Iraq and demographic
diversity meant that residents of the province were watching events
in Iraq and taking inspiration from the freedoms being introduced
there.

“This Assyrian protest in Hasakah was caused by a personal dispute,
but the way the people wanted their problem solved was a result of
the Iraqi impact,” Mr. Sulayman said. “They see that demonstrating is
a civilized way to express a position.”

“Since the war in Iraq, this complex of fear has been broken, and we
feel greater freedom to express ourselves,” he added.

Mr. Sulayman noted that members of minorities in Hasakah had also
been energized by a sense of brotherhood with their counterparts in
Iraq.

“For example, when Massoud Barzani announced that Kurdish would be
officially recognized as one of the main languages in Iraq, the Kurds
in Hasakah were out in the streets celebrating, expressing their
joy,” Mr. Sulayman said, referring to the leader of the Kurdistan
Democratic Party in Iraq.

Taher Sfog, the secretary general of Syria’s illegal Kurdish
Democratic National Party, suggested that in some sense, Iraq and
Syria were mirror images of each other, as they shared a roughly
similar ethnic composition and a political heritage of Baathism, the
secular Arab nationalist policy of Mr. Hussein and Bashar Assad, the
Syrian president.

“Kurds in Syria feel relieved when we see Kurds in Iraq getting their
rights and holding news conferences,” Mr. Sfog said in his home in
Qamishli. “Democracy there will lead to a push in Syria, too.”

In fact, the Hussein government had long been estranged from Syria’s.
Before the American invasion of Iraq, many Iraqi politicians who
opposed Mr. Hussein made their homes in Damascus. Basil Dahdouh, a
member of the illegal Syrian Nationalist Social Party who represents
Damascus in Syria’s Parliament as an independent, said renewed
contact with Iraq, as well as the chance to observe the changes
taking place there, was leading many Syrians to actively question
their own political ideals. “The Iraq question has raised the idea of
what kind of state we want,” he said.

Emmanuel Khosaba, a spokesman for the Assyrian Democratic Movement, a
political party representing Iraq’s Assyrian Christian minority, said
Syrian political life could not help but be influenced by Iraq.

“In Syria, gradually it’s becoming safer to talk about minority
rights and human rights,” he said. But he cautioned against seeing a
single “Iraq effect” on the very different aspirations of Syria’s
minorities .

Advertisement

“The interaction between minorities in Iraq and its neighboring
countries really depends on how particular minorities view their own
situation,” Mr. Khosaba said. “For example the Assyrians in Syria are
seeking a national solution within a democratic framework, while some
of the Kurds seek separation.”

Despite their sometimes startling optimism about an Iraqi democracy’s
longer-term prospects, the Syrian minority leaders became more sober
when discussing the violence in Iraq. Not only is it painful to see
Iraq convulsed with strife, they said, but instability in Iraq is
causing problems closer to home.

Bachir Isaac Saadi, the chairman of the political bureau of the
Assyrian Democratic Organization, said that throughout Syria, anger
over the American presence in Iraq had set off a sharp rise in
Islamist sentiment, which was creating difficulties for Syria’s
Christian minority.

“Christians in Syria aren’t afraid of the government any longer,” Mr.
Saadi said. “They’re afraid of their neighbors.”

Though the increase in Islamist feeling is troubling, minority
activists say, fear of the government and of publicly discussing
minority rights has eased to a degree which would have been
unthinkable only a few years ago.

Mr. Kirakos, the Armenian activist, has even begun a bid for Syria’s
presidency, an astoundingly brazen gesture in a country where the
Assad family has ruled unchallenged for more than 30 years.

The Christian Mr. Kirakos’s presidential run – which he announced in
September on , a pro-democracy Web site – is illegal, as
Syria’s Constitution stipulates that the president must be a Muslim.
But though he lost his engineering job as a result of his activism
and his family has received uncomfortable phone calls from the secret
police, Mr. Kirakos is unfazed.

“I carry a Syrian citizenship which is not equal to Ahmed’s
citizenship,” he said, using the common Muslim name as shorthand for
Syria’s Sunni majority. “It is the Syrian Constitution that must
change. We should be writing a constitution that guarantees equal
rights for everyone.”

www.elaph.com

BAKU: Azeri Refugees to Get IDB Assistance

Baku Today
Dec 29 2004

Azeri Refugees to Get IDB Assistance

Sponsored Links

by Habib Shaikh, Arab News 29/12/2004 06:34

The Islamic Development Bank (IDB) is to assist Azerbaijan government
in meeting some of the social needs of the country’s refugees,
particularly in education, health, water supply and sanitation, in
the territory occupied by Armenia.

Bank President Dr. Ahmad Muhammad Ali, who visited Azerbaijan, has
promised that the IDB would `very soon’ send a mission to identify
priority areas to help the refugees.

Previously, the bank had allocated $1.5 million as grant to provide
emergency assistance to these displaced people. It had also provided
a loan of $10 million to finance schools, water supply, irrigation
infrastructure and agriculture equipment for the benefit of the
refugees.

Dr. Ali, who visited one of the refugee camps, also promised that the
IDB would do its best to sensitize the international community on the
tragedy of these displaced people.

Earlier, during a meeting with President Ilham Aliev in the capital
Baku, the two focused on ways to enhance the `already excellent’
cooperation between Azerbaijan and the IDB.

Azerbaijan authorities and the IDB president agreed to redouble
efforts to promote intra-trade and intra-investment among member
countries and also enhance their capacity to export to other
countries. IDB expressed its readiness to assist in organizing
exhibitions in the UAE and Germany to present their products and
project their potentialities to investors in various sectors of
Azerbaijan economy.

Since Azerbaijan joined the bank in 1992, IDB has provided it
financing amounting to $130 million. The bank has also participated
in the financing of several roads connecting Azerbaijan to the
European markets. Currently, it is considering the possibility of
participating in the construction of another section of the road
linking the country to Europe (Yavlakh-Ganja), as well as the
North-South corridor linking Azerbaijan to Iran.

The bank is giving special attention to the energy sector in the
country, and is considering the possibility of participating in the
connection of the energy grid of Azerbaijan and the grid of Russia
and Iran, facilitating the export and import of energy from
Azerbaijan to the two countries.

Chess: China Wins 1st Internet Chess International

St Petersburg Times, Russia
Dec 29 2004

China Wins 1st Internet Chess International

THE ST. PETERSBURG TIMES

The world’s first international chess tournament played over the
Internet ended Thursday with China clinching an unexpected victory
ahead of France, Russia and Armenia.

The Tigran Petrosian Internet Memorial tournament was held in
commemoration of the 75th anniversary of the birth of the late world
chess champion Tigran Petrosian, an Armenian. Each four-player team
played six rounds.

China was the lowest-ranked team, but finished with 14 points to
Russia’s and France’s 13, but France beat Russia on tiebreaks to take
second place. Armenia finished with 8 points.

The St. Petersburg Chess Federation with the support of the city
government and the Armenian community in St. Petersburg were among
the organizers of the competition, which took place Dec. 18 to 23.

The teams of the four competing countries fought it out for $55,000
in prize money without leaving their home countries.

The Russian team of Pyotr Shvidler, Alexander Khalifman, Alexei
Dreyev and Vadim Zvyagintsev played in St. Petersburg under
supervision of French referee Jean-Claude Templeur.

“Apart from the handshake, the playing conditions resembled the
conditions of any high-level tournament,” Templeur said. “Whether you
are playing on the Internet under official supervision or meeting
your opponent face-to-face seems not to matter much.”

“This tournament has shown that from now on it will be possible to
play chess under realistic sporting conditions from any part of the
planet, where you live,” he said. “Why don’t we dream of huge opens
played at 50 or 100 sites around the world. After my experience here
in St. Petersburg, I know that this is already possible.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Turkey’s long march to an EU wedding

The Japan Times, Japan
Dec 29 2004

GANTLET OF REFERENDUMS AWAIT

Turkey’s long march to an EU wedding

By ANDRE FONTAINE

PARIS — Although a wedding date has yet to be set between the
European Union and Turkey, the two parties managed to conclude what
several participants at the Dec. 17 European summit have called a
formal “engagement.”

Such an outcome had long looked doubtful because a majority of the
public in EU countries that have a large number of Turkish workers
oppose Turkish membership in the EU.

In Germany, 55 percent are opposed; in Austria, 62 percent; and in
France, 67 percent. Such opposition has increased following the
murder of a popular filmmaker by a Muslim immigrant in the
Netherlands. In addition, the EU now has 25 members, making it all
the more difficult to attain the unanimous approval required for
Turkey to join the union.

Talks on the conditions of Ankara’s entry into the EU will begin Oct.
3, 2005. It will be a long process due to the need to harmonize
Turkish law with no less than 80,000 pages of European rules, and to
find the immense funds needed to provide Turkey the economic and
social help to which it will be entitled.

This means that Turkey’s entry into the union cannot possibly take
place before 2014. Furthermore, the eventual treaty of admission will
have to be submitted to a referendum in every member country if the
draft European Constitution — the subject of a special convention
chaired by former French President Giscard d’Estaing and unanimously
approved June 18 — is ratified, as the document makes such a step
compulsory for any enlargement of the EU.

Even if the draft constitution is not adopted, several countries will
still organize their own referendums. As French President Jacques
Chirac has made a strong commitment to such a move, count France
among these countries.

At 72, Chirac is unlikely to still be in charge when such a
referendum takes place. While initiating a referendum designed to
take place so long from now may sound strange, it was apparently the
only way he found to avoid a crisis not only with his European
colleagues but within his own party, the Union for a Popular
Movement.

UMP’s new chairman, Nicolas Sarkozy, and two former prime ministers,
Edouard Balladur and Alain Juppe, openly express their hostility to
Turkey’s entry, thus reflecting the mood of a majority of their
countrymen. D’Estaing has equally declared himself against it, as
have the Christian Democrat members of the Union for French Democracy
party.

All of these politicians prefer the formula of a “privileged
partnership” advocated by the German rightist opposition but
categorically opposed by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
and an overwhelming majority of the Turkish public.

It’s easy to understand Erdogan’s reasons. For decades Turkey has
belonged to the Council of Europe, and it has been an associate
member of the EU since 1963. At that time, French President Charles
de Gaulle didn’t hesitate to hail Turkey’s “European vocation.”
Turkey has also joined the Customs Union created in 1995, and at the
1999 European summit its “partnership” was recognized.

In any case, another European referendum will take place in France
next year, probably in May, on the draft constitution. As France’s
Socialist Party has decided by a large majority to back this
agreement, the “yes” side is likely to win by a small margin.
Nevertheless, one cannot rule out a negative vote, which could in
turn affect the outcome of the talks on Turkey’s admission.

Referendums are not the only obstacles that could deal Ankara’s
application a fatal blow. In addition, the Dec. 17 agreement mentions
a formal condition: Turkey must make a decisive improvement in its
observance of human rights.

Nobody denies that Turkey has made significant progress in this area
since Erdogan took power following the 2002 general election. His
party, the AKP (Justice and Development Party), is supposed to be
both conservative and Islamic, but it resembles a Muslim version of
the Christian-Democrat parties of Western Europe, maintaining a
commitment to upholding human rights.

Turkey has abolished the death penalty — a prerequisite to enter the
EU — as well as a law that demanded the jailing of adulterous wives.
In addition, a law opening university doors to pupils of religious
schools has been “suspended” and the use of torture by police has
seriously diminished.

Much remains to be done as many abuses still take place in various
fields, particularly regarding women and the country’s Kurdish
minority. The EU Council has decided that if serious human rights
violations take place in Turkey, a vote by a third of its members
will be enough to halt the admission talks.

Two other “conditions” don’t figure in the Dec. 17 agreement but will
play a serious role in the future:

The first concerns the deaths of up to 2 million Armenians during
World War I at the hands of Turks, responsibility for which Ankara
has never accepted. The proud Turks despise the idea of having to own
up to such an act, but why should they not do so when Germany has
repeatedly apologized for its slaughter of millions of Jews in World
War II.

Chirac has been particularly insistent on the Armenian issue, as has
the European Parliament in Strasbourg. While approving in principle
Turkey’s entry into the union, the Parliament has insisted that
Ankara should clearly acknowledge the Armenian genocide.

The second issue concerns Cyprus, a British colony from 1878 to 1960.
The population of this beautiful island in the eastern Mediterranean
is roughly 80 percent Greek and 20 percent Turkish. An attempt by
Greek rightists to unite the country with Greece led the Turkish Army
to intervene in 1974 and occupy one-third of the territory.

Later Ankara created the Cyprus Turkish Republic, which no country
but Turkey has recognized. Although many mediation efforts have taken
place, the division issue remains unresolved.

Now that the Greek government of the island is member of the EU,
everyone thinks that Turkey will finally accept a reunification of
Cyprus in the framework of a confederation.

Important steps have been made, including the opening of the border,
allowing some 200,000 Greek Cypriots who had to flee their homes in
1974 to freely visit their former residences. And Ankara has signed
the Greek Cyprus regime. It’s difficult to imagine the Turks not
going further. But they clearly hate the idea, so it will take time.

Andre Fontaine is former editor in chief of Le Monde.

ASBAREZ Online [12-28-2004]

ASBAREZ ONLINE
TOP STORIES
12/28/2004
TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
WEBSITE AT <;HTTP://

1) Gomitas Institute Donates Armenian Genocide Books to US Congress Members
2) Armenian Prime Minister Conveys Condolences
3) Saakashvili Tells Armenian Population Integration Necessary
4) Another Gas Poisoning Reported in Armenia

1) Gomitas Institute Donates Armenian Genocide Books to US Congress Members

WASHINGTON, DC (Armenpress)–In commemoration of the 90th anniversary of the
Armenian Genocide, the UK-based Gomitas Institute on Armenian Genocide studies
has donated 500 copies of its latest publication, United States Official
Records on the Armenian Genocide 1915-17, to members of the US Senate and
House
of Representatives.
This initiative was taken at the request of a generous benefactor, and made
possible through the support of the Congressional Caucus on Armenian
Issues, as
well as the Washington, DC based Armenian National Committee of America
(ANCA);
the move comes as the incoming 109th Congress faces consideration of the
Armenian Genocide Resolution.
“With the publication of this volume, the Gomitas Institute has, once again,
provided a vital resource for all those working to overcome the Turkish
government’s shameful campaign to pressure the United States into
complicity in
Turkey’s denial of the Armenian Genocide,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram
Hamparian. “The comprehensive and compelling evidence assembled in this book
establishes the US response to the Armenian Genocide as a critical
milestone in
American history–one that Turkey should not be allowed to erase.”
United States Official Records on the Armenian Genocide 1915-17 was published
by the Gomitas Institute and is the latest book among the expanding resources
on the Armenian Genocide, currently utilized by students, scholars, and
journalists.
“The documents in this book provide a first-hand look at the efforts of US
consuls and the American Ambassador in Constantinople to engage the US
government in ending the systematic destruction of the Armenian people. Sadly,
these efforts were ultimately unsuccessful, the massacres continued, and most
Armenians perished as a result. . . It is our hope that this publication will
help educate America’s leaders and the general public about the Armenian
Genocide and the need for the US Congress to enact legislation that recognizes
this tragedy as genocide. Finally, we must ensure that the lessons learned
from
this tragedy are used to prevent future genocides.” write Congressmen Frank
Pallone and Joseph Knollenberg in their forward of the book.
A sister publication, United States Diplomacy on the Bosphorus: The Diaries of
Ambassador Morgenthau 1913-1916, will soon be printed.
Serving as an invaluable record of the Armenian genocide in all its
complexities, the two books reveal to what extent the United States government
knew about the Armenian genocide, as early as the summer of 1915.

2) Armenian Prime Minister Conveys Condolences
Death Toll in Asian Disaster Approaches 60,000

GALLE (Reuters)–Armenian prime minister Andranik Margarian sent
condolences to
the prime ministers of Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Thailand, Bangladesh, and India to
express Armenia’s anguish over the thousands of deaths and the scale of the
destruction caused by Sunday’s monster tsunami.
The sea and wreckage of coastal towns around the Indian Ocean yielded up tens
of thousands of bodies on Tuesday, pushing the toll to 60,000.
The apocalyptic destruction caused by the ocean surge dwarfed the efforts of
governments and relief agencies as they recovered countless corpses while
trying to treat survivors and take care of millions of homeless, increasingly
threatened by disease amid the rotting remains. Thousands more were injured.
The United Nations launched what it called an unprecedented relief effort to
assist nations hit by a devastating tsunami triggered by a magnitude 9.0
undersea earthquake off the Indonesian island of Sumatra.
In a further threat to the region, disease could kill as many people as those
killed by the wall of water, a top World Health Organization (WHO) official
said.
While grieving families in wrecked coastal towns and resorts buried their
loved
ones, others, including many foreign tourists, searched for friends and
relatives still missing.
In Thailand, where thousands of tourists were enjoying a Christmas break to
escape the northern winter, many of the country’s paradise resorts were turned
into graveyards.
In Sri Lanka, hundreds of people were killed when a wave crashed into a train,
wrecking eight carriages and uprooting the track it was traveling on. The
train
was called “Sea Queen”.
Of the overall death toll so far of 59,186, Indonesia has suffered the biggest
number of victims, with its Health Ministry reporting 27,174 dead.
Nearly all the deaths in Indonesia were in the northwestern province of
Aceh at
the tip of Sumatra. Rescue crews were still trying to reach cut off areas.
Separatist rebels announced a truce while people search for loved ones.
Sri Lanka reported around 19,000 dead. India’s toll of 11,500 included at
least
7,000 on one archipelago, the Andamans and Nicobar. On one island, the
surge of
water killed two-thirds of the population.
Hundreds of others died in the Maldives, Myanmar and Malaysia. The arc of
water
struck as far as Somalia and Kenya. Fishing villages, ports and resorts were
devastated, power and communications cut and homes destroyed. The United
Nations said the cost of the damage will reach billions of dollars.
The tremor, the biggest in 40 years, ripped a chasm in the sea bed which
launched the tsunami, possibly the deadliest in more than 200 years.

3) Saakashvili Tells Armenian Population Integration Necessary

JAVAKHK (Civil Georgia)–Georgia’s President Mikhail Saakashvili visited
Akhalkalak on December 28, a predominately Armenian-populated town in southern
Georgian region of Javakhk.
In meeting with the local population, President Saakashvili addressed the
necessity of integration into Georgia.
“Our Armenian population [of Javakhk] is very patriotic, and requires more
attention and care. Though you should be integrated, your language and your
culture should also be preserved. I know that you face many problems, but we
can solve them if we stand together,” he said.
Saakashvili stressed that the construction on a new highway connecting Tbilisi
with Akhalkalak would begin in the coming year, “We have already allocated
funds for this project.”
He also promised scholarships for students willing to continue their education
in Tbilisi universities.

4) Another Gas Poisoning Reported in Armenia

(AP)–A man and his wife were asphyxiated by a natural gas leak in Armenia, an
emergency official said Monday–the fourth such incident this month.
The deaths of the couple, aged 59 and 55, brings the death toll from gas leaks
and poisonings this year to 16–with 12 in December alone.
A spokesman for the emergency situations ministry said neighbors found the two
bodies on Sunday at their home in the town of Ashtarak, north of Yerevan.
Preliminary information showed that a poorly installed homemade gas heater and
an illegal connection to municipal gas pipes were to blame.
Many people in the poor ex-Soviet republic use homemade gas heaters, sometimes
tapping illegally into gas lines, because their homes lack heaters, which are
expensive.

All subscription inquiries and changes must be made through the proper carrier
and not Asbarez Online. ASBAREZ ONLINE does not transmit address changes and
subscription requests.
(c) 2004 ASBAREZ ONLINE. All Rights Reserved.

ASBAREZ provides this news service to ARMENIAN NEWS NETWORK members for
academic research or personal use only and may not be reproduced in or through
mass media outlets.

http://www.asbarez.com/&gt
HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ.COM
WWW.ASBAREZ.COM

BAKU: Armenia Trying to Withdraw Karabakh Problem From UN Session

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Dec 28 2004

Armenia Trying to Withdraw Karabakh Problem From UN Session Agenda

Russian co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group Yuri Merzlyakov has told
Armenian media that the OSCE fact-finding mission, which will visit
Azerbaijan’s occupied territories soon, will conduct monitoring not in
Nagorno Karabakh itself, but only in the seven regions adjacent to it.

Merzlyakov said that Armenia will provide suitable conditions for the
work of the OSCE mission, while Azerbaijan will allegedly withdraw its
proposal to discuss the illegal settlement of Armenians its occupied
territories at the United Nations.

Azerbaijani officials have not expressed their position on the matter
yet.

Director of the Political Innovation and Technology Center Mubariz
Ahmadogu says that Merzlyakov’s statement was distorted by both
Azerbaijani and Armenian press.

`Even if his statement was not distorted, it still hurts Armenia’, he
added.

Armenia to join Bologna Declaration (re higher education) next May

ArmenPress
Dec 28 2004

ARMENIA TO JOIN BOLOGNA DECLARATION NEXT MAY

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 28, ARMENPRESS: Armenian education and science
minister Sergo Yeritsian said Monday Armenia plans to join the
Bologna Declaration next May. He said the ministry had sent a report
on Armenian education activity, which was approved. Beofre Armenia’s
memebrship is ratified a group of experts will arrive here to carry
out a series of studies of the higher education establishments.
The Bologna Declaration was signed in 1999 by education ministers
from around 30 of European countries in Bologna, Italy, to establish
a single area of higher education by 2010.
The Bologna Declaration of 19 June 1999 involves six actions
relating to a system of academic grades which are easy to read and
compare, including the introduction of the diploma supplement,
designed to improve international “transparency” and facilitate
academic and professional recognition of qualifications; a system
essentially based on two cycles : a first cycle geared to the
employment market and lasting at least three years and a second cycle
(Master) conditional upon the completion of the first cycle; a system
of accumulation and transfer of credits; mobility of students,
teachers and researchers; cooperation with regard to quality
assurance; the European dimension of higher education.
Yeritsian said Armenia is able to meet these requirements. He said
a timetable of actions was planned which will become more specified
after joining the Declaration.

Cyprus still facing uncertain future

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
December 27, 2004, Monday
02:05:08 Central European Time

Cyprus still facing uncertain future

By Masis der Parthogh

Nicosia

When Cyprus joined the European Union on May 1, celebrations on the
island were muted, unlike the mood in the nine other new enlargement
states. The year had kicked off uneasily after United Nations
Secretary General Kofi Annan had tried to secure a solution that
would have reunited the island after a 30 years of division. The U.N.
chief finalised a document initially conceived in November 2002 and
put it to separate referenda to the main Greek Cypriot and Turkish
Cypriot communities. The former rejected the plan outright as it
failed to guarantee the pullout of Turkey’s 35,000-strong garrison
stationed in the north since Ankara invaded and occupied the
territory in 1974. No other assurances were given about the reduction
of the 65,000 settlers from Anatolia either. On the other hand, the
majority of Turkish Cypriots embraced the “Annan Plan” in the April
24 poll, saying it brought them closer to autonomy within a federal
state of two equal partners. In theory, at least, Europe had expected
a reunited Cyprus to join the Union, with several phases of the U.N.
plan already implemented by summer, when a significant number of
Greek Cypriot refugees would have returned to the lands they lost
three decades earlier. However, the “No” vote of the Greek Cypriot
referendum left a bitter feeling among both communities, with the
Turkish Cypriots expressing greater mistrust and pushing them closer
to the patronage of Ankara. Incentives were supposed to come into
force throughout the year to encourage trade and movement along the
180-kilometre “Green Line” of division. Barbed wire still separates
the 700,000 Orthodox Greek Cypriots from the 200,000 Moslem Turkish
Cypriots, with only five checkpoints where people can make the
crossing to the other side. Cyprus President Tassos Papadopoulos was
widely expected to cast a veto at the December 17 summit in Brussels
and block Turkey from joining the E.U. unless it offered full
recognition to all ten new member states through an extension of the
Customs Union agreement. The Dutch Presidency intervened and reached
a compromise, partly satisfying the British and U.S. demands for
Turkey’s unconditional membership, while the Greek Cypriots may
exercise their veto prior to the October 3 start of accession talks
with Ankara. “I warned my (E.U.) counterparts that if Turkey does not
meet its commitments, we reserve the right to block the start of
accession negotiations, estimated to begin on October 3,”
Papadopoulos said in media interviews. But he ruled out any
re-engagement on the same U.N. plan he led Greek Cypriots to reject
in April. “As it stands, that plan is never going to be put before
the people again.” This is where Turkey’s abilities to reach a
compromise will come in, as it has to persuade the U.N. chief and
public opinion of its clear intentions to help resolve the Cyprus
dispute, while respecting human rights in its own country as regards
religious freedom, Kurdish rights and recognition of the Armenian
genocide in 1915. Failure to do so will put on hold all its hopes of
ever joining the European club within the next 15 years or so, during
which time the “Cyprus problem” would remain unresolved and the
Turkish Cypriots would still be over-dependent on handouts from
Ankara. dpa mdp ch