Kwasniewski, Aliyev on cooperation, Caspian Sea oil

PAP Polish Press Agency
PAP News Wire
March 30, 2005 Wednesday

Kwasniewski, Aliyev on cooperation, Caspian Sea oil

Warsaw, March 30

Poland is very interested in big projects
concerning the transmission of crude oil and gas from the Caspian Sea
region to Europe which have been presented by Azerbaijan to the
EU, said President Aleksander Kwasniewski on Wednesday
following talks with Azeri president Ilham Aliyev.

We discussed the possibility of including in the projects
the Odessa-Brody-Gdansk stretch, Kwasniewski told a news
conference.

President Aliyev, on the two-day official visit to Poland
said talks on including Poland in the project were underway. He
stressed that Azerbaijan had always supported the extension of
Odessa-Brody-Gdansk pipeline.

Kwasniewski added he had discussed the stepping up of the
pipeline construction with Ukrainian President Victor Yushchenko and
that in his opinion Ukraine seemed to be interested in joining
the project.

The Polish president said Poland supported Azeri efforts to
establish closer cooperation with the EU, NATO and WTO and was ready
to share its experience in this field.

During the visit three agreements between both governments
were signed: on economic cooperation, on cooperation and mutual
assistance in customs issues and on cooperation in defence. According
to Kwasniewski also agreements on cooperation between SMEs and
labour markets as well as letters of intent on cooperation in
agriculture and education will be signed.

According to the Polish president a peaceful solution to
Azeri-Armenian conflict about Nagorno-Karabakh was feasible but, as
the president stressed, the decision hinged on Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Asked about Poland’s official stand in case of Azeri democratic
revolution gathering momentum Kwasniewski said Poland persistently
supported democracy, civil society, democratic institutions and the
freedom of mass media.

The Azeri president said he was satisfied with the level of
bilateral relations. He explained that he updated his Polish
counterpart on negotiations with Armenia.

After the meeting of the two presidents Defence Minister
Jerzy Szmajdzinski conveyed to his Azeri counterpart Safar Abiyev
archival materials confirming the presence of Azeri officers in the
Polish armed forces in the period between the two world wars.

The Azeri president received deputy Senate Speaker Jolanta
Danielak, who stressed smooth development and intensification of the
political dialogue.

President Aliyev said his country was in the process of
making investor-friendly laws and expected an increased number of
Polish investments.

OSCE chief hails NK upcoming talks between Armenian, Azeri Leaders

Agence France Presse
March 30 2005

OSCE chief hails Karabakh upcoming talks between Armenian, Azeri
leaders

AFP 31/03/2005 01:48

YEREVAN, March 30 (AFP) – The Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) on Wednesday hailed upcoming talks
between the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan over rising tensions in
the disputed enclave of
Nagorno-Karabakh.

“The presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia must use this window of
opportunity to solve the conflict,” said OSCE chairman Dimitrij Rupel
during a visit to the Armenian capital Yerevan.

Armenian President Robert Kocharian and his Azeri counterpart Ilham
Aliyev will discuss Nagorno-Karabakh in Warsaw on May 16, officials
said here earlier Wednesday.

They will meet on the sidelines of a Council of Europe meeting.

Long-simmering tensions over the disputed enclave in the volatile
Caucasus have flared recently, sparking fears that the escalation of
hostilities along a ceasefire line between Armenian and Azeri forces
could lead to a new war.

“It is essential to put an end to ceasefire violations, and there
must be a solution as soon as possible,” Rupel told reporters said
after talks with Kocharian.

Armenia has controlled Karabakh and seven surrounding regions which
make up 14 percent of Azerbaijan’s internationally recognized
territory since the two former Soviet republics ended large-scale
hostilities with a ceasefire in 1994.

But an escalation of ceasefire breaches and a mounting death toll
reported in recent weeks by the Azeri media have given observers
pause and caused concern in Washington, as efforts to resolve the
dispute diplomatically have disintegrated.

In the past month alone there have been reports of numerous exchanges
of fire between Azeri and Armenian forces resulting in the deaths of
at least four Azeris and the capture of another three.

During 2004, six Azeri soldiers were killed.

Polish president, Azerbaijani counterpart discuss oil pipelines

Polish president, Azerbaijani counterpart discuss oil pipelines

PAP news agency
30 Mar 05

Warsaw

Poland is very interested in big projects concerning the transmission
of crude oil and gas from the Caspian Sea region to Europe which have
been presented by Azerbaijan to the EU, said President Aleksander
Kwasniewski on Wednesday [30 March] following talks with Azerbaijani
President Ilham Aliyev.

We discussed the possibility of including in the projects the
Odessa-Brody-Gdansk stretch [running through Ukraine to Poland],
Kwasniewski told a news conference.

President Aliyev, on a two-day official visit to Poland, said talks on
including Poland in the project were under way. He stressed that
Azerbaijan had always supported the extension of the
Odessa-Brody-Gdansk pipeline.

Kwasniewski added he had discussed the stepping up of the pipeline
construction with Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko and that in
his opinion Ukraine seemed to be interested in joining the project.

The Polish president said Poland supported Azerbaijan’s efforts to
establish closer cooperation with the EU, NATO and WTO and was ready
to share its experience in this field.

During the visit three agreements between both governments were
signed: on economic cooperation, on cooperation and mutual assistance
in customs issues, and on cooperation in defence. According to
Kwasniewski, also agreements on cooperation between SMEs and labour
markets, as well as letters of intent on cooperation in agriculture
and education will be signed.

According to the Polish president a peaceful solution to the
Azerbaijani-Armenian conflict over Nagornyy Karabakh was feasible but,
as the president stressed, the decision hinged on Armenia and
Azerbaijan.

Asked about Poland’s official stand in case of an Azerbaijani
democratic revolution gathering momentum, Kwasniewski said Poland
persistently supported democracy, civil society, democratic
institutions and the freedom of the mass media.

After the meeting of the two presidents, Defence Minister Jerzy
Szmajdzinski conveyed to his Azerbaijani counterpart Safar Abiyev
archival materials confirming the presence of Azerbaijani officers in
the Polish armed forces in the period between the two world wars.

Tbilisi: Georgian bank takes first commercial loan

The Messenger, Georgia
March 30 2005

Georgian bank takes first commercial loan
Loan, backed by Germany’s KfW, to support lending to small and medium
sized entrepreneurs
By Christina Tashkevich

Lasha Papashvili, Birte Moerke and
Grigol Katsia
Bank Republic announced on Tuesday that it had concluded an agreement
on a five year, USD 4 million credit line with the international
commercial bank Commerzbank International S.A. on March 15.

Chairman of the bank’s Board of Directors Grigol Katsia said the deal
“is unprecedented in the Caucasus region – when a private foreign
commercial bank agrees to lend to a Georgian bank.” So far the
Georgian banking sector has been able to borrow money only from
international donors and development institutions.

The deal was concluded within the framework of a Credit Guarantee
Fund established by the German development bank KfW in Georgia. The
Fund allows Georgian bank to borrow on international capital markets,
with the Credit Fund acting as guarantor of 90 percent of the loan.

“This deal gives local banks the possibility to cooperate with
leading international banks,” Katsia said on Tuesday, adding that the
agreement would help Bank Republic to develop and strengthen
positions in international markets.

Manager of the Credit Guarantee Fund Birte Mörke told journalists
that this agreement would give Bank Republic access to the
international capital market.

“Bank Republic will in turn use this loan to offer loans to small and
medium enterprises in Georgia,” she told The Messenger, while
Chairman of the Bank Republic Supervisory Board Lasha Papashvili
added that the agreement could lead to the creation of jobs in
Georgia.

“It can create new working places which the country needs right now,
not only in small and medium businesses but in the bank itself,”
Papashvili explained, adding that as a result of the new loan the
bank will be able to announce several new products, which will in
turn call for a staff increase.

“What is important is that these loans allotted to financing small
and medium businesses will form a middle class in the country,”
President of the Banks’ Association Zurab Gvasalia said to The
Messenger, adding that the formation of a middle class will serve as
a guarantee of stability in the country.

In the shorter term, Gvasalia says this agreement will increase the
prestige of the Georgian banking sector. “When a leading bank forms
such relations with a Georgian commercial bank this points to good
prospects [for the banking sector],” he said.

Frankfurt-based Commerzbank is one of the world’s 20 largest banks
and is one of the leaders in Eastern Europe and Central Asia.

The Credit Guarantee Fund has also partnered with Bank of Georgia as
well as with three banks in Armenia. The same type of project is soon
to be launched in Azerbaijan.

Among the Bank Republic’s another cooperation partners is the
International Finance Corporation (IFC). In 2004 the bank became a
pilot company to take part in the IFC’s Corporate Governance
enhancement project.

The bank also cooperates with the Savings Banks Foundation for
International Cooperation (SBFIC)

ANKARA: People in Time Machine

Turkish Press
March 28 2005

Press Scan

PEOPLE IN TIME MACHINE

MILLIYET- According to a research, Armenians do not give up their
prejudices. Director of the research Dr. Ferhat Kentel said, ”the
project showed the ignorance and the prejudices based on this
ignorance.” The research showed that after Ataturk, Armenians mostly
knew Enver Pasha and Talat Pasha who was shot by an Armenian in
Berlin in 1921. This situation is assessed that Armenians stuck on
history. Also, Armenians do not want to be examined by Turkish
doctors in hospital and they oppose to marriage of their daughters
with Turkish men. Armenians are against the existence of Turks in
their neighborhood, apartment and business places. On the contrary,
Turkish people do not have much prejudices. 51.2 percent of Turkish
participants have an Armenian friend while 28 percent of Armenians
have a Turkish friend.

Did Jesus really rise from the dead? The case of the empty tomb

DID JESUS REALLY RISE FROM THE DEAD? – THE CASE OF THE EMPTY TOMB
by: John Cornwell

Australian Magazine
March 26, 2005 Saturday

The crucifixion and resurrection define Christianity, but scholars –
and a best-selling book – question what really happened.

The Da Vinci Code is only the latest in a series of books challenging
the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. John Cornwell examines
both sides of the argument.

Holy Saturday: Basilica of the Holy Sepulchre, Jerusalem. Within the
ancient, ornate shrine, arguably the holiest place in all Christendom,
worshippers from many denominations and ethnicities – Greek and
Russian Orthodox, Armenians and Ethiopian Copts, as well as Catholics,
Anglicans, Lutherans, Christian Zionists and Evangelicals – ponder
a crucial question. Is this church, with its crypts, murky chapels,
forests of silver lamps and smell of incense, the actual site of
Christ’s tomb? And did Christ actually rise from the dead on this spot?

Answering these questions is like exploring the history of the Holy
Sepulchre church itself. It’s a bewildering rabbit warren of an edifice
that has been knocked down, rebuilt, and fought over by Jews, Muslims
and, scandalously, by and among Christians, ever since Helena (mother
of Constantine the Great) identified it as the site of Christ’s tomb
in the fourth century.

Each year on the Vigil of Easter Day, however, there is another more
tangible and immediate test of faith and reason. The contentious
assortment of Christians, tensely watched by Israeli police, gather
to celebrate the most enduring alleged miracle on the planet. Within
a tiny inner chapel known as the aedicule, said to be the site of
Christ’s actual burial slab,

a “holy fire” miraculously self-combusts, traditionally observed
in strictest secrecy by the Greek Orthodox patriarch of Jerusalem,
accompanied by a senior Armenian Orthodox priest. Heaven, on schedule,
is favouring eastern Christians with a token of the truth of the
Resurrection of Christ’s body from the dead. The priests light their
candles from this holy fire, which is said to be at first pale blue
and cold, incapable of burning even the skin on your face. They emerge
into the main body of the church to share the miraculous flame with the
massed congregation, many of whom have queued for a day and a night
to get a good spot. The holy fire is then rushed to the airport at
Tel Aviv in special lanterns, which are dispatched to Moscow, Kiev,
Istanbul and Athens to be spread throughout the Christian Orthodox
world on Easter Day.

In an investigation of the basilica, the ceremony and its significance,
Victoria Clark, author of a new book, Holy Fire: The Battle for
Christ’s Tomb, recently winkled from a senior official of the Greek
Orthodox church in Jerusalem the admission that for some years now
the Easter fire has been generated not by a miracle but by a common
or garden plastic lighter.

The revelation, repudiated by the aghast faithful, is only marginally
less scandalous, though substantially less harmful, than the tensions
that have reigned among the warring Christian guardians of the Holy
Sepulchre and the punch-ups that routinely occur there. Intricate and
pedantic rights exerted by different denominations over the sacred
space, right down to shared ownership and cleaning rights of a tiny
manhole, are jealously measured in square millimetres. Even on the
roof of the basilica, where Ethiopian monks and nuns live in squalid
shelters without water or electric light, territorial disputes with
the neighbouring Egyptian Copts are intense to the point of physical
aggression.

But nothing compares with the conflicts in the heart of the basilica.
In 2002, the patriarch and the Armenian prelate came to blows within
the aedicule over who should ignite the lighter; two Orthodox monks
joined the fray and Israeli police had to storm the chapel to restore
peace. This was nothing new. Back in 1834, the holy fire ceremony
prompted an affray that caused a stampede and the deaths of several
hundred onlookers. An English writer described the church walls
“spattered with the blood and brains of those who had been felled,
like oxen, with the butt-ends of the soldiers’ bayonets”.

The Orthodox faithful will no doubt learn to live with the news that
their holy fire is less than miraculous, just

as Catholics now have mostly come to terms with the prosaic fact that
the annual liquefaction of martyr San Gennario’s blood in Naples
Cathedral is a special clay found in the vicinity of Vesuvius that
boils at a low temperature.

What Christians will resist, however, is the proposition, currently
spreading like out-of-control bird’flu, that Christ did not in fact
die on the cross.

Successive fictional versions of the death and resurrection over
more than 200 years culminating in Holy Blood, Holy Grail (1982),
by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh and Henry Lincoln – stunningly
boosted by Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code, which has sold 17 million
copies since 2003 – have served to promote the notion that the empty
tomb was not evidence of the death and resurrection but that Jesus
survived the crucifixion and escaped the tomb alive (hence no need
for a resurrection). The issue is crucial: without the death and the
resurrection of Jesus Christ, there is no Christianity.

>>From the outset there were attempts to undermine the reality of
the resurrection story. Matthew’s gospel claims that enemies of the
disciples were insisting that the body had been stolen from the tomb.
Heretical sects in the second and third centuries argued that a
substitute for the Messiah had been crucified, while the real Jesus
lived to ridicule their mistake. The Koran records that Christ,
a human rather than a divine prophet, was not killed; he survived
and lived to rejoin his disciples.

In the modern period, “rationalists” have drawn close parallels
between the “Christian resurrection myth” and widespread mythologies
of gods who die and become reborn. In oriental religions there are
multiple legends featuring dying and rising gods and goddesses,
including Adonis, Isis, Dionysus, Demeter, and assorted corn-kings
and corn-mothers. In the dark and ancient north, moreover, Balder
the Beautiful, offspring of Odin, dies only to rise again. Fertility
rights in spring, and the gift of eggs, are a pagan backdrop to the
Christian story. Is Jesus, ask the clever anthropologists, just one
more of these myths? But they ignore the fact, according to one of
the world’s most distinguished Resurrection scholars, the Australian
Jesuit, Professor Gerard O’Collins of the Gregorian University in Rome,
that Christ rose only once, and that he was God and not “a” god.

But the story that Christ actually survived his passion, rather
than resurrected, assumed powerful imaginative impetus from the
mid-18th century onwards with the publication of a fictional version
of the Christ story by the German writer Karl Heinrich Venturini
(1768-1849). Venturini exploited the existence of the Essenes,
a community of radical Jews at Qumran by the Dead Sea, proposing
that they took Him down from the cross still alive and subsequently
revived him in their monastery.

Albert Schweitzer, a physician in an African leper colony and himself
author of a life of Jesus, commented in 1906 that the Venturini story
“may almost be said to be reissued annually down to the present day,
for all the fictitious lives go back to the style which he created.
It is plagiarised more freely than any other Life of Jesus, although
practically unknown by name.” Today Schweitzer would have recognised
in The Da Vinci Code a precise example of the prediction.

One of the most famous subsequent versions of Venturini appeared a
century later in The Brook Kerith: A Syrian Story by the Irish writer
George Moore. Moore depicts Jesus as a crude shepherd philosopher who
suffered the delusion that he was the Messiah. As Moore puts it, Jesus
is lifted from the cross in a coma. When he comes round he perceives
that he was “mistaken in all things: angels did not come down from
Heaven to lift him from the cross and bear him back to his father,
and the world still subsists the same as before”. He is buried in a
tomb owned by a rich man, Joseph of Arimathea, who finds him revived
there the next day and takes him away. Christ then returns in secret
to his life as a shepherd with the Essene community on the brook of
Kerith. It is Paul of Tarsus, according to Moore, who invents both
the resurrection story and the Christian Church after his vision on
the road to Damascus. Meanwhile, the real Jesus has come to believe
in a form of pantheism – the idea that God is everything.

Moore’s book invokes natural explanations for everything, including
Christ’s appearance to the two disciples on the way to Emmaus. The
disciples were suffering, he argues, from a simple case of mistaken
identity. Moore ends his account by suggesting that Christ travelled
eastwards and spent his final years as a missionary in India. To this
day there are Muslim sects in India who venerate a tomb of Christ.

Similarly sensational in its time was D.H. Lawrence’s novella
The Man who Died (1931). Lawrence has Christ saying to onlookers
after his supposed death on the cross: “I am not dead. They took
me down too soon.” He comes round in the tomb and simply walks out
to be cared for by compassionate peasants until meeting up with Mary
Magdalene, who conspires with him to perpetrate the resurrection story.
Subsequently he meets by chance some of his disciples (who swallow the
resurrection account), and eventually escapes to the Lebanon where he
becomes involved with a woman who runs a temple to Isis. She falls
in love with him, believing him to be the god Osiris, and together,
in true Laurentian style, they discover the meaning of sex and earthly
existence. When she falls pregnant with his child, however, he abandons
her, saying: “I have sowed the seed of my life and my resurrection,
and put my touch forever upon the choice woman of this day, and I
carry her perfume in my flesh like the essence of roses.”

Another bizarre alternative is that of Robert Graves, poet and author
of the famous First War memoir Goodbye to All That. Graves’s book,
Jesus in Rome, purports to be a factual account, but it is a tissue of
conjectures and sources regarded as apocryphal by biblical experts. A
crucial feature of Christ’s survival, according to Graves, is the
embalming ointment donated by Joseph of Arimathea and the “extreme
sultriness of the weather” which combined to create a sort of life
support system for the half-dead Jesus in the tomb. Graves has the
Roman soldiers breaking into the tomb to steal this ointment only to
find Jesus alive. The sergeant not only lets Christ go, but later
accepts a bribe from Nicodemus to broadcast the news of the bogus
“resurrection”.

In 1966 came The Passover Plot by Hugh Schonfield, a Jewish writer
who used his own translations of the gospels to argue that Jesus
conspired with the disciples to arrange his death. Jesus is depicted
as ransacking the Old Testament for prophecies of his passion. He
takes a drug before his arrest which enables him to suffer torture and
crucifixion and the eventual semblance of death. He is buried alive
but revives the next day, whereupon he finally succumbs and dies for
real. Mary Magdalene, Christ’s close friend, is described as demented;
she believes that everybody she meets is the Christ.

The American novelist John Updike added to the fictional survival
accounts in 1971 with his New Yorker story, “Jesus on Honshu”. Basing
himself on the members of the Japanese Mahikari cult, Updike has Jesus,
aged 21, travelling to Japan where he is taken on by a guru called
Etchu. Aged 32 he returns to Jerusalem to choose his 12 apostles. In
a passion and death worthy of a parallel universe, it is Judas who
is executed. Christ meanwhile escapes via Siberia back to Japan where
he lives until the age of 106 as a teacher and miracle worker.

Donovan Joyce’s Jesus Scroll, published in 1973, repeats the survival
story and expands on the link between Christ and Mary Magdalene that
would become familiar in the Holy Blood, Holy Grail concoction and
The Da Vinci Code. Basing himself on the Gospel of Philip (regarded
as apocryphal by scholars), Joyce asserts that Christ was married
to Mary Magdalene, who anointed him before his triumphant entry
to Jerusalem with the aromatic ointment spickenard, a symbol of
kingship. Joyce claims that Christ, accompanied by Mary Magdalene,
escaped Jerusalem after causing an uprising; eventually he joins the
Essene community at Qumran by the Dead Sea.

With Holy Blood, Holy Grail (1982), by Michael Baigent, Richard
Leigh and Henry Lincoln (Sir Leigh Tebbing, in The Da Vinci Code,
is drawn from the authors’ names), the Christ story begins to shoot
off in wildly eccentric trajectories. The book claims that Christ
married Mary Magdalene at the feast of Cana. Among their children
was Barabbas, the criminal released by Pontius Pilate at the request
of the Jews. The authors argue that Christ’s family bribed Pilate
to give the body to Joseph of Arimathea. But the crucifixion was a
staged affair in which the victim was a substitute. Baigent and his
colleagues are not forthcoming about the whereabouts of the escaped
Jesus, but they claim that Mary Magdalene went with the children to
southern France. The sacred bloodline, sang real, or royal blood,
which is the Holy Grail, rather than the cup of the Last Supper,
continued through the Merovingians, the Carolingians and the House
of Lorraine to the Habsburgs.

More recent books with scholarly pretensions, notably J. Duncan
Derrett’s The Anastasis (1982) and Barbara Thiering’s The Gospels
and Qumran (1992), repeat the survival theory. Thiering, who has
gained much publicity because of her claims to have deciphered the
secret code of the Dead Sea Scrolls and the New Testament, insists
that Jesus lived for many years after his crucifixion, travelling
around the Mediterranean before dying in his sixties. She claims
that Jesus had three children with Mary Magdalene; that he divorced
her and married Lydia (who appears in the Acts of the Apostles),
passing his latter years in Rome.

Professor Gerard O’Collins and, independently, world-class
scripture scholars such as T.N. Wright (now bishop of Durham), J.
Murphy-O’Connor and the late Raymond E. Brown protest that the
non-fiction exponents of the survival theory routinely misuse
documents, indulge in outlandish interpretation techniques and invoke
shadowy sources unavailable for checking by bona fide scholars. At
least Dan Brown, who sometimes gives the impression that he believes
the Holy Blood, Holy Grail thesis, has had the good grace to name
one of his lead characters Bishop Aringarosa, which translates as
red herring.

Scepticism of the survival theorists, however, does not indicate
that we can trust the story of the death and the resurrection in
the same way as we trust the death and the burial, say, of Princess
Di. But Christian biblical scholars assert that there is sufficient
evidence to make their belief reasonable. They stress that there is
ample evidence for Jesus’s death, pointing out that the Romans were
good at killing people and that there is clear evidence that they
finished him off – the lance thrust into his chest, producing a gush
of water and blood, is firm and plausible, they say. That the tomb was
found to be empty by reliable witnesses who had no motive to lie, they
argue, is also supported by the evidence. Here is Mark, for example:
“When the Sabbath was over, Mary Magdalene, Mary the Mother of James,
and Salome brought aromatic oils, intending to go and anoint him …
They went into the tomb, where they saw a youth sitting on the right
hand side, wearing a white robe; and they were dumbfounded.” The
young man, who we can take to be an angel, or perhaps a good-looking
gardener, told them: “He has been raised again; he is not here.” He
tells them that Jesus has gone on ahead into Galilee.

The accounts of his appearances after the resurrection differ from
each other but they are impressive. Mary Magdalene sees him in Mark’s
version, then “two of his followers” see him, and eventually the 11
remaining apostles encounter him. Paul, who is given most credence by
scholars as an early witness (as early perhaps as two years after the
death and alleged resurrection), reports that Jesus appeared to Peter,
then to the apostles, and later to more than 500 of “our brothers
at once, most of whom are still alive, though some have died”. He
concludes: “In the end he appeared even to me.” The facts that Jesus
ate meals, and that the resurrected Lord invited Doubting Thomas to
put his finger in his Lord’s side, indicate for believers that he
was neither vision nor hallucination.

The difficulty for any reader following the gospel stories of the death
and resurrection, however, is that we are not dealing with reportage in
the style of a modern-day journalist or historian. The gospel texts are
fraught with religious significance. They are as much, metaphorically,
about the story of the spiritual redemption of humankind as they are
about supposedly actual events. And yet, even practised journalists
who know the difference between factual and fictional accounts, and
stories that are essentially although not necessarily strictly true,
have been impressed by the detail and vividness of the gospels.

A telling and intriguing testimony is given by Graham Greene, a
Catholic writer who throughout his life was agonised by scepticism.
Not long before he died, I interviewed Greene at his home in Antibes,
on the French Riviera. We were talking about belief in the resurrection
and I had commented, “It sounds as if belief is a struggle for you.” He
said: “What keeps me to … it’s not strong enough to be called
belief … is St John’s gospel. It’s almost a reportage – it might
have been done by a good journalist – where the beloved disciple is
running with Peter because they’ve heard that the rock has been rolled
away from the tomb, and describing how John manages to beat Peter in
the race … and it just seems to me to be first-hand reportage,
and I can’t help believing it … I know that St Mark is supposed
to be the earliest gospel, but there’s just the possibility of St
John’s gospel having been written by a very old man, who never calls
himself by name, or says ‘I’, but does describe this almost funny race,
which strikes me as true.”

However compelling the story, however authentic the feel of the
evidence, in the final analysis it comes down to a decision to believe
or not to believe. And beyond belief are the consequences of faith
and of faith communities of all kinds.

As the Christians meet once again in the Basilica of the Holy Sepulchre
there appears to be hope for a new beginning for the peace process
between Arabs and Jews in the land of what Christians traditionally
call the holy places, the holiest of which is the site of the tomb of
Christ. With any luck the ceremony of the holy fire will have passed
off peacefully; but it is an apt time to ponder, as Victoria Clark has
put it, “the mistakes made and the crimes committed by a succession
of Christian powers over hundreds of years” in the Middle East. On
the pretext that they were reclaiming and protecting the site of the
death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ, the Crusaders massacred
Jews, Muslims and fellow Christians, and the conflicts prompted for
ownership and control of the Christian holy places have continued
to the present day. The latest claimants are Christian Zionists who
have made common cause with radical Jewish Zionists calling for the
territorial integrity of ancient Israel and the ousting of Muslims
and Christian Arabs alike in the expectation of the reconstitution
of the promised land and the second coming of the Messiah.

In a region tragically riven with ethnic and religious hatred, a
Christian is inclined to wonder whether the redemptive story of the
resurrection at the heart of the Christian message would not best
be exemplified by the relinquishing, at last, of the Holy Sepulchre
church. For it appears after centuries of conflict not so much a holy
focus of Christendom as a living metaphor for all that is delusional,
violent and divisive in Christianity’s turbulent internal history
and its relationship with other religions.

John Cornwell is the author of Pontiff in Winter: the Dark Face of
John Paul II’s Papacy, published by Viking-Penguin. His last story
for the magazine was “Stranger than fiction” (Feb 12-13), on the
Vatican’s secret history.

Protesters control Kyrgyzstan

Protesters control Kyrgyzstan
By MARK McDONALD

SunHerald.com, MS
Posted on Fri, Mar. 25, 2005

KNIGHT RIDDER NEWSPAPERS

MOSCOW – Protesters in the former Soviet republic of Kyrgyzstan took control
of the capital Thursday as they fought with pro-government partisans,
stormed government buildings, took control of the national TV network and
apparently chased the president from the country.

It was the third time in two years that opposition forces had overturned an
authoritarian government in Russia’s back yard in the wake of allegations
that elections were fraudulent. Unlike the Rose Revolution in Georgia in
2003 and the Orange Revolution in Ukraine last year, the Kyrgyz revolt was
marred by violence.

Opposition leaders quickly tried to re-establish order Thursday evening as
the defense and interior ministers ordered their troops to stand down.

The Supreme Court met in emergency session and annulled the results of a
recent parliamentary election that anti-government politicians said was
tainted by fraud. Parliament also convened Thursday night and named Ishenbai
Kadyrbekov, a former member of Parliament, as acting president.

Reports that President Askar Akayev had fled the country – to Kazakhstan or
Russia – were still unconfirmed late Thursday.

In Washington, State Department spokesman Adam Ereli said the United States
was working with the United Nations, European monitors and “our Russian
friends” to keep track of the rapidly unfolding events.

“The future of Kyrgyzstan should be decided by the people of Kyrgyzstan,
consistent with the principles of peaceful change, of dialogue and respect
for the rule of law,” he said.

The United States maintains an air base at the Manas airport outside
Bishkek, the capital. The base, with an estimated 1,000 troops, is used
principally for flights in support of American forces in Afghanistan.

A Russian military base, known as Kant, sits only a dozen miles away.

Thursday’s events in Bishkek began when protesters were charged by
stick-wielding Akayev supporters wearing blue armbands.

Fights broke out in the main square and along the principal downtown
boulevard. Several dozen injuries were reported. There were no immediate
reports of any deaths, and police and security forces didn’t fire on the
protesters.

Anti-government groups eventually took control of the presidential compound
in the city center. They seized the minister of defense – releasing him
later – and smashed windows and furniture in the White House.

They also freed opposition leader Felix Kulov, a former vice president and
former head of the secret police who was imprisoned five years ago on
embezzlement charges.

Kulov said it wasn’t clear whether Akayev had resigned from the presidency
before fleeing his Bishkek residence.

SOVIET REPUBLICS

The Soviet Union broke up in 1991, creating 14 separate republics, many of
them governed by people tied to the defunct Soviet system. Here’s a status
report on those countries:

ARMENIA: President Robert Kocharian, a former Communist Party member, became
president in 1997. He was re-elected in 2003 in a contentious election.

AZERBAIJAN: Political instability postponed elections until 1992. More
instability led to the election of Heydar Aliyev, a former KGB agent, as
president in 1993. His son, Ilham Aliyev, won the presidency in a disputed
election in 2003.

BELARUS: President Alexander Lukashenko was elected in 1994 and re-elected
in 1999. A referendum in 2004 did away with limitations on presidential
terms. He’s expected to run again in 2006.

ESTONIA: Declared independence in 1991 after the “Singing Revolution,” in
which thousands of Estonians sang in mass demonstrations.

GEORGIA: The “Rose Revolution” of 2003 forced former Soviet Foreign Minister
Eduard Shevardnadze from the presidency amid allegations of widespread voter
fraud.

KAZAKHSTAN: Former Communist Party member Nursultan Nazarbayev was elected
the country’s first president in 1991 and re-elected in 1997.

KYRGYZSTAN: President Askar Akayev apparently resigned and fled the country
Thursday after allegations of voter fraud in parliamentary elections sparked
opposition protests.

LATVIA: Several governments have formed, dissolved and re-formed since
independence in 1991. President Vaira Vike-Freiberga was elected in 1999 and
re-elected in 2003.

LITHUANIA: The government has swung from one political party to the other.
In January 2004, the president was impeached. A newly elected government
took office last December.

MOLDOVA: An election in 2001 led to the Communist Party being in control.

TAJIKISTAN: Instability led to a 1997 peace accord, implemented in 2000. The
1999 and 2000 elections were considered flawed but legitimate. Tajikistan is
the only Central Asian country with an Islamic party represented in
Parliament.

TURKMENISTAN: President Saparmurat Niyazov was elected in 1991. In 1999, he
was named president for life by a Parliament composed of members he’d
handpicked.

UKRAINE: Widespread allegations of voter fraud and intimidation in the 2004
presidential campaign led to the “Orange Revolution” protests, which
produced a runoff election won by opposition candidate Viktor Yushchenko.

UZBEKISTAN: President Islam Karimov was elected in 1991; his term has been
extended until 2007.

Sources: State Department, Wikipedia, CIA Factbook

-Compiled by researcher Tish Wells

ANKARA: Turkish columnist views alleged disagreement between premier

Turkish columnist views alleged disagreement between premier, foreign minister

Hurriyet web site, Istanbul
21 Mar 05

Text of column by Erdal Saglam, “Why is the government deadlocked?”,
published by Turkish daily Hurriyet web site on 21 March

Although the prime minister, his aides, and other ministers are
denying it, everybody sees that there has been a standstill lately
preventing the government from making certain necessary decisions.
When you talk to them personally, most ministers admit that there is
such a standstill.

Business circles are disturbed by the government’s inertia although
they are not saying it openly. The fact that Prime Minister [Recep
Tayyip] Erdogan is responding sharply to criticisms is deterring
business organizations from voicing their criticisms openly because
they do not want to find themselves involved in a public debate.

Businessmen are saying they could easily tell in recent meetings with
the prime minister and his close aides that they were demoralized.
They are saying that all advisers to the prime minister looked
discouraged and crestfallen. It is being said that some ministers
have the same air [of discouragement].

What, then, is responsible for the standstill and the government’s
inertia and discouragement? Actually, Ankara has been asking this
question frequently and seeking an answer to it for about a month.
The conjectures proposed as answers to this question mostly refer to
international relations. It is being said that above all there is a
defeatist attitude within the [ruling] AKP [Justice and Development
Party] concerning the EU, that opinion polls conducted by the AKP might
have yielded results to that effect and that this could have made the
government indecisive. Some commentators are saying that these polls
could be one reason why the government has not been taking concrete
steps concerning the EU.

Relations with the United States are as much the focus of such
conjectures as the EU. Political circles are calling attention to
the fact that the US Administration appears to have adopted a harsher
attitude towards the ruling AKP and withdrawn its support for it and
that the United States might have certain major demands from the ruling
AKP unknown to the public and likely to place the AKP in a difficult
situation. Among these demands are the opening of the Armenian border
gate and a more intensive utilization of the Incirlik Air Base.

However, there are those suspecting that even these demands do not
explain the defeatist attitude of the government. Certain people who
believe that there are more important reasons [for the government’s
inertia] are saying that the United States might for example have
asked that its troops in Iraq be replaced with Turkish troops when
they are withdrawn sometime in the autumn. It is being pointed out
that Turkey might have been told that its demands concerning Cyprus
and Kirkuk [north Iraq] could be met in return. Particularly, this
idea sounds like a conspiracy theory yet there are quite a number of
people who say that it might well be true.

[Foreign Minister Abdullah] Gul acts like prime minister yet…

Meanwhile, it is being said that intra-party rows are playing a role
in inducing inertia on the government’s part. It is being asserted
that the party administration is in a fix particularly as regards
the issue of corruption, that it cannot expel certain people whose
names appear in dossiers that the party leadership cannot disclose,
and that for this reason there are disagreements in the party.

It is also being rumoured that the struggle for power between Prime
Minister Erdogan and Deputy Prime Minister Abdullah Gul has started to
build up. Analysts point out that Gul has lately been making frequent
public appearances and that he is trying to appear to be cooperating
with the prime minister even as he is saying that the government is
making mistakes. They say that this long-discussed conflict might
have grown intense because of the [corruption] dossiers that have
been compiled.

Meanwhile, it is noteworthy that Gul is talking like a prime minister
about all topics from the economy to internal politics. Erdogan’s
close aides were offended for example at the fact that Gul met with
investors in London last week and discussed the economy. They are
even criticizing State Minister Ali Babacan who they found out had
organized the said meeting.

Those who listened to Gul’s speech at the Building Contractor’s
Association last week are saying that while dwelling on every subject
from relations with the IMF to politics, Gul delivered what was on
the whole a defensive address. Pointing out that Gul remained on the
defensive in this speech in order to get across the message that the
government is not behind schedule, building contractors said that
Gul failed to present a vision.

In short, the deadlock in the government is well known while the
rumoured reasons for it are various.

The War Prisoners Will Be Returned, Not Exchanged

THE WAR PRISONERS WILL BE RETURNED, NOT EXCHANGED

A1+
23-03-2005

In Tbilisi the meeting of the representatives of the Armenian and
Azerbaijani State Committees of war prisoners and people missing
in action took place. The Armenian side was represented by Michael
Grigoryan, deputy head of the RA State Committee, and Leo Agajanov,
his assistant.

Svetlana Ganushkina and Bernard Klazen, co-heads of the international
working group looking for people missing in action during the Karabakh
conflict also took part in the meeting.

Mechanisms of constructive cooperation were worked out, on the basis
of the principle of returning the prisoners after the corresponding
check-up as soon as possible.

The participants of the meeting consider the exchange of people
immoral, and in future the stress will be put on the return of the
prisoners, not on the exchange.

The sides are ready to give the international organizations and the
relatives of the prisoners the possibility of meeting them, for them
to make sure that there is the possibility for them to return home.

Antelias: Christian-Muslim International Conference held in Cairo

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V. Rev. Fr. Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

THE CATHOLICOSATE OF CILICIA PARTICIPATES IN THE CHRISTIAN-MUSLIM
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE HELD IN CAIRO

The International Islamic Forum for Dialogue and the Middle East Council of
Churches’ (MECC) Christian-Muslim Dialogue Committee organized, for the
first time, a Christian-Muslim international conference that was held on
15-17 March in Cairo. The theme of the conference was “Religion and the
Perspectives for Dialogue.”

The conference was held under the patronage of Patriarch Shnouda, Head of
the Coptic Orthodox Church and Dr. Mohammed Said Tantaoui.

The members of the Christian-Muslim Dialogue Committee of MEEC, as well as
members of the International Islamic Forum from Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Iraq
and England participated in the conference. Archbishop Sebouh Sarkisian,
primate of the Diocese of Tehran and a member of the Christian-Muslim
Dialogue Committee, participated in the conference on behalf of the Armenian
Catholicosate of Cilicia.

Two lectures about dialogue and its purposes were presented during the
conference. The participants discussed the common concepts and views in
Christianity and Islam. They also visited Dr. Tantaoui and Patriarch Shnouda
and issued a common declaration, outlining their readiness to continue the
dialogue initiative.

Archbishop Sebouh Sarkisian had a separate meeting with Patriarch Shnouda
and greeted him on behalf of His Holiness Aram I.

##

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the Ecumenical
activities of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

–Boundary_(ID_OgStAw5Vykj693L1IaZolw)
Content-type: message/rfc822; CHARSET=US-ASCII
Content-description:

From: Catholicosate of Cilicia <[email protected]>
Subject: Antelias: Christian-Muslim International Conference held in Cairo
MIME-version: 1.0
Content-type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V. Rev. Fr. Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

THE CATHOLICOSATE OF CILICIA PARTICIPATES IN THE CHRISTIAN-MUSLIM
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE HELD IN CAIRO

The International Islamic Forum for Dialogue and the Middle East Council of
Churches’ (MECC) Christian-Muslim Dialogue Committee organized, for the
first time, a Christian-Muslim international conference that was held on
15-17 March in Cairo. The theme of the conference was “Religion and the
Perspectives for Dialogue.”

The conference was held under the patronage of Patriarch Shnouda, Head of
the Coptic Orthodox Church and Dr. Mohammed Said Tantaoui.

The members of the Christian-Muslim Dialogue Committee of MEEC, as well as
members of the International Islamic Forum from Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Iraq
and England participated in the conference. Archbishop Sebouh Sarkisian,
primate of the Diocese of Tehran and a member of the Christian-Muslim
Dialogue Committee, participated in the conference on behalf of the Armenian
Catholicosate of Cilicia.

Two lectures about dialogue and its purposes were presented during the
conference. The participants discussed the common concepts and views in
Christianity and Islam. They also visited Dr. Tantaoui and Patriarch Shnouda
and issued a common declaration, outlining their readiness to continue the
dialogue initiative.

Archbishop Sebouh Sarkisian had a separate meeting with Patriarch Shnouda
and greeted him on behalf of His Holiness Aram I.

##

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the Ecumenical
activities of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

–Boundary_(ID_OgStAw5Vykj693L1IaZolw)–

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http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/