BAKU: Azerbaijan, Saudi Arabia sign memorandum on political consult.

Azerbaijan, Saudi Arabia sign memorandum on political consultations

Lider TV, Baku
4 Jan 05

[Presenter] Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov is on an
official visit to Saudi Arabia. He started meetings with Saudi
officials today. The Azerbaijani ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Elman
Arasli, told Lider that Mammadyarov has already had talks with his
Saudi counterpart, Amir Sa’ud Al-Faysal. A bilateral memorandum on
political consultations was signed at the end of the meeting, which
discussed issues of mutual interest. The Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict
over Nagornyy Karabakh was also discussed during the talks.

[Elman Arasli, captioned, speaking over phone and over his still
picture] Saudi Arabia unanimously supports Azerbaijan at international
organizations, the UN and the Organization of Islamic Conference on
issues pertaining to the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict. It has not
established diplomatic relations with Armenia despite the latter’s
efforts. Undoubtedly, they exchanged views on that and also discussed
the issue.

Somebody took a picture

Somebody took a picture

Morning Sentinel Online (Maine)
Sunday, January 2, 2005

By J.P. Devine

Somebody took a picture. I wish I had it now. It was an early autumn day
in the 1950s at an old Greek dance hall outside of Waukegan, Ill. I was
the new boy in town, all of 17, out of high school and living with a
brother.

I met a bunch of kids at a malt shop back when kids actually drank
malts. I fell in with this crowd, and we went dancing at night and on
Saturday afternoons. There was Greek music and Nat “King” Cole. It was a
magic time.

One day we all took a break by the lake and ate at a picnic table
between dances, and somebody took a picture. I wish I had it now.

There were two blondes, one who looked like Veronica Lake, the other
like nobody at all. There was a tall girl named Barbara, a saxophone
player named Dugo, who was so good that when he played “Mood Indigio,”
even the boys cried.

Then there was the Armenian girl whose name I’ve forgotten and two
skinny boys with black hair in white T-shirts with the sleeves rolled
up, both named Jerry. Jerry Devine and Jerry Orbach.

We were all just out of high school and the future was like the six
o’clock mist on Lake Michigan, gray and impenetrable.

We all put our arms around one another. Dugo, passed around cigarettes
from the pack he kept rolled up in his clean white T-shirt. We dangled
them from our lips like Alan Ladd or Victor Mature.

The two Jerrys stood next to each other, arms on each other’s shoulders
and somebody took a picture. I think it was the Armenian girl whose name
I’ve forgotten. I wish I had it now.

The two Jerrys entertained the others from time to time in the hall when
it rained. They did Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin impressions. Everyone
laughed. There was a dance contest once and Jerry Devine really wanted
to dance with the Armenian girl whose name he knew then. But Jerry
Orbach, or Jerry O as they called him, snatched her away for a Greek
dance. He was always a better dancer.

Years later, the two Jerrys met again in New York, both actors now. They
studied with Herbert Berghoff and Myra Rostova and at the Actor’s
Studio. That was something then.

They both started working in drafty off-Broadway theaters and worked at
all the low-wage day jobs they could find. They would meet on the street
from time to time when both were working in theaters two blocks apart.
One Jerry got bored with slush and cold winds off the East River and
went to Hollywood to be a movie star.

The other Jerry stayed in New York and moved uptown to become a Broadway
musical star. They met again one day on a street in Beverly Hills. Then
Broadway Jerry went back to being a musical star.

One Jerry became a famous television detective, the other a writer.

They never met again, the new kid from South St. Louis and the boy from
Waukegan who was a better dancer.

Broadway Jerry Orbach died Wednesday. Writer Jerry is left to write
about him and how they were young once on a picnic table with arms
around each other and cigarettes dangling from their lips that made them
look like Alan Ladd or Victor Mature.

Sometimes the past is like that mist off Lake Michigan, thick and gray
and impenetrable. But once upon a time, before the hard rain fell,
somebody took a picture. I wish I had it now.

Goodnight Jerry O, wherever you are.

J.P. Devine is a freelance writer who lives in Waterville.

http://morningsentinel.mainetoday.com/news/local/1256509.shtml

2005 To Be A Busy Year For Ra Ministry of Urban Construction

2005 TO BE A BUSY YEAR FOR RA MINISTRY OF URBAN CONSTRUCTION

YEREVAN, December 30 (Noyan Tapan). 2005 will be a busy year for RA
Ministry of Urban Construction. Aram Haroutiunian, RA Minister of
Urban Construction, said during the December 30 press conference that
there are serious problems in the sphere and intensive work is
necessary for their solution. In particular, 4b drams (about $8m) was
allocated to the apartment construction by 2005 state budget. Work in
the amount of nearly 1b drams will be implemented in Gyumri and a
number of rural areas and 1.3b drams will be aimed at solution of
refugees’ problems connected with apartments. The Minister also said
that a memorandum on cooperation in the sphere of urban construction
has been signed with Russia lately. The memorandum envisages to
restore and reconstruct a number of buildings in Gyumri. The
preliminary cost of this program is 2b drams. In 2005 the second stage
of anti-landslide program, stuty of landslide areas, implemented with
Japan’s assistance will be also carried out. It was mentioned that
thier inventory was made during the first stage of the
program. According to the Minister, the cost of the anti-landslide
program is $2m.

BAKU: Aliyev says new Karabakh settlement stage “almost started”

Azeri president says new Karabakh settlement stage “almost started”

Azad Azarbaycan TV, Baku
3 Jan 05

[Presenter] The country’s Security Council headed by President Ilham
Aliyev met today. The head of state said that success has been
achieved in all spheres in 2004. The course of the all-national
leader, [Former President] Heydar Aliyev, was continued resolutely.

[Correspondent over video of the meeting] Talks between Azerbaijan and
Armenia on resolving the Nagornyy Karabakh problem are under way in a
direction acceptable for Azerbaijan, President Ilham Aliyev told the
Security Council today.

[Aliyev] A new stage of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over
Nagornyy Karabakh has almost started. The process, which we call the
Prague process, envisages a stage-by-stage solution. I have talked
about that already. It was not easy to achieve this. Of course, I do
not want to say that the issue has already been resolved. The talks
are under way. We are making every effort for the talks to continue in
a direction that will meet our interests.

[Correspondent] Mr Aliyev also said he is confident that the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and other regional projects will be implemented
successfully during the upcoming year.

[Aliyev] One can be optimistic about the year 2005. Of course, it will
depend on our activities and work. I hope that we, the government will
implement these tasks as honestly as always we do.

[Correspondent] The head of state also told the Security Council
members about the work that has been done over the last year and also
about future tasks.

[Aliyev] We have all worked very efficiently during 2004. We, every
one of us in his position, ruled Azerbaijan very resolutely. What is
important is that the policy of our people’s national leader, Heydar
Aliyev, remained unchanged. And this is an important factor which
will secure our future success.

[Correspondent] Mr Aliyev also paid special attention to the
enforcement of the state programme on the fight against corruption and
the development of regions. The president said that the state will
continue to do its best to raise the people’s living standards.

Istanbul’s Vanished City of the Dead: The Grand Champs des Morts

The Fountain Magazine, NJ
Dec 31 2004

Istanbul’s Vanished City of the Dead: The Grand Champs des Morts

By Brain JOHNSON

With a rich and varied architecture embodying centuries of history,
Istanbul is one of the world’s most celebrated cities. Besides the
splendid monuments of its classical, Byzantine, and Ottoman heritage,
Istanbul’s cemeteries have also contributed to its renown.
Historically, the vast necropolises of Eyüp, Üsküdar, and the Grand
Champs des Morts in Pera have attracted the most notice. While the
first two cemeteries still survive, the latter endures only as a
memory – described in the pages of travel accounts, depicted on old
engravings and maps, and tangibly perceptible in a scattering of
funerary monuments that once graced its broad expanse. Yet, just over
a hundred and fifty years ago, the Grand Champs des Morts existed as
one of the world’s great necropolises. A realm where the living
intermingled with the dead, it roused the interest and imagination of
visitors to Istanbul, and, even more notably, in an age of reform and
change, offered inspiration and a model for contemporary designers of
cemeteries in Western Europe.

Dating back to the sixteenth century,1 the Grand Champs des Morts was
unique among Istanbul’s necropolises, with burial grounds for
followers of both Islam and Christianity in close proximity.
Beginning at Taksim (roughly on the site where the Atatürk Cultural
Center now stands) and extending down the slopes of Gümüþsuyu and
Fýndýklý lay the graves of Muslims, while the area stretching
northward toward Harbiye was divided into separate sections for the
city’s various Christian communities. The English traveler Julia
Pardoe describes the site in 1836:

The first plot of ground, after passing the barrack [the artillery
barracks of Selim III at Taksim], is the grave-yard of the Franks;
and here you are greeted on all sides with inscriptions in Latin;
injunctions to pray for the souls of the departed; flourishes of
French sentiment; calembourgs2 graven into the everlasting stone,
treating of roses and reine Marguerites; concise English records of
births, deaths, ages, and diseases; Italian elaborations of regret
and despair; and all the common-places of an ordinary burial-ground.3

Immediately in a line with the European cemetery, is the
burial-ground of the Armenians. It is a thickly-peopled spot; and as
you wander beneath the leafy boughs of the scented acacias, and
thread your way among the tombs, you are struck by the peculiarity of
their inscriptions. The noble Armenian character is graven deeply
into the stone; name and date are duly set forth; but that which
renders an Armenian slab. . . peculiar and distinctive, is the
chiseling upon the tomb the emblem of the trade or profession of the
deceased.

The Turkish cemetery stretches along the slope of the hill behind the
barrack, and descends far into the valley. Its thickly-planted
cypresses form a dense shade, beneath which the tall head-stones
gleam out white and ghastly. The grove is intersected by footpaths,
and here and there a green glade lets in the sunshine, to glitter
upon many a gilded tomb. Plunge into the thick darkness of the more
covered spots, and for a moment you will almost think that you stand
amid the ruins of some devastated city. You are surrounded by what
appears for an instant to be the myriad fragments of some mighty
whole; but the gloom has deceived you – you are in the midst of a
Necropolis – a City of the Dead.4

The vastness and natural beauty of the Grand Champs des Morts
captured the attention of foreign residents and visitors to Istanbul
alike, and few travel accounts and diaries from the past fail to
mention – even if only in passing reference – the cemetery on the
outskirts of Pera. The Grand Champs des Morts presented a sharp
contrast to the densely packed inner-city churchyards which served as
the principal burial grounds in so many of Europe’s cities up to the
nineteenth century. Although some chroniclers considered the size of
the Pera cemetery, as well as the great necropolises bordering other
districts of Istanbul, a hindrance to urban expansion and
development,5 the advantage of such a spacious, sylvan tract of land
for burial of the dead was also recognized.

Not far from this [Taksim] we entered upon one of those vast
burying-grounds which form one of the most conspicuous features of
every Turkish city. . . In a few words. . . I may state that the
cemetery. . . covers an area of more than 100 acres, and that a thick
forest of cypresses (resembling in shape the poplar, but with a dark
green foliage) overspreads it with a solemn shade, extremely
appropriate to its ordinary uses. . .6

Cemetery planners in Western Europe, spurred on by public calls for
improvements to the hygiene and appearance of local burial grounds,
cited precedents in Istanbul – as well as other areas of the East – in
their effort to close inner-city churchyards and replace them with
larger, more salubrious cemeteries outside settled areas. This
process of reform essentially began in France during the eighteenth
century. It was encouraged by authors such as the naturalist
Bernardin de Saint-Pierre (1737-1814), who, in his celebrated Études
de la Nature, praised the Turkish custom of burying the dead in the
countryside (a tradition also observed in classical antiquity and
contemporary China) and recommended the implementation of similar
practices in Paris. He proposed `landscaped Élysées as the
burial-place of the great and good, and public cemeteries
(essentially landscaped gardens where the dead would be buried and,
if prosperity allowed, monuments erected). . . Public cemeteries
should be created in the vicinity of the city, planted with
cypresses, pines, and fruit-trees, and monuments erected in such a
setting could only induce profound moral feelings and tender
melancholy in those who visited them.’7

By the late 1700s, new methods for disposing of the dead were of
absolute necessity in most of Europe’s major cities, and not simply
for esthetic purposes, but for maintaining public health. Toward the
end of the eighteenth century, the municipality of Paris took the
first steps by closing old burial grounds, such as the ancient
Cimetière des Innocents, and establishing new cemeteries, including
the famed Père-Lachaise, Montparnasse, and Montmartre early in the
next. A similar course of action occurred somewhat later in London,
commencing with the opening of Kensal Green in 1832, the first of
seven new private cemeteries founded over the next decade on the
outskirts of the city.8 Finally, in 1852, all graveyards inside the
city limits were closed with the passage into law of the Metropolitan
Burial Act. By that time, London’s churchyards, many dating from the
Middle Ages, were in a critical state. One contemporary journal, The
Builder, asserted in 1843 that 50,000 bodies yearly were piled one on
top of the other in these overcrowded graveyards, where – left to
putrefy and rot – they gave out exhalations and darkened the air with
vapors. Charles Dickens cynically portrayed the grim situation in the
Uncommercial Traveller:

Such strange churchyards hide in the City of London; churchyards
sometimes so entirely pressed upon by houses, so small, so rank, so
silent, so forgotten, except by the few people who ever look down
into them from their smokey windows. As I stand peeping in through
the iron gates and rails, I can peel the rusty metal off, like bark
from an old tree. The illegible tombstones are all lopsided, the
gravemounds lost their shape in the rains of a hundred years ago, the
Lombardy Poplar or Plane-Tree that was once a drysalter’s daughter
and several common-councilmen, has withered like those worthies, and
its departed leaves are dust beneath it. Contagion of slow ruin
overhangs the place . . .9

Considering the dismal, unwholesome state of burial grounds in their
own countries, it is no wonder that Europeans often waxed eloquent
about the cemeteries of Istanbul, highlighting the aura of life which
they engendered. Julia Pardoe offers a particularly vivid description
of the burial grounds in the Ottoman capital, where the present
generation readily merged with those of the past.

[The Turk] looks upon death calmly and without repugnance; he does
not connect it with ideas of gloom and horror, as we are too prone to
do in Europe, – he spreads his burial places in the sunniest spots – on
the crests of the laughing hills, where they are bathed in the light
of the blue sky; beside the crowded thoroughfares of the city, where
the dead are, as it were, once more mingled with the living, – in the
green nooks that stretch down to the Bosphorus, wherein more selfish
spirits would have erected a villa, or have planted a vineyard. He
identifies himself with the generation which has passed away – he is
ready to yield his place to that which is to succeed his own.10

For the cemetery reformers of Europe, such descriptions offered an
ideal in their quest for more wholesome, esthetically appealing
burial grounds. Located in the hilly countryside on the fringes of
the city, the Grand Champs des Morts and Istanbul’s other great
necropolises served as a model for those who strove to create new
cemeteries for the sanitary disposal of the dead, as well as provide
an idyllic environment for the expression of one’s most tender
feelings and deepest sentiments. Contemporary author Samuel Taylor
Coleridge even commented on the emotive aspect of Turkish burial
grounds.

Nothing can make amends for the want of the soothing influences of
nature, and for the absence of those types of renovation and decay
which the fields and woods offer to the notice of the serious and
contemplative mind. To feel the force of this sentiment, let a man
only compare in imagination, the unsightly manner in which our
monuments are crowded together in the busy, noisy, unclean, and
almost grassless churchyard of a large town, with the still seclusion
of a Turkish cemetery in some remote place, and yet further
sanctified by the grove of cypresses in which it is embosomed.11 /

Specific reference to the Grand Champs des Morts and other Turkish
cemeteries as archetypes to imitate in the West also appear in the
writings of John Claudius Loudon (1783-1843), one of the most
influential cemetery reformers of the nineteenth century. A Scottish
landscape gardener, Loudon proposed that burial grounds should be on
elevated ground, distant enough from urban centers as not to endanger
the health of the populace, yet near enough to lessen the time and
expense of funerals and encourage visits by the living to the tombs
of the dead. To make the site attractive, he favored a garden-like
setting, and suggested the planting of various types of trees and
shrubs. Istanbul’s necropolises offered exemplary models of these
principles, and Loudon quoted descriptions of them in his works on
burial ground planning and design. `The Turkish cemeteries are
generally out of the city, on rising ground, planted with cedars,
cypresses, and odoriferous shrubs, whose deep verdure and graceful
forms bending in every breeze give a melancholy beauty to the place,
and excite sentiments very congenial to its destination.’12

Besides the location of Istanbul’s cemeteries in the midst of nature
and removed from the habitations of the living, the local tradition
of single interments also impressed European observers. As Julia
Pardoe remarked, the remains of the dead were not disturbed once laid
to rest, a practice followed in both the Muslim and Christian burial
grounds of the Grand Champs des Morts. `There is no burying and
reburying on the same spot, as with us. The remains of the departed
are sacred.’13 In stark contrast, Europeans – largely due to space
restrictions in their heavily populated cities – regularly opened
existing graves and filled them with new cadavers, to the point that
some churchyards became pestilential pits, seriously endangering
public health. By the late eighteenth century these unsanitary
conditions had become intolerable. Through the influence of
reformers, many of whom took inspiration from the burial practices of
the Ottomans, new laws were instituted regulating methods of
disposing of the dead. A French decree passed in 1804, for instance,
prohibited burial in common graves, where the dead were stacked up
one on top of the other.14 Instead, each cadaver was to be buried in
its own space, dug to a specific depth and separated from other
graves by a set distance, a method of sepulture eventually adopted in
other European countries as well.

More than Ottoman burial practices, however, the unique social life
which revolved around Istanbul’s cemeteries, especially in the Grand
Champs des Morts, aroused the interest of foreigners. Both Muslim and
Christian inhabitants of the city followed distinct rituals for
remembering their dead, and families of all religious persuasions
made regular visits to their respective burial grounds, maintaining
their link with the generations which had preceded them. The pleasant
surroundings of the cemeteries (places to avoid in Europe’s
municipalities) encouraged this communion with the departed.
Moreover, the great necropolises were more than resting places for
the dead. `The Champs des Morts,’ as Julia Pardoe recounts, `is the
promenade of the whole population – Turk, Frank, Greek, and Armenian. .
.’15 It was known to the locals as a place of keyif, or an area
connected with ease and enjoyment.16 Spacious, fresh, green, and in
close proximity to the residential quarters of Pera, the burial
ground served as a kind of parkland – an attractive area of rest and
relaxation for the populace of Istanbul.

With whatever views they pay these visits, it is certain that the
burying-ground is their favorite resort, where they spend many of
their spare hours. Whole families, parents and little children, may
be seen gathered around a tomb in silence and seriousness, or in
animated and joyous converse. All the burying-grounds, Turkish,
Jewish, and Christian, are chief places of public resort.17

The Grand Champs des Morts even had a cafe at the crest of the hill
overlooking Dolmabahçe, where customers could while away the day
smoking water pipes, drinking Turkish coffee, and gazing out at the
sparkling waters of the Bosphorus in the distance.18 Itinerant
vendors also wandered through the cemetery, offering refreshments to
visitors. Water sellers usually followed in their wake, carrying huge
dripping jars and shouting their distinctive cry buz gibi su!
(ice-cold water),19 ready to quench the thirst of those strolling or
lounging among the tombs.

Yet, perhaps the most fascinating sight for Europeans were the public
fairs held in the necropolis. More than just a place for
commemoration, quiet contemplation, and repose, the Grand Champs des
Morts was also the site of lively festivals and celebrations. On such
occasions, the burial grounds – primarily those of the Christians – were
transformed into an animated spectacle of gaiety and amusement. Julia
Pardoe describes in colorful detail one such fête for the living
amongst the monuments of the dead.

I have already spoken elsewhere of the indifference, if not absolute
enjoyment with which the inhabitants of the East frequent their
burying grounds; but on the occasion of this festival I was more
impressed than ever by the extent to which it is carried. The whole
of the Christian cemetery had assumed the appearance of a fair. . .

Grave-stones steadied the poles which supported the swings – divans,
comfortably overlaid with cushions, were but chintz-covered
sepulchers – the kibaub merchants had dug hollows to cook their
dainties under the shelter of the tombs, and the smoking booths were
amply supplied with seats and counters from the same wide waste of
death.

Every hundred yards that we advanced, the scene became more striking.
One long line of diminutive tents formed a temporary street of
eating-houses; there were kibaubs, pillauf, fritters, pickled
vegetables, soups, rolls stuffed with fine herbs, sausages, fried
fish, bread of every quality, and cakes of all dimensions. . . .

Here and there a flat tomb, fancifully covered with gold-embroidered
handkerchiefs, was overspread with sweetmeats and preserved fruits;
while in the midst of these rival establishments, groups of men were
seated in a circle, wherever a little shade could be obtained,
smoking their long pipes in silence, with their diminutive
coffee-cups resting on the ground beside them. The wooden kiosk
overhanging the Bosphorus was crowded; and many a party was snugly
niched among the acacias, with their backs resting against the tombs,
and the sunshine flickering at their feet.20

Undoubtedly, Europeans were amazed by the merging of the realms of
the living and the dead that occurred at Istanbul’s Grand Champs des
Morts, where, as French embassy member Charles Pertusier remarked,
`those who weep are not disturbed by the lyric songs of joy, and
those who laugh pay no attention to those who weep.’21 Visiting – much
less taking one’s pleasure in – burial grounds would have been almost
inconceivable in the West. However, in the first half of the
nineteenth century, this had already begun to change with the closing
of inner-city churchyards and the creation of cemeteries on the
periphery of urban areas in Europe. Planted with a rich variety of
trees and shrubs, the burial grounds founded in Paris and London
during this era constituted a distinctly new style. Essentially
funerary gardens, they served both as cemeteries and parklands.
Burial grounds such as Pere Lachaise, Montmartre, Kensal Green, and
Highgate became renowned for their natural beauty, and were
frequented – much like today – both by mourners wishing to commemorate
the dead as well as visitors seeking a quiet spot for meditation and
repose.

Ironically, even as Europeans in the nineteenth century were opening
new burial grounds influenced by models from Istanbul, sections of
the very cemeteries from which they had derived inspiration
(including portions of the Grand Champs des Morts) were being lost in
the wake of rapid urban development. During the course of this
transformation – spurred on by a desire to rebuild the city in
contemporary Western fashion – it was inevitable that many of
Istanbul’s old burial grounds would lessen in size, or vanish
completely from the map. The city was unique in that so many of its
immediate environs were taken up by vast necropolises for the dead, a
conspicuous feature which left a distinct impression on foreign
travelers, such as Stephen Olin, who in 1853 remarked on the loss of
the cemeteries in the wake of urban growth.

Indeed, so vast a space has been devoted to the dead around Istanbul,
that it is no longer possible to respect the sanctity of their abode
without interfering greatly with the convenience of the living, and
even the entire sacrifice of public convenience. Immense as the city
is, I am quite sure that much more ground is occupied by tombs and
graves than by the habitations of the living. The whole country about
Constantinople, Scutari, and Pera is occupied in this way, and a vast
number of tombs and burying grounds are enclosed within the walls. In
forming roads, streets, and in building, it is no longer possible to
spare them, and one often treads upon causeways or pavements made of
sculptured grave-stones and monuments.22

Between 1840 and 1910, the area of Istanbul stretching northward from
Taksim to ½iþli was transformed from open countryside to densely
inhabited residential settlement. Early nineteenth-century maps of
Istanbul show much of the area in this direction taken up by the
non-Muslim burial grounds of the Grand Champs des Morts, with the
Frankish section directly in the path of the main route of expansion.
Already, by 1842, this burial ground was being whittled down, as a
contemporary account by Reverend William Goodell attests. One of the
founders of the American Board mission to the Armenians at Istanbul,
Goodell had lost his nine-year-old son, Constantine Washington, to
gastric typhoid in 1841 and buried him in the Frankish section of the
Grand Champs des Morts.

February 18, 1842. On account of the encroachments. . . on the Frank
burying ground, I had to remove the body of our beloved boy. The
grave . . . had been dug deep, and the coffin was scarcely damp.
Every thing was sweet and still. The new grave which we have prepared
a few rods distant was also deep and dry; and there we laid the body,
to rest in its quiet bed till the resurrection morning. Beloved
child, farewell!23

However, little Constantine’s tranquility lasted far less than
expected, disturbed again by a flurry of construction in the early
1860s, including the widening of the main road running from Taksim to
Pangaltý. In July 1863, the remains of more than a dozen Americans,
including those of Constantine Washington Goodell, were exhumed from
the old Frankish burial ground in the Grand Champs des Morts. They
were transferred, along with their grave markers, to a new Protestant
cemetery in Feriköy – created by order of Sultan Abdülmecit I in the
1850s – for re-interment.24 The land occupied by the former burial
ground was turned into a public park (in a modern Western sense), a
project finally completed six years later with the opening of Taksim
Garden in 1869.25

As the urban environment around Taksim expanded in succeeding
decades, the other burial grounds of the Grand Champs des Morts also
disappeared. The Armenian cemetery, which lay to the north of the
Frankish burial ground, was still delineated on the 1925-26
Pervititch insurance maps of Istanbul, but labeled as `ex-Cimetière
Armenien,’ apparently indicating that it had ceased to be an active
place of interment. Most of the Muslim burial grounds which had
covered the slopes of Gümüþsuyu and Fýndýklý had already vanished by
the First World War; an aerial photograph taken from a balloon at
that time shows a small portion – evident as a thick patch of
cypresses – still straddling the side of the hill between the Taksim
barracks an the military hospital in Gumussuyu.26 The scant remains
of the once great necropolis would cease to exist by the
mid-twentieth century.27

All the while, as the great cemetery shrank – sacrificed for the sake
of public convenience – reformers in Europe were transforming the
spatial relationship of the living and dead in the West. The
nineteenth century witnessed an innovative concept in European burial
ground design, with the introduction of expansive, magnificently
landscaped cemeteries. Serene and picturesque, they served as
additional public parks in many towns and cities. Whereas the small,
noxious churchyards of previous ages had been shunned, the new
necropolises were considered an ideal place for a relaxing stroll or
family outing, not to mention a site of regular pilgrimage to pay
respects to the well-loved dead. This shift in custom and attitude
was the culmination of several decades of reform, which – to no small
extent – was inspired by the traditions of sepulture in other lands,
including the Ottoman empire. Remarkably, at a time when the Ottomans
were actively borrowing ideas and institutions from Europe in an
effort to modernize the empire, their centuries-old customs of burial
and commemoration of the dead helped fuel a vital social advance in
the very countries they looked to for guidance. At the same time,
urban development in the Ottoman capital, influenced by Western
models, led to the closure of the Grand Champs des Morts – Istanbul’s
`City of the Dead,’ a world-renowned necropolis which had provided
inspiration, as well as an ideal, for the cemetery reformers of
Europe.

Footnotes

1 By some accounts, the earliest interments at the Grand Champs des
Morts date to c. 1560, when Istanbul was struck with a severe
epidemic of plague, and the open fields around Taksim were used to
bury the great numbers of dead; see Istanbul Ansiklopedisi, s.v.
`Ermeni Mezarliklari.’ The tombstone of a Dutch physician, Willem
Quackelbeen, who died of the disease in 1561, offers physical
evidence of this conjecture. It is currently located in the Roman
Catholic cemetery at Feriköy, where it was most likely transferred
when the Frankish section of the Grand Champs des Morts closed in the
mid-1800s, see A.H. de Groot, Old Dutch Graves at Istanbul, Archivum
Ottomanicum 5 (1973): 6. Robert Walsh, chaplain to the British
Embassy at Istanbul in the 1830s, recounted in his memoirs that the
earliest grave-marker in the Frankish burial ground was that of
Ludovicus Chizzolo, a Jesuit who succumbed to the plague in 1585, see
R. Walsh, A Residence at Constantinople, vol. 2 (London: Richard
Bentley, 1838), 441.
2 Calembourg: a pun, or play on words.
3 Julia Pardoe, The City of the Sultan, 4th ed. (London: George
Routledge and Sons, 1854), 51.
4 Ibid., 53-54.
5 For instance, Lady Mary Wortley Montague, writing in 1717,
commented: `The burying fields about it (i.e., Istanbul) are
certainly much larger than the whole city. `Tis surprising what a
vast deal of land is lost this way in Turkey. Sometimes I have seen
burying places of several miles, belonging to very inconsiderable
villages. . . .’ See Hans-Peter Laqueur, `Cemeteries in Orient and
Occident: The Historical Development,’ in Cimetières et Traditions
Funéraires dans le Monde Islamique (Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu
Basýmevi, 1996), 2: 3.
6 An American, Sketches of Turkey in 1831 and 1832 (New York: J. & J.
Harper, 1833), 158.
7 James Stevens Curl, The Victorian Celebration of Death (Stroud,
Gloucestershire: Sutton Publishing Ltd.), 17.
8 These included West Norwood (1837); Highgate (1839); Brompton,
Nunhead, and Abney Park (1840); and Tower Hamlets (1841).
9 Charles Dickens, The Uncommercial Traveller (London: Oxford, 1860)
233.
10 Pardoe, The City of the Sultan, 36.
11 John Claudius Loudon, `On the Laying Out, Planting, and Managing
of Cemeteries and on the Improvement of Churchyards.’ The Gardener’s
Magazine, 1843, p. 100.
12 Ibid., 405.
13 Pardoe, The City of the Sultan, 50.
14 Thomas A. Kselman, Death and the Afterlife in Modern France,
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1993, 169-70.
15 Pardoe, The City of the Sultan, 50.
16 Charles White, Domestic Manners of the Turks in 1844, vol. 1
(London: Henry Colburn, 1846), 15-16.
17 Stephen Olin, Greece and the Golden Horn (New York: Carlton &
Philips, 1854), 249.
18 Pardoe, The City of the Sultan, 51.
19 White, Domestic Manners of the Turks in 1844, 1: 15-16.
20 Pardoe, The City of the Sultan, 134-35.
21 Petusier further states: `To form a correct idea of these
heterogeneous scenes, we
must be on the spot, for no description can do justice to them; and
even when we see them, for the first time, it appears such a complete
illusion, that we can scarsely conceive its reality.’ See Charles
Petusier, Picturesque Promenades in and near Constantinople and on
the Waters of the Bosphorus (London: Sir Richard Phillips and Co.,
1820), 96.
22 Olin, Greece and the Golden Horn, 219.
23 E.D.G. Prime, Memoirs of Rev. William Goodell, D.D. (Robert Carter
and Brothers, 1876), 275.
24 Burial Registry of the Feriköy Protestant Cemetery, no. 331-343,
1863, Governing Board of the Feriköy Protestant Cemetery, Istanbul,
Turkey.
25 Zeynep Çelik, The Remaking of Istanbul, Seattle and London:
University of Washington Press, 1986, 69.
26 For a copy of this image, see Çelik Gülersoy, Taksim: Bir Meydanýn
Hikayesi (Istanbul: ‹stanbul Kitaplýý, 1986), 37.
27 Some tombstones from the Frankish section of the Grand Champs des
Morts still survive in the Protestant and Catholic cemeteries in
Istanbul’s Feriköy district, where they were transferred after the
old burial ground closed in the mid-1800s.

;k=507&780881237&show=part1

http://www.fountainmagazine.com/articles.php?SIN=fa10d4e718&amp

Asia: Tourists From CIS Among Those Missing, Killed In Tsunamis

Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep.
Dec 30 2004

Asia: Tourists From CIS Among Those Missing, Killed In Tsunamis
By Antoine Blua

With more than 100,000 people reported dead so far as a result of the
South Asian tsunami disaster, governments and relief agencies are
rushing to deliver humanitarian aid to millions of survivors. The
region is a popular holiday destination for tourists from around the
world, including the countries in the Commonwealth of Independent
States (CIS). Thousands of holiday makers are reported either dead or
missing, including nearly 50 Russian and Kazakh tourists. Citizens
from other CIS states were also traveling in the disaster zone.

Prague, 30 December 2004 (RFE/RL) — A government plane airlifted
home the first group of Russian tourists from Sri Lanka yesterday.

Stanislav, who was among the 21 tourists evacuated, described to
Reuters what he saw.

“Of course, it was terrifying,” Stanislav said. “We didn’t know where
to go. We wanted to hide as high above the ground as possible because
we didn’t know how big the wave was going to be.”

The Russian tourists sought assistance from the Russian Embassy in
the Sri Lankan capital, Colombo, where they received food and
clothing. They complained that they felt let down by tour operators.
No one required medical assistance.

At least two Russian tourists — a Moscow woman and her 6-year-old
son — were killed in Thailand when the tsunami struck the country’s
southern island of Phuket.

A plane dispatched today is due to start evacuating Russian tourists
from Thailand. The Russian Embassy in Bangkok has registered almost
600 Russians as “safe and sound.” More than 40 Russians are still
unaccounted for, however.

Some Russian tourists, such as Natalya, had just arrived in Sri Lanka
when the tsunami hit.

“We had just arrived [in Colombo] when it all happened,” Natalya
said. “So we did not even have our holiday started there. And we are
grateful to the [Russian] Emergency Ministry. We just flew in and
out.”

In Belarus, authorities say 41 citizens were in the region when
disaster struck, but no deaths have been reported.

Belarusian businessman Ihar Makalovich explained how his brother, who
was visiting Thailand, escaped the tsunami.

“He and his girlfriend went up to the hills to take pictures at that
moment. This is what saved them. Their hotel was destroyed
completely,” Makalovich said.

Some 75 Kazakh tourists were evacuated from Thailand earlier this
week.

Lada Li returned to Kazakhstan from southern Thailand after the
tsunami struck.

“It was really horrible, so horrible that the water rose above the
second floor, breaking windows and sweeping people away,” Li said.

Kazakhstan’s Foreign Ministry said yesterday that five Kazakh
nationals, including two children, remain in hospital on Phuket.
Three other Kazakh citizens remain missing.

Azerbaijan’s ambassador to India, Tamerlan Karaev, said he is
optimistic about the fate of 17 Azerbaijani tourists believed to have
been traveling in South Asia.

“Fortunately, we haven’t received any bad news so far about their
fates,” Karaev said.

Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamlet Gasparian said he has no
specific information but does not rule out that some Armenians may
have been traveling in the disaster zone.

“We called the Thai Consulate in Yerevan, and they said no visas were
issued to Armenians prior to the disaster,” Gasparian said. “And the
[Armenian] Embassy in India has no data about whether there were any
Armenians in the disaster zones. As for the Armenians living in the
region, we don’t have any information. But it is possible that there
were some Armenians who flew to these countries from Moscow.”Some
travel agencies continue to send tourists to resorts in the region
that were unaffected by the tsunamis.

Many survivors of the tsunami lack proper food and medical help, and
also face the threat of disease from the lack of clean drinking water
and poor sanitation. Indian authorities have also warned that high
waves could strike southern coastal areas again.

Foreign governments are advising their citizens not to travel to the
region.

Kazakh Foreign Ministry spokesman Mukhtar Karibai spoke with RFE/RL
in Astana.

“As a result of the natural disaster that took place in Southeast
Asian countries, there is a high threat of communicable diseases in
that area,” Karibai said. “In addition to that, some foreign weather
forecast services report the possibility of a recurrence of such
natural disasters as earthquakes. Taking into consideration all of
the above, the Kazakh Foreign Ministry advises Kazakh citizens not to
travel to this area temporarily, either for business or for private
trips.”

However, some travel agencies continue to send tourists to resorts in
the region that were unaffected by the tsunamis. Many tourists from
the CIS risk losing the money they have already paid for their
holidays if they don’t complete their trips.

“The situation at those resorts doesn’t always correspond to what you
see on television,” said Irina Tyurina, a spokeswoman for Russia’s
Association of Travel Agencies. “In fact, there are nice inland
hotels. There is a warning [about travel to the region] from
epidemiologists, from the Foreign Ministry, and the Federal Tourism
Agency. And Sri Lanka’s Embassy is asking [Russia] to suspend flights
to their country. And the airport in Colombo is asking [Russia] not
to send any planes there. And Phuket [in Thailand] is asking for
tourists not to be sent there but [instead] to Pattaya and other
provinces. We can’t forbid people to go there. It is their right. Our
border is open.”

Tyurina said a charter flight yesterday to Phuket was full, and that
no flights to the Maldives have yet been canceled.

Officials in Russia’s Far Eastern Kamchatka region say about 180
tourists left the peninsula for Thailand yesterday.

Russia’s First Illegal Alien Deportation Camp Opens in Krasnodar

Window on Eurasia: Russia’s First Illegal Alien Deportation Camp Opens in
Krasnodar

29 December 2004

Paul Goble

Tartu, December 29 – A camp intended to confine illegal
immigrants until they can be speedily deported from the Russian Federation
opened today in Krasnodar krai, the first such camp to be opened in
post-Soviet Russia and one organized in such a way that it seems certain to
exacerbate ethnic tensions not only there but elsewhere as well.

Krasnodar Governor Aleksandr Tkachev, who has long pushed this
idea, said at the opening that “we have begun the struggle with univited
guests, and we will continue this work to find, detain, and expell those who
do not wish to obey” Russian laws, Radio Mayak Kubani reported earlier
today. ( )

Tkachev added that people living in his territory “ought to be
able to live a peaceful life and not be afraid of going out to work or to
rest. And as experience shows, among these illegal [migrants], there are
criminals.”

In the near future, Krasnoyarsk officials have indicated that
they plan to open three additional camps elsewhere in that southern Russian
region. Each of these four tent cities will hold up to 150 people pending
deportation and will be heavily guarded, according to “Novyyze izvestiya.”
(See .)

This action comes following a significant increase in the
reported number of illegal aliens coming into the region from the Caucasus
and Central Asia and the apparent inability of officials there to control
the situation, even though in the last year alone they had increased the
number of militia officers solely responsible for dealing with this issue to
400.

Officials both in Moscow and the regions are attempting to deal
with the anger many Russians feel toward illegal immigrants, especially
those from the Caucasus and Central Asia. But so far, most of the measures
they have tried have proved ineffective often because of the corruption of
militia officers who often are willing to allow illegal aliens to remain for
a price.

That has led to calls for more radical measures like those now
being introduced in Krasnodar. But there are three reasons for thinking
that these steps are likely to exacerbate ethnic tensions there even if they
succeed in reducing the influx of illegal aliens from the Caucasus or
further afield.

First, Tkachev has played upon popular prejudice by suggesting
that illegal immigrants are responsible for a rise in crime. Research by
the Interior Ministry in Moscow and by the noted ethnosociologist Emil Pain
have disproved that contention, but many Russians are inclined to believe
it. Tkachev’s remarks will only reinforce such attitudes.

Second, the Krasnodar authorities say that they will organize
the camps on ethnic lines. That is, they will put people from Ukraine and
Moldova in one of the camps, people from Armenia in another, and those from
Central Asian countries in a third. Intended to make the management of these
camps easier, this step could easily have just the opposite effect.

(Other Russian regional governments which have thought about
setting up such filtration camps in the past have concluded that it would be
a mistake to organize them along ethnic lines, lest that provoke an
explosion. ( ).)

And third, Tkachev and his staff say that they want to do all
this without putting undue burdens on Krasnodar taxpayers. To that end,
they have created tent cities with few amenities. And they plan to force
the illegal migrants to pay for their own deportations either on their own
or by getting money from their co-ethnics who are living in the krai
legally.

The logic behind that approach seems to be that this will make
the local non-Russian communities less willing to help their co-ethnics come
to Krasnodar, but it is entirely likely that in at least some cases, this
tactic will provoke anti-government and even anti-Russian feelings among
both those confined and those who are told to help them.

Tkachev’s policies may nonetheless be popular with ethnic
Russians there who are angry about illegal immigration. Consequently and
especially in the absence of serious criticism from outside, what he does
may very well be copied by others in other region’s of the country where the
influx of illegal migrants is large.

But even such draconian measures may not reduce the number of illegal aliens
any time soon. Economic and demographic pressures are simply too great. What
such steps almost certainly will do, however, is to further divide the
Russian Federation’s ethnic communities and thus make the achievement of
interethnic accord there that much more difficult.

http://www.radioportal.ru/mayak/index.shtml?news
http://www.newizv.ru/news/?id_news=1367304-10-21
http://www.rosbalt.ru/2004/10/19/181922.html

Jewish Leaders and Armenian Min. Meet on Question of Anti-Semitism

The Federation of Jewish Communities of the CIS (FJC), Russia
Dec 27 2004

Jewish Leaders and Armenian Minister Meet on Question of
Anti-Semitism
Monday, December 27, 2004

YEREVAN, Armenia – Chief Rabbi of Armenia Gersh Meir Burshtein and
other Jewish leaders in Yerevan met with Armenian Foreign Affairs
Minister Vardan Oskanyan this week. While the Minister expressed his
wish to create appropriate conditions for regular cooperation with
the Jewish community, emphasizing his intentions to provide his
support to the Jewish community in Armenia, the main focus of the
discussion concerned anti-Semitic statements made by a number of top
officials in Armenia.

“These statement haven’t received the support of the Armenian people,
but nevertheless I consider it necessary to discuss the situation at
the governmental level,” expressed Vardan Oskanyan. These offences
included a statement comparing the Jewish community to a number of
sects known for spreading anti-Jewish propaganda, a comment made by
Granush Haratyan, the Head of the Department on National Minorities
and Religion. These and other anti-Semitic statements, one of which
suggested exiling Jews from Armenia, have been published in the
country’s leading commercial and even state-sponsored newspapers.

“We want to live and work in Armenia, but these false statements
printed in the mass media may result in negative attitudes towards
Jews by Armenians. I am counting on a positive and resolute response
from the Armenian Government regarding these anti-Semitic
statements,” affirmed the Chief Rabbi of Armenia. Such offenses to
the Jewish Diaspora in Armenia have also been aired on one of the
national television channels ‘ALM’.

“I have always been proud to say that there is no anti-Semitism in
Armenia,” stated Rimma Varjapetyan, the Chairman of the Jewish
Community in Armenia. “However, we have been receiving a number of
threatening calls as of recent, just as soon as the President of the
ALM Channel, Tigran Karapetyan, joined Mrs. Haratyan in Jew-bashing.
These anti-Semitic attitudes are unacceptable,” she declared
solemnly. Such concerns were echoed by the meeting’s other
participants, who are also afraid for the resultant security risks to
the Jewish institutions they head.

The Minister promised to take measures to resolve the situation. “I
understand your anxiety. There is actually no state anti-Semitism in
Armenia, although some individuals propagandize it and may consider
themselves to be anti-Semitists in order to be different”. The
Minister expressed his desire to meet with Granush Haratyan to
discuss her actions and to submit a report about this meeting and
issue to the President of Armenia, Robert Kocharian.

At the end of the meeting, the Jewish leaders presented the Minister
with a number of gifts as a symbol of friendship with the Jewish
community. In addition to a music album by composer Willy Vainer, the
Director of the ‘Menorah’ Jewish Cultural Center, who also attended
the meeting, the Minister received a calendar for the upcoming year,
the latest issues of the ‘Lechaim’ Magazine and the ‘Kohelet’ and
‘Magen David’ newspapers.

http://www.fjc.ru/news/newsArticle.asp?AID=245471

Turkey’s EU bid: The long road ahead

Monday Morning, Lebanon
Dec 27 2004

Turkey’s EU bid: The long road ahead

Turkey has finally been given a date — October 3, 2005 — on which
it can begin negotiations that may in the fullness of time lead to
membership of the European Union. There has been dissent from this
decision from various quarters, notably in France and Austria, not to
mention Armenia, who complain of an attempt to `manufacture’ an
`artificial’ link to bind a Middle Eastern country to what Goethe
called `the Old Continent’.

The process of negotiations that is scheduled to start in October
2005 would take at least a decade before Ankara could be admitted.
Many details remain to be settled, including the issues of Cyprus,
human rights and legal reform. And the Turkish government, now led by
a government dominated by a moderate Islamic party, has to show how
deep the roots are of the secular tradition established by Kemal
Ataturk in the 1920s and `30s.
At the European Union summit, the Turkish prime minister, Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, said the possibility of EU membership was for Turkey
a promise of greater prosperity and influence in the Islamic world.
Addressing his people after coming back from Brussels, he said,
`There will no longer be interruptions, interim periods [of military
rule] and interventions, because there will be no need for them’. He
added that `Turkey is no longer a country that will progress for five
years, stall for 20 years, fight for three years. Stability has
come’.
These words were very expressive and show how very decisive Turks
consider EU membership to be for their future.
The other option for Ankara is to seek another regional gathering in
the Middle East, which is poorer and less stable from a strategic
angle. Joining the EU is a guarantee for the coming generations but
achieving it will be an immense task and challenge for the present
generation, which will have to mould the country into conformity with
EU standard, including thousands of pages of directives on almost
every imaginable subject.

A European country?
This is the principal question that many Europeans are asking. If we
look at the map, the European part of Turkey is very small,
comprising only about five percent of the country’s land mass.
Ninety-five percent of Turkey is `Asia Minor’. And joining the EU
will bring millions of Muslims into the European entity, where
Christianity has been the main source of morals and laws, despite the
secular character of many institutions. This point was brought to the
surface during discussions of the draft EU constitution. A big debate
took place whether the document’s preamble should mention the
Christian roots and values on which Europe’s civilization is based.
It is not a technical issue only as it seems to be when examining it
from above. Deep inside it is a cultural debate between separate
civilization, different traditions and practices. The Europeans are
afraid of the slow change taking place in their identity and culture.
This point has been clear when dealing with the immigration issue
bringing immigrants from North Africa to Southern Europe. Radical
anti-foreign parties are winning more and more seats in European
national parliaments simply because of a fear that Europe’s face is
being altered. This debate is another aspect of the `clash of
civilizations’ which, right-wing American commentators would have us
believe, is now going on between the Islamic world and the `coalition
of the willing’ led by the United States.
In this regard Ankara has to prove how European it is, and how stable
and capable it is of defending its secular tradition to alay all
these fears. A decade or fifteen years devoted to discussing these
questions may be enough to provide answers.

The role of the generals
Turkish generals have long held considerable sway over the country’s
elected politicians, staging three outright coups since 1960 and
forcing a fourth government, led by an Islamist party, to resign in
1997. But recent reforms aimed at meeting EU political criteria to
start negotiations have reined in the power of the military, which
sees itself as the guarantor of Turkey’s secular state.
Financial markets are finely tuned to any sign of friction between
the army and the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), a
moderate party viewed with suspicion by much of the secularist
establishment for its roots in a banned Islamist movement.
The generals themselves are in a paradoxical position: welcoming the
EU as a bolster to secularism in Turkey but seeing their own power
eroded in the process.
Another item of discussion is that of human rights. Brussels expects
a major improvement in Turkey’s record in this respect, including
full rights for non-Muslim minorities — including the use of the
Kurdish language –, women, and the eradication of torture. The EU,
the national parliaments and a legion of non-governmental bodies will
demand concrete proof of improvements on these points.

The Cypriot nettle
Ankara has a clear vision regarding the problematic issues mentioned
above, but its main complex is the Cypriot nettle. The sensitive
issue of recognizing the internationally-accepted Cyprus government,
a full EU member since May 2004, could prove a stumbling block for
Turkey. even before it starts negotiations. Even before talks can
even start next October, Turkey will have to take the difficult step
of acknowledging the Greek Cypriot government in Nicosia, something
it has said it can only do when a settlement for the divided island
is reached.
Ankara pledged last week that it would sign a protocol extending its
EU association agreement to the bloc’s 10 new members, including
Cyprus, before its EU accession negotiations are due to start on
October 3, 2005. But it insisted this was not tantamount to direct or
indirect recognition of the Greek Cypriot government in Nicosia. This
point promises many complications because Nicosia would not accept
any deviation in the general line aimed at securing recognition of
its independence. To provide a new impetus, UN Secretary-General Kofi
Annan offered his mediation to renew the bilateral talks that failed
months ago intended to reunify the island. The European Union urged
all sides in the Cyprus dispute to take up this offer. But Ankara
still needs time to decide what course to take.
Assuming this hurdle is passed, the negotiations will oblige Turkey
to make reforms more costly and far-reaching than those required by
other `clubs’ such as NATO or the United Nations. Turkish industry,
at present a strong backer of EU entry, will have to make expensive
upgrades of its machinery to comply with EU standards on health,
safety and the environment. One of the big challenges will be in
revamping an economy still recovering from the crisis of three years
ago, and whose reputation for corruption and red tape still scares
off many much-needed foreign investors.
Turkey adherence to the EU would change a great deal in the Middle
Eastern equation. And if Israel were to succeed in presenting its
candidacy for EU membership, it could be a slap in the face for the
Arab countries, split between various groups and interests. It would
be a `wake-up call’ to the Arabs regarding the need for them to form
strong alliances to keep their strength in the world of
globalization.

Armenian pressure group urges MPs not to endorse sending troops to I

Armenian pressure group urges MPs not to endorse sending troops to Iraq

A1+ web site
24 Dec 04

23 December: The Defence of the Liberated Territories public initiative
sent an open letter to the members of the [Armenian] National Assembly
today. The National Assembly is to adopt a decision tomorrow on
sending to Iraq a 50-strong group of Armenian military doctors,
sappers and drivers.

“At this decisive moment I am calling on everybody to be vigilant.
Responsibility for sending mercenaries to Iraq is put on the
shoulders of the deputies today. Nobody can cite a single logical
reason justifying Armenia’s participation in the US-British escapade
in Iraq. You know that there is no reason of this kind,” the letter
says. The authors of the open letter are sure that one or two persons
are responsible for everything, and this is being done “in order to
mitigate the outside danger directed against their personal power
and its successful handover”.

“One does not have to pretend to be a diplomat: cunning and
cowardliness alone are too little for that. Dare not defame the
honour of our arms. Each deputy, moreover, each faction are obliged
to do the impossible to not allow this agreement to be ratified. The
Armenian people demand this today,” says the letter signed by the
commander of the special battalion of the Artsakh [Nagornyy Karabakh]
war and coordinator of the Defence of the Liberated Territories public
initiative, Zhirayr Sefilyan.