The Armenian Genocide: 90 Years Later Turkey Continues to Deny theEx

The Armenian Genocide: 90 Years Later Turkey Continues to Deny the Extermination of a People

Democracy Now, NY
April 22 2005

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This week marks the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide when
more than a million Armenians were exterminated by the Young Turk
government through direct killing, starvation, torture, and forced
death marches. Another million fled into permanent exile. Almost
a century later, Turkey continues to deny the genocide. We speak
with Colgate University professor Peter Balakian, author of “The
Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America’s Response”
and Zanku Armenian of the Armenian National Committee of America.

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This week marks the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide. On
April 24, 1915, the Young Turk government of the Ottoman Empire
began a systematic premeditated genocide of the Armenian people
– an unarmed Christian minority living under Turkish rule. More
than a million Armenians were exterminated through direct killing,
starvation, torture, and forced death marches. Another million fled
into permanent exile. An ancient civilization was expunged from its
homeland of 2,500 years.

Today, almost a century later, the Turkish government continues to deny
this genocide. Books about the genocide are banned in Turkey and its
government funds chairs in Turkish studies at American universities
to ensure a certain version of history is presented. To this day,
Turkey and Armenia do not have diplomatic relations.

But now, Ankara’s ambitions to join the European Union are in
jeopardy. French President Jacques Chirac has said Ankara must first
acknowledge the genocide before being allowed to become a member of
the EU. In response, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has
called for a “impartial study by historians” concerning the fate of
the Armenian people during World War I.

Today we commemorate the 90th (ninetieth) anniversary of the Armenian
genocide.

Peter Balakian, author, “The Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide
and America’s Response.” He is also the Professor of English at
Colgate University

Zanku Armenian, of the Armenian National Committee of America.
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MOSCOW: Russian Duma statement condemns 1915 Armenian genocide

Russian Duma statement condemns 1915 Armenian genocide

Interfax news agency
22 Apr 05

Moscow, 22 April: The State Duma on Friday [22 April] adopted a
statement condemning genocide against Armenians in 1915.

“State Duma deputies completely condemn the act of genocide and think
that its 90th anniversary should be marked by the entire international
community,” says the statement that was unanimously adopted by 310
deputies.

The parliamentarians stressed that “this was one of the most cruel
and tragic events in the history of the 20th century”.

Armenian opposition leader says government change “inevitable”

Armenian opposition leader says government change “inevitable”

Noyan Tapan news agency
19 Apr 05

Yerevan, 19 April: Armenia is currently in the hands of several
people and while the Turks devastated Armenia by massacring its
population, it is being devastated without a massacre today, the
leader of the National Democratic Union, Vazgen Manukyan, said at a
press conference today.

Noting that two parties of the [ruling] coalition, the Republican
Party of Armenia [RPA] and Armenian Revolutionary Federation –
Dashnaktsutyun [ARFD], have declared themselves national, he said:
“I would like them to take a sheet of paper and describe clearly
what they mean by national. Not loving the Turks does not mean
‘national’. And the third party of the coalition, the Orinats Yerkir
[Law-Governed Country] Party, wants to establish lawfulness in the
country, even though there is nothing lawful in Armenia.”

In Manukyan’s opinion, a change of government is inevitable in
Armenia. Not only the opposition and people, but also all the echelons
of the authorities realize this. “We must have allies not only among
the population, but also among the authorities,” he said.

In theory, the best way to normalize the situation in the country
would be if members of the government understood that the current
situation has to be changed and tried to carry out changes, which
would be a “revolution from the top”, Manukyan said. However, this
scenario is implausible, in Manukyan’s view. Under these conditions,
the revolution must take place from the bottom – “a big movement that
will make the change of government imminent”.

Manukyan also said that although candidates of the National Democratic
Union are not running in the municipal elections, the party will wage
a struggle to make the elections as fair as possible.

ARKA News Agency – 04/18/2005

20% of Turkish public ready to recognize Armenian Genocide

ARKA News Agency
April 18 2005

An exhibition of photos by Armin Vegner “Armin T. Vegner and Armenians
of Anatoly, 1915” to be opened in the building of AR MFA on April 20

The Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Cyprus to Armenia
hands his credentials to RA President

The reason of violation of ceasefire regime along the front line
between Armenia and Azerbaijan is that Azerbaijan is sure of its
remaining unpunished

Commemorating Armenian Genocide Armenian people keeps on hoping for
voice of justice: Garegin II

Any dialogue with Turkey acceptable: Armenian Premier

RA Prime -Minister expects some positive steps in the position of
Turkey regarding Armenian Genocide issue

No changes should be expected in Turkey’s policy toward Armenian
Genocide during next few years: Lavrenty Barseghyan

Chairmen of Armenian and Perm CCIS sign cooperation agreement

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20% OF TURKISH PUBLIC READY TO RECOGNIZE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

YEREVAN, April 18. /ARKA/. A fifth of Turkish public is ready to
recognize the Armenian Genocide, Head of the Armenian Sociological
Society Gevorg Poghosyan stated at a conference “Great Genocide.
Reality and Condemnation”, presenting the results of an interview
which was conducted in Armenia and in Turkey in 2001-2004, and involved
1,200 respondents from 34 Turkish cities, and 1,000 respondents from
21 Armenian cities. The respondents were offered three questions:
knowledge of each other, relations and possibilities of further
development. According to Poghosyan, more advanced sections of
Turkey’s population are psychologically ready to recognize the Armenian
Genocide and will not be surprised if the country’s Government adopts
such a resolution. “Moreover, our contacts with Turks showed that a
considerable number of journalists and writers, who are well aware of
this historical fact and of the fact that sooner or later the Turkish
Government will have to admit the Genocide, lay emphasis on Armenians’
further steps in this matter,” Poghosyan said. He added that they are
in more fear of the Armenian diaspora’s hard line. Poghosyan himself
expressed surprise that Turks made the interview results public on
their TV channels. “It testifies to the fact that the authorities
started discussing this problem with their own people. It is a new
step in Turkey, as for 90 years the Genocide has been passed over in
silence,” he said. Poghosyan added that Armenians are much better
informed of Turkey and the Turks than the Turks of Armenia. He pointed
out that 23 Turkish respondents mixed Armenians with Jews. According
to the interview results, Turks’ attitude to Armenians is better that
Armenians’ attitude to Turks. Poghosyan thinks that the admission
of the Armenian Genocide is an matter of future for Turkey, as it is
directly connected with the country’s admission to the EU. “They will
try to throw this burden sooner or later,” he said. P.T. -0–

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AN EXHIBITION OF PHOTOS BY ARMIN VEGNER “ARMIN T. VEGNER AND ARMENIANS
OF ANATOLY, 1915” TO BE OPENED IN THE BUILDING OF AR MFA ON APRIL 20

YEREVAN, April 18. /ARKA/. An exhibition of photos by German writer
and humanist Armin Vegner “Armin T. Vegner and Armenians of Anatoly,
1915” will be opened in the building of AR MFA on April 20. According
to the State Commission on organization of arrangements devoted
to the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, 64 photos are
exhibited. The photos are taken by a simple photo camera and express
episodes displaying the horror of the genocide – deportation, hunger,
death and will to revival. The photos allow imagining Armin Vegner,
a man and fighter for justice. Armin Vegner during the first world war
was in German sanitary corps and became the witness of the massacre of
Armenians in Ottoman Turkey. Not obeying the instructions not to give
publicity the seen, Vegner collected various kind of information,
statements, notes, letters and photos about Armenian genocide. He
managed with difficulty to keep and send to Germany and the USA part
of photos telling about the horrors of the massacre. In 1915 he was
arrested and sent to Germany. Since 1919 Vegner had had lectures in
German cities telling about the sorrows of Armenians driven by force
to Arabian desert. The same year he sent to the US President Woodrow
Wilson a letter with the appeal to punish the guilty in the Armenian
genocide. The ashes of Vegner was taken to Yerevan and placed in the
memorial wall of the Complex to the victims of the Genocide. Mickele
Vegner, the son of A. Vegner will participate in the exhibition.
A.H.-0–

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THE AMBASSADOR EXTRAORDINARY AND PLENIPOTENTIARY OF CYPRUS TO ARMENIA
HANDS HIS CREDENTIALS TO RA PRESIDENT

YEREVAN, April 18. /ARKA/. The Ambassador Extraordinary and
Plenipotentiary of Cyprus to Armenia Leonidas Pantelides handed his
credentials to RA President Robert Kocharyan. According to the RA
President’s Press Service, issues of broadening cooperation between the
states were discussed by the sides. Pantelides noted that strengthening
cooperation in the framework of international organizations may ply
important role in enlargement of bilateral communication. In his
turn Kocharyan attached much importance to the necessity to review
of the bilateral relations. He added that it was necessary to use
the new opportunities for strengthening the relations. A.H. –0–

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THE REASON OF VIOLATION OF CEASEFIRE REGIME ALONG THE FRONT LINE
BETWEEN ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN IS THAT AZERBAIJAN IS SURE OF ITS
REMAINING UNPUNISHED

YEREVAN, April 18. /ARKA/. The reason of violation of ceasefire regime
along the front line between Armenia and Azerbaijan is that Azerbaijan
is sure of its remaining unpunished, as stated AR MFA Press Secretary
Hamlet Gasparyan commenting the recent statements by the OSCE Minsk
Group, according to RA MFA Press Secretary. According to Gasparyan,
it’s obvious that ther statements of the OSCE MG Co-Chairs refer
to Azerbaijani side, since exactly Azerbaijan “rattle the sabre”
and makes bellicose appeals. “Everybody knows who encroaches, and
everybody understands that Azerbaijanians openly violate armistice”,
he said. He also stated that nevertheless nobody says publicly who
is the initiator. “As a result, the Azerbaijanians again and again
infringe armistice”, he concluded. To remind, on April 15, 2005 the
Minks Group co-Chairs made a statement in which they expressed their
concern about the growing tension between Armenian and Azerbaijan, as
well as about public statements by Azerbaijan about the possibility
of resuming war. The co-Chairs found it appropriate to recall that
“such violations are causing needless loss of life and jeopardizing
the cease-fire”. the Co-Chairs strongly urge the sides to reinforce
the cease-fire on the line of contact and refrain from any public
statements that could lead to escalation of the conflict. A.H.–0–

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COMMEMORATING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ARMENIAN PEOPLE KEEPS ON HOPING FOR
VOICE OF JUSTICE: GAREGIN II

YEREVAN, April 18. /ARKA/. Marking the 90th anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide in the Ottoman Empire, the Armenian people keep on hoping for
the voice of justice, says a message addressed to the conference “Great
Genocide. Reality and Condemnation” by Catholicos of All Armenians
Garegin II. According to him, during the Genocide “we experienced the
most horrible things that a people may experience.” However, during
those evil days, trusting in God, the Armenian people succeeded in
restoring its national independence, and “the hearths of Armenians
scattered about the world started smoking again.” “Thank God, times
have changed, and many countries and international organizations are
recognizing and condemning the Genocide now,” says the message. The
international community recognizes and condemns the Genocide being sure
that a deserved appraisal of the heinous crime committed 90 years ago
will be of high importance for the humanity’s moving toward peaceful
co-existence and partnership. According to Garegin II, the Armenian
Genocide not only resulted in human victims and destruction of cultural
values, but also was a violation of human and divine laws. In this
context, Garegin II stressed that the triumph of the new century way
of thinking must be in the rejection of permissiveness, which will
put an end to violence, cruelty and humiliation in human life, and
strengthen humanitarian values. “We are praying to the heaven, asking
God for peace and good in the entire world and His blessing of all our
efforts for the triumph of our just cause,” says the message.P.T. -0–
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ANY DIALOGUE WITH TURKEY ACCEPTABLE: ARMENIAN PREMIER

YEREVAN, April 18. /ARKA/. Any dialogue with Turkey aimed to specify
both countries’ positions is acceptable, RA Premier Andranik Margaryan
told reporters. According to him, a dialogue at any level may be
useful for the formation of an atmosphere of confidence and for
settling the problem at the diplomatic level. Margaryan is against the
formation of a commission of scholars only to confirm the fact of the
Armenian Genocide. “I do not see the task of confirming the fact of the
Genocide. Numerous people residing in Armenia experienced Genocide and
know about it not just from books,” Margaryan said. He pointed out that
a talk of confirming the fact of the Armenian Genocide with Turkish
scholars is unacceptable for him. “It is only the establishment of
diplomatic relations that can be spoken of. Numerous agreements of
1918-1920 exist, and we must decide which of them are acceptable for
us, and which are not. It means establishing relations between the
two states, not between the Turkish and Armenian peoples, in a new
situation,” he said. P.T. -0–

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RA PRIME -MINISTER EXPECTS SOME POSITIVE STEPS IN THE POSITION OF
TURKEY REGARDING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ISSUE

YEREVAN, April 18. /ARKA/. RA Prime -Minister Andranik Margaryan
expects some positive steps in the position of Turkey regarding
Armenian Genocide issue. According to him, positive changes will
happen in the position of Turkey considering public opinion abroad,
in particular, among countries-members of EU, and the discussion
of its membership in EU planned to take place in autumn 2005. “It’s
obvious that there is some progress, but how serious it will be and
whether we will see the results of it this year or within the next
years is difficult to say”, he said. Margaryan noted that “everything
should be imagined in process, and not to expect momentary solution
of the problem”. “If our generation achieves that Turkey establishes
diplomatic relations with Armenia, then the borders would open,
economic relations would be established and atmosphere for the
development of further issues would form. This would be both progress
and victory”, he said. A.H. -0–

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NO CHANGES SHOULD BE EXPECTED IN TURKEY’S POLICY TOWARD ARMENIAN
GENOCIDE DURING NEXT FEW YEARS: LAVRENTY BARSEGHYAN

YEREVAN, April 18. /ARKA/. No changes should be expected in Turkey’s
policy toward the recognition of the Armenian Genocide during next
few years, Director of the Museum of the Armenian Genocide, Professor
Lavrenty Barseghyan told reporters. According to him, Turkey has been
following this hard line for several years.”When the matter concerns
the adoption to the European Union, they follow a different line,
but when they are faced with the admission of the Armenian Genocide,
they assume a harder stand,” Barseghyan said. He pointed out that in
the context of arrangements on the occasion of the 90th anniversary
of the Armenian Genocide Turkey has launched a harder policy. “I am
sure that no progress in Turkey’s admission of the Armenian Genocide
should be expected in the near future,” Barseghyan said. He added that
the Turkish authorities will hardly have enough courage to admit the
Armenian Genocide, as Germany did it in the case of Jews. P.T. -0–

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CHAIRMEN OF ARMENIAN AND PERM CCIs SIGN COOPERATION AGREEMENT

YEREVAN, April 18. /ARKA/. The Chairmen of the Chambers of Commerce
and Industry of Armenia and of the Perm region, Russia, signed a
cooperation agreement in Yerevan today. Following the signing ceremony,
Acting Governor of the perm region Oleg Chirkunov stated that the visit
of the Russian delegation, which includes businessmen of Perm, will
give an impetus to the development of trade between Armenia and one
of the largest Russian regions. “The agreement will enable Russian and
Armenian business to speak one language,” Chirkunov said. He added that
cultural ties between Armenia and Perm should be developed as well.
During his visit, Chirkunio held meetings with RA President Robert
Kocharyan, Premier Andranik Margaryan, Catholicos of All Armenians
Garegin II, Governor of the Gegharkunik region Stepan Barseghyan. The
delegation is also scheduled to visit the Armenian State University
of Architecture, as well as the brandy and wine factory. P.T. -0–

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BAKU: Reports on new OSCE MG proposals exaggerated,says Armenian min

Reports on new OSCE MG proposals exaggerated, says Armenian minister

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
posted April 18 2005

Baku, April 15, AssA-Irada — Armenian foreign minister Vardan
Oskanian told Radio Liberty that the recent media reports about
the new proposals from the OSCE MG co-chairs on the Upper Garabagh
conflict settlement are exaggerated. The OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs
met separately with the Foreign Ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia
in London on Friday.

Oskanian told journalists following the meetings that he considers
them a continuation of ‘Prague talks’. He declined to elaborate on
the details of the meetings but said they focused on general issues.*

USA Isn’t Going to Protect Baku-Jehyan

AZG Armenian Daily #068, 16/04/2005

Neighbors

USA ISN’T GOING TO PROTECT BAKU-JEHYAN

Mediamax informed that Rino Harnish, US Ambassador to Azerbaijan, stated
that the US do not find it necessary to assist Azerbaijan in securing the
safety of Baku-Tbilisi-Jehyan oil pipeline.

Harnish stated that the countries that allow the pipeline pass though their
territories are mainly responsible for the security of the pipeline. Harnish
said, “This is the principal position of the US, as only the Azeri
Government can take the final decision to apply force for the securing the
safety of the pipeline.

Commemorating Lebanon’s War Amid Continued Crisis

Media Monitors Network
April 15 2005

Commemorating Lebanon’s War Amid Continued Crisis
by Laurie King-Irani

“The true, lasting and successful opposition in Lebanon, 30 years
after the onslaught of the vicious war, will be the group or party
that demands “the truth” for all. In other words, the real opposition
is opposition to impunity.”

At midnight on April 13, ringing church bells and the call to prayer
echoed across Beirut. These haunting sounds intermingled over
Martyrs’ Square, the unfinished main plaza of old Beirut where
thousands of Lebanese have been mixing, day and night, since the
assassination of former Prime Minister Rafiq al-Hariri in
mid-February. The blending of the aural symbols of Christianity and
Islam was but one component of a carefully orchestrated series of
events designed by the family and supporters of the late prime
minister, the architect of downtown Beirut’s reconstruction, to
commemorate the thirtieth anniversary of the beginning of Lebanon’s
long and devastating civil war.

Entitled “a celebration of national unity,” the week of commemorative
events dovetailed with the themes of the massive demonstrations that
took place in Martyrs’ Square in February and March. Those
demonstrations saw tens of thousands of Lebanese demanding
accountability from the Lebanese government for the killing of Hariri
and nearly 20 others, coupled with calls for an end to Syria’s
political, military and intelligence presence in Lebanon. The
unifying demand of the protests, which have brought Christians,
Sunnis and Druze together in an unprecedented alliance, has been
“al-haqiqa” – the truth. Although the main political tribune of
Lebanon’s Shiite community, Hizballah, has not joined in these
demonstrations, the party’s leaders have been adamant in voicing the
need to safeguard national unity and have staged immense
demonstrations featuring the Lebanese flag, rather than the yellow
Hizballah banner.

CELEBRATION AMID CRISIS

Yet even as thousands of Lebanese from nearly every point on the
country’s diverse political spectrum fill the city center, the
centers of government — no less than the centers of opposition to
the government — appear increasingly hollow and insufficient for
carrying out the pressing tasks at hand, most notably forming a
cabinet, running parliamentary elections, effecting overdue
institutional reforms, providing security and grappling with
Lebanon’s massive debt. The Lebanese press, on both the left and the
right, warns of the dangers of the current “political vacuum” (firagh
siyasi) and “national crisis” (azma wataniyya). Meanwhile, the US
media and the International Crisis Group have described Lebanon as a
country “awash in arms” and on the brink of a perilous political
transition. The implicit message of such reports is that conditions
are ripe for a reprise of the civil war and that cooler heads will
not prevail for long.

As Lebanese went out to see art exhibits, films, concerts and panel
discussions about the 1975-1990 war, they were learning that Omar
Karami, unable to form a cabinet, had stepped down as prime minister
designate for the second time in six weeks. As the cabinet was to
have set the rules for upcoming parliamentary elections, the
likelihood that the balloting will take place on schedule by late
April is now slim. A key sticking point was whether to arrange voting
on the level of the governorate (muhafaza) or the smaller level of
the district (qada’). The latter approach would ensure greater
representation by confessional groups having less demographic weight
in the population, and it is the preferred method of balloting among
most members of the opposition to the government. In the event that
elections cannot be held on time, the current parliament’s term will
be extended. The majority in the current parliament are “loyalists”
who back President Emile Lahoud and acquiesce in Syria’s interference
in Lebanese affairs.

Despite Karami’s resignation, the public mood is surprisingly upbeat.
A friend who called from Beirut described bicycle races, Arab-Cuban
music concerts and the screening of a 1961 Fairouz film, all of which
took place in Martyrs’ Square over the weekend. He laughed into the
phone and asked: “What kind of crazy people are we? We are
celebrating our war!”

Celebrating the war is not quite as crazy as denying it or ignoring
it, though, which is what most Lebanese did for three decades. If
addressed at all, the 15 years of carnage were usually described as
“the war of others on our soil.” This perspective prevented any
serious probing of Lebanese accountability, perhaps out of fear that
such questions could rekindle angry recriminations and even fighting.
No truth commission or war crimes tribunal has ever been convened. In
2001, a writer for Beirut’s al-Safir newspaper explained why not:
“It’s simple: the war has not yet ended. We have not yet had any
transition. No one dares to raise such issues now, as there is
actually less freedom of thought, expression and assembly now than
there was during the war.”

The fact that Lebanese are now actively debating the war and its
causes, on Internet discussion lists, on radio and television, and in
Martyrs’ Square, is evidence of fears surmounted and demons faced. It
signals that the 1975-1990 war has indeed ended, although the
internal Lebanese dilemmas that sparked and sustained it remain.

IMPUNITY, MIDWIFE OF THE POST-WAR ORDER

The Lebanese war, which began on April 13, 1975 in the Beirut suburb
of Ain al-Rummaneh, was a multi-dimensional horror show in multiple
installments. Several interlinked conflicts were fought out amid a
tormented civilian population, destroying thousands of lives while
introducing disturbing new terms — car bombs, suicide bombers and
hostage takers — into the world’s political vocabulary. The war even
spawned a new word: Lebanonization, a term connoting the total
breakdown of social order and internecine conflict without bounds.
The war was a nightmare from which the Lebanese feared they might
never awaken.

Beginning in 1975 as a confrontation between right-wing Lebanese
Christians and left-wing and Arab nationalist Lebanese Muslims allied
with the Palestinians, by 1990 the war saw Maronites killing
Maronites, Shiites killing Shiites, two governments vying for
legitimacy, indiscriminate shelling of civilian neighborhoods,
mafia-like militias assuming state and municipal administrative
functions, and the near destruction of Lebanon’s once vibrant
economy. Seemingly interminable, the Lebanese war took place against
a larger canvas that featured the rise to power of the Likud in
Israel in 1977, the Islamic Revolution in Iran and the
Israeli-Egyptian peace accord of 1979, the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war,
the 1987-1993 Palestinian intifada, the decline and breakup of the
Soviet Union, and the emergence of the United States as the world’s
sole superpower, announced in 1991 with the US-led war to dislodge
Saddam Hussein’s troops from Kuwait. All of these developments
reverberated through Lebanon’s war system, each boosting the fortunes
of some militias at the expense of others. But it was the last
development that effectively quashed active fighting between and
among Lebanese militias.

The war did not end organically through popular activism or peace
talks, though Lebanon witnessed many such endeavors over the 15 years
of conflict. Rather, external pressures halted the fighting. Syria’s
price for participating in the US-led coalition to drive the Iraqi
army out of Kuwait was gaining decisive control over Lebanon. With US
support and Israeli permission, Syria crushed Gen. Michel Aoun’s
rebellion in October 1991 and put all other Lebanese militias and
warlords on notice that no further internal skirmishes would be
tolerated.

In less than a year, most militia leaders had traded in their
fatigues and battle gear for the tailored suits of parliamentarians,
ministers and businessmen cooperating with Syria and taking care not
to obstruct Damascus in the pursuit of its political and economic
interests in Lebanon. The first law passed by the newly reconstituted
Lebanese parliament in the spring of 1991 was the General Amnesty Law
(al-‘afw al-‘amm), which granted immunity to any and all Lebanese
individuals and groups for war crimes and crimes against humanity
committed between 1975 and 1991. Impunity was thus the midwife of the
post-war political order, and silence was the price that Lebanese
citizens were asked to pay for the privilege of no longer sleeping in
bomb shelters, hurrying past unfamiliar parked cars, scanning the
urban horizon for snipers or queuing up for water.

As in other venues where past crimes go unpunished, the ultimate cost
exacted by impunity was the violation of Lebanon’s collective memory.
Damage to the Lebanese people’s ability to remember has engendered
perennial doubts about the truth of what has happened, what is
happening and what can happen. Impunity and its effects have put
political identity and agency in question for over a decade, creating
a complex problem that is at once judicial, personal, geographic,
social, educational, political and psychological.

INDICES OF RECONCILIATION

Although the Lebanese war had a definite starting date, its ending
seemed uncertain until very recently. The war’s conclusion has, in
fact, been unfolding gradually for over two decades; disparate
events, like puzzle pieces falling into place, have closed the war’s
various chapters. In retrospect, it is clear that the regional and
international dimensions of the war began to end with the departure
of the PLO in 1982, and with Israel’s evacuation of south Lebanon in
2000. The local dimensions of the war have not been not so easily
erased. But one index of inter-confessional reconciliation emerged
during the April 1996 Israeli assault on Lebanon, codenamed Operation
Grapes of Wrath. Maronites, Sunnis, Druze and Armenians joined in
solidarity with Lebanese Shia to assist Shiite families fleeing
indiscriminate Israeli bombardments of towns and villages in the
south. Young people of all confessional backgrounds volunteered with
the Red Cross, and in the wake of Israel’s aerial massacre of over
100 civilians sheltering at a UN base in Qana, the outpouring of
unified national grief and outrage was genuine and profound.

Another index of reconciliation appeared in the summer of 2001 with
the visit of Maronite patriarch Nasrallah Sfeir to the Chouf
Mountains, where he met with Druze leader Walid Jumblatt at Mukhtara.
Despite a history of mutual bloodletting that goes back to the
mid-nineteenth century, the Druze and Maronite communities are the
two founding sects of contemporary Lebanon, a country unique in being
comprised solely of minority groups. Eighteen officially recognized
ethno-confessional sects make up Lebanon, and although some have more
demographic weight than others, power sharing and accommodation are
constitutionally mandated. The long-standing formula by which
Lebanon’s prime minister is Sunni, the president is Maronite and the
parliamentary speaker is Shiite was sealed in 1989 by the Taif
Accord, signed by the various communal representatives to help end
hostilities. This agreement also transferred some executive powers
from the president to the cabinet and changed the balance of
parliamentary seats to reflect the demographic reality that
Christians were no longer the majority community in Lebanon.

The warming of Druze-Maronite relations had significance not only for
members of these two sects and for Lebanon as a whole, but also for
Lebanon’s relationship to Syria, whose leaders saw the rapprochement
between the patriarch and Jumblatt as a potential threat to Syrian
control of Lebanon. A Druze-Maronite reconciliation might demonstrate
the limitations of Syria’s “divide and rule” approach, and risk
weakening patron-client relations linking key players in Lebanon to
Damascus at a time when Syria was still reeling from the death of
President Hafiz al-Asad.

The dramatic events of 2005 did not arise out of a vacuum, but rather
built upon these earlier developments. The last 60 days have
demonstrated that Lebanon’s war has finally ended. In refusing to use
violence as a primary means of responding to Hariri’s assassination,
Lebanese from across the political and confessional spectrum have
announced that killings, bombings, rumor and blackmail are no longer
acceptable ways of conducting politics. The nighttime bombings that
have taken place in East Beirut and Jounieh have been denounced
broadly as attempts to destabilize the country. Most Lebanese suspect
these explosions are the work of Syrian or Lebanese intelligence
agents unhappy to be losing their grip on the population. Sadly, some
Lebanese individuals have taken their anger out on innocent Syrian
workers, some of whom have been seriously injured and even killed.
Yet by calling for “the truth” and insisting on and securing an
objective forensic investigation of the assassination, the Lebanese
have signaled they are ready to look into the dark shadows of their
collective political history and dispense with comforting myths,
rumors and stereotypes.

Mai Masri, a Beirut-based, award-winning Palestinian filmmaker, said
that “people of all backgrounds and ideologies are really talking to
one another and listening to each other for the first time. There is
no fear any more; there is a big sense of freedom. Young people want
something new and different. They don’t want the leaders of the war
years. People are talking to each other, but the leaders, whether
loyalists or the opposition, are not.” At present, there is little if
any institutionalized articulation between the tens of thousands of
citizens who are protesting and the leaders of the opposition.
Indeed, as Masri remarked, “There are many, many people who define
themselves as being neither with the opposition nor with the
loyalists. They want something very different from what is being
offered by the politicians.”

One of the most visible and controversial members of the unwieldy
anti-Syrian opposition, Druze leader Jumblatt, demanded in a weekend
press conference that his fellow opposition members hammer out a
political program. Asking “Ma ba’d?” (“What’s next?”) after the
elections, he highlighted the opposition’s lack of a comprehensive
strategy. Those opposed to the current government, he stressed, must
develop a clear set of policies to deal with Lebanon’s pressing
domestic and foreign matters. Others in the opposition have been
focused primarily on the technicalities of the elections, as well as
the fate of jailed Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea and the
possible return of the exiled Aoun. These latter two issues, in
particular, would seem to be to be far from the concerns of young
people in Martyrs’ Square.

NEITHER A NATION NOR A STATE

Lebanon is a country that has never been a nation, yet which managed
to cohere without having a working state administrative structure for
nearly two decades. Despite giving much blood to pan-Arab and
Palestinian causes, despite a key militia’s battle against Israeli
occupation forces in south Lebanon, doubts still remain about
Lebanon’s Arab identity and role. Of course, Lebanon is also the
country where Palestinian refugees live the most hellish lives, where
Christian militiamen aided and abetted by the Israeli army
slaughtered over 1,000 Palestinian and Lebanese civilians at Sabra
and Shatila in 1982. Lebanon is home, moreover, to an ideology
asserting that Lebanese are Phoenicians, not Arabs. Yet many Lebanese
are perplexed when Syria is hailed as the guardian of Arab
nationalist causes, since Syria neither sacrificed thousands of its
civilians nor witnessed the destruction of its cities, as did
Lebanon, in the framework of the Arab-Israeli conflict.

Despite having survived 15 terrifying years of war and 15 years of
post-war limbo, Lebanon is still a “precarious republic,” in the
words of political scientist Michael Hudson, and an “abducted
country,” in the words of journalist Robert Fisk. Even before the war
began, the title of a book by Lebanese political scientist Iliya
Harik asked Man yahkum Lubnan? (Who Governs Lebanon?), a question no
one would have thought to ask about Hafiz al-Asad’s Syria (though one
might ask it today about Bashar al-Asad’s Syria).

For the late Pope John Paul II, Lebanon was “not a nation, but a
message” (of Christian-Muslim coexistence, presumably). Former
Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Arens disparaged Lebanon as “not a
nation, but a game.” Perhaps the most stinging comment in this vein
came from Maronite intellectual Georges Naccache, who dismissed
Lebanon’s National Pact of 1943 with some acidity. Of the unwritten
agreement between Christians and Muslims, in which the two
communities pledged not to rely upon the West or the Arab world,
respectively, in the pursuit of communal interests, Naccache said:
“Deux negations ne font pas une nation” (“Two negations do not make a
nation”).

OPPOSITIONS

Today, one might offer an updated version of Naccache’s observation:
two oppositions do not make a nation. Neither the loyalists nor the
anti-Syrian forces have articulated what they are for. They only
proclaim what they are against.

The loyalists, led by Lahoud, his term in office having been extended
through Syrian arm twisting in blatant violation of the Lebanese
constitution in September 2004, have no political program beyond
holding on to power and privilege. Comprised of Christians, Shiites
and a few Sunnis, the loyalists present themselves as being against
US and Israeli interference in Lebanese and wider Arab affairs. The
opposition, a fractious and shape-shifting collection of groups and
individuals encompassing the Christian Lebanese Forces and the Druze
Progressive Socialist Party along with leftist movements and Hariri’s
predominantly Sunni Mustaqbal (Future) party, defines itself as
upholding Lebanese sovereignty and protesting Syria’s interference in
Lebanese affairs. Their program, to the extent that one exists,
strikes some in Lebanon, even those sympathetic to their demands, as
being too close to US desiderata for Lebanon and the region. Neither
loyalists nor the opposition, however, have fresh answers to the
perennial institutional problems that have plagued Lebanon since
before the war. The leadership of both groups, in fact, represents
confessionalized patron-client politics and division of the spoils as
usual.

With the exception of some recent comments by Jumblatt, neither group
has broached the crucial question of how to transform Lebanon from a
system of contending power bases defined by sectarian affiliation
into a unified yet pluralistic democratic system characterized by
equal representation, power sharing and access to justice. This is a
question not merely of constitutional engineering, but rather of the
restructuring of Lebanon’s entire political order from the ground up.
It touches not merely upon governance, but on identities as well.

Last but not least, neither the loyalists nor the anti-Syrian
opposition have decisively captured the hearts and minds of Lebanon’s
largest, most unified and best organized group — Hizballah, which is
more than a militia or a party, but indeed, an institutional order
unto itself. Unrepresented in the National Pact, kept on the margins
of the pre-war political system, the large numbers of Lebanon’s Shia
who back Hizballah do not see themselves reflected in the ill-defined
platform of the opposition. Rather, they view its leaders as the
privileged children of those who excluded their parents and
grandparents from power in the 1950s and 1960s. Meanwhile, they
perceive Syria’s departure as a threat to Hizballah’s survival and
fear that authorities will strip Hizballah of its weapons (as
required by UN Security Council Resolution 1559), thus ending the
group’s role as the vanguard of national resistance and truncating
its autonomy in the southern suburbs of Beirut and the south of the
country.

To assuage Shiite fears and concerns, many in the opposition, most
notably Jumblatt, have urged that the Taif Accord, not Resolution
1559, should be the road map for the coming transitional period. The
two documents are similar in their demands, particularly those
concerning Syria’s withdrawal from Lebanon, but the Taif Accord does
not require the disarming of Hizballah. It appears that UN
representative Terje Roed-Larsen is using a blend of the two
documents to chart his way through negotiations with various Lebanese
interlocutors among the loyalists and the opposition, indicating that
the international community, including the US, will not make
Hizballah’s disarmament a priority at this stage.

LEBANON’S LARGEST RECONSTRUCTION SITE

Ten years ago, the twentieth anniversary of Lebanon’s war came and
went without much comment or emotion. No one commemorated the date in
public; no one celebrated the war’s cessation. Looking back did not
inspire the same urgency as did looking ahead in 1995. Fifteen years
of war were bracketed and shoved aside, even though evidence of their
destructiveness was all over Beirut. The lunar urban landscapes were
something to look beyond, toward the horizons, as suggested by the
omnipresent signs announcing Horizons 2000, the ambitious urban
renovation project launched by the billionaire Hariri, who promised
to restore Beirut, “the ancient city of the future,” to its former
glory.

On the twentieth anniversary of the war that had destroyed it,
Beirut, touted in the local press as “the world’s largest
construction site,” was criss-crossed daily by huge dump trucks and
tractors and dominated by high-rise construction cranes as various
groups and individuals protested the project’s plans to transform
Beirut into Hong Kong on the Mediterranean, not to mention decrying
the project’s troubling quasi-public, quasi-private nature and its
expropriation of private lands through legal means of dubious
legitimacy.

As for the thousands of wartime handicapped and orphaned, the 150,000
dead, and the 17,000 disappeared and still missing, there was only
numbness and averted gazes for them in 1995. Only a very few spoke in
terms of investigating war crimes, assigning accountability or
reconciling former combatants. To pursue such questions in a country
that had recently passed a general amnesty law while rewarding
warlords with key ministerial positions and lucrative business deals
was ill-advised. Though Beirut’s infrastructural horizons appeared to
be expanding, its political horizons had shrunk considerably.

As work on Horizons 2000, the apple of Hariri’s eye, proceeded apace,
it seemed odd that Martyrs’ Square remained unreconstructed even
after “Centreville” was renovated and buzzing with wealthy
restaurant-goers and shoppers. Though the late Hariri, who is buried
now at the edge of the square, could never have imagined it, this
empty space, now filled with diverse voices calling for change, is
where Lebanon’s war has decisively and finally ended. This venue for
public display of diverse opinions by Lebanese who do and do not
agree with the opposition, representing every sect and a variety of
political currents, may prove to be Lebanon’s largest political
reconstruction site.

But it cannot be Lebanon’s only site of acknowledgement and
accountability. The truth to be sought now in Lebanon, as the freedom
to open old war files grows, is not just for Hariri, but also for all
the war’s victims, especially those who lack the wealth and
connections to stage festivals of unity. The true, lasting and
successful opposition in Lebanon, 30 years after the onslaught of the
vicious war, will be the group or party that demands “the truth” for
all. In other words, the real opposition is opposition to impunity.

Tbilisi: Armenia and China: targets of velvet revolutions

The Messenger, Georgia
April 15 2005

Armenia and China: targets of velvet revolutions

Russian newspaper GazetaSNG reports that on the eve of the ninetieth
anniversary of the Armenian genocide at the hands of the Ottoman
Empire, Turkish analysts and mass media unanimously forecast the
“Orange Transformation” of Armenia.
The paper writes that this looks like to be a response to the effort
by Yerevan to force Ankara to recognize the genocide and take
responsibility for it. According to an expert of the organization
Eurasian Strategic Researches (Ankara) Sinan Ogan, the revolution in
the Kyrgyzstan will not be the last in CIS countries.
He forecasts that in the next 10 years the target of the United
States will be not Russia, but China. According to him, they want to
spread their influence to China, because Americans need a base and
“Kyrgyzstan will play this role.”
He also thinks that the second target of the United States will
become Armenia, because the policy in Yerevan does not coincide with
Washington’s policy in the Caucasus. “Armenia will remain
pro-Russian, will fight with Turkey and impede the construction of
the Georgian part of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline,” he said. The
paper writes that the socioeconomic situation in the territories of
Armenia bordering Turkey and Georgia is rather deplorable.
“In addition, possible Russian interference should also be taken into
consideration,” the paper writes, adding that such forecasts can
entirely impede the construction of Iranian-Armenian gas pipeline and
aggravate relations between these two countries. “However, the export
of such events is inevitable for Nagorno-Karabakh,” GazetaSNG
reports, adding that there is impression that the next targets for
revolution have become these two countries – potential strategic
partners of Russia.

NPA Leader Met With His Supporters

A1plus

| 17:39:05 | 14-04-2005 | Politics |

NPA LEADER MET WITH HIS SUPPORTERS

Today leader of the National Party of Armenia (NPA) Stepan Demirchyan met
with his regional supporters in Talin. Mr. Demirchyan informed they will
often organize such meetings since any political force needs «live» contacts
with the population to conduct the right policy. Armenia needs to establish
justice and overcome the crisis of trust, said Mr. Demirchyan.

According to him, today’s authorities cynically speak about combating
corruption while in fact not a single top official has been called to
account. NPA supporters decisively declared that the current authorities
should be removed from office by force. `They should follow the example of
Kyrgyzstan’. However, the NPA leader thinks these authorities will be
removed peacefully and within the Constitution.

When asked whether the NPA will cooperate with the coalition, Stepan
Demirchyan said their party is cooperating with the people.

People also shared with Demirchyan their everyday concerns. The NPA leader
told them to present the problems in writing and promised to deal with them.

No Armenian Citizens Were Among Casualties In A Terrorist Act In Cai

NO ARMENIAN CITIZENS WERE AMONG CASUALTIES IN A TERRORIST ACT IN CAIRO

Arminfo

YEREVAN, APRIL 8. ARMINFO. No Armenian citizens were among the
casualties in a terrorist act in Cairo on April 7 2005. Press Secretary
of the Armenian Foreign Ministry Hamlet Gasparyan informs ARMINFO’s
correspondent today.

The POlice version is that yesterday approximately at 21:00 a terrorist
on a motorbike threw an exploitive at the tourists in the historical
center of Cairo. According to the preliminary data, 4 were killed and
20 injured in the terrorist act. The whole area is surrounded by the
police, details are being determined.-