A battle-tested pen

The Santa Fe New Mexican (New Mexico)
September 16, 2005 Friday

A BATTLE-TESTED PEN

by SOLEDAD SANTIAGO

In more than 30 years of covering the Middle East, journalist Robert
Fisk has become one of Britain’s most respected and vilified
journalists. His detractors call him an apologist for terrorists. His
admirers, including American journalist Amy Goodman, count on him to
tell the stories no one else is telling. Unlike many covering the
region, Fisk is fluent in Arabic; he is the Middle East correspondent
for The Independent newspaper in London and has won the British
International Journalist of the Year award seven times.

At 7 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 21, the Lannan Foundation Readings &
Conversations series begins with Fisk reading from and discussing his
upcoming book The Great War for Civilisation: The Conquest of the
Middle East (Alfred A. Knopf, 2005) with Amy Goodman, host of the
public-radio program Democracy Now!

>From the 1970s through the 1990s, Fisk covered the Israeli invasions
of Lebanon, the Iranian revolution, the Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan, the Iran-Iraq war in 1980-88, the 1991 Persian Gulf War,
the war in the former Yugoslavia, the 1999 Kosovo conflict, and the
ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict. One of only two Western
journalists to remain in Beirut during the Lebanese civil war, he
subsequently published Pity the Nation: The Abduction of Lebanon
(Thunder’s Mouth Press, 1990); he still has a home in Beirut. When
the United States launched its invasion of Afghanistan, Fisk covered
the conflict. Most recently, he has been covering the war in Iraq.
Fisk was in Baghdad when the “shock and awe” campaign began.

The Great War for Civilisation: The Conquest of the Middle East is a
vivid firsthand account of the civilian agony caused by war. Many
chapters are set in Afghanistan and Iraq in the years following the
U.S. invasions of those countries. The book begins in 1993, when Fisk
was the first Western journalist to interview Osama bin Laden. In a
subsequent interview in Afghanistan, Fisk writes, bin Laden uttered
his first direct threat against the United States. But bin Laden
ultimately represents a small part of a thousand-page tome that
blends investigative journalism, first-person narrative, and gut
reaction with historical analysis. Fisk emphasizes that most of the
civilians he writes about are the subjects of totalitarian regimes
and thus never had a say in the actions of their governments. He
portrays years of political failures and coercion leading to
conflagrations, both religious and territorial. “I used to argue,
hopelessly, I’m sure, that every reporter should carry a history book
in his back pocket,” he writes.

As a young boy, Fisk learned about World War I from his veteran
father, who had fought believing he was participating in the “war to
end all wars.” Robert grew up accompanying his father on yearly
summer treks to that war’s great battlefields. When his father died
at the age of 93, Fisk inherited his campaign medals, one of which
was engraved with the words The Great War for Civilisation. Fisk used
the phrase as the title for his latest book to draw attention to his
central contention that, far from solving problems, World War I
generated them. He writes, “After the Allied victory of 1918, at the
end of my father’s war, the victors divided up the lands of their
former enemies. In the space of just seventeen months, they created
the borders of Northern Ireland, Yugoslavia and most of the Middle
East. And I have spent my entire career – in Belfast and Sarajevo, in
Beirut and Baghdad – watching the peoples within those borders burn.
America invaded Iraq not for Saddam Hussein’s mythical “weapons of
mass destruction” – which had long ago been destroyed – but to change
the map of the Middle East, much as my father’s generation had done
more than eighty years earlier. Even as it took place, Bill Fisk’s
war was helping to produce the century’s first genocide – that of a
million and a half Armenians – and laying the foundations for a
second, that of the Jews of Europe.”

Fisk notes that, to his parents’ consternation, he has spent most of
his adult years writing about an endless series of wars, each of
which was also positioned as a battle between good and evil and
fought “for civilization.” He blames governments, including his and
ours, for war. “Governments like it that way,” he writes. “They want
their people to see war as a drama of opposites, good and evil,
‘them’ and ‘us,’ victory or defeat. But war is primarily not about
victory or defeat but about death and the infliction of death. It
represents the total failure of the human spirit. I know an editor
who has wearied of hearing me say this, but how many editors have
first-hand experience of war?”

Fisk’s book is written with the urgency of a Scheherazade who must
tell one more story to keep the forces of death at bay. Nevertheless,
Fisk is adamant that, as a journalist, he observes war from the
privileged position of one who can leave. “Which is why I cringe,” he
writes, “each time someone wants to psycho-babble about the ‘trauma’
of covering wars, the need to obtain ‘counselling’ for us well-paid
scribes that we may be able to ‘come to terms’ with what we have
seen. No counselling for the poor and huddled masses that were left
to Iraq’s gas, Iran’s rockets, the cruelty of Serbia’s militias, the
brutal Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982, the computerised death
suffered by Iraqis during America’s 2003 invasion of their country.”

Having witnessed the human price of more than a generation of wars,
Fisk’s compassion for civilian victims is mixed with a simmering rage
against “the arrogance of power” he attributes to Britain and the
United States. He wrote an article for The Independent headlined “My
Beating by Refugees Is a Symbol of the Hatred and Fury of this Filthy
War”: “I couldn’t see for the blood pouring down my forehead and
swamping my eyes. And even then, I understood. I couldn’t blame them
for what they were doing. In fact, if I were the Afghan refugees of
Kila Abdullah, close to the Afghan-Pakistan border, I would have done
just the same to Robert Fisk. Or any other Westerner I could find.”

While many admire his courage, some have questioned his objectivity.
But Fisk, a frequent guest on Democracy Now!, accuses mainstream
media of biased and even censored coverage of the Middle East. His
book charges that Western reporters fail to cover the daily suffering
of Arab mothers and children. In particular, he alleges that the
carnage of Palestinian and Iraqi civilians remains hidden from
Western eyes. In an Independent editorial written earlier this year,
Fisk attacked a number of America’s most respected news organizations
in an editorial titled “‘Hotel Journalism’ Dictates Coverage of
Iraq.” He wrote: “Rarely, if ever, has a war been covered by
reporters in so distant and restricted a way. New York Times
correspondents live in Baghdad behind a massive stockade with four
watchtowers, protected by locally hired, rifle-toting security men,
complete with “NYT” T-shirts. Journalists with America’s NBC
television chain are holed up in a hotel with an iron grill over
their door, forbidden by their security advisors to visit the
swimming pool or the restaurant, ‘let alone the rest of Baghdad,’
lest they are attacked.”

Details:

Robert Fisk with Amy Goodman, Lannan Foundation Cultural Freedom
event

Lensic Performing Arts Center, 211 W. San Francisco St.

7 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 21

$6, $3 for seniors and students; 988-1234

Rebroadcasts:

6 p.m. Sept. 25 on KUNM-FM 89.9

2 p.m. Sept. 26 on KSFR-FM 90.7

BAKU: Gusar police detains Armenian in Chilagir village

Azerbaijan News Service (ANS)
Sept 21 2005

GUSAR POLICE DETAINS ARMENIAN IN CHILAGIR VILLAGE

An Armenian was detained in Chilagir Village of Gusar. ANS Gusar
Bureau says was detained due to information by local residents.
Ex-Azerbaijani citizen and born in Aghdere Region of Azerbaijan,
Abreik Abramyan is mentally ill and had been treated in Mashtaga
Mental Hospital. Then Red Cross Organization took him to Armenia.
Currently, law enforcement organs are investigating how and for what
reason he entered Gusar Region. Abrik Abramyan is currently kept in
isolation cell of Gusar Regional police department.

Aram I of Cilicia chairs WCC executive committee meeting

Noyan Tapan News Agency
Sept 19 2005

CATHOLICOS OF CILICIA CHAIRS WCC EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETING

GENEVA, SEPTEMBER 19, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. His Holiness
Aram I, Armenian Catholicos of Cilicia, presided the meeting of the
Executive Committee of the World Council of Churches, held in Geneva
last week.

According to the Information Department of the Catholicosate of
Cilicia, the agenda of the meeting focused on the preparations for
the WCC 9th Assembly to be held in Brazil in February 2006. The
participants discussed and finalized the meeting’s agenda, as well as
the political, economic and social decisions to be taken by the
Assembly.

The Executive Committee listened to the General Secretary’s report
and adopted decisions accordingly. The financial situation of WCC was
widely discussed and the participants concluded that despite the
economic initiatives taken by the Council, WCC still faces financial
difficulties, which force the Council to plan more wisely for the
coming years.

After long and serious discussions the Executive Committee took a
series of decisions related to administrative, economic and executive
issues. The committee established new committees and assigned people
to new positions.

As chairman of WCC’s Executive and Central Committees, His Holiness
Aram I emphasized the importance of keeping up with the modern world,
introducing drastic changes to WCC’s structures and projects and
turning the inter-religious dialogue into an important imperative.

His Holiness Aram I also held meetings with the General Secretary,
secretariat and the heads of some committees of WCC.

BAKU: Aliyev says military spending to equal Armenia’s entire budget

Azeri president says military spending to equal Armenia’s entire budget

Yeni Azarbaycan, Baku
17 Sep 05

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has said that the international
community should not be concerned about the increase in Azerbaijan’s
military spending as years of peace talks with Armenia have yielded no
results. Addressing a meeting at the Defence Ministry, Aliyev said
that he has set himself a task to make Azerbaijan’s military equal to
Armenia’s entire budget. He said that in 2006 the country’s military
spending will double and reach 600m dollars. The following is an
excerpt from unattributed report by Azerbaijani newspaper Yeni
Azarbaycan on 17 September headlined “The president has held a meeting
on army build-up” and subheaded “Ilham Aliyev: the Azerbaijani army’s
combat readiness deserves appreciation”. Subheadings have been
inserted editorially: The Azerbaijani president and
commander-in-chief, Ilham Aliyev, yesterday chaired a meeting at the
Defence Ministry on the development of the army in Azerbaijan.

[Passage omitted: Defence Minister Safar Abiyev and top officers
welcomed Ilham Aliyev outside the ministry]

Addressing the meeting, Ilham Aliyev said that the army has been
developing in Azerbaijan at a high pace and very successfully. The
establishment of a proper army has brought dividends to Azerbaijan. We
are strengthening our military potential, and I am confident that this
process will also continue developing at a high pace in the future.

[Passage omitted: about the late President Heydar Aliyev’s role in the
build-up of the army]

“Azerbaijan is living in a state of war. Our land is under occupation,
and bearing this in mind, one should pay major attention to the
army. As the commander-in-chief, I attach major importance to these
issues. It is possible to say that I deal with these issues on a daily
basis because this is the most important issue for us.”

Peace talks yield no results President Ilham Aliyev added that
Azerbaijan must restore its territorial integrity. “We are trying to
settle this issue peacefully, through talks.

However, as we know, years of talks have yielded no results. It is
possible to settle the issue in a just manner as a whole, and I hope
that we will achieve this because Azerbaijan’s position is based on
international legal norms, Nagornyy Karabakh is an integral part of
Azerbaijan and our territorial integrity is recognized and supported
by the entire world community. Historical justice is on our side,
too.”

[Passage omitted: Armenia does not comply with UN resolutions on
Karabakh; efforts of international organizations yield no results]

“At the same time, the issue remains unsettled. Despite our endless
talk about all these factors, diplomatic, economic and other political
achievements, the issue remains unsettled. What should Azerbaijan do
in this situation? Azerbaijan has conducted and expressed its
peaceful policy for many years, but the issue remains unsettled. For
this reason, it is natural that we are increasing our military
potential.”

[Passage omitted: repetition]

Azerbaijan’s military spending will equal Armenia’s entire budget
President Ilham Aliyev stressed that next year’s budget will be more
than 3.5bn dollars. In this case, military spending will grow as
well. In 2004, military spending was 175m dollars, in 2005 – 300m
dollars and in 2006 it will be 600m dollars, and this is not the final
rate. As you know, my task is that our military budget should equal
Armenia’s entire budget, and maybe exceed it and it will exceed it. We
will achieve this.

President Ilham Aliyev said that Armenia and some international
organizations are concerned about this, i.e. the increase in
Azerbaijan’s military budget is the reason for their concern. The
increase in our country’s military budget is our sovereign right. On
the other hand, the sides, organizations and countries which are
playing a leading role in these organizations, should be concerned
about the fact of Azerbaijani land has been occupied for more than 10
years.

Nagornyy Karabakh is not a democracy “I would like to speak about
another issue. Armenian propaganda has been trying to put Azerbaijan
in a negative light before the international community.

They are trying to prove that there are allegedly democratic
institutions in Nagornyy Karabakh, democracy is developing and human
rights are protected there, and that in Azerbaijan, democracy is not
developing. This is a completely false and very dangerous theory.

“First, Azerbaijan is a country which is developing at a very high
pace in terms of democratic development. Everyone admits this, and
first of all, the Azerbaijani people see this and welcome our policy.
Second, the Nagornyy Karabakh regime is an illegal establishment. It
is not recognized by anyone. A criminal regime is ruling there. For
some reason, hypocritical politicians do not pay attention to the fact
that drugs are being cultivated and trafficked, armed groups and
terrorist organizations are deployed, human rights are violated and a
totally militarized regime exists there. Nagornyy Karabakh is
presented as an alleged example of democracy in this region.

Armenians to fail hampering regional projects “They have done their
best against the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, but failed. Now
they are trying to tie the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline to the
Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagornyy Karabakh conflict. This is a completely
false idea. There is no link between these issues. The
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan is an international project, it is supported by
international financial institutions and major states, it is being
successfully implemented. No lobby or Armenian organization will be
able to hamper it.

“I would like to speak about another issue as well. Armenian
officials have recently started making statements against a new
regional project. You know that we support the idea of building a
railway linking Azerbaijan to Turkey, and the construction of the
Kars-Tbilisi-Baku railway is becoming a reality.

We are actively working and ready to take financial commitments to
make this railway happen in the near future. The feasibility study is
being prepared, and when it is ready, Azerbaijan will take financial
commitments as the first move.”

The head of state ridiculed the Armenians’ protests against the
allocation of funds for the construction of the Kars-Tbilisi-Baku
railway.

[Passage omitted: Ilham Aliyev said that Armenians have no moral right
to occupy Azerbaijani lands]

Much time necessary for comprehensive settlement of Karabakh issue

Pan Armenian News

MUCH TIME NECESSARY FOR COMPREHENSIVE SETTLEMENT OF KARABAKH ISSUE

16.09.2005 07:51

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ `It is already that various structures have recognized the
fact that without a direct participation of the NKR even finding ways to
solve the conflict is problematic,’ NKR FM Arman Melikyan stated at a
meeting with local and accredited journalists in Stepanakert. The Minister
said he is sure that `Nagorno Karabakh will be internationally recognized –
at that in the future that is not so far.’ In his opinion, much time is
necessary for comprehensive settlement of the problem. `The legislative
activities are one of most important components from the point of view of
international recognition. We have done much in this respect: the other day
the Parliament passed a number of major acts referring to foreign policy,
including the NKR law on international agreements. Our legislation has
certain shortcomings in this respect, these should be eliminated, then we
will be able to join international conventions. I am sure that before the
end of the year we will realize what we have planned,» A. Melikyan said.
When commenting on the scientific conference with participation of
representatives of unrecognized republics, A. Melikyan called it a good
opportunity for presenting the NK issue from a serious rostrum and to get
acquainted with others’ problems. «I would like for similar conferences to
be organized in Strasbourg, New York and other centers of international
significance,» the NKR FM remarked, reported IA Regnum.

Armenian foreign minister discusses Karabakh in USA

Armenian foreign minister discusses Karabakh in USA

Mediamax news agency
16 Sep 05

YEREVAN

Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan has met Steven Mann, US
co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group, in New York.

Vardan Oskanyan, who is attending the 60th session of the UN General
Assembly, also met EU External Relations Commissioner Benita
Ferrero-Waldner. Vardan Oskanyan briefed her on the Nagornyy Karabakh
conflict.

The Armenian foreign minister also met Cyprus Foreign Minister
Yeoryios Iakovou and Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmad Abu-al-Ghayt.
Vardan Oskanyan submitted to his Egyptian counterpart Armenian
President Robert Kocharyan’s congratulatory message for Egyptian
President Husni Mubarak on his re-election as president of Egypt.

Arnold Shvetsov to Stage “Madam Snow-Storm” Tale By Grimm Brothers

ARNOLD SHVETSOV TO STAGE “MADAM SNOW-STORM” TALE BY GRIMM BROTHERS AT
THEATER OF YOUNG SPECTATOR

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 14, NOYAN TAPAN. Each festival is a great
theatrical holiday and it is something like a birth of a child,”
Arnold Shvetsov, American actor and producer, mentioned. He arrived in
Armenia to participate in the “Armmono” third international
Shakespeare festival of monoperformances held in Yerevan. “The most
important about this festival is that a great number of youths come to
watch the performances and it means that theatrical work and theater
take an important place in this country,” the American art worker is
convinced.

The actor mentioned that in the US actors or producers make their name
on their own and they look like “lonely wolves.” And Russian theaters
are mainly repertoire, i.e. actors and producers grow and make their
name together there: according to Shvetsov, this have its positive and
negative sides.

Hakob Ghazanchian, Director of “Armmono” festival, informed that
immediately after the end of the festival Arnold Shvetsov will stage
the “Madam Snow-storm” tale by Grimm brothers at the Theater of Young
Spectator. The same performance was staged by Shvetsov 3 years ago at
Moscow Nikolay Gogol Theater.

Arnold Shvetsov, a Russian by origin, graduated from Moscow State Art
and Theater Institute, studied at the class of Maria Knebel, a famous
producer, Stanislavski’s pupil. At present Shvetsov lives and works at
the theater-laboratory of New York 78th street. In 2005 he staged
Chekhov’s “Uncle Vanya” there.

Tonight Arnold Shvetsov will present the Yerevan spectator the “Clown
for Fortinbras Suite” monoperformance staged by him.

BAKU: Azeri Election: Candidates Seek Voters’ Support In Parliamenta

AZERI ELECTION: CANDIDATES SEEK VOTERS’ SUPPORT IN PARLIAMENTARY POLLS

Azerbaijani TV Channel One, Baku
13 Sep 05

Political pundit Rovsan Novruzoglu, a parliamentary candidate from the
Liberal Party of Azerbaijan, has praised his professional skills and
contribution to Azerbaijan’s independence. In his election broadcast
on Azerbaijani state television on 13 September, he said that his
works have played a significant role in exposing Armenian plots
against Azerbaijan. At the same time, Novruzoglu accused officials
of Baku’s Yasamal district of interfering in the election process.

Siyavus Novruzov, deputy executive secretary of the New Azerbaijan
Party, praised President Ilham Aliyev’s economic policy and accused
his opponents of misinterpreting facts. In his election broadcast
on state TV, he hailed the government’s policy to stamp out bribery
and corruption and accused the parties of the Azadliq election bloc
of corruption. He expressed his confidence that voters will support
Heydar Aliyev’s policy again.

In turn, the founder of the New Policy (YeS) bloc, Eldar Namazov,
highlighted the bloc’s innovation mission. He said that the bloc
includes representatives of three governments and they represent all
strata of society.

Namazov said in his election broadcast that the bloc is fighting for
democratic changes and against corruption in the country. He said that
only national unity will save the country from current lawlessness.

For his part, Ali Karimli, chairman of the People’s Front of Azerbaijan
Party, spoke about the Azadliq bloc’s approaches to the country’s
burning problems. In his election broadcast, he accused the Aliyev
regime of dividing Azerbaijanis into two parts. Karimli said the
majority of the country’s population is unemployed and is leaving
the country in search of a job abroad.

However, a privileged group of people are living a prosperous life,
he said. Karimli accused the privileged class of enjoying all
opportunities in Azerbaijan and exploiting the country’s riches to
their own benefit. He stressed that everybody should be equal before
the law. Karimli said that Azadliq bloc wants to eliminate inequality
in Azerbaijan and called on voters to support the bloc in order for
them to be able to implement their plans.

BAKU: Azerbaijan’s Poor UN Development Rating Due to ‘Use of OldFigu

Azerbaijan’s Poor UN Development Rating Due to ‘Use of Old Figures’

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Sept 13 2005

Azerbaijan ranked 101st in the annual UN report on human development
due to the use of statistics released a few years ago in the
evaluations, the UN Development Program representative in Azerbaijan
Marco Borsotti has told journalists.

Borsotti said that statistical data released 2-3 years ago are usually
taken as a basis during the preparation of annual global reports. There
is no need for comparing the human development indices observed in
2004 and 2005, as application of a new method started this year to
determine the figures on CIS countries, he said.

Borsotti said that according to the new method, living standards in
CIS countries, except Armenia, have declined. Azerbaijan’s slipping
rating is due to the statistics covering life expectancy of people,
the UNDP representative said.

“As the United Nations, we have been citing problems in certain fields
for about 4 years.”

Borsotti added that Azerbaijan has been developing in recent years.

BAKU: PACE Mulls Karabakh Conflict,MP Demands Armenia to Honor UN Re

PACE Mulls Karabakh Conflict, MP Demands Armenia to Honor UN Resolutions

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Sept 13 2005

The Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over Nagrno Karabakh was discussed by
the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe in Paris on Monday.

Azerbaijan was represented by its delegation at PACE and the
President’s special envoy Araz Azimov, while Armenia – by its
parliament members and a foreign ministry official at the second
subcommittee meeting, chaired by the former PACE president, British
MP Lord Russel Johnston.

Azeri MP Asim Mollazada speaking at the meeting demanded Armenia to
implement the four UN Security Council resolutions on its unconditional
withdrawal from the occupied Azerbaijani territories. He stressed the
need for accelerating a peaceful, stage-by-stage conflict resolution.

“But first, refugees must return home, their security ensured, and
then, communication lines opened and normal relations established
between the two sides. Only after this, the issue of legal conflict
settlement may be considered.”

The subcommittee meeting was attended by the head of British LINKS
non-government organization, the OSCE chairman’s envoy, French
and Russian co-chairs of the mediating OSCE Minsk Group, the OSCE
PA rapporteur on the Karabakh conflict and the European Union
representative on South Caucasus.