BAKU: Wouldbe fighters ask Azeri leader to start guerrilla war in NK

Would-be fighters ask Azeri leader to start guerrilla warfare in Karabakh

525 Qazet, Baku
3 Dec 04

Text of Mahabbat’s report by Azerbaijani newspaper 525 Qazet on 3
December headlined “Our purpose was only to restore our country’s
territorial integrity” and subheaded “The young men charged with
preparing for guerrilla warfare in Karabakh have appealed to the
country’s leadership”

Twenty-one people known as “Karabakh guerrillas” who are now standing
trial at the Grave Crimes Court [on charges of attempting to form an
illegal armed group] have appealed to the Azerbaijani president, the
chairman of the Supreme Court, the national security minister and the
prosecutor-general.

The appeal reads that they intend to take up arms and fight the enemy
at the time when the Armenians are trying to create obstacles to the
[Karabakh] settlement.

“We think that it is high time to start guerrilla warfare in Karabakh
in a confidential way and under state control. Hundreds and thousands
of patriots, including us, who wish our motherland and state to be
powerful and do not seek any benefit, are ready to join this fight.”

Twenty-one young men wishing to fight in Karabakh think that the
Armenian occupiers who are working jointly with foreigners and
collecting our resources from the occupied lands will witness once
again that these lands actually belong to us.

“We believe that by crossing into our occupied lands, we will succeed
in guerrilla actions gaining momentum there. We want to draw you
attention to the fact that we have been in jail for 16 months since we
prepared for guerrilla warfare. Although in doing so, we violated some
norms established by the law, our purpose was only to restore our
country’s territorial integrity.”

Tbilisi Sides with Bagapsh, Calls on Moscow for Restraint

Civil Georgia, Georgia
Dec 3 2004

Tbilisi Sides with Bagapsh, Calls on Moscow for Restraint

Giorgi Sepashvili, Civil Georgia / 2004-12-03 15:09:00

Tbilisi, which had previously tried to distance itself from the
Abkhaz election crisis, made it clear on December 3 that, unlike
Moscow, it will support opposition leader Sergey Bagapsh, who intends
to be inaugurated as the new President of unrecognized republic on
December 6.

Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili commented over the
developments in Abkhazia on December 3 and recognized Sergey Bagapsh
as the President-election of the breakaway region; however he
condemned the October 3 presidential polls in Abkhazia as
`illegitimate.’

Saakashvili said that Tbilisi is ready to hold peace talks over the
Abkhaz conflict resolution only with Bagapsh, who represents the
majority of the population that currently lives in Abkhazia.

Saakashvili, who was speaking in Tbilisi at a meeting with the
representatives of the Georgian-Abkhaz Relations Institute, said that
the elections in Abkhazia were illegitimate, as most of the
population of the region, which was forced to flee Abkhazia as a
result of 1992-93 armed conflict, could not participate in it.

But the President added that the majority of those who currently live
in Abkhazia voted for opposition leader Sergey Bagapsh.

`The elections in Abkhazia were illegitimate, because not only ethnic
Georgians, but also many Russians, Jews, Armenians [who lived in
Abkhazia before armed conflict] could not return to Abkhazia and
participate in the elections. At the same time, it is quite clear
that those people who participated in the elections, expressed the
opinion of the majority of the remaining population and they
supported Sergey Bagapsh in these elections’ Saakashvili said.

`The Georgian authorities are ready to launch a dialogue with the new
authorities of Abkhazia, namely with Sergey Bagapsh, who enjoys the
support of most Abkhazians,’ he added.

However, Saakashvili also warned that `nobody should have the
illusion that Tbilisi will reject its objective regarding the
restoration of Georgia’s territorial integrity.’

`This is our supreme goal. However, this will not occur at the
expense of the Abkhaz people. We need dialogue,’ Saakashvili stated.

The Georgian authorities are also trying to focus more international
attention on Abkhazia, as Bagapsh’s inauguration day encroaches.
Georgian Foreign Minister Salome Zourabichvili met with foreign
Ambassadors accredited in Georgia on December 2 to inform them
regarding the recent developments in Abkhazia.

`Today all the attention of the international community has turned to
the developments in Ukraine, which may result in less interest
towards the Abkhazian issue. But we think that most alarming events
may develop in Abkhazia now, because we have already witnessed those
measures carried out by Moscow [in Abkhazia],’ Salome Zourabichvili
said, referring to Russia’s active involvement in recent crisis.

Salome Zourabichvili said that arrival of Russia’s Interior Ministry
and General Prosecutor’s Office top-official to Abkhazia `is not a
good sign, it may be a very bad sign.’

Moscow, which supports pro-governmental presidential contender Raul
Khajimba, has already imposed sanctions on Abkhazia by halting its
rail link with Abkhazia and banning the import of agricultural
products from Abkhazia, in an attempt to mount pressure on Sergey
Bagapsh.

`We do not think that the natural situation inside Abkhazia will lead
to this kind of destabilization. Destabilization may occur only in
the event of interference of external forces. That is why we want our
friendly countries to be informed about the situation in Abkhazia, so
they can pay more attention and, if they can, influence Russia and
call on Russia for restraint,’ the Georgian Foreign Minister said.

Meanwhile, outgoing President of Abkhazia Vladislav Ardzinba, who
supports Raul Khajimba, reiterated that he will not step down,
despite the planned inauguration of Sergey Bagapsh. The press office
of Ardzinba issued a press statement on December 3 describing the
inauguration of opposition leader Sergey Bagapsh, scheduled for
December 6, as `illegal.’

`Under the current conditions, the Cabinet of the Republic of
Abkhazia has no legal ground to organize a solemn ceremony for
inaugurating Sergey Bagapsh as the newly elected President. Nor can
the presidential credentials be delivered to him,’ RIA Novosti news
agency quotes the statement.

The statement stresses that the ministries and state departments of
breakaway Abkhazia are still under the subordination to the current
President until the holding of repeat presidential elections occur.

Agency: Ethnic minorities to be represented in Romanian parliament

Agency: Ethnic minorities to be represented in Romanian parliament

Rompres news agency
2 Dec 04

Bucharest, 2 December: Twenty-eight organizations and associations of
ethnic minorities registered in the parliamentary electoral race in
Romania, with the polls held on 28 November, further to the acceptance
by the Central Electoral Bureau (BEC) of the logos and lists and
supporting signatures presented by them, daily Nine O’Clock says on
Thursday 2 December .

Since the beginning of the registration of the electoral process, BEC
has rejected the requests of several minorities’ organizations to
participate in the parliamentary election. Among them there are the
Szeklers’ Union of Romania, the Association of the Slav Macedonians of
Romania, the Ethnic Association of the Russians in Romania. They could
not participate in the polls, as the minorities that they allegedly
represent are not mentioned in the latest census. The BEC members also
turned down the registration of the Cultural Union of the Albanians in
Romania, which submitted a list with only 36 of the 72 signatures
required from supporters. The lists of sympathisers of the Hungarian
Civic Union (UCM) were referred to the Prosecutor’s Office to verify
if the signatories are members of the Hungarian ethnic group, as BEC
noticed the existence of several Romanian names on the lists. Further
to verifications, the decision was made not to accept UCM to take part
in the election. In exchange, two other organizations in a similar
situation, the Association of the Italians in Romania and the Cultural
Union Association of the Poles, do participate, the daily adds.

>From a political point of view, the national minorities are
represented in parliament, are part of the ruling process and are
consulted by the government. Article 5 (2) of the Romanian
constitution stipulates: “The organizations of citizens of ethnic
minorities, which do not meet in the election the required number of
votes to be represented in parliament, have, each of them, the right
to one deputy seat, as the electoral law says,” daily Nine O’Clock
reports.

In Romania, there are several parties and organizations of the
national minorities, and the ones below are represented in parliament:
Hungarian Democratic Union of Romania, Democrat Forum of the Germans
in Romania, Rroma Social Democratic Party, Union of Serbs in Romania,
Union of Armenians in Romania, Democratic Union of Turkish-Moslem
Tartars in Romania, Democratic Turkish Union in Romania, Union of
Ukrainians in Romania, Cultural Union of Ruthenians in Romania, Union
of the Poles in Romania-Dom Polski, Democratic Union of the Slovaks
and Czechs in Romania, Bulgarian Union in Banat/Romania, Lippovan
Russians Community in Romania, Federation of the Jewish Communities in
Romania, Union of the Croatians in Romania, Association of the
Macedonians in Romania, League of the Albanians in Romania, Greek
Union of Romania, Italian Community of Romania.

Construction of Iran-Armenia gas pipeline begins

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
November 30, 2004 Tuesday

Construction of Iran-Armenia gas pipeline begins

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN

The construction of a gas pipeline from Iran to Armenia began in the
highland village of Agarak on Tuesday. Armenian Prime Minister
Andranik Margaryan attended the ceremony.

The 40-kilometer-long gas pipeline sector in Armenia is being built
with a $30 million loan of Iran, a source in the Armenian government
press service told Itar-Tass. The loan agreement was signed during an
official visit of Iranian President Mohammad Khatami to Yerevan in
September 2004.

The construction of the gas pipeline began simultaneously in Armenia
and Iran. One hundred kilometers of the pipeline will be laid in Iran
from Tabriz to the border of Armenia’s Megri district. Gas systems of
Armenia and Iran will unite when the gas pipeline is ready in January
2007.

The initial capacity of the gas pipeline will make 1.1 billion cubic
meters a year, and it will increase to 2.3 billion cubic meters by
2019, the source said. That would require laying 197 kilometers of a
gas pipeline from southeast Armenia to central Armenia between
Kadzharan, Sisian, Dzhermuk and Ararat. Negotiations with possible
investors are underway.

The gas pipeline from Iran will strengthen the energy security of
Armenia, the source said.

An Agarak-Shinuair power line was commissioned in southeast Armenia
on Tuesday. The Armenian Energy Ministry says the power line will
double the delivery of Armenian electricity to Iran to 400 megawatt.

2005 draft budget earmarks 563m drams for business dev. program

ArmenPress
Nov 29 2004

2005 DRAFT BUDGET EARMARKS 563 MILLION DRAMS FOR BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT
PROGRAM

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 29, ARMENPRESS: The 2005 draft budget has
earmarked 563 million drams for Armenian trade and economy
development ministry to implement a string of projects to promote
trade and economy development.
Trade and economic development minister Karen Chshmaritian told
Friday that the bulk of that money, 300 million drams (a 50 million
increase over 2004), will be directed for carrying out a
government-development plan of actions to boost small and
medium-sized businesses. He said part of that money will be used also
to finalize the process of establishment of regional branches of the
Center for Development of Small and Medium-Sized Business.
The government program for tourism development will receive 20
million drams, as much as in 2004. The minister said the government
expects the assistance of international organizations to tourism
development program. Also 156 million will be allocated for a
government program for regulation and maintenance of standardization
and measurement norms.

Faith, death and violence: A researcher seeks to determine why somep

The Vancouver Sun (British Columbia)
November 26, 2004 Friday
Final Edition

Faith, death and violence: A researcher seeks to determine why some
people turn to hatred

Douglas Todd, Vancouver Sun

University of B.C. psychology professor Ara Norenzayan grew up in
Beirut, Lebanon, during a savage religion-fuelled war between
Christians and Muslims. As an altar boy in the Armenian Orthodox
Church, he sensed the power of religion for good and evil.

He also became familiar with death.

Now, 15 years after emigrating to North America at the peak of
Lebanon’s bloody conflict, Norenzayan is returning to his roots to
research the relationship between faith, thoughts of death and
violence.

The soft-spoken social psychologist has received a $105,000,
three-year grant from Canada’s national research council to deepen
his exploration into why people become religious and some turn to
hatred.

Devising unique psychological experiments, Norenzayan has already
discovered that the more people are exposed to the reality of death,
the more likely they are to believe in “supernatural agents,” like
God, angels or ancestral spirits.

He’s also concluded prominent scientists, such as Richard Dawkins,
are off track when they argue belief in God is, along with the atomic
bomb, the greatest danger to world peace.

Norenzayan’s studies suggest antagonism toward outsiders is not a
result of belief in God. It’s the byproduct of people finding a sense
of identity in a religious group.

To find out if there is a link between thoughts of death and belief
in the supernatural, Norenzayan devised two series of tests, one
involving hundreds of students at UBC and another involving subjects
in Malaysia.

He asked one group to write essays about death, reflect on pain in
the context of mortality and read a short story about a boy who dies.
He asked the control group to think about pain in relation to
visiting a dentist and read a story about a boy who doesn’t die.

Norenzayan and his team found subjects asked to contemplate death
were much more likely than those who weren’t to report they strongly
believe in supernatural agents.

Norenzayan says his experiments are the first to provide “solid
empirical evidence” to back up theories by Soren Kierkegaard and
Ernest Becker that humans become religious because they’re capable of
recognizing they will die.

“One of the definitions of religion is it’s a way of dealing with
anxiety-provoking thoughts,” Norenzayan says in his tidy third-floor
office overlooking the forest and ocean surrounding UBC, as quiet
classical music plays.

“All religions say death is not literally death, that mortality is
not the end of our being.”

Norenzayan — who maintains he’s not a “strict” religious believer,
despite maintaining ties to the Armenian Orthodox Church — says it’s
shocking how little research psychologists have done into the origins
and effects of spirituality.

“Most academics are blind to the power of religion.”

A typical psychology textbook, he says, contains virtually no mention
of religion, despite the 19th-century American founder of psychology,
William James, devoting a great deal of energy to the subject.

“Most psychologists have no idea why two people who are probably
equally religious — the Dalai Lama and Osama bin Laden — could end
up being so different, with one teaching peace and one preaching
violence.”

– – –

With his grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research
Council, Norenzayan plans to make his first trip to Lebanon since he
left at age 18.

He’ll explore more deeply the impression he developed as a young man
in the war-torn country that spiritual beliefs can be exploited by
leaders to foment aggression against outsiders.

And he’ll continue his experiments into why religion can breed both
peace-loving tolerance and intolerant fury, in the Middle East and
North America.

Norenzayan recognizes religion isn’t the only cause of violence, but
he also believes it “is at the top of the list of ideologies that can
kill.”

How exactly does religion lead to mayhem?

Norenzayan and his graduate student, Ian Hansen, have discovered it’s
not spiritual devotion that causes violence.

Norenzayan’s work builds on studies of Palestinian Muslims by his
alma mater, the University of Michigan, where researchers found the
more often Palestinian Muslims attended mosque, the more they
supported suicide terrorism. There was no link, however, between
Palestinians’ support for violence and how often they prayed at home.

The goal of one of Norenzayan’s experiments was to test North
Americans on their tolerance of religious pluralism. In effect, he
wanted to explore how subjects would respond to someone like the main
character in Yann Martel’s book, The Life of Pi, who claims he’s a
Hindu, a Muslim and a Christian.

Norenzayan’s team discovered Buddhists were most tolerant of
followers of other religions. Christians were less tolerant and
Muslims were the least tolerant.

Norenzayan believes that may be because Christianity and Islam
provide more group cohesion, leading to a belief there’s only one
true religion.

So how does thinking about death relate to religious tolerance?

For one thing, Norenzayan found study participants who were reminded
frequently about death were more likely to believe in supernatural
agents from not only their own religion, but from other religions.

In other words, a Christian contemplating death would become more
open to the Asian idea of revering ancestors.

“There’s an old saying: ‘In a storm, voyagers will believe in any god
to rescue them.’ To some extent, it’s hopeful that people facing
death will consider addressing other supernatural agents,” says
Norenzayan.

But his research also led him to a more negative side-effect tied to
when people think often about death: They become less accepting of
people who don’t belong to their culture.

Many Christians, for instance, became less tolerant of Jews and less
tolerant of prostitutes. More intense thoughts about death “seemed to
make people draw stronger cultural boundaries.”

Norenzayan is also wondering what the ramifications of his research
are for North America since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001,
which made a lot more North Americans anxious about their mortality.

He believes the terrorist attacks created a unique experimental
condition for a study of how increasing consciousness of death
affects religious tolerance.

“Sept. 11,” he says, “was one humongous manipulation of North
Americans’ thoughts about death.”

[email protected]

GRAPHIC: Color Photo: Glenn Baglo, Vancouver Sun; Ara Norenzayan:
‘Most psychologists have no idea why two people who are probably
equally religious — the Dalai Lama and Osama bin Laden — could end
up being so different, with one teaching peace and one preaching
violence.’

Equatorial Guinean Court Sentences Armenian Pilots To Long Prison Te

EQUATORIAL GUINEAN COURT SENTENCES ARMENIAN PILOTS TO LONG PRISON TERMS

Arminfo
26 Nov 04

Yerevan, 26 November: A court in Equatorial Guinea has sentenced
Armenian pilots to prison terms ranging from 14 to 24 years.

It must be remembered that on 8 March of this year, the authorities
in Equatorial Guinea arrested a large group of people, which among
other foreigners, included six Armenian pilots. The Armenian pilots
were charged with complicity in the organization of a coup d’etat in
that country and are now facing imprisonment for up to 26 years. The
Armenian pilots are flatly denying the accusations.

The prosecutor had reportedly demanded that the Armenian citizens be
sentenced to 26 years’ imprisonment.

South Caucasus – Is Priority Region For NATO, Symon Lunn Believes

SOUTH CAUCASUS – IS PRIORITY REGION FOR NATO, SYMON LUNN BELIEVES

BAKU, NOVEMBER 26. ARMINFO-TURAN: One of the priorities of NATO is
protection and safety provision to the NATO member-states and the
countries which are under transition period, state the secretary
general of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly Symon Lunn responding the
question of TURAN correspondent on priorities of the Alliance in the
South Caucasus.

Lunn noted that the South Caucasian region is priority for NATO and,
first of all, due to geographic situation. According to him, the
processes going on in the region may affect every country NATO-member.

“Global threats cause trouble in all countries”, Lunn noted. According
to him, one of the prior tasks for NATO is help in elimination of
this threat and providing of stability in the countries living under
transition period.

Responding the question on the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict, Lunn
noted that the conflict can be solved only with agreements of both
sides. “Here, first of all we must take into account the security
questions. Both sides must work intensively with each other so that
to be able to regulate the conflict on mutually acceptable terms”,
Lunn said but he admitted that it is a long process.

“It seems that the other sides also may help in searching the ways
for the resolution of the conflict”, Secretary General said. According
to him, NATO does not take direct part in settlement of the conflict.

Responding the question on democratization in the countries of
South Caucasus. S. Lunn said that NATO followed the events but it
is difficult yet to give any concrete assessment. Speaking about
nuclear programs of Iran, he said that UN dealt in the question. But
some members of NATO, USA, Great Britain, France “very seriously”
treat the nuclear programs of Iran.

Five Soldiers Of NKR Defense Army Killed and Several Injured InAccid

FIVE SOLDIERS OF NKR DEFENSE ARMY KILLED AND SEVERAL INJURED IN ACCIDENT

STEPANAKERT, NOVEMBER 24. ARMINFO. Five militaries of NKR Defense Army
were killed and several were injured in a road accident in Mardakert
region, NKR, last Sunday. The NKR Defense Ministry confirmed this
information to ARMINFO.

A lorry transporting soldiers from bath-house to the military unit
turned over. An investigation is initiated on the fact. The details
have not been provided yet.

Armenian leader hails economic reforms

Armenian leader hails economic reforms

Arminfo
22 Nov 04

Yerevan, 22 November: Armenia has finished structural reforms,
Armenian President Robert Kocharyan said at the Berlin Economic Forum
on 19 November.

In his speech, Robert Kocharyan said that for the time being Armenia’s
aim was to move towards the European Union standards, the presidential
press service has told Arminfo news agency.

The number and scale of reforms, which involve large-scale
privatization, trade liberalization and the streamlining of the
functions of the state apparatus, currently ensure a steady economic
growth in the country, the Armenian president said. He recalled that
in the last four years, this growth amounted to a double-digit figure.

“The share of the private sector in GDP has exceeded 80 per
cent. Moreover, 38 per cent of them are small and medium-sized
businesses,” Robert Kocharyan said. Armenia is cooperating fruitfully
with the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the European
Commission in the economic sphere, he added.