Government Approves Concept Of Regulation And Control Of Gambling In

GOVERNMENT APPROVES CONCEPT OF REGULATION AND CONTROL OF GAMBLING INDUSTRY IN ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
Apr 1, 2010

YEREVAN, APRIL 1, NOYAN TAPAN. At the April 1 sitting, the Armenian
government approved the concept of the regulation and control of
the gambling industry in the Republic of Armenia. Deputy Minister
of Finance Pavel Safarian said that the concept includes measures
on licensing and control of the gambling industry and presupposes
changes in the law on casinos and prize games.

He said that the purpose of licensing and introducing stricter
control over the industry is to make gambling industry transparent
and controllable which will enable to protect the interests of society.

Such control will allow the competent state bodies to prevent
financial, economic and other crimes, making the offenders answerable
for violations. These measures include the fight against money
laundering and shadow economy.

Chairman of the Audit Chamber Ishkhan Zakarian underlined the
necessity to clarify the process of licensing and to make the owners
pay taxes for each gaming table and playing machine. According to
him, many receive licenses for 10 tables or machines, but use only 3
and pay taxes only for these tables and machines. "We see a risk of
corruption here. It is necessary that taxes be paid for each gaming
table and playing machine, regardless of whether they are used or not,"
I. Zakarian said.

Armenian Woman Among Moscow Bombing Victims

ARMENIAN WOMAN AMONG MOSCOW BOMBING VICTIMS
Arman Hovannisian, Ruzanna Stepanian

/1998094.html
30.03.2010

A teenage Armenian woman was among 39 people killed in twin suicide
bombings on Moscow’s underground railway, the Armenian Foreign Ministry
said on Tuesday.

The explosions, which authorities said were set off by female suicide
bombers linked to Islamist militants from the North Caucasus, ripped
through two metro stations in the city center during the Monday
morning rush hour.

Thirty-eight people were initially reported killed and more than 70
others seriously wounded in what was the deadliest attack on the
Russian capital in six years. A 17-year-old woman, identified as
Valentina Yegiazarian, died of severe injuries in hospital on Tuesday,
bringing the death toll to 39.

Russia — A relative of a victim of terrorist metro blasts cries
outside a morgue in Moscow, 30Mar2010Armenian Foreign Ministry
spokesman Tigran Balayan confirmed her ethnic Armenian origin.

"Unfortunately, there is an Armenian victim who died in hospital
today: the 17-year-old Valentina Yegiazarian," he told RFE/RL’s
Armenian service.

Balayan said two other Russian citizens of Armenian descent,
both of them women, were also injured in the blasts and required
hospitalization. Doctors says their condition is "satisfactory,"
he added.

President Serzh Sarkisian joined world leaders in condemning the
bombings and expressing condolences to Russia’s leadership and families
of the victims. "Armenia resolutely condemns any manifestation of
terrorism," he wrote to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Monday.

"I am confident that everything will be done to identify and hold
accountable the masterminds [of the attacks,]" said Sarkisian.

Russia’s Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said the culprits must be
scraped "from the bottom of the sewers" and exposed as Moscow observed
an official day of mourning on Tuesday. Flags across the city flew
at half-mast and somber Muscovites laid flowers and lit candles at
the stations hit by the blasts

http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article

Turkish Lawyer Claims To Recognize The 1915 Genocide

TURKISH LAWYER CLAIMS TO RECOGNIZE THE 1915 GENOCIDE

Aysor
March 31 2010
Armenia

Turkish lawyer Bendal Celil Ezman has applied to the Ankara Court,
claiming to recognize the 1915 massacres of more than 1,5 million
Armenians as a Genocide, Russian media reported citing Turkish
sources. Before, Bendal Celil Ezman campaigned for apologies for the
tragic happenings of 1915.

In Bendal Celil Ezman’s claim, sent to the Second Ankara Criminal
Court, is said that "Sait Halim Pasha’s government of Turkey committed
genocide against Turkish population of Armenian origin in 1915,"
Haber Turk paper reported. "Armenians were killed in 1915 within the
framework of a special scheduled plan," the paper quotes Bendal Celil
Ezman’s claim.

"Turkey must face with its past," Ezman said in an interview.

This is the first precedent of filing of a claim to the Criminal Court
over the issue of the 1915 Genocide, stressed Turkish lawyer. When
asked if he doesn’t afraid of taking these steps, Ezman said:
"Everything that happens is Allah’s will, if something happens to me."

Turkey has been campaigning vigorously against process of recognition
of the 1915 Genocide. It traditionally denies all those massacres,
mass killings, deportations, executions, starvations, and other means
that resulted in 1,5 million deaths among Armenians. Any regarding
to Genocide and a campaign on recognition and condemnation the 1915’s
crimes is a very sensitive and offensive issue to Turkey.

The 1915 Genocide is recognized by Uruguay (recognized and condemned
the first, in 1965), Russia, France, Italy, Netherlands, Germany,
Belgium, Poland, Lithuania, Slovakia, Sweden, Switzerland, Greece,
Cyprus, Lebanon, Canada, Chile, Argentina, and 42 States of America;
Vatican, the European Parliament, and the World Council of Churches.

MONT Company Office Opens In Armenia

MONT COMPANY OFFICE OPENS IN ARMENIA

Panorama.am
12:51 30/03/2010

Economy

MONT Company office has been opened in Yerevan today. MONT has been
in Yerevan since January 11, 2010.

"The opening of Yerevan office is part of business development global
strategy," the Chief Manager of company’s Armenian representation
Ruben Yesayan said.

Armenian Deputy Minister of Economy Ara Petrosyan said in his welcome
address that this is a very important event to promote the development
of IT market in Armenia.

The company’s business development vice-president Ivan Yermakov added
the opening of the office would highly contribute to the development
of IT market in Armenia since MONT is one of the leading, largest
licensed software distributors in Russia and the CIS.

MONT suppliers are Microsoft, Symantec, Abby, ADOBE, ESET, "Kaspersky
Lab" and others.

R. Yesayan affirmed that the company product will be highly available
for consumers.

IMF Completes Third Review Under Stand-By Arrangement For Armenia An

IMF COMPLETES THIRD REVIEW UNDER STAND-BY ARRANGEMENT FOR ARMENIA AND APPROVES $73.6 MILLION DISBURSEMENT

ARKA
March 30, 2010
Yerevan

YEREVAN, March 30, /ARKA/. The Executive Board of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) completed March 29 the third review of Armenia’s
economic performance under a program supported by a Stand-By
Arrangement (SBA), a press release by IMF said.

It said the decision enables the immediate release of an amount
equivalent to SDR 48.485 million (about US$73.6 million), bringing
total disbursements so far an amount equivalent to SDR 350.425 million
(about US$532.2 million).

They Executive Board also approved a request for a waiver of
nonobservance of the end-December 2009 quantitative performance
criterion on the net domestic assets of the Central Bank of Armenia
(CBA).

The 28-month SBA was approved for an amount equivalent to a total
of SDR 368.0 million (about US$558.9 million) on March 6, 2009 ,
with a total amount of access augmented to an amount equivalent to
SDR 533.6 million (about US$810.4 million) on June 22, 2009.

Following the Executive Board’s discussion on Armenia, Mr. Murilo
Portugal, Deputy Managing Director and Acting Chair, stated:

"Armenia’s performance under its Stand-By Arrangement with the Fund has
been strong, and the economic recession appears to have bottomed out,
aided by supportive monetary and fiscal policies. The challenge remains
to support the fragile recovery, address external vulnerabilities,
and advance a credible fiscal consolidation plan over the medium term.

"Fiscal policy aims to continue to support the recovery, while
gradually starting fiscal consolidation in 2010. Social spending will
be protected. The authorities are committed to make good progress on
the reforms in tax policy and administration, as well as on public
expenditure and debt management.

"Monetary policy aims to move from an accommodative to a more neutral
stance, in order to head off potential inflation pressures. The
authorities are committed to a flexible exchange rate regime, and
aim to strengthen the monetary transmission mechanism to enhance the
effectiveness of monetary instruments, as well as improve the central
bank’s communication strategy. "The financial sector remains sound
and well capitalized, and the authorities have strengthened their
crisis preparedness and contingency planning frameworks. Further
reforms will be important to ensure continued resilience to risks.

"The authorities are committed to pursue broad-based structural
reforms to enhance productive capacity and promote long-term growth
through an open trade regime, an improved business environment,
better governance, and increased market competition in key sectors
of the economy," Mr. Portugal said.

BAKU: OSCE Minsk Group Note The Parties’ Commitment To Peaceful Sett

OSCE MINSK GROUP NOTE THE PARTIES’ COMMITMENT TO PEACEFUL SETTLEMENT OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT

Trend
March 30 2010
Azerbaijan

After the recent meetings between the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs and
the foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia in Paris and in the
region, the Co-Chairs note with satisfaction the commitment of the
parties to reach a peaceful settlement within the framework of the
Madrid Principles. OSCE reported.

The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, Ambassadors Yuri Merzlyakov
of Russia, Bernard Fassier of France, and Robert Bradtke of the
United States visited Yerevan and Nagorno-Karabakh March 26-29,
the organization reported.

They updated the de facto authorities March 27 on the current state
of negotiations.

In Yerevan March 28, the Co-Chairs met President Serzh Sargsian
and Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian to further discuss Armenian
comments on the Basic Principles for the peaceful settlement of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. While in Armenia, the Co-Chairs also had
a number of other separate bilateral meetings.

Armenian Foreign Policy Between Russia, Iran And U.S.

Eurasia Review
March 28 2010

Armenian Foreign Policy Between Russia, Iran And U.S.

Sunday, March 28, 2010
By Mikayel Zolyan, Yerevan for Caucasus Analytical Digest

The nature of Armenia’s relationship with the USA is quite complex.
For years Armenia had to cope with a serious dilemma in defining its
foreign policy. On the one hand, ever since its independence Armenia
has closely cooperated with Russia, on which it is heavily dependent
in such areas as security and economy. Armenia’s good neighborly
relations with Iran are also vital from the point of view of Armenia’s
economy and national security. On the other hand, Armenia is also
striving to forge close contacts with the West, including the USA and
Europe. While the Armenian government has repeatedly stated that it is
not planning to apply for NATO membership, it is closely cooperating
with NATO, and the level of this cooperation is comparable to those of
Armenia’s neighbors. This policy of simultaneously advancing relations
with Russia and the West is called `complementarism,’ a term
associated with Vardan Oskanian, the Minister of Foreign Affairs from
1998 to 2008. However, though the term `complementarism’ originated in
the late 1990s, the idea behind it has been the main paradigm of
Armenian foreign policy since its independence.

Balancing between Americans and Russians: Armenia’s `complementarism’ policy

Armenia and Armenian issues have never been among the major priorities
for American foreign policy. However, from the point of view of the
United States, Armenia has a significance somewhat disproportionate to
its small size, scarce resources and low level of economic
development. This significance can be attributed to two main factors:
Armenia’s geopolitical location in an important borderland between
Europe, Central Eurasia and the Middle East and the existence of an
influential Armenian

Diaspora in the US.

The first time Armenia became a foreign policy issue for the US was
during World War I, when American diplomats did whatever was possible
to save the Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire from extermination
by the Ottoman government. Throughout the two years of its existence
(1918`1920), the Republic of Armenia received humanitarian aid and
political support, earning President Woodrow Wilson consideration as a
friend of Armenia and Armenians. At one point Wilson’s administration
even had plans to put Armenia under the government of the United
States as a `mandate territory,’ but these plans were soon abandoned.
American assistance to Armenia, which remained mostly within the
limits of humanitarian aid, could not save the short-lived republic
from being occupied and divided by the Turkish Kemalist movement and
the Russian Bolsheviks. During the Soviet years, Armenian political
parties and organizations, banned in Soviet Armenia, thrived on
American soil. During the first years after the break-up of the USSR,
the USA offered massive humanitarian assistance to Armenia, which was
ravaged by the 1988 earthquake and suffering from the war with
Azerbaijan and the economic blockade imposed by Turkey. Throughout the
1990s global and regional settings seemed to favor the Armenian
`complementarism’ policy.

Through the 1990s relations between Russia and the West were mostly
constructive: while Russia cooperated with the West on many global
issues, the West did not explicitly challenge Russia’s influence in
the post-Soviet countries. However, in the beginning of the 2000s the
nature of the relations between the USA and Russia began to change,
due to multiple factors, ranging from the transition to a more
authoritarian regime in Russia to the American occupation of Iraq.
Russian`American relations were further complicated by `the colored
revolutions’ in Georgia and Ukraine and the warm welcome that these
revolutions found in the USA. The American support for the `colored
revolutions’ was perceived by the Russian elites as a direct
encroachment on Russian interests, and the competition between the two
global powers intensified, which complicated matters for Armenia and
put in doubt the future of the `complementarism’ policy. The latest
test to Armenia’s complementarism doctrine came in August 2008 with
the Russian-Georgian war. Armenia, however, managed to avoid choosing
sides in the confrontation and even successfully resisted the Russian
pressure to recognize the independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

One of the most interesting aspects of `complementarism’ is Armenia’s
security policy. Armenia is a member of the Russian-dominated
Collective Security Treaty Organization and hosts Russian military
bases. However, even here Armenian authorities have sought to balance
Armenia’s extensive cooperation with Russia in the sphere of security
by steps in the direction of cooperation with the USA and NATO.
Although these steps have been largely symbolic, they were quite
significant as they sent an important message of openness for
cooperation.

One of these steps was the participation of an Armenian regiment in
the NATO peace keeping operation in Kosovo. Another example of that
cooperation is Armenia’s decision to dispatch an Armenian non-combat
unit to Iraq. In spite of the relatively small scale of the mission,
this has been quite a significant step, when measured against the
general context of Armenian foreign policy, and especially the
existence in some countries of the Middle East (including Iraq) of
large Armenian communities vulnerable to terror and radicalism. A new
affirmation of Armenia’s determination to cooperate with the USA came
in late 2009, when the Armenian government sanctioned the
participation of a small Armenian military regiment in the peace
keeping operation in Afghanistan.

Another test of the policies of `complementarism’ is Armenia’s
relationship with Iran. While historically Iran has often been
perceived as a threat, today Armenia enjoys a close relationship with
the country. Reconciling the need to maintain good relations with Iran
and Armenia’s partnership with the USA was relatively easy in the
1990s, when moderates and reformers like Rafsanjani and Khattami
dominated Iranian politics. However, the balancing act became more
difficult when relations between Iran and the US (and the West in
general) deteriorated under Bush and Ahmadinejad. In general, though,
the West has viewed Armenia’s cooperation with Iran with
understanding, since Armenia’s geopolitics and conflicts with Turkey
and Azerbaijan make good relations with Iran a strategic necessity for
Armenia. In its turn the Iranian leadership has been keen to preserve
the good relationship with Armenia and resisted calls from some
radicals to openly support Muslim `brothers’ in Azerbaijan against
Armenia in the Karabakh conflict. Of course, Iran has a number of
unresolved issues in its relationship with Azerbaijan that influence
its policies in the South Caucasus.

The USA as a Mediator: Turkish-Armenian Relations and the Karabakh Conflict

One of the most important issues from the point of view of American
policy vis-a-vis Armenia and the region in general is the issue of
Armenian-Turkish relations. The US has been involved in efforts to
break the ice in Armenian-Turkish relations for a long time.
Complementing calls on both sides to normalize relations, the US
intervention included unofficial mediation efforts and track two
diplomacy, as in the case of the American-sponsored Turkish-Armenian
Reconciliation Committee (TARC), an informal group that consisted of
former diplomats from Armenia and Turkey. Since 2008, especially in
the wake of the Russian-Georgian war in August, the USA actively
supported the so-called `football diplomacy’ and the Armenian-Turkish
normalization process.

When Barak Obama visited Turkey in April 2009 he made a reference to
Armenian-Turkish relations and called for opening the border that had
been sealed by the Turkish government in the early 1990s. The April
23, 2009, Armenian-Turkish statement about the existence of a roadmap
for normalization came about in part thanks to the serious involvement
of American diplomacy, including a late night telephone call Serzh
Sargsyan received from Vice President Joe Biden. Similarly, when in
October 2009 the signing of Armenian-Turkish normalization protocols
was under threat, the mediation by US Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton together with her Russian colleague Sergey Lavrov, was
instrumental in securing the signatures of both Armenian and Turkish
sides.

While American involvement in Turkish-Armenian relations has mostly an
indirect and informal character, in the case of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict, the USA officially plays the role of mediator as one of the
co-chairs of the Minsk Group. Both sides have criticized the mediators
in the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process and sometimes have blamed them
for the fact that no political solution to the conflict has been
reached so far. However, it is difficult to deny the positive role of
the mediators in preventing the conflict from reemerging as a
full-scale violent confrontation. The US government position on the
Karabakh issue is quite complex. On the one hand, US diplomats have
often repeated that the US does not consider Nagorno-Karabakh an
independent state and recognizes Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity,
something that invites criticism in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, as
well as within the Armenian-American community. On the other hand, the
US has offered millions of dollars in humanitarian aid to
Nagorno-Karabakh, in spite of protests coming from Azerbaijan.

Armenian Americans: Realities and Myths

As noted above, one of the factors that determines Armenia’s
significance for American foreign policy is the existence of an
important Armenian-American community.

Though relatively small compared to some other ethnic communities
within the USA (estimates usually put the number of Armenians in the
USA at over one million), the Armenian community is well-organized and
vocal in the defense of its interests and priorities. The Armenian
community’s significance is boosted by the fact that Armenians are one
of the most established and well-integrated ethnic communities of the
US. The roots of the Armenian American community go back to the late
19th and early 20th centuries, when thousands of Armenians fleeing
massacres in the Ottoman Empire found refuge in the USA. Since then
generations of Armenians have successfully integrated into American
society while keeping a strong attachment to their historical
homeland. Large numbers of Armenians can be classified as middle
class, and some Armenians have successfully entered the top levels of
American government, business and culture.

The Armenian community in the USA maintains close connections with
Armenia. The idea that contributing to the historical homeland is a
moral obligation for American Armenians is quite widespread. While in
most cases these contributions take the form of financial assistance
and charity, there have also been certain cases, when prominent
Armenian Americans relocated to Armenia, as did Raffi Hovannisian, a
lawyer from California, who became the first minister of foreign
affairs of independent Armenia and who is an influential figure in
contemporary Armenian politics.

For decades the focus of American Armenians has been winning official
recognition by the US government that the extermination of Armenians
by the Ottoman government in 1915 constituted an act of genocide. This
campaign usually focuses on two main goals: ensuring that the US
president uses the term in his address to Armenian Americans on April
24, the day when Armenians around the world remember the victims, and
passing a Congressional resolution, which would officially recognize
the mass killings of 1915 as genocide. Though Ronald Reagan used the
word `genocide’ in referring to the Armenian genocide in 1981, most US
presidents have avoided the term since then. A constant source of
bitterness for American Armenians is the fact that virtually all
successful presidential candidates have given the promise to recognize
the genocide during the election campaign in order to gain the votes
of American Armenians, and later reneged on that promise, fearing an
angry reaction from Turkey.

During the latest election campaign, Barak Obama issued several strong
statements advocating the need to recognize and condemn the genocide
officially. Although it can be argued that Obama has come closer to
fulfilling his promise than most of his predecessors ` in his April
24, 2009, address to the Armenian community, he announced that his
views on the issue are on the record and have not changed and used the
Armenian term Eghern (literally ` `a great crime, a man-made
catastrophe’), which is comparable to using the Hebrew term `Shoah’ to
describe the Holocaust ` many American Armenians were bitterly
disappointed by Obama’s decision to avoid the use of the English (and
international) term genocide. The issue of official recognizing the
genocide has long since gone beyond being an issue that concerns only
American Armenian voters and the American government.

Turkey has reacted angrily to the genocide recognition campaign and
repeatedly warned that the damage done to American-Turkish relations
by the recognition would be irreparable. Moreover, the Turkish
government spends millions of dollars in awareness campaigns and
lobbying in an effort to counter those carried out by American
Armenian organizations. Ironically, contrary to the hopes of the
Armenians and fears of the Turks, an official recognition of the
genocide by the American government is unlikely to have any immediate
practical effect, while the ongoing genocide recognition campaign is
an effective tool of spreading awareness about the genocide and
putting pressure on the Turkish government to come to terms with its
country’s past. In any case, the activities of the Armenian community
are among the factors that, along with geopolitical considerations,
have influenced the US government’s interest in the normalization of
Turkish-Armenian relations.

However, it would be wrong to overestimate the influence of the
so-called `Armenian lobby’ over the formulation of American policy
towards Armenia and the region. Besides, it is important to remember
that on certain issues there are important differences and divisions
between the government of Armenia and some Diaspora organizations, as
well as between different segments of the Diaspora itself. A recent
example of these differences is the mixed reaction with which Diaspora
Armenians reacted to Serzh Sargsyan’s initiative of normalizing
relations with Turkey and the signing of the Armenian-Turkish
protocols. Sargsyan, who visited Los Angeles prior to signing the
protocols, faced a cold reception from some influential Armenian
American organizations and massive street protests by local Armenians.
While some American Armenian organizations, such as the Armenian
Assembly of America (AAA) have cautiously supported the normalization
of Turkish-Armenian relations, others, such as the Armenian National
Committee of America (ANCA), have criticized the Turkish-Armenian
process and the American government’s role in it.

Conclusion

As we have seen, the nature of the relationship between Armenia and
the USA has been quite complex. Armenia has managed to combine an
alliance with Russia and good relations with Iran with a close
partnership with the USA and a drive to participate in European
integration.

Global and regional trends, as well as internal developments might
influence Armenia’s policy, pushing it from one side of this spectrum
to the other. The current trend of `reset’ in the relations between
the USA and Russia offers certain hopes that Armenia’s
`complementarism’ policy might bear fruit. Normalization of
Turkish-Armenian relations is one of those issues, in which the
positions of the American and Russian governments largely coincide, at
least at this point. Armenia’s `complementarism’ policy is also
dependent on the future of Iranian-American relations: the fate of the
Obama administration’s initiatives on Iran and the outcome of the
post-election struggle in Iran will certainly influence Armenia’s
position between Iran and the West. However, even taking into account
all these factors, the long term foreign policy strategy of Armenian
elites is unlikely to change. Armenia’s history, geopolitics and
current situation suggest that for years to come Armenian foreign
policy will be dominated by the need to find a balance between
stronger neighbors and global powers.

About the Author: Mikayel Zolyan is assistant professor at Yerevan
State Linguistic University. He received his Ph. D. in history from
Yerevan State University and has studied at the Nationalism Studies
program of Central European University in Budapest.

Source:
This article first appeared under the title of "My Friend’s Enemy is
my Friend: Armenian Foreign Policy between Russia, Iran and the United
States" (PDF) and was published in the 15 Feb 2010 edition of the
Caucasus Analytical Digest on pages 2-5. The article is reprinted with
permission.

The Caucasus Analytical Digest (CAD) is a monthly internet publication
jointly produced by the Heinrich Böll Foundation in Tbilisi, the
Research Centre for East European Studies at the University of Bremen,
the Resource Security Institute in Washington, DC and the Center for
Security Studies (CSS) at ETH Zurich with support from the German
Association for East European Studies (DGO).

Recommended Reading:
Alexander Iskandaryan, `NATO and Armenia: A Long Game of
Complementarism,’ Caucasus Analytical Digest, no. 5, April 16, 2009.

armenian-foreign-policy-between.html

http://www.eurasiareview.com/2010/03/32768-

Every layer of this city needs preserving

Every layer of this city needs preserving

The rich history of Mardin, in south-east Turkey, is being
rediscovered with the help of EU money. But the present is also an
important part of its story

By Sankha Guha, Travelling man

Sunday, 28 March 2010
Independent/uk

The drama of Mardin’s position is best appreciated from the air.

The city clings to the southern flank of the last escarpment of the
Taurus Mountains, facing the vast plains of Mesopotamia. From above, a
neat line is visible marking the last convulsions of the massif –
mushroom and mud tinted – beyond which a sea of green takes possession
of the Earth’s crust. This is the cartoon geography of a semi-mythical
place; Mesopotamia, the land between the rivers Euphrates and Tigris,
aka The Cradle of Civilisation. But it wasn’t just myths that were
created here. It was history.

The current official version would like to paint Mardin in the United
Colours of Benetton – as a multi-ethnic, multi-faith, multi-cultural
playground of bright-eyed co-residents, where Kurds, Syriac Catholics,
Mahalemi Arabs, Orthodox Armenians and Turks all rub along happily,
under one flag. But in this layer cake of a city, each layer tells a
story. Some layers are invisible; they are an absence. People who
should be here are not here – their former homes have been put to new
uses, their places of worship neglected and ruined. History happened
here. History scared them into leaving.

In Istanbul, 700 miles away, they were surprised that I was going to
Mardin. An artist I met said no, she had never visited. "There are a
lot of military there, you will see," she said pointedly. Others were
more blunt and suggested the region is dangerous. In a shocking
incident less than a year ago, 44 villagers in Mardin municipality
were murdered at a wedding. The authorities were keen to play it down
as Kurdish intra-clan violence but the details of who did what and why
remain murky.

It looks peaceful enough. There is an army base to one side of the
road from the provincial airport. Behind the base, rocks have been
rolled together to form large words on the hillside. Translated they
say something like "Happy to be Turkish". They do protest too much. As
recently as the Eighties and Nineties the Turkish army was putting
down the Kurdish insurgency in this region with "extreme prejudice".
The Syriac population was caught in the crossfire. Memories are also
long enough to remember the genocide of Armenians and Syriacs
perpetrated by the Ottoman Turks and Kurds back in 1915. It’s
complicated.

The Syriac population of the town is down to a meagre 1 or 2 per cent
– many relocated to Sweden. There are maybe six or seven Armenian
families left, the last Jews upped sticks in the early 1980s. Even the
Kurds, though still the majority, have suffered a diaspora as far
flung as Canada.

There are, however, reasons to be cheerful, according to Mesut Alp, a
local historian. "My parents’ generation thought of themselves as
Kurdish first, Muslim second and human third," he tries to explain.
"But for me it’s different, my generation thinks we are human first."
We’re picking our way through the veg market and through the minefield
of regional politics. Mesut is saying the aspiration for a Kurdish
nation state is no longer so important for him in a world where
national boundaries are being broken down; joining the larger human
family of the EU is the priority.

A cockerel, bred for fighting, struts across the pavement, pausing to
fluff its chest and flap its wings in display. We pass a gun shop with
hunting rifles lined up in the window. They are carved and engraved
with intricate patterns – objects of desire. Next door is a bank with
a hole-in-the-wall cash dispenser, followed by a string of shops
selling mobile phones. A heavily laden donkey, part of the municipal
refuse collection service, clatters past in the narrow, cobbled
street. It is hard to settle on which century these street vignettes
belong to.

Modern Mardin, if that isn’t an oxymoron, is a celebration of
architectural misrule. It tumbles down from a hilltop fortress,
oblivious to planning. For more than six millennia it has bent to the
will of successive masters and they have left their marks in stone
and, more recently, concrete. Churches, mosques, minarets,
monasteries, villas, bazaars, bus stations and flat blocks elbow each
other for space. But the defining features of the city are terraces.

The terrace of the Antik Tatlidede Hotel explains why the architects
of Mardin favoured this feature. The hotel, built in the late 19th
century, was once home to a prosperous Syriac merchant. The view is
enormous, dizzying, Biblical. We are perched on a cliff, and the land
falls away to an ocean. Despite the absence of spray and surf it is
hard to shake off the illusion. Down there the fertile plains rise to
meet a flat horizon over a hundred miles deep inside Syria.

It has been Mardin’s mixed fortune to be on the Silk Route – making it
a magnet for traders and tyrants alike. Marco Polo stopped here on his
way to China in the 13th century – a more benign visitor than
Tamerlane, who laid siege to the city (unsuccessfully) a century
later. The Abdullatif mosque, built just a few years before the Mongol
emperor arrived, is a testament to the city’s ability to absorb and
endure. The outer portal is finely carved and looks in remarkably good
nick – which is perhaps not surprising because it was added less than
10 years ago. The minaret was also an addition (19th century) but the
mosque is greater than the kit of parts assembled over seven
centuries.

More sweeping terraces characterise the Mardin Museum, which was once
the home of the Syriac Catholic patriarch. It is a graceful affair
with four or five levels supported on rounded arches and rows of
faux-classical pillars linked by grand balustraded staircases. It is
another of the town’s many theatrical buildings that cry out for
performance – perhaps grand opera or a sword-and-sandal epic.

This is Mesut’s workplace and he can’t conceal a note of pride when he
shows off some of the exhibits. Pointing to a child’s toy that
resembles a stone tractor, he says he found it in a local villager’s
home. It was still being used as a plaything by the kids who had dug
it up in the family plot. The "tractor" is at least 5,000 years old.

The view from the museum’s grandstand is untidy. The main square below
is presided over, predictably, by a heroic statue of Mustafa Kemal
Ataturk, father of the Turkish Republic. He stands at the top of a
wedding-cake monument exhorting citizens to put "country before
everything". On the far side of the square, the view is interrupted by
multi-storey concrete blocks sprouting satellite dishes and cables.
Mesut talks enthusiastically of an EU-backed project to rid the city
centre of the unsightly concrete and show Mardin in all its
honey-coloured limestone splendour to eagerly awaited hordes of
tourists.

"I’m a bit suspicious about the idea of turning Mardin into a museum
city," says Clemens von Wedermeyer, a Berlin based video-artist who is
in the town for another EU (and British Council) sponsored project.
The idea is to bring established artists from Europe to five cities in
Turkey to create major works of public art. Turkish artists will go
the other way, on residencies. It is an attempt to build cultural
bridges in tandem with the country’s bid to join the EU.

But Clemens is perhaps a bit off-message. "I am an anti-museum,
anti-institutional artist," he says. "I think it’s more interesting to
encounter the dynamics of the city and if you control that from the
top and turn it into a museum – then only tourists will inhabit the
space."

Clemens’ installation won’t be a museum piece. "Addressing the
complexity of this area – the ethnicities, religions, different
cultures – I thought of an empty square, 10 to 12 metres wide, that
looks like a cinema screen, something like the monolith in 2001
(Stanley Kubrick’s film), a screen of desires where you can project
your fantasies. And that reflects for me some of the psychology here,
which has often to do with unfulfilled desires."

Clemens wants his installation, which is due to be unveiled later this
year, to be a device for cultural dialogue within Mardin’s disparate
communities. "It’s like a mirror. Where you can see yourself and where
you can see the others, your neighbours."

Later, I am woken by the muezzin’s call to prayer. It is 4.20am and
the sound is loud enough to pierce sleep. He has an exquisite voice.
He recites the adhan, rising through the register in fractions of
notes, hitting the highest with avian clarity, then retreating down
the scale in resolution. In my dreaming consciousness, it no longer
matters who is doing the singing or why. The voice seems loaded with
the yearning of all peoples, when history is done, for peace.

MOSCOW: Azerbaijan violates truth with Nagorno-Karabakh

ITAR-Tass, Russia
March 28 2010

Azerbaijan violates truth with Nagorno-Karabakh

28.03.2010, 04.52

According to the information of the army of Nagrono-Karabakh, advanced
forces of the Azerbaijani army fired from firearms of various calibre
in the southeastern, central and northeastern directions of
Nagorno-Karabakh. Truce violation was particularly intensive in the
northwestern section of the line of contact, the press service went on
to say. On March 22-23, Azerbaijani troops launched 34 fire attacks
from submachine guns and sniper rivals, including of a large calibre,
at the villages of Karmiravan, Namirli, Dzhraberd, Seisulan, Shurabad
and Yarmndzha.

After retaliatory measures, undertaken by advanced forces of the
Defence Army of Nagorno-Karabakh, the enemy stopped shooting, a source
in Stepanakert reports.

The Karabakh forces didn’t suffer any losses.

NewsID=14962863&PageNum=0

http://www.itar-tass.com/eng/level2.html?

Military Expenditure in Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia up 500%

Daily Georgian Times
March 27 2010

Military Expenditure in Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia Increased by
More than 500 Per Cent According to SIPRI

Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) publishes
research conducted by Dr. Paul Holtom, Director of the SIPRI Arms
Transfers Programme. SIPRI is an independent international institute
dedicated to research into conflict, armaments, arms control and
disarmament.

According to the research ARMS TRANSFERS TO EUROPE AND CENTRAL ASIA,
in 2004`2008 the only recorded exports from Kazakhstan were of
anti-tank missiles to Georgia and of two Mi`17 helicopters to
Kyrgyzstan.

In the decade preceding the August 2008 Georgia`Russia conflict in
South Ossetia, military expenditure in Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia
increased by more than 500 per cent in real terms. Military reform and
modernization have been offered as justifications for increased
military spending and arms procurement in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia
and Russia, but unresolved border disputes, territorial claims and
separatism remain among the main national security threats facing
these countries. Table of the Military expenditure in European and
Central Asia in 1999-2008 is given in the SIPRI background paper,
according to which, Georgian military expenses increased from 39,8
million to 651 million dollars, in Armenia ` from 93 million to 217
million dollars and in Azerbaijan ` from 133 million to 697 million
dollars.

IPN
2010.03.27 14:25

;newsid=21027

http://www.geotimes.ge/index.php?m=home&amp