BAKU: Meeting of FMs of Azerbaijan & Russia

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
Feb 2 2005

MEETING OF FOREIGN MINISTER OF AZERBAIJAN AND RUSSIA
[February 02, 2005, 17:44:35]

On February 2, Elmar Mammadyarov, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the
Republic of Azerbaijan, met with his Russian counterpart Sergey
Lavrov, who paid an official visit to Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister, welcoming his Russian colleague,
emphasized the relations of friendship and cooperation between the
two nations. He also stressed close and cordial personal relations
between the two heads of state.

Foreign Minister Lavrov agreed with this statement and expressed his
hope that the ties between Russia and Azerbaijan will continue to
develop comprehensively.

The two sides exchanged views on certain aspects of bilateral
relations, such as further increasing trade volume, intensifying
partnerships between regions of the two countries, developing
cultural cooperation, etc. In this regard, the Ministers broadly
discussed plan of actions for the upcoming `Year of Azerbaijan in
Russia’, as well as the perspective for 2006 to be the `Year of
Russia in Azerbaijan’.

Minister Elmar Mammadyarov and Minister Sergey Lavrov spoke about
various aspects of cooperation on the Caspian matters, where both
sides re-affirmed their commitment to resolving remaining issues
among the five littoral states in the spirit of constructive
cooperation based on the principle of medium line.

Other issues of mutual interest discussed by the sides included
reform on the UN, future perspectives of OSCE and CIS activity.

Special attention was paid to the ways of settlement of the
Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, especially to the
activity of the OSCE Minsk Group, of which Russia is a co-chair.

After the meeting, Elmar Mammadyarov and Sergey Lavrov briefed for
media representatives and answered their questions.

Karabakh government developing new economic programme for 2006-2012

Karabakh government developing new economic programme for 2006-2012

Arminfo, Yerevan
1 Feb 05

STEPANAKERT

The government of the Nagornyy Karabakh Republic NKR is drawing up a
new economic development programme for 2006-2012, Prime Minister
Anushavan Danielyan has said in an interview with a correspondent of
Arminfo news agency.

Prime Minister Danielyan attributed the need for a new programme to
stable growth in macroeconomic indicators. “In 2000, the NKR
government developed a programme of economic reforms divided into
periods. The years 2000-2002 were a period of active reform, 2003-2005
were years of sharp economic growth, and we describe 2006-2010 as
years of promising economic development,” the prime minister said.

“Today I can confirm that the first two phases are nearing completion,
and we are not only assessing the reforms of previous years but also
setting new objectives in the run-up to the decisive phase, bearing in
mind the achievements and omissions of previous years.”

Passage omitted: previous years’ figures

Elton plays Paris charity concert

Elton plays Paris charity concert

BBC News
2005/01/24

Sir Elton John has performed at a special concert in Paris to raise
money for the victims of the Asian tsunami.

The British singer played to a 2,700-strong audience on Sunday at the
French capital’s Bastille opera house.

The concert was also part of an attempt to bring a broader range of
events to the famous venue.

Money raised will go to the Fondation pour l’Enfance (Foundation for
Childhood) which aims to rebuild a children’s shelter in Sri Lanka.

Sir Elton played hits from his vast back catalogue to a sell-out crowd
which included former French president Valery Giscard d’Estaing and his
wife Anne-Aymone.

The veteran pop star played piano accompaniment throughout the concert
which lasted for three hours without an interval.

Standing ovation

He told the crowd: “Throughout the years, I’ve done a lot of drugs and
alcohol. It’s true that I was a nightmare, impossible. For the last 14
years I’ve been normal. Now my drug is called David” – a reference to
David Furnish, his partner.

The crowd, who greeted each song with a standing ovation, also included
French singer Charles Aznavour and British ambassador Sir John Holmes.

Sir Elton has also teamed up with Phil Collins to record a version of
Eric Clapton’s 1991 hit Tears In Heaven to raise money for the relief fund.

A release date has yet to be set for the recording, which was organised
by Sharon Osbourne.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/entertainment/4200939.stm

Reid’s phone call to Ridge spurs LV sisters release from fed custody

Las Vegas Sun
Jan 28 2005

Reid’s phone call to Ridge spurs LV sisters’ release from federal
custody

By Timothy Pratt
<[email protected]>
LAS VEGAS SUN

The Las Vegas teens who have spent the last two weeks detained in Los
Angeles pending deportation to Armenia were scheduled to arrive at
McCarran International Airport this morning.

Last night 18-year-old Emma Sarkisian and her 17-year-old sister,
Mariam, were told they would be freed and got the word back to their
family and lawyers.

Family, friends and strangers who rallied behind the family are
expected to be celebrating their return into the evening. This
morning, the girls’ Russian-speaking father, Rouben Sarkisian, who
runs Tropicana Pizza in Henderson, said through an interpreter that
today it will be “free pizza for everybody!”

Then he laughed and admitted he doesn’t know exactly how he and his
daughters will celebrate their reunion after the emotional roller
coaster of the last two weeks.

“I will see how they feel and what they want to do,” he said. He
added that he understood many residents of the Las Vegas Valley might
want to greet the sisters — whose photos and stories have been in
the media nonstop since their Jan. 14 detention — so he would
probably bring them by the pizzeria this afternoon.

Their freedom had been won, said one of their lawyers, Jeremiah Wolf
Stuchiner, “apparently due to the intervention of (Secretary of
Homeland Security) Tom Ridge,” whom Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., had
asked in a phone call Wednesday to give the case “personal
attention.”

That sort of phone call has rarely, if ever, occurred to stop an
order of deportation, which is “like a death sentence” in its legal
finality, said Stuchiner, who has worked on immigration issues for
nearly 50 years, first as a federal official and then as a lawyer.

Virginia Kice, spokeswoman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement,
said “a collective decision had been reached … to use our
discretionary authority and grant a deferred action on the case.”
That means the sisters still have no legal status and will have their
case reviewed on an ongoing basis, she said.

Several immigration experts said the case drew attention to a larger
problem, with thousands of children facing deportation because of the
actions of their parents.

Jeanne Butterfield, executive director for the American Immigration
Lawyers Association, a Washington-based group that has 9,000 members
nationwide, said “the case illustrates that we need changes in our
law — especially for minors who are having trouble with their legal
status through no fault of their own.”

But Thursday night at Tropicana Pizza the mood was giddy.

The restaurant had been ground zero for the growing public campaign
in support of the girls in recent weeks. Their framed photos sat on
the counter, behind two sheets of paper with phone numbers for
members of Congress and immigration officials.

Michelle Sarkisian, 13, stood outside the pizzeria around 8:45 p.m.,
exchanging text messages via cell phone with Mariam.

Though the scene was typical American tech, the pizzeria in a mall,
the surrounding suburbs, it arose from a labyrinth of immigration
law, international diplomacy and Capitol Hill maneuvers.

Mariam was hiding in the federal holding tank’s shower and using the
cell phone that had been forbidden to her to tell her sister she was
due to be freed.

“We’re coming home tomorrow!” Mariam wrote.

The case had turned on a series of events stretching back more than a
decade. Rouben Sarkisian arrived in the United States in 1991 and had
three more daughters with his wife, Anoush. He then divorced his
wife, married a U.S. citizen, and through that marriage gained the
status of legal resident — the step below citizenship. He later
divorced the U.S. woman.

But Sarkisian never gained any legal status for his oldest daughters,
though he has said on several occasions that he thought he had. He
even took them to a Las Vegas immigration office in July to obtain
the paperwork he thought would show their status, in order to obtain
a driver’s license for Emma.

That visit set in motion the steps that led to the Jan. 14 detention
of the girls. Immigration officials said they had been ordered
deported in 1993 and were just following the law.

The Sarkisians’ lawyers argued that the government should give Rouben
a few months to finally become a citizen, which would then give him
the right to petition for his daughters to become legal residents.

Now that they are being released, the lawyers will withdraw their
writ of habeas corpus still before Magistrate Judge Robert Johnston
at the George Federal Building, since “the purpose of the habeas was
to stop detention and have them released,” Stuchiner said.

Rouben Sarkisian said Thursday’s events, as well as the two weeks
before, had been “like life — one time up, one time down.”

That up and down included placing an advertisement in recent days to
sell the pizzeria, since he thought he would need money “to fight to
keep my daughters here.”

Thursday night, he didn’t know whether he would still try to sell the
business. “The girls have worked hard in the pizzeria and … and
being together is what drives the business,” he said.

Rouben said it was hard to focus on the future for now. He reviewed
the day’s events, which began at 9 a.m. when he had attended a
hearing at the George Federal Building and was told the girls would
not be released to his custody while Johnston decided in the coming
weeks whether they would be deported.

“I thought it was over,” he said. Then the sisters themselves were
told they would be freed in the afternoon, news that eventually got
back to Las Vegas only because a member of their legal team, lawyer
Troy Baker, called them to brief them on the results of the hearing.

Baker had been given a phone number to reach the teens in their
detention cell because Johnston had ordered the federal government to
give lawyers access to the girls.

“I called them about 6 p.m. to tell them where we were going from
here, after their release had been denied,” Baker said.

“But while I was on the phone, someone told them they would be set
free. I told them, ‘Don’t start jumping up and down until I confirm
this.’ ”

Baker said the girls had been told several times in recent days that
they had lost the legal battle and would be sent back to Armenia,
even though no decision had been made. The girls were born in Armenia
but don’t speak its language and have no family there, the Sarkisians
have said.

Baker said he didn’t want them to be given incorrect information
again.

Stuchiner, who Baker said has an impressive “black book,” made a few
phone calls Thursday night and confirmed the news about the release.

The Sarkisian case had already brought surprises, including twice
turning the sisters back from flights to Moscow within hours of
take-off — once due to an administrative order and once due to a
judge’s order.

A retired Armenian archbishop in Los Angeles whose diocese has an
estimated 600,000 followers had also been lobbying Armenian and U.S.
authorities to let the girls go. And — in what the lawyers said was
the key to the release — dozens of local residents let their
congressmen know they thought the sisters should be with their
family.

Rouben said Thursday night that he did not blame anybody and was not
bitter about what his family had been through in recent weeks.

“I think everybody tried to do what they were supposed to do,” he
said.

“And in the end, common sense and good people — they prevail in
America.”

Boxing: Darchinyan IBF title defence in Sydney

SecondsOut
Jan 27 2005

Darchinyan IBF title defence in Sydney

by Paul Upham: IBF flyweight champion “Raging Bull” Vic Darchinyan
looks set to make the first defence of his world title at Homebush in
Sydney on March 26. The Australian based Armenian won the title on
December 16 from long-reigning champion Irene Pacheco.

29 year-old Darchinyan’s trainer/manager Jeff Fenech has become
frustrated by promoter Warriors Boxing inability to confirm a fight
in the USA. The American company promoted the Darchinyan-Pacheco
fight and had suggested a fight for the new champion with USA
Olympian Brian Viloria in March.

“I have rang them fifty times and they have not returned my call
once,” said Fenech. “My phone is always on and no one else has the
same trouble reaching me. We are not waiting any longer and Vic will
defend his title against someone in the IBF top fifteen.”

A rematch with Pacheco is unlikely, as the Columbian has indicated
that he will be moving up to junior bantamweight.

“It is very exciting being the world champion and I am looking
forward to my first world title fight in Australia,” said southpaw
Darchinyan 22-0 (17).

***
WBC Interim super middleweight champion Danny Green will hold a
public training session on Wednesday, February 2 in Sydney. The
“Green Machine” is preparing for his rematch with arch-rival Markus
Beyer in Germany on March 12 and will be at the Ritz Hotel in
Hurstville from 5pm.

Paul Upham
Contributing Editor

Auschwitz remembered: the shadow of Auschwitz

The Independent
January 27, 2005

AUSCHWITZ REMEMBERED: THE SHADOW OF AUSCHWITZ

by John Lichfield

The turn-off is just past a BP petrol station, close to a Leclerc
supermarket. You leave a roundabout and cross a concrete flyover. You
could be on the edge of any town in early 21st-century Europe.

Ahead, through the swirling snow, looms a single railway line,
disappearing through a tower in a long, red-brick building – the
terminus of a short branch line to Auschwitz-Birkenau built in the
spring of 1944. Beyond are three long railway sidings, tall
barbed-wire enclosures, wooden watch- towers, and dark huts in neat
lines. Some huts are ruined. Others stand pristine in freshly fallen
snow, as if enchanted by a curse and frozen for all time.

All is symmetrical and orderly, the product of rational, intelligent
minds – modern, Western minds.

If you stroll to the end of the railway tracks, you find the rubble

of two buildings strewn in front of a small birch wood (Birke means
birch tree.) Two other ruins stand a little way over to the right.
The remains of two cruder buildings can be seen in the distance.

Inside, or just outside, these six buildings at least one million
people, almost all of them Jews, were gassed and cremated during
1942, 1943 and 1944. Birkenau, only part of the Auschwitz complex,
was, among other things, a factory, a purpose-built human abattoir,
an assembly line of death.

The factory’s raw materials were men, women and children, whose only
crime was to be Jewish or Gypsy. The Jews came initially from other
parts of Poland and nearby Slovakia. Later, they were transported for
hundreds of miles across Europe, from Greece, from Hungary, from
France, from Belgium, from the Netherlands, to be reduced to ashes,
their gold teeth, hair, clothes, false limbs recycled into raw
materials for the Nazi war effort. These, however, were merely
by-products. The chief purpose of Auschwitz- Birkenau was to destroy
a race and to obliterate the 800-year-old Jewish- European
civilisation. (In this second task, the Nazis succeeded.)

Auschwitz was not, in itself, the Holocaust. There were five other
Nazi death camps in Poland, some of whose names are still scarcely
known to the general public (Belzec, where 550,000 Jews are thought
to have died; Sobibor, where 200,000 died).

Auschwitz has, nonetheless, become the prime symbol of the
bureaucratically organised, orderly frenzy of killing in which at
least five million European Jews were murdered by the Nazis (maybe as
many as six million) between 1939 and 1945.

Many other victims were also deemed unfit to live by the perverted
Darwinism of Nazi, racial ideology: not just Gypsies but also
homosexuals and the handicapped. Pre-planned Nazi mass murders were
also carried out – it is sometimes forgotten in the West – of
hundreds of thousands of Russians and at least 1,500,000 Polish
officers, intellectuals, students, priests and randomly seized
civilians. The Poles were slaughtered to reduce their country to a
slave state, permanently colonised by Germans.

On a first visit to Auschwitz-Birkenau, the mind revolts against the
proximity of roundabouts and barbed wire, of supermarkets and gas
chambers; against the juxtaposition of the death camp and the
pleasant Polish town of Oswiecim, now as much part of the European
Union as Dorking or Macclesfield. In truth, this is no anachronism,
but a useful reminder. The Holocaust began three years after Walt
Disney made Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs; 20 years before The
Beatles and Swinging London. Auschwitz is part of Modern Times.

Today, politicians from 40 countries will travel to the Birkenau camp
to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the discovery of Auschwitz by
Soviet troops in January 1945. Up to 400 survivors – the remaining,
fit survivors of the maybe 60,000 survivors in 1945 – are expected to
be there.

The Queen will attend a ceremony to mark Holocaust Day at Westminster
Hall in London with other survivors.

Among those at the Birkenau commemoration will be Raphael Esrail, 80,
who was taken to Auschwitz from France in February 1944, at the age
of 19, and is now secretary general of the French association of
Auschwitz victims. “There have been other anniversaries and there
will be others still to come,” he said, “but this is maybe the most
important. First, because it will be the last big anniversary to have
so many living eyewitnesses. Most of us are already in our eighties.”

“But it is crucial also for another reason. The world has changed.
And not in the way we had hoped. After the war, we comforted
ourselves that this terrible experience might finally teach mankind
to love mankind, but what do we see now? We see again the rise of
anti-Semitism and we see a world torn apart by fanatical hatreds and
by absolute certainties.”

In other words, the most important, single lesson that we can learn
from today’s commemorations is that Auschwitz is not just part of our
history. It is part of our present. This is a lesson that seems to
have escaped the 45 per cent of Britons – according to a recent poll
– who have not heard of Auschwitz.

In truth, the story of the Holocaust is imperfectly understood, even
by many of us who think we know what happened. (I was astonished by
my own ignorance when I visited Auschwitz, even though my father was
Jewish, even though some of my distant, Slovakian-Jewish relatives
almost certainly died there.)

The details are imperfectly known, even to honest, specialist
historians, because so much of the evidence was destroyed by the
Nazis themselves in 1943-44. The story was further muddied by the
Soviet domination of Poland up to 1990 – years when Auschwitz was
turned into an “anti-fascist” shrine and the suffering of the Jews
was pushed into the background.

Did 5,000,000 Jews die in the Holocaust or 6,000,000? Even now,
honest historians disagree. The generally accepted figure of
1,100,000 dead in Auschwitz alone (including 960,000 Jews, 75,000
Poles and 21,000 gypsies) is a “conservative estimate”, according to
the head archivist of the Polish state museum on the site, Piotr
Setkiewicz. “It was almost certainly more than that. These are just
the people that we can say with absolute certainty died here.”

One of the perverted oddities of the Final Solution is the mixture of
brazen pride and shame with which it was implemented. Intelligent,
educated men believed that they had a right to destroy millions of
fellow human beings. At the same time, they felt it was necessary to
lie about, and cover up, what they were doing. The same twin impulses
– denial on the one hand, and pride in the Holocaust on the other –
persist among Nazi apologists to this day.

The 60th anniversary has brought an abundance of new studies,
including the excellent BBC television series on Auschwitz, and the
accompanying book by Laurence Rees. All the same, confusions remain
in many educated and unprejudiced minds: confusions which are often
exploited by Holocaust- deniers and relativisers. There is,
especially, an abiding confusion about the different kinds of camps
which existed in the Nazi archipelago of evil.

Broadly speaking, there were labour camps, concentration camps and
death camps. Life in the labour and concentration camps, such as
Belsen, south of Hamburg, and Dachau, north of Munich, was barbaric.
Life expectancy was short. These camps had tens of thousands of
political prisoners, and resistance activists, from Germany and from
occupied countries – and some high-profile Jews.

Much of the confusion, in the West, arises because these camps, in
the western part of Germany, were liberated by the British and the
Americans. They provided the images which were first seared onto the
world’s memory and conscience: images of walking skeletons in striped
uniforms and heaps of emaciated bodies being cleared by bulldozers.

But these were not the death camps. There were no planned mass
killings – no gas chambers or crematoria – in Belsen or Dachau or
Ravensbruck or Mauthausen or anywhere within Germany’s pre-war
borders.

The Holocaust happened further east, in Poland, notably at Auschwitz
but also in five other camps, some of which were no larger than three
or four football pitches: Treblinka, Belzec, Sobibor, Chelmno and
Majdanek.

The unfamiliarity of these names – apart from Treblinka –

is significant, and deliberate. They were dismantled, and the ground
ploughed over and planted with trees, by the SS at the end of 1943.
By that time, it is estimated that 1,700,000 people had been murdered
there, mostly Polish Jews, mostly killed by carbon-monoxide poisoning
(Zyklon- B gas was an Auschwitz speciality.)

Mr Setkiewicz says: “We have very, very little direct information on
what happened in these places. There are few records, few eyewitness
accounts, no survivors. We know only that transports took Jews out of
the ghettos established by the Nazis in Warsaw and other cities and
they took them to these camps, which were set up as extermination
centres. There was no room for people to live or work in these
places. No one came back.”

Auschwitz was unique. It was the only site which contained both an
extermination camp and a labour camp (in fact 40 different camps,
spread over an area covering 40 square kilometres, the Auschwitz
“zone of interest”).

Because both kinds of camp existed side by side, there are survivors,
Jewish survivors and Polish survivors, to tell us what happened in
Auschwitz. But the existence of both kinds of camp on one site, or at
one complex of sites, is also fertile ground for the negationists.

Look, they say, Auschwitz had a swimming pool; it had a brothel for
inmates, an orchestra, a sauna. How bad could it have been? Yes,
Auschwitz had an orchestra but most of the 1,100,000 people who died
there never heard it play.

The complex has two main camps: the original Polish army barracks
taken over by the Nazis in 1940, and the much larger Birkenau camp,
three kilometres away, built by slave labour from October 1941.

The original Auschwitz camp – which looks like a pleasant army base
or a university campus – has its own horrific tale to tell. It was
here that the first mass killings of Poles and Russian prisoners of
war took place. It was here that the camp commandant, Rudolf Hoss,
devised methods of mass slaughter with Zyklon-B in the first of the
Auschwitz gas chambers (built at the end of the garden where his
children played).

It was here that the SS doctor Josef Mengele conducted medical
experiments on twins and pregnant women. It was here that the
orchestra, comprised of musically talented inmates, played merry
dance tunes and waltzes as the half-starved work groups – kommandos –
struggled in and out of the gate marked Arbeit macht frei (work makes
you free).

The swimming pool and brothel also existed – but only for the kapos
or inmates promoted to be overseers.

Tens of thousands of people died in the original camp but the greater
slaughter happened down the road at Birkenau, conceived originally as
a labour camp but then developed into an industrial killing-machine.

Another grim distinction needs to be made. The Belsen-generated image
of the Holocaust – emaciated people in striped uniforms being herded
into gas chambers – is largely false. Most of those who died at
Auschwitz never wore camp uniforms. They never received a number
tattooed on their forearm (another Auschwitz speciality which did not
occur elsewhere). Most were led, or taken in trucks, directly from
the trains to the chambers. They died, not as dehumanised skeletons,
but as people looking and feeling like citizens of the mid-20th
century.

When a train arrived (from Hungary or Holland or France), the
prisoners – 1,200 to 1,500 on each train – were divided into columns
of men and columns of women and children. The SS doctors and guards,
often behaving with extreme politeness, selected maybe 200 young men
and women from each train to be admitted to the camp as slaves for
the Nazi war machine. The remainder were taken to the far end of the
site – to the place where tomorrow’s ceremony will take place. They
were made to undress and told they had to take a shower. They were
led into the gas chambers and murdered as they huddled in family
groups.

Their bodies were removed by the members of the sonderkommando – the
Jews and other prisoners forced to do the most horrific work to
protect the minds of the SS guards. Gold teeth, rings and hair were
cut from the bodies before they were burnt. (The hair was made into,
among other things, socks for submariners.)

It is estimated that Birkenau, when functioning at its most
efficient, could murder and burn 20,000 people in a day.

How do we know all this? The Holocaust deniers say we don’t know;
that it is largely made up or exaggerated; that no evidence exists
that the gas chambers – destroyed by the SS in January 1945 – were
gas chambers. (On surviving plans they are described as “morgues”.)

In truth, the amount of direct and circumstantial evidence of what
happened in Auschwitz-Birkenau is huge. Twenty-five photographs were
taken by an unknown SS guard, discovered in an album when the camp
was liberated, showing the process of “selection” of trainloads of
Hungarian Jews in 1944. Eyewitness accounts have been given by SS men
and by survivors, including members of the sonderkommando, the few
who survived and others who buried their testimony in the earth of
the camp.

Plans show the “morgues” were designed to be gas-tight and have a
high ambient temperature – counter-productive for a morgue but
necessary to activate pellets of Zyklon-B. (One plan also exists
which labels the gas chamber not as as a morgue, but as a “gas
chamber”).

Mr Setkiewicz says: “Do we have one piece of evidence which proves
beyond all doubt that the Holocaust happened? No. We have a
thousand.”

The museum at the original Auschwitz camp presents this evidence in
crushing, disturbing mass. Human hair is piled behind a glass window
and covers the area of two tennis courts. Similar picture-windows
display heaps of shoes, spectacles, suitcases, false legs and arms,
crutches and clothes found when the camp was liberated six decades
ago.

A newer exhibition has also been opened in the “sauna” at Birkenau.
This was, in fact, the building where the few selected to work and
suffer, rather than to die instantly, were stripped, shaved and
tattooed. This display speaks of the individual ordinariness of
thousands of obliterated lives. It shows hundreds of photographs,
mysteriously found in a suitcase at the site – all of them pre-war
family snaps taken by Jews living in the town of Bedzin: snaps of
weddings and walking trips, grinning young men acting the fool,
brothers arm in arm, happy picnics and shopping expeditions.

In the next room is a display of objects, confiscated from Jews as
they arrived at the camp: banal objects, precious objects, objects
which suggest that many of those who arrived here had no conception
of the fate awaiting them. There are cigarette lighters and
cheese-graters, picnic baskets and kettles, razors and chess sets,
hairbrushes and cameras.

Once again, you are reminded that the Holocaust happened in a time
like the present, to people like you and me. Visiting Auschwitz, and
seeing sights like these, you wrestle with an impossible question.
What makes Auschwitz and the Holocaust different? Are they different?

Massacres and genocides have been carried out throughout history,
from Genghis Khan to the Crusades, from the American Plains to
Turkish Armenia,

Lebanon, Cambodia, Rwanda and Bosnia. Even the numbers killed in the
Holocaust are not unique. Stalin killed more, for reasons of
expediency and terror, than Hitler killed for reasons of race and
ideology. Studies in comparative evil are barren and pointless: all
of these crimes are monstrous.

And yet there is something about the Holocaust which sets it apart,
in its essence, if not its enormity. Here was a genocide willed and
planned by a modern industrial state, using all the paraphernalia of
modernity, from trains to toxic gases. Here was a genocide, willed
not just because a people were occupying space coveted by another
people but because of a self-induced, obsessive, racial fear and
hatred.

In no other genocide, before or since, have hundreds of thousands of
people been sought out and shipped hundreds of miles, at great
expense, to their instant murder. In no other genocide have bodies
been treated as industrial raw materials, coldly denying the humanity
of the victims even in death.

It took a very modern and advanced state to conceive and organise
such an elaborate, bureaucratic genocide. It took all the resources
of modern politics and mass media to brain-wash an entire people so
that they were complicit in murder on an industrial scale.

What is the way to Auschwitz? The road does not just start beside a
roundabout and a BP petrol station.

Teresa Swiebocka, the senior curator at the Auschwitz museum, who
also teaches on the meaning of the Holocaust, said: “The Holocaust
did not begin in 1939 or 1941. It began many years earlier. It began
with an obsession that one nation, one race, had absolute wisdom and
absolute rights, superior to those of other races or religions.

“The question people should ask when they come here, or watch the
anniversary ceremonies, is how can civilised people in a modern state
be brought so far and so low? How does it begin? At what point do you
take a turning which leads you eventually on to a road marked
Auschwitz?”

CoE Resolution Not To Affect Karabakh Settlement – Armenian MP

COUNCIL OF EUROPE RESOLUTION NOT TO AFFECT KARABAKH SETTLEMENT – ARMENIAN MP

Arminfo
26 Jan 05

YEREVAN

The resolution of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
(PACE) on Nagornyy Karabakh will not reflect on the process of
settling the Karabakh conflict within the framework of the OSCE Minsk
Group, Galust Saakyan, head of the faction of the Republican Party of
Armenia, said in an interview with our Arminfo correspondent while
commenting on the PACE Nagornyy Karabakh resolution adopted yesterday.

Of course, the PACE resolution on Nagornyy Karabakh does not reflect
the position and desires of the Armenian side on the issue of settling
the Karabakh conflict, but it should be noted that the final version
of the document is somewhat softer than its initial one, Saakyan
said. The positive thing is that the document contains a call to the
Azerbaijani authorities to start negotiations with the communities of
Nagornyy Karabakh to determine its status, the MP believes. This is a
result of the Armenian delegation’s successful work in PACE, Galust
Saakyan said.

Collection for women in fall

ArmenPress
Jan 25 2005

COLLECTION FOR WOMEN IN FALL

YEREVAN, JANUARY 25, ARMENPRESS. A well-known Russian designer,
head of the Moscow Fashion House Vyacheslav Zaytzev will present his
latest winter collection for men today in “Apollo” men’s clothes
shop. In the same shop the designer will present his first exclusive
collection for women in autumn.
Vyacheslav Zaytzev told today at a press conference that his first
collection for women will be intended for plump women. The dresses
will be classic, romantic, also modern and of sports style.
The well-known designer has been involved in the world fashion for
already 40 years. During the first 16 years he worked in the sphere
of light industry creating new fashions of clothes for everyday
together with 60 talented artists at a time when he had no
opportunity to reveal all the charm and mystery of the art of
fashion. This was the basic reason why he leaved the state fashion
world in 1978.
From 1982 Zaytzev began working with individual customers creating
for them. “Here I realized that fashion is my world,” said Zaytzev,
noting that the first thing for him in fashion is the quality, which
was the reason why he refused to accept suggestions he received from
foreign fashion houses. “I did not like their approaches concerning
the quality of the models, I create models only of high-quality that
are neither too cheap nor too expensive. My models are for people of
the middle class, for those who want to look beautiful.”
Clothes carved by his models are sold in Apollo” shop for already
two years.

BAKU: Council of Europe adopts resolution on Armenian-Azeri conflict

Council of Europe adopts resolution on Armenian-Azeri conflict

ANS TV, Baku
25 Jan 05

[Presenter in studio] The discussions on the Nagornyy Karabakh
conflict at the winter session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe [PACE] came to an end about two hours ago. The
participants in the session heard David Atkinson’s report on the
conflict. Our special correspondent Ayaz Mirzayev reports from
Strasbourg.

[Correspondent by telephone] The resolution prepared on the basis of
British MP David Atkinson’s report on the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict
has been unanimously adopted by the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe [PACE]. No amendment, proposed by the Armenian side,
was made to the phrase separatist forces in the document. We should
note that the opposite side claimed that the use of this term in the
document was an affront to Armenia and Nagornyy Karabakh’s Armenian
community and tried very hard to get the word freedom fighters used in
the document instead of separatist forces.

Before the session, the political committee even adopted a decision to
make this amendment. However, during the vote at the session, the
Azerbaijani and Turkish parliamentarians spoke out against this
amendment. The head of the Azerbaijani delegation, Samad Seyidov, said
in his speech that only the Armenian lobby was against the adoption of
the resolution and a speedy solution to the problem. They do not want
the resolution to be adopted and the conflict to be solved on the
basis of international law.

After heated discussions, even the political committee, which had
agreed to make this amendment, had to change its decision. During the
general vote, the overwhelming majority spoke out against the
amendment. In general, only two changes were adopted to the resolution
during the vote. One of them says that Azerbaijan should conduct
consultations with both the Armenian and Azerbaijani communities
without any preconditions. The resolution also appeals to
Secretary-General of the Parliamentary Assembly Terry Davis to hold
these consultations in Strasbourg. The other amendment is of a
technical nature. Samad Seyidov, head of the Azerbaijani delegation,
said that the resolution is of very special importance to
Azerbaijan. It shows that European countries already recognize Armenia
as an aggressor and acknowledge that Nagornyy Karabakh is still
controlled by separatist forces.

As for the other points of the resolution, they say that the sides
should not resort to a military solution, the Azerbaijani government
should establish ties with both communities of the region in order to
hold consultations on the future status of Nagornyy Karabakh and
should appeal to an international criminal court if it is impossible
to solve the conflict.

At the same time, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
decided to keep this issue at the centre of attention and return to it
at the January 2006 session.

Ayaz Mirzayev, ANS, Strasbourg.

BAKU: Azeri Official Sees Armenian FM’s US apology remarks as PR

Azeri official sees Armenian minister’s US apology remarks as PR move

ANS TV, Baku
22 Jan 05

Excerpt from report by Azerbaijani TV station ANS on 22 January

[Presenter] The recent statements by [outgoing US Secretary of State]
Colin Powell and [US Assistant Secretary of State for European and
Eurasian Affairs] Elizabeth Jones have caused a wave of sharp public
outcry in Yerevan.

[Passage omitted: reported details; Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan
Oskanyan said that Elizabeth Jones telephoned him to apologize for
having earlier used the term of criminal separatists with regard to
Nagornyy Karabakh]

[Correspondent over archive footage] While commenting on the
developments unfolding over Elizabeth Jones’s statement, Azerbaijani
Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov, who is also the Azerbaijani
president’s special representative for the Karabakh negotiations, has
said that Oskanyan’s revelation was nothing but a PR move and advised
that statements of this kind should not be treated seriously.

He said Oskanyan’s anxiety over Elizabeth Jones’s statement was
further proof of Armenia’s role in the occupation of Azerbaijani
lands.

I think Mrs Jones’s statement was objective and reflected the
reality. She said nothing that did not reflect the official position
of the USA because the USA has repeatedly stated its recognition of
Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. Colin Powell has repeatedly
pointed to the existence of separatist forces in regional conflict
zones and of the countries supporting them from the outside. And if
someone is worried about the situation that has shaped, then they
should take a more active part in the process of negotiations, end of
quote.

Ceyhun Asgarov for ANS.