Ukraine: the practice of protest

Ukraine: the practice of protest

ORANGE REVOLUTION, ORIGINS AND OUTCOME

Le Monde diplomatique
January 2005

There was genuine, widespread rejection of the regime in Ukraine, but
the mass demonstrations were still not spontaneous. They were backed by
self-seeking organisations, both local and international.

By Régis Genté and Laurent Rouy

Three non-violent revolutions, Yugoslavia in 2000, Georgia in 2003, and
now Ukraine in 2004-5, have overturned regimes that were tainted,
corrupt and decadent – anything but democratic. It was the same scenario
each time. An infuriated Russia denounced western intervention,
especially that of the United States, in its “near abroad”, Georgia and
Ukraine. Yet when hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians took to the
streets, what course of action against their non-violent protests was
open to Vladimir Putin and the heads of state that he supports? What
could they do against such well-organised and innovative crowds? Nothing.

The demonstrations seemed spontaneous. That was the source of their
strength. In fact almost every detail was planned. The recipe for
non-violent revolution had been perfected in Belgrade. In 1999 Nato’s
bombardment of Serbia failed; the US and the European Union decided to
overthrow Slobodan Milosevic, which they did in the presidential
elections of September 2000. Milosevic, convicted of electoral fraud,
faced powerful, carefully organised demonstrations. A few skilfully
prepared ingredients and a year of preparations were more effective than
bombs.

Once success was certain in Belgrade, the sky was the limit for the
Georgian opposition and activist movement. They made contacts in Serbia,
went to look and borrowed the recipe. It worked, thanks in no small part
to several million dollars from US organisations (the cold war was not
yet over). Even so, these revolutions, inspired by Gandhian tactics or
by the uprisings of the 1990s in eastern Europe, were more than a matter
of manipulation. To believe that would imply ignorance of the social and
historical context of the countries.

Are elections traps for dictators and ageing regimes? They are certainly
traps for regimes that are not completely dictatorial, or too dependent
on the West to refuse some of its democratic demands. Elections were the
cornerstone of the Serbian, Georgian and Ukrainian “revolutions” since,
in each, the regime was forced to commit massive fraud to stay in power.
Then there was “monitoring”: a vast surveillance system applied to the
voting process as a whole to ensure its freedom and transparency.
International organisations such as the Organisation for Security and
Cooperation in Europe sent hundreds of observers, but NGOs participated
too, including the National Democratic Institute and the International
Republican Institute. These two partisan US foundations provide
financial and technical means to help local organisations and political
parties monitor the ballots and enable a popular movement to defend
victory at the polls.

The point is to force power to bend. Hence the real strategy of
regime-toppling, as witnessed by Gia Jorjoliani, of Tbilisi’s Social
Research Centre, who explained that he had finally “refused to go on
participating in the monitoring” when he “understood that the Georgian
organisations that had initiated it did not want free elections as much
as to shake the regime”.

The goal of unseating power usually remains implicit, with
revolutionaries repeating that their only aim is to bring about victory
for democracy at the ballot box. Tools, among them parallel counting,
are prepared to expose fraud. In this “revolutionary” strategy the media
play an important role. Based on the supposed neutrality of monitoring
by international organisations, the media present proof of fraud and
help mobilise the majority.

One or several student movements are responsible for part of
communications and opposition. In Belgrade Otpor (Resistance) was in
charge of such operations and used peaceful, original shock tactics.
Otpor adds its own experience to its sources of inspiration: manuals of
non-violent struggle that include the works of the US theoretician, Gene
Sharp, among them the famous From Dictatorship to Democracy: A
Conceptual Framework for Liberation (1). Sharp, a committed pacifist,
explained that non-violent struggle aims not to resolve conflicts but to
win them. Unlike physical weapons, political defiance does not seek to
“intimidate, injure, kill, and destroy”; unlike violence, it is
“uniquely suited” to severing dictatorships’ sources of power.

Otpor set the example. Georgian activists contacted the movement as the
parliamentary elections of November 2003 approached. Workshops were set
up in Georgia, as they were again a year later in Ukraine, with the
additional participation of Kmara (Enough), the Georgian student
movement, side by side with US coaches. Once fraud had been proved, the
opposition could move. In Kiev in 2004 another student movement, Pora
(It’s Time), prepared the ground and set up tent villages on the main
street. Kiev started to look like Woodstock. Pacifism, as always, was in
the air.

Backstage the opposition, with street support, was arm-wrestling a
regime from which it had in some cases emerged, but was now fighting in
the name of liberal,
democratic values. Opposition activists negotiated with the forces of
order, wanting them to drop the regime. Western leaders, depending on
their interests, offered overt support.

Otpor’s activities in Ukraine were financed by Freedom House, the US NGO
headed by James Woolsey, a former CIA chief who made his presence felt
in Serbia as early as 2000. The organisation wouldn’t reveal much about
its relations with Otpor but one official, visiting Ukraine for the
first round of elections, said: “Freedom House is not here to change
political regimes. That is up to citizens. We provide the resources for
voters to understand that their vote counts and that they can overcome
their fear of the existing regime.” The same policy guides the Open
Society Institute, the nucleus of the Soros Foundation’s network. The
institute was
founded by George Soros, the Hungarian-born billionaire, and designed as
a support organisation for civil society and emerging democracies. It
had been established to assist civil society and encourage the
transition to democracy in former Soviet republics. But in 2003 it went
beyond that stated aim in Georgia, since Kakha Lomaia, then head of
Georgia’s Open Society, was involved in organising Otpor workshops there.

This is a long-term policy: Freedom House, Otpor and veteran activists,
such as Mukhuseli Jack, a leader of the anti-apartheid struggle in South
Africa, organised trainers’ training seminars to exchange experiences.
There was one in Washington on 9 March 2004; among those present were
theoreticians of non-violent struggle, including Gene Sharp and Jack
DuVall, producer of the documentary Bringing Down a Dictator. It has
been shown in Georgia and also, with no results so far, in Cuba and Iran.

Although the network can take credit for the Serbian and Georgian
successes, events show that NGOs, no matter how well organised, are not
enough to overthrow a non-democratic regime. Cedomir Jovanovic, a former
opponent of Milosevic who later became co-prime minister in Serbia,
observed that the takeover of parliament in Belgrade on 5 October 2000
was in some ways an attack on the state: it was a political decision,
taken by the coalition of opposition to Milosevic. Politicians seized power.

But NGOs do make it possible to create a climate favourable to action:
hence the importance of local political leaders. In Ukraine Viktor
Yushchenko played his role to perfection. He appears to have received
advice from Georgia’s current president, Mikhail Saakashvili, in
February. Saakashvili, holding a rose, had known when best to storm the
Georgian parliament; in spring 2002 he had been in contact with the
Serbian anti-Milosevic opposition. The Serbs, and especially Zoran
Djindjic, the former prime minister of the transition government
(assassinated on 12 March 2003), were the first to benefit from the new
wave of revolution. They had freely
adapted the role of the Chilean popular movement and political parties
in the period directly before General Augusto Pinochet’s departure.

There are many ingredients in a revolution, needing careful preparation
– about a year in Serbia, Georgia and Ukraine. Some observers, and also
the former Georgian president, Eduard Shevardnadze, and Ukraine’s Leonid
Kuchma, perceived the direct intervention of foreign powers in these
revolutions. Financing from Freedom House was evident; Poland and the EU
were involved in Ukraine.

From the perspective of democracy, the results are not always
commensurate with the proclaimed aims. A year after the rose revolution,
a Georgian human rights activist, Tinatin Khidasheli, drew up a
qualified report on the new regime, which had arrested journalists and
political officials (2). Viktor Yushchenko was a minister before he
became Kuchma’s rival; the opposition’s pasionaria, Yuliya Timoshenko,
belongs to the nomenklatura that made its money from privatising
public-sector firms. Nothing indicates they have changed and adopted
ethical, democratic principles.

What kind of future do these “revolutions” face? The US has defined
three fields of action. The first covers the Castro regime, the bugbear
of US foreign policy, against which every method, overt or covert,
diplomatic or military, has been used. There are even indications that
non-violent action was first used in Cuba (3).

In another favourite domain, the former Soviet bloc, many countries are
taking measures against the Georgian model. Cooperation between the
Russian secret service, the Belarussian KGB and the Ukrainian FBU made
it possible to draw up a black list of activists. At least three former
members of Otpor were refused entry to those countries between July and
October.

A third seemingly auspicious terrain appeared with the idea of a
“Greater Middle East”, promoted by President George Bush. Yet this
project, which aims to “bring democracy” to the region, has few chances
of finding local allies given the level of animosity toward the US and
its policies in Palestine and Iraq.

It remains to be seen who will benefit from the logistical support of
the current donors. Little altruism can be expected from governments;
everything will depend on the donors’ foreign policy.

Away from outright opposition, organisation depends on the flaws, and
sometimes the crimes, of the existing system, and addresses the desire
for change among populations at the end of its tether; no one can
contest their sincerity. (No one doubted the intensity of popular
opposition to Shevardnadze and Milosevic.) In such conditions it is
possible to see US foreign policy, or a new version of cold war
antagonism between East and West, reflected in non-violent revolutions.

It would be wrong to claim that mass protests can be imported from
abroad, especially after deliberate electoral fraud. The decision to
follow the politicians, or not, must be taken by the people.

NOTES:

(1) Bangkok, 1993; Albert Einstein Institution, Boston, 2003.

(2) Tinatin Khidasheli, “The Rose Revolution Has Wilted,” International
Herald Tribune, Paris, 8 December 2004.

(3) These methods, based on an intense media campaign, the mobilisation
of civil society and support from such organisations as the National
Endowment for Democracy, were also used in Venezuela, but there they
served to justify the coup of 11 April 2002 and the attempt at economic
destabilisation in December 2002-January 2003. In a country with
democratic institutions and a president benefiting from a majority of
popular support, the manoeuvre failed.

Translated by Pascale Ghazaleh

http://MondeDiplo.com/2005/01/03ukraine

BAKU: Carriages en route to Georgia detained again

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Jan 14 2005

Carriages en route to Georgia detained again

Freight carriages en route to Georgia through Azerbaijan were
detained two days ago to ascertain whether or not they were further
bound for Armenia. The number of such carriages withheld at Boyuk
Kasik and neighboring railway stations has reached 709, the State
Railway Office said.
336 of the carriages are loaded with grain, 278 with diesel, 36 gas
and 31 stove fuel, and the rest with other products.
In December, the Azerbaijani authorities detained numerous carriages
at Boyuk Kasik and other railway stations being transported through
the country’s territory to find out whether they were en route to
Armenia. After an investigation, the State Customs Committee chairman
Kamaladdin Heydarov said the companies engaged in transporting
consignments to Armenia were determined but did not disclose their
names.
According to the existing agreement, the cargo going through
Azerbaijan is not to be transported to Armenia through Georgia.
A working group is working at the Azeri embassy in Georgia to
ascertain the destination of the consignments.*

The struggle to keep the faith in Bethlehem

The struggle to keep the faith in Bethlehem

The Times/UK
January 15, 2005

by Michael Binyon
After 2,000 years Christianity is in danger of extinction in the land
of its birth

FOR the first time in several years, a few rays of hope have begun to
shine over Bethlehem. The recent elections for a Palestinian president
passed off relatively peacefully and fairly, despite complaints about
Israeli barricades and bureaucracy. Almost twice as many visitors as
last year thronged Manger Square to celebrate midnight Mass at
Christmas, and there were also more Orthodox Christians who came to
celebrate at their Christmas on January 7. Could this mean that the
terrible events of recent years – the Israeli siege of the Church of
the Nativity, the curfews, blockades and violence – may now be
followed by desperately needed calm and stability?

Christians in Bethlehem ardently hope so. For, despite the brief
upsurge in pilgrims and tourism, there is a bleak midwinter.
Unemployment, economic collapse and emigration have devastated their
community. Many fear that Christianity, after 2,000 years, may soon be
extinguished in the land of its birth.

For hundreds of years and throughout Ottoman rule, Christians formed a
majority in Bethlehem. In the last century they were 90 per cent of
the population. But since the Israeli occupation, and especially
after the start of the first Palestinian intifada, they have been
leaving.

Since the Pope’s visit in March 2000 (six months before the second
intifada and when there was still hope of a political solution with
Israel), an estimated 3,000 people have moved abroad. They have left
behind a communitynow down to 21,500, barely a third of the
Palestinian population.

Christians with education, savings or ambition are leaving for
America, South America, Canada, Australia – anywhere where they can
escape the occupation and economic stagnation. Those who remain are
increasingly old, poor and despairing. They cannot even reach the
churches of nearby Jerusalem without difficulty. The new separation
fence hems in the little town, and Israeli checkpoints make what was
once a short and easy journey over the stony hills a frustrating
experience.

In Jerusalem itself, the Christians are equally demoralised. Their
numbers, too, are falling fast. At the time of the British mandate,
Christians formed about 10 per cent of the Palestinian population. Now
they are probably no more than 2 per cent.

It is not simply that many are leaving. The Christian birthrate is
about half that of Muslims. And Christians find themselves caught
between two communities. They have suffered as much as their Muslim
neighbours from therecent violence. But many say the Muslims believe
them to be less active in the struggle against occupation, and they
are seen as more ready to co-operate with the Israelis – a perception
that makes for bad blood between the two communities.

These mutual suspicions were intensified by the Christian-Muslim
clashes that took place in Nazareth in 1999 over the proposal to build
a mosque, authorised by Israel, next to the Basilica of the
Annunciation.

In Jerusalem, the Christians are suffering, as in Bethlehem, from the
lack of pilgrims and tourists. But in recent years they have come
increasingly into conflict with the Israelis over the management and
status of their churches. Partly this is because of the churches’
extensive land holdings, partly because Israeli settlers are
determined to expand their presence in the Old City, and partly
because Christian clergy now identify themselves more than before with
the Palestinian cause and have become suspect in official Israeli
eyes.

The leadership of the Greek Orthodox Church, which has the largest
Palestinian membership, has run into conflict with Israel over its
appointments. The present Patriarch, Irenous I, is 140th in a direct
line of succession. His appointment was confirmed only in the autumn
after a two-year delay. Israelsaw him as too close to Yassir Arafat,
and delayed recognition of his appointment through a court case
accusing him of anti-Semitism, finally dismissed by the Israeli
Supreme Court. Another priest of Palestinian origin, Father
AtallahHanna, was appointed church spokesman in Jerusalem in 2001 and
became outspoken in denouncing the occupation. He was frequently
stopped and questioned, placed under house arrest and finally
disinvested by the Patriarch under Israeli pressure.

Other denominations have had other disputes, many concerning land
sales. The St John’s Hospice building in the Old City was occupied by
a group of Jewish settlers, causing general concern among Christians
at the lack of an official response.

One of the main concerns is the Christian claim that Israeli
authorities are indifferent to the observance of the age-old status
quo – the complex balance between the various factions which has for
centuries maintained a precarious peace between the Greek Orthodox,
the Armenians, the Latins, Copts, Ethiopians and others who claim
rights in the custody of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.

In the negotiations leading to the establishment of diplomatic
relations with the Vatican, Israel signed a Fundamental Agreement in
1993, giving the Vatican also an official say in church affairs in
Jerusalem. This has yet to be ratified by the Knesset.

Samuel Jacob Kuruvilla, a specialist in Middle East politics at Exeter
University, details many of the clashes in the current issue of the
Palestinian journal al-Aqsa. He argues that recent Israeli proposals,
such as opening anew entrance to the Holy Sepulchre and ending the
800-year tradition that entrusts its keys to two prominent Muslim
families, have elicited intense suspicion from Jerusalem’s Christians
who fear that they will upset the status quo.

`The churches were suspicious whether the Israelis had any plans
ofextending a foothold into the Church of the Holy Sepulchre much as
they had done on the Temple Mount,’ Kuruvilla said. They feared that
the Israelis were planning ` to do what no rulers of Jerusalem had
ever succeeded in carrying out, namely to interfere with the sole
right of the churches themselves to manage affairs within the
precincts of the church’.

Church frustration is directed not only against the ruling
authorities, however. Kuruvilla said that many Christians in Jerusalem
were angry that the European powers had failed to recognise the
sensitivities and traditions of historic churches in the land in which
they were born.

Transporti: Argentino Eurnekian mira a scali Milano e Bergamo

ANSA Notiziario Generale in Italiano
January 13, 2005

TRASPORTI: ARGENTINO EURNEKIAN MIRA A SCALI MILANO E BERGAMO

BUENOS AIRES

(ANSA) – BUENOS AIRES, 13 GEN – L’uomo d’affari argentino
Eduardo Eurnekian, gia’ socio di Volare Group, progetta un
ingresso nel capitale dell’italiana Sea per partecipare alla
gestione degli aeroporti di Milano e di Bergamo. Lo scrive oggi
il quotidiano ‘El cronista’ di Buenos Aires.

Eurnekian controlla attraverso ‘Corporacion America’ la
societa’ ‘Aeropuertos 2000′ (AA2000) che gestisce insieme alla
Sea (36%) 32 scali argentini ed e’ responsabile anche delle
attivita’ degli aeroporti di Montevideo (Uruguay), Guayaquil
(Ecuador) e Zvartnots (Armenia).

Il presidente di AA2000, Ernesto Gutierrez, ha indicato a ‘El
cronista’ che l’operazione riguardante l’Italia si
concretizzerebbe in aprile: “E’ una proposta interessante che
ci farebbe soci della Sea anche in Italia)”.(ANSA).

Dog Epilepsy Gene Discovery Could Aid People-Study

Dog Epilepsy Gene Discovery Could Aid People-Study
Thu Jan 6, 2005 03:11 PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A gene that causes a rare but severe form of
epilepsy in people is also found in highly bred dogs, which could lead
to new ways to treat the condition, an international team of
researchers said on Thursday. Dr. Berge Minassian of the Hospital for
Sick Children in Toronto, Canada and colleagues in the United States,
France and Britain found the gene in purebred dachsunds, and were able
to breed it out of them.

Writing in the journal Science, they said they hoped their findings
could lead to treatments for epilepsy in people.

“Epilepsy afflicts 1 percent of humans and 5 percent of dogs,” they
wrote.

“More than 5 percent of purebred miniature wire-haireddachshunds in
the United Kingdom suffer an autosomal recessive progressive myoclonic
epilepsy, which we show to be Lafora disease, the severest form of
teenage-onset epilepsy in humans.”

In dogs, the disease was much less severe than in humans.

The dachshunds with Lafora disease had a mutation in the EPM2B gene
that prevents the gene from functioning. It takes two faulty copies of
the gene, one from each parent, to cause epilepsy.

The mutation was found across dogs but not in close dog relatives such
as bears, raccoons or skunks, the researchers said. Cats also lack the
mutation.

They said their study at the very least showed that dogs can be used
to study the epilepsy and to look for better treatments.

In 2003 Minassian’s team found the EPM2B gene was associated with
Lafora disease. A closely related gene called EPM2A can also cause the
epilepsy, which causes seizures and progressive brain damage and kills
within about 10 years.

© Reuters 2005

WhiteHouse: Proclamation to Extend NonDisc. Trade Treatment to ROA

The White House

President George W. Bush

For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
January 7, 2005

Presidential Proclamation: To Extend Nondiscriminatory Trade Treatment to
the Products of Armenia

1. Since declaring its independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, Armenia
has made considerable progress in enacting market reforms and on February 5,
2003, Armenia acceded to the World Trade Organization (WTO). The extension
of unconditional normal trade relations treatment to the products of Armenia
will permit the United States to avail itself of all rights under the WTO
with respect to Armenia. Armenia has demonstrated a strong desire to build a
friendly and cooperative relationship with the United States and has been
found to be in full compliance with the freedom of emigration requirements
under title IV of the Trade Act of 1974 (the “1974 Act”) (19 U.S.C. 2431 et
seq.).

2. Pursuant to section 2001(b) of Public Law 108-429, 118 Stat. 2588, and
having due regard for the findings of the Congress in section 2001(a) of
said law, I hereby determine that chapter 1 of title IV of the 1974 Act (19
U.S.C. 2431-2439) should no longer apply to Armenia.

3. Section 604 of the 1974 Act (19 U.S.C. 2483), as amended, authorizes the
President to embody in the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States
the substance of relevant provisions of that Act, or other acts affecting
import treatment, and of actions taken thereunder.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, GEORGE W. BUSH, President of the United States of
America, acting under the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the
laws of the United States, including but not limited to section 2001(b) of
Public Law 108-429, and section 604 of the 1974 Act, do proclaim that:

(1) Nondiscriminatory trade treatment (normal trade relations treatment)
shall be extended to the products of Armenia, which shall no longer be
subject to chapter 1 of title IV of the 1974 Act.

(2) The extension of nondiscriminatory treatment to products of Armenia
shall be effective as of the date of signature of this proclamation.

(3) All provisions of previous proclamations and executive orders that are
inconsistent with the actions taken in this proclamation are superseded to
the extent of such inconsistency.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this seventh day of January,
in the year of our Lord two thousand five, and of the Independence of the
United States of America the two hundred and twenty-ninth.

GEORGE W. BUSH

Powell and Governor of Florida Arrive in Bangkok

New York Times
Jan 3 2005

Powell and Governor of Florida Arrive in Bangkok
By SCOTT SHANE

Published: January 3, 2005

ANGKOK, Jan. 3 – On a journey designed to assure nations devastated
by the tsunami of the United States’ support, Secretary of State
Colin L. Powell arrived here tonight accompanied by Gov. Jeb Bush of
Florida as the personal representative of his brother, President
Bush.

The four-day trip through the region is intended to quash any
lingering criticism of the administration’s initial reaction to the
tragedy. Critics called the reaction sluggish and said it threatened
to bungle an opportunity to win hearts and minds in Indonesia, the
world’s largest Muslim country and the one hit hardest by the
disaster, as well as in Sri Lanka, Thailand and India.

“The president wanted both of us to come out here to demonstrate U.S.
commitment to the nations of the region and to make an assessment as
well, to see what else we might need to do,” Mr. Powell said on board
the 19-hour flight from Washington to Bangkok.

Mr. Powell said the United States’ pledges of aid – increasing an
initial $15 million offer to $35 million and then to $350 million –
was a natural “scaling up” of aid as the number of victims and the
extent of the ruin became clear.

In Washington, President Bush announced that he had asked two former
presidents, his father and Bill Clinton, to head a nationwide
fund-raising effort. “Both men, both presidents know the great
decency of our people,” Mr. Bush said. “They bring tremendous
leadership experience to this role, and they bring good hearts.”

President Bush said his father and Mr. Clinton “will ask Americans to
donate directly to reliable charities already providing help to
tsunami victims.” The president went on to say that “cash donations
are most useful, and I’ve asked the former presidents to solicit
contributions both large and small.”

The president said the United States had made “an initial commitment”
of $350 million for disaster relief. “We’re working with the United
Nations and with governments around the world to coordinate the
comprehensive response,” he said.

For Mr. Powell, 67, the trip to Thailand, Indonesia and Sri Lanka
will be one of his last tours – perhaps the very last – as secretary
of state, and it provides a shift of focus from the war in Iraq and
the strain the war has put on relations with many countries in Europe
and the Muslim world. His term will end when his successor,
Condoleezza Rice, the current national security adviser, is
confirmed.

For Jeb Bush, 51, who is a possible contender for the presidency in
2008 or later, the trip is a first major turn on the international
stage when the eyes of millions of Americans are on the disaster.

Governor Bush, who oversaw Florida’s response to four hurricanes in
August and September, defended the administration’s approach to
tsunami relief and suggested that his presence on the trip would send
a powerful message of sympathy.

“I think family matters in a lot of places, just as it does in the
United States,” the governor said. He recalled in 1988 being asked by
his father to travel to Armenia, which had just been hit by an
earthquake that cost more than 25,000 lives.

“We went, and it made a big difference that a family member would go
– this was on Christmas Eve – go to a far-off place,” Mr. Bush said.
“These hardened Soviet Communists were crying as they saw my son hand
out medicine and toys to children that looked just like him in this
hospital that needed a whole lot of help.”

Explaining the administration’s series of rising pledges of aid, Mr.
Powell said he was alerted to the Dec. 26 tsunami “Sunday after
church” at a time when the number of dead seemed possibly as low as
10,000. He quickly contacted the region’s foreign ministers and
helped start a response from the U.S. Agency for International
Development and the American military. That effort has grown steadily
with the dimensions of the disaster, he said.

As of today, Mr. Powell said that while 15 Americans have been
confirmed dead, 4,000 to 5,000 remain officially unaccounted for,
since their relatives called State Department hotlines to report that
they were in the region and had not been heard from. He suggested
that most of those reported possibly missing probably are fine,
adding that diplomats are working to reduce that total by checking
with families.

Powell and Governor of Florida Arrive in Bangkok
By SCOTT SHANE

Published: January 3, 2005

ANGKOK, Jan. 3 – On a journey designed to assure nations devastated
by the tsunami of the United States’ support, Secretary of State
Colin L. Powell arrived here tonight accompanied by Gov. Jeb Bush of
Florida as the personal representative of his brother, President
Bush.

The four-day trip through the region is intended to quash any
lingering criticism of the administration’s initial reaction to the
tragedy. Critics called the reaction sluggish and said it threatened
to bungle an opportunity to win hearts and minds in Indonesia, the
world’s largest Muslim country and the one hit hardest by the
disaster, as well as in Sri Lanka, Thailand and India.

Advertisement

“The president wanted both of us to come out here to demonstrate U.S.
commitment to the nations of the region and to make an assessment as
well, to see what else we might need to do,” Mr. Powell said on board
the 19-hour flight from Washington to Bangkok.

Mr. Powell said the United States’ pledges of aid – increasing an
initial $15 million offer to $35 million and then to $350 million –
was a natural “scaling up” of aid as the number of victims and the
extent of the ruin became clear.

In Washington, President Bush announced that he had asked two former
presidents, his father and Bill Clinton, to head a nationwide
fund-raising effort. “Both men, both presidents know the great
decency of our people,” Mr. Bush said. “They bring tremendous
leadership experience to this role, and they bring good hearts.”

President Bush said his father and Mr. Clinton “will ask Americans to
donate directly to reliable charities already providing help to
tsunami victims.” The president went on to say that “cash donations
are most useful, and I’ve asked the former presidents to solicit
contributions both large and small.”

The president said the United States had made “an initial commitment”
of $350 million for disaster relief. “We’re working with the United
Nations and with governments around the world to coordinate the
comprehensive response,” he said.

For Mr. Powell, 67, the trip to Thailand, Indonesia and Sri Lanka
will be one of his last tours – perhaps the very last – as secretary
of state, and it provides a shift of focus from the war in Iraq and
the strain the war has put on relations with many countries in Europe
and the Muslim world. His term will end when his successor,
Condoleezza Rice, the current national security adviser, is
confirmed.

For Jeb Bush, 51, who is a possible contender for the presidency in
2008 or later, the trip is a first major turn on the international
stage when the eyes of millions of Americans are on the disaster.

Governor Bush, who oversaw Florida’s response to four hurricanes in
August and September, defended the administration’s approach to
tsunami relief and suggested that his presence on the trip would send
a powerful message of sympathy.

“I think family matters in a lot of places, just as it does in the
United States,” the governor said. He recalled in 1988 being asked by
his father to travel to Armenia, which had just been hit by an
earthquake that cost more than 25,000 lives.

“We went, and it made a big difference that a family member would go
– this was on Christmas Eve – go to a far-off place,” Mr. Bush said.
“These hardened Soviet Communists were crying as they saw my son hand
out medicine and toys to children that looked just like him in this
hospital that needed a whole lot of help.”

Explaining the administration’s series of rising pledges of aid, Mr.
Powell said he was alerted to the Dec. 26 tsunami “Sunday after
church” at a time when the number of dead seemed possibly as low as
10,000. He quickly contacted the region’s foreign ministers and
helped start a response from the U.S. Agency for International
Development and the American military. That effort has grown steadily
with the dimensions of the disaster, he said.

As of today, Mr. Powell said that while 15 Americans have been
confirmed dead, 4,000 to 5,000 remain officially unaccounted for,
since their relatives called State Department hotlines to report that
they were in the region and had not been heard from. He suggested
that most of those reported possibly missing probably are fine,
adding that diplomats are working to reduce that total by checking
with families.

ANKARA: Turkey: Motto of the Political and Social Debate in France

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
Jan 3 2005

Turkey: The Motto of the Political and Social Debate in France

France’s skeptical stance against Turkey’s membership to the European
Union (EU) has become a critical issue during these days. The
negative voices that are very loud in French public have affected the
political atmosphere not only in France but also in Turkey. Turks
have become very suspicious about French public during these days
while Turkey’s membership to the EU is the central concern. As the
survey of ISRO, EU Perception Survey, proved that 33.5 % of the
respondents say France is the most important obstacle for Turkey’s EU
entry, it is clear that the relations will become more strained. In
order to draw a full picture, it is significant to analyze the
reasons behind this opposition. After a short explanation of the
overall status in France about Turkey’s accession to the European
Union (EU), the unknown side of the coin will be mentioned in this
paper. As an introductory part, this work aims to question simply the
unapparent part of the scene in France. Who are the actors of this
`game’?
There is general truth the Turkish issue divided the French public.
The debate between those who see Turkey’s Islamic society as an
obstacle, and those who see the country as a valuable bridge between
Europe and the Middle East, is already heating up. Although many
French politicians and citizens are worried about admitting a large
Muslim nation into the Union, the proponents of Turkish membership
have the upper hand. The President Jacques Chirac favors Turkish
membership but he is in an isolated position. The leading state and
political elites, including the Prime Minister Jean Pierre Raffarin,
are against Turkey’s membership. Especially, Raffarin’s declaration
with an unusual bluntness, “Do we want the river of Islam to enter to
the riverbed of secularism?” explains the situation.
The first reason behind this aggression is the Muslim minority in the
country. More than nine million Muslims live in Western Europe, which
makes them the largest religious minority in the region. While the
majority of Muslim population in Europe lives in France with a high
percentage, 10%, French public are skeptic against them. Muslims have
an isolated life in France. They are not `with’ their French
neighbors. This feeling of `otherness’ makes the Muslim, generally
Turks, segregated from daily life. This feeling has leaded them to
the uprising and the frequency of crime has increased. It can be said
that the repressed feelings occurred under the conditions of being
isolated. Therefore, when the crime rates have increased in France,
especially, in Muslim neighborhood, the image of Turks has been
shaped: the criminal. After 11 September attacks the image of Muslim
have become more significant and contentious. The extent of popular
opposition to the Muslims has increased. Status distinctions based on
religion have become the basis for the political divisions in France
and this became more apparent during the debatable period of Turkey’s
accession to the EU.
Another reason that lies behind against Turkey stance of France is
Armenian population who live in France. As political elites do not
want to lose their votes, they carried out a deliberate policy. It
should be mentioned that only 400.000 Armenians live in France but
they are French citizen. Although nearly six million Muslim are in
the country, they are not French citizen, especially the first
generation rejected to be a French citizen. On the other hand,
younger generations are much more willing to be a French citizen.
At this point, it is valuable to mention that for French public,
national identity is equal to the national security. Therefore, the
Muslim problem for them is both a threat to the French identity and
France’s security. France experienced this kind of `problem’ during
the history, and their solution is nearly same; to make the Muslims
French. As Napoleon’s assimilation policy to the Protestant and
Jewish people, today politicians aim to do the same. Their aim is to
form a homogeneous French identity by erasing the identity of
`other’.
Turks are the scapegoat at this perspective. The suppressed
aggression against Turks has become visible during these days while
Turkey’s accession to the EU is debatable. French do not want to lose
their powerful position in the EU. The majority of French see Turkey
as irreconcilably foreign thanks to geography, religion, culture —
and the fact that, with a population of nearly 70 million, more than
France’s, Turkey would simply be too big to assimilate, and a country
too big is, simply, a threat to their big France dream.
France’s superiority complex has always shaped the domestic and
foreign policy of the country. Some political elites have been the
main actors of this dream. The former President Valerie Giscard
D’Estaing declared that Turkish membership would be “the end of the
EU.” Giscard has also warned Europeans that Turkey’s supporters are
“the adversaries of the European Union.”. D’Estaing mentioned that
Turkey was not a part of the European tradition, culture or history.
`The European convention sought to define the foundations of what
brings us together: the cultural legacy of ancient Greece and Rome,
the religious heritage which infused European life, the creative
enthusiasm of the Renaissance, the philosophy of the Enlightenment,
the contribution of rational and scientific thought,’ (Le Figaro
25/11) he wrote and added that `None of these elements was shared by
Turkey.’ According to him, EU should propose to Turkey `a privileged
membership’.
Sarkozy as the chairman of France’s ruling People Movement Union
Party, Sarkozy will also be candidate for the country’s presidency in
the 2007 elections against Chirac. According to Sarkozy, Turkey
should be a `special partner’ rather than a full member of this
integration. He declared that he was not against `co-operation’ with
Turkey and added that `I want Turkey to be associated with Europe but
not integrated into the European Union’.
The declarations of the actors make the picture clear in France.
Turkey has become a political means in the country, especially before
the presidential elections in 2007. French leaders seem to feel that
refusing to admit a large Islamic country into the Union would be
seen as a disastrous confirmation of the “clash of civilizations”.
Furthermore, French people and diplomats, for their part, hope that
admitting Turkey to the EU will bring confirmation that Islam is not
incompatible with western values. Therefore, it can be said that
Turkey has become the motto of the political and social debate in
Turkey. A big country, or a threat to their `superiority’, has also
become the motto of their future.

Selin Akyüz,ISRO

Armenia to increase import of gas from Russia in 2005

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
December 28, 2004 Tuesday 4:56 AM Eastern Time

Armenia to increase import of gas from Russia in 2005

By Yulia Bagrysheva

MOSCOW

Armenia will increase the import of natural gas from Russia by 25
percent in 2005, representative of the joint-stock company
“ArmGazprom” Karen Karapetyan told journalists on Tuesday.

According to Karapetyan, growth of gas deliveries is mainly connected
with the increased gas supplying of the republic and better
socio-economic situation in Armenia.

In 2004, Russia delivered 1.33 billion cubic metres of natural gas to
Armenia, and in 2005, the volume will amount to 1.7 billion cubic
meters.

“ArmGazprom” is the only supplier of natural gas to the internal
market of Armenia. The company was founded in Yerevan in 1997 to sell
natural gas to local consumers and transport Russian gas through the
territory of Armenia to other countries.

Russian, Armenian justice ministers sign cooperation agreement

Russian, Armenian justice ministers sign cooperation agreement

ITAR-TASS news agency, Moscow
28 Dec 04

Moscow, 28 December: The Russian and Armenian justice ministers, Yuriy
Chayka and David Arutyunyan respectively, signed a cooperation
agreement in Moscow today.

ITAR-TASS was told at the Russian Justice Ministry PR department that
the agreement stipulates cooperation in shaping up and implementing
state policy and in the sphere of justice, in ensuring the rights and
legitimate interests of the individual and the state, in providing
support for, and the implementation of, criminal sentences, court
decisions and decisions by other bodies as well as in some other
areas.