National Press Club Calls On Legal Bodis To Take Necessary Actions T

NATIONAL PRESS CLUB CALLS ON LEGAL BODIS TO TAKE NECESSARY ACTIONS TO REVEAL ONES TAKING STEP OF TERRORISM AGAINST JOURNALIST

Noyan Tapan
Feb 12 2007

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 12, NOYAN TAPAN. The National Press Club (NPC)
expressed its indignation on the occasion of the terrorism step against
Ara Saghatelain, the owner of the "Im Iravunk" (My Right) newspaper
and "Panorama.am" electronic periodical. As it is mentioned in the
statement spread by the NPC, "those terrorism actions more strain the
inner political situation of Armenia during the pre-electoral period,
making it uncontrolable and, as the experience shows, journalists
and mass media become the first victim of it." Expressing anxiety
that similar crimes are not revealed as a rule, the NPC at the same
time calls on the legal bodies to take necessary steps to reveal and
punish those guilty to keep media representatives from such terrorism
attacks. To recap, unknown people threw bottles filled with petrol
on A.Saghatelian’s car and set it on fire at about 20:00, February 8.

Bush Swaps Turkey For Iran

BUSH SWAPS TURKEY FOR IRAN

Assyrian International News Agency
Feb 7 2007

The US has dropped Turkey, a NATO member, as a strategic partner in
the Middle East in favor of Iran. The only good aspect of this Bush
Administration decision is that it has ended the confusion over US
policies. The next step for the Bush Administration will be to ease
US trade restrictions so that US companies can compete for business
in Iran. The pro-Iran faction at State and Defense is overjoyed. The
practical effect of this pro-Iran shift in US policy is that the US is
preparing to partition Iraq, as desired by Iran and its Kurdish allies.

Evidence of this pro-Iran shift in US policy is as follows.

First, the US Congress remains strongly anti-Turkey. Speaker Pelosi
would not even meet with Turkish Foreign Minister Gul during his visit
to the US this week. Also, Congress is still determined to pass the
resolution condemning Turkey’s genocide against the Armenians.

Passage of this resolution would seriously set back US-Turkish
relations.

Second, in a major insult to Turkey, the US refuses to postpone the
December 2007 referendum in Kirkuk that will solidify Kurdish control
in Kirkuk. This US support for Kirkuk’s referendum is tantamount to
a US declaration of war against Turkey, as well as against Iraq’s
Sunni population and the Arab states in general. Iraq’s resistance
movements — both Sunni and Shi’ite — will be strengthened.

Third, the US will continue to accept an Iranian and Kurdish veto of
Iraq’s National Petroleum law. Iran and the Kurds block the petroleum
law because they want to control the bulk of Iraq’s oil resources,
not Baghdad, via Kurdish control of Kirkuk and Iran’s control of
Basra. As for Iraq, it will be partitioned by Iran and the Kurds
and impoverished.

Fourth, US forces in Northern Iraq will continue to ignore the PKK,
which is using Kurdish territory to launch attacks into Turkey. As a
result of FM Gul’s recent visit, the US has agreed to "take action"
against the PKK, as it has many times in the past, when little or
nothing has been done.

In short, a New Middle East is emerging. The US has swapped Turkey
for Iran as a strategic partner. Iraq will disappear from the map.

Iran and Kurdistan are now the dominant regional powers, with
unconditional US support. Iraq is part of the Iran-Kurdish coalition,
along with Lebanon, thanks to Hezbollah. Turkey will be the first
target of the Iran-Kurdish coalition. Syria will be the second target,
and Saudi Arabia the third. Russia and China, who detest and fear Iran,
are now, along with the Arab states, in Iran’s gun-sights.

Welcome to the Brave New World.

‘Genocide Denial Laws Will Shut Down Debate’

‘GENOCIDE DENIAL LAWS WILL SHUT DOWN DEBATE’

Spiked, UK
Feb 6 2007

She’s one of the best-known warriors against Holocaust denial. Yet
Deborah Lipstadt thinks EU plans to ban ‘genocide denial’ are
a disaster.

‘For European politicians, bringing in a ban on genocide denial is
like apple pie. It’s what I call a freebie. They’re doing it to make
themselves feel good. I mean, who could possibly be against standing up
to nasty genocide deniers? Only when you get to the heart of it, this
"freebie", this populist move, could have a dire impact on academic
debate. Even on truth itself.’

Deborah Lipstadt, Dorot Professor of Modern Jewish and Holocaust
Studies at Emory University in Atlanta, may be one of the best-known
warriors against Holocaust denial. But she has no time for the
proposals currently doing the rounds of the European Union which
suggest making it a crime to deny the Holocaust, other genocides and
crimes against humanity in general.

Last week it was revealed that Germany, current holder of the EU’s
rotating presidency, is proposing a Europe-wide ban on Holocaust
denial and other forms of genocide denial. This would make a crime
of ‘publicly condoning, denying or grossly trivialising…crimes of
genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes [as defined in the
Statute of the International Criminal Court].’ (1) In some European
countries – most notably Germany and Austria, which formed the heart
of the Third Reich – it is already against the law to deny or minimise
the Nazis’ exterminatory campaign against the Jews in the Second World
War. This new legislation might also make it a crime, punishable by
fines or imprisonment, to raise awkward questions about the official
history of conflicts that took place over the past 20 years.

‘This is so over the top’, says Lipstadt, in between sips of decaf
coffee in the plush surroundings of the Athenaeum Hotel in Piccadilly,
London. Her earthy New York accent sounds almost out of place in a
building where even the doorman comes across as posh. ‘The question
of genocide, the history of genocide and what you can say about it,
should not be decided by politicians and judges’, she insists.

Lipstadt certainly can’t be accused of being soft on deniers. Her
book Denying the Holocaust: The Growing Assault on Truth and Memory,
published in 1994, meticulously exposed the lies and the underlying
racist agenda of those who deny the truth of the Nazi Holocaust.

Famously (or infamously) she was subsequently sued by the British
historian David Irving, whom she had named in the book as a Holocaust
denier. In January 2000, the 32-day trial, a showdown between an
American-Jewish historian and a far-right British historian, became a
legal debate about the history of the Nazis, and the nature of truth
itself. Irving lost rather spectacularly. The judge branded him an
anti-Semite, a racist and a Holocaust denier who had ‘deliberately
misrepresented and manipulated historical evidence’. Lipstadt recounts
the experience in History on Trial: My Day in Court with David Irving.

Yet this ridiculer of deniers is no fan of the idea that Holocaust
denial or genocide denial should be outlawed. The current EU proposal
to criminalise denial of contemporary genocides and war crimes is an
affront to serious historical debate, she says.

Consider Srebrenica, the massacre that took place at the end of the
Bosnian civil war in 1995 in which it is estimated that 8,000 Bosnian
Muslims were killed. ‘Some people argue that, given there are only so
many tens of thousands of people in Srebrenica and the Serb soldiers
went after an X number of a specific group, then it is genocide. But
someone else might say it’s a massacre of the X population, not a
genocide – because if you’re going to use that word then you have
to go back to what the Nazis did to the Jews or what was done to the
Armenians [by the Turks in the First World War]’, says Lipstadt.

‘That is an entirely legitimate debate to have about Srebrenica. Are
we now saying that the person who says it’s not a genocide will be
fined and punished?’

Lipstadt is also worried about the way in which debate about
the Armenian experience might be closed down. During the First
World War, as Ottoman Turkish forces fought against the Russians,
some of the Armenian minority in Eastern Anatolia sided with
Russia. Turkey responded by rounding up and killing hundreds of
Armenian community leaders in April 1915, and then forcibly deporting
the two million-strong Armenian community in marches towards Syria and
Mesopotamia (now Iraq). Hundreds of thousands died as a result. At
the end of last year, to the fury of Turkey, France made it a crime
to deny that the Armenian tragedy was a genocide, and now Germany
seems to hope that the rest of Europe will follow suit by accepting
its proposals to outlaw denial of all genocides.

‘This is another body-blow to academic debate’, says Lipstdadt. ‘I
know serious historians who do not deny for a minute what happened
to the Armenians, who do not deny the severity or the barbarity of
what happened to them. But they question, they ask intellectually,
"Was this a genocide, or was it a horrendous massacre?" They don’t
ask that question on ideological grounds; they don’t have a shred of
allegiance to Turkey. They ask it intellectually, because they want
to get to the truth.’

‘I happen to think they’re wrong’, she says. She believes the Armenians
did suffer a genocide. ‘But you can, indeed you must, have a vigorous
academic debate about historical events. And in the course of that
vigorous academic debate you probably would illuminate weaknesses
in both sides of the argument, and hopefully sharpen the arguments
as a result. That is what academic debate is about. This kind of
legislation could put a kabash on that.’

Last year, in its reporting of the French decision to outlaw denial
of the Armenian genocide, the BBC was forced to explain why it
put the word ‘genocide’ in inverted commas. ‘Whether or not the
deaths of hundreds of thousands of Armenians during the First
World War amounted to genocide is a matter for heated debate’,
it said (2). Yet if the proposed legislation is passed in the EU,
then such things will no longer be a matter for heated debate; they
will become legally-defined truths that you deny or question at your
peril. Maybe even the BBC will find itself in the dock for putting
‘Armenian genocide’ in inverted commas.

It strikes me that as well as stifling open academic debate the
proposed legislation could criminalise political protest. Very often
these days, Western powers justify wars of intervention abroad in
the language of combating genocide. Bill Clinton and Tony Blair
described their bombing crusade over Kosovo in 1999 as an effort to
stop Slobodan Milosevic’s ‘genocide’ against the Kosovo Albanians. In
truth, the final number of civilians killed in Kosovo – including
both Kosovo Albanians by Milosevic’s cronies and Serbs in NATO air
strikes – was fewer than 3,000. The Nazis were capable of killing
12,000 a day in Auschwitz alone. As Nazi camp survivor Elie Wiesel
said, taking umbrage at the use of Holocaust-talk to justify the
Kosovo campaign, ‘The Holocaust was conceived to annihilate the
last Jew on the planet. Does anyone believe that Milosevic and his
accomplices seriously planned to exterminate all the Bosnians, all
the Albanians, all the Muslims in the world?’ (3) If EU officials,
in their infinite wisdom, decide that a conflict such as Kosovo is
genocide, and therefore the bombers must be sent in, will protesters
who question that line be criminalised under the new legislation?

Lipstadt finds today’s over-use of the genocide and Holocaust
tags, to describe conflicts or political repression, disturbing and
distasteful. She seems still to be reeling from an article she read in
The Times on Saturday, the day before we met. Under the headline ‘We
are vilified like Jews by the Nazis, says Muslim leader’, the paper
reported that Birmingham’s most senior Muslim leader had compared
contemporary political Britain to Nazi Germany.

‘That is ludicrous. It is stupid and ridiculous’, she says. ‘Is
there fear of Muslims today? No doubt. Do some politicians play on
that? Of course. But to compare Muslims in Britain to Jews in Nazi
Germany…that shows an utter lack of historical understanding, not to
mention sensitivity. Here, the police go out of their way to explain to
Muslims what is going on. In Nazi Germany if a Jew spoke to a policeman
he got hit. It was a whole government dedicated to being against you,
to eliminating you. So that is a disgusting kind of analogy. It is
wicked, and cleverly wicked. Sometimes it is done in a calculating
fashion to further your aims by playing that victim card.’

To the ‘befuddlement’ of some of her colleagues, Lipstadt is also
opposed to laws outlawing actual Nazi Holocaust denial. Such laws
already exist in Germany, Austria, Belgium, France, the Czech Republic,
Lithuania, Poland, Romania and Slovakia, and under Germany’s proposals
these will be extended to the rest of the EU and will also cover
genocide and war crimes denial. She points out that there is a huge
difference between those historians who legitimately debate something
like the Armenian experience, and the charlatans who distort the
truth in order to show that the Holocaust didn’t happen and ‘the
Jews’ are all liars. Where ‘genocide denial’ laws might frustrate
serious academic debate, Holocaust denial laws are only aimed at
punishing weird and malicious pseudo-historians. Yet she is against
the censorship of these charlatans, too.

‘I’m opposed to Holocaust denial laws for three reasons’, she says.

‘First because I believe in free speech. Governments should make
no laws limiting free speech, because it is never good when that
happens. Second, because these laws turn Holocaust deniers into
martyrs. Look what happened to David Irving when he was released from
jail in Austria – he became a media darling, given room to spout his
misinformation. We should ignore them rather than chasing them down.

‘And thirdly, and most importantly, such laws suggest that we don’t
have the history, the documentation, the evidence to make the case
for the Holocaust having happened. They suggest we don’t trust the
truth. But we do have the evidence, and we should keep on developing
it and deepening it, and we should trust it.’

Ironically, given her outspoken opposition to laws against Holocaust
and genocide denial, many point to Lipstadt’s legal victory over David
Irving as evidence for why the courtroom is a good place to resolve
historical issues and punish those who lie about or deny historic
tragedies. ‘I wish they wouldn’t do that’, she says. She points
out that her case was not about ruthlessly pursuing Irving in order
to prove the truth about the Holocaust. ‘He came after me! He sued
me! I didn’t want it. I tried to stop it. Our whole legal strategy
was premised on trying to make this guy go away. Only when it was
very close to the case, when I saw the wealth of evidence that showed
how he had lied and distorted the facts, was I glad it had come to
court. Aside from that, I can think of no other instance where history
has benefited from courtroom adjudication.’

‘Politicians should not be doing history’, she says. ‘They have a
hard enough time doing politics right and doing legislation right.

Let them not muck up history, too.’

Brendan O’Neill is editor of spiked. Deborah Lipstadt’s book History
on Trial: My Day in Court with David Irving is published by Harper
Perennial. (Buy this book from Amazon(UK)). Visit her website here.

The photographs of Professor Lipstadt were taken by Sasha Frieze who
blogs at Sashinka.

(1) EU plans far-reaching ‘genocide denial’ law, Bruno Waterfield,
Daily Telegraph, 4 February 2007

(2) Q&A: Armenian ‘genocide’, BBC News, 12 October 2006

(3) Quoted in ‘Exploiting genocide’, Brendan O’Neill, Spectator,
21 January 2006

/article/2824/

http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php?/site

Kocharyan Didn’t Receive Lenmark

KOCHARYAN DIDN’T RECEIVE LENMARK

A1+
[08:16 pm] 06 February, 2007

Goran Lenmark, special envoy on Nagorno Karabakh issue at the OSCE
Parliamentary Assembly, assumes that the OSCE observers will arrive
in Armenia 1 – 1.5 months earlier the parliamentary elections. Prior
to their arrival, another delegation will come to Armenia to observe
the preliminary works.

Lenmark left Yerevan for Tbilisi on Tuesday. During his interview
to Radio Liberty, he said, "There is no doubt that Armenians want
to have fair and transparent elections." He voiced hope that the
elections will meet the democratic standards.

Tomorrow Lenmark will leave for Baku to meet with Ilham Aliyev.

It is noteworthy that Lenmark’s meeting with RA President Robert
Kocharyan didn’t take place as "the president wasn’t in Yerevan"
in Lenmark’s words.

Viktor Soghomonyan, speaker to the RA President, informed Radio
Liberty that "there wasn’t any meeting with Lenmark in President
Kocharyan’s agenda."

Policemen Honoring Hrant Dink’s Murderer Dismissed

POLICEMEN HONORING HRANT DINK’S MURDERER DISMISSED

ArmRadio.am
05.02.2007 16:44

The Interior Minister of Turkey has dismissed the policemen who took
photos with the criminals that murdered Hrant Dink. As it was reported
earlier one of the Turkish TV Channels broadcasted a video, which
pictured that Turkish policemen treated Ogun Samast, the 17-year old
murderer of Hrant Dink, as a hero. Currently the Police is searching
for the authors of the video.

Chief Prosecutor Praises Law-Enforcement Bodies for Good Job

Armenpress

CHIEF PROSECUTOR PRAISES LAW-ENFORCEMENT BODIES FOR
GOOD JOB

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 2, ARMENPRESS: Armenian
law-enforcement bodies reported a 10 percent rise in
the number of crimes committed across the country last
year, but the rise was attributed by chief prosecutor
Aghvan Hovsepian to ‘a set of positive developments,’
particularly, to an increased crime detection rate.
The chief prosecutor also praised investigators
‘positive job’ in revelation of corruption and graft
crimes, which rose from 8 in 2005 to 22 last year. He
said crime detection rate was also higher in tracking
down and apprehending people avoiding taxes, duties
and smugglers.
Hovsepian also poured lavish praise on
law-enforcers who deal with fighting against drug sale
and use, who revealed last 957 such cases, up from 737
in 2005. But he also said that along with these
positive changes the number of grave and very grave
crimes last year rose 15 and 23 percent respectively,
which he said is a very serious concern.

Power Production Down 6% in 2005

Armenpress

POWER PRODUCTION DOWN 6 PERCENT IN 2005

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 2, ARMENPRESS: Armenian power
generating facilities produced last year 5.940 billion
kilowatt/hour electricity. 6 percent less than in the
previous 2005.
Armenian National Statistical Committee said hydro
power plants produced nearly 3 percent more power from
a year before, while thermal power plants and Armenian
nuclear power plant produced 19 and 2.8 percent less
electricity respectively.
The nuclear power plant in Metsamor produced 2.640
billion kilowatt/hour electricity accounting for 44.4
percent of overall power production, while thermal
power plants produced 1.475 billion kilowatt/hours
(24.8 percent) and hydro power plants produced 1.822
billion kilowatt/hours or 31 percent.
A wind power plant in Lori province produced 2.6
million kilowatt/hours or 0.1 percent.

Putin advised Yerevan and Baku to establish relations

PanARMENIAN.Net

Putin advised Yerevan and Baku to establish relations
01.02.2007 16:37 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ During Russian President Vladimir
Putin’s press conference in Moscow asked about the
Nagorno Karabakh conflict Putin advised Armenia and
Azerbaijan to establish relations independently.
Particularly, the head of Russian State stated that
the two countries could, say, jointly produce an
inexpensive alcoholic drink like `Aghdam’ port, which
was very popular during Soviet times. Asked why Russia
needs military base in Armenia, Vladimir Putin
answered Russian bases in CIS come still from former
USSR. In his words, the base in Armenia is not aimed
against any country in the region, including
Azerbaijan, Lenta.ru reports.

World-Famous Pianist Francois-Joel Thiollier To Concert in Yerevan

WORLD-FAMOUS PIANIST FRANCOIS-JOEL THIOLLIER TO HAVE CONCERTS IN
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 1, NOYAN TAPAN. Solo concert of world-famous
pianist Francois-Joel Thiollier will be held on February 1 at
A.Spendiarian National Academic Theater of Opera and Ballet. And on
February 2, at one of Yerevan clubs, the painist will present his
concert program "80 Minutes Around the World." The famous French
pianist’s Yerevan concert was initiated by the Armenian Music Center
within the framework of the Prospects of 21st 8th festival.

As festival’s Chairman, composer Stepan Rostomian reported at the
February 1 press conference, concerts of world-famous musicians have
been organized in Armenia for already several years on the initiative
of the Center. In his words, the festival is unique by its nature and
art level both in Armenia and in the whole region. S.Rostomian also
said that this year the Prospects of 21st festival will become a
member of European Festival Association.

Francois-Joel Thiollier stated that he does not miss the chance to
have concerts in Yerevan. "I love Armenians and Armenia. I have even
brought my family here for them to see Armenia’s picturesque nature
and historic-cultural monuments," the pianist said.

Francois-Joel Thiollier is laureate of eight international
competitions, he received Queen Elizabeth prize in Brussels and
Tchaikovki prize in Moscow. He has had concerts in more than fourty
countries and has played with world-famous orchestras. Francois-Joel
Thiollier has released more than 40 cassettes and over 35 laser disks.

Events Dedicated to 28th Anniversary of IRI Revolution in Yerevan

EVENTS DEDICATED TO 28th ANNIVERSARY OF IRI REVOLUTION TO BE HELD IN YEREVAN

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, NOYAN TAPAN. The Iranian revolution implemented
great and fatal overturn not only in Iran but in all over the
world. Reza Atufi, the Cultural Advisor of the Embassy of Iran to
Armenia stated about it at the January 31 press conference.

"Today Iran is in a more stable state, and the Iranian people keep and
develop achievements of the revolution and the reforms started by it,"
the Advisor said.

In the Culture Advisor’s words, a false propaganda about the
revolution exists in the world starting from the first days of the
Islamic revolution, but it did not influence on the spiritual and
constructive posture of the Iranian people. Iran "was able to overcome
the transitional period and rose dozens of steps." By democratic
marches to take place in different cities of Iran on February 10,
people will prove how they defended and kept their achievements in
different spheres, especially within the framework of the neuclear
energy peace-keeping program," Reza Atufi.

Reza Atufi expressed confidence that the main and first mystery of
this splendid period of the Iranian history is the Ashura movement and
Imam Hussein’s and his 72 co-thinkers’ martyrdom for the sake of
common people’s liberty. "150 mln Moslems of the world again jointly
mourned yesterday Imam Hussein’s martyrdom," the Culture Advisor
emphasized.

Reza Atufi mentioned that numerous national minorities, religious and
spiritual communities, including Armenians, live in Iran which greatly
assist the revolution and creation of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

In his words, the 28th anniversary of the victory of the Islamic
Republic of Iran this time coincided with the month of Moharan and the
Ashura ceremony. Celebrations and jubilee events dedicated to the
28th anniversary of the IRI revolution will be implemented in 100
countries of the world during these days, on the occasion of the 28th
anniversary of the IRI revolution.

The events dedicated to the Iranian revolution will be held in Yerevan
as well: an exhibition of Iranian masters’ works will open at the
Museum of People’s Art, the presentation of the Armenian translation
of the Saint Koran will take place at the Writers’ Union, a
competition-exhibition of works of the P.Terlemezian college students
will be held in the Blue Mosque, etc.