In fighting visa fraud, nothing beats the personal touch.

Los Angeles Times

latimes.com/news/local/la-me-immig-fraud7-2010feb 07,0,7555071.story

In fighting visa fraud, nothing beats the personal touch

U.S. is using new technology and better cooperation between agencies
to detect false applications, but face-to-face visits are the best way
to catch a fraudulent claim.

By Teresa Watanabe
February 7, 2010

The immigration investigator was polite but persistent as he
approached the leasing agent at a five-story office building in El
Monte. Where is Suite 105? Can I see it? Where is the person who
established the business?

The leasing agent paused. The businessman was trying to set up the
office a year ago, she said, but he never did. Actually, she added, he
used the place only as a mailing address.

Bingo. According to immigration official Rand L. Gallagher, the visit
confirmed his suspicions that the Chinese national in question had
filed a fraudulent application for a business visa. The visa petition
claimed the El Monte office housed employees who were going to start a
U.S. subsidiary of an import-export parent company in China.

But "Suite 105" turned out to be a tiny side room inside the leasing
office, with no workers and no evidence of a business operation.

"There’s a lot of covering up going on," said Gallagher, who heads the
western operations of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services’
anti-fraud unit. "I doubt the guy was even here."

Increased site visits like the recent trip to El Monte are a key tool
in the federal government’s newly aggressive fight against immigration
fraud. The visits are to expand to as many as 25,000 this fiscal year
from 5,000 last year, according to Alejandro N. Mayorkas, director of
the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.

Site visits are required for each application for a religious worker
visa after a 2006 internal review found a 33% fraud rate. The expanded
site visit program will focus on applicants for a skilled worker visa
known as H-1B. Applications in that visa category were found to have
a 21% rate of fraud or technical violations in a 2008 internal review.

Investigators have found applicants for skilled worker or managerial
visas working at convenience stores, fast-food restaurants and video
shops. They have discovered bogus firms, as in the El Monte case. They
have documented exaggerated claims, such as an Armenian flower shop in
Glendale that asserted the need to bring in a foreign worker as a
full-time accountant when the business, on inspection, turned out to
be far too small to need one.

"I’d be happy to find that everything was legitimate, but that’s not
the real world," said Gallagher, who has investigated immigration
fraud for 14 years and previously served as an intelligence analyst,
interrogator and linguist in the U.S. Air Force. "The reality is that
there are many people who exploit our agency. . . . We’re trying to
make sure we give benefits to people who actually deserve them."

Some fear, however, that the aggressive anti-fraud effort is having
unintended negative consequences. Robert P. Deasy, a spokesman for the
American Immigration Lawyers Assn., said many of his organization’s
business clients are complaining that denial rates for visa
applications appear to be on the rise even for legitimate applicants.

Although immigration officials could not provide overall denial rates,
a government study last year found they doubled for religious worker
petitions, to 60% in fiscal year 2007 from 31% the previous year.

In addition, Deasy said, many of his members are concerned that the
government is contracting out site visits to people whom they view as
inadequately trained in immigration law.

"We’re seeing a whole lot of employer heartburn," Deasy said.

The federal push on immigration fraud began after a 2002 study by
government auditors found that immigration fraud was "pervasive and
significant" and that immigration officials were poorly equipped to
fight it.

The report expressed alarm that criminals were increasingly using the
application process to gain legal entry into the U.S. for narcotics
trafficking, terrorism and other illegal activity.

Since then, the government has increased resources and reorganized its
anti-fraud operations, including the 2004 establishment of the Office
of Fraud Detection and National Security to find false claims
involving marriage petitions, work visas, green card renewals and
other immigration benefits. Gallagher heads the nation’s largest
regional program, which is based in Laguna Niguel and covers
California, Arizona, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, Alaska and Hawaii.

In the last six years, the number of anti-fraud officers nationwide
has grown from 100 to 600. Offices have been established in Mexico and
Germany, with others being considered for the Philippines, China,
India and South Korea.

The number of fraud leads investigated has jumped from 2,620 in 2005
to 31,827 last year.

And the fraud office’s budget has swelled to $95 million in fiscal
year 2009, up from about $20 million five years earlier. To help fund
the operations, Congress approved a $500 "fraud fee" on certain
business visa applications, raising millions of dollars a year for
investigators in the Homeland Security, Labor and State departments.

Addressing a key criticism in the 2002 report, officials have created
a national case management system to allow investigators to share
information across state lines.

That system allowed Gallagher and his staff to learn that one Southern
California man suspected of business visa fraud had moved to South
Carolina and was trying to win legal status through marriage to a
U.S. citizen.

The couple withdrew their petition in November after an immigration
officer found in an interview that the Chinese suspect and African
American woman were 15 years apart in age, did not speak each other’s
native language and shared no common address. His green card
application was denied in November and he has been ordered to appear
before an immigration judge.

New technology, including an enhanced computer system with expanded
access to databases, has also aided the fight against fraud, Gallagher
said.

For green card renewals, for instance, officers can now see the photos
and other biographical information in the original application to scan
for potential fraud. That advance has helped keep fraud rates low for
green card replacements — less than 1%, according to an internal
review.

"We are by no means less vigilant than we were in 2002," Mayorkas
said. "But our vigilance is far better equipped than it was then."

Mayorkas added that better collaboration with other agencies has also
helped the anti-fraud effort. In Los Angeles, the immigration services
and customs and enforcement agencies have collaborated to break some
major fraud cases. But site visits have proved to be one of the
biggest keys to success, Gallagher said. An applicant’s paperwork can
raise red flags: A new subsidiary claiming it needs four or five
foreign managers, for instance, will probably be scrutinized.

But nothing clinches a case like face-to-face encounters,
investigators say. Once, Gallagher drove out to a north Los Angeles
County community to visit a supposed applicant for a managerial visa.

Instead, he found a farmer loading fruit and vegetables into a trailer
who knew nothing about the visa petition.

His name had been used by a man whom officials ultimately found had
filed more than a dozen fraudulent visa petitions.

U.S. Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa), who has led the fight for
tougher anti-fraud efforts, praised the progress that has been made
but cautioned that the problem was a "vicious cycle that never really
ends."

[email protected]
Co pyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

ISTANBUL: Better or worse days for the ATAA?

Hurriyet, Turkey
Feb 5 2010

Better or worse days for the ATAA?

Friday, February 5, 2010
Ä°LHAN TANIR

There were many reasons for the Democratic Party’s mammoth Senate loss
in Massachusetts. In trying to elaborate on the importance of this
loss in my recent columns, I emphasized that many of the Democratic
voters, as well as the independents, were dissatisfied by what they
came to view as a failed Obama presidency during the first year.

They wanted to punish him severely for seeing none of the sort of
change Obama promised.

The state of the American economy, the ongoing wars and the
ever-increasing budget deficit annoyed the American voters, as did the
health-care debacle that has become a nightmare for all, as it seems
it will never get passed in the American Congress, nor go away.

For Obama, like every other politician, there were many great
obstacles to fulfilling his promised `change’ mantra, and he can
explain them quite marvelously, as seen once more in the recent State
of the Union speech.

Therefore, Democrats and the Obama administration suffered a huge blow
in Massachusetts, which was felt heavily in Washington, D.C.,
especially by the lifting of the Democratic Party’s super-majority in
the Senate. The American media heavily faulted the Obama presidency
for this loss, along with the flawed campaign of the Democratic
Party’s Massachusetts Senate candidate, Martha Coakley.

However, the Massachusetts loss was reported in the Hürriyet Daily
News with a very different touch than many could have predicted.
According to a recent report in the Daily News, the Armenian-Americans
played a big role in this Massachusetts election, and wanted to punish
the Obama presidency. As a self-described political junkie, I must
confess that I have never seen such analyses in any of the American
media organizations or columns. I think that if the Armenian-American
community was such an important factor in such a vital election, one
that has changed the political calculation deeply in Washington, it
would have been a nationwide topic and discussed overtly.

A letter featured last week in the column of David Judson, editor in
chief of this newspaper, and written by Ergun Kirlikovali, the
president-elect of the Assembly of Turkish-American Associations, or
ATAA, a `30-year-old nonprofit umbrella organization with 60
components, fielding 5,000 members nationwide,’ also attracted some
attention.

The ATAA, unfortunately, has not had a good reputation among the
Turkish community living in America until recently for its internal
fights. It has become mostly a grassroots organization that uses
almost all its energy, time and money to fight the Armenian diaspora’s
efforts, especially before and during the April 24 fever every year `
when the American administration announces how it considers and words
the tragic events that happened to the Armenians during World War I.

Although I understand the logic of this struggle, seeing a Turkish
nonprofit organization being tied to this struggle only, in addition
to the never-ending internal fights ` until recently ` painted a
picture of a narrow-minded and reactionary organization that turned
me, along with many others, off over the years.

When I saw the letter that Kirlikovali, president-elect of the ATAA,
sent to Judson, claiming that the Hürriyet Daily News uses `a
persistent anti-Turkish, pro-Armenian slant’ in its reporting over
`the past few years,’ I was caught by surprise. I was saddened at
hearing a point of view that usually would not be expected from a
person who will assume an important position representing the Turkish
community in America.

So I wanted to get in touch with Kirlikovali, and then with current
president Gunay Evinch, to talk about the assembly, but also to ask
about this letter. I wanted Kirlikovali to explain to me his remarks
calling the Hürriyet Daily News’ coverage `pro-PKK, and anti-Turkish,’
with which I totally disagree. I made it clear over the conference
call between the three of us ` Evinch, Kirlikovali and myself ` that I
disagreed with his complaining about the Hürriyet Daily News just
because it gives space to different opinions, including opinion pieces
that run contrary to the official Turkish state policies in many
matters. I think the reflection of such tolerance, by giving a wide
variety of perspectives in a Turkish paper that functions as a window
to the outside world, in a time when Turkey’s image is in despair in
terms of press freedom, lifts some hopes.

Apart from this disagreement, however, both presidents’ complaint
about the recent reporting on the Armenian effect on the Massachusetts
loss should be taken into consideration. This time, I disagree with my
own newspaper’s reporting on the issue, for it does not exactly
overlap with the realities of local and national politics in America.

And second, it was a great pleasure to listen to both presidents at
the same time and hear them getting along so well, when it was only a
few years ago that this kind of compatibility seemed impossible. I
hope that the outreach programs designed in recent times by the ATAA
will be continued by the future president, Kirlikovali. The
presidents’ excitement over the phone urged me to accept Evinch’s
polite invitation to visit the ATAA as soon as possible.

Turkish-Americans comprise a relatively small community when one
compares them with others, especially the Armenian and Greek
communities. However, after a long battle, the assembly is now getting
into a preferable shape by better learning the spirit of advocacy day
by day. And I think they also have right reasons to complain when they
are not consulted over the grassroots issues in America that are
serious concerns for them, as people who do this work day in and day
out.

ATAA tries to do better work and I am ready to give the group the
benefit of the doubt, even if I disagree sharply with some of its
perspectives.

I believe this spirit of endurance and indulgence is needed to
appreciate the Hürriyet Daily News better.

Lindblad mooted involvement of RA army in March 2008 events in PACE

news.am, Armenia
Feb 6 2010

Lindblad mooted involvement of RA army in March 2008 events in PACE

16:35 / 02/06/2010Motion for a resolution under `The involvement of
the army in the events of March 2008 in Armenia’ head, signed by 20
PACE delegates and presented by Goran Lindblad was posted on PACE
official website. NEWS.am issues the full text.

1. Recalling its previous resolutions on Armenia, in particular
Resolution 1609 (2008), which, among other things, calls for `an
independent, transparent and credible inquiry into the events of 1
March 2008′;

2. Dissatisfied with the report of the ad hoc Committee of the
Armenian Parliament on `the events of 1 March’, which, in essence, is
biased and avoids criticizing the Armenian authorities;

3. Deeply alarmed at reports concerning the use of the army during the
events of March 2008, which constitutes a violation of the Armenian
Constitution and a breach of the internationally accepted principle of
neutrality of the army in domestic political matters;

4. Outraged by the existence ‘ recently discovered and made public `
of secret order no. 0038, issued by the then President of Armenia,
Robert Kocharyan, on 23 February 2008, proving that Armenian army
units received formal orders to assemble and deploy in Yerevan before
1 March;

5. Considering that the involvement of the army in domestic political
matters, accompanied by large-scale repression of citizens’ civil and
political rights and persecution of the political opposition, clearly
bears the characteristics of a coup d’etat;

6. Considering unacceptable the attempts by the Armenian authorities
to conceal the involvement of the army in the events of 1 March 2008,
the Parliamentary Assembly urges the Armenian authorities to take the
following immediate action:

– disclose all information concerning the involvement of the army in
the events of 1 March 2008;

– conduct a transparent inquiry into the involvement of the army in
the post-electoral events;

– hold personally responsible all officials involved in the army’s
participation in the events.

7. The Assembly encourages the member states to use their influence on
the Armenian authorities to ensure that this inquiry is carried out.

8. The Assembly intends to examine this matter urgently and include
the outcome of that examination in its next report on Armenia.

Twitter Diplo: Can new media help break the Armenia-Azerb. info bloc

Twitter Diplomacy
Can new media help break the Armenia-Azerbaijan information blockade?
by Onnik Krikorian

2 February 2010

This is the fourth in a series of reports on relations between ethnic
Azeris and Armenians that belie the tension between the two countries.
Previous multimedia reports focused on villages and urban districts in
Georgia where Azeris and Armenians co-exist. In this analysis Onnik
Krikorian explores how new media tools could foster ties between the
two groups. You can learn more about this project and see more photos
and video at TOL’s Steady State blog.

A week before Azerbaijani youth activists and video bloggers Adnan
Hajizade and Emin Milli were arrested in July in Baku, an Armenian
hundreds of kilometers away in Yerevan posted a YouTube video on his
Facebook page.

The video, by Hajizade, introduced subscribers of the young
Azerbaijani activist?s online video channel to the now-vacant Armenian
church in Azerbaijan?s capital. The message was simple. It was a
virtual hand of friendship extended across a closed border and a
15-year-old cease-fire line.

For Armenian Facebook users, this was their first exposure to an image
of the ?enemy? at odds with that usually portrayed in local media.
With a peaceful resolution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict seemingly
as elusive as ever, Armenians and Azerbaijanis are unable to visit
each other?s country or communicate through traditional means such as
telephone or mail. Media in both countries frequently self-censor or
fall back on government propaganda when it comes to reporting on the
other nation.

The resulting stereotypes are not easily dislodged, even among those
critical of their governments. In a comment on her compatriot?s
Facebook page, one Armenian opposition activist expressed doubt that
there are others in Azerbaijan as tolerant and progressive as
Hajizade. A civil society organizer suspected Baku had simply invented
a dissident youth movement to score points with the Council of Europe.

But when Hajizade and Milli were detained for their other activities,
other Armenians discovered a whole network of young Azerbaijanis who
leaped to the bloggers? defense on Facebook, Twitter, and other online
platforms. Their skillful use of social media attracted international
press attention to the case.

And, via Facebook, Azerbaijani activists learned that many of their
Armenian counterparts supported the campaign for Hajizade and Milli?s
release ? not because the arrests made the Baku government look bad,
but out of genuine concern.

In Azerbaijan and Armenia, many journalists have effectively become
combatants in an information war of attrition. Media bias in the two
countries creates a ?negative context? in the public mind that
?hinders dialogue and mutual understanding,? the Caucasus Resource
Research Center stated last year in a report for the Eurasia
Partnership Foundation. ?Without more accurate and unbiased
information … free of negative rhetoric and stereotypes, Armenians
and Azerbaijanis will continue to see themselves as enemies without
any common ground.?

In blogs and on social platforms, however, youth in both countries are
tentatively reaching out and breaching the information blockade. Those
who until recently contacted one another only in secret are now
communicating more openly, attracting others into their ranks.

?These new tools can be used to foment violence or to foster peace,?
Ivan Sigal, executive director of the blog aggregation site Global
Voices Online and a former researcher on citizen media at the U.S.
Institute of Peace, wrote in a 2009 paper on digital media in
conflict-prone societies. ?[I]t is possible to build communication
systems that encourage dialogue and nonviolent political solutions.?

In the past year, civil society groups that regularly convene
third-country meetings between Armenians and Azerbaijanis have started
taking note of what is happening online. (This author, for example,
was approached by two such organizations for Azerbaijani contacts in
online activist circles.) The open nature of the Internet makes it an
increasingly vital tool for identifying new participants in civil
society activities.

But two high-level diplomatic sources told me such groups have not
done enough to expand their networks in Armenia and Azerbaijan. And
critics in the social-media sphere say traditional civil society
groups remain as closed as ever, focused on maintaining a ?monopoly on
problems,? as Slovene attorney and activist Primoz Sporar put it in a
2008 essay for the Trust for Civil Society in Central and Eastern
Europe.

In the South Caucasus, ?a significant amount of civil society work …
reinforces status quo policies where governments profit from war and
exacerbate cultural differences to their advantage,? says Micael
Bogar, a former Peace Corps volunteer in the region, now a projects
manager at American University?s Center for Social Media. ?New media
tools, with their powerful and cheap ability to communicate across
borders, threaten [their] wasteful practices,? she adds, and thus go
largely unexplored by more traditional groups.

Bogar cites the cross-border Hajizade/Mills campaign and a U.S.
project to bring Armenian and Azerbaijani teenagers together online as
success stories. But access to the new tools remains an issue.
Internet penetration and connection speeds are still low in the
region, particularly in Armenia.

?While there is an elite element within civil society with access, but
no interest, there is an even larger pool of citizens within the South
Caucasus who may have the desire to work towards peace but lack any
real long-term ability to use these tools towards that end,? Bogar says.

The International Research and Exchanges Board, a U.S. nonprofit, has
identified the inability of local journalists to easily check facts as
a major obstacle to media development in Armenia and Azerbaijan. A
Caucasus Resource Research Center study recommends that the Millennium
Challenges Account ? a U.S. aid agency active in Armenia and Georgia,
among other countries ? consider funding development of high-speed
Internet and the spread of Web 2.0 and mobile Internet technologies to
open opportunities for civil society initiatives.

But even existing tools and information infrastructure offer willing
journalists and activists accessible, low-cost ways to pierce the
information wall ? using Skype or other online chat programs to
communicate directly with one another, for example, rather than
relying on government or media boilerplate.

Interaction on Facebook, Twitter, and other social sites sets examples
of Armenians and Azerbaijanis making and maintaining normal, open
contact, and allows participants in conferences and other initiatives
to get in touch before physically meeting and stay connected long
after their brief real-world encounters, something that rarely happens
now. Established blogs such as Armenian-American journalist Liana
Aghajanyan?s Ianyan and Baku-based regional analyst Arzu
Geybullayeva?s Flying Carpets and Broken Pipelines foster further
cross-cultural communication.

True, such small-scale outreach represents a drop in the ocean of
Azerbaijani-Armenian hostility now. But as Internet penetration
increases, bringing costs down and connection speeds up, alternative
routes for delivering information will grow ? offering more chances
for alternative voices to find purchase, narrowing the space for
partisan disinformation in the mainstream media, and creating fertile
ground for genuine dialogue and an exchange of reliable, factual
information.

Onnik Krikorian is a freelance photojournalist and writer in Yerevan.
He is also the Caucasus region editor for Global Voices Online and
writes from Armenia for the Frontline Club. Funding for this project,
?Overcoming Negative Stereotypes in the South Caucasus,? was provided
by TOL and the British Embassy in Yerevan.


135-twitter-diplomacy.html

http://www.tol.org/client/article/21

Pasadena ANC Builds Ties With Local NAACP

PASADENA ANC BUILDS TIES WITH LOCAL NAACP

Asbarez
Feb 4th, 2010

PASADENA, CA – Leaders of the Armenian American community in Pasadena
exchanged ideas with a leader of the Pasadena chapter of the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) at a meeting
held at the Pasadena Armenian Center on February 3.

The meeting was with Gwendolyn Jones, a senior member of the Executive
Committee of the Pasadena Branch of the NAACP. Present alongside
ANC of Pasadena members was Katya Kazarian, a member of the Pasadena
Armenian Youth Federation’s "Nigol Touman" Chapter.

"Expanding our working relationship with the NAACP is a priority for
the Pasadena ANC," remarked Pasadena ANC Executive Director Ishkhan
Boghossian. "The Armenian American and African American communities
have a shared stake in the City of Pasadena and a common goal of
making our city a better one. We intend to build a strong and enduring
relationship with the local NAACP chapter."

"It takes a village to keep a community strong," commented Gwendolyn
Jones of the NAACP after her meeting with Pasadena ANC leaders. "The
Pasadena ANC has got it right," she added. Jones extended an invitation
for the Pasadena ANC’s leaders to visit the NAACP local headquarters
and to meet with her colleagues on the Executive Committee. In addition
to the NAACP’s Executive Committee, Jones is also a member of the
Legal Redress Committee, where she advances social justice issues
for her community.

The meeting with the Pasadena ANC and the Pasadena Branch of the
NAACP included an open discussion of a number of items of concern to
the citizens of Pasadena. The city’s work on the General Plan was
discussed, as were plans for a parcel tax to benefit the Pasadena
Unified School District. In addition, the groups discussed the current
search for a permanent chief of police to replace Chief Bernard
Melekian, who left his post last year to take a position at the U.S.

Department of Justice in Washington, DC.

The NAACP was founded in 1909 and is the nation’s oldest, largest
and most widely recognized grass-roots based civil rights organization.

The NAACP has over 500,000 supporters nationwide, with thousands of
them residing in the City of Pasadena and the southern California
region. The NAACP was formed partly in response to the continuing
horrific practice of lynching early in the 20th century in parts of
America. Today, the organization’s principal objective in Pasadena and
across the nation is to ensure the political, educational, social and
economic equality of minority groups and to eliminate racial prejudice.

The Pasadena ANC advocates for the social, economic, cultural,
and political rights of the area’s Armenian American community and
promotes increased Armenian American civic participation at the
grassroots and public policy levels.

Turkish Prosecutors Back Fourth Indictment In Ergenekon Case

TURKISH PROSECUTORS BACK FOURTH INDICTMENT IN ERGENEKON CASE

World Markets Research Center
Global Insight
January 29, 2010

BYLINE: Grace Annan

Yesterday, Turkish prosecutors added an additional 300 pages to
the extensive indictments against the members of Ergenekon, an
alleged counter-state organisation plotting to overthrow the Turkish
government. The state prosecutor charged 17 people with attempting
to overthrow the Turkish government through attacks on a popular
attraction in Istanbul’s Museum of Science and on Turkey’s small
Christian community. The defendants are 1 rear admiral, 2 retired
soldiers, and 14 active naval officers. The process against them is
starting on 9 April; if found guilty, they could face life in prison.

Significance:Ergenekon has entered the Turkish vocabulary swiftly
since it was first circulated in the media in 2007 (seeTurkey:
6 August 2009:). The army still wields considerable power in
the country, and has managed to overthrow four governments since
1960. Yet times are changing, with the army somewhat sidelined by
the emergence of a stronger and more stable political system. The
current Turkish government is arguably the strongest the country
has seen in decades, working comparatively well together with the
army, previously diplomatic foes such as Armenian senior government
officials, and European Union representatives alike. The government
has even managed to establish a dialogue with moderate senior forces
of the banned Kurdistan Workers’ Party. However, things are not going
well for the cabinet in several aspects, notably with regards to the
watering down of Turkey’s staunchly secular outlook. Members of the
army–both retired and still active–are often accused of plotting
to overthrow the government. The chief of the Turkish general staff,
Ilker Basbug, has strongly rejected rumours of an army coup. Yet he
is having a difficult time convincing the public, notably as the state
prosecutor continues to prop up his indictments. The ongoing Ergenekon
investigation is certainly dampening government-army relations, but
should not lead to a coup d’etat or great political instability in
the near future.

BAKU: UN Not Directly Involved Into Karabakh Conflict Settlement

UN NOT DIRECTLY INVOLVED INTO KARABAKH CONFLICT SETTLEMENT

news.az
Feb 4 2010
Azerbaijan

Ban Ki-moon "UN is not directly involved in the resolution of the
Karabakh conflict.

The leading role belongs to OSCE and the questions about this conflict
should be addressed to this very organization", UN Secretary General
Ban Ki-moon has said in his interview.

According to the secretary general, there is a need to intensify
cooperation of international structures in Afghanistan under the
UN auspices.

"Though my special envoy is responsible for coordination of
international civil efforts, the UN mission on assistance to
Afghanistan should be consolidated by officials who have necessary
experience and are able to hold negotiations with the governments of
the main donor-countries and embassies in Kabul.

In this connection, my special envoy also considers that the
appointment of the senior civil official within the framework of
the International Security Assistance Forces raises coordination of
efforts in the political sphere and in the sphere of development,
in particular, of the provincial groups on reconstruction to ensure
their greater adherence to Afghan plans and priorities".

As for the steps taken by UN to protect human rights in Iran, the
secretary general said:

"I have repeatedly urged the Iranian authorities to respect the main
civil and political rights, especially freedom of speech, freedom of
assembly and freedom of information.

The situation in Iran causes concerns among the international
community. In this respect, I call the government and opposition to
settle their differences legally and through dialogue.

Also, my high human rights commissioner Navy Pillay continues watching
the situation in Iran voicing his clear concerns over the treatment
of activists by the government".

Turkish PM Limits Powers Of State Army

TURKISH PM LIMITS POWERS OF STATE ARMY

News.am
16:28 / 02/02/2010

Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan responds to the criticism by
Brussels and intends to limit the powers of the state army. Hereafter,
the servicemen are deprived of using force without permission of
civil offices.

Thus, Erdogan initiates further steps towards the restriction of
Turkish armed forces’ rights. In his TV interview given earlier, he
stated that will abolish the protocol of 1997, under which in case
of domestic crisis state army is eligible of taking drastic measures
without permission of state civil offices, German Der Spiegel weekly
reports.

The mentioned document was repeatedly scalped by EU for vesting armed
forces with domestic power, which conflicts with European norms. In
last years political powers of Turkish army were limited, however
official Brussels reckons that further steps should be taken in this
direction, as the country strives to join EU.

According to Der Spiegel, in their turn Turkish armed forces feel
themselves like "minions of Turkish republic’s secular values" and
are suspicious of religious-conservative office of Erdogan.

IFJ Marks ‘ ‘End Of Deadly Decade’ With Report Of Journalists And Me

IFJ MARKS ‘END OF DEADLY DECADE’ WITH REPORT ON JOURNALISTS AND MEDIA STAFF KILLED IN 2009

AZG DAILY
03-02-2010

Mass media

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) February 1 issued
its report on journalists and media workers who died in the exercise of
journalism in 2009. The report provides detailed information of media
killings, including 32 victims of a single massacre in Maguindanao,
the Philippines, last November.

"The report is more than just a record of the death toll of journalists
and media workers killed in 2009," said Aidan White, IFJ General
Secretary. "More importantly, it provides a chilling account of risks
and dangers which continue to claim our colleagues’ lives in the four
corners of the world."

The IFJ says that 2009, one of the worst years for journalists’
killings, capped a violent decade which put journalism to the sword
and left record numbers of murders of media people. According to the
report, the death of Michelle Lang, the Canadian reporter killed
in Afghanistan on 30 December and the confirmation of murder of
photographer Jepon Cadagdagon in the Manguindanao massacre brought
the 2009 total of media killings to 139.

The Asia Pacific region recorded the highest death toll with 52
followed by the Americas with 30 killings, including 13 murders of
journalists in Mexico alone.

The IFJ reports warns that the levels of violence against media
witnessed last year raise the likelihood of another massacre in places
like lawless Somalia and gangster-ruled parts of Mexico.

"The failure of governments to take seriously the issue of media
protection plays in the hands of men of violence," added White. "This
can only be tackled by an unwavering commitment to end Impunity for
journalists’ murderers."

Boxing: Raging Bull sizes up big Fui

Sunday Telegraph – Australia

Raging Bull sizes up big Fui

* By James Hooper
* From: The Sunday Telegraph

* January 31, 2010 12:01AM

AS they stood toe-to-toe, it looked like the biggest mismatch since
Gorden Tallis used Ben Ross’s head as a speed ball.

Parramatta enforcer Fuifui Moimoi stepped into the ring with world
champion Vic Darchinyan at Eels headquarters last Friday, the Kiwi man
mountain against the Raging Bull Ant.

Moimoi might weigh twice as much as the 56kg super-flyweight, but when
it comes to speed, footwork and ring smarts, the diminutive Darchinyan
is all over the NRL cult figure.

It might have only been a mock sparring session, but there are no
jokes when it comes to finding Darchinyan’s next opponent for March 6
in the US.

Nicknamed the Mexican assassin because of his penchant for knocking
out boxers from south of the Californian border, the WBA and WBC
unified champion has had his past three adversaries pull out of
prospective fights. The reasoning is simple: Darchinyan’s left-hand
bombs are so lethal he has rival fighters running scared.

"I’m fighting on March 6 on the Arthur Abraham-Andre Dirrell card, but
up until today nobody has wanted to fight me," Darchinyan said. "It’s
been frustrating. They know my power and they don’t want to feel it.
My last three opponents have cancelled.

"They say it’s because of money, but I think it’s because they’re
scared. I’m the champion and I don’t care who I fight, I’ll fight
anybody."

The son of an Armenian Olympic wrestling coach, Darchinyan finally
landed an opponent last Friday in the form of Mexican Rodrigo
Guerrero.

To defend his WBA and WBC world title belts, Darchinyan intends to mix
up his training regimen to try to improve his already brutal punching
power.

Gone are the heavy sessions in the gym bench-pressing 120kg and doing
hundreds of push-ups with his feet elevated on top of one corner of
the ring.

Instead, the Sydney Olympian has been working with world champion
discuss thrower Dani Samuels to improve the fast-twitch muscle fibres
and explosive power in his legs.

Parramatta Eels conditioning gurus Hayden Knowles and Craig Catterick
are supervising the new lower-body program.

"Vic doesn’t need to work on his upper body, boxing is enough for him
in terms of maintenance there," Knowles said. "But by working on the
power from his legs, we believe we can increase his power quite
considerably."

Darchinyan’s manager Elias Nasser admitted the assignment of finding
fights was tough because of Darchinyan’s fearsome reputation.