BAKU: Azeri military prosecutor’s office resumes probe into 1992Xoca

Azeri military prosecutor’s office resumes probe into 1992 Xocali massacre

Turan news agency
3 Aug 05

Baku 3 August: On 12 July this year, the Military Prosecutor’s Office
of Azerbaijan resumed the criminal case into the occupation of the town
of Xocali in Nagornyy Karabakh, which was suspended on 31 March 1994.

The press service of the Military Prosecutor’s Office says in a press
release forwarded to Turan news agency that on 25-26 February 1992,
the Armenian troops, the Karabakh separatist forces and the military
of the 366th regiment of the Soviet army committed a crime which can
be identified as genocide.

The Military Prosecutor’s Office resumed the criminal case into
the seizure of Xocali, having re-examined the materials of the
investigation under Article 103 (genocide), 115 (violation of laws
and traditions of war), 16 (violation of norms of international
humanitarian law during armed conflicts) and 118 (military assault)
of the current Criminal Code.

The seizure of Xocali was accompanied by unprecedented atrocities –
339 residents of the town were killed, including 43 children, 109
women and 16 men over 60, 115 people went missing, 30 were taken
hostage and 421 wounded.

Moreover, on 15 July this year, the Military Prosecutor’s Office
launched a criminal case under Article 103 (genocide) into the seizure
of the village of Qaradagli in Xocavand District [in Nagornyy Karabakh]
on the night of 16 February 1992. When the village was seized, 49
people were killed and another 57 local residents were held hostage
and tortured for a long time.

At present, measures are being taken to bring to book, track down
and prosecute people who committed crimes against humanity and war
crimes in both cases, the press release says.

Garegin II appreciated Armenia-IAEA cooperation

PanArmenian News Network
July 28 2005

GAREGIN II APPRECIATED ARMENIA-IAEA COOPERATION

28.07.2005 03:52

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin II met in Holy
Echmiadzin with head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
Mohamed ElBaradei, reported the Press Service of Holy Echmiadzin
Chancellery. In the course of the meeting Catholicos presented the
history of the Armenian Church to the guest, as well as it mission in
the life of Armenian people. Garegin II also noted with pleasure that
efficient cooperation between Armenia and the IAEA is formed. He said
the safe and uninterrupted work of the Metsamor Nuclear Power Plant
was vital to Armenia. In his turn Mohamed ElBaradei presented the
goals and the outcomes of his visit to Armenia. In the course of the
meeting the parties also discussed the challenges the humanity has
faced. They noted the importance of religious leaders and
inter-confessional dialogue aimed at strengthening moral values in
the society in struggle with these challenges. «Degradation of moral
values is as dangerous to humanity as atomic energy or more,» the
Catholicos of All Armenians stated, emphasizing the human «as the
summit of creation» can stop undesirable development by means of
forming understanding.

`Kommersant`: Gasleitung aus Iran nach Westeuropa um Russland herum

` Kommersant`: Gasleitung aus Iran nach Westeuropa um Russland herum

15:07 | 26/ 07/ 2005

MOSKAU, 26. Juli (RIA Nowosti). Die ukrainische Staatsfirma Naftogas
Ukrainy kündigte an, sie wolle sich am Bau einer Transitgasleitung
aus Iran nach Westeuropa – wahrscheinlich an Russland vorbei –
beteiligen, meldet die Tageszeitung Kommersant.

Naftogas-Vorstand Alexej Iwtschenko bot dem stellvertretenden
iranischen Ã-lminister Seyed Mohammad Hadi Nejad-Hosseinian zwei
mögliche Routen für die Gaspipeline an: Iran – Armenien – Georgien –
Russland – Ukraine – Europa und Iran – Armenien – Georgien – Schwarzes
Meer – Ukraine – Europa.

Am vergangenen Sonntag wurde in Teheran ein Memorandum über
Zusammenarbeit zwischen dem ukrainischen Brennstoff- und
Energieministerium mit dem iranischen Ã-lministerium signiert. Das
Memorandum sieht die Einberufung einer ` fünfseitigen Konferenz
(also mit Teilnahme Russlands) bis Ende September im Rahmen der
Vorbereitungen für die Umsetzung einer Variante des Transits des
iranischen Gases sowie die Bildung von Expertengruppen und eine
Kompetenzverteilung zwischen den am Projekt beteiligten Firmen` vor.

Die ukrainische Ministerpräsidentin Julia Timoschenko hatte vorige
Woche erklärt, dieses Projekt sei äuÃserst wichtig für die
Ukraine und `muss schnellstens verwirklicht werden. Nur so
können wir die Energielieferungen diversifizieren` .

Wie gestern aus Gasprom verlautet, habe der russische Gasmonopolist
von der ukrainischen Seite kein Angebot erhalten, an der Wahl einer
dieser Routen teilzunehmen. Das, obwohl keine dieser Routen ohne eine
Zustimmung Gaspromsgebaut werden kann, schreibt die Zeitung. Die erste
soll nämlich über Russland verlaufen, die zweite – über den Grund
des Schwarzen Meeres, wo bereits die russische Gaspipeline
`Blauer Strom` verlegt ist, so dass der Bau einer neuen
Gasleitung, die den `Blauen Strom` überquert, ohne eine
Genehmigung Russlands offenbar unmöglich wäre.

Dennoch erklärte der stellvertretende Brennstoff- und Energieminister
der Ukraine, Sergej Titenko, dass die neue Rohrleitung aus dem Iran
über Armenien, Georgien, die Ukraine nach Europa gebaut wird, wobei
sie auf einer Strecke von 550 Kilometer vom georgischen Hafen Supsa
über den Grund des SchwarzenMeeres zur Krim verlegt werden soll. Den
Wert des Projekts schätzt das Ministerium auf fünf Milliarden
Dollar.

Moskau sieht in der krampfhaften Suche Kiews nach alternativen
Gaslieferanten unter anderem auch den Versuch, den russischen
Gasmonopolisten unter Druck zu setzen.

http://de.rian.ru/world/20050726/40975645.html

Armenia will not benefit from open border with Turkey, ARF member

ArmenPress
July 26 2005

ARMENIA WILL NOT BENEFIT FROM OPEN BORDER WITH TURKEY, ARF MEMBER
SAYS

YEREVAN, JULY 26, ARMENPRESS: A senior member of the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation echoed today findings of a study conducted
by the Armenian-European Policy and Legal Advice Center (AEPLAC), a
research center funded by the European Union that concluded that an
open border with Turkey would do little to give a strong push to
Armenia’s economic development. Deputy parliament chairman Vahan
Hovhanesian told participants of the third Armenian youth forum that
sooner or later Ankara would have to open the border, as it cannot
join the EU with a closed border with one of its neighbors.
The AEPLAC findings run counter to the opinion of Western donors
and some members of the Armenian government who say that an open
border would help restore the Turkish-Armenian rail link and give
Armenia alternative routs to take its products to other markets.
Currently over 90 percent of Armenia’s external trade is carried out
through Georgian territory.
AEPLAC findings also contrast the World Bank economists, who say
the reopening would dramatically accelerate Armenia’s economic
growth. Talking to young Armenians from several countries,
Hovhanesian said Armenia should work hard to persuade the EU to force
Turkey to open the border when negotiating Turkey’s EU membership.
“The border has never been closed from the Armenian side and it
is Turkey that has to lift its transport blockade of Armenia, but
Armenia cannot agree to Ankara’s demands to pull out troops from
Karabakh as a precondition for starting normalization of relations,”
he said adding that Armenian forces of Karabakh are its Armenian
population. He said Armenia cannot either give up its campaign of the
genocide recognition. Citing the recent Venezuela’s parliament
resolution recognizing the Armenian genocide, he said the process
goes on without Armenia’s participation.

Anchorage inspecting Baku

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
July 25, 2005, Monday

ANCHORAGE INSPECTING BAKU

SOURCE: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, July 21, 2005, p. 5

by Sokhbet Mamedov

Tomorrow an official visit of Turkish minister of defense Vedzhi
Kyunel to Baku terminates. He arrived in Azerbaijan on Monday
evening. The minister negotiated with his Azerbaijan colleague Safar
Abiev, was acquainted with the work of different military educational
institutes of the republic, where the training of officers is going
according to the Turkish system, and visited the coordination center
of military collaboration. Yesterday the Turkish Minister of defense
met with President of Azerbaijan, Ilkhan Aliev. For today meetings
with the Prime Minister and the Minister of Foreign Affairs are
planned, after which an intergovernmental agreement on technical
cooperation in the field of training military men will be signed.
Officially, this visit is a response for last year’s trip of Safar
Abiev to Turkey. However, independent analysts are inclined to pay
much more attention to it. According to the words of Azerbaijan
military expert Uzeir Dzhafarov, any military contacts between Baku
and Anchorage serve for strengthening of the Azerbaijan Armed Forces
and speeding up the integration process in NATO. “Some months ago a
plan of individual cooperation between Azerbaijan and the alliance
was adopted. According to this plan, our country took
responsibilities to reform the army and staff it according to NATO
standards. Turkey is a country responsible for controlling this
process”, the expert told journalists. According to his opinion, the
fact that in the last few weeks Turkey military delegations’ trips to
Azerbaijan became more frequent, can prove the fact that “they are
sure to have extra planned tasks in our country”.

Such tasks are, first of all, question on organization and securing
the defense of main export oil pipeline Baku-Tbilisi-Dzheikhan (BTD)
and gas pipeline Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum (BTE). Oil pipeline BTD is
almost ready, and they wait for starting its exploitation in
November. As for the gas pipeline, its construction continues and
will be finished next year. These energetic communications have
strategic significance both for Azerbaijan, Georgia, Turkey and
Western countries, the US as well. That is why the Northern Atlantic
Alliance is intended to set mobile groups for securing pipelines on
Apsheron peninsula. Turkey has not last place in this task, because
its military specialists educate Azerbaijan colleagues.

Another important task is a question concerning the regulation
process of the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Official
Anchorage, supporting the position of Azerbaijan, is interested in
normalization of relationships with Armenia. That is why the head of
the military department of Turkey discussed with Azerbaijan
authorities the perspectives of Anchorages participation in the
regulation process. As it is well known, the other day this problem
was discussed at the meeting of Russian Federation President Vladimir
Putin and Turkish Prime Minister Redzhep Tayip Erdogan in Sochi.
According to the opinion of Azerbaijan experts, the minister of
defense had much to say to Ilkhan Aliev concerning the results of
negotiations in Sochi.

In any case, during the meeting the minister of defense of Turkey
pointed out the necessity of regulating the Mountain Karabakh
conflict within the frames of the territorial integrity of
Azerbaijan.

Translated by Denis Shcherbakov

Entertainment Complex for non-Muslims to be established in Iran

Payvand, Iran
July 25 2005

Entertainment Complex for non-Muslims to be established in Iran’s
Qeshm island

Tehran – 25 July, 2005 (CHN) – A residential, tourist and
entertainment complex will be soon constructed in Persian Gulf island
of Qeshm by Armenians who live in Iran. In the complex, Iranian
religious minorities and foreigners can experience entertainments
without usual Islamic limitations which are current in Iran.

“Marina tourist agency, which belongs to an Armenian lady, has
grasped the license for establishing the complex in which women and
men can swim jointly” said Ali Akbar Einollahi, the tourist deputy of
Qeshm free zone.

“The mentioned Agency has requested building a complex,” he added,
“in which Armenians and foreigners can have entertainments according
to their regulations, and also, can hold their ceremonies and
rituals.”

According to him, establishing such a complex can make a positive
influence on attracting foreign tourists who are now more
concentrated in Dubai.

He asserted that the initial license was issued in Tehran and the
second license is waiting to be signed by the province officials.

Only Armenian minority and foreigners are allowed to enter the
complex and the entrance of Iranian Moslems is forbidden. The special
ceremonies, like Christmas and The Easter, can also be held in the
complex.

Einollahi explained that these activities can provide entertainment
opportunities here in the country, so Iranians do not have to travel
to destinations like Dubai, with spending great expenses!

The initial plans, he indicated, are ready. A suitable plot of land
was chosen and handed to the agency. Iran Cultural Heritage and
Tourism organization will support the construction of the complex by
providing long-term loans.

IMF hails Armenia’s economic progress

IMF hails Armenia’s economic progress

Agence France Presse — English
July 21, 2005 Thursday 8:48 PM GMT

YEREVAN July 21 — Armenia has made impressive economic progress
over recent years and the International Monetary Fund will continue
to assist the former Soviet republic on its path toward reforms,
a top IMF official said late Thursday.

“Armenia is on a promising path toward sustained high growth and the
alleviation of poverty,” said IMR deputy managing director Augustin
Carstens.

“I think this is a major achievment,” he added.

Carstens noted that the Armenian economy has shown a “very successful
performance” during the last three years due to “a good macro-economic
policy.”

“The IMF stands ready to continue to assist Armenia with policy and
technical advice, as well as financial support in implementing its
reform agenda,” he said.

The IMF last May approved a new three-year program aimed at reducing
poverty and stimulating growth, which involves granting the Caucasus
nation 34 million dollars (28 million euros) worth of preferential
credit until 2008.

During the first six months of this year, Armenia’s gross domestic
product grew 10.2 percent compared with the same period a year earlier,
while inflation reached 1.4 percent. In 2004, the country’s economy
grew by 9.3 percent.

Carstens said poverty had been reduced to 30 percent of the population
in 2003, down from 50 percent in 1999.

However, poverty continues to plague Armenia, with many families
living at least partly on money transfers from relatives abroad.

Money transfers are expected to reach one billion dollars this year,
up 25 percent from last year.

Representatives of 3 south Caucasus republics to discuss ways forliq

ARKA News Agency
July 18 2005

REPRESENTATIVES OF THREE SOUTH CAUCASUS REPUBLICS TO DISCUSS WAYS FOR
LIQUIDATION STEREOTYPES AND OVERCOMING OBSTACLES IN REGIONAL
INTEGRATION

YEREVAN, July 18. /ARKA/. Working discussions on ways for liquidation
of stereotypes and overcoming obstacles will be held in Yerevan on
July 19 in the framework of civil initiative “South -Caucasus
Integration: Alternative Start”. As Caucasus Center of Peace-Making
Initiatives reports, issues such as regional cooperation in the South
Caucasus as a security and stability guarantee, political abuses of
South Caucasus conflicts and their consequences, negative role of
Mass Media and NGOs and unused possibilities in the process of
overcoming conflicts will be touched upon during the discussions.
Leader of Liberal -Progressive Party of Armenia Hovhannes
Hovhannisyan, Head of Yerevan Press Club Boris Navasardyan, Georgian
Parliament Deputy Nazi Aronia, Leader of South Caucasus Peaceful
Development Union Nugzari Gogorishvili, Head of Analytical Center
“Peace, Democracy and Culture” Rouf Rajabov will participate in the
discussions. A.H. –0–

Soccer: Norway Overcome Armenia in UEFA U19 finals

Norway Overcome Armenia in UEFA U19 finals
Report by Fred Magee

Soccer Central, Ireland
July 18 2005

Both teams started briskly with Armenia having a penalty claim for hand
ball turned down in the 4th minute. One minute later the Armenian No
11, Edgar, shot wide from a great position, and then 2 minutes after
that Norway, in their first real attack, had a dangerous corner kick
punched away by the Armenian keeper, Apoula Eddima Bete.

Norway continued to show more aggression and continued to dominate
the play. On 22 minutes came the gaol that the game needed. Aoudia
cleverly lobbed the ball into the far corner of the net, just managing
to escape the outstretched hands of the goalkeeper.

Armenia tried to take the game to Norway and almost levelled the
game just 5 minutes later when a Norwegian defender narrowly headed
just past his own post. Norway remained in control up until the half
time whistle.

Norway continued to dictate the play from the restart and although
Armenia’s passing was good they had no fire power up front to trouble
the well organised Norwegian defence.

Armenia had a half chance when No 9 Petrosyan cleverly beat two men
only to finish with a weak shot straight at the keeper.

Aoudia continued to pose a threat and indeed could have had a hat
trick with a little more luck.

Armenia made a substitution in the 64th minute in hope of injecting
some sort of threat but as the game went on the Norwegians just got
stronger and more confident.

In the 68th minute the game was all but over when Nisja scored with a
fierce shot to make it 2-0. Play was almost all one way by now with
the Norwegian ‘keeper almost a spectator for the last 30 minutes.
Only a free kick from Petrosyan, which the ‘keeper saved at the second
attempt was on any note from Armenia after that.

This was a convincing victory for Norway and they paid a fitting
tribute to their small band of supporters following the final whistle
when the whole team came over to the stand to acknowledge them.

Petitions started to intervene in Darfur UA professor leadsanti-geno

Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock)
July 10, 2005 Sunday

Petitions started to intervene in Darfur UA professor leads
anti-genocide drive

BY CHRIS BRANAM ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE

FAYETTEVILLE – It’s been a year since Samuel Totten looked into the
eyes of refugees from the Darfur region of Sudan.

Still, not a day goes by that he doesn’t think about what he saw.

Totten, a professor of education at the University of Arkansas at
Fayetteville, now is circulating an online petition urging military
intervention by the United Nations to stop what was been described as
genocide in Darfur.

Totten hopes to present the petition by September to members of
Congress, President Bush, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan and the
U.N. Security Council. Totten expects the petition to be signed by
more than 100 genocide scholars.

“I’m not going to stop until the attacks stop on the [refugee]
camps,” Totten said.

The petition requests that the European Union, the African Union and
individual nations deploy 12,000 heavy infantry, logistical,
communications and airborne troops in Sudan.

The document is co-authored by Gregory Stanton, a former State
Department official who leads Genocide Watch, a coalition of 20
humanrights groups coordinating an international campaign to stop
genocide; and Joyce Apsel, an advisory board member for the
International Association of Genocide Scholars.

The language in the petition was unanimously approved last month as a
resolution of the International Association of Genocide Scholars at
the association’s biennial conference in Boca Raton, Fla.

“Sam’s initiative led to this resolution and petition,” Stanton said.
“We hope that it will result in first, consciousnessraising among the
people who read it, and secondly, those who do sign it, will send it
along to leaders who make policy.

“It’s a very forward-leaning petition that calls for active
intervention.”

Totten said he decided to draft the petition when he remembered late
U.S. Sen. Paul Simon having said in the mid-1990s that the federal
government would have been pressured to act in Rwanda if every member
of Congress would have received 100 letters in support of
intervention.

He has joined a chorus of human-rights advocates who see echoes in
Darfur of the tribal conflict in Rwanda in 1994, when an estimated
800,000 people were killed.

In Sudan, Arab militia members known as the janjaweed have been
working with the Sudanese government to rid the Darfur region of
black Africans, then-Secretary of State Colin Powell reported to
Congress in September 2004.

Powell told Congress that Sudan’s government is to blame for killing
tens of thousands and uprooting of 1.2 million people who fled across
the border to Chad.

Totten was one of 24 investigators who took part in the Darfur
Atrocities Documentation Project, based in Chad in July 2004. He
interviewed 49 refugees for the project, which documented murders and
rapes against non-Arabs in Darfur.

Powell noted the investigators’ work in his Sept. 9 remarks to the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

The U.S. State Department says that genocide is occurring in Darfur.
The designation marked the first time one sovereign nation has
accused another sovereign nation of genocide. The 1948 genocide
convention defines the act of genocide as a calculated effort to
destroy a national, ethnic, racial or religious group in whole or in
part.

The United Nations passed Resolution 1556 on July 30, 2004, demanding
that the Sudanese government take action to disarm the janjaweed
militia and bring janjaweed leaders to justice. The United States
pledged $299 million in humanitarian aid to Darfur refugees through
fiscal 2005.

But that hasn’t been enough to stop the violence, said Totten, who
served as a co-editor of the Encyclopedia of Genocide, published in
1999. Totten is also cowriting and editing a book about the Darfur
Atrocities Documentation Project with Eric Markusen, a senior
researcher at the Danish Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies.

The janjaweed are now entering Chad and attacking civilian refugee
camps, Totten said.

Totten criticized what he perceives to be indifference by the U.S.
media toward Darfur.

“It’s disheartening. It’s extremely disheartening,” he said. “Unless
it’s on the air and [people] see it in the way they did the tsunami
.. it does seem rather ephemeral in people’s minds. They see it and.
forget about it.

“The coverage just hasn’t been sustained as it could or should be.”

At UA, Totten teaches curriculum and instruction to aspiring middle-
and high-school teachers. But genocide is his chosen field of study.

Reed Greenwood, dean of the UA College of Education and Health
Professions, said Totten goes “above and beyond” as a professor and
researcher.

“He’s probably one of the most hard-working faculty members we have
in the college,” Greenwood said. “It’s been a major accomplishment
and a major achievement to the field, the work he’s done. He’s
established an international reputation.”

Totten is editing a new edition of Century of Genocide, a scholarly
collection of essays accompanied by eyewitness testimonies of
genocide.

Totten will compose the last essay. His focus will be prevention and
intervention of genocide.

In April, Totten traveled to Armenia for an international conference
on genocide that coincided with the 90 th anniversary of what
Armenians claim was the start of genocide at the hands of the Turkish
government.

Armenians say Turkey’s mass deportation of Armenians during World War
I was part of an organized genocide, beginning in 1915, that killed
1.5 million people. Turkey denies there was any systematic attempt to
kill Armenians.

The conference was held in Yerevan, Armenia’s capital. The
proceedings were broadcast locally on live television, Totten said.

“People in the street would see that you were with the conference and
they would come up and thank you,” Totten said.

Totten was one of a handful of Americans at the conference of 700. He
also took part in a Mass at the Martyrs Church in the Syrian desert,
where many refugees from Armenia ended up after being forced to march
out of their country.

His Holiness Catholicos Aram I, the spiritual leader of the Armenian
Church, led the Mass.

“I was moved by how intent people seemed to hang on to every single
word that His Holiness spoke, all of which dealt with some aspect of
the Armenian genocide,” Totten said.