BAKU: PM disapproves of Italy’s stance in UN discussions on UpperGar

PM disapproves of Italy’s stance in UN discussions on Upper Garabagh

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Nov 26 2004

Prime Minister Artur Rasizada, in a meeting with Italian Deputy
Foreign Minister Margherita Boniver on Thursday, said he disapproves
of the recent statement made by the Italian official during her talks
in Yerevan.

Rasizada said that Azerbaijan, unlike Armenia, has been subject to
aggression, and that Azeri civilians have been ousted from their homes
and the country’s territories occupied. These facts should be taken
into account when discussing the issue, the Azeri Prime Minister said.

Touching upon economic relations, Rasizada said prospects exist for
developing such cooperation. Italy is a leading country in terms
of the turnover of goods with Azerbaijan, but most of the trade
occurs on oil, he said. The Prime Minister pointed out that Italy’s
investments in Azerbaijan are insignificant and emphasized that Baku
is interested in drawing Italian investors and its participation in
global transport projects.

Italian Deputy Foreign Minister Boniver said that the documents
signed during the current visit on establishing the Italy-Azerbaijan
Economic Council and the joint Chamber of Commerce and Industry will
serve strengthening of economic ties. She added that Italy can assist
Azerbaijan in developing small and medium enterprise in the country,
as her country possesses extensive experience in this area.*

Meetings in Paris

MEETINGS IN PARIS

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR)
16 Nov 04

As it was already informed, on November 11 the president of the
Republic of Nagorni Karabakh left for the USA via Paris to take part
in the November 25 telethon of donations for the development of
Artsakh. On the same day in Paris the NKR president gave an interview
to the local Armenian radio channel and mainly dwelled on the
phonothon which will take place in France on November18-21. Arkady
Ghukassian also spoke about the economic, social and democratic
reforms in Artsakh, problems of home and foreign policies. In the
evening the NKR president met with the leader of the Western Europe
branch of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Murad Papazian and
discussed the necessity of repairs and equipment of the ambulance
station of Stepanakert. On November 12 Arkady Ghukassian left Paris
for the US. He is visiting the US accompanied with the executive
director of the pan-Armenian foundation `Hayastanâ=80=9D Naira
Melkumian.

AA.
16-11-2004

Jews, Scots, Armenians, Dutch

Jews, Scots, Armenians, Dutch
by Gary North

Lew Rockwell, CA
Nov 13 2004

You have heard this phrase: “He can buy from a [ ], sell to a [ ],
and make a profit.

Here are the most likely choices:

Jew
Scot
Dutchman
Armenian

Why? What do these seemingly disparate groups have in common, other
than money?

Let’s begin with the least known group.

THE ARMENIANS

In 1962, I had a Jewish roommate, Roger Hartman. I didn’t know much
about Judaism back then. Roger had grown up in the area around
Fresno, California – not exactly a cosmopolitan region. His family
had later moved to San Francisco, as I recall. He told me why: “When
the Armenians moved in, the Jews moved out.” I don’t know if he
really meant this specifically about his own family, but the phrase
was obviously common among Jews in the area. Armenians are highly
competitive in commerce. They are famous as rug merchants, but their
skills go way beyond importing rugs.

I knew less about Armenians in 1962 than I do now. I’m now married to
one. But I never did forget Roger’s comment. There was, and is, a
large Armenian population in the Fresno area. The most famous
Armenian-American author, William Saroyan, was born in Fresno in
1908. My father-in-law grew up in Kingsburg, not far from Fresno.

Side note: Armenians are easily identified by their names – more
easily than any other national group. Their names usually end in -ian
or -yan. My father-in-law was an exception: Rushdoony, not
Rushdoonian. He told me why. His family had roots back to royalty in
Armenia. When the Turks conquered the country nine centuries ago,
they forced a name change on everyone, so that they could be easily
identified. They added the -ian sound. My father-in-law’s family
escaped the restriction because of the family’s royal lineage.
Anyway, that’s what he told me. As someone who read a book a day for
60 years, he knew about such things.

The Armenians are the entrepreneurs of Western Asia. This has been
true for centuries. I found it interesting that in the old “Upstairs,
Downstairs” series, when the script writers wanted to portray a rich,
aggressive, unscrupulous, social-climbing businessman, they chose an
Armenian. It may have been too politically incorrect to select a Jew,
but the decision was nevertheless believable. The character was
looked down on by the upper crust. They referred to him as a Jew, he
said. This upset him; he was proud of his Armenian heritage.

In the Soviet Union, Armenians were called the Christian Jews. There
was considerable hostility and discrimination in Moscow against
members of both groups. But, like Jews, Armenians climbed their way
to the top of the Communist Party’s hierarchy. Anastas Mikoyan was
the most prominent of them. He was the Commissar of Food Supply and
then Minister of Trade under Stalin. He was elected president in
1964, a ceremonial post. He survived. He never missed a trick. He
introduced Eskimo Pie into the USSR – one of the more productive
things ever done by a senior Soviet bureaucrat. His brother Artem
designed the MiG jet fighters. Under Gorbachev, Abel Aganbegyan
served as senior economic advisor. Yet Armenia was the smallest of
the Soviet republics, both in population and geography.

There is another shared feature with Jews. In 1915, the Turks
committed the first genocide of the twentieth century. They killed
about a million Armenians. This policy was systematic. Most people
have never heard of this event. (On the persecution, see the great
but little-known 1963 movie by Elia Kazan, America, America.)

Because World War I was going on, the Armenian genocide received
little publicity. It was concealed because the Germans and the Turks
were allies. Word did not get out, except for survivors’ accounts.
War news dominated the Western press. Also, Turkey was crucial
internationally because Turks controlled the Dardanelles, the narrow
access to the Black Sea. The Turks could seal off access from the
Russian Navy’s only warm water port. British foreign policy had long
been favorable to the Turks because of this geography: the balance of
power. So, there was no outcry from the West after the War, despite
Turkey’s former alliance with the Germans. The lesson was not lost on
Hitler, who wrote:

I have issued the command – and I’ll have anybody who utters but one
word of criticism executed by a firing squad – that our war aim does
not consist in reaching certain lines, but in the physical
destruction of the enemy. Accordingly, I have placed my death-head
formations in readiness – for the present only in the East – with
orders to them to send to death mercilessly and without compassion,
men, women, and children of Polish derivation and language. Only thus
shall we gain the living space (Lebensraum) which we need. Who, after
all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?

The famous British historian Arnold Toynbee did much of the research
on the Armenian genocide for Lord Bryce’s 1916 collection of
survivors’ accounts. My wife’s grandfather, who had a photographic
memory, has two articles in the book. It was an official publication
of the British government, but it had no political effect.

THE DUTCH

When we think of the Dutch, we think of “Dutch Treat.” This term
applies to dates in which the woman pays her share of the evening’s
expenses. Whether the practice originated in Dutch-American circles,
I do not know, but the phrase has stuck.

The Dutch are frugal. They are legendary for this frugality. They are
good farmers, especially dairymen. They are not equally famous in
commerce, although there are highly successful Dutch-affiliated
companies. The Herman Miller Company is dominant in business chair
manufacture. The Dutch are regional: Grand Rapids, Michigan, is an
urban enclave.

In the seventeenth century, the Dutch rivaled the British in world
trade, yet their country was tiny, dug out of the sea by means of
dikes and windmills. They had money, and they had great artists. They
were also ruthless colonialists in Indonesia. They took no guff. They
fought a naval war with Cromwell’s England: two Calvinist powers
going at each other with fleets. The war continued under Charles II.
New Amsterdam became New York City in 1664.

It is one of those historical anomalies that they arrived, seemingly
out of nowhere, in the early seventeenth century. They were masters
of commerce. Their central bank actually preceded the Bank of England
(1694). They had a well organized stock exchange. They also had help
from Jews, who had been kicked out of Spain by Queen Isabella in
1492, and had fled to Antwerp and Amsterdam, where there was greater
religious liberty for them.

The Dutch reputation for frugality as consumers is an extension of
their former reputation as hard-bargaining traders. The same
legendary frugality is associated with the Scots.

THE SCOTS

In the eighteenth century, the Scots replaced the Dutch as the
world’s traders. While the English gained this reputation, the Scots
had the edge. Union with England came in 1707. From then on, the
Scots took advantage of the British colonial empire. Again, like the
Dutch a century earlier, they came out of nowhere. In 1650, Scotland
was poor, a backwater of Europe. By 1750, the Scots dominated trade
and philosophy. David Hume, Lord Kames, Adam Smith were Scots. By
1850, Scots around the world dominated invention and
entrepreneurship. From James Watt to Andrew Carnegie, the Scots
pioneered manufacturing and mass production. Arthur Herman’s book,
How the Scots Invented the Modern World (2001), tells this remarkable
story.

By 1950, the Scots were still influential as individuals, but not as
a self-conscious, well-connected group. Ronald Reagan was one of
them, and he attended a traditional Presbyterian Church, as a good
lowland Scotsman should. But we do not think of Reagan as a Scot.
While Sean Connery represents them, they are not organized
sufficiently to be represented.

THE JEWS

Like the Dutch in 1600 and the Scots in 1700, Jews in 1900 came out
of nowhere – or its cultural equivalents, Russia and Eastern Europe –
to dominate the movie industry and radio in the first half of the
century, and the economy in the second half.

The Rothschilds made their fortune under Napoleon, and other banking
houses of the late nineteenth century were Jewish-owned. But the
Morgan network was dominant in America in 1890, not Jewish investment
banks. The Rockefellers became competitors by 1910. Kuhn Loeb was not
in this league. The only Jewish-owned commercial bank of any
consequence in New York City was the Bank of the United States, which
went bankrupt in the Great Depression when the gentile bankers who
ran the Federal Reserve System refused to bail it out. The other big
banks were protected.

Jews are not legendary as tight-fisted consumers. They are not Scots
or Dutchmen. Jewish extravagance has in fact elicited envy in Europe,
especially before and after World War I. Two phrases tell the story:

“He Jewed me down.”

“A Jewish brother-in-law deal.”

Both phrases reflect retailing. “He Jewed me down” is the complaint
of a gentile wholesaler trying to sell to a Jewish retailer. “A
Jewish brother-in-law deal” reflects the consumer’s quest for a
discount. Thus, we return to the original phrase: “A Jew can buy from
a [ ] and sell to a [ ], and make a profit.”

If someone said, “He Jewed me up,” it would sound strange. That would
be the complaint of a consumer against a retailer who charged too
much. But Jews are not famous for charging too much. They are famous
for the Jewish brother-in-law deal.

Here, we see the entrepreneurial flair at work: “Buy low, sell
higher, but lower than the competition.” Recently, I bought a new
Sony digital voice recorder from Abe’s of Maine. The shipping box had
a New York City return address. Now, Abe may be a clever gentile
cashing in on a group reputation, but when it’s Abe’s of Maine, the
public gets the idea that wherever you go, you can get a Jewish
brother-in-law deal. Except in Fresno.

Jews are prominent in academia, law, and medicine. This has long been
the case in medicine. Jews for centuries served as physicians for
Christian and Muslim rulers. “My son, the doctor” was basic to Jewish
family advancement and even survival. Similarly, when the Czar opened
up residence in Moscow to members of the state’s symphony orchestra,
Jewish children all over Russia were seen carrying violins. A violin
was the ticket out of the ghetto.

Jews are famous for comedy. This is an odd fact about modern Jews.
Humor was frowned on in Orthodox Jewish circles for many centuries.
(“Orthodox” was a pejorative term applied to Talmudic Jews by liberal
and secular Jews in the early nineteenth century. A Talmudic rabbi
and scholar, Samson R. Hirsch, decided to accept the term and run
with it in the mid-nineteenth century.) Yet by the days of
vaudeville, Jews were prominent comedians. The most famous Russian
comic in America, Yakov Smirnoff, is a Jew. But he did not know he
was Jewish until his parents told him, when he was 13, in 1964. They
were afraid of persecution. (“What a rotten country!”) They emigrated
in 1977. Somehow, in less than half a century, Jews became
professional comics. I have never seen a book on how and why this
happened. It was as if Jews have a humor gene that had to be
suppressed by the rabbis, and when the rabbis’ influence waned, Jews
started making people laugh.

By the way, in the collection called The World’s Shortest Books,
Famous Jewish Farmers has to be included, right next to Famous
Gentile Violinists.

WHAT’S THE CONNECTION?

Half a century earlier in each case, it would have been impossible to
predict the group’s imminent dominance.

All four groups have this in common: a strong sense of the covenant.
The covenant is an Old Testament idea: Abraham’s covenant with God,
marked by circumcision. Membership in the religious community is
basic to the survival of the group.

Family and cultural ties are common to most groups, especially prior
to the Industrial Revolution. But the covenant ideal meant that God
had singled out a group to represent Him, and that He promises to
make it prosper if members obey Him. Leviticus 26 and Deuteronomy 28
are the central passages.

The lowland Scots after 1550 were Presbyterian Calvinists if they
were anything. This meant the doctrine of predestination and also a
vision of world expansion, a theology called postmillennialism. But
it took 150 years for this outlook to produce the Scottish
transformation. Why so long? I have no idea. Herman’s book begins in
1697, which is too late to answer the question.

The Dutch did not call themselves Presbyterians, but the church
structure and the theologies are so similar that it takes a
specialist to distinguish them. In the seventeenth century, there
were more Dutch postmillennialists than there are today (i.e., more
than none).

Both theologies rested on the idea of God’s covenant, which
encompasses family, church, and state. Both theologies produced an
outlook of “them vs. us, and we can beat them.”

One of the best short books on business leadership is Max DuPree’s
Leadership is an Art (1989). DuPree ran the Herman Miller Company for
many years. His father founded it. DuPree actually uses the word
“covenant” to describe the business’s key factor. He does not mean
contract. While I think the use of “covenant” is misused here,
because covenants in the Bible relate to family, church, and state,
his main point is correct: contracts are not enough.

Covenantal relationships enable participation to be practiced and
inclusive groups to be formed. The differences between covenants and
contracts appear in detail in “Intimacy” (p. 25).

The Armenians are not covenant theologians. Their tradition is that
of Eastern Orthodoxy – more mystical than judicial. Armenia was the
first nation to adopt Christianity, in either 301 or 303. They were a
warrior people for a long time, standing in the gap in 451 A.D. to
repel the Persians. The battle of Avarier is not as famous as an
anti-Persian battle in the way that Thermopylae is, but it was
important. They were invaded again and again, and they lived for 900
years under the Turks, except for the thirteenth century under the
Mongols. (My father-in-law told me that his father told him that in
the margin of the community’s heirloom Bible, there was a notation:
“Today, the Mongols passed through.”) Persecution held them together.
They have had a sense of religious solidarity, and this persisted
even after they arrived in Protestant-secular America.

Their economic success is more difficult to explain than the success
of the other three groups. This may be for lack of interest on the
part of historians and economists: fewer books on them.

The Jews were traders for centuries. Religious ties made possible a
network of international communications and transactions. They also
had their own courts and legal precedents, called “responsa.” Owning
land was difficult except in separate communities. Capital in
diamonds or gold was portable, unlike land.

The Dutch had to learn other European languages in order to trade.
They also became skilled sailors. The country is tiny. It has few
natural resources. If they wanted to prosper, they had to trade. They
did. But they had a sense of destiny about them, which led them to
fight the Spanish in the late sixteenth century, gaining independence
in the early seventeenth. In 1689, after their defeat by the British
Navy, one of their rulers, William III, became the king of England.
“If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em.” His wife inherited England for
him. Maybe this was the original Dutch Treat.

There is another factor: separation. This means cultural separation,
but it can also mean confessional. In America, the Dutch still set up
parent-run private schools that are formally Calvinistic. When I
lived in the border town of Lynden, Washington, in 1976, there were
more children enrolled in the Christian schools than in the public
schools. The Dutch pay for their cultural and confessional
separation. Theology was sufficiently well defined that, at the
border on Sunday morning, you would see Dutch-American Calvinists
heading to Canada to worship, and Dutch-Canadian Calvinists heading
for the U.S. They were polite, hard-working, well-fed people on both
sides of the border. And on both sides, we “gentiles” labeled their
mentality: “If you aren’t Dutch, you aren’t much.” On neither side
was it wise to mow your lawn on Sunday. On the American side, only
one gas station was open for business, on a rotating basis with the
competition, to serve the needs of gentile tourists.

CONFIDENCE ABOUT THE FUTURE

Members of all four groups have seen themselves as hand-picked by God
to dominate trade. They have regarded themselves as possessing an
advantage over everyone else, either in brains, trade, or the ability
to prosper under the radar. This outlook came earliest to Jews, then
the Armenians, then the Dutch, then the Scots. Their sense of group
solidarity was not unique, but their sense of participation in a
covenant that promises economic success has been unique.

The Dutch and the Scots have lost their sense of inevitable
covenantal victory, but not their sense of frugality. They have
transferred to thrift what they once attributed to God’s covenant.
Adam Smith wrote Wealth of Nations (1776) as a manifesto of this
theological shift.

Innovation, uncertainty, cost-cutting, new markets, profit and loss:
here is the program of personal success for the entrepreneur. When
you belong to a group that will help you when you fall, which will
provide start-up capital to get you going, you have an advantage. The
Koreans have this outlook and group support in the United States. The
Koreans, more than any Asian immigrant group, are Christians:
specifically, Presbyterians. It is interesting that the dairy farming
Dutch in Southern California have sold their land to developers, who
in turn sold new homes to the Korean children of the family-run,
drive-through dairy stores of 1960. The Dutch then moved to Lynden.
That relocation process has been going on for three decades.

Without confidence in the future, the entrepreneur cannot function.
He becomes at best an investor in bonds or other fixed-income
ventures. He accepts statistically insurable risk in place of
unpredictable uncertainty. He becomes frugal, advancing himself by
means of the steady excess of income over outflow. He does not change
society through innovation.

CONCLUSION

If you can buy from a [ ], sell to a [ ], and make a profit, your
future is secure. Most people can’t.

As the free market erodes family ties, group solidarity, and
persecution, members of many groups can get in on the cornucopia. It
is clear that the Japanese have a similar mindset as the four groups,
but without the doctrine of the covenant. The Chinese are now
adopting it. The freedom to compete breaks down the barriers to
entry. But, as the free market moves westward, those who belong to
subgroups that have the same outlook as the Big Four enjoy an initial
advantage. Group solidarity fades in the face of open competition,
but this takes time. When an innovator has confidence in the future,
which includes confidence in the safety net of his family or his
confessional group, he has an advantage: less fear of failure.

Faith is then transferred to the free market itself. In Europe and
America, faith in the twentieth century was transferred from the free
market to the welfare state. The reverse process is true in Asia.
This is why Asia now has an advantage over the West: social and
racial solidarity coupled with increasing faith in the free market
and declining faith in the state, whether Communist or Fabian
socialist.

In the interim period, in between the coming of the free market and
the erosion of social and racial solidarity, confidence is on the
side of the family-based small enterprise. Asia is booming because of
this. China seems to have the unique combination. We shall see what
happens when the boom turns into recession after China’s central bank
stops creating fiat money like a drunken (non-Dutch) sailor.

November 13, 2004

Gary North [send him mail] is the author of Mises on Money. Visit

http://www.freebooks.com.
http://www.lewrockwell.com/north/north323.html

Kocharian condoles on Arafat death

PRESIDENT KOCHARIAN CONDOLES ON ARAFAT DEATH

ArmenPress
Nov 11 2004

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS: Armenian president Robert Kocharian
sent a message of condolences to the interim leader of the Palestinian
Authority Rawhi Fattouh to convey his and Armenians’ sympathy to the
people of Palestine in connection with the death of Yasser Arafat.

Arafat died after suffering a brain hemorrhage at the Paris hospital
where he was flown on October 29 from the West Bank headquarters where
he had been penned by Israel for more than 2-1/2 years. His body is
to be flown to Cairo for a ceremony on Friday and then to the West
Bank city of Ramallah for burial at his headquarters.

Under Palestinian law, Arafat was replaced as caretaker president
of the Palestinian Authority by parliamentary speaker Rawhi Fattouh,
who must organize elections within 60 days.

Mahmoud Abbas, a reform-minded former prime minister, was elected
to succeed him as chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization,
the Palestinians’ highest decision-making body.

Turkey: There Is No Information On Changes In Armenia’s Policy

TURKEY: THERE IS NO INFORMATION ON CHANGES IN ARMENIA’S POLICY

Azg/arm
12 Nov 04

It has been several days now that Turkish press misleads readers by
informing that the Armenian government left the state budget of 2005
without money for promoting Armenian Genocide acknowledgement and
concludes that the issue ceased to be a priority for the country.

Yesterdayâ~@~Ys issue of Azg Daily explained Turkeyâ~@~Ys groundless
conclusions by the latterâ~@~Ys desire to confuse the international
community and to give signals to Armenia.

Press secretary of the Foreign Ministry of Armenia, Hamlet
Gasparian, said in an interview to Armenpress: “There is no change
in Armeniaâ~@~Ys policy as to international acknowledgment of the
Armenian Genocide. The issue of Genocide acknowledgement is still on
the foreign agenda of Armenia, and separate sentences in the budget
bill mean nothing”.

Press secretaryâ~@~Ys words proved our evaluation of Turkish printed
mediaâ~@~Ys conclusions to be true. Itâ~@~Ys interesting that
the spokesman of Turkeyâ~@~Ys Foreign Ministry Namk Tan confirmed
Gasparianâ~@~Ys words on November 10.

Turkish Milliet writes that Turkey declared that there is no
information about Armeniaâ~@~Ys decision to remove the issue of
Armenian Genocide from its foreign agenda, therefore Yerevan will
not change its policy.

Tan made the issue clear at his meeting with journalists. According
to Milliet, Tan noted that the information on “the absence of
Genocide-related articles from 2005 budget bill” came from the
printed media only and that they have no facts stating the shift in
Armeniaâ~@~Ys stance except for the newspapers. Then he added that the
Armenian government displayed no wish to bring changes in the budged,
thus it is a waste of time to talk of Armeniaâ~@~Ys changed policy.

By Hakob Chakrian

–Boundary_(ID_UMrsJq0JXW4qiw9pAleIiQ)–

USA: Voto, Stampa Turca delusa da vittoria di Bush

ANSA Notiziario Generale in Italiano
Nov 4, 2004

USA: VOTO, STAMPA TURCA DELUSA DA VITTORIA DI BUSH

ANKARA

(ANSA) – ANKARA, 4 NOV – “Ancora 4 anni con Bush”
(Hurriyet). “Bush da una parte, il mondo dall’altra” (Radikal
e Star). “Nonostante tutto, gli americani hanno preferito un
generale ad un filosofo” (Sabah). “Lo status quo vince negli
Usa” (Milliyet). Sono questi i titoli, prevalentemente ispirati
ad una evidente delusione, con cui questa mattina i giornali
turchi riferiscono e commentano la notizia della definitiva
conferma di George W. Bush a presidente degli Usa.

I quotidiani turchi esprimono anche “sorpresa” per
l’amplissimo sostegno popolare al presidente americano, che
“nonostante il fiasco in Iraq” – viene osservato da molti
giornali – ha aumentato i suoi suffragi su scala nazionale dai
50 milioni di voti del 2000 a 60 milioni, prendendo 3,5 milioni
in piu’ di Kerry e raggiungendo un 51% dei voti totali, mentre
-come osserva il centrista Hurriyet- oscura persino il 49% preso
da Bill Clinton nel 1996. Il quotidiano liberale di sinistra
Milliyet si consola osservando che, pero’, il voto mostra che
l’America “e divisa a meta'”.

“Gli americani hanno ignorato l’opinione pubblica
internazionale”, scrive il quotidiano di sinistra, Radikal,
mentre il giornale islamico moderato “Zaman” nota che la
vittoria di Bush “avra’ effetti sull’intero pianeta e per piu
di 4 anni”. “Il mondo e’ alla merce di Bush” – titola anche
il quotidiano di centro-sinistra Cumhuriyet.

Tuttavia, sui rapporti tra Turchia e Usa, prevale il giudizio
che nulla cambiera’ (e nulla sarebbe cambiato anche con Kerry)
riguardo all’appoggio americano all’adesione della Turchia
neell’Unione europea.

A tale proposito il giornale Milliyet scrive che Ankara
potrebbe avere anche qualche vantaggio dalla rielezione di Bush:
“L’attuale amministrazione Usa attribuisce alla Turchia una
grande importanza specie a causa della sua posizione
geostrategica” in rapporto al suo progetto di diffondere la
democrazia nel grande Medio Oriente”, scrive Milliyet.

“Mentre l’atteggiamento di Kerry sulla questione armena e
quella cipriota erano poco chiare, la posizione di Bush e del
suo team e’ stata gia’ sperimentata. E’ questo puo’ essere
valutato come un fattore tranquillizzante per Ankara”, conclude
lo stesso giornale Milliyet.

NATO not to compete with other countries in Caucasus -Scheffer

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
November 5, 2004 Friday 11:22 AM Eastern Time

NATO not to compete with other countries in Caucasus -Scheffer

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN

The visit of NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer to the
Trans-Caucasian region is not aimed at engaging of the organisation in
competition with other organisations and countries there.

Scheffer made this statement in the Armenian capital after talks with
the country’s leadership on Friday.

The North Atlantic Alliance head said the Armenia-NATO relations are
developing very well. According to Scheffer, Armenia has made a
principled decision to start developing an individual plan of
partnership with NATO.

It is a very considerable step in the development of the Alliance’s
relations with Armenia, in the view of the NATO secretary general.

The NATO leader stated that his visit to the region is caused by the
decision the heads of state and government of the Alliance made in
Istanbul to give more attention to Central Asian and Caucasian
countries.

According to Scheffer, NATO has no plans and ambitions concerning the
settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh problem, as its solution is within
the competence of the OSCE Minsk Group.

Armenian homosexuals in France accuse president of homophobia

Armenian homosexuals in France accuse president of homophobia

Arminfo
4 Nov 04

PARIS

The association of Armenian gays and lesbians in France (AGLA) has
recently staged a protest action outside the Armenian embassy in
Paris.

AGLA reports that demonstrators, around 30 people, chanted: “Kocharyan
– homophobe”. The main reason for the action was the increasing number
of homophobia cases in Armenia.

During the action the demonstrators met representatives of the
Armenian embassy and gave them two letters for Armenian President
Robert Kocharyan and Prime Minister Andranik Markaryan.

“We receive a lot of letters from Armenia which list numerous cases of
discrimination and violence in Armenia. Gays are victims of blackmail,
beatings and brutal treatment by the police on a permanent basis. They
are often defenceless in the face of hatred and street violence,” the
letters said.

Representatives of AGLA demanded that the Armenian leadership begin to
resolutely fight against manifestations of homophobia and
discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.

Armenian Opposition Needs Toilets to Change Power

ARMENIAN OPPOSITION NEEDS TOILETS TO CHANGE POWER

Aravot, Yerevan
2 Nov 04

At his recent press conference, the head of the political council of
the Republic (Anrapetutyun) Party, MP Albert Bazeyan, announced:
“Certain social issues need to be resolved before we organize mass
protest rallies.”

“People cannot be expected to spend three to four days in the streets
if the necessary conditions are not there. They must be provided with
food and water and some other problems need to be solved. For example,
there are no public conveniences for them to use in Yerevan today. To
solve these problems we need money which the opposition has not got,”
(he said).

RFE/RL Armenia: Jehovah’s Witnesses Trapped In Bureaucratic Maze

RFE/RL Armenia: Jehovah’s Witnesses Trapped In Bureaucratic Maze
Friday, 22 October 2004

At a gathering of the Council of Europe in June, the deputy speaker of
Armenia’s parliament said Yerevan would free Jehovah’s Witnesses who had
been jailed as conscientious objectors — as soon as parliament passed a
new alternative-service law. The law was passed in July, but at least 13
conscientious objectors remain in jail in Armenia, including five jailed
just this month. The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
has questioned the country’s actions, as have other civil rights
organizations.

By Don Hill

Prague, 22 October 2004 — Different government officials offer
divergent statements about the treatment of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Armenia.

According to deputy speaker of parliament Tigran Torosyan, there are no
members of the Christian denomination in jail for resisting military
service as conscientious objectors. Torosyan told RFE/RL yesterday, “I
don’t know examples of people belonging to this organization who are in
jail.”

The Forum 18 news service — which covers religious freedom in the
former Soviet republics and Eastern Europe — reported that, in fact,
five Jehovah’s Witnesses have been jailed this month alone for refusing
military service. That brings to 13 the number serving prison time for
the offense. The maximum sentence for such an offense in Armenia is two
years.

In yet another statement, Torosyan said those conscientious objectors in
jail in Armenia would be freed when a new law on alternatives to
military service was passed. He made the comment to Jehovah’s Witnesses
representatives at a meeting of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe last June. The law passed on 1 July. Yet the
conscientious objectors remain in jail.

Despite parliament adopting a law on alternative service, the government
has not made any provision for such service. A lawyer for the Jehovah’s
Witnesses, Rustam Khachatryan, said that is what Defense Ministry
officials told his clients individually before they were prosecuted and
jailed.

Officials have also said Jehovah’s Witnesses cannot be recognized as
conscientious objectors until the denomination achieves official
registration as a religious organization.

But Paul S. Gillies, a spokesman for the group, points out that
authorities finally registered the church on 11 October. The group had
sought this status for nine years. “One of the explanations [for denying
conscientious objectors’ rights] that was given to me personally was
that they were waiting for registration. Because we were unregistered,
then they couldn’t release the prisoners. But then one of the obstacles
to registration was always said to be the fact that we were
conscientious objectors,” Gillies told RFE/RL.

“I get the feeling that no government department particularly wants to
do this — to [implement] an alternative-service law.”

Forum 18 says that Vladimir Karapetian of the ministry’s Media Relations
Division said on 19 October that the issue is outside the competence of
the Foreign Ministry.

Natalia Voutova, a Council of Europe representative in Yerevan, said the
Foreign Ministry declined to explain how keeping a promise the country
made to the council in 2001 could be construed as outside the competence
of the ministry.

Forum 18 editor Felix Corley told RFE/RL that he does not believe all of
these contradictions indicate that Armenia’s bureaucracy is incompetent.
“No. I get the feeling that no government department particularly wants
to do this — to [implement] an alternative-service law.” he said.
“They know perfectly well what they are doing. The Foreign Ministry, the
Justice Ministry, the Defense Ministry, the representatives to the
Council of Europe — they all know perfectly well what the commitments
are. They all know perfectly well what the current situation is. They
just don’t want to. They fear political and social pressure.”

Corley said the Jehovah’s Witnesses — which says it has 8,000 members
in Armenia — is probably the most unpopular religious group in Armenia,
where normalcy means membership — however casual — in the Armenian
Apostolic Church.

In a country troubled by tense relations with neighboring Azerbaijan,
refusal of military service is disliked. Also, the group aggressively
seeks to recruit new converts, an activity that offends many in the
country.

Jehovah’s Witnesses has its headquarters in New York and claims 6
million members around the world. The group’s fundamental guiding belief
is that the Bible contains the literal word of God.

http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2004/10/85d9757a-21ec-495c-85a0-e71043e29bd2.html