BAKU: Opposition party to picket French embassy

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Aug 30 2004

Opposition party to picket French embassy

Baku, August 27, AssA-Irada
The Whole Azerbaijan Popular Front Party (WAPFP) is going to resume
actions in a protest against the participation of Armenian officers
in NATO military training to be held in Baku this September.
The party’s protest actions that started early in August were
suspended later.
A source from the WAPFP has said that a picket will be held outside
the French embassy in Baku on September 3. The party has applied to
the Mayoral Office of Baku to sanction the action.
The police earlier prevented the party’s attempts to picket the
ministries of Foreign Affairs and Defense and the US embassy in
Baku.*

AZTAG: Interview with Henry Theriault

“Aztag” Daily Newspaper
P.O. Box 80860, Bourj Hammoud,
Beirut, Lebanon
Fax: +961 1 258529
Phone: +961 1 260115, +961 1 241274
Email: [email protected]

AZTAG: Interview with Henry Theriault

Interview by Khatchig Mouradian

Professor Henry Theriault received his B.A. from Princeton University and
his Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of Massachusetts. He serves as
Associate Professor of philosophy and coordinates the Center for the Study
of Human Rights at Worcester State College (Massachusetts, USA). His
research interests include genocide, nationalism, and the philosophy of
history.

Henry Theriault visited Beirut in April. His visit was initiated by the
Lebanese-Armenian Heritage Club of the American University of Beirut. He
gave public lectures at the American University of Beirut, Haigazian
University, the Hagop Der Melkonian hall, and the Armenian Catholicosate of
Cilicia. Despite his tight schedule, he managed to spare some time for an
interview, which ended up being more of a lively discussion. Excerpts:

Aztag- Having specialized in philosophy, you bring a fresh perspective to
the study of the Armenian Genocide. This is evident from the few papers you
have so far published as well as from your lectures. In what way can
philosophy be helpful in the study of genocide and mass murder?

Henry Theriault- One issue where such an approach is necessary is that of
denial. People often respond to denial on the level of presenting the facts.
However, denials are really never about the facts, they are about trying to
manipulate a target audience and make them see the realities of the world in
a way that’s not accurate. To achieve this end, there are a number of
techniques that deniers use. For example, they introduce ideas that every
perspective on a historical event is equally valid. And if you approach the
deniers from a historical perspective, you state the facts and you end up
getting into a debate about which facts count and which ones don’t. In my
opinion, you can almost never win that debate. A denier can always reject
whatever fact you have, any document you produce, no matter how good the
evidence. A denier can always bounce back and you get in an ongoing battle
over the facts; a battle that doesn’t end, and the ultimate result is a kind
of stalemate where whatever historical facts you are trying to prove is
never really proven. In case of the Armenian genocide, for instance, the
Turkish deniers sometimes just make the same arguments over and over again
to new audiences. The arguments can be discredited, they can be completely
fallacious and yet, every time they make them, they get taken seriously
again and again, and you have to fight that battle forever.

Aztag- You put this very bluntly when you said in one of your lectures in
Beirut that it is not important for the deniers to make people believe in
what they say, the important thing for them is that what the Armenians say
is not believed.

Henry Theriault- Exactly! They create a situation where there’s no clear
truth; for a denier, that’s victory! The audience doesn’t have to believe
any version. I find the claim put forth by some extreme deniers that the
Armenians committed genocide by killing Turks and other Muslims very
striking. If anyone with a basic understanding of history just looks at the
number of Armenians who were in the Ottoman Empire and what possible access
of arms they had, the notion that Armenians committed genocide becomes so
absurd. But when deniers make that claim, people end up balancing:
`Armenians say Turks committed genocide against them; Turks say the
Armenians committed genocide against them. These two groups hate each other,
and who knows what is the truth is and what’s not, we can’t commit to either
side.”

As I said, there are also things like the appeal to free speech. Deniers
insist that that every opinion should be heard and taken seriously no matter
what it is. One of the problems in the US is that people are very simplistic
about free speech. Every opinion should be heard doesn’t mean every opinion
should be taken equally seriously, and what happens is that people make that
mistake; they think “oh, this is an opinion, that’s an opinion too. I’ll be
open minded and take them BOTH seriously”. That’s great if you’re talking
about complicated political issues where you’re really trying to reach an
understanding of different positions. But when we’re talking about a basic
historical fact, then you want to make sure you get the evidence, the
available information, and then you take it and you try to make some sense
out of it.

>From a philosophical standpoint, there are other problems as well. There is
this idea of absolute positivism where no historical fact is ever proven
unless somehow there’s absolute evidence on it. But the problem is the
evidence standards that a lot of deniers try to get people to commit to are
so extreme that no person really thinking rationally would accept them. The
deniers say, for instance, that to prove that Armenian genocide happened,
you have to have absolute data, a huge number of valid data that support
every particular point you’re making and there should be no ambiguous data
and so forth. But sometimes even in the hard sciences, absolute data is not
available. People ought to be very careful when they claim that evidence of
the genocide isn’t sufficient because it really accepts the deniers’ view
that whatever evidence you give, the bar goes up a little bit higher to the
point that it becomes irrational.

People have a lot of very simplistic ideas about critical thinking. For
instance, they think one should listen to the both sides of the story and
you never judge, or the proper way that objectivity is the same as
neutrality, which is completely false. I think anyone claiming that he knows
anything about history should be willing to accept that some basic facts are
beyond doubt. One may disagree on the number of Armenians killed in the
Armenian genocide, but the fact that a large number of Armenians were killed
because of a systematic state policy is something that’s either a fact or it
isn’t.

In a murder case, it’s very rare to have direct and conclusive evidence of a
crime. You trust this witness, you trust that witness. Somebody was supposed
to be somewhere at 10 o’clock at night, and somebody says he saw a car like
the one that person drives on the street, miles away…you put the evidence
together and the bottom line is that you eventually have to come to a
conclusion. Deniers would like to keep the question open forever. So by
saying that there’s not enough evidence of genocide you’re essentially
giving a victory to denial, because you’re not settling the question. As
soon as you say you need more evidence then it’s your job to make sure you
get it. I’m an academic and I certainly have this `disease’ as well. We tend
to think in terms of decades of thinking and research and so forth, but when
you’re dealing with Human Rights issues, like the Armenian genocide, lives
can be on the line and future human rights issues could be at stake. So I
think we have to hurry ourselves up occasionally and make some tough
decisions.

Aztag- And, of course, that doesn’t mean that the research should stop.

Henry Theriault- No it doesn’t. The way you test whether someone is being
reasonable in their opinions, you ask him `what kind of evidence you would
it take to make you change your position?’ and if the person says there is
no evidence that could possibly make him change his mind, then you know that
the person is committed to the idea without really weighing it through the
process of evaluation. If someone asks what it would take to make me change
my mind about, say, the Armenian genocide or the Rwandan genocide, I would
answer that if I suddenly found out I’ve been brainwashed or something, then
I would have to accept the argument that these genocides didn’t occur.
However, the evidence is so overwhelming that it will be entirely irrational
and unreasonable for me not to take it seriously. Anyone who studies the
events in the Ottoman Empire during that period of time would conclude that
what took place was genocide.

Aztag- But we have to be realistic. People cannot research every single
issue to form an opinion about it. At some point, they have to accept the
views of professionals specialized in that field. You are saying that anyone
who researches these events will conclude that what took place was genocide.
The deniers can, in turn, say that anyone who does some research will find
out that what took place wasn’t genocide. No wonder some people are confused
and approach the issue with `open-mindedness’.

Henry Theriault- I would like to say two things about this. First, in the
field of philosophy there’s a debate about whether you can have something
called theory neutral data. If you just collect the data, will it point to
some theory or is it always necessary to have some kind of framework? The
use of a bad relativist framework convinces people that this is a good way
to look at the world, and then when they’re confronted with data of the
Armenian genocide or any other human rights violation they see it within a
framework where it doesn’t look like genocide, it doesn’t look like a one
sided violence.

Second, I’d like to say that in life there is no absolute certainty. People
300 years ago thought that Newton’s equations of motion were the absolute
last word in physics. I’m not an expert on this, but the universe doesn’t
fit together in quite the neat way. And human reality is so much more
complicated than the hard sciences. And of course, nothing fits together in
a nice neat package. If the deniers apply their evidence standards on the
Holocaust, and even on issues of hard sciences, they would sound equally
convincing.

Aztag- This atmosphere that denial creates is intolerable for the ever
decreasing number of Armenians who faced these atrocities as well as for us,
their descendents. However, the Turks who are not aware of the facts, and
who are brought up in schools where the denialist or, at best, the
relativist approaches are being taught, would feel great frustration as well
when they face the `Armenian claims’. Denial’s detrimental effects are felt
on both sides and on many levels, aren’t they?

Henry Theriault- If I were a Turk today, I would be reaching back to the
Ottoman Empire to think of something good about my country. Today, Turkey is
in a very weak position, it looks very strong but Turkey is effectively a
state of the United States; the US government more or less tells turkey what
it wants and Turkey has to do it. Of course, if you look back to the days of
the Ottoman Empire, the contrast is striking. Nowadays, Turkey is not only
very dependent on the USA, but also it’s not much liked in the region by
most governments. It also has internal problems (Islamism, democracy
standards, Kurds). And you can understand, maybe on a human level that Turks
would want to identify with the good things in their history. The problem is
when they takes that to the level of “I desperately need to have a proud
identity and anybody that says anything negative at all about Turkey as my
enemy and it’s got to be wrong”. But the anger that an Armenian feels at
denial and the anger that a Turkish person might feel at having to confront
the fact of the genocide are not the same angers, they’re not coming from
the same source and they shouldn’t be evaluated in the same way.

Aztag- You are working on a paper where a new approach to the interpretation
of the motives that led to the Armenian genocide will be presented. What was
your `problem’ with the previous theories?

Henry Theriault- A lot of important and invaluable research has been done on
the Armenian genocide. But there are two issues that I often think about.
One is that people tend to look for one mechanism that accounts for the
genocide. The way I understand genocide is in terms of the particular
perpetrators who participate at the high levels, at the ground level and in
between. There are different kinds of perpetrators, there are different
kinds of motives: some perpetrators have overlapping multiple motives;
economic, ideological, psychological etc.

Some theories of Holocaust would reduce it down to “Hitler was insane, and
hated his grandmother who was a Jew” or something like that; that’s just
ridiculous because that may be a piece of the bigger puzzle and it might
very important to include it, but when people take one piece and present it
as the whole truth, that’s too much. One should know what the historical
facts are, and then try to understand why they are as they are.
One needs to look at economic issues, clerical issues, prejudice on the
ground, racism, if there were religious issues, historical trends and
shifts, demographics, migration patterns, one needs to look at a whole range
of issues to understand genocide. In this respect, there are some missing
pieces in the Armenian genocide historiography because a lot of the scholars
try to reduce it down to one or two mechanisms.

This is somehow related to Nietzsche’s Perspectivism. One of the things
Nietzsche does in his writings is work through different perspectives and
different ideas; people think he’s contradicting himself, but what he’s
actually doing is bringing different things into perspective, and going
through that takes a fairly sophisticated intellectual sense of what’s going
on.

What I’m saying is that if one is going to explain a complicated historical
event that involves millions of people, one has got to recognize that your
understanding of that event is going to be very complicated. It doesn’t mean
that you can’t focus in on certain clear pieces that help to reduce it down
for easy kind of understanding, and it doesn’t mean you can’t say that the
Turkish government committed genocide of Armenians; of course they did, but
that genocide was complicated, the way it works. In my paper, a draft of
which you saw, I’m not giving a comprehensive view of the genocide, but I’m
trying to pay attention to some things that have not been paid attention to,
such as the interior issues among the Turks and within the Armenian
community.

Aztag- In an interview conducted in January, I asked Professor Rudolph
Rummel about the issues of recognition and reparation. He said, `No
reparations. Too much time has passed, virtually no one in authority during
this period is alive, and Armenians loses in property and income are too
diffuse to determine now anyway. Theother side of this in the injustice that
would be committed against Turks that had no role in the genocide and may
have opposed it, and whose even may have fought against it (many Turks did
try to help the Armenians)’.
What do you think about his comment?

Henry Theriault- The amount of time that passed doesn’t matter; it’s whether
the repercussions of the genocide and the loss of land still have an impact.
For example, I fully support the case of land claims of native Americans,
and part of the reason why I do that is the impact of the loss of lands.
Native Americans today are facing great difficulty because of the legacy of
the genocide; I don’t care if a thousand years go by. The case of Armenians
is similar. If you just look at the delicate political situation of Armenia,
its vulnerability to Turkey, the dependence on Russia and the US and others
for basic survival, what I mean becomes clear. So I think that part of the
reparations is to help rebuild the victim community in a way that makes it
secure and viable.

http://www.aztagdaily.com/interviews/interviews.htm

Armenia, Russia Wrap Up Annual War Games

Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
Aug 28 2004

Armenia, Russia Wrap Up Annual War Games

By Gevorg Stamboltsian

Armenian and Russian troops practiced defensive and counter-offensive
operations against an imaginary common enemy on Friday, ending four
days of joint military exercises at a training ground 40 kilometers
west of Yerevan.

Hundreds of soldiers backed by warplanes and helicopter gunships
fired live rounds from assault rifles, artillery pieces and tanks as
they fought back a simulated invasion of Armenia from the north. The
heavy fire from elements of the Armenian Armed Forces and the Russian
military
base stationed in the country lasted for about 90 minutes and marked
the final episode of the war games described as a success by the
organizers.
`The military exercises have taken place in a coordinated manner and
have served their purpose,’ Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian, clad in
a military uniform, declared afterward. `No incidents have been
registered and the detachments participating in the exercises have
fully achieved their objectives.’

The official purpose of the annual exercises was to improve the
interoperability of troops from the two countries bound by a military
alliance. The Armenian army’s chief of staff, Colonel-General Mikael
Harutiunian, has said they are not directed against any third
country. However, Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry has reportedly
expressed concern about the maneuvers, saying that they are at odds
with Russia’s role as a mediator in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Speaking to journalists, Sarkisian indicated that official Yerevan is
not worried about a possible deployment of U.S. troops in Azerbaijan
as a result of Washington’s national security priorities. `Maybe
Russia has a different opinion, but in our view this is the United
States’ and Azerbaijan’s business,’ he said. `We can’t tell
Azerbaijan not to host one or another base on their territory, can
we?’

Sarkisian also reaffirmed the Armenian government’s intention to send
a small contingent of non-combat military personnel to Iraq where the
U.S.-led multinational occupation force has been struggling to
maintain law and order. He said the government is awaiting the
parliament’s approval for the dispatch of Armenian military doctors,
demining experts and truck drivers.

Kocharian Visit to China to Stimulate Armenian/Chinese Relations

RA PRESIDENT’S VISIT TO CHINA TO BECOME NEW STIMULUS FOR ARMENIAN-
CHINESE COOPERATION

YEREVAN, August 27 (Noyan Tapan). The visit of RA President Robert
Kocharian to China scheduled for September will become a new stimulus
for further cooperation between the two countries. RA Minister of
Defense Serge Sargsian, Secretary of the National Security Council
attached to the RA President, reported about it during the August 26
meeting with Major-General Qian Lihua, Deputy Chief of the Head
Department of Foreign Relations of the Chinese Ministry of Defense,
and Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of China to Armenia
Zo Suelian. He thanked the Chinese government and the Army for the aid
rendered to Armenia. Major-General Qian Lihua noticed in his turn that
the government and the Armed Forces of China attach great importance
to cooperation between two countries both in the military and other
spheres. According to the press service of the RA Ministry of Defense,
it was noticed during the meeting that ten Armenian officers have
already graduated from the higher military institutions of China, and
another six places are given to the Armenian Armed Forces in
accordance with the 2004-2005 plan of military education. It was also
mentioned that if the Armenian side wants to increase this number, the
military leadership of China is ready for the discussion of this
issue.

Russian Transportation minister outlines plans to develop

RIA Novosti, Russia
Aug 24 2004

TRANSPORTATION MINISTER OUTLINES PLANS TO DEVELOP INFRASTRUCTURE IN
RUSSIA’S SOUTH

SOCHI, August 24 (RIA Novosti) – Transportation Minister Igor Levitin
outlined plans to develop the infrastructure in southern Russia and
told about some of the newly-commissioned large infrastructure
projects as he met with President Vladimir Putin in the Black sea
port of Sochi Tuesday. Mr. Putin is now in Sochi on vacation.

According to Mr. Levitin, his ministry has worked out a concept for
the development of rail, aviation, and motor infrastructures in
Russia’s south, as well as of sea ports. He said that in 2005, as
much as $8 billion in allocations (the U.S. dollar currently buys
29.22 rubles) would be distributed among seven port construction
projects. “Within three years’ time, we will be able to mount all the
bridges that have been under construction for over a decade now,” he
assured.

As Mr. Levitin pointed out, 30% of the nation’s passenger traffic
falls on southern provinces, but the infrastructure network here is
not adequately developed throughout. His ministry’s new concept is
aimed at bringing uniformity to the transportation infrastructure of
Russia’s south so that people will have no difficulty getting to
southern resorts from any part of the country, he said.

Speaking of motorways, Mr. Levitin said the network was developed
well enough for freight traffic, but not for passenger traffic. Many
of the routes run through highland areas and may therefore be unsafe
for passengers, hence the need for tunnels.

“We have reoriented funds to the construction of tunnels at [the
Black Sea resorts] of Krasnaya Polyana and Dzhubga, and this will
raise safety,” he told President Putin.

Within one year’s time, the Transportation Ministry will renovate the
sea terminal in Sochi and restore sea travel between Russia, Ukraine,
Armenia, and Georgia, Mr. Levitin said. There is high demand for sea
lines that would link those countries together, he stressed. “We
intend to develop an infrastructure for passengers in ports,” said
the minister.

Mr. Levitin also pointed out that Russian rail transportation was
becoming increasingly efficient. He said that his ministry would be
developing the rail infrastructure in parallel with motorways.

In Javakhk Georgian Students Present Armenian Church as Georgian

IN JAVAKHK GEORGIAN STUDENTS TRY TO PRESENT ARMENIAN CHURCH AS
GEORGIAN

AKHALKALAKI, August 23 (Noyan Tapan). Students of a number of higher
schools of Tbilisi visit Javakhk with a “Parvana” expedition for the
fifth time in succession. It is initiated and headed by monk Nikoloz,
Head of the so-called Gumburdo and Akhalkalak Diocese of the Georgian
Orthodox Church. According to the “A-Info” Agency, if last year the
expedition was mainly engaged in collecting stones from Abul mount for
the wall of the monastic complex of Poka, this year it decided to
travel over Javakhk. The 50-member group visited different areas of
Javakhk. The “pilgrimage” of the students started from the Armenian
village of Poka, in the vicinity of which the newly established
Georgian monastic complex is situated, and finished at the same
place. This time the local population also expressed dissatisfaction
in connection with the visit of the Georgian students: the reason was
scornful attitude towards the Armenian holy things, history,
traditions. There was espectially great dissatisfaction in the
villages of Gumburgo and Poka. So, Gumburdo was discontent that the
guests tried to present the Armenian church as Georgian. Poka was
discontent, because the Georgian students spread drugs among the youth
of the village, etc..

Chess: Iranian GM Maghami emerges sole leader

Gulf News, United Arab Emirates
August 22, 2004

IRANIAN GM MAGHAMI EMERGES SOLE LEADER

Iranian Grandmaster Ehsan Ghaem Maghami emerged as the sole leader of
the Master Tournament at the 14th Abu Dhabi Chess Festival when he
defeated Marat Dzhumaev in the sixth round yesterday.

Ghaem Maghami has five points with three rounds remaining in the $
4,000 tournament. Five players are in second place with 4.5 points
each. They are Russian’s Mikhail Kobail and Evgeny Vladimirov,
Kazkhstan’s Pavel Kotsur, Artashes Minasian and Armenia’s Ashot
Anastasian.

Thursday was the only rest day in the Festival and the competition
resumed late Friday evening.

A total of $ 30,000 is on offer in prize money for the event which
also includes an open tournament, a children’s tournament and a blitz
tournament.

Ghaem Maghami won the Blitz tournament beating Konstantin Chernyshov
in the final. Top-seeded GM Evgeny Vladimirov of Kazakhstan drew his
sixth-round match with Tejas Bakre to total 4 points. Fancied GM
Artashes Minasian of Armenia beat International Master Imad Hakki of
Syria.

Five more players including Indian GMs Ramachandra Ramesh and
Pentalal Harikrishna, are in joint seventh place with four points
each. The others are Evgeny Vladimirov, Dmitry Bocharov, Tejas Bakre
and Morteza Mahjoob.

Net Profit of Armenia’s Banking System to Total 9.4bln AMD by 2005

NET PROFIT OF ARMENIA’s BANKING SYSTEM TO TOTAL 9.4BLN AMD BY 2005

YEREVAN, AUGUST 16. ARMINFO. The net profit of Armenia’s banking
system is expected to make up 9.4bln. AMD by 2005, and 11.1bln. AMD by
2007. Bankers forecast that almost all profit expected by 2005 will be
directed to increasing the capital. Only three banks intend to pay
dividends totaling 290.3mln. AMD before July 1, 2005.From that time,
three other banks are to perform this operation, and their dividends
are to amount to 2.4bln. AMD.

If the forecast profit and carrying amounts are ensured by 2005, the
ROA of Armenia’s banking system will make up 2.8% and the ROE 24.2%.

According to bankers, changes in the income-expense structure of the
country’s banking system will be caused by further reduction of
interest rates, increase in the share of assets, improvement of the
credit portfolio and introduction of modern technologies as a result
of a necessity for new banking services.

According to bankers, in the incomes structure, interest incomes will
increase from 26.4bln. AMD to 33.7bln. AMD and noninterest incomes
from 13.8bln. AMD to 17.2bln. AMD January 1, 2005 to January 1,
2007. In the expenses structure, interest expenses are expected to
increase from 8.9bln. AMD to 10.8bln. AMD and noninterest expenses
from 18.1bln. AMD to 22.3bln. AMD. As a result, incomes are expected
to total 51.4bln. AMD and expenses 40bln. AMD by 2005, and
64.3bln. AMD and 49.2bln. AMD respectively by 2007. As a result, the
balance profit is expected to increase from 11.4bln. AMD to
15.1bln. AMD.

According to the RA Central Bank, the net profit of Armenia’s banking
system totaled 4.3bln. AMD in the first half of 2004. By June 1, 2004,
the total capital had been 55.7bln. AMD, assets 310.9bln. AMD. In the
first half of 2004, total incomes were 25.6bln. AMD, and total
expenses 20.2bln. AMD. As a result, balance profit totaled
5.3bln. AMD.

Turning a blind eye to genocide

Toronto Star, Canada
Aug 12 2004

Turning a blind eye to genocide

PETER MORLEY

“Never again.” These words evoke the international community’s
collective promise to remain vigilant and prevent the scourge of
genocide from repeating itself. But a promise to whom?

In 1948, the United Nations completed the drafting of the Genocide
Convention. Once called “a crime without a name” by Winston
Churchill, the convention defines “genocide” as the intentional
destruction, in whole or in part, of a national, ethnic, racial or
religious group.

The convention followed the Holocaust and the near extermination of
the Armenian population in Turkey. The first article of the
convention sets out the most important obligation on states: to
prevent and punish genocide, whether it occurs during time of peace
or time of war.

Over the past decade, the international community has demonstrated
the will to punish genocide.

U.N. war crimes tribunals have indicted and prosecuted the
perpetrators of genocide in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia, and the
International Criminal Court has been established to continue this
work into the future.

Despite this apparent will to punish genocide, the international
community has demonstrated no will to uphold its obligation to
prevent genocide. The Genocide Convention empowers states to seek
action through the U.N. to prevent and suppress genocide.

Unfortunately the U.N., a body that is ultimately a reflection of the
will of its constituent states, has proved both unwilling and unable
to intervene in genocidal campaigns.

In the former Yugoslavia, 8,000 Muslims were killed in the Bosnian
town of Srebrenica while under the reluctant protection of the U.N.
Hopelessly outnumbered, the Dutch peacekeepers guarding the
Srebrenica enclave offered no protection as Bosnian Serb forces
rounded up the Muslims in the area, killed all men of roughly
military age and deported the remaining men, women and children.

In an even more tragic scenario, the U.N. peacekeeping force in
Rwanda, under the command of Canadian Lt.-Gen. Romeo Dallaire, was
powerless in the face of the genocidal fury that swept the country in
1994, claiming the lives of 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus over a
period of only 100 days.

Since 1994, world leaders ranging from former U.S. president Bill
Clinton to Annan have made their way to Rwanda to express their
regret over their failure to prevent the unspeakably terrible
genocide, and to once again breathe the words, “Never again.” But on
the 10th anniversary of the Rwandan genocide, has anything changed?

In recent months, familiar images of systematic extermination,
systematic rape and other inhumane acts taking place in Sudan trickle
through.

The situation in Sudan is complex, but the core of the humanitarian
disaster is the attacks upon black African civilians in the Darfur
region of Sudan by ostensibly government-sponsored Arab militias
known as the Janjaweed.

The scope of the disaster is staggering: 1.2 million Darfur residents
displaced, at least 50,000 civilians killed, widespread and
systematic rape, and according to a statement released by the head of
the U.S. Agency for International Development in early July, an
inevitable death toll due to mass starvation and disease that will
range from 300,000 to 1 million people.

In the face of such a disaster, swift and decisive action is
required. Instead, as in 1994, the international community refuses to
apply the word “genocide” for fear of the obligations that will be
raised, and the Security Council has limited its response to requests
that the Sudanese government disarm the militias. Sudan remains
defiant, and the atrocities continue.

Perhaps the phrase, “Never again,” is not even a real promise, but
merely an empty statement to ease our collective guilt over past
inaction.

As a nation, Canada has accomplished much good in the area of
international affairs. In recent times, we have deployed peacekeepers
to troubled regions of the world and provided diplomatic leadership
in establishing the International Criminal Court and banning
anti-personnel land mines.

Is this merely out of a desire to uphold a certain image
internationally or is it a reflection of the principles for which we
stand?

If it is a reflection of our principles, then we must be engaged into
action whenever those principles are violated. We are not a great
military power, but we are leaders in the areas of international law
and affairs and have the ability to mobilize co-operative power.

Human beings are being killed, raped, and otherwise destroyed in
Sudan on a horrific scale, and no state seems willing to make a firm
stand.

I ask Prime Minister Paul Martin: Where do we stand?

Peter Morley is a senior law student at the University of Victoria
specializing in international law. He recently returned to Canada
after working with the Yugoslavia and Rwanda war crimes tribunals.

Wis. looks at tourism jobs for locals, not foreigners

Chicago Sun-Times

Wis. looks at tourism jobs for locals, not foreigners

August 9, 2004

Summer visitors to Wisconsin may be noticing accents beyond the usual
cheeseland variety as hundreds of foreign teenagers are staffing tourist
magnets like the Dells and Door County.

Now, though, some are saying those jobs ought to go to Wisconsin’s
unemployed.

Wisconsin’s tourism secretary wants to start a new effort to promote the
state’s seasonal tourism jobs to its own out-of-work residents.
Jim Holperin said he has no indication that theme parks and other popular
destinations are intentionally passing over Wisconsin workers, but he said
the state lacks a strategy for matching the jobless to tourism posts, which
often go to foreign workers. A program is in its early stage of discussion.

The state’s tourism industry started recruiting foreign workers — typically
college students — in the late 1990s, when low unemployment created a labor
shortage.

Some in the tourism industry say Wisconsin residents in high unemployment
areas are not willing to move for the summer jobs. Some also say residents
don’t seem to be interested in drudgery jobs.

“Even in desperate times, they don’t want to do housekeeping,” said Joanne
Stanzel, personnel director at Landmark Resort in Door County. She has hired
several college-aged students from Armenia and Romania for such jobs.

Tom Diehl, president of Tommy Bartlett Inc., said he hired about 70 young
people from Finland this summer to work at the company’s water shows and
other attractions in Wisconsin Dells.

Lifeguard Tito Suero of the Dominican Republic earns about $1,000 a month at
Noah’s Ark Family Park compared with the $50 a month he would earn doing
similar work in his homeland. “I feel pretty lucky,” the 23-year-old
medical student said.

Jim Cavanaugh, president of the Madison-based South Central Federation of
Labor, said laid-off factory workers would take the seasonal jobs to get a
regular paycheck. But he suspects the tourism industry is afraid a tight
labor market might return and are hesitant to cut off sources of
international labor.