MP urges Armenian, Georgian governments to tackle problems in Javakh

MP urges Armenian, Georgian governments to tackle problems in Javakhk

Arminfo
18 Mar 06

Yerevan, 17 March: Although steps are being taken to tackle the
socio-economic problems in Georgia’s Samtskhe-Javakheti region,
Armenia can do more on this issue, MP Mger Shakhgeldyan, chairman of
the parliamentary standing commission on defence, national security
and internal affairs, told a news conference today.

The Armenian and Georgian authorities should resolve problems of
the region by joint efforts, he said. Shakhgeldyan believes that an
improvement in the situation in Samtskhe-Javakheti is in the interest
of both countries. In his opinion, the creation of conditions for
the socio-economic development of Javakhk will considerably alleviate
the situation in the region.

Commenting on the incident in the Georgian town of Tsalka, where an
ethnic Armenian Gevorg Gevorkyan was killed, Shakhgeldyan said that
offenders should be punished with the utmost rigour of the law.

“Rule of Law Country” not Attacked yet

“RULE OF LAW COUNTRY” NOT ATTACKED YET

Panorama.am
15:12 18/03/06

Today at the conference NA Deputy, “Orinats Yerkir” (Rule of
Law Country) party vice president Mher Shahgeldyan rejected the
information saying after their party member Gagik Avetyan raids are
being prepared on the other RLC deputies. “I have no such information
and there is nothing of the kind,” he said answering the questions
of correspondents.

What refers to the news that RLC can possibly become an oppositional
party M. Shahgeldyan mentioned: “Time will show what is going to be in
the future.” Yet the “future” he mentioned is before the beginning of
official election campaign. “The “Rule of Law Country” decides on its
own in what field and how to continue acting,” he added. /Panorama.am/

Ukraine completes WTO talks with Armenia, Colombia

Ukraine completes WTO talks with Armenia, Colombia

UNIAN news agency, Kiev
17 Mar 06

Kiev, 17 March: Ukraine has completed talks on mutual access to markets
of goods and services with Armenia and Colombia in the framework of
Ukraine’s preparation to join the WTO, Ukrainian Economics Minister
Arseniy Yatsenyuk has said.

“We completed the bilateral talks regarding Ukraine’s accession to the
WTO with two countries – Armenia and Colombia – this morning,” he said.

[Passage omitted: background.]

TBILISI: Kocharyan And Daniel Fried Discussed Regional Energy Securi

ROBERT KOCHARYAN AND DANIEL FRIED DISCUSSED REGIONAL ENERGY SECURITY

Prime News Agency, Georgia
March 16 2006

Yerevan – Tbilisi, March 16 (Prime-News) – Robert Kocharyan, President
of Armenia, met Daniel Fried, US State Assistant Secretary for Bureau
of European and Eurasian Affairs, and Steven Mann, Co-Chairman of
Minsk Group of OSCE for regulation of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,
currently on regional visit in Yerevan on Thursday, Armenian mass
media reports.

Issues on energy security in the region, including Armenia, were
discussed during the meeting.

The parties exchanged views on situation and future measures in
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict resolution.

Participants also touched upon issues of ‘Millennium Challenge’
program.

On Books, Censorship And Political Pressure

ON BOOKS, CENSORSHIP AND POLITICAL PRESSURE
Haroon Siddiqui

Toronto Star, Canada
March 16 2006

Just as the din of the Danish cartoon controversy – with its arguments
over freedom of speech, censorship and political or consumer pressures
– was dying down, several others with similar echoes have hit the
headlines.

The Toronto school board has joined those in York, Essex and Ottawa
in restricting access to a book about the Arab-Israeli conflict.

The Ontario Library Association had included Deborah Ellis’s Three
Wishes: Palestinian and Israeli Children Speak in its list of 20
Canadian books for a province-wide program that encourages reading.

Students in Grades 4 to 6 will vote their choice in May for the Silver
Birch Award (others being the Blue Spruce, Red Maple and White Pine
awards for other age groups).

But the Canadian Jewish Congress argued that the book is not suitable
for young children, and called for its removal from the popular
program.

The librarians stood by their choice, backed by the Association of
Canadian Publishers, the Writers’ Union, the Playwrights Guild, PEN
Canada and the Freedom to Read Committee of the Book and Periodical
Council.

PEN director Alan Cumyn asked the Toronto board if it would “restrict
access to, for example, The Diary of Anne Frank or the more recent
Hannah’s Suitcase, which also deal with very dark subject matter,”
i.e. the Holocaust. Both books “have helped inspire and educate
countless children about the nature of our often difficult world.”

The age-appropriate argument, said Sheila Kauffman, owner of Another
Story, a Toronto children’s bookstore, is often a way of suppressing
certain viewpoints.

A similar conclusion was reached by Bernard Katz, a retired University
of Guelph librarian, who had been asked by the library association to
respond to the Jewish congress’s analysis of the Ellis book. He wrote
that the congress was reacting to “what they perceive as criticism
of Israel’s behaviour toward Palestinian civilians.”

Criticism of Israel is what prompted the New York Theatre Workshop
to cancel My Name is Rachel Corrie. That’s a British play about the
young American student activist who in 2003 went to the Gaza Strip
where she stood in front of an Israeli bulldozer to prevent the
destruction of a Palestinian home and was crushed to death.

James Nicola, the theatre’s artistic director, said that in “talking
around and listening in our communities in New York, what we heard
was that (with) Ariel Sharon’s illness and the election of Hamas …
we had a very edgy situation.”

Katharine Viner, co-creator of the play, accused the theatre of
censorship and criticized its management for having “caved in to
political pressure.”

The Los Angeles affiliate of PBS has cancelled a documentary on the
Armenian genocide, and also a follow-up panel discussion, scheduled
for airing on the network April 17.

Two of the four panelists argue that while World War I-era massacre
did take place, it was not a planned genocide by Turkey.

The Armenian National Committee of America objected. The PBS affiliate
in Los Angeles (home to more than 400,000 Armenian Americans) pulled
the plug. An affiliate in Plattsburg (which beams into Montreal)
said it would show the documentary but not the panel discussion.

London Mayor Ken Livingstone has been suspended from his elected office
for four weeks for comparing a Jewish reporter to a Nazi concentration
camp guard. He has appealed the ruling by the Adjudication Panel,
which deals with disciplinary cases at the municipal level. It had
acted on a complaint by the Board of Deputies of British Jews, which
offered this sensible summation on the verdict:

“Had the mayor simply recognized the upset his comments had caused,
this sorry episode could have been avoided.”

The House of Commons in Britain has passed a law banning groups that
“glorify terrorism.” Yet it rejected a bill prohibiting anything
“abusive and insulting” to a religious group.

The latter, characterized as a sop to British Muslims, was opposed
by writers and artists concerned about their creative freedoms being
curbed. The former, aimed at another group of Muslims, sailed right
through, even though it, perhaps, threatens freedom of speech even
more, given the vagueness of the language of the act.

These examples have elicited vastly different official and public
responses to a familiar challenge.

Exposing this inconsistency may turn out to have been the more lasting
legacy of the Danish cartoon caper.

State Department Regular News Briefing Re: Amb. Evans

STATE DEPARTMENT REGULAR NEWS BRIEFING RE: AMB. EVANS

Congressional Quarterly
March 14, 2006 Tuesday

Speaker: J. Adam Ereli, State Department Deputy Spokesman

[parts omitted]

QUESTION: Mr. Ereli, on the DOS Web site, regarding yesterday’s
taken question about U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Evans’ status,
you have put quote, “genocide,” unquote, in quotes.

I’m wondering why, if you can say so.

ERELI: I think because it was referring to remarks that somebody made.

QUESTION: Do you know whether John Evans was recalled or whether he’s
been recalled due to his speech on Armenian genocide?

ERELI: I think the question was answered in the — that was answered
in the question posted.

QUESTION: Should DOS employees have been advised not to use the term,
quote, “genocide,” unquote, when discussing the extermination of the
(inaudible)?

ERELI: No, I think our guidance on that is the same. And we posted
that guidance last week.

QUESTION: Is it not true that Mr. Evans’ 35-year diplomatic career will
be shortened because of the remarks he made, saying that Armenians
were the victims of genocide, since the U.S. government or the State
Department doesn’t believe what happened was genocide? It doesn’t
fit the definition of genocide?

ERELI: I really don’t have anything more to add to what we posted.

QUESTION: Well, what you posted yesterday was a bit of a dodge.

ERELI: No. I think it’s the situation as it is.

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: There is very strong reason to believe, in Congress and
elsewhere, that this man is going to lose out; he’s going to be
brought home early because of what he said.

ERELI: Look, I’d like to be able to — Ambassador Evans is our
ambassador and he continues to exercise that honor and privilege. And
he takes it seriously; we take it seriously. And I really don’t have
any more to add to that.

Where Killers Roam, The Poison Spreads

WHERE KILLERS ROAM, THE POISON SPREADS
By Nicholas D. Kristof

The New York Times
March 7, 2006 Tuesday
Late Edition – Final

Along The Chad-Sudan Border

For more than two years, the world has pretty much ignored the
genocide unfolding in the Darfur region of Sudan, just as it turned
away from the slaughter of Armenians, Jews, Cambodians and Rwandans
in earlier decades.

And now, apparently encouraged by the world’s acquiescence, Sudan is
sending its proxy forces to invade neighboring Chad and kill and rape
members of the same African tribes that have already been ethnically
cleansed in Darfur itself.

I’ve spent the last three days along the Chad-Sudan border, where this
brutal war is unfolding. But “war” doesn’t feel like the right term,
for that implies combat between armies.

What is happening here is more like what happens in a stockyard.

Militias backed by Sudan race on camels and pickup trucks into Chadian
villages and use machine guns to mow down farming families, whose only
offense is that they belong to the wrong tribes and have black skin.

I found it eerie to drive on the dirt track along the border because
countless villages have been torched or abandoned. Many tens of
thousands of peasants have fled their villages, and you can drive for
mile after mile and see no sign of life — except for the smoke of the
villages or fields being burned by the Sudan-armed janjaweed militia.

In some places the janjaweed, made up of nomadic Arab tribes that
persecute several black African tribes, have turned villages into
grazing lands for the livestock they have stolen. At one point,
my vehicle got stuck in the sand, and a group of janjaweed children
materialized and helped push me out. The children were watching a
huge herd of cattle with many different brands. Their fathers were
presumably off killing people.

This is my sixth trip to the Darfur region, and I’ve often seen burned
villages within Darfur itself, but now the cancer has spread to Chad.

One young man, Haroun Ismael, returned with me — very nervously —
to the edge of his village of Karmadodo, between the towns of Adre
and Ade. Eleven days earlier, Sudanese military aircraft and a force
of several hundred janjaweed had suddenly attacked the village. Mr.

Haroun and his wife had run for their lives, with his wife carrying
their 3-month-old baby, Ahmed.

The janjaweed raiders overtook Mr. Haroun’s wife and beat her so badly
that she is still unconscious. They also grabbed Ahmed from her arms.

“They looked at the baby,” Mr. Haroun added, “and since he was a boy,
they shot him.”

Sudan is also arming and equipping a proxy army of Chadian rebels under
a commander named Muhammad Nour. The rebels were repulsed when they
tried to invade Chad in late December, and now they are regrouping
for another attempt.

Sudan’s aim seems to be to overthrow Chad’s president and install a
pawn in his place, in part because this would allow Sudan’s Army to
attack rebels in Darfur from both directions.

Regardless of whether the rebels succeed in overthrowing Chad’s
government, they could ignite a new civil war in Chad. Much will depend
on whether the French will use their military base in Chad to fight any
Sudanese-sponsored invasion; the French aren’t saying what they’ll do.

Chad’s army is too small to defend its border, so it tries to
defend potential invasion routes. That leaves villages in other
areas defenseless.

“See that smoke over there?” asked Ali Muhammad in the market town
of Borota. “The janjaweed are burning our fields today.”

“Most people here have fled,” he added, “but I have old family members
to look after, so I can’t leave.”

These areas are too insecure for the United Nations and most
international aid workers, who are already doing a heroic and dangerous
job in Darfur and Chad. So Mr. Ali and others left behind get no food
aid and go hungry.

In the last few weeks, President Bush has shown an increased
willingness to address the slaughter in Darfur. He should now encourage
the French to use their forces to defend Chad from proxy invasions,
make a presidential speech to spotlight the issue, attend a donor
conference for Darfur, encourage the use of a NATO bridging force
until U.N. peacekeepers can arrive, enforce a no-fly zone and open
a new initiative for peace talks among the sheiks of Darfur.

The present Western policy of playing down genocide and hoping
it will peter out has proved to be bankrupt practically as well as
morally. Granted, there are no neat solutions in Darfur. But ignoring
brutality has only magnified it, and it’s just shameful to pretend not
to notice the terrified villagers here, huddling with their children
each night and wondering when they are going to be massacred.

USA Satisfied With Progress In Defense Sphere

USA SATISFIED WITH PROGRESS IN DEFENSE SPHERE

YEREVAN, MARCH 7. ARMINFO. The United States are satisfied with the
achieved progress in cooperation in the military sphere, stated
Matthew Bryza, assistant of the US Deputy-Secretary of State for
Europe and Eurasia.

According to the US official, the authorities of the USA is also glad
about Armenia’s close partnership with NATO and Armenia’s participation
in the peacemaking missions of the USA.

Mr. Bryza emphasized democratization of the Armenian society for the
realization of Millennium Challenge program.

Success in development of democracy requires a political will, public
aspiration and construction of democratic culture. The culture of
democracy depends on votes during elections, it requires participation
in elections and constructive and active acts by all the political
parties in the country, especially from the opposition.

In future, the US Government will contribute to construction of
democracy and development of the public in accordance with the schedule
not from above but from below.

BAKU: Baku ‘Not Ready For War’, Armenian Official Says

BAKU ‘NOT READY FOR WAR’, ARMENIAN OFFICIAL SAYS

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
March 14 2006

Baku, March 13, AssA-Irada
Azerbaijan will not resume hostilities, at least because it is not
ready for war now, Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian has said.

The Armenian diplomat said in an interview with Yerevan’s Shant TV
channel that he believes that if Azerbaijan cannot make even the
most basic compromises in the negotiations, it will never venture to
resort to a military option. He added that Azerbaijan could benefit
a lot from the talks.

Oskanian said further that billions of dollars were being invested
in the Azerbaijani economy and that Baku would not want to jeopardize
this capital.

“Therefore, no-one will give Azerbaijan the opportunity to restart
war with Armenia,” he said.

The discussions held by the Azeri and Armenian leaders in the French
town of Rambouillet in February turned out fruitless, as the parties
failed to iron out issues of principle, which was followed by mutual
threats.

Hakob and Armenian Illumination

New Europe, Greece
March 8 2006

Hakob and Armenian Illumination
ENGLAND – LONDON -April 25 to May 16 2006

Following the success of the first selling exhibition of Armenian art
staged by the gallery in 2004, Sam Fogg is delighted to present an
exhibition of a major Armenian manuscript which will be accompanied
by a groundbreaking publication. Entitled The Outsider: Hakob and
Armenian Illumination, the exhibition will display the Gospels
illuminated by Hakob Jughayetsi, the most celebrated Armenian
illuminator of the 16th century, at Sam Fogg, 15d Clifford Street,
London W1, from April 25 to May 16, 2006 . The manuscript once
belonged to the celebrated collector and diplomat Jean Pozzi.

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