Belarus, Azerbaijan sign military cooperation agreement

Belarus, Azerbaijan sign military cooperation agreement

Belapan news agency
16 Dec 04

Minsk, 16 December: An intergovernmental agreement between Belarus
and Azerbaijan on military and military-technical cooperation was
signed in Baku on 15 December in the course of a two-day visit to that
country by a Belarusian military delegation led by Defence Minister
Col-Gen Leanid Maltsaw, foreign news agencies reported.

The document was signed by Maltsaw and Azeri Defence Minister Col-Gen
Safar Abiyev.

[Passage omitted: Abiyev briefed Maltsaw on Azerbaijan’s stance on
the conflict with Armenia.]

The Belarusian defence minister said that Belarus is ready for
cooperation with Azerbaijan in all areas, including the defence
sector, based on the two countries’ mutual interests. Speaking about
the settlement of the Armenian-Azeri conflict in Nagornyy Karabakh,
Maltsaw said that his country stands for the settlement of this
problem on the basis of international law.

[Passage omitted: Maltsaw had talks with Azerbaijani President Ilham
Aliyev see report by Turan news agency, Baku, in Russian 1719 gmt 15
Dec 04.]

The reaction of Armenia – Belarus’s partner in the Collective Security
Treaty Organization – to the stepping-up of Belarusian-Azerbaijani
contacts in the defence sector is not yet known.

ANKARA: There are 1 Million Illegal-Immigrants in Turkey

Journal of Turkish Weekly
Dec 16 2004

There are 1 Million Illegal-Immigrants in Turkey

Every year 250.000-300.000 immigrants enter Turkey… It is estimated
about 50.000 Armenians for instance work in Istanbul illegally.

Jan Soykok, JTW (Ankara
16 December 2004

According to the ILO reports there are about 1 million illegal
foreign immigrants in Turkey. Every year 250.000-300.000 immigrants
enter Turkey and half of them stay in the country while the rest of
them go to Europe and other places. Most of the immigrants come from
Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Romania, Ukraine, Russian
Federation and Georgia. Moreover thousands of foreigners come to
Turkey work illegally. It is estimated about 50.000 Armenians for
instance work in Istanbul illegally.

Police can only capture half of the illegal immigrants. Turkish
experts argue that Turkey cannot deal with this issue without
international co-operation. Dr. Mehmet Ozcan told the JTW that “this
is a common problem for Turkey, neighboring countries and the EU. So
all these states have to deal with this issue. Otherwise not only
Turkey but also the EU states will face a formidable social,
political and economic problems.”

Analysis: Turkey’s moment of truth

United Press Int’l, US
Dec 15 2004

Analysis: Turkey’s moment of truth

Date: Wednesday, December 15, 2004 8:50:21 AM EST By CLAUDE SALHANI,
UPI International Editor

ANKARA, Turkey, Dec. 15 (UPI) — In all probability, next Friday,
Dec. 17, will be the most important date for Turkey since Mustafa
Kemal — or Ataturk — founded the modern Turkish Republic in 1923,
following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.

No other event since then is likely to alter the lives of Turkey’s 70
million people to that extent. The impact of Turkey’s accession to
full EU membership will no doubt be gradual, but it will affect
multiple aspects of Turkish life, such as the economy, trade and
eventually, free movement of its people within the EU.

The Turkish press speaks of a historic day, one of monumental
proportions. Indeed, there is great optimism in Turkey that on this
day the European Union will give Ankara the much-anticipated green
light, thereby setting a date for talks that will finally bring
Turkey into Europe’s fold.

This, of course, is assuming there are no last-minute snags. As the
deadline approaches, there remain a number of “Turkey-skeptics” who
would like to impose certain conditions on Turkey’s accession,
something Prime Minister Recep Tayyib Erdogan rejects off-hand.
Erdogan insists that the accession talks be initiated without any
preconditions.

Only last Monday French President Jacques Chirac rocked the boat by
saying Turkey should apologize for the Armenian genocide, something
Turkey is unlikely to do.

Additionally, Turkey refuses to be forced to recognize Nicosia; a
sensitive issue in light of the Greek half of Cyprus recently joining
the EU.

Turkey rejects the notion of “permanent safeguards” restricting the
movement of its workers to other EU countries, some of which worry of
a sudden influx of Turkish migrants.

Turkey insists on full EU membership, rejecting any second-tier
compromise. Ankara is pushing Brussels for a clear date, insisting
there should be no more delays, saying they have implemented all the
necessary changes and are more than ready to join Europe.

In fact, Turkey has already changed as a direct result of the
European Union. The Turks have moved in giant strides towards
democratization, rule of law, respect of human rights and other
demands stipulated by the Copenhagen criteria, prerequisites for
admission into the EU. These changes were implemented to pave
Turkey’s entry into the Brussels club.

In a flurry of last minute campaigning, Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan shuttled around European capitals to garner support
for Turkey’s EU bid. At one such meeting in the Belgian capital last
Friday, a sort of pep rally attended by some 300 Turkish business
executives, one could not help feeling that history was in the
making. To say the air was electrifying would not have done justice
to the event.

There was a feeling among the organizers and participants — among
which Erdogan and his foreign minister, Abdullah Gull, were in
attendance — that they were on the verge of a historic beginning for
Turkey.

Dec. 17 will be the start of what is certain to turn out to be a long
and torturous road ahead for Turkish and EU negotiators. But it is
also the beginning of the culmination of a road that started some 41
years ago, the first time Turkey came knocking on Brussels’ door.

Ever since, Ankara realized it would need to make amends, accepting
the fact that it would have to transform itself into a Western-styled
democracy.

Despite occasional setbacks and periodic accusations from Brussels
and other European capitals that changes were not going at a fast
enough pace, the country did change. Many of the changes were made
since Erdogan was elected to the prime ministership, and that,
despite the fact that the ruling party — the AKP, or Justice and
Development Party — is an Islamist party.

Proponents of Turkey’s accession like to remind that Turkey has been
undergoing these changes for many years, and that it is now finally
ready to join the European family. In fact, some observers put
forward the notion that Turkey has been looking toward Europe long
before the creation of the EU — ever since the French Revolution of
1789. It was only a matter of time for it to find its natural place
with the rest of Europe. Erdogan reminded the audience in Brussels
last week that “the Ottomans were called the sick man of Europe, and
not of Asia.”

“This is not time for European amnesia,” said Pat Cox, a former
president of the European Parliament at the Brussels meeting.

“The time to say yes is now; the time to say yes has come,” said Cox.

To those who worry of a massive Turkish invasion of tens of thousands
of Turkish migrant workers flooding the European Union looking for
jobs in Paris, Lisbon or Madrid, Prime Minister Erdogan said, “Turks
will come back to Turkey once the economy improves thanks to the EU.”

This was true of Spain, Portugal, Greece and Ireland, countries that
have seen record high numbers of their citizens leave for jobs in
other European countries, but have returned once the economy and
standards of living improved.

Erdogan says the same will happen in Turkey. He backed up his claims
with these facts: Turkey’s exports rose to $60 billion, a 13.5
percent growth; 17 million tourists traveled to Turkey in 2004,
generating some $12.5 billion; inflation dropped from 33 percent to
10 percent, and the target for 2005 is 8 percent; Turkey’s per capita
income today stands at $4,100; and finally next January the
government will drop six zeroes from the Turkish lira, simplifying
life. A short taxi ride in town can cost 7 million liras today — or
about $6.

Until Friday, Turkey is holding its collective breath. As Pat Cox
commented, “Next week’s summit meeting is the moment of truth.”

La porte Etroite

L’Humanité, France
15 décembre 2004

La porte étroite;
Éditorial

par Patrick Apel-Muller

* Les mêmes, qui veulent faire gober aux Français une constitution
qui grave le libéralisme dans le marbre glacé d’un traité, se sentent
des prurits protectionnistes quand le mot de Turquie est évoqué. *

La Sublime Porte s’avère d’un coup bien étroite. Ou du moins dans un
sens, celui de l’entrée en Europe. Les uns après les autres, les
ténors de la droite marchent au pas de Nicolas Sarkozy et repoussent
au loin un peuple qui revendique d’être des nôtres. Ceux-là mêmes qui
voyaient sans tressaillir les démocrates d’Istanbul se faire
assassiner par les Loups gris, ceux que ne troublaient pas les
tortures ou les massacres qui ensanglantaient le Kurdistan, les
belles mes qui attendirent des décennies pour proclamer que les
Arméniens furent victimes de génocide brandissent cette histoire
comme un repoussoir.
Derrière ce bouclier vertueux, où les mêmes qui gardent le silence
quand l’avortement est mis en cause au Portugal s’inquiètent
brusquement de la condition féminine en Turquie, se dissimulent des
sentiments moins avouables. L’Europe, c’est-à-dire ses peuples, doit
effectivement être exigeante sur le respect des droits des femmes et
des hommes dans son enceinte et au-delà. C’est d’ailleurs
l’efficacité, disent les démocrates de ce pays qui tous s’engouffrent
dans la perspective d’une entrée dans l’Union pour revendiquer plus
de droits, plus de libertés, plus d’égalité.
Ici et là, ceux qui voudraient bien qu’en France la laïcité ne soit
plus qu’un souvenir et rêvent d’une balkanisation nationale entre
communautés religieuses – organisant même la promotion d’intégrismes
– agitent la peur. D’un côté, les amis du président de l’UMP flirtent
avec les organisations les plus conservatrices des musulmans en
France, de l’autre ils applaudissent ceux qui voudraient avec Giscard
d’Estaing voir proclamer « chrétienne » l’Europe. Et ils présentent
comme une incompatibilité majeure le fait qu’une majorité de Turcs se
disent musulmans. Les Français musulmans viennent donc d’être, mine
de rien, jugés indésirables sur le continent, et avec eux, ceux qui
ne se croient ni en dieu ni au diable.
Derrière l’agitation de l’islamisme comme une menace, le choc présent
ou à venir des civilisations est annoncé par ceux qui regardent les
peuples comme « des masses ». C’est une sourde xénophobie qui suinte,
avec pour prétexte les lignes imaginaires de la géographie ou une
histoire réduite aux images d’Épinal.
Les mêmes qui veulent faire gober aux Français une constitution
européenne qui grave le libéralisme dans le marbre glacé d’un traité
se sentent des prurits protectionnistes quand le mot de Turquie est
évoqué. Les beaux apôtres ! Ils justifient jour après jour les
délocalisations, menacent le droit de grève et démantèlent les acquis
sociaux à tour de bras sans jamais tressaillir et ils agitent devant
nos votes le chiffon rouge de la concurrence turque. Quand le sage
désigne la lune, l’idiot regarde le doigt, dit le proverbe.
L’état-major de l’UMP nous prend pour des idiots, désignant la
Turquie là où c’est à la constitution, au traité de Maastricht, à
l’emballement libéral de l’Europe qu’il faudrait réagir !
Le danger pour les salariés français n’est pas l’obtention par les
salariés d’Ankara ou d’Ömerli de meilleurs salaires ou de la
possibilité de se syndiquer, il réside dans le projet européen de
refonder le droit social sur les règles du début du XXe siècle, de
faire d’une concurrence féroce le ferment des divisions d’un
continent qui les a payées assez cher par le passé.
Le vote qu’on nous promet après-demain sur l’adhésion de la Turquie à
l’Union européenne n’aura de portée qu’éclairé par un succès du « non
» à la constitution dont l’Humanité vient de montrer que les
autorités européennes ont préparé l’interprétation la plus
réactionnaire qui se puisse imaginer. On nous a déjà fait le coup de
la tête de Turc… Ça ne marche plus.

France: Armenian genocide issue not central to Turkey’s EU talks

France says Armenian genocide issue not central to Turkey’s EU membership
talks

AFX Europe (Focus)
Dec 14, 2004

PARIS (AFX) – Turkey does not have to acknowledge accusations of
genocide against Armenians living under Turkish rule in the early 20th
century as a pre-condition for opening talks on EU membership, French
foreign minister Michel Barnier said.

“France does not pose it (acknowledging the Armenian genocide) as a
condition, notably not for opening negotiations (on EU accession)”,
Barnier told the state-owned television station France 2.

This statement comes despite reports yesterday that Turkish
acknowledgement of the genocide was a pre-condition.

Why we need Ukraine

Agency WPS
What the Papers Say. Part A (Russia)
December 13, 2004, Monday

WHY WE NEED UKRAINE

SOURCE: Ekspert, No. 46 (446), December 6, 2004, pp. 17-20

by: Pavel Bykov, Olga Vlasova

Russia has an interest in seeing Ukraine become an integral, strong,
democratic state with its own independent policies. This is entirely
self-evident: Russia needs effective partners, not more problem zones
along its borders. Moscow doesn’t need yet another burden around its
neck; it already has enough problems in the CIS and within Russia
itself.

Russia’s authorities are only just starting to restore order in the
administration of Russia’s regions. The situation in the North
Caucasus remains explosive. The problem of the Kaliningrad region’s
future still hasn’t been resolved. Relations with “friendly Belarus”
are fairly tense. The Trans-Caucasus conflicts are frozen, but not
resolved. Moscow accepts the military presence of Washington in
Central Asia as a good thing. These are the realities. So how can
anyone talk of Russia exerting real, direct control over Ukraine, a
nation with 50 million people and considerable problems of its own?

The fewer problems Kiev has, the easier things will be for Moscow.
The stronger Ukraine becomes, the more opportunities there will be
for mutually beneficial cooperation. Russia needs an ally that would
take on part of the responsibility for military and political
stability in our region of the world: a suitable partner for
implementing large-scale international business projects in the CIS,
the Black Sea region, the Balkans, and Europe.

Thus, the break-up of Ukraine would not be to Russia’s advantage.
After all, that scenario would not only deprive us of a potentially
very strong partner, but also create a giant conflict zone along our
borders – one that would make the break-up of Yugoslavia and the
Trans-Dniester war seem minor. It would put all of Russia’s border
cities – from Rostov-on-Don to Bryansk – at risk of finding
themselves on the front line.

There would be another risk if Ukraine split into Western Ukraine and
South-Eastern Ukraine: the risk of a border revision process starting
throughout the post-Soviet states. Following the break-up of the
USSR, Russia had a very narrow escape from finding itself enmeshed in
series of regional wars, similar to those in Yugoslavia. Nothern
Kazakhstan, Eastern Ukraine, the Crimea, the Trans-Dniester region,
ethnic Russians in the Baltic states: there would have been more than
enough pretexts for intervention on the grounds of defending the
interests of Russian minorities. At least as many pretexts as the
Serbs had.

And now, in the event that Ukraine does break up, the general public
in Russia would find it very hard to reject the idea of supporting
the southern and eastern regions of Ukraine in a confrontation with
the West. There is no harm in support, as such, but it contains a
hidden danger: should the West suddenly decide that this is “a matter
of principle,” this could lead to a simultaneous deterioration in
Russia’s relations with the United States and the European Union, and
thus a more hard-line regime in Russia itself. And then it would be
only one small step to a direct confrontation over Kaliningrad
(following the Berlin crisis pattern), and an exacerbated situation
throughout the Baltic region. Control over the Trans-Dniester region
would be part of the plan for supporting South-Eastern Ukraine. The
logic behind developments is such that by starting with Ukraine,
Russia would very soon find itself in a confrontation with NATO
across the entire Western front.

What’s more, even if Ukraine breaks up rapidly and painlessly, it is
by no means certain that part of it would join Russia. Becoming the
president of an independent, industrially-developed country close to
the Black Sea is a far more enviable destiny than that of a
semi-appointed regional leader within Russia. In that event, we would
probably end up with another Belarus on our borders: a country held
back from real integration with Russia by a leader who is hostile to
the West, regardless of mutual attachments between the peoples and
pro-Moscow rhetoric.

In short, “break-up of Ukraine” scenarios don’t promise any benefits
for Moscow.

Neither would Russia stand to gain from the prospect of an
economically weak Ukraine, not self-sufficient, becoming part of the
periphery of the European Union. Practically all of Europe’s
politicians and analysts are now saying that the EU has had nothing
to do with the events in Ukraine. According to them, the West didn’t
favor either presidential candidate, initially; it was only after
Russia’s unseemly role became apparent – its determination to secure
a win for pro-Russian candidate Viktor Yanukovich – that the West
started condemning these events and supporting opposition candidate
Viktor Yushchenko. That may be a fair statement for some EU
countries, but not all of them. For example, a number of the EU’s
newest member states were overtly pro-Yushchenko even before they
joined the EU. Above all, this applies to Poland.

Poland has never been known to have any great liking for the
brother-people of Ukraine, though it has attempted to extend its
influence into Ukraine on more than one occasion. Yet now the Poles,
most of whom used to be skeptical about their neighbor-state, are
simply overflowing with inexplicable love for Ukraine. Even the
Ukrainians admit that only Poland’s active support helped draw the
European Parliament’s special attention to the situation in Ukraine
and prompt it to refuse to recognize Yanukovich as the winner.

Poland’s love for the freedom-loving people of Ukraine did not arise
suddenly. Long before Ukraine’s election, Polish politicians were
starting to glance in the direction of their south-eastern neighbor.
The Poles claim that the EU absolutely must declare that EU
membership for Ukraine is a possibility. At the latest East-West
Economic Forum, held in Poland this autumn, President Alexander
Kwasniewski stated openly that Poland considers EU membership for
Ukraine to be its own mission, and will do all it can to achieve that
goal.

Poland’s persistence is by no means altruistic. Poland actually hopes
to resolve many of its own problems by pushing for Ukraine to be
accepted into the European Union. For example, despite Poland’s
recently-acquired EU member status, the development of its economy
has stalled. Compared to Poland, Ukraine seems a far more attractive
prospect for many investors: Ukraine is free of the bureaucratic
obstacles created by endless EU regulations, and it has a skilled
labor force prepared to work for relatively low wages. Ukraine’s
economig growth has been in the double digits this year: and this is
causing bitterness in neighboring Poland, where the economy has been
in stagnation for some years. The Poles would much prefer to see a
“velvet revolution” scenario in which factories stand idle, banks
stop functioning, and investors start seeing the political situation
in Ukraine as extremely unstable.

Poland – a weak state on the periphery of Western Europe, with a
semi-agrarian economy – is striving to move towards the center of
Europe by shifting its own current role as “the periphery” onto its
eastern neighbor. Even the negotiation process for EU membership for
Ukraine actually strengthens Poland: it brings Ukraine within the
jurisdiction of EU regulations, thus making it pointless for
investors to go into Ukraine, since its legal status is
indeterminate. Essentially, Poland gains complete control over the
situation: by becoming the mediator between the EU and Ukraine, it
can directly influence the decision-making process for Ukraine’s most
important political and economic issues.

Ukraine will have to be forced to accept that scenario. By summer
2004, the prevalent attitude in Ukraine was that EU membership is not
worth pursuing. President Leonid Kuchma called on his fellow citizens
to heed the negative experience of integration into the EU among the
states of Eastern Europe, and not to be over-hasty in seeking to
integrate Ukraine into the EU with the status of “younger sister.”

The Ukrainian government was intent on developing relations with
Brussels in the areas where this would be to Ukraine’s advantage,
without making any unnecessary commitments. Ukraine’s business
community was preparing to skim some cream: as soon as the nations of
Eastern Europe joined the EU, consumer prices for essential goods
rose sharply, and people from Eastern Europe flooded into Ukraine to
buy up everthing they could. Ukraine’s border regions started
building new supermarkets, aiming to attract consumers from among the
new citizens of the EU. But now these obvious economic advantages for
Ukraine are suddenly in doubt. Viktor Yushchenko has stated
repeatedly that he is in favor of closer relations with the EU. If
the mandate of Ukraine’s new president is determined by EU support
more than by the Ukrainians themselves, he will have to be more
accommodating.

In any event, we should bear in mind that Ukraine’s economy is
stronger than that of Poland. Potentially, it could be stronger than
the combined economies of all Ukraine’s EU-member neighbors. Poland
will find it very difficult to impose the “economic periphery” role
on Ukraine; this plan could only succeed if it’s possible to disrupt
the trend of establishing Ukraine as an independent power which is
bound to play a key role in the region.

A strong, independent Ukraine would generate a fundamentally
different situation throughout Europe. The cornerstone concept in the
EU’s strategy regarding the countries of the East is that they all
wish to become EU members. So Brussels can pick and choose the
candidates, imposing its own terms on them. The EU has a strategy for
dealing with weak neighbors, but it lacks one for dealing with strong
neighbors. That is precisely why relations between Moscow and
Brussels deteriorated in early 2004: the EU’s strategy designed for a
weak Russia wasn’t working (gradually integrating Russia into the
EU’s sphere of influence, piece by piece, on the EU’s own terms), and
the EU had no other strategy. The same situation applies to Ukraine.
If even the slightest doubts arise about whether it’s really
worthwhile for Ukraine to join the EU, this makes all the
pressure-applying procedures of the Eurobureaucrats pointless. The EU
would no longer be viewed as a desirable “heaven on earth”; rather
than making demands, it woould have to seek attention – and that’s an
entirely different ball-game.

If Ukraine can manage to break out of the relations strategy now
being imposed on it by the EU, this would be to Russia’s advantage.
There has been a lot of mud-slinging directed at Russia by the
Europeans this year, and this is largely due to the EU being at a
loss. Its script, designed for a weak Russia, has been in place for a
long time; the entire colossal bureaucracy of the EU is following it.
The fact that Russia has suddenly started to rise just doesn’t fit
into the EU’s plans – and it’s so very reluctant to change those
convenient plans and concepts. It’s far easier to try to persuade
everyone that Russia remains weak and desperately in need of the EU’s
support – while any attempts by Russia to defend its own interests
are only vestiges of the past or imperialist ambitions.

If Ukraine chooses the path of a strong and independent European
power, this would force the EU to admit that its old strategy no
longer works: not because of any “imperialist ambitions,” but due to
the objective process of development among former Soviet countries.
The interests of Ukraine itself, as well as the interests of Russia,
would be served if events develop along these lines.

Events would develop differently if the revolution wins in Ukraine.
The laws by which revolutions develop are such that the leader who
wins is forced to become a dictator – otherwise he is unable to hold
on to power, and would be replaced by a more radical leader. The most
recent and obvious example of this implacable principle in action is
Georgia’s “revolution of roses,” from which the leaders of the Kiev
demonstrators are copying their plans. Mikhail Saakashvili, the “rose
revolutionary,” is being forced to keep on with revolutionary
policies, relying on direct support of the masses and his own
popularity. Saakashvili’s cult of personality has practically been
established in Georgia already – even though the costs of state
administration are covered solely through donations from abroad, and
the economic situation is deteriorating.

There is one fundamental difference between the “revolution of
roses,” for example, and the revolution of 1968, which many observers
are currently citing. In 1968, the revolution failed to win in any
country; but the ideas and movements that drove it were accepted by
the elites and integrating into the existing order. The participants
in that protest movement called for change, but set themselves the
goal of taking power. That was why the revolution of 1968 succeeded.
But if the students of Paris had actually taken power back then, what
would France be like today? The memory of 1968 probably wouldn’t seem
nearly as romantic.

And this is precisely why it’s important now that the “chestnut
revolution” in Ukraine should not win. It would be acceptable for
some opposition leaders to take up government office. There can and
should be some political reforms, and the interests of the protesters
should be taken into account. But all this should take place solely
on the basis of existing laws, and a system of compromises with the
ruling elites. A total victory for the “orange opposition” – a
victory for the power of the streets – would be a Pyrrhic victory for
Ukraine. If that happens, Ukraine would be a source of instability on
post-Soviet territory for a long time to come. The priorities of any
and all victorious revolutionaries are to radically purge the field
of domestic politics and export the revolution – not to ensure the
necessary conditions for the nation’s economic and social development
(and we are already seeing some disastrous consequences of the
revolution for Ukraine’s economy).

A second success for “velvet revolutions” within the CIS will lead to
further attempts to stir up revolutionary uprisings everywhere:
Belarus, Armenia, Azerbaijan, the Central Asian nations. To put it
plainly, this would not be about democratization; it would be yet
another phase of regime change in former Soviet countries. There is
probably no need to spell out where this can lead. And Ukraine would
undoubtedly be the center of this revolutionary movement; it has
already become a testing-ground where revolutionaries from all over
the CIS are gathering experience.

Those in the West who have inspired Ukraine’s current revolution –
the likes of Zbigniew Brzezinski – do not conceal that in the event
of success in Ukraine, the main target of the international
revolutionary-democratic movement will be Russia. Brzezinski recently
said: “There is no doubt that if democracy is established in Ukraine,
this will provide great momentum for democratic forces in Russia.”
Indeed, the momentum would be great. The opposition within Russia
would become more radical, inspired by the achievements of its
neighbors. We should also expect a threat to come from the
redistribution of influence among Ukraine’s economic elites; the
finance channels of Ukraine and Russia are intertwined, so a
redistribution in Ukraine would destabilize the situation within
Russia’s elites as well. And there’s another destabilizing factor:
Ukraine could become a refuge for critics of the Kremlin’s policy in
the Caucasus. Not only theoretician critics, but practical critics:
the Russian-Ukrainian border is virtually open (so far), and close to
the Caucasus. And finally, the “loss” of Ukraine – which is precisely
how many interest groups in Russia and abroad would view an
unequivocal win for Yushchenko – may weaken the domestic and foreign
policy positions of President Vladimir Putin. At the very least, he
would be sure to face increased pressure.

It would certainly be foolish to oppose the development of democracy
in Russia. Yet the version of it currently being proposed to us by
our Western partners does seem odd: an “orange” victory at any cost,
with no consideration whatsoever of the opinions and interests of the
other side. Zero tolerance for the opposing point of view: is this
democracy?

The track record of how the current crisis in Ukraine is being
resolved, as well as analogous crises in Serbia and Georgia over
recent years, indicates one important point. The West does not have a
complete collection of the tools required to resolve such situations
to its own advantage. And Russia doesn’t even need to obstruct the
West’s revolution-managers in order to stymie them; all Russia has to
do is refrain from helping them. In one case after another, the
intervention of Russian mediators during the final stages of
conflicts has been the only factor that prevented situations from
getting out of control.

In this regard, it is very instructive to note the outcome of the
latest South Ossetia crisis. Moscow did not permit Saakashvili to
provoke it into using force; but neither did it give in to
Saakashvili’s blackmail – Moscow did not start putting pressure on
South Ossetia to agree to terms that South Ossetia considered
unacceptable. What cooled the fervor of Georgia’s leader was a
principled stand by Moscow: if Georgia wants to regain full control
over South Ossetia, it ought to reach agreement with the South
Ossetians themselves, rather than with Washington or Moscow. This
approach by Moscow proved sufficient.

Moscow has now adopted a similar stance with regard to Ukraine. It is
not in the Kremlin’s power to persuade Ukraine’s political elite or
the Ukrainian people to act in one way or another. Is the West
capable of doing so? The Western media have been full of discussion
about the importance of separating Ukraine from Russia and preventing
Russia from gaining control over Ukraine. Thus, allegedly, Ukraine
will make a conclusive choice in favor of freedom and democracy. We
have no wish to argue with commentators who say so. Ukraine should
indeed choose freedom.

Translated by Pavel Pushkin

The Circassian Genocide

Global Politician, NY
Dec 13 2004

The Circassian Genocide

12/14/2004

By Antero Leitzinger

The genocide committed against the Circassian nation by Czarist
Russia in the 1800s was the biggest genocide of the nineteenth
century. Yet it has been almost entirely forgotten by later history,
while everyone knows the later Jewish Holocaust and many have heard
about the Armenian genocide. “Rather than of separate, selectively
researched genocides, we should speak of a general genocidal tendency
that affected many – both Muslim and Christian – people on a wide
scene between 1856 and 1956, continuing in post-Soviet Russia until
today”, writes Antero Leitzinger. This article was originally
published in “Turkistan News”.

——————————————————————–

A professor of the university of Munich (München), Karl Friedrich
Neumann (not to be confused with the later Naumann), wrote in 1839 a
book titled “Russland und die Tscherkessen” (published in the
collection “Reisen und Länderbeschreibungen”, vol. 19, in 1840). He
describes, how Russia settled Christians to the parts of Armenia
gained from Persia in 1828 – actually, Neumann had written about the
issue already in 1834. (p. 68-69) Neumann considered this a very
sound policy and predicted, that all Caucasus would become under firm
Russian rule within the next decades. (p. 125) European powers would
not intervene, because it was the destiny of all Europe to rule over
the lands of Turks, Persians, and Hindus. (p. 129-130)

Neumann was no racist, but he certainly advocated colonialism and was
a Russophile in relation to the southern lands. He had a Darwinist
approach many years before Charles Darwin or Herbert Spencer
presented their ideas. This appears to have been more typical to 19th
century German thought than any anti-Armenian sentiments. Neumann
makes it clear in his very first words of the preface: “The European
humanity is selected by divinity as ruler of the earth.”

Although Neumann respected the bravery of Circassians, he anticipated
their destruction by Russia, because in a modern world, there would
be no place for chivalrous “uncivilized” people. Neumann estimated
the total number of Circassians, including the Kabardians and Abkhaz,
at 1.5 million persons, or 300.000 families. (p. 67) Both the Russian
figure of 300.000 persons, and the Circassian figure of four
millions, were exaggerated.

Neumann divided the Circassians into ten tribes: Notketch, Schapsuch,
Abatsech, Pseduch, Ubich, Hatiokech, Kemkuich, Abasech, Lenelnich,
Kubertech (in German transliteration). They formed a loose
confederation very much like old Switzerland, with democratic
majority votes deciding the affairs of villages. Their princes had no
privileges, and were regarded only as military commanders. Women were
more free than anywhere in the Orient. There was no written law, and
death penalties were unknown. Many Circassians were Muslims, but
there were also Christians and pagans, all completely tolerated.

Russian prisoners-of-war were used as slaves, but if they were of
Polish origin, they were regarded as guests. Therefore, Poles
recruited in the Russian army, deserted en masse at every
opportunity, and even Russians often declared themselves to be Poles.
(p. 123) Slavery as such included no shame. Circassians used to sell
their own family members as slaves to Turkey and Persia, and many
went to slavery voluntarily, returning later on back home as rich and
free men. (p. 124) This system could be compared to the Gastarbeiter
emigration from Turkey since the 1960s. We should also remember, that
in those times, slavery or serfdom existed in Romania and Russia as
well.

The Circassians had been fighting against Russia already for forty
years when appealing to the courts of Europe in a “Declaration of
Independence”: “But now we hear to our deepest humiliation, that our
land counts as a part of the Russian empire on all maps published in
Europe… that Russia, finally, declares in the West, that
Circassians are their slaves, horrible bandits…” (p. 140-141)

The fight continued for two more full decades, until a national
Circassian government was set up in Sochi. In 1862, Russia began the
final invasion, annihilation and expulsion, as predicted by Neumann
well in advance.

According to Kemal H. Karpat, “Ottoman population 1830-1914” (Madison
1985), “Beginning in 1862, and continuing through the first decade of
the twentieth century, more than 3 million people of Caucasian stock,
often referred collectively as Cerkes (Circassians), were forced by
the Russians to leave their ancestral lands…” (p. 27)

Salaheddin Bey mentioned, in 1867, a total of 1.008.000 refugees from
the Caucasus and Crimea, of whom 595.000 were initially settled in
the Balkans. (p. 27) Half a million followed by 1879, and another
half a million until 1914. (p. 69) Most of them were Circassians,
although there were Crimean Tatars, Chechens, and other Muslim people
among them. Hundreds of thousands Circassians perished on their way.

Neumann’s estimate of 1.5 million Circassians corresponds to 1/30
ethnic Russians, or 1/3 Czechs, or 3/4 Slovaks. (p. 66) According to
Neumann, there were over two million Armenians in the world. (p. 69)
Now, according to the Soviet census of 1989, the number of Russians
has increased to 145 millions, whereof 1/30 would be almost five
millions. There are 10 million Czechs and 5 million Slovaks, which
would lead us to assume that there should be over 3 million
Circassians. Armenia alone has a population of over 3 million
Armenians, despite of the past ordeals; 2 million Armenians live
elsewhere. The number of Czechs, Slovaks, and Armenians has more than
doubled in 150 years, while the number of Russians has tripled; but
where are the missing millions of Circassians?

“The Encyclopaedia Britannica”, 11th edition (Cambridge 1911),
divided the Armenian population equally between Russia and Turkey
(little over a million in each empire), and numbered 216.950
Circassians (including Abkhaz etc.) in Russia. Again we must
conclude, that about 1.5 million Circassians had been massacred or
deported. This disaster exceeded both absolutely and proportionally
whatever fell upon Armenians in 1915. Was it intentional? Yes. Was it
ideological? Yes. The conquest and Christian colonization of the
Middle East was expected not only by Germans, but by most Europeans
during the 19th century, and the expulsion of Muslims from Europe was
considered a historical necessity. Russia had practicized massacres
and mass deportations in the Crimea and Caucasus, and “ethnically
cleansed” Circassia specially in 1862-1864. During that period,
Panslavists like Mikhail Katkov provided the Russian public with
nationalistic excuses for what had started as imperial ambition
(“Third Rome”) and strategic interests (“Access to sea”).

A vicious cycle was created and increased the stakes at both
frontiers: the Caucasus, and the Balkans. Circassian refugees settled
in the Balkans were provoked to commit the “Bulgarian atrocities”,
that inspired some of the Armenian revolutionaries. After the Balkan
Wars, Muslim refugees were roaming in Anatolia, thus spreading
terror, and hostility. This was exploited by Russia, at the cost of
many innocent Armenians. The massacres of 1915 were a tip of the
iceberg – the part best visible for Europeans, who had been actively
seeking and expecting horror news to justify anti-Muslim prejudice,
and to prevent interventions on behalf of Turkey, as had happened in
the Crimean War of the 1850s.

Was it a genocide? That depends on the definition. Rather than of
separate, selectively researched genocides, we should speak of a
general genocidal tendency that affected many – both Muslim and
Christian – people on a wide scene between 1856 and 1956, continuing
in post-Soviet Russia until today.

The article was originally written in October 2000.

Antero Leitzinger is a political historian and a researcher for the
Finnish Directorate of Immigration. He wrote several books on Turkey,
the Middle East and the Caucasus.

ENI: Muslim majority no obstacle to Turkey’s EU bid: Dutch churches

Ecumenical News International
Daily News Service / 08 December 2004

Muslim majority no obstacle to Turkey’s EU bid: Dutch churches

By Andreas Havinga

Amsterdam, 8 December (ENI)–Turkey’s Muslim majority population
should not be a reason for denying the country membership in the
European Union, the Council of Churches in the Netherlands has
said in an open letter to Dutch prime minister Jan Peter
Balkenende.

The EU should, however, insist that Turkey recognise the
Orthodox and other religious minorities within its borders and
this should be a “hard condition” for membership, said the
council, which groups the Protestant, Roman Catholic and
Orthodox churches. It stressed “the importance of respect for
freedom of religion, and for religious and ethnic minorities”.

The Netherlands holds the presidency of the 25 member European
Union. Member states will decide on 17 December about whether to
open talks with Turkey on EU membership.

Turkey’s population of 69 million is second only to that of
Germany’s 82 million people. Demographers estimate that by the
middle of the century, Turkey’s population will exceed that of
any of the EU’s current members.

“The fact that Turkey is a secular state with a Muslim-majority
population certainly poses no obstacle for possible admission of
the country [into the EU],” said the 29 November letter signed by
Ineke Bakker, the Dutch church council’s general secretary.

The church council also pointed out that Turkey still does not
formally recognise the Syrian Orthodox minority living within
its borders.

Turkey does not publish official statistics on religious
affiliation, but estimates say there are between 15,000 and
50,000 Syrian Orthodox Christians in Turkey, while some 12,000
Syrian Orthodox live in the Netherlands. Totalling more than one
million worldwide, Syrian Orthodox read and write Aramaic, the
language that Jesus spoke. Fewer than 0.2 per cent of Turkey’s
population are Christians.

“It would be a special confidence-building sign if the Turkish
authorities were to publicly admit the genocide of 1915,” the
council added, referring to massacre of Armenians by Turkey’s
predecessor, the Ottoman empire, in which also Syrians were
annihilated. Books about the genocide are banned in Turkey.

Istanbul in Turkey is also home to the Ecumenical Patriarch of
Constantinople, who is seen as the senior Eastern Orthodox leader
in the world. Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomeos I complained this
month about Turkey backtracking on a promise to reopen the Halki
Orthodox seminary, closed by the government in 1971.

“It is important that all religious minorities gain the right to
build and maintain buildings such as churches and monasteries,
to set up theological training, to speak and teach in their own
language, and to be free in carrying out diaconal and other
church-related activities,” the Dutch church council said in its
letter.

In the Netherlands rapid secularisation has occurred in recent
decades while the country has received large numbers of Muslim
immigrants, mainly from Turkey and Morocco. Christians are still
the largest religious grouping in the country, but about 40 per
cent of the Dutch population profess no religious faith and more
than five per cent are Muslim.

* * *
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International Conference Devoted To 1600th Anniversary Of Opening Of

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE DEVOTED TO 1600TH ANNIVERSARY OF OPENING OF FIRST
SCHOOL IN ARTSAKH TO BE HELD IN NKR IN 2005

STEPANAKERT, December 6 (Noyan Tapan). A scientific conference
devoted to the 1600th anniversary of the opening of the first school
in Artsakh will be held in Nagorno Karabakh in 2005. According to
Hamlet Grigorian, the Rector of the Artsakh State University, the
conference will be held in the second half of May. The scientists
of a number of countries expressed wish to participate in it. The
conference will held in Stepanakert, Shushi and in the territory of
the ancient Amaras temple, where the first school was opened. According
to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the NKR, Amaras temple occupies
special place in a number of historical monuments of Artsakh-Karabakh
as the spread of Christianity in the Armenian Communities of Artsakh
is connected with it. Centuries later this temple became one of the
famous centers of the spiritual and cultural life of Artsakh. It
is well known that Mesrop Mashtots began the first teaching of the
Armenian written language in the territory of Eastern Armenia, in
Amaras, and the first school was established there.

134 nations drop death penalty; 62 still have it

134 nations drop death penalty; 62 still have it

UNITED NATIONS, Dec 3 (Reuters) – A total of 134 countries have given
up capital punishment, 10 more than had done so at the start of 2003,
a campaigner against capital punishment reported on Friday.

Of the total, 81 have abolished the death penalty completely, 14 have
abolished it for ordinary crimes, one — Russia — has pledged to
abolish it, and six are observing moratoriums, the Rome-based
organization Hands Off Cain said.

Another 32 countries allow capital punishment but have in effect
abolished it by not carrying out an execution for at least the past 10
years, the group said.

Since the start of 2003, Benin, Ghana, Malawi and Morocco had in
effect abolished the practice by not executing anyone for at least 10
years while Kazakhstan and Tajikistan had put in place a legal
moratorium on the practice, it said.

Another four countries — Bhutan, Samoa, Bosnia and Armenia — either
abolished the death penalty or tightened an existing partial ban since
the start of last year, the group reported at a presentation at
U.N. headquarters.

In all, 62 countries retain the death penalty and in 2003 put to death
at least 5,523 individuals, the group said.

One country alone, China, executed at least 5,000 people last year
while Iran put to death at least 154 and Iraq had executed at least
113 people by April 9, 2003, when the U.S.-led occupation suspended
the death penalty, it said.

12/03/04 18:56 ET