Refugees Must Regain Their Losses

REFUGEES MUST REGAIN THEIR LOSSES

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR)
09 Feb 05

The NKR department for migration, refugees and re-settlement carries
out a record of the refugees in the republic. According to the head
of the department Serge Amirkhanian, the aim of these measures is to
grant a status to the refugees and improve their social conditions,
for later to retrieve their lost property or compensate for the
losses. â~@~In recognized countries all the refugees have the
right for the corresponding status and certificate. The latter
is a document equal to the passport. The fact that Karabakh is
not recognized does not allow our refugees to receive assistance
from international organizations,â~@~] said Amirkhanian. By the
decision of the government, the registered refugees will be granted
privileges: flat, financial aid, transport fare, free transporting of
luggage. Serge Amirkhanian said, another aim of the record is to apply
to the international organizations for receiving compensation for the
property lost when the refugees were displaced. At the department we
were told that in 2005 it is planned to build flats in Stepanakert for
the refugees living in dormitories, in bad housing conditions. ***
The fact-finding group of the OSCE Minsk Group has been in Karabakh
since January 10 to check the question of mass re-settlement,
development of drug business and terrorism in Nagorni Karabakh raised
by Azerbaijan. The head of the NKR department for migration, refugees
and re-settlement Serge Amirkhanian said the Minsk Group co-chairmen
had wished to meet with the refugees of Karabakh as well. The meeting
took place on February 6. They were people displaced from different
places in Azerbaijan, living in hard social conditions, and hoping to
get the assistance of international organizations to compensate for
their losses in some way or another. *** Serge Amirkhanian abstained
from answering our question on the impressions and OSCE monitoring
mission and the results of the monitoring saying that it was still
early to discuss the results. But he said that they nevertheless had
the possibility to get convinced personally in the falseness of the
questions raised by Azerbaijan. â~@~I think, the fact-finding group
witnessed that what Azerbaijan says is not true. We do not deny that
there are refugees living in these territories who had been displaced
from their homes. The government may provide some social assistance to
these people but this does not yet mean mass re-settlement. In this
sense, I think, the situation will get a positive assessment,â~@~]
he said.

SRBUHI VANIAN. 09-02-2005

–Boundary_(ID_c3jMFP8RnfqJcU4YvANpeQ)–

ASBAREZ Online [02-09-2005]

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TOP STORIES
02/09/2005
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1) White House Proposes Maintaining Armenia-Azerbaijan Military Assistance
Parity
2) Patriarchate Chancellor Remarks on Melkonian Grant
3) Sargsian’s Iran Visit Continues; Meets with Khatami
4) Deputy Russian Parliament Chairman Proposes New Approach to Calm Tensions
over Karabagh
5) Hungarian Court Postpones Safarov Trial

1) White House Proposes Maintaining Armenia-Azerbaijan Military Assistance
Parity

ANCA welcomes recognition of the role that military aid parity plays in
regional stability

WASHINGTON, DC–In a move welcomed as a contribution to regional stability
and
the search for peace, the Bush Administration’s Fiscal Year (FY) 2006 budget
proposal, released February 7, called for maintaining parity in military
assistance to Armenia and Azerbaijan, reported the Armenian National Committee
of America (ANCA). This decision represents a break from the last year’s
widely criticized FY 2005 budget request, which, although later reversed by
Congress, initially proposed providing four times more military aid to
Azerbaijan than to Armenia.
“We are gratified that the President’s Fiscal Year 2006 budget calls for
parity in military aid appropriations to Armenia and Azerbaijan,” said ANCA
Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “We welcome this request as a contribution
toward regional peace, and want to extend our appreciation to Congressman
Knollenberg, Senator McConnell and the other key legislators who impressed
upon
the Administration the wisdom of this course of action.”
The budget request includes $5 million in Foreign Military Finance (FMF)
assistance and $750,000 in International Military Education and Training
(IMET)
for both Armenia and Azerbaijan. The FY 2006 White House proposal also
includes a $55 million earmark for Armenia, $7 million less than the figure
proposed by the Administration last year, and $20 million less than the actual
assistance appropriated by Congress for 2005. Azerbaijan and Georgia have
been
budgeted $35 million and $67 million, respectively. The overall foreign aid
budget for the former Soviet Union is $482 million, a $74 million reduction
from last year.
For the first time, the budget document also makes specific reference to
‘Nagorno Karabagh,’ citing that a portion of a $48.5 million allocation for
Eurasia would include funding for humanitarian assistance to Mountainous
Karabagh Republic.
“We were pleased that the Administration’s request, for the first time,
specifically cited humanitarian aid to Nagorno Karabagh,” continued
Hamparian.
“We were, however, troubled by the White House’s proposed reduction in aid to
Armenia. We will, in the coming weeks and months, work with Congressional
appropriators in support of an increased allocation for Armenia.”
The Foreign Operations Subcommittees of the Senate and House Appropriation
Committees will now review the budget and each draft their own versions of the
FY 2006 foreign assistance bill.
The agreement to maintain parity in US military aid to Armenia and Azerbaijan
was struck between the White House and Congress in 2001, in the wake of
Congressional action granting the President the authority to waive the Section
907 restrictions on aid to Azerbaijan. The ANCA has vigorously defended this
principle, stressing in correspondence, at senior level meetings, and through
grassroots activism, that a tilt in military spending toward Azerbaijan would
destabilize the region, emboldening Azerbaijan’s leadership to continue their
threats to impose a military solution to the Nagorno Karabagh conflict. More
broadly, the ANCA has underscored that breaching the parity agreement would
reward the leadership of Azerbaijan for walking away from the OSCE’s Key West
peace talks, the most promising opportunity to resolve the Nagorno Karabagh
conflict in nearly a decade. Finally, failing to respect the parity agreement
would, the ANCA has stressed, undermine the role of the US as an impartial
mediator of the Nagorno Karabagh conflict.

2) Patriarchate Chancellor Remarks on Melkonian Grant

Concerning the press release of the AGBU Central Board of Directors, on the
lawsuit filed by His Beatitude Mesrob II, Armenian Patriarch of Istanbul and
all Turkey, the Rev. Dr. Krikor Damadyan, the Chancellor of the Patriarchal
See
[of Turkey], released the following statement:
“It is difficult to comprehend how the closure of a prestigious school in the
Middle East, and one of the very few Armenian educational institutions in the
European Union could be in the best interests of the Armenian nation. We
believe that this decision, taken by a few executives, is a wrong one.
“The AGBU Central Board of Directors claims that it will continue to honour
the vision of its many generous benefactors including the late Garabed
Melkonian, for the benefit of all Armenians worldwide. This is a remarkable
statement since the AGBU is confessing publicly that the Armenians in Turkey
are not considered part of “all Armenians worldwide,” since, unlike the
Gulbenkian Foundation and the Apcarian Trust, the AGBU has not taken much
interest in how Armenians in Turkey have wrestled to maintain their community
organisations during the last seventy-five years. However, we do acknowledge
receipt of minor sums sent us by donors through AGBU means.
“The only way to honour the vision of the Melkonian Brothers is to keep the
Melkonian Educational Institute in Cyprus open. The AGBU should refrain from
closing down the MEI and selling the property, lest she should declare herself
untrustworthy before all Armenians worldwide. Why should people make grants to
a charity organisation such as the AGBU, if following their demise a few
executives will deal with the grant in a way that will not do justice to the
benefactor’s memory?
“The AGBU should also publish how she has executed the Melkonian Trust since
1926. As the present successor to Patriarch Zaven of blessed memory, His
Beatitude Patriarch Mesrob takes dutiful interest as to whether the terms of
the grant have been implemented responsibly. Every charity organisation should
be accountable to the public and should not take offense when asked for
accounts. AGBU executives who donate their own family wealth on charity are
appreciated dearly by all Armenians worldwide. Nevertheless, that should not
allow them any right to do as they please with the grants made by other
benefactors.
“His Beatitude Patriarch Mesrob has magnanimously made it known to those
Californian Armenians who would like to act as mediators that he would be
willing to receive a delegation in Istanbul in order to discuss a meaningful
settlement of this critically important issue to the Armenians of Europe.
Great
justice will be done if the AGBU reverses her decision to close down the
Melkonian Educational Institute. This is our Patriarchate’s wish and
prayer, as
also expressed by numerous Melkonian alumni worldwide.”

3) Sargsian’s Iran Visit Continues; Meets with Khatami

TEHRAN (Combined Sources)According to Iran Daily, President Mohammad Khatami
during a meeting with Defense Minister Serge Sargsian stated that cooperation
between Iran and Armenia will help advance mutual interests and promote
regional security and stability.
Khatami told the visiting Armenian minister that the presidents of the two
countries have opened a new chapter in Yerevan-Baku economic cooperation and
should now exert efforts in implementing mutually beneficial accords. To
further such cooperation, the Iranian president spoke about the need for road
and railways that establish a north-south connection.
Echoing Khatami’s remarks, Sargsian noted that the promotion of cultural,
educational, and economic cooperation will bolster regional security.
Sargsian reiterated this sentiment during a Tuesday meeting with his Iranian
counterpart, Hojatoleslam Hassan Rowhani, who raised the Karabagh issue.
Rowhani said that the conflict’s resolution will stem from direct dialogue
between Yerevan and Baku, and assured Sargsian that Iran is ready to offer its
assistance in resolving the issues. Ruling out a military solution, the
Iranian
minister also noted that the people of Karabagh must be involved in deciding
the fate of region.
Responding to Rowhani, Sargsian said that Armenia is ready to settle the
Karabagh crisis within the framework of a collective settlement, which
addresses all of the disputed issues. Sargsian also thanked the Iranian
government for supporting Armenia’s membership in the North-South transit
corridor.
The same day, Sargsian also met with Expediency Council Chairman Akbar
Hashemi
Rafsanjani, who stated, “The Islamic Republic of Iran is willing to broaden
ties with neighboring countries,” and that it is interested to mediating a
peaceful solution to the Karabagh conflict.

4) Deputy Russian Parliament Chairman Proposes New Approach to Calm Tensions
over Karabagh

MOSCOW (Armenpress)–Russian parliament member Vladimir Zhirinovsky proposed,
on Tuesday, a new scheme for ending the more than a decade-long dispute
between
Armenia and Azerbaijan over Mountainous Karabagh.
Considered the most outspoken political leader of his time, Zhirinovsky
argued
that Karabagh should join the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), in
order to calm tensions on both sides.
Zhirinovsky, the head of the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia and a deputy
chairman of parliament, pointed to the futility of resolving both the
Karabagh
conflict and the Arab-Israeli conflict.
Speaking to a news conference in Moscow, he stressed that neither Armenia nor
Azerbaijan would ever agree to concessions on Karabagh. “If Russia insists on
joining Karabagh with Armenia, that will offend Azerbaijan; if Karabagh is
joined with Azerbaijan that will hurt Armenia,” he said, adding that
Mountainous Karabagh is, in fact, a historical part of Armenia.

5) Hungarian Court Postpones Safarov Trial

BUDAPEST (Armenpress)–A Hungarian court has postponed the trail of an Azeri
officer accused of murdering his Armenian counterpart, until May 10.
Attorney Nazeli Vardanian, who is representing the interests of the slain
officer’s family, revealed that the court has postponed the trial because two
witnesses–one from Azerbaijan, the other from Lithuania–did not show up in
court for the scheduled February 8 trial. She also said that psychiatrists and
other experts have found the defendant Ramil Safarov, physically and mentally
fit to stand trail.
Safarov is accused of slaying of Gurgen Margarian, on February 19, 2004,
while
both officers were attending a NATO-sponsored English language training
courses in Hungary.
The Azeri officer is charged with first-degree and attempted murder–and could
face 10 years to life imprisonment, if found guilty.

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ASBAREZ Online [02-08-2005]

ASBAREZ ONLINE
TOP STORIES
02/08/2005
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1) Armenian Genocide Back in German School Curriculum
2) OSCE Minsk co-chairs View Return of Refugees as ‘Unrealistic’
3) Kurdish Leader Barzani Vows to Never Forsake Kirkuk
4) Minsk Envoys Meet Oskanian after Karabagh Mission

1) Armenian Genocide Back in German School Curriculum

BERLIN (DPA)–Defusing a possible fiasco after Turkish pressure forced the
removal of the Armenian genocide from German public school curriculums, a
state
premier said on Tuesday the 1915 killings of up to 1.5 million Armenians would
be again be taught in history classes.
Brandenburg’s Prime Minister Matthias Platzeck admitted it had been a mistake
to remove all mention of the genocide from his state’s education ministry
website curriculum planner.
The Armenian genocide–which had been used as the only example in history
classes other than the Holocaust–will now be returned to high schools along
with other cases of 20th century genocide, he said.
Platzeck denied media reports that he ordered removal of the Armenian
genocide
from his schools after strong pressure from a Turkish diplomat.
“None of that happened,” said Platzeck.
Platzeck made his announcement after a meeting with Armenia’s ambassador to
Germany, Karine Kazinian, who expressed deep anger over the move.
“The key point is that the genocide and everything that happened back then is
being clearly addressed,” said Ambassador Kazinian.
The row began last month after Turkey’s Consul in Berlin, Aydin Durusay,
raised the issue of the Armenian genocide in connection to Brandenburg–which
is so far the only one of Germany’s 16 federal states, which described the
killings as “genocide” in its official public school curriculum.
Most European and US historians agree, however, that up to 1.5 million
Armenians were systematically massacred and deported by the Ottoman Turks
during World War I.
Eight European Union (EU) parliaments including France and the
Netherlands–but not Germany–have passed resolutions declaring the deaths
genocide.
With about two million resident ethnic Turks, Germany is cautious about any
issue which could disturb ties with its biggest minority.
German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder is a firm supporter of Turkey’s bid to
join the EU.
Platzeck is a rising star in Chancellor’s Social Democratic Party (SPD)
and is
tipped by some as a possible successor to Schroeder.

2) OSCE Minsk co-chairs View Return of Refugees as ‘Unrealistic’

YEREVAN (Yerkir)–Speaking with the Armenian refugees from Azerbaijan, Yuri
Merzliakov, the Russian co-chair of the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group, said the issue of refugees cannot be
viewed separately from the entire conflict.
Referring to the region’s instability, Merzliakov said, “I could not imagine
how Armenians would be able to return to [Azeri-occupied] Shahumian.” He added
that their security must not only be guaranteed, but the issue must also
remain
a component in reaching a settlement.
Minsk Group French co-chair Bernard Fassier–who served as the French
ambassador to Georgia in 1990s–said he witnessed firsthand the unorganized
return of refugees to the Gali region of Georgia–and the consequences
involved
when the situation is not fully scrutinized.
Both Merzliakov and Fassier just wrapped up an OSCE fact-finding mission
around Mountainous Karabagh to investigate Azeri claims that they were being
populated by “illegal Armenian settlers.” Fassier commented that the mission
proved useful for understanding the situation.

3) Kurdish Leader Barzani Vows to Never Forsake Kirkuk

(Combined Sources)–Iraqi Kurdistan Democratic Party (IKPD) leader Massoud
Barzani declared on Tuesday that no matter the circumstances, he would never
relinquish the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk.
“No power or no state in the world will make us forsake Kirkuk,” he stated.
Speaking to Zaman froom his compound in Erbil on Feburary 3, Barzani said
that
the establishment of an independent Kurdish state was the Kurds’ right, but
that neighboring states firmly opposed this.
“We want to unify Kurdistan, he said, adding that Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and
Syria must understand the reality of the situation.
Stressing that their first priority at the moment is a federal Kurdish state,
Barzani said, “We cannot agree with Turkey on two issues. One is the Kirkuk
issue, and the other is the situation of a federative Kurdistan within Iraq.”
The Kurdish leader stressed that Ankara should not intervene in the region,
and that Turkish military intervention might be tragic for both parties.
Referring to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s harsh remarks
about
the Iraqi elections and Kirkuk, the Kurdish leader argued that such statements
by Turkish authorities regarding northern Iraq are based on “some problems
stemming from internal affairs.” He added that Erdogan should know what the
will of the people means.
Countering claims that the elections in Kirkuk were illegitimate, Barzani
reiterated, “Those who voted in Kirkuk are all residents of Kirkuk. There is
not a single non-Kirkuk resident among those who voted.”
When asked how they will direct their relations with Turkey, Barzani
answered:
“The Turkmen are our brothers. We will protect their rights as much as they
[protect] their own rights. We protected their rights in the past and will do
so today as well. I hope relations with Turkey will be better from now on.”
Barzani, emphasizing that relations between Kurdistan and the US are strong
and
deeply rooted, said that the US should not withdraw from the region until
terrorism is eliminated.

4) Minsk Envoys Meet Oskanian after Karabagh Mission

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)–The Russian and French Minsk Group co-chairs met with
Foreign
Minister Vartan Oskanian on Tuesday to discuss details of the upcoming
round of
Armenian-Azeri peace talks which they said could mark further progress toward
the conflict’s resolution.
Yuri Merzlyakov and Bernard Fassier arrived in Yerevan from Karabagh where
they accompanied officials from the Organization for Security and Cooperation
in Europe on a fact-finding trip to Armenian-controlled territories.
The OSCE mission led by a senior German diplomat, Emily Haber, spent more
than
a week touring Armenian occupied regions around Karabagh. Haber and members of
her team were tasked with investigating Azeri claims that the lands have been
illegally populated by Armenians.
The OSCE representatives were still in the Armenian capital as of late
Tuesday, and are due to submit a report on their findings to the OSCE’s Minsk
Group on Karabagh which is co-chaired by Merzlyakov, Fassier, and their US
counterpart, Stephen Mann.
“It is still early to speak of conclusions to be made by the report,” the
Russian co-chair said after the meeting with Oskanian. “It is not yet ready.
Members of the mission are still working on it.”
“We simply informed the minister that, logistically, the mission went very
well,” he said, praising the authorities in Stepanakert for cooperating with
the OSCE officials.
The Russian and French envoys said they also discussed with Oskanian
preparations for yet another meeting in Prague of the Armenian and Azerbaijani
foreign ministers. Azerbaijani media reports have said the meeting is
tentatively scheduled for March, but Merzlyakov said no final dates have been
set yet.
Oskanian and Azeri counterpart Elmar Mammadyarov announced no far-reaching
agreements after their most recent Prague talks held last month.
Asked whether a breakthrough can be expected this year, Merzlyakov said, “I
can not make forecasts on time frames. We hope that there will be is progress,
if not breakthrough.”
“We hope that there will be progress,” Fassier said for his part. “But
progress is not yet a breakthrough.”

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The scandal Kofi couldn’t cover up

SUNDAY TELEGRAPH(LONDON)
February 06, 2005, Sunday

The scandal Kofi couldn’t cover up
Evidence of double-dealing in the Iraq oil-for-food programme is
stacking up by the week as more and more of the United Nation’s
officials are being implicated. PHILIP SHERWELL in Washington and
CHARLES LAURENCE in New York report

BY PHILIP SHERWELL and CHARLES LAURENCE

It was just two weeks ago, in a rented suite of offices on the 15th
floor of an anonymous Manhattan office block, that Benon Sevan
finally discovered that his story would not hold. For months, the
burly, bristling Armenian-Cypriot, known within the UN for both his
bonhomie and bad temper, had insisted that the talk of oil deals with
Saddam Hussein and strange petroleum companies in Panama had nothing
to do with him.

On January 21, however, the former head of the UN’s Iraq oil-for-food
programme was confronted by proof of his deception by Paul Volcker.
The former Federal Reserve chairman is leading the UN’s investigation
into a scheme — established by the UN in April 1995 — from which
Saddam Hussein skimmed off about $2-billion and bribed foreign
allies. Its aim was to allow the Iraqi government to sell a limited
amount of oil to buy food, medicine and other essentials for its
people in the aftermath of the first Gulf War in 1991.

Mr Volcker’s interim report, delivered last week, not only contained
a damning verdict on the behaviour of Mr Sevan, an official long
defended by the current UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan, it also
threw an unexpected new focus on the role of Mr Annan’s predecessor,
Boutros Boutros-Ghali, as the unravelling scandal dragged in new
names.

The meeting was the 13th time that Mr Sevan had met the investigators
since the allegations of financial abuse were first raised by Claude
Hankes-Drielsma, a British banker who was advising the interim Iraqi
government in Baghdad. Although it was an open secret at the UN that
the oil-for-food scheme had been subject to surcharges and kickbacks
for years, Mr Annan had consistently refused to launch an
investigation until then.

On his first 12 visits, Mr Sevan refused to discuss the specifics of
the claims against him. But by this trip, the investigators had
obtained his full telephone records after clearing his office files
and computer disks (Mr Sevan had previously provided the “clean”
telephone data from his home). These records proved that Mr Sevan’s
claim to have spoken with Fakhry Abdelnour, the man who ran African
Middle East Petroleum Co (AMEP), the Panamanian oil dealership, only
once, by chance at an Opec meeting in Vienna in 1999, was
demonstrably false.

Senior former Iraqi officials had already told the commission that Mr
Sevan had solicited contracts for AMEP – claims that Mr Sevan denied,
saying he barely knew Mr Abdelnour, who also happens to be a nephew
of former UN Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali. This new set of
telephone numbers showed several calls between the two men, who also
sometimes conducted back-to-back conversations with Fred Nadler, Mr
Boutros-Ghali’s brother-in-law. The former Secretary General’s role
in pushing the French bank preferred by the Iraqi authorities to
administer the programme’s accounts also comes in for close scrutiny.

But Mr Volcker and his fellow commissioners have become accustomed to
digging into the activities of Secretary Generals (past and present)
and their relatives. Their second report, due out next month, will
focus on the business links of Mr Annan’s son, Kojo, with Cotecna,
the Swiss company that won the UN contract to oversee oil-for-food
imports into Iraq in 1998. Kojo has said that he played no part in
Cotecna’s Iraq work; his father said that he did not have any idea
that Kojo remained on Cotecna’s payroll until a year ago.

Mr Annan had done his best to avoid ordering an inquiry, but the
Volcker findings may yet help save his job – for now, at least. The
UN is not a body in which the buck stops with the boss, and now, in
the belligerent form of Benon Sevan, there is a senior official to
blame.

He was not, however, the only UN official singled out for criticism
in the report and now subject to disciplinary proceedings: so, too,
was Joseph Stephanides, a fellow Cypriot who oversaw the selection of
the programme’s major contractors. The report said that the UN broke
its own competitive tendering rules when it chose Lloyd’s Register of
London, Banque Nationale de Paris of France and Saybolt, a Dutch
company, to implement the scheme. In particular, Mr Stephanides is
criticised for co-operating with British diplomats at the UN to
ensure that Lloyd’s Register, the 245-year-old inspection and risk
management group, won the contract to oversee imports into Iraq. A
lower tender was submitted by a French rival, but the UN decided that
the deal should go to Lloyd’s since BNP, the Parisian bank, had been
awarded another key contract.

Sir John Weston, the then British ambassador to the UN, said on
Friday that he was operating under “ministerial instructions” from
London in advising Lloyd’s Register on the best tactics to win the
contract. Suggestions that there was improper behaviour are based on
“ignorance of the practices of diplomatic missions”.

Lloyd’s Register is furious at being dragged into the row and says
that its reputation has been damaged badly by the release of UN
audits suggesting that it over-charged. David Moorhouse, the
executive chairman, also said that it was customary for British
diplomats to be helpful to British companies seeking overseas
contracts.

Carne Ross, the British diplomat in charge of Iraq policy at the UN
at the time, told The Sunday Telegraph that the scheme was “deeply
politicised” and “carved up” between member states. “It was our job
to lobby for British companies and we did so vigorously. Nobody in
Britain would have expected any less,” said Mr Ross, who resigned
last year. “That is the way the UN operates and it seems a little
harsh if Joseph Stephanides is carrying the can.”

The Volcker committee’s criticism of Mr Sevan was scathing. It
concluded that he had solicited and received oil allocations of
several million barrels on AMEP’s behalf, helping the company to earn
about $1.5-million. Saddam’s regime apparently believed he would help
it ease economic restrictions in return. The committee also said that
Mr Sevan failed to adequately explain the source of $160,000 of extra
income between 1999 and 2003 (he told them he was given the money by
an aged aunt who died in Cyprus last year after falling down a lift
shaft). The committee said that it “continues to investigate” whether
he “received personal or financial benefits” for soliciting the oil
deals for AMEP.

Even after the publication of the interim Volcker report, Mr Sevan’s
status with the UN remains strangely blurred, and UN officials seem
to have remarkable trouble defining it. Does he still have diplomatic
immunity? Yes. Has he retired? Yes, but he still has the status of a
contract employee, at $1 per year, maintaining his immunity. Does he
have a pension? Yes, but it is not yet being paid.

Last week, Eric Lewis, a Washington lawyer issued a spirited defence:
“Mr Sevan never took a penny.” He said that the commission had
“succumbed to massive political pressure” to find a scapegoat.

There was no sign of Mr Sevan at his Manhattan apartment block
yesterday. When The Sunday Telegraph tracked him down last year as he
visited his aunt in a Cyprus hospital, he rejected all suggestions of
impropriety and claimed that he would be vindicated.

Even if Mr Annan escapes censure in Mr Volcker’s next report, he is
not out of the woods. There are also five US congressional
investigations into the oil-for-food scandal and UN mismanagement (as
well as two criminal inquiries being conducted by federal and New
York prosecutors). And in Republican-controlled Washington, where
many politicians consider “United Nations” to be dirty words, the
Secretary General’s role still faces intense scrutiny. Nile Gardiner,
a fellow at the Heritage Foundation, an influential conservative
think tank, who has studied the scandal, said: “The UN continues to
display breathtaking arrogance with regard to the oil-for-food
scandal. The organisation does not seem to recognise the extent to
which it has been damaged by this. Five major congressional
investigations are looking at the role of Kofi Annan and any of them
have the potential to force his resignation.”

The Volcker findings have provided fresh ammunition for prominent
American critics of the UN. “I am reluctant to conclude that the UN
is damaged beyond repair, but these revelations certainly point in
this direction,” said Henry Hyde, the Republican chairman of the
House International Relations Committee, one of the investigating
panels.

At the UN, the fightback is being led by Mark Malloch Brown, the
eloquent British official who Mr Annan recently promoted to his chief
of staff with a brief to “renew” the organisation. “Benon Sevan has
been a lifelong colleague and a dear, dear friend,” he said. “But
these are extremely serious charges of wrongdoing and no one will be
shielded from prosecution. If there are criminal charges, the UN will
fully co-operate and waive diplomatic immunity of staff members,
whoever they are.” Mr Malloch Brown said the Volcker report was
“encouraging” and a “step in the right direction”.

But, he said, the report showed that the UN bureaucracy would have
done better at controlling Saddam’s oil-for-food schemes if they had
been allowed to do their jobs without the interference of the “member
nations”, particularly those on the Security Council. The report also
said that the major source of Saddam’s illicit money was not
kickbacks but oil smuggling to Jordan and Turkey, to which the US and
Britain turned a blind eye because the two countries were allies.
“Back off — that’s the message to the member states,” Mr Malloch
Brown declared. “They should look to the mote in their own eye
because what has been revealed is a process of politicisation.”

The famously haughty Mr Boutros-Ghali was even blunter in his
response after the report detailed how he “acquiesced” to the Iraqi
authorities in the choice of BNP as the programme’s banker, despite
apparently stronger competitive bids from others. According to Sir
John Weston, he did not get a second term, because he was not
regarded as a good enough secretary general to deserve a second term.
Sir John said of him: “I think he was an honourable public servant.
But he had a number of shortcomings. One of them was that he was a
singularly poor manager.”

The former Secretary General, reached by telephone in his Paris
apartment soon after the interim report was published, insisted that
he had done nothing improper. He called the allegations “silly” and,
in a telling remark, dismissed the Volcker investigators as
“ignorant” about the UN system.

In fact, the investigators have become all too well-informed about
how the UN system operated – and the rest of the world is now
learning fast. -Additional reporting by Ed Simpkins and Damien
McElroy

Tehran Genocide Commemor. CentCom Publishes Principle of Activities

CENTRAL COMMITTEE OF TEHRAN ON ORGANIZATION OF ARRANGEMENTS IN
CONNECTION WITH 90TH ANNIVERSARY OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE PUBLISHES
PRINCIPLES OF ITS ACTIVITIES

YEREVAN, February 3 (Noyan Tapan). The Central Committee on
organization and holding of arrangements in connection with the 90th
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, which was recently established
at the Armenian Diocese of Tehran, published the principles of its
activities. These activities are mainly directed at the establishment
of the corresponding atmosphere for the recognition of the Armenian
Genocide by the Iranian Islamic parliament, submission of a demand on
the recognition of the Genocide as a condition for the admission of
Turkey in the European family, demand that Turkey should compensate
for material and moral damage caused to the Armenian people, coverage
of the process of the destruction of the Armenian monuments of culture
and history continuing up to day, etc.. While carrying out the
abovementioned actions the Commission should be guided by the fact
that all the statements are addressed to the Turkish government and
don’t concern the people or some community. This information was
published in the “Alik” (“Wave”) newspaper of Tehran.

Georgia PM death: five facts on the country

FACTBOX-Georgia PM death: five facts on the country

TBILISI, Feb 3 (Reuters) – Here are five basic facts on ex-Soviet
Georgia, whose Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania was found dead on
Thursday, apparently from accidental gas poisoning:

– Georgia toppled long standing leader Eduard Shevardnadze in a
bloodless “Rose Revolution” in November 2003 and replaced him with
West-leaning president Mikhail Saakashvili. Saakashvili wants to pilot
his poor country into the Europe mainstream.

– Zhvania, 41, was one of the fathers of the revolution and as prime
minister was seen as a moderating influence on Saakashvili, a volatile
37-year-old U.S.-trained lawyer.

– The Georgian model of mass street protests over rigged elections was
emulated by another ex-Soviet state, Ukraine, a year later in an
“Orange Revolution” that brought Viktor Yushchenko to power.

– A mountainous republic of about 5 million in the Caucasus, Georgia
is one of the poorest ex-Soviet states. It has a ramshackle economy
with a small industrial base and limited natural resources. The new
government has pledged to implement liberal reforms to attract
investment.

– Though small, Georgia is riven by separatist tensions. The
Saakashvili leadership has pledged to re-assert control by peaceful
means over two breakaway regions, South Ossetia and Abkhazia, which
say they want to join Russia.

02/03/05 12:41 ET

Iraq has “Turned the Corner” – MEP Claims

The Scotsman, UK
Jan 30 2004

Iraq has “Turned the Corner” – MEP Claims

By Caroline Gammell, PA Deputy Chief Reporter

The turnout at today’s Iraqi election was enormous and proof that the
troubled country has now `turned the corner’, a British MEP currently
in Iraq said today.

Baroness Emma Nicholson, who has visited Iraq many times over the
years, said she was delighted to see Sunni minorities casting their
vote alongside the Shiites and Christians.

An Iraqi election official claimed that 72% of eligible voters had
turned out so far nationwide.

The official, Adel al-Lami of the Independent Electoral Commission,
offered no overall figures of the actual numbers, but said the
percentage of registered voters who had gone to the polls in some
Baghdad neighbourhoods was as high as 95%.

Earlier, the top US adviser to commission, Carlos Valenzuela, offered
a much more cautious assessment, saying turnout appeared to be high
in many areas, but that it was too early to know for sure.

Baroness Nicholson, a Liberal Democrat MEP, described how she saw
polling stations just outside Basra adorned in brightly coloured
banners with people laughing and celebrating the first election in
decades.

`There was a mass of colour all along the streets and lanes – the
Iraqi people are saying that this is the first day of freedom for
Iraq,’ she said.

`The atmosphere was one of excitement. I spoke to a bunch of young
women who said they were very, very serious about this election.

`There were also rural women, country women and they were all
determined to vote.’

The baroness said although the older women were more reluctant to
talk, the young women and all the men were keen to speak about their
hopes for the future.

`They have been waiting for this for nearly 40 years,’ she said.
`This is a very momentous day and I was not expecting to say that.’

The baroness is no stranger to Iraq having long campaigned on behalf
of the Marsh Arabs in the southern part of the country and made
several undercover trips into their territory during the Saddam
years.

Today she praised the UN and Iraqi Electoral Commission for
organising such a seemingly smooth election.

She said coalition forces were keeping a low profile: `They are only
visible in small quantities as back-up far away.

`They are completely out of sight of the polling stations. The people
who are visible are the Iraqi police who are very well mannered, calm
and attentive.’

She said the Iraqi army was also in evidence, manning the numerous
check points.

Baroness Nicholson told how she saw queues of people lining up
outside the polling station in both the Sunni and Shiite areas before
they even opened.

She also saw a group of Christian women who had fled from Armenia
during the First World War and settled in Iraq.

`They apologised for being late – as if 7am is late – and said they
had held a Christian service at home because they could not get to
the church due to the curfew and had come on to vote.’

At one polling station the MEP visited, 2,000 potential voters had
registered and by 12pm 1,300 had already entered the polling booth.

Organisers expected around 1,800 – or 80% – of people listed at that
one station to have voted by the close of the poll at 5pm.

The baroness – who has come to Iraq with one other MEP – said the
vast majority of people had not been scared to come and vote.

`There have been a few incidents but they are not disrupting the
elections – I don’t think people would allow that,’ she said.

`The insurgents are labelled as a small number of extremists who want
to disrupt the democratic process. Most people do not wish them to
succeed.’

Baroness Nicholson is due to leave Iraq tomorrow and will report her
findings to the European parliament on Tuesday and Wednesday.

She said: `My overriding message will be that Iraq has turned the corner.’

Turkey, Armenia: A Major Thaw In the Long Freeze

Turkey, Armenia: A Major Thaw In the Long Freeze

Stratfor.com (Strategic Forecasting Inc.)
Feb 01, 2005

Summary

Armenia and Turkey have made stunning announcements that indicate a
melting in the long diplomatic freeze between them. Such unprecedented
progress suggests an end to the stalemate is on the horizon, if still
off in the distance. With Turkey’s drive for EU membership providing
the impetus, both governments now have far more to gain from
normalizing relations than they stand to lose by angering nationalist
opponents to those relations.

Analysis

Mustafa Safran, chairman of the Turkish Education Ministry’s
commission on textbooks, says the country’s newest history textbooks
will include references to the controversial Armenian “genocide.”
Armenia has long insisted that Turkey acknowledge that it committed
genocide against more than 1 million Armenians in 1915, a charge
Turkey has denied — so vehemently, in fact, that the topic has been
taboo until recently. Textbooks, however, will now include both
Armenian and Turkish version of the events so students can make up
their own minds, Safran said.

This essentially amounts to an astounding change in Turkish foreign
policy and an enormous concession to Armenia. Diplomatic relations
between the two have been frozen since, in the wake of Armenian
independence from the Soviet Union, Turkey closed its border with
Armenia — this was done in a show of support for its Turkic brethren
in Azerbaijan over Yerevan’s role in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
that began in 1988.

Complementing Safran’s surprise announcement was a statement the same
day, Jan. 28, from Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian on a
Turkish radio station. Oskanian said Armenia no longer considers
Turkish acknowledgement that the 1915 events constituted genocide as a
precondition for normalized relations. Oskanian added that Armenia
would renounce all claims to territory now within Turkish borders and
that the re-opening of borders between the two countries would be
enough to re-establish normal ties. These two announcements are
tantamount to an earthquake in the old foundation of relations between
these two longtime adversaries, and their simultaneous presentation
likely signals coordination — revealing that a serious push is on.

It is probably no coincidence that these announcements came so soon
after Turkey received its invitation to begin negotiations on
membership to the European Union. The two sides have been holding
high-level secret meetings for several years, sources close to the
talks say, to avoid having nationalists on either side scuttle
negotiations before they can make progress. Turkey’s EU drive likely
has given those negotiations a strong shove forward.

According to EU membership requirements, Ankara need not restore
relations with Yerevan in order to join. Given that some EU members
are likely to try to delay Turkey’s accession as long as possible,
Turkey will need to be squeaky-clean in order to get in, and that
makes normal relations with Armenia a necessity. If the road to
Brussels goes through Yerevan, then Ankara has all the motivation it
needs to normalize relations.

For its part, Armenia also announced recently that it hopes to join
the Union in the future. If it is sincere, this makes peace with a
prospective member imperative for Yerevan as well, not to mention the
resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Hopes of EU membership
are even further off for Armenia than for Turkey, but Armenia has
convincing reasons to bury the hatchet.

In spite of their closed borders, trade between Turkey and Armenia
totaled $125 million in 2004, and the Armenian government believes
that figure would jump to $500 million almost instantaneously if the
border were re-opened. For a country with an estimated 2004 gross
domestic product of $3.5 billion, this is an enormous difference. That
trade would no doubt grow further if economic ties were allowed to
develop between the two countries, to the benefit of both sides.

More significantly for Armenia, an open door to Turkey would finally
release it from the economic prison it has been in since its borders
with Turkey and Azerbaijan were slammed shut. With the borders closed,
Yerevan has been forced to subsist on Georgia’s dilapidated
infrastructure to get goods to and from the West, which makes for a
significantly slower, and more expensive, trip than if it could go
through Turkey. Also, with access to Turkey, goods would pass through
a large market along the way to the West.

The political ramifications for Armenia are equally significant as the
economic ones, if not more so. An open border with Turkey would reduce
Armenia’s reliance on Russia for either its political or economic
well-being. Furthermore, Armenia would find less of a need for close
relations with Iran — its economic lifeline to the south and no
friend to Ankara — if it had more stable ties to the West. Better
relations with Turkey also likely would give a push to negotiations
with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh. In short, normal diplomatic and
trade relations with Turkey would reshape Armenia’s strategic position
and offer it a political independence that it has not had for a very
long time.

Potential stumbling blocks, however, remain. The Turkish military has
been the guardian of Turkish national interests since the days of
Ataturk and can always bring the works to a grinding halt. The
military high command has repeatedly demonstrated its willingness to
allow the elected government to take steps to move the country toward
EU membership, which is in keeping with Ataturk’s Western-oriented
philosophy. If, however, it perceives an unnecessary step or
concession, such as one on Nagorno-Karabakh, the military could
quickly make its presence felt again. As long as Turkish Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan does only what is necessary for EU
membership, which includes normal relations with Armenia, the military
should stay on the sidelines.

On the Armenian side, the biggest stumbling block to Turkish-Armenian
rapprochement at this point appears to lie outside the two countries.
The Armenian lobbies in the United States and France are highly
successful and influential. They exercise their influence not only
through their control of significant remittances to Armenia, on which
the country depends economically, but also through their influence on
the governments of their respective countries. The sources say the
Armenian diasporas in the United States and France continue to be
vehemently opposed to a deal with Turkey that does not include
recognition of the events of 1915 as genocide.

These diasporas played a decisive role in the rise to power of
nationalist Armenian President Robert Kocharian in 1998 after his
predecessor, Levon Ter-Petrosian, began talking to Ankara. Since they
do not have the political and economic interests that the residents of
Turkey and Armenia have, these expatriates tend to act strictly on
emotional grounds and have little interest in the practical benefits
of normalized relations.

It comes as no surprise, then, that the day after Oskanian’s Jan. 28
statement, French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier demanded that Turkey
recognize the genocide of 1915 — a comment the Turks will never take
sitting down. Sympathy in France tends to be in Armenia’s favor, but
it is a virtual certainty that phone calls from influential Armenians
— in a tizzy about Yerevan’s overtures — played a role in eliciting
such a high-level response so soon. The fact, however, that Kocharian
is so publicly stepping out on a limb and risking the wrath of
important supporters abroad indicates there is enough political will
at home for him to absorb criticism from his supporters abroad.

Although bumps on the road are inevitable, opponents to normalized
relations on either side likely are fighting a losing battle. The
prospect of EU membership has altered the calculations of the
Turkish-Armenian dispute, and the power politics now point toward a
normalization of relations. In October, Turkey will officially begin
its negotiations to enter the EU, and the disputes with both Cyprus
and Armenia are destined to be resolved if Turkey is sincere in its
desire to join. With renewed Turkish willingness to negotiate, and
great benefits awaiting Armenia, the incentive to overcome any
obstacles is far greater now than it has been in the past, and that
makes normalized relations a strong possibility in the future.

(Stratfor: Predictive, Insightful, Global Intelligence)

Discussions on NK Conflict Resolution & Nation Building in Yerevan

DISCUSSIONS ON TOPIC “DIPLOMACY FOR SETTLEMENT OF KARABAKH CONFLICT
AND THE PROBLEM OF STATE CONSTRUCTION OF ARMENIA AND NAGORNY KARABAKH”
AT HOTEL YEREVAN

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 1. ARMINFO. The current format of negotiations for
settlement of Karabakh conflict has not exhausted yet, it does not
allow maneuvers either, say the participants of discussions on the
topic “Diplomacy for settlement of Karabakh conflict and the problem
of state construction of Armenia and Nagorny Karabakh” held at the
Hotel Yerevan, Tuesday.

Leader of the National-Democratic Union, MP Vazgen Manukyan,
representing the opposition bloc Justice, says that <starting from the
moment of cease-fire in 1994, the Armenian party has suffered
uninterrupted losses in the process of settlement. In particular, if
the public was gathered around the Karabakh problem then, at present
it is ousted from the settlement-process, if the Karabakh conflict was
part of international geo-political processes then, now it is outside
them. The philosophic approaches to the problem have changed. And what
is the most important, if 10 years ago Nagorny Karabakh was a subject
of the negotiations, now, it has become their object. >

In his turn, Leader of the Union Self-Determination party Papuyr
Hairikyan says that ten years ago the whole native public was united
around the Karabakh problem, today, the negotiation process is a
prerogative of several people protecting the interests of groups and
not the national ones. The National Security Council does not
function; the relations between Armenia and Nagorny Karabakh are not
regulated. In these conditions, the role of independent experts
increases, they can create mechanisms of control over state structures
<which got out of national control long ago. > NKR Presidential
Adviser for Foreign Political Affairs Georgiy Petrosyan is sure that
solution is in establishment and triumph of democratic principles,
transparency and honesty of the policy, including foreign
policy. Leader of the Union of Socialist Forces of Armenia Ashot
Manucharyanm in his turn, asks whether the OSCE Minsk Group aims
contribution to the settlement process or it is just an instrument for
containment of negative processes in the South Caucasus.

Head of the NKR Press Club Gegham Baghdasaryan makes rather harsh
statements, in particular, saying that Karabakh must become an active
part of the negotiations, the NKR authorities must be maximum active
in the process, but the present Administration of Stepanakert is
unable to do it, as <there are words only, and there are no acts. >
The meeting-participants decided to continue the discussions in future
as well. Their next meeting may take place in Karabakh. – M-

OSCE Minsk Group vows to intensify Karabakh settlement efforts

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
January 28, 2005 Friday

OSCE Minsk Group vows to intensify Karabakh settlement efforts

By Sevindzh Abdullayeva, Viktor Shulman

BAKU

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev received a special mission of the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) in Baku on
Friday. The mission was formed to investigate settlements on
Azerbaijani occupied lands.

The president hopes that the mission, which will visit the occupied
lands and familiarize with the local situation, will help to put an
end to Armenian illegal activities. He said these activities “are one
of the biggest obstacles on the way of lasting peace in the Karabakh
conflict.”

Materials about settlements on the occupied land, which the mission
has received from Azerbaijan, are very important for the work of OSCE
experts, Russian Cochairman of the OSCE Minsk Group for
Nagorno-Karabakh Yuri Merzlyakov said. He vowed that the Minsk Group
would intensify Karabakh settlement efforts.

The mission will visit Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh and another seven
occupied areas of Azerbaijan outside the Karabakh limits. The mission
will make a report to the OSCE Vienna headquarters.