Putin to attend CES, CIS summits in Astana

Putin to attend CES, CIS summits in Astana

ITAR-TASS, Russia
Sept 15 2004

MOSCOW, September 15 (Itar-Tass) – Russian President Vladimir Putin
leaves for Astana on a working visit on Wednesday . He will meet with
the leaders of the CIS states that are forming a common economic space
(CES), while on Thursday, he will take part in a broader CIS summit.

The leaders of the four CES countries — Russia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine
and Belarus — will first have a narrow-format meeting, and then
continue their talks together with members of their delegations.

The four leaders are expected to sign joint documents and give a news
conference. The main item on the agenda is the discussion of the list
of 29 first-priority agreements subject to signing, presidential aide
Sergei Prikhodko told Itar-Tass.

“The implementation of these documents is expected to create the
necessary conditions for deepening economic integration and phased
headway towards free movements of goods, services, capital and labor
forces within the confines of the four states,” Prikhodko noted.

“An agreement on setting up a commission on trade and tariffs will
be signed within the framework of the prepared package of documents,
which is expected to become a single regulating body for the CES
states,” the aide said.

On Wednesday evening, a tripartite meeting will take place between
the presidents of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan: Vladimir Putin,
Robert Kocharyan and Ilkham Aliyev.

In the course of his working visit to Astana, Putin is likely to hold
a separate meeting with the summit host: Kazakh President Nursultan
Nazarbayev.

Dallaire event offers message of tolerance

DALLAIRE EVENT OFFERS MESSAGE OF TOLERANCE
BY BESSIE BORWEIN, SPECIAL TO THE FREE PRESS

London Free Press (Ontario, Canada)
September 13, 2004 Monday Final Edition

There was an event of great importance in London in August, namely,
the Gen. Romeo Dallaire Summer Institute on Teaching the Holocaust
and Genocide.

It ran for five days in a room at the Ivey School of Business at the
University of Western Ontario. About 40 teachers were there to learn
ways of teaching the centrality of tolerance for the preservation of
our democratic society and its human rights.

The event was planned by the London Association for the Elimination
of Hate, with the collaboration of the Holocaust Literature Research
Institute at UWO founded by Alain Goldschlager and the London Jewish
Federation.

A major topic was genocide, what it is and what it is not. Genocide
is essentially the deliberate, organized, systematically planned
murder of a people, targeted for who they are with the intent to
wipe them out. It is not a term to be used casually and carelessly.
Genocide always involves hatred and is preceded by the indoctrination
of hatred of the targeted people, delegitimizing them as humans by
calling them cockroaches, pigs, apes, or caterpillars. Genocide is
a political ideological tool.

In the last 100 years, there have been, among others, the Rwandan
and Armenian genocides and the Holocaust. The study of these formed
a crucial component of the Dallaire summer institute. Other terrible
slaughters in that time have included those in Cambodia, the former
Yugoslavia, the Congo, the Iraqi gassing of the Kurds and the millions
killed by the former Soviet Union (the Gulag), in the Chinese Cultural
Revolution, and by the Japanese in China and Southeast Asia, and in
the rape of Nanking. A terrible century.

In Rwanda, there were at least four years of preparation by extremist
Hutus for the genocide of the Tsutsis, by the indoctrination of hate
by hate-filled language (the radio was important in this) and the
stockpiling of half a million machetes.

In the genocide, not only were more than 800,000 Tsutsis killed in
100 days (a greater rate of killing even than that at Auschwitz)
but they also murdered moderate Hutus (bystanders). They planned to
leave no witnesses and no evidence.

As he watched the horror unfolding, Dallaire, in Rwanda with a
UN peacekeeping mission, pleaded with Kofi Annan for permission to
intervene and for additional help. Dallaire disobeyed Annan and saved
40,000 Rwandans.

Canadian Maj. Brett Beardsley, who was Dallaire’s right-hand man
in Rwanda, gave a powerful address to the institute. He described
watching the unfolding of the horror of the well-planned genocide,
the impotence of the UN, and its unwillingness to give Dallaire the
authority and the means to stop the killing. He also referred to the
embedded corruption at the UN.

A few years ago, Londoners Elaine Pensa and Laila Norman persuaded
London city council to set up an informal committee to address the
presence here of hate-language, and assaults on persons, properties
and identifiable groups. From the deliberations of that committee
resulted the establishment of the Association for the Elimination of
Hate, supported by city council.

I would like to pay a tribute to Rich Hitchens and Debbie Lee for
their work in getting the institute going. It is hoped that it will
be a model for other Canadian cities.

The Dallaire summer institute will be held annually and there are
plans to build in London a tolerance education centre.

Teaching of tolerance is the best way to protect our liberty, democracy
and civil society. We cannot tolerate the teaching of intolerance,
which threatens our precious human rights and our freedom.

Armenian minister says cancellation of NATO drills”loss of opportuni

Armenian minister says cancellation of NATO drills “loss of opportunity”

Mediamax news agency
13 Sep 04

Yerevan, 13 September: Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan and
NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer expressed their deep
concern at a meeting in Brussels today that “Azerbaijan hindered
the participation of Armenian servicemen in NATO exercises at the
highest level”.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry press service reported that “the NATO
secretary-general said that such an approach was unacceptable for
a Partnership for Peace member country and was assessed as a breach
of commitments”. Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said that if the Azerbaijani
authorities did not reverse their decision today, the NATO leadership
would cancel the exercises.

Vardan Oskanyan rated highly NATO’s principled position on this issue,
noting that “the cancellation of the exercises because of Azerbaijan is
a great loss of an opportunity for regional cooperation”. The Armenian
foreign minister said that Yerevan’s official position was that the
authorities of regional countries should try to implant the idea of
cooperation into the minds of their people, which will help settle
conflicts. In this connection, Vardan Oskanyan recalled that although
Armenia and Turkey had no diplomatic relations, Turkish servicemen had
taken part in the Cooperative Best Effort – 2003 exercises in Armenia.

Vardan Oskanyan filled the NATO secretary-general in on the latest
developments in the settlement of the Nagornyy Karabakh problem and
the Armenian-Turkish dialogue at the level of the foreign ministers
of the two countries.

The Armenian foreign minister also met the US ambassador to NATO,
Nicholas Burns, at the NATO headquarters. Vardan Oskanyan filled
him in on the current stage of Armenia-NATO relations, and the sides
exchanged views on the security in the South Caucasus, settlement of
conflicts and measures to build confidence between neighbours.

BAKU: Azeri defence minister, Iranian envoy discuss expansion of tie

Azeri defence minister, Iranian envoy discuss expansion of ties

Trend news agency
11 Sep 04

Baku, 11 September, Trend correspondent G. Mustafayeva: Azerbaijani
Defence Minister Col-Gen Safar Abiyev is not satisfied with the level
of military cooperation with Iran. At a meeting with Ahad Qaza’i,
the outgoing Iranian ambassador to Azerbaijan, Abiyev said that during
his mission in Azerbaijan, Qaza’i created all the conditions for the
development of bilateral relations.

“Iran is a fraternal country for Azerbaijan. But I should note with
regret that relations between the two counties could be better and,
in particular, in the military field,” he said.

Abiyev noted that the Iranian government has always rendered assistance
to refugees from Azerbaijan’s territories occupied by Armenia, and
expressed his gratitude to the ambassador.

Speaking about the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict, he said that
Azerbaijan expects more efforts from Iran over this issue.

Safar Abiyev said: “This conflict cannot continue for a long time. If
Armenia fails to agree to resolve the conflict peacefully, Azerbaijan
will free its territory.”

The sides also discussed the fight against international
terrorism. They noted that there is no such notion as terrorism in
the Islamic culture and science.

BAKU: Radical group holds protest action in west region

Radical group holds protest action in west region

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Sept 9 2004

Baku, September 8, AssA-Irada — Members of the Garabagh Liberation
Organization’s (GLO) branch in Shaki, West Azerbaijan have held
a picket in protest against the planned participation of Armenian
officers in NATO exercises to be held in Baku in September.

The GLO deputy chairman Shamil Mehdi told AssA-Irada that during the
picket arranged close the city’s Cemetery of Martyrs the protesters
showed placards «Shame on those who invite Armenians to Azerbaijan!»,
«Freedom to Garabagh!» and «Release GLO members!».

A statement condemning Armenian officers’ planned visit to Azerbaijan
was issued at the end of the protest action.*

How Much Is Vaccination?

HOW MUCH IS VACCINATION?

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR)
6 Sept 04

Recently parents have come to the editorial office of AA and
informed that their children had not received certain vaccinations
for a period of time already. At the Childrenâ^À^Ùs Consultation
we were told that the reason is the lack of vaccines. In the past
year a small amount of vaccines against poliomyelitis, as well as
diphtheria, tetanus and whooping cough was received in Karabakh.
Recognizing the importance of vaccination of children against the
mentioned diseases, we tried to find out why our children do not
receive them, how much vaccination costs, and who is to blame for
the situation. Fist we visited the Childrenâ^À^Ùs Consultation
of Stepanakert where we met with the parents of the children who
already had received vaccination. Part of the parents did not know
for certain when and what vaccinations their children had had, and
some of them mentioned with anxiety that their children had not been
vaccinated against the above mentioned diseases. They also mentioned
that their children were vaccinated against tuberculosis, hepatitis
and measles in time. The chief specialist of the NKR Ministry of
Health S. Hayrapetian said, â^À^ÜWe are seriously worried by the
current situation however the problem is the lack of vaccines in
Armenia as well.â^À^Ý At the Republic Center of Hygiene we talked to
the acting chief doctor O. Harutiunian. According to her, a national
program of immunization is implemented in the republic. Once in a
month and a half the group of doctors leaves for the regions for
vaccination. In Stepanakert two days per week vaccination is carried
out. But there is the lack of vaccines. The minister of health Zoya
Lazarian emphasized that this year the ministry faces the problem
of vaccines. So far Armenia has provided free vaccines to Karabakh,
which were received through the UNICEF programs. The amount of vaccines
provided to Armenia considerably reduced this year, whereas control
over their use became stricter. As to NKR, the fact that our country
is not recognized does not allow us to establish direct relationships
with international organizations. How much vaccines cost and whether
it is possible to buy them and not to wait for receiving them as
humanitarian aid, Zoya Lazarian answered that vaccines are, of course,
expensive but starting with this year we will have to but them. A
month ago the minister of health of Armenia arrived in Karabakh. They
studied the situation and reported that the vaccines were used in
Karabakh with minimum losses. They took the list of the children to
be vaccinated and promised to present the estimation of the amount
of the necessary vaccines and their total value in a week. On the
basis of this calculation the ministry will apply to the government
to provide means from the state budget 2005 for buying vaccines from
UNICEF though Armenia. The problem is that the calculations have
not been sent yet. We do not know yet how much vaccines we need and
nevertheless how much they cost. Are these too expensive for us
to ignore the health of our children? At the end we must add that
according to the minister the epidemical situation in the country
is more than quiet. There are separate cases of infectious diseases
but these are localized and necessary measures are taken. According
to the acting chief doctor of the Center of Hygiene O. Harutiunian,
despite the lack of vaccines the population has already acquired
collective immunity, therefore the risk of epidemics is not big. As
to the children that have not been vaccinated yet, there is still
the danger of getting infected.

NAIRA HAYRUMIAN.
06-09-2004

Swiss delegation says trip to Turkey paves way for foreign minister’

Swiss delegation says trip to Turkey paves way for foreign minister’s visit

Swissinfo web site, Bern
3 Sep 04

Text of report in English by Swiss Radio International’s Swissinfo web
site on 3 September; subheadings as published; first five paragraphs
are Swissinfo’s introduction:

A delegation of Swiss parliamentarians has wound up a visit to Turkey
following meetings with the country’s leaders and opposition figures.

Peter Briner, the head of the group, told Swissinfo that there was
nothing now to prevent Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey from
visiting Ankara.

Calmy-Rey and the foreign affairs committee delegation had been due
to make scheduled trips to Turkey last year, but these were called
off at short notice.

Turkey was angered when two Swiss cantonal parliaments officially
recognized as genocide the 1915 killings of hundreds of thousands
of Armenians in Turkey. The federal parliament followed suit last
December.

But Briner said that Turkey now had “no bad feelings” towards
Switzerland.

Swissinfo How successful has the visit been?

Briner I think it has been a very successful trip. Our objective was
to get acquainted with Turkey and to meet parliamentary colleagues
of the foreign policy committee, because if we want to understand
each other we first have to get to know each other.

We met with open doors and an extraordinary hospitality from our
Turkish friends.

Swissinfo You met Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul. What subjects
did you discuss with him?

Briner We discussed mutual cooperation. There is a lot of cooperation
in business, in culture and in technology. They (our Turkish partners)
stressed their wish to strengthen our business relationship.

On our side we had problems to be resolved too. It seems that Turkish
customs discriminate against Swiss imports due to European Union
certification, even though we have a free trade agreement with Turkey
and with the EU. We are discussing this problem at various levels
and I’m hopeful that it can be resolved.

Swissinfo Did you raise the issue of human rights?

Briner We did mention human rights. We also met a small delegation of
opposition leaders led by (Kurdish human rights activist) Leyla Zana.

She said she wants to see a stable Turkey living in peace, democracy
and justice. She therefore welcomes the focus on reform due to
(Turkey’s application for) membership of the European Union.

She is encouraged, but of course she would like to speed things
up. She will fight with democratic means, we hope, because violence
is no way to reach goals. We stressed the fact that democracy can be
reached only through legal means.

Swissinfo A year ago you wanted to go to Turkey and weren’t able
to. In the meantime relations between Bern and Ankara appear to have
improved. How would you describe them now?

Briner We have a very open, friendly relationship. We discussed the
disagreements which made us postpone our trip. We explained things
in Switzerland, and finally I think we did finish that discussion to
the satisfaction of both sides.

Swissinfo Do you think that your visit might pave the way for Swiss
Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey to visit Turkey finally?

Briner Yes, absolutely. Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said there
were no obstacles whatsoever to a visit by Calmy-Rey, and that the
chiefs of protocol would try to find a suitable date. There is no
bad feeling left whatsoever.

At times of unprecedented disaster,human societies have had to coin

Australian Magazine
September 4, 2004 Saturday

Phillip Adams

At times of unprecedented disaster, human societies have had to coin
new words, or apply old words to the experiences.

When the citizens of Pompeii were being suffocated by the gases
from Vesuvius, the Romans had no word for volcano. When the French
stormed the Bastille, there was no appropriate term for the scale
of the upheaval, and so for the first time the word “revolution”
was appropriated for the purpose. In the 20th century when, by some
estimates, 140 million people died in wars and genocides, the latter
term was in few lexicons. We’d had wars forever, but genocide? Yes,
there’d been attempts to wipe out this or that group, but not a
specific word to describe the carnage. Nor had “holocaust” become
The Holocaust.

A few months ago, I gave the annual Oration on the Armenian Genocide.
Though still denied by the Turks, that terrible event set the stage for
so many more attempts to wipe out groups, races and communities in the
20th century, from Europe’s Jews and gypsies to Rwanda’s Tutsis. And
what happened in the Balkans introduced another unprecedented term,
a particularly loathsome one: ethnic cleansing.

That, at the very least, is what’s been happening in Sudan and
Darfor. So I asked Foreign Minister Alexander Downer why he hadn’t
agreed with the US Senate to label that ongoing massacre of Africans by
Arabs as genocide. Downer pooh-poohed the question, saying that “words
don’t matter”. But, of course, they do. “Genocide” has powerful legal
ramifications – it kicks in an escalation clause in international law.

Correctly used, genocide doesn’t have to involve slaughter. An
orchestrated attack on people’s culture and religion can be defined
as genocidal under United Nations law. Which is why it has sometimes
been used in regard to Australia’s treatment of Aborigines. It’s
not just the massacres and the arsenic in the flour, but also the
destruction of Aboriginal languages and beliefs. The driving of
indigenous populations from their ancestral lands or the kidnapping
of Aboriginal children from their parents can be deemed genocidal.

When that word is applied in the Australian context, the conservatives
are enraged. Which is why, recently, Geoffrey Blainey lost his
crown as the Right’s favourite historian. That’s now worn by Keith
Windschuttle, impeccably connected to Paddy McGuinness and Quadrant –
where the stolen generation is regarded as a misnomer. If anything,
Aboriginal parents should be grateful – with McGuinness calling their
children the “saved generation”.

Windschuttle has gone further, insisting that what has been described
for generations as genocide in Tasmania was a fabrication of history
and of left-wing historians. He insists that the only dead Aborigine
is one with an official toe tag, listed on a documented body count.
We must ignore anecdotal evidence, particularly that provided by
Aborigines. (Apart from not inventing the wheel, they failed to
invent writing and filing cabinets, and their oral histories mean
nothing.) When one protests to Windschuttle that official body counts
had to be understated, not everyone went around demanding that their
acts of murder be notated. Even then there was a remote possibility
of punishment.

But Windschuttle’s efforts at revising history are nothing compared
with the serious work of the revisionist historians. Now, there’s
another 20th century coinage. These ultra right-wing ranters with Nazi
sympathies or neo-Nazi connections say that either the Holocaust didn’t
happen or, if it did, the death toll has been immensely exaggerated. By
whom? By Jews, of course. Britain’s David Irving and Frederick Tobin,
of the Adelaide Institute, insist that the Holocaust is a guilt
industry run by Jews manipulating sympathy and greedy for reparations.

This issue has renewed urgency for me as a consequence of a recent
column wherein I disputed a claim of British Prime Minister Tony
Blair’s, twice repeated, that 400,000 corpses had been found in mass
graves since the invasion of Iraq. As The Observer and The Guardian
both pointed out, at last count 395,000 fewer bodies had been unearthed
and Number Ten was forced to issue a retraction. But the story had
a life of its own – and was bounding and rebounding around the world
on official US Web sites.

It’s odd that the same conservatives who want the names and addresses
and fingerprints of every indigenous Australian killed since the First
Fleet have written letters to the editor, or to me, protesting that
I’m quibbling.

We were misled about Iraq. About Saddam Hussein’s personal
responsibility for 9/11. About his connections with Osama bin Laden.
About the mountains of WMDs. So if the world is to believe that
Saddam’s trial is ethical, lest it descend into a show trial, a
publicity stunt, let’s get the facts right. Let it be as forensic as
Adolf Eichmann’s trial in Israel. Simply declaring the former dictator
of Iraq as guilty as hell, and hanging him ten times, won’t convince
many in the Arab world, and will leave the door open for all sorts
of revisionist historians in the months and years ahead.

Armenian foreign minister hails Karabakh talks in Prague as positive

Armenian foreign minister hails Karabakh talks in Prague as positive

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
1 Sep 04

[Presenter] The Armenian foreign minister has said that the major
goal of the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers is to lay
the foundation for the negotiations on a peaceful settlement to
the [Nagornyy] Karabakh conflict. Commenting on his Prague meeting
with the Azerbaijani foreign minister [on 30 August], the Armenian
foreign minister said that it was early to speak about sharing a
joint position on the Karabakh conflict. Oskanyan is confident that
the meetings of the two countries’ foreign ministers are fruitful and
they are conducive to increasing rapprochement between the parties
to the conflict.

[Oskanyan] My overall assessment of the meeting is positive. But this
should be within the context. We have said more than once that the
aim of these meetings at the level of ministers and co-chairs [of
the OSCE Minsk Group] is to lay the foundation for the negotiations
in order to continue discussions on this basis in the future. This
is our fourth meeting and at these meetings, we wanted to create a
basis for the principal issues, and on this basis, we will continue
our negotiations further and talk about more specific issues.

I cannot say that we have set up this basis. However, in the context
of establishing this foundation, I believe that this meeting was the
most important compared to the previous ones and think that we have
taken an important step towards this foundation.

Therefore, I assess this meeting as positive and consider that if
we continue the negotiations in this direction, we shall be able to
create that foundation, which will provide us with more opportunities
for a positive outcome in the future.

BAKU: Azeri MPs slam guilty verdict for anti-Armenian protesters

Azeri MPs slam guilty verdict for anti-Armenian protesters

Turan news agency
1 Sep 04

Baku, 1 September: The autumn session of the Milli Maclis [Azerbaijani
parliament] started today. In the course of debates of issues on
the agenda, many MPs criticized the conviction of six activists of
the Karabakh Liberation Organization [KLO] who protested against the
arrival of Armenian officers in Baku.

Together with opposition MPs, pro-government deputies also slammed the
court verdict. MP Cahangir Huseynov said that not the KLO activists,
but employees of the prosecutor’s office and the court should be
punished.

MP Zeynab Xanlarova believes that those who “incited” the judge to
take the erroneous decision are guilty. Armenian blood runs in the
veins of those people, Xanlarova said.

MP Gular Ahmadova proposed that an appeal be adopted on behalf
of MPs asking to review the verdict on the KLO members. Only Musa
Musayev called on his colleagues not to make national heroes of the
KLO activists.

Summing up the debates, Speaker Murtuz Alasgarov said that he also
supported the KLO’s protest against the arrival of Armenians in
Baku. “However, this is a NATO requirement. And we should comply with
it if we count on NATO’s assistance in the resolution of the Karabakh
conflict,” the speaker said.

At the same time, he did not rule out that the investigation might have
“wrongly” assessed the actions of the KLO activists. But parliament
cannot interfere in the activities of another power branch, and
therefore, MPs can appeal to court individually.