BAKU: Mines found near BTC pipeline planted by Russian military

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
March 19 2005

Mines found near BTC pipeline planted by Russian military

AssA-Irada 19/03/2005 13:13

Ten mines, recently discovered close to the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC)
oil pipeline in the Akhalkalaki district of Georgia, found to be
training mines, according to the Javakhetia governor’s office.

The mines planted by the Russian military 15 kilometers away from the
BTC do not pose any threat to the pipeline.

90% of residents in the Javakhetia district are Armenians who were
settled in the region during the deportation of Meskhet Turks after
World War II.

Org. of CIS CST takes up common standards

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
March 18, 2005, Friday

ORGANIZATION OF THE CIS COLLECTIVE SECURITY TREATY TAKES UP COMMON
STANDARDS

SOURCE: Izvestia (Moscow issue), March 15, 2005, p. 6

by Nikolai Khorunzhy

Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Razov told Duma deputies last week
that some “important accords” were to be signed at the Collective
Security Council of the Organization of the CIS Collective Security
Treaty. According to what information this newspaper has compiled,
one of these accords will make Russian made military hardware
available at a discount to all armies of the Organization of the CIS
Collective Security Treaty.

So far, this military hardware has been only available at a discount
to units involved in the system of Fast Response Collective Forces.
The matter concerns 11 battalions at this point, representing
national armies of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, and Tajikistan.
Insiders say that the practice is to be applied now to all armies of
the Organization of the CIS Collective Security Treaty (i.e. the four
mentioned ones plus Armenia and Belarus).

All matters in connection with deliveries of the military hardware
will be tackled by the international military-technical cooperation
commission. This panel is also to be set up at the next meeting. The
analogous commission within the framework of the Commonwealth was
disbanded as inefficient. As a matter of fact, the powers of the
future commission will not be restricted to deliveries alone. It will
also handle cooperation between military-industrial complexes of
countries of the Organization of the CIS Collective Security Treaty,
organization of joint research, weapons upgrade, and joint
manufacture of military hardware.

The meeting will also contemplate a draft accord on the mechanism of
collective military-technical assistance to countries of the
Organization of the CIS Collective Security Treaty, in accordance
with Article 4 of the Collective Security Treaty. The article states
that all countries of the Organization of the CIS Collective Security
Treaty provide all and any necessary aid, military assistance
included, to the signatory under attack. In fact, the future accord
will set up a legal basis for supplying the troops with ordnance,
fuel, spare parts, for urgent repairs, and personnel training in
emergencies.

An accord on personnel training at a discount within the framework of
the Organization of the CIS Collective Security Treaty has been
drafted as well. All six signatories set quotas for mutual personnel
training in 2005, already. After all, deliveries of Russian military
hardware and weapons systems require unification of personal training
systems. Russia set aside $15 million for the purpose in 2005. The
United States spends about $11.5 million on CIS military training.

Official says weapons smuggled into USA not from Armenia – web site

Official says weapons smuggled into USA not from Armenia – web site

A1+ web site
18 Mar 05

“We know that a 18-strong gang led by our compatriot has been
arrested,” the deputy head of the Armenian National Security Service
[Grachya Arutyunyan] has said. He was commenting on the arrest of the
Armenian-led group involved in the illegal weapons smuggling into the
USA.

Arutyunyan said that [Armenian national] Artur Solomonyan and his
brother had been detained. The two brothers left Armenia, one in 1998
and other in 2000. The students of the Academy of Agriculture left
for the USA on an exchange programme and never returned.

To recap, both of them have been wanted by police since 2001 for
dodging military service.

Arutyunyan also said that the discovered weapons had not been brought
from Armenia.

BAKU: Deputy FM positively assesses OSCE fact-finding mission work

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
March 17 2005

Deputy FM positively assesses OSCE fact-finding mission’s activity

Baku, March 16, AssA-Irada

The OSCE fact-finding mission has confirmed the fact of illegal
settlement of Armenians in the occupied regions of Azerbaijan, Araz
Azimov, Deputy Foreign Minister, the President’s special envoy on the
Upper Garabagh conflict, has told the ATV channel.
Azimov positively assessed the fact-finding mission’s approving the
evidence on illegal settlement presented by official Baku.
`I have become familiar with the mission’s report, which provides
figures that are close to those presented by the Azerbaijani side,’
he said.
The report on the illegal settlement of Armenians in the occupied
regions of Azerbaijan, forwarded to the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs in
Vienna on Wednesday, will be presented to the organization’s
Permanent Council on Thursday.*

Tbilisi: Mirtskhulava trial enters deliberations

The Messenger, Georgia
March 17 2005

Mirtskhulava trial enters deliberations
Former minister, facing a possible twelve-year sentence, says
presiding judge is neither objective nor independent
By Mary Makharashvili

One-time Minister of Fuel and
Energy Davit Mirtskhulava listens
to his lawyer’s closing arguments
on Tuesday
Former Minister of Fuel and Energy Davit Mirtskhulava opened his
defense speech at Mtatsminda-Krtsanisi Regional Court on Tuesday by
saying he was the victim of “revenge justice.”

“This is revenge justice. I should directly say that today the
quality of your [the judge’s] independence is equal to nil. You will
not be independent while making a decision and no one can ask you to
be a hero,” the defendant said in an hour-long speech which brought
the trial to an end.

He is accused of abuse of power and defrauding the state of USD 6.7
million, and if found guilty could receive a prison sentence of up to
twelve years. The judge is expected to announce his decision on March
30.

Mirstkhulava believes, however, that the judge’s decision will be
neither objective nor impartial. “I was asked whether I was hopeful
that the court’s decision would be objective. I answered that I have
no hope and illusion of this,” he said.

“The process cannot be called a court process and there cannot be any
talk of justice. The only description for the process is revenge
justice,” he said, adding that he did not intend this as an insult to
the judge.

In conclusion, the former minister stated that he used to live much
better than anyone in the current General Prosecutor’s Office can
ever imagine.

Mirtskhulava was the first former high ranking official detained by
the General Prosecutor’s office following the Rose Revolution. After
a seven month investigation, the General Prosecutor’s Office charged
him with abuse of power, which carries a 3-8 year prison term,
participation in a scheme to defraud the state, which carries a 5-10
year sentence, and misappropriation of state documents, which carries
up to one year.

The General Prosecutor’s Office presented an eighty-page summary of
its arguments and evidence in its closing comments, and demanded that
Mirtskhulava be sentenced to 12 years’ imprisonment.

The prosecution said that Mirtskhulava was responsible for overseeing
the repayment of a USD 6.7 million state debt to the Armenian energy
company Armenergo. Instead, the state charges, he transferred the
funds to an intermediary company leaving Georgia still owing the
money to Armenia.

Mirtskhulava’s defense states, however, that the document authorizing
this payment was not signed by the minister, but stamped “Agreed with
the minister” in his absence: he was not in Georgia at the time, the
defense states.

Furthermore, Mirtskhulava’s lawyer Eka Beselia told journalists on
Tuesday that Mirtskhulava was ordered to approve the repayment
scheme, which was set up by other agencies, by a presidential decree.

She also stated that Armenia first filed a case against the Georgian
state regarding the debt in 1999, when Mirtskhulava was not a
minister but that “Armenia lost the case both in Tbilisi District
Court and then in the Supreme Court of Georgia.”

The state claimed in that case that the seal of a Georgian minister
did not mean that the state should pay this debt, as it was an
agreement between legal entities, she said, adding that in bringing
the current charges against Mirtskhulava, the prosecution was
admitting that the state was in fact responsible for the debt.

Moreover, on Tuesday Eka Beselia stated in her closing statements to
the court that Armenia has not requested the sum which was paid to an
intermediary but not transferred to Armenia.

She also wanted to know, “if this is a crime, where are the five
people who signed this agreement with Armenergo, including the former
head of the Railway Department Akaki Chkhaidze, the head of the
Georgian Whole Sale Electricity Market, the director of state owned
Sakenergo and the Marsh Corporation, which served as the
intermediary.”

“If signing this agreement was a crime and grounds to jail a person
and demand a 12 year imprisonment, then why hasn’t the responsibility
of the others been raised?” the defense lawyer asked.

Speaking with the media, the prosecutor did not respond to the
remarks made in the defense’s three-hour address, saying only “the
defense is doing what it should do in such cases.”

Ombudsman attends trial

The final stage of the trial was attended by the Public Defender of
Georgia Sozar Subari, who explained in an interview with The
Messenger that after the allegations of a lack of court independence
and objectivity, he wanted to witness the trial “with my own eyes.”

“I have been watching the court process for a long time and was well
aware of the case,” he stated. “But now I decided to attend it myself
as it has reached the final stage – just to hear myself what are the
arguments of the defense,” Subari.

The public defender admitted that there had been violations in the
early stage of the trial, when the defendant was seriously ill.

Asked if he believes the decision of the court will be objective, he
replied, “I do not want to put pressure on the court authority by my
statements. I just hope that the decision will be objective,”

He added, however, that no-one can be considered guilty before the
court has made a decision, and criticized those who had already
proclaimed his guilt. “Neither the president of Georgia nor other
persons are behaving properly when they make premature statements,”
he stated.

Mirtskhulava’s defense lawyer, meanwhile, says that she is not under
the illusion that the judge will make an objective decision.

“Taking into consideration the conditions and circumstances in which
the judge presiding over Mirtskhulava’s trial is considering the
case, he cannot manage to make an impartial decision,” she said in an
interview after the case closed with The Messenger.

“When the judge is considering the case while the deputy general
prosecutor is holding an emergency press briefing and that president
is making such statements, I do not think that Judge Kharebava is
such a hero not to take into consideration all of this,” she said.

“Anyway, it does not matter what decision is made by the court. We
will fight on until we achieve the desired outcome. Mirtskhulava is
absolutely innocent,” she added.

Using Mil. levers inevitable in NK settlement – World Azer. Congress

PanArmenian News
March 16 2005

USING MILITARY LEVERS INEVITABLE IN KARABAKH SETTLEMENT, WORLD
AZERBAIJANIS CONGRESS CHAIRMAN SURE

16.03.2005 03:42

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ «If Azerbaijan starts liberating its occupied
territories by force, the countries of the world will support us,»
President of the World Azerbaijanis Congress (WAC) Mohammed Rza
Kheshti residing in the US stated. In his opinion, in the course of
the Karabakh settlement the use of military levers is inevitable.
«The latest talks show that Armenians are trying to protract time.
The Azeri party should take this into account,» M. Kheshti said. The
WAC supposes that «Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian did not
join the latest Prague meeting intentionally.» «Today the situation
over the Karabakh problem is not in favor of Yerevan. They are trying
to hamper the process by means of technical speculations, though the
main goal is to hamper the Prague talks,» he said. The WAC stand is
«the conflict should be solved via diplomacy, not force.» «Diplomats
should act diplomatically, politicians should secure the political
solution of the issue, the Diaspora should work with the
international community and the Parliaments of the world, and the
military should stand on the front positions,» M. Kheshti summed up.

NKR: Recovery Not Started Yet

RECOVERY NOT STARTED YET

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR)
14 March 05

As we have already informed, on March 3 the president of NKR signed a
decree on the recovery of the savings devalued after 1993. According
to the decree, the government will undertake the recovery of the
savings of the citizens born before 1944, as well as the soldiers
killed during the Artsakh war and the disabled soldiers of the first
degree. We asked the manager of the Stepanakert branch of Artsakhbank
Robert Grigorian if the recovery of savings had started. He said that
the payment had not started yet. It will start as soon as the
corresponding decision is made. This time the lost savings of the
citizens born in 1939-1944 will be recovered. R, Grigorian informed
that the order of recovery did not change: 25 drams is paid for 1000
Soviet rubles. Currently Artsakhbank carries out the recovery of
savings of the persons born before 1939.

AA.
14-03-2005

Nalbandian, sin piedad

Clarín, Argentina
Domingo | 13.03.2005

TENIS : EL CORDOBES APLASTO A MONACO EN LA SEGUNDA RONDA DE INDIAN
WELLS. TAMBIEN GANO CORIA

Nalbandian, sin piedad

David perdió sólo tres games ante Mónaco. Y Coria venció al
estadounidense Kevin Kim por 7-6 y 7-6. Fueron eliminados Acasuso y
Calleri.

INDIAN WELLS, EE.UU . AFP, DPA Y EFE

El duelo argentino tuvo apenas un par de games de paridad, los cuatro
primeros. Después fue todo de David Nalbandian (10° cabeza de serie),
que debutó con firmeza en la segunda ronda del Masters Series de
Indian Wells superando a Juan Mónaco por 6-2 y 6-1 en el primer
partido entre compatriotas del torneo que reparte 2.724.600 dólares
en premios y se juega sobre cemento.

Anoche, Guillermo Coria (5°) debió trabajar bastante para sacarse de
encima al estadounidense Kevin Kim. El Mago ganó 7-6(2) y 7-6(3) y
también pasó a la tercera ronda. En tanto, José Acasuso fue eliminado
por el estadounidense Robby Ginepri por 7-5 y 7-6 (7-5). También se
quedó fuera del torneo Agustín Calleri, quien cayó ante el tailandés
Paradorn Srichaphan 7-5 y 6-4.

Anoche, al cierre de esta edición, debutaba en la segunda ronda
Gastón Gaudio (8°) frente al bielorruso Max Mirnyi.

En el primer partido del circuito entre el cordobés y el tandilense,
Nalbandian ~Wque regresó después de su exitosa participación en el
match de Copa Davis frente a República Checa, donde sumó dos puntos
(un single y el dobles) para Argentina en la victoria por 5 a 0~W se
impuso en 49 minutos en base a su mayor potencia y experiencia ante
un adversario que fue la revelación del tenis argentino el año
pasado. Sólo fue parejo el partido hasta el 2-2 del primer set. A
partir del quiebre en el quinto game, Nalbandian dominó a voluntad a
su rival que venía de derrotar en la primera ronda al francés Anthony
Dupois en sets corridos. Ahora Nalbandian enfrentará al ganador del
duelo sueco entre Thomas Johansson (23°) ~Wcampeón del Abierto de
Australia 2002~W y Jonas Bjorkman.

Las estadísticas del partido de ayer marcaron el amplio dominio de
Nalbandian. Por ejemplo, el cordobés ganó el 83 por ciento de los
puntos con su primer servicio y su rival, apenas el 50 por ciento; y
con el segundo saque ganó el 87 por ciento contra el 16 de Mónaco.
Además Nalbandian metió cuatro aces contra ninguno de su adversario.

Acasuso cayó en manos de Ginepri en una hora y 29 minutos. El
misionero falló en los momentos clave de cada uno de los sets. En el
primero, los dos jugadores defendieron con seguridad su saque hasta
que Acasuso se quedó en el 12° game.

En el segundo set la historia se repitió: a pesar de que Acasuso
levantó tres match points con su servicio en el décimo game (estaba
4-5 y 0-40 con su saque), en el tie break volvió a quedarse en el
final después de estar 3-0 y con buenas perspectivas de estirar la
definición. El saque del estadounidense terminó marcando la
diferencia en un partido muy equilibrado.

Hoy será el debut para los dos restantes argentinos en el primer
Masters Series del año. Se presentarán Guillermo Cañas (14°) ante el
danés Kenneth Carlsen y Juan Ignacio Chela (22°) contra el alemán
Rainer Schuettler, finalista de Australia 2003.

En otros resultados de la 2 ronda, el español Tommy Robredo (12°)
derrotó al francés Gael Monfils (el mejor junior de la temporada
pasada) 6-3 y 6-1, el alemán Nicolas Kiefer (29°) al armenio Sargis
Sargsian 6-0 y 6-0 y el sueco Thomas Enqvist al ruso Mikhail Youzhny
(18°) 6-4 y 6-1.

–Boundary_(ID_fRTLZ6r3ipnXpTpq6nxrMg)–

UN: Up to 600,000 rural Azerbaijanis face food shortages,UN food age

UN News Centre
March 11 2005

Up to 600,000 rural Azerbaijanis face food shortages, UN food agency
warns

11 March 2005 – From 400,000 to 600,000 rural Azerbaijanis face food
shortages and nearly 300,000 of the 1 million people displaced by the
conflict with Armenia over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh
are likely to continue to rely on food aid for the foreseeable
future, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) warned today.

“In the absence of food assistance, two thirds of this displaced
population would become food insecure very quickly,” said WFP’s
Regional Director for the Middle East, Central Asia and Eastern
Europe, Amir Abdulla. A whole generation of children could be
affected by malnutrition.

The warning comes in the first “Food Security and Nutrition Report”
on Azerbaijan, where WFP faces a shortfall of about $4 million out of
an appeal for $21 million for a three-year humanitarian operation
that started in January 2003.

For over a decade, WFP has been assisting people displaced by the
conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, when Azerbaijanis fled the region now
occupied by Armenia to other parts of Azerbaijan, where many still
live in sub-standard conditions and have severely limited assets.

An overwhelming majority are heavily dependent on the Government’s $6
monthly allowance and nearly 90 per cent purchase food on credit or
borrowed money. Despite receiving food aid, the bulk of additional
expenditures are on food or medical care and more than half of the
families have at least one member suffering from a chronic illness,
the report said.

The survey found that children in rural area were likely to be born
malnourished, with about 1 in 5 described as being “smaller than
normal” or “very small” at birth. More than 30 per cent of the rural
children under the age of five were stunted.

Micronutrient deficiencies are also problematic in rural areas with
25 per cent of the households reporting goitre problems among family
members and only two-thirds of the sample households adequately using
iodized salt.

“It’s critical for these children to have access to better foods
otherwise malnutrition could affect a whole generation,” WFP Country
Director Rahman Chowdhury said.

Turkish diplomat survived 1985 embassy siege: Amb. hurled himself ou

Ottawa Citizen, Ontario, Canada
March 7, 2005 Monday
Final Edition

Turkish diplomat survived 1985 embassy siege: Ambassador hurled
himself out window during attack

by Nick Petter, The Ottawa Citizen

On a cold Tuesday in March 1985, the Turkish ambassador to Canada
threw himself out a second-storey window to escape a squad of
terrorists armed with assault rifles and hand grenades who were
storming his Ottawa embassy. Twenty years later, the events of that
morning’s siege are still fresh in the memories of those who were
there.

“It’s as if it happened yesterday. I remember everything,” says
Ottawa police Const. Michel Prud’Homme, the first officer to respond
to the embassy siege.

What Const. Prud’-Homme did over the next four hours that day would
earn him the Medal of Bravery and save the life of the then-Turkish
ambassador, Coskun Kirca.

After the attack, Mr. Kirca remained in Canada as the ambassador for
several years before returning to Turkey, where he served in many
high-level state posts, including foreign minister. Mr. Kirca died of
a heart attack last Thursday in Istanbul at the age of 78. He was
laid to rest the next day, almost exactly 20 years after his brush
with death in Ottawa.

On the morning of March 12, 1985, a cold rain was spitting on the
windows of Mr. Kirca’s bedroom at the Turkish Embassy in Sandy Hill.
Out front, a security guard at the compound was about to finish his
12-hour shift.

It was just before 7 a.m. when the guard saw a U-Haul van backing up
to the three-metre-high embassy wall. When the van hit the wall, its
doors burst open and three heavily armed terrorists, members of the
Armenian Revolutionary Army, climbed up the van and down the fence.

“Code red, code red, they’re shooting at me,” the guard yelled into
the radio in his steel-fortified guardhouse as its windows exploded
around him. He left the guardhouse and fired four shots from his
.38-calibre revolver. One of the three attackers returned fire with a
12-gauge shotgun. The fatal shot hit the guard in the chest, knocking
him off his feet.

The three men then ran to the heavy oak front door of the embassy. In
front of it they placed a package wired to a motorcycle battery.

An RCMP officer later testified that this home-made bomb had blown
open the embassy doors with such force that he found oak splinters
embedded in a brick wall across the street.

Ercan Kilic, 16 at the time, was asleep in the basement. He lived
there in an apartment with his parents, who were both embassy support
staff. Twenty years later, he still remembers the terrible violence
of the explosion that woke him.

“My mother woke up first and went upstairs to find out what was going
on. She realized the embassy was being attacked when she saw one of
the gunman,” he says.

As she hurried back to warn her family, the gunman threw a grenade
down the stairs after her.

“They found the grenade at the bottom of the stairs,” Mr. Kilic says.

An explosives expert with the Ottawa police testified later that the
grenade’s pin had been pulled and its fuse had burned, but it somehow
did not explode. He also noted that it had landed next to a propane
tank. Had it exploded, the entire embassy would have been destroyed.

“At the time, I was in a panic. I didn’t realize what was being
thrown because of the sound of guns going off, the explosions
everywhere,” Mr. Kilic says.

Mr. Kilic, whose English was better than that of his parents, was
told to call for help. With the sound of heavy footsteps, screaming,
and gunfire overhead, he ran to a phone and contacted the police.
Several minutes later, Const. Michel Prud’Homme, then only 25, was
first to respond.

“I saw a person lying on the ground next to the embassy. I didn’t
know who it was at first,” the officer says now, recalling the
situation.

Const. Prud’Homme jumped the fence, ran over the man splayed on the
ground, and dragged him to the side of the house, out of the gunman’s
line of fire. “I was lucky, I was very lucky,” he says. “Because if I
had arrived a minute or two later, I probably would have been shot by
the terrorists. But I didn’t learn about that until later.”

He would also soon learn that the man he had helped was not the
security guard who had been shot and killed, but the ambassador
himself.

Mr. Kirca, perhaps trying to escape what he believed was certain
death at the hands of the Armenian terrorists, had thrown himself out
the window of his second-floor bedroom. His right arm, right leg, and
pelvis were broken in the fall.

For almost five hours, in the cold and the pouring rain, Const.
Prud’Homme kept Mr. Kirca hidden. “Had they known where we were, all
they had to do was open a little window that was about six feet above
my head and drop a grenade,” the officer recalls. “They would have
done us both in. They were there to kill him. They didn’t care who
they got in the meantime. So I would have just been collateral
damage.”

While Const. Prud’Homme was pinned down outside, and Mr. Kilic and
his family were trapped in the basement, the terrorists upstairs
talked to the press and negotiated with police.

“We are the Armenian Liberation army, and we got demands,” one of the
terrorists told a CBC Radio reporter. “We want our land back and we
want the Turkish government to recognize the Armenian genocide in
1915.”

The gunman had taken hostages: the ambassador’s wife, his daughter,
and a friend of his daughter’s who had slept over. The friend was Mr.
Kilic’s 13-year-old sister.

“We knew nothing about what was going on. We assumed that the
ambassador and his family had been killed, including my sister,” Mr.
Kilic says.

The hostages were finally released and Mr. Kirca recovered from his
injuries at the National Defence Medical Centre.

After returning to Turkey, some of Mr. Kirca’s political opponents
later questioned his actions of that day in March. “I saw him being
questioned in Turkey at one point by people who asked him, ‘Why did
leave your wife and your daughter to the mercy of the terrorists?'”
says Fazli Corman, counsellor at the Turkish Embassy in Ottawa.

“But for most it was seen as a courageous act to save his life and
the honour of the ambassadorship.”

Before his posting to Canada, Mr. Kirca served as Turkey’s permanent
delegate to NATO, and then the United Nations.

Mr. Kirca left politics on Dec. 5, 1995, when he resigned from prime
minister Tansu Ciller’s cabinet after participating in an
unsuccessful bid to postpone an election. It was then that he began
writing an influential column for a centre-right Turkish newspaper,
Aksam. As a foreign policy analyst, he was known for his hawkish
positions.

Mr. Kirca warned his government that if it was not careful, it could
lose control of some territory to separatist movements in Cyprus and
southeastern Turkey. He also supported the policies of U.S. President
George W. Bush in the region, writing that “Turkey should not
disappoint its main ally, the United States.”

His hardline stance on Turkey’s conflict with Greece over Cyprus made
news in 1999, when the Turkish press found out that his daughter,
Selcan, had married Dimitri Papadopulos in 1998, the son of a retired
Greek air force general.

Mr. Corman says Mr. Kirca will be remembered above all for the ordeal
he endured in Ottawa in 1985. Although attacks on Turkish ambassadors
were not uncommon between 1973 and 1986, the siege of Mr. Kirca’s
embassy was headlined in all the Turkish papers.

The events of that day, says Mr. Corman, remain vivid to the members
of the Turkish Foreign Service, particularly to him. “My window looks
out onto the Rideau River. It’s the same window Ambassador Kirca
threw himself out of.”

In 2004, Canada became one of the few countries to formally recognize
as genocide the deportation and subsequent death of as many as 1.5
million Armenians at the hands of the Turkish military after the
First World War.

Armenia has been independent since the breakup of the Soviet Union in
1992, and the Armenian Revolutionary Army has not committed an act of
terrorism since 1986.

The three gunmen — Kevork Marachelian, Ohannes Noubarian and Raffi
Panof Titizian — were sentenced to 25 years in prison without
parole.

“I’m not sure how many of them are still in jail,” says Mr. Corman.
“We tried to get the information two years ago, by writing diplomatic
notes, but we didn’t receive anything out of it.

“It should be a diplomatic nicety to tell us. But we won’t press
ahead, because then it looks as if we are trying to get involved in
the local affairs of Canada.”

The National Parole Board decided last month to allow one of the men,
Mr. Marachelian, to visit his family for the first time in 20 years.
The board granted him two visits over the next six months, during
which he must be accompanied by a corrections officer.

“We do not feel any animosity against these people,” says Mr. Corman.
“We don’t want to track them or make life difficult for them. We just
wanted them to face justice.”

If the attack of 1985 happened today, it would probably be handled
differently.

Before 1985, foreign diplomats in Canada had long complained about
the lax security provided to the embassies in Ottawa.

After the attack, prime minister Brian Mulroney’s Conservative
government moved quickly to review Canada’s counter-terrorism
capabilities. The review led eventually to the creation of Canada’s
top-secret commando unit, Joint Task Force Two.

GRAPHIC:
Colour Photo: Coskun Kirca died of a heart attack last Thursday in
Istanbul at the age of 78.;
Colour Photo: Paul Latour, The Ottawa Citizen; Medics treat Turkish
ambassador Coskun Kirca after the diplomat jumped from a
second-storey window during a terrorist attack on the embassy March
12, 1985, in Ottawa.;
Photo: Fred Chartrand, The Canadian Press; Members of the Ottawa
police tactical squad take a suspect into custody during the 1985
embassy siege.;
Photo: Brigitte Bouvier, The Ottawa Citizen; Const. Michel Prud’Homme
was awarded the Medal of Bravery for saving Turkish ambassador Coskun
Kirca on March 12, 1985.