Reference to genocide to be added

Reference to genocide to be added
State retracts decision to eliminate notation

FAZ Weekly Frontpage

11. Februar 2005 F.A.Z. Weekly. The eastern state of Brandenburg has
withdrawn its decision to remove a passage in a history lesson that
refers to the killings of more than 1 million Armenians by the Turks in
the early 20th century.

The state’s premier, Matthias Platzeck, made the announcement on Tuesday
after he met with Armenian representatives in the state capital of
Potsdam. Beginning next school year, the history lesson for the ninth
and 10th grade will once again include a reference to the killings, but
it will also contain other examples of genocide. Previously, the
killings of the Armenians were listed as the only example.

In explaining the latest decision, Platzeck said it would be wrong to
list just one example of genocide. The view was shared by the state’s
education minister, Holger Rupprecht. In a newspaper last week,
Rupprecht defended the decision. “The reference was removed because I
and the premier consider it to be a mistake to list Armenia as the sole
example of such a controversial subject.”

The issue is an extremely sensitive one between Armenians and Turks.
Armenians say 1.5 million people were killed between 1915 and 1923 as
part of the Ottoman Empire’s campaign to push them from eastern Turkey.
Turkey maintains the Armenians were killed as the empire fought civil
unrest.

As a result, the Social Democrat Platzeck faced pressure from both the
Armenian and the Turkish representatives. The first change was announced
in late January two weeks after Turkish General Counsel Aydin Durusay
raised the issue.

The decision set off a wave of criticism from parties in the state,
including at least one member of the Social Democrats, who demanded that
Platzeck reverse the decision. Sven Petke, the general secretary of the
Christian Democrats in Brandenburg, said the removal of the passage had
hurt the state’s reputation. “It was not the reference to the genocide
on the Armenians that communicated a wrong image. It was the unjustified
removal,” Petke said.

Armenians joined the criticism as well. This protest resulted in
Tuesday’s meeting, which was attended by the Armenian Ambassador Karine
Kazinian. Kazinian expressed her satisfaction with the change. “The key
issue is that that genocide and everything associated with the things
that happened then will be discussed clearly,” she said.

Platzeck denied previous reports that he had bowed to Turkish pressure
and noted that discussions with the Education Ministry had been
conducted months ago.
Brandenburg is the first of Germany’s 16 states to use a textbook that
discusses the subject of genocide in the 20th century.

C F.A.Z. Electronic Media GmbH 2001 – 2005
This article is printed from

–Boundary_(ID_o11DSH/xajJi/dTqh6aY+w)–

http://www.faz.net/s/Rub9E75B460C0744F8695B3E0BE5A30A620/Doc~EE7FB17046E6746E7B71BBA501A51218F~ATpl~Ecommon~Scontent.html
www.faz.net

Classical Spin: Anja Lechner and Vassilis Tsabropoulos

Georgia Straight, Canada
Feb 10 2005

Classical Spin: Anja Lechner and Vassilis Tsabropoulos
By alexander varty

Publish Date: 10-Feb-2005

Chants, Hymns and Dances (ECM New Series)

As gurus go, Georges Ivanovich Gurdjieff was not a bad one. Even if
he did like his acolytes to keep him in baronial splendour, his
open-ended belief system–which included elements of Christian,
Buddhist, and Sufi thought as well as a kind of sceptical
humanism–remains a useful guide to navigating the world.

The Greek-Armenian mystic, who died in 1949, viewed music and
movement as powerful conduits for the divine presence, and his
students were required to embrace a variety of “sacred gymnastics”
aimed at calming the mind and strengthening the body. These gestures
were often accompanied by melodies created by Gurdjieff and arranged
for piano by his musically gifted student Thomas de Hartmann. Chants,
Hymns and Dances includes 11 of these short works, sensitively
performed by cellist Anja Lechner and pianist Vassilis Tsabropoulos,
in addition to five similarly flavoured pieces written by the latter.

In hindsight, it’s easy to see Gurdjieff’s music as a precursor of
the contemporary school known as sacred minimalism. Like Arvo Pärt
and John Tavener, the most acclaimed exponents of that relatively new
genre, Gurdjieff sought to express spiritual ecstasy in a musical
marriage of East and West. As interpreted by Lechner and
Tsabropoulos, his tunes are haunting and timeless; the pianist’s own
compositions are also dark without being dour and contemplative
without being catatonia-inducing. Music does have magical powers to
unlock deep feeling, and there’s proof of that in every note on this
lovely CD.

–Boundary_(ID_6YbzjdpbNE4128uxB/rW0g)–

Beyond Ukraine

Beyond Ukraine
By Amitabh Pal

The Progressive
February 2005

In the prolonged election battle in Ukraine, the United States cast
itself as the friend of freedom and self-determination. The Bush
Administration made strong statements in support of democracy and the
electoral process in the country, and denounced the initial rigged
election of ruling party candidate Viktor Yanukovich.

Do not think this is the norm, however.

In several instances in other countries of the former Soviet Union,
the Bush Administration has backed dictatorships much worse than
the government of Ukraine. It also hasn’t had much of a problem with
other recent elections that have been blatantly fixed. The occasional
proclamations by the United States in favor of democracy aren’t taken
seriously by most ruling governments in the area. “The United States
has a rhetorical commitment to human rights,” says Rachel Denber,
acting executive director of Human Rights Watch’s Europe and Central
Asia division. “But its first priority is fighting the war on terrorism
and drug trafficking. That’s why there are no real consequences for
governments in the region that violate human rights.”

In Azerbaijan, a current favorite of the United States, presidential
elections in October 2003 were marked by large-scale fraud. In
monarchical fashion, Heydar Aliyev handed over power to his son Ilham.

Heydar, who died two months after this crowning act of nepotism, had
been warmly courted by the United States since the Clinton era due
to his country’s oil wealth. (Western oil companies have invested
$4 billion in the country and are expected to put in $10 billion
more in the coming years, according to Mother Jones.) During the
Clinton Administration, Heydar’s attempts to bolster relations with
the United States were helped along by oil companies and a luminary
of go-betweens that included Jim Baker, Brent Scowcroft, Zbigniew
Brzezinski, as well as Dick Cheney and Richard Armitage.

The Bush Administration maintained the warm relationship with Heydar.

“Our common security interests, our commercial interests, and our
interests in peace and prosperity will be strengthened with each
length of pipe laid along this line,” Bush said in a letter read
aloud by Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham during the groundbreaking
ceremony of the Baku-Tblisi-Ceyhan pipeline in September 2002. (Two
American companies, Unocal and Amerada Hess, are investors in the
pipeline.) “All of us here today,” Bush stated, “are part of a new,
more promising chapter in a new, more promising history between
our nations.” For his part, Abraham lauded Heydar’s “vision and
determination.”

Bush’s high regard for the father was transferred to the son. Back
when he was governor, Bush in 1996 had made Ilham an honorary
Texan for facilitating the entry of Texas-based oil companies into
Azerbaijan. When Ilham was chosen as the prime minister shortly before
the presidential elections, Bush sent him a letter of congratulations
through a visiting Congressional delegation.

The Bush Administration continued its friendship with the Ilham
regime after the rigged October elections, even though not only
were the elections set up, the aftermath was marked by a brutality
not yet seen in Ukraine. At least one person was killed in protests,
and security forces arrested hundreds of opposition members, many of
whom were tortured, Amnesty International found.

Although the United States spent more than $2 million during the
elections ostensibly to promote democracy, in its initial statement
on the election, the State Department said that early indications
were that the polling had gone smoothly, even if it was reserving
final judgment, a very different response from that of an official
European observer who said that the brutality of the security forces
made it seem “that a war had started.”

Deputy Secretary of State Armitage made a phone call to Ilham shortly
after the election, congratulating him on his “strong performance
at the polls,” according to Mother Jones. Armitage also expressed
the Bush Administration’s “desire to work closely with him and
with Azerbaijan in the future.” Not coincidentally, Armitage is a
former board member and co-chair of the U.S.-Azerbaijan Chamber of
Commerce. “For a long time, it was the U.S.-Azerbaijan Chamber of
Commerce that was the real link between our two nations,” Armitage
said in a 2002 speech before the organization. “I think now we’ve
got a pretty solid government-to-government link.”

Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld visited Azerbaijan in December
2003, just six weeks after the elections. He again congratulated
Ilham and refused to comment on the fairness of the poll. Armitage
tried to make amends by holding a meeting with opposition leaders
during a visit in March 2004, but expressed confidence at a press
conference that the human rights situation would soon get better.

Apart from the oil link, Azerbaijan has proven useful to the United
States in other ways. It has granted overflight rights to the United
States, and has sent 159 troops to Iraq. The Bush Administration
requested $70 million in aid for Azerbaijan in 2004, including $8
million in military aid. Until September 11, the regime received no
military aid because of its poor human rights record and an ongoing
dispute with Armenia.

“United States policy toward Azerbaijan has focused on Azerbaijan’s
support for America’s war against terror and oil interests,” Human
Rights Watch stated in a 2004 report. “The U.S. role has been marred
by weak responses to rights abuses, including those accompanying the
2003 election and its aftermath.”

In October, the government sentenced seven opposition leaders to
years in prison for allegedly organizing the disturbances following
the elections. Human rights rapporteurs sent by Europe denounced
the imprisonment. The United States made no big fuss.

When Kazakhstan held parliamentary elections in September and October
2004, the results left the opposition with the sum total of one member
in parliament. The member refused to take his seat in protest.

Widespread fraud occurred.

“My wife is a school director, and on election day we both voted six
times, because we had to,” a driver told The New York Times. “You
call that democracy?”

After the results, the European Union condemned the vote as
unfair. The U.S. Embassy, however, remained mum. Armitage flew to
Kazakhstan a month after the vote and did not mention the elections
at all during his news conference. Nor did he refer to the State
Department’s own human rights report in February, which noted the
almost complete muzzling of the media in the country. Instead,
he said, the main purpose of the visit was to thank the government
for its twenty-eight-member contingent in Iraq. Armitage had earlier
praised Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev in an April 27, 2004,
speech before the U.S.-Kazakhstan Business Association for making
his country the “most stable and prosperous Central Asian state.”

This seems to be the general White House line in the region. On
November 28, 2001, at the launch of the Caspian Pipeline Consortium,
Bush issued a statement praising Kazakhstan for helping “build
prosperity and stability” in the world. Nazarbayev got to visit the
White House in December 2001, partly as a reward for allowing the
U.S. Air Force to use an airport in his country. During his visit,
Nazarbayev presented Bush with a fancy saddle worth $7,500. (Under
current regulations, Bush has to turn over all his gifts to the federal
government.) The two countries signed a series of agreements. “We
declare our commitment to strengthen the long-term, strategic
partnership and cooperation between our nations seeking to advance a
shared vision of a peaceful, prosperous, and sovereign Kazakhstan in
the twenty-first century,” the joint statement by Bush and Nazarbayev
stated. As if to wave at Kazakhstan’s problem, the declaration did
“reiterate our mutual commitments to advance the rule of law and
promote freedom of religion and other universal human rights.”

This expression of a commitment to human rights by the Kazakh
government did not seem to have much of an effect on its behavior. An
August 2004 report by Human Rights Watch documented a host of abuses in
Kazakhstan, including the jailing of opposition figures, the suspicious
death of a journalist, and harassment of nongovernmental organizations.

In September 2003, the two nations signed a five-year cooperation
plan that includes the supply of helicopters, military cargo aircraft,
and ships, plus supply equipment for Kazakh troops and anti-terrorism
training. U.S. aid to Kazakhstan grew from $47.9 million in 2000 to
$92 million in 2003, of which half was for security-related purposes.

“We are grateful for the strong and growing relationship we have and
for the friendship and for the steadfastness of the Kazakh people,”
Rumsfeld said in a visit to Kazakhstan in February 2004. “Kazakhstan
is an important country in the global war on terror and has been
wonderfully helpful in Iraq, and I came here to personally say ‘thank
you’ and express our appreciation.”

The Bush Administration’s fondness for Nazarbayev is partly explained
by the fact that U.S. oil companies have significant investments in
his country. Chevron Texaco is putting in billions of dollars in
Kazakhstan. Cheney was a member of Nazarbayev’s Oil Advisory Board
when he was running Halliburton. During his visit to the United
States, Nazarbayev also met with Bush Senior, whom he awarded one
of Kazakhstan’s top civilian honors. A host of former and current
officials have lobbied for, and worked with, the Kazakh government,
including Armitage, Baker, Lawrence Eagleburger, and President Reagan’s
deputy chief of staff Michael Deaver, according to Ken Silverstein
in the Los Angeles Times.

Islam Karimov, a complete thug, rules Uzbekistan. The jails are filled
with an estimated 6,500 political prisoners, says The Guardian. At
least two prisoners have been boiled to death, according to a British
Embassy report. The U.N. rapporteur on torture, Theo van Boven, stated
after a 2002 visit that torture in the country was “institutionalized,
systematic, and rampant.”

But since Karimov has cooperated in the Afghan War and allowed the
setting up of a U.S. base in his country, he has become a crucial ally
of the United States. He was received in the White House in March
2002, and top cabinet officials such as Colin Powell and Rumsfeld
have visited the Central Asian republic. The country has received
hundreds of millions of dollars in U.S. aid and rent money since
September 11, according to Lutz Kleveman in Amnesty Now, the Amnesty
International magazine.

“People have less freedom here than during Brezhnev,” a senior Western
official in Uzbekistan told The Guardian. “The irony is that the U.S.
Republican Party is supporting the remnants of Brezhnevism as part
of their fight against Islamic extremism.”

Powell, among other top U.S. officials, has lavished praise on
Karimov. “It was my pleasure to bring to the president the greetings
of President Bush and also to extend to him our thanks for all the
support we have received from Uzbekistan in pursuing this campaign
against terrorism in Afghanistan and elsewhere throughout the world
as well,” Powell said during a December 2001 visit to the country.

At Karimov’s White House visit a few months later, Bush “expressed
appreciation” for his help. The Uzbek government made the most of
Karimov being feted by the White House. “The world community cannot
deprive this person of the moral and physical right to stand among
those who have suppressed the forces of fear and terror becoming
the living symbol of his country,” gushed an Uzbek government press
statement released during his sojourn to the United States. While
in the United States, Karimov signed five bilateral agreements with
Washington. The Bush Administration was careful, however, to invite
Karimov for afternoon tea, instead of dinner, and to avoid a press
conference afterward.

When I visited the country later in 2002, a Western diplomat
characterized the U.S.-Uzbek relationship as “very good” and claimed
that there had been “measurable improvement in the human rights
record” in that nation, a claim refuted by the Human Rights Watch
office director for the country. The indulgence toward the country
continues. The U.S. ambassador warned Uzbek activists early last year
not to ask him “political questions,” according to Harper’s Magazine.

“Tortured dupes are forced to sign confessions showing what the Uzbek
government wants the U.S. and U.K. to believe–that they and we are
fighting the same war on terror,” Britain’s ambassador to Uzbekistan,
Craig Murray, stated in a document leaked to The Financial Times. Tony
Blair forced Murray to resign because of his outspoken criticism, in
large part due to pressure from Washington, according to The Sunday
Times of Scotland.

Roughly 1,000 U.S. troops are stationed at a base in Uzbekistan, named
K2, eighty miles from the Afghanistan border. A formal agreement
commits the United States to respond to “any external threat” to
Uzbekistan. U.S. Special Forces have provided training to the Uzbek
military, and the U.S. Army has provided military communication
equipment to the Uzbek armed forces. In 2002, Uzbekistan received
$43 million in U.S. military aid. It also participates in the NATO
Partnership for Peace program.

After meeting Karimov in February 2004, Rumsfeld said that
U.S.-Uzbek defense relations were “growing stronger every month”
and that the country’s human rights record was just one part of its
relationship with the United States, which could not be based on a
“single pillar.” He added, “We have benefited greatly in our efforts
in the global war on terror and in Afghanistan from the wonderful
cooperation we’ve received from the government of Uzbekistan.”

In July, at the advice of the State Department, the United States
cut some aid over human rights concerns. But General Richard Myers,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, publicly disagreed with that
move during an August visit to Uzbekistan. “My own view is that is very
shortsighted, and it’s never productive,” Myers said. “In fact, it can
often have the opposite effect that people intend, because you lose any
ability to influence at all, at least through a military standpoint.”

Uzbekistan’s neighbor Turkmenistan has the worst regime in the
region–and one of the nastiest in the world. Dictator Saparmurat
Niyazov put on show trials in late 2002 and early 2003. “Many people
in Russia and the West are calling [these trials] the most chilling
public witch hunt since Stalin’s show trials of prominent Bolsheviks
in the 1930s,” The New York Times reported.

Niyazov has renamed the months of January, April, and September
after himself, his dearly departed mother, and The Book of Ruhnama,
a treatise authored by Niyazov that every schoolchild has to study at
least one day a week. Portraits and statues of him are everywhere,
including a revolving thirty-five-foot golden statue whose raised
arms welcome the dawn and bid the sun farewell at dusk. His face is
on everything from the currency to vodka. The country’s oil revenue
is put in an offshore account that only Niyazov controls.

“Turkmenistan is one of the most repressive countries in the
world,” says Human Rights Watch in a 2004 report. “The government
systematically violates virtually all civil, political, economic,
social, and cultural rights.” But Niyazov’s neo-Stalinism hasn’t
stopped top U.S. officials from visiting Turkmenistan and courting him.

“The support of President Niyazov to our efforts, and the support of
the Turkmen people to the Afghan people, remain very important to our
efforts,” General Tommy Franks said after meeting Niyazov in August
2002. “The cooperation between our nations remains very good and,
of course, I am thankful for that, as well.”

The Bush Administration requested $19.2 million in military aid
for Turkmenistan in 2003, according to the Federation of American
Scientists. A small contingent of U.S. troops has been based in
Turkmenistan to refuel cargo planes for aid into Afghanistan. During
an April 2002 visit, Rumsfeld discussed with Niyazov the expansion of
the Foreign Military Financing Program, under which the United States
has donated a Coast Guard cutter to the country. The United States
has also trained Turkmen military officers under the International
Military Education and Training program.

Rumsfeld was effusive in thanking Niyazov during his visit. “I took
the opportunity to thank the president and the people for their very
fine cooperation” in the war on terror, he said, adding that the
United States was “grateful and appreciative.” Rumsfeld expressed
gratitude to Niyazov for his “very fine contribution with respect
to humanitarian assistance for Afghanistan.” He made no mention of
Niyazov’s dubious humanitarian record in his own country.

Amitabh Pal is Managing Editor of The Progressive.

http://www.progressive.org/feb05/pal0205.php

Manama: King Hamad receives message from Kocharian

Bahrain News Agency
February 8, 2005 Tuesday 1:46 PM EST

King Hamad receives message

Bahrain News Agency

Manama, February 08

HM King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa received here today a written
message from the President of Armenia Robert Kocharian on bilateral
relations and cooperation.

The message was conveyed to HM by Chairman of the Armenian
Parliament, Artur Paghdasarian during his meeting here today with HM.

HM hailed the progressive friendly ties bonding both countries in
different fields.

HM also asserted the importance of such visits among parliamentarians
in both countries , , praising the advanced parliamentary process in
the Kingdom which enhanced Bahrain’s status between democratic
countries worldwide.

HM hailed the signing agreement of joint cooperation between the
Council of Representatives in Bahrain and Armenian Parliament,
wishing the Armenian delegation success during their visit to
Bahrain.

>>From his side, Chairman of the Armenian Parliament, Artur
Paghdasarian lauded the achievements accomplished by the Kingdom of
Bahrain , wishing Bahrain further progress and prosperity under it
wise leadership.

Ukraine posts highest CIS growth in 2004

Ukraine posts highest CIS growth in 2004

Interfax
Feb 7 2005

MOSCOW. Feb 7 (Interfax) – Ukraine posted the highest economic growth
among CIS nations in 2004, with GDP rising 12%, the CIS Interstate
Statistical Committee said.

Russia and Kyrgyzstan had the lowest growth of 7.1% in both cases,
the committee said.

GDP grew 11% in Belarus, 10.6% in Tajikistan, 10.2% in Azerbaijan,
10.1% in Armenia, 9.4% in Kazakhstan, 8.4% in Georgia and 7.3% in
Moldova, the committee said.

The committee did not give GDP growth figures for Turkmenistan or
Uzbekistan.

GDP grew 8% in the CIS as a whole in 2004, as in 2003. Industrial
output was up 7%, compared with 8% in 2003, retail grew 13%, compared
with 10%, and capital investments increased 14%, compared with 16%.

MCA: Iraq War, Budget Pressures Squeeze Aid for Poor Nations

Iraq War, Budget Pressures Squeeze Aid for Poor Nations

Fri Jan 28, 2005 -10:57 AM ET

Jim Lobe, OneWorld US

WASHINGTON, D.C., Jan 28 (OneWorld) – Even as the Bush administration
refutes charges by critics that U.S. aid to poor nations is miserly
compared to the contributions of other wealthy countries, it appears
to be quietly rolling back its previous commitments to increase
development assistance by 50 percent beginning next year.

According to the Wall Street Journal, the website for the Bush
administration’s new Millennium Challenge Account (MCA)–an innovative
program designed to substantially increase aid going to poor countries
that are implementing far-reaching political and economic reforms–has
been updated to erase a reference to his 2002 pledge to provide it
with US$5 billion by next October 1, the first day of the fiscal year.

Last Friday, according to the Journal, the website of the Millennium
Challenge Corporation (MCC)–which administers the MCA–noted that
“President Bush has pledged to increase funding to $5 billion a year
starting in FY06,” roughly a 50% increase over current U.S. core
development assistance.

This week, the MCC site now reads: “The president has pledged to
increase funding for the MCA to $5 billion in the future.”

Bush made his original pledge in the spring of 2002 at the UN’s
development aid conference in Monterey, Mexico where he said, “there
are no second class citizens in the human race. I carry this
commitment in my soul.”

MCC officials said they were informed by the White House’s Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) that, instead of the $5 billion request
they were expecting, Bush intended to ask for only $3 billion when he
submits his FY06 budget proposal to Congress after delivering his
State of the Union Address early next month.

As noted by the Journal, even if Congress funds Bush’s full request,
the MCA will still be $4.5 billion short of the total amount the
administration promised to provide over the program’s first three
years of operation. So far, Congress has provided only $2.5 billion to
the MCA, about 40 percent less than what Bush had originally proposed.

“From what we hear, the president appears to be stepping back from his
promise to fully fund (the MCA),” Mary McClymont, president of
Interaction–a coalition of 160 U.S. aid groups–told the Journal.

The cuts–and the effort to obscure them–come less than a month after
the U.S. was strongly criticized for initially pledging $15 million in
disaster relief for the December 26 tsunami disaster that took as many
as 200,000 lives in the Indian Ocean region.

Stung by one UN official’s observation that wealthy countries in
general had been “stingy” with aid to poor countries, the
administration raised its commitment to $350 million, an amount it
doubled this past week. The episode, however, drew renewed attention
to the fact that, of the world’s 21 biggest donors, the United States
ranks 19th in the amount of development aid it provides as a
percentage of its gross domestic product (GDP )–or only 0.15 percent.

Bush has in fact tried to increase that percentage through the MCA and
a five-year $10 billion emergency program to fight AIDS ,
tuberculosis, and malaria in 15 mainly African nations. But the
increase is not enough to significantly alter Washington’s low
ranking, particularly compared to the Nordic and Benelux countries of
Europe whose per capita GDP aid contributions are five or six times
greater.

Meanwhile, in a major report released earlier this month, economist
Jeffrey Sachs, director of the UN’s Millennium Project, warned that
poor countries would not be able to reach the “Millennium Development
Goals” (MDGs)–among them, halving the number of people living in
absolute poverty and hunger by 2015–without a doubling of development
assistance from the world’s wealthy countries.

At the same time, British Prime Minister Tony Blair is calling for the
world’s wealthiest nations to commit themselves to a global Marshall
Plan that would provide the world’s poorest nations with the resources
they need to achieve the MDGs on time, as agreed to by the world’s
leaders at the Millennium Summit in 2000.

“Time is running out for millions living in poverty and rich countries
must act now,” noted Katia Maia of the international development
agency Oxfam at the World Social Summit in Porto Alegre, Brazil
Thursday. “It is absolutely shameful that at the start of the 21st
century, more than a billion people are living in abject poverty, and
more than 100 million children don’t go to primary school.”

In this context, any retreat from previous public commitments to
increase aid is particularly damaging. Development groups and
activists argue that Bush has sufficient political capital to fulfill
his promise if he were as devoted to doing so as he is to other
priorities–such as the Iraq war for which he just asked Congress to
approve $80 billion in a supplemental appropriation for FY05.

“Bush’s ‘compassionate conservatism’, it turns out, is really
‘compassionate charades’,” noted Salih Booker, director of Africa
Action. The organization has called for Bush to increase aid to Africa
and support comprehensive debt relief for the poorest nations of the
region as proposed by Blair’s government. “The sad reality is that
2005 risks being another year of compassionate showmanship rather than
a year of sea change.”

Eight low-income African countries are among the 15 nations worldwide
whose record on fighting corruption, implementing market reforms,
respecting human rights, and fighting absolute poverty and disease
make them eligible for MCA assistance.

Countries that meet these criteria include Armenia, Benin, Bolivia,
Cape Verde, Georgia, Ghana, Honduras, Lesotho, Madagascar, Mali,
Mongolia, Morocco, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Senegal, Sri Lanka, and

OSCE Mission to Arrive in Yerevan Today

OSCE MISSION TO ARRIVE IN YEREVAN TODAY

YEREVAN, JANUARY 29. ARMINFO. The OSCE mission for investigating into
the facts of territorial settlement are arriving in Yerevan today.

The Finnish, Italian, Swedish and German experts led by German FM
official Emilia Margaret Haber are to visit 7 districts around Nagorny
Karabakh. No Azeris will accompany the mission during their 8-10 day
trip. The experts are to make a report and to present it to the OSCE
Minsk Group co-chairs. If need be the latter will make a statement on
the facts revealed. Sunday the mission are going to Stepanakert to
start their trip therefrom.

US Envoy says Azerbaijan, Armenia must resolve NK conflict

ArmenPress
Jan 27 2005

US ENVOY SAYS AZERBAIJAN, ARMENIA MUST RESOLVE KARABAGH CONFLICT

BAKU, JANUARY 27, ARMENPRESS: In an interview to Azerbaijani MPA
news agency US ambassador to Baku, Reno Harnish, praised the “The
OSCE Minsk Group for doing a lot last year to help Armenia and
Azerbaijan resolve their dispute over Nagorno Karabagh.
“As far as the USA is concerned, its position remains unchanged.
The USA does not recognize the so-called Nagorno Karabagh republic
and respects Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity,” Harnish was quoted
as saying.
Harnish also the Karabagh conflict will be on the agenda of the
February meeting between US President George Bush and Russian
President Vladimir Putin. “Russia is playing an important role in
regional conflicts. In some cases this role is positive, while in
others negative. However, the solution to the problem depends not
only on Moscow and Washington. It is the leaders of Azerbaijan and
Armenia who must come to agreement first,” he said.
“Therefore, we are urging Russia to step up its positive role, and
Baku and Yerevan to display more constructive positions,” Harnish
said.

Aliyev: Azerbaijan will return lost territories at any price

PanArmenian News
Jan 25 2005

ALIYEV: AZERBAIJAN WILL RETURN LOST TERRITORIES AT ANY PRICE

25.01.2005 14:25

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ “Azerbaijan will never put up with the loss of
territories. We will return them at any price. It depends on the
course of the talks and other factors whether it will be done by
peaceful means or not,” President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev stated
at a meeting with representatives of Russian media in Baku last
week-end. In I. Aliyev’s words, the Nagorno Karabakh conflict being
not solved poses a constant threat of resumption of hostilities,
which will have very serious consequences.

EU envoy, Armenian official discuss electoral law

EU envoy, Armenian official discuss electoral law

Arminfo
25 Jan 05

YEREVAN

The chairman of the Armenian Central Electoral Commission CEC ,
Garegin Azaryan, and the visiting EU special representative for the
South Caucasus, Ambassador Heikki Talvitie, today discussed reforms of
the Armenian Electoral Code.

Garegin Azaryan told the guest that the CEC has already prepared a
package of proposals on reforming the Armenian Electoral Code on 149
pages and if the Armenian National Assembly wants to listen to the
CEC’s opinion, he is ready to inform MPs of the commission’s views,
the press service of the Armenian CEC told an Arminfo correspondent.

Experts of the commission believe that it is necessary to computerize
all the polling stations of the country within a year, which is
already being negotiated with the OSCE. It is also necessary to
retrain members of local and regional electoral commissions, members
of electoral commissions should be appointed not by political parties
but the authorities, and they should include representatives of all
the parliamentary and presidential candidates. This will help avoid
reports of breaches of the rights of proxies and observers during
elections. It is the authorities that organize elections, and
responsibility for their conduct lies with electoral commissions
rather than political parties, proxies and so on, Garegin Azaryan
stressed.

As for the notorious election lists that caused a storm of criticism
in the latest presidential and parliamentary elections in the country,
they were published on the Internet on 2 July 2004, and now any
political party can access them, discuss them with the local
authorities and electoral commissions and make their amendments, the
chairman of the CEC noted.

Heikki Talvitie was also informed that according to the existing
legislation, the Armenian CEC has no right to take part in the
parliamentary discussions of the package of electoral reforms.

Passage omitted: Talvitie met Kocharyan