The True Cost Of The Iraq War

CounterBias.com
July 2 2004

The True Cost Of The Iraq War

Marc Krug

The war in Iraq has sent to their graves more than 850 Americans,
almost 120 coalition soldiers, and somewhere around 10,000 Iraqis – a
good portion of whom were civilians. Similarly dispatched from this
world were upwards of 90 contractors and 30 journalists.

In monetary terms, the war has cost Americans over $120 billion as of
June 30 and there is no end in sight. Nor will there ever be an end
as long as the Bush administration remains in power.

What is truly unfortunate is that these figures represent only the
traditional costs of the war. And while nothing exceeds the value of
a human life, the costs of this misbegotten war – both to America and
the world – amount to so much more than these figures alone can ever
convey.

For instance, the war has cost us the respect of many in the world
and of many astute Americans. Bush’s unilateralist policies, in which
he openly disdained those countries not sufficiently reckless to
support his war, have greatly damaged the strong relations we once
had with our allies. Relations that took decades to build – several
of which were battle tested during World War Two – were nearly
destroyed by Bush in weeks.

It’s not difficult to find evidence of these strained relations. On
June 16, a bipartisan coalition of 27 former senior diplomatic
officials and retired military commanders – including many who had
worked in the Administrations of Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush –
issued a statement quite critical of how our current President has
prosecuted this war, particularly the contempt he has displayed
toward former allies and the U.N.

“From the outset, President George W. Bush adopted an overbearing
approach to America’s role in the world, relying upon military might
and righteousness, insensitive to the concerns of traditional friends
and allies, and disdainful of the United Nations. Instead of building
upon America’s great economic and moral strength to lead other
nations in a coordinated campaign to address the causes of terrorism
and to stifle its resources, the Administration, motivated more by
ideology than by reasoned analysis, struck out on its own. Our
security has been weakened.”

And our security has indeed been weakened. The war in Iraq has cost
Americans much of whatever security they may have felt after
September 11. It’s done the same for the Iraqis who say they feel far
less safe now than when Saddam was still in power: actually, most
Iraqis polled by the C.P.A. in late May said they would feel safer if
we were to leave immediately. This sentiment derives partly from the
horrors disclosed at Abu Ghraib and Bush’s fictitious claim that the
torture and murder of prisoners ended with the departure of Saddam.
It also derives from the never-ending carnage in Iraq.

For these and other reasons, the Iraq war provided the most effective
recruitment device for terrorists conceivable. As Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak said on March 31, 2003, twelve days after the war
began: “Instead of having one (Osama) bin Laden, we will have 100 bin
Ladens.” The London-based International Institute for Strategic
Studies (IISS) claims the war spurred a sharp increase in the
membership of al-Qaeda, who now number around 18,000. And who, after
the war in Afghanistan caused them to disperse, may have come to
America in large numbers.

Also weakened is international security. First, al Qaeda does not
target only the U.S., nor is it the only terrorist group whose
membership the war has increased. Furthermore, these terrorist’s most
common targets, besides Americans, are citizens of those countries
that have aligned themselves with America.

Second, amidst much noise and controversy, the State Department
recently revised the number of terror-related deaths worldwide from
307 to 625. This latter figure is the highest number recorded since
statistics of its type have been kept. So it would seem that the war
against terrorism has not only failed to decrease it; the war has
actually increased terrorism all over the world.

And third, by fighting a pre-emptive war, Bush has not only placed
certain countries at risk by setting a dangerous precedent; he has
also violated international law. For instance, his pre-emptive
invasion of Iraq has increased the likelihood that India might attack
Pakistan, Rwanda might enter the Congo by force, and Armenia might go
to war against Azerbaijan. Moreover, by fighting a pre-emptive war,
he has violated the U.N. Charter and the Nuremberg Charter.
Unfortunately, these are not the only international agreements Bush
has acted in disregard of.

By bombing civilian targets, our armed forces have violated the Third
and Fourth Geneva conventions, which are concerned with the
protection of civilian populations during wartime. American soldiers
have further dishonored these conventions by using certain tactics
against the Iraqi civilian population – specifically, imposing
curfews, closing entire towns, demolishing houses, and arresting and
kidnapping family members of wanted militants in the hopes that they
will turn themselves in once they’ve heard what has become of their
families.

So it’s not difficult to understand the intense enmity that many
Arabs now feel towards Americans, thus making the U.S. a “flycatcher
for terrorists,” as one State Department figure put it. Consequently,
Americans feel less safe now than they ever did before. And for good
reason.

This feeling was fueled, however illegitimately, by the
Mueller-Ashcroft “press conference” in late May. In that bizarre
televised event, our two leading law enforcement officials presented
the pictures of seven nefarious terrorists – whose crimes,
whereabouts, and connections to each other remained largely unknown –
but who, no doubt, were at that very moment planning terrorist
attacks against America. Notably absent from this “press conference”
was Tom Ridge, Director of Homeland Security, who stated earlier in
the day on ABC’s Good Morning America, “that the threats are not the
most disturbing I have personally seen during the past couple of
years.”

The message seemed to be that America stood in peril of imminent
terrorist attack. But apparently not to any greater degree during
Ashcroft and Mueller’s imitation of America’s Most Wanted than at any
other time before or since. One can then only wonder why the “press
conference” was held at all, aside from the fact that fear of
terrorism plays right into one of Bush’s few remaining strengths.

Nevertheless, the growing fear of Islamic terrorism has now become
part of the American landscape. But it is only one of many costs that
this war has forced Americans to endure.

Fighting this war, while simultaneously lowering taxes, has not only
created a substantial and ever increasing deficit; it has also
resulted in decreased federal and state spending. The deficit alone
has partly caused an increase in interest rates and a rise in the
Consumer Price Index.

Deficits are rather easy to understand: they happen when your
expenses exceed your income. In the case of the federal government,
the cost of the war plus its other expenses exceed the income it
derives largely from taxes, which now are substantially less because
of the cuts. To finance this deficit, the US Treasury Department must
borrow money by selling IOUs in the form of bills, notes, and bonds
to the public.

But as the debt increases, the government has to sell more of these
IOUs to what often is a reasonably fixed group of buyers. In other
words, the supply of IOUs goes up, while the demand does not – at
least not to the same extent. To compensate, the government has to
increase the incentive for individuals and institutions to buy more
of these IOUs. It does this by raising the financial reward for
buying them – namely, the interest paid to the purchaser. As a
result, one type of interest rate goes up. And, eventually so do
other types of interest rates.

Unfortunately, it gets worse. Keep in mind that interest constitutes
one cost of producing goods and services; so rising interest rates
cause the price of those goods and services to eventually rise as
well. Actually, this process already began months ago: the Consumers
Price Index for the first quarter of 2004 came in at 4.4 %, more than
twice what it was for all of 2003 (1.9%). Also keep in mind that the
first quarter ended before the rapid upward spike in oil costs,
caused largely by the war in Iraq. So most likely, we could be
looking at a 6% rise in the Consumers Price Index for the second
quarter.

Put simply, when the price of petroleum products goes up, so will the
price of everything shipped by truck or plane as both use petroleum
products. Furthermore, your drive to buy those increasingly expensive
goods will cost you more – as will your drive to the job whose
paycheck now buys you increasingly less. In addition, if crude oil
prices stay at around $40 a barrel, the U.S. Gross Domestic Product
(GDP) will fall by over $50 billion a year. And remember, a recession
is defined by two straight quarters of negative GDP growth.

In addition to the costs of higher interest rates, higher gas prices,
and rising inflation, the war in Iraq has brought about other
hardships as well. For example, it wasn’t until June 7, 2004 that all
American soldiers had bullet proof vests. Before then, their families
or loved ones often spent $600-$1,000 buying this equipment
themselves before shipping it overseas at their own expense.

Additionally, many National Guard units have now become depleted by
losing so many members to fighting the Iraq war that some states
worry whether they have enough people to fight whatever natural
emergencies that might occur within their boundaries. So the next
cost of the war in Iraq could be the fire that burns out of control
for weeks because there aren’t enough National Guard members to help
stop it.

Also, the families of National Guard members currently in Iraq have
learned by necessity how to survive without their primary breadwinner
– often by living in substandard housing and using food stamps to
eat and welfare to buy necessities. And when the Guard members do
return, they often do not find their old jobs waiting for them. The
law guaranteeing them their right to the job they left behind has
lately been very laxly observed and even more laxly enforced.

To make matters worse, the Bush administration’s initial proposal for
discretionary veterans’ benefits for FY 2005 was $3.8 billion short
of what was needed, according to leading veterans’ organizations. The
House of Representatives in May boosted Bush’s proposal by $1.2
million, still leaving a $2.6 million shortfall.

But for all Americans, the war meant that many programs would be cut,
such as grants for low-income schools and family literacy. In fact,
the FY 2005 budget proposes deep cuts in many essential domestic
programs. With the exception of Homeland Security, funding for
domestic discretionary programs was essentially frozen. Programs
slated for elimination included Community Development Block Grants,
Rural Housing and Economic Development, and Arts in Education grants.
Nevertheless, the tax cuts proceed unabated.

Perhaps the greatest beneficiaries of the war in Iraq were the
defense contractors, particularly the politically connected
Halliburton, whose subsidiary KBR (Kellogg Brown & Root) became the
recipient of $7 billion in slightly over two years. To show their
gratitude, KBR overcharged $61 million for gas and $16 billion for
meals, 2/3rds of which were never delivered. Eventually, in March
2004, the government stepped in and withheld $160 million slated to
reimburse KBR for these phantom meals.

Just this last June, four former Halliburton employees claimed that
the company routinely wasted money, charging $45 for cases of Coke
and $100 dollars for bags of laundry. The company also instructed
employees to overstate on their time cards and to abandon nearly new
$85,000 trucks in the desert when they got flat tires. In many cases,
these trucks were entirely empty, although the U.S. Government was
billed for transporting what employees derisively referred to as
“sailboat fuel.”

So there you have the war in Iraq: death, destruction, damaged
relations with our allies, disrespect for prevailing international
law, diminished purchasing power for the dollar, and decreased
spending on what America truly needs.

I, for one, can truly live without it. As can the tens of thousands
who may yet die if the war continues too much longer.

http://www.counterbias.com/070.html

ANCA-WR: ANC Floods Congressional Leadership Offices w/ Genocides

Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region
104 North Belmont Street, Suite 200
Glendale, CA 91206
Phone: 818.500.1918
Fax: 818.246.7353
[email protected]

PRESS RELEASE
Friday, July 09, 2004
Contact: Ardashes Kassakhian
818.500.1918

ANCA-WR Floods the Offices of Speaker Hastert and Senate President
Frist with Postcards Supporting Genocide Resolutions

Republican Leaders Block Bills Honoring Genocide Convention Backed By
the Late President Ronald Reagan

Glendale, CA – On Friday, July 9, 2004, the Chairman of the Armenian
National Committee of America – Western Region (ANCA-WR) flew to
Washington, DC to deliver thousands of postcards demanding that
Republican leaders of the House and Senate schedule a vote on
resolutions marking the 15th anniversary of the U.N. Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of Genocide. Over the course of the last
four months, ANC local chapters have been actively collecting
signatures for the year long ANCA National Genocide Prevention
Postcard Campaign. ANC Chapters and activists in Arizona, California,
Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada and Texas have been instrumental in
gathering over 150,000 postcards and over 25,000 additional
signatures.

Both H.Res 193 and S. 164 are pending because leaders in both bodies
refuse to bring the measures to a vote. Both bills mark America’s
commitment to the U.N. Genocide Convention, which was adopted by the
United States in 1988.

The late President Ronald Reagan was a primary force in encouraging
the U.S.

Senate to ratify and implement the U.N. Genocide Convention. Adopted
by the United Nations in 1948, the Convention languished on the Senate
docket for some 40 years, despite the heroic efforts of Wisconsin
Senator William Proxmire (D) and later Rhode Island Senator Claiborne
Pell (D) to obtain passage of the measure. In 1986, President Reagan
urged the Senate leadership to takeup the bill and, after a number of
modifications, the Convention was signed into law by Reagan in 1988.

`The time has come for a vote,’ remarked ANCA-WR Chairman Raffi
Hamparian.

`With the support of hundreds of Members of Congress and over a
hundred civic organizations, these bills deserve to be voted on in the
House and Senate.

It is a sad day in America when Republican leaders actively block
legislation marking a Convention that is designed to prevent future
genocides,’ he added.

The ANCA Genocide Prevention Postcard Campaign was launched last year
with the help of Grammy nominated musicians System of a Down. The
purpose of the Postcard campaign is to raise public awareness about
the Genocide resolutions and urge Congressional leadership to schedule
a vote.

`We’re confident that both of these bills will pass if they come to a
vote, so it’s up to the leadership to bring them to the floor,’
commented ANCA-WR Executive Director Ardashes Kassakhian. `The House
version passed in committee without any objection,’ he added referring
to the vote on H. Res. 193 in the House Judiciary Committee back in
May of 2003.

To date, over 100,000 postcards have been delivered to both the House
and Senate leadership offices. With less than four months left in the
legislative calendar year, the ANCA-WR aims to heighten its efforts to
raise awareness and call for a Congressional vote.

The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) is the largest and
most influential Armenian American grassroots political
organization. Working in coordination with a network of offices,
chapters, and supporters throughout the United States and affiliated
organizations around the world, the ANCA actively advances the
concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of
issues.

Editor’s Note: Photo attached Photo caption – ANCA-WR Government
Relations Director Armen Carapetian, ANCA-WR intern Lara Talverdian,
and ANCA-WR Staff Assistant Tamar Sadoriancount out Genocide
Prevention campaign postcards and prepare to send them to
Congressional and Senate Leadership Offices in Washington, DC.

#####

www.anca.org

BAKU: Visiting Turkish minister confirms stance on Armenian border

Azerbaijan: Visiting Turkish minister confirms stance on Armenian border

ANS TV, Baku
8 Jul 04

Presenter Turkish Minister of Environment and Forestry Osman Pepe is
visiting Baku. Today he and the ministry representatives went to the
Milli Maclis parliament .

Correspondent Parliament Speaker Murtuz Alasgarov today met Turkish
Minister of Environment and Forestry Osman Pepe and the delegation he
leads. Although the speaker spoke about forestry and national parks,
he focused his attention on the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict.

Alasgarov said that the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan should be
restored and that the world countries should recognize Armenia as an
aggressor state.

Alasgarov, speaking at the meeting, captioned Turkey has repeatedly
declared that Turkey will not establish any relations with Armenia
until Azerbaijan’s occupied territories are liberated. This is a great
assessment for us. I think that Turkey will remain adherent to this
and will constantly back our position. Although talks which are being
carried out at various levels have not yielded results yet, we are
trying to have the problem resolved as soon as possible.

Correspondent Turkish Minister of Environment and Forestry Osman Pepe
said that Ankara officials will not open the border with Armenia until
the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict is resolved.

Afat Telmanqizi and Azar Qarayev, ANS.

Video shows the meeting

PM Margarian’s address on occasion of Constitution Day

ArmenPress
July 5 2004

PRIME MINISTER ANDRANIK MARGARIAN’S ADDRESS ON THE OCCASION OF
CONSTITUTION DAY

YEREVAN, JULY 5, ARMENPRESS: Dear compatriots, I congratulate you
on the occasion of the Constitution Day of the Republic of Armenia.
By adopting the Basic Law of the Republic of Armenia in 1995 our
state and people expressed their resoluteness and determination to
take the path of integration with the civilized world, consolidation
of democratic values and building the civic society.
The Constitution has undoubtedly promoted further establishment of
our independence and sovereignty in the passed years and ensured also
domestic and external stability in difficult situations. However, the
life is advancing and new realities are making their demands of the
society and the state, which, naturally, should be fixed in the Basic
Law.
However, it is important that constitutional reforms be
implemented in the atmosphere of consistency of political forces, be
fully comprehended and find the support of the entire society. And
only in that case the Constitution will perform its main role of
ensuring our citizens’ prosperity and solidarity, protection of basic
human and citizens’ rights and freedoms in conformity with
internationally declared principles and norms and make our
long-cherished national dreams and goals come true.
I am confident that as a result of the reforms, to be carried out
through our joint efforts we shall eventually have a Constitution
that will be the main guarantor of prosperity of our state and
society.

An American dream

Newsday (New York)
July 4, 2004 Sunday
ALL EDITIONS

An American dream

BY JAN TYLER. freelance writer.

Michael Halberian’s father, Jack, was a 17-year-old immigrant from
Armenia when he first saw the Steinway Mansion in 1914. In those
days, the imposing structure was the centerpiece of a 440-acre
country estate. Standing on a bluff overlooking the East River in
Astoria, the summer home of the piano-making Steinway family with its
lofty square tower “was to him like a grand stone castle,” says
Michael.

“My father was a simple tailor; he’d see the ‘castle’ every day from
across the fields on his way to work. To him it was a symbol of what
anyone could aspire to in America. He was a dreamer, but he was
determined to own it one day.”

His father’s dream came true in 1926 – the year Michael was born. The
25-room Steinway mansion, its property reduced to only one acre, came
on the market, and Jack went into debt to come up with the $40,000 he
needed to make it his own.

The house already had a place in history.

William Steinway had purchased the mansion in 1870 from the widow of
Benjamin Pike Jr., the man who built it. A manufacturer of optical
instruments, Pike had images of his stock-in-trade etched into the
glass inserts of a pair of massive walnut doors that connect the
mansion’s twin parlors. “The Smithsonian once wanted to buy those
doors,” says Michael. “But I wouldn’t sell them.”

The house stands in the district once called Steinway Village near
the Steinway & Sons piano factory. The family built homes for its
workers and added municipal improvements that included a trolley line
and a tunnel under the East River used by the city subway system. But
eventually the Steinways abandoned the mansion, where they had hosted
elegant parties, in favor of more fashionable locales and it stood
empty until Jack Halberian purchased it.

“The place was in excellent condition,” says

Michael, “but it had never been wired for electricity; it ran on
gaslight. For some reason the Steinways had shut off the water, which
was piped in from their factory, and the coal furnace sent up more
dust than heat. My father did most of the repairs and upkeep with his
own hands.”

Jack Halberian and his wife Shamie furnished the place with Edwardian
and Victorian pieces that complemented the classic backgrounds – but
they never attempted to alter their home’s architectural integrity.
All the public rooms – including a cavernous library and a demi-lune
dining room – retain their original glory. The parlors are paneled in
age-darkened pine, their 12-foot- high ceilings and wide crown
moldings encrusted with ornately detailed Beaux-Arts sculptured
plaster.

When his father died 25 years ago, Michael, a restaurateur, moved
back into his boyhood home with his wife and three children. “I put
everything I have into this place, like my father did. I wanted to
honor him and his dream.”

Now retired and divorced, Michael lives amid the fading splendor with
three dogs that patrol the fenced-in property, a lone chicken with
roaming privileges and a pair of house cats. He collects bronze and
marble statuary as well as historical artifacts and assorted
memorabilia that he displays on tables and sideboards and the mantels
of five fireplaces.

“I buy what catches my fancy at the moment,” he says. His main
interest at the moment is a collection of nonfiction books on a
variety of subjects, just a fraction of the more than 30,000 titles
in the library’s floor-to-ceiling shelves and in the upper gallery of
the center hall.

The gallery is reached by a graceful curved staircase illuminated by
a crystal chandelier 7 feet in diameter that he bought at auction. A
motorized mechanism of his making raises and lowers the half-ton
fixture that he believes once sparkled in a Whitney estate and now
hangs from a leaded-glass skylight 30 feet above the main floor.

Like his father before him, Michael is passionate about the survival
of the house. Which is why, in 1966, he applied for – and received –
city, state and national landmark status for it. He speaks with
reverence about his father’s vision and his mother’s warmth and
humor. “No one ever grew up in a more loving atmosphere.”

There was just one element from the mansion’s glory days that Michael
couldn’t preserve. He shows a photograph of the original cast-iron
portico and supporting pillars that distinguished the front entry
even in his childhood. Rusted and worn by time and weather, the
ornate portico would have cost $250,000 to replace. Reluctantly, he
removed it several years ago.

Now the still-impressive pillars stand alone – silent sentries of a
time before a waste treatment plant and industrial complexes intruded
on the pastoral setting, a time when the mansion on the river’s shore
was a symbol of the American dream.

GRAPHIC: NEWSDAY PHOTOS / BRUCE GILBERT – 1) LANDMARK: The 25-room
stone castle on a bluff holds on to its place in history. 2)
surrounded by History: The parlor’s intricately carved mantel and
sculptured plaster moldings harken to bygone days. 3) SPLENDOR IN THE
PAST: Michael Halberian’s eclectic collection of antique statuary,
left, is displayed throughout the house. 4) Below, from left:
elaborate moldings around the library skylight; 5) exterior pillars
stand tall against the vagaries of time; 6) ceiling medallion in the
parlor; 7) etched glass in the massive walnut front doors. 8) Newsday
Cover Photo by Bruce Gilbert – A half-ton crystal chandelier hangs 30
feet above the foyer in the Steinway mansion.

Putin invites CIS presidents to visit Moscow

Interfax
Jul 2 2004 3:47PM

Putin invites CIS presidents to visit Moscow

MOSCOW. July 2 (Interfax) – The presidents of the CIS countries will visit
Moscow on July 2-3 at the invitation of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The presidents of Azerbaijan, Armenia, Uzbekistan, Moldova, Kazakhstan,
Ukraine, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Georgia, and Belarus will come to Moscow to
discuss the upcoming CIS summit, scheduled to take place in Astana in
September, the Russian presidential press service told Interfax on Friday.

Various issues of mutual interest, including joint celebrations of the 60th
anniversary of the victory in WW II, will also be considered, the press
service told Interfax on Friday.

BAKU: Armenia optimistic for Turkey

Baku Sun
July 2, 2004

Armenia optimistic for Turkey

YEREVAN (AP) – Armenia Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian said Wednesday
that a brief meeting with the Turkish leader on the sidelines of this
week’s NATO summit convinced him that relations could improve between
the uneasy neighbors.

Oskanian spoke for 10 minutes with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan at the summit in Istanbul, which was also attended by numerous
leaders from non-NATO member states such as Armenia. President Robert
Kocharian had refused to attend, saying that he was dissatisfied with
his country’s relations with Turkey.

`During that meeting I was again convinced that the current Turkish
government sincerely wants to achieve a change for the better in
resolving relations with Armenia,’ Oskanian said, without elaborating.

Armenia and Turkey do not have diplomatic relations. Armenians accuse
Turks of a genocide of up to 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and
1923. Turks claim the number of deaths is inflated and say the victims
were killed in civil unrest.

Armenia and Turkey are also at odds over Nagorno-Karabakh, a region
within Azerbaijan that has been under ethnic Armenian control since a
war that ended in 1994 without a political settlement. Azerbaijanis and
Turks share close ethnic ties, although recently Turkey has expressed a
willingness to improve relations with Armenia.

Oskanian said that he used a separate meeting his with his Turkish
counterpart, Abdullah Gul, to discuss the possibility of resuming
railroad service between their nations. Turkey, which supported
Azerbaijan in the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, has maintained an
economic blockade of Armenia, hobbling economic development in this
landlocked ex-Soviet republic.

Oskanian noted, however, that despite gradually developing ties with
Turkey, Armenia would object to Turkey `pretending to be an impartial
mediator’ in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Oskanian also said that he held discussions Wednesday with the U.S.
administration about Armenia’s intention to veto a proposal that would
give Turkey the acting chairmanship of the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe in 2007. Oskanian said that Armenia thinks
the role can only be filled by a nation that has diplomatic relations
with all the OSCE’s member states. But he added that Armenia was still
holding talks on the issue.

Armenian Foreign Minister to visit Russia on July 5-7

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
July 2, 2004 Friday

Armenian Foreign Minister to visit Russia on July 5-7

By Syuzanna Adamiants, Alexandra Urusova

MOSCOW

Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian will visit Russia on July
5-7, a source at the Russian Foreign Ministry’s information department
told Itar-Tass on Friday.

Oskanian is expected to meet with the Russian Foreign Minister, Sergei
Lavrov, and the chairman of the State Duma Committee on CIS affairs and
ties with compatriots, Andrei Kokoshin.

The two parties will focus on cooperation in the CIS format, including
in the Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO) and the Eurasian
Economic Community (EurAsEC). They will also discuss pooling the two
foreign ministry’s efforts to improve the situation in the North
Caucasus.

“The Nagorno-Karabakh problem will be of special attention,” the source
said. “Russia is ready to help settle the conflict and take on the role
of a guarantor to an agreement the two parties will come to.”

Russia and Armenia will also touch upon the development of trade,
economic, cultural and humanitarian cooperation.

Yerevan Press Club Weekly Newsletter – 07/01/2004

YEREVAN PRESS CLUB WEEKLY NEWSLETTER

JUNE 25 – JULY 1, 2004

HIGHLIGHTS:

POLITICS AND MEDIA

“YERRORD UJ” WEEKLY PUBLISHED

POLITICS AND MEDIA

On June 29 in Yerevan a seminar “Political Developments in Armenia and Their
Media Coverage” was held. The seminar was organized by Yerevan Press Club
with the assistance of Friedrich Naumann Foundation. Representatives of
media, public, also journalistic organizations of Armenia, international
structures took part in the event.

The subject matter of the seminar was pre-conditioned by the events that had
occurred over the past few months with regard to the activities of Armenian
media. These are in particular the opposition rallies, accompanied by
violence against journalists (see details in YPC Weekly Newsletter, April
2-8, 2004 and April 9-15, 2004), the change of the owner of “Kentron” TV
company, presently called “Aravot TV” (see YPC Weekly Newsletter, April
23-29, 2004), the amendments to the RA Criminal Code provisions on libel and
insult adopted by the parliament recently (see YPC Weekly Newsletter, June
4-10, 2004) and, finally, the speech that the President of Armenia Robert
Kocharian made at the PACE session in Strasbourg on June 23, where the
problems of Armenian media were touched upon too.

The seminar was opened by Asparuh Panov, the deputy head of programs of
Friedrich Naumann Foundation in Romania, Bulgaria and South Caucasus. The
presentation of the Chairman of “Asparez” Journalist’s Club of Gyumri Levon
Barseghian was devoted to the Armenian media reflection of the political
situation in 2004, and the Chairman of the Committee to Protect Freedom of
Expression Ashot Melikyan presented the cases of journalist and media rights
violations through the lens of the inner political developments.

At the seminar the joint statement of Yerevan Press Club, the Journalists
Union of Armenia, Internews Armenia public organization and the Committee to
Protect Freedom of Expression war released, adopted with regard to the June
trial of the case on the attack on journalists on April 5 (see YPC Weekly
Newsletter, June 4-10, 2004) and the lack of progress in the investigation
on other cases of violence against journalists.

“On June 10, 2004 the court of primary jurisdiction of Center and
Nork-Marash communities of Yerevan sentenced two people, who engaged in
violent actions against journalists during the rally of April 5, to a fine
of 100,000 drams each. The process became a comedy show. We cannot call it
otherwise, because both the preliminary investigation and the court
proceedings and the sentence cause doubt and frustration. The proceedings
were only instituted on Part 1 of Article 185 of the RA Criminal Code
(“Premeditated destruction or spoilage of property”), whereas the charges
should have also been introduced on Article 164 (“Obstruction of legitimate
professional activities of journalist”): the violent actions, committed on
April 5 with regard to journalists, contain the signs of crimes, stipulated
by these two Articles of the RA Criminal Code. Therefore, Article 20 of the
RA Criminal Code (“Cumulative offences”) should have been applied which was
not done by the structure implementing the preliminary investigation. The
court on its behalf did not correct the mistake of the preliminary
investigation and did not send the case to additional investigation.

Neither the bodies of preliminary investigation, nor the court displayed any
wish to protect the right of journalists to gather and disseminate
information, to say nothing of the fact that the punishment defined is not
adequate to the misdeed. Moreover, the supporters of those who committed the
crime obstructed the entry of journalists to the courtroom and exerted
pressure on the course of the trial.

We expected more disclosures and trials to come, however nothing was done to
find those guilty of other violent acts.

Up to day no measures have been taken to punish the policemen who were
impartially observing those who interfered with the work of media
representatives and broke their equipment on April 5.

The policemen who gave a beating to journalists on Baghramian Avenue in the
early morning of April 13 were not revealed and punished either. Not even a
condemnation of their actions was made. Instead from the highest power
levels statements were made that it had been impossible to tell journalists
from the demonstration participants.

We once more demand that the right of the public to receive and the right of
the journalists to impart information be respected that any attempt to
infringe these rights be prevented.

We call on all the media and journalists be more united and consistent when
it comes to professional solidarity, when the right to free gathering and
dissemination of information is violated”, the statement by four
journalistic organizations says.

The seminar participants noted the disputability of the answers that RA
President Robert Kocharian gave in Strasbourg to the questions of the PACE
deputies and journalists with regard to the media situation. In particular,
the statement of the President that the Law “On Television and Radio” was
proposed by the opposition was incorrect (apparently Kocharian meant to say
that the discontent about the work of the National Commission on Television
and Radio should be addressed by the opposition to itself). The appropriate
official draft law was developed by the present RA Minister of Education and
Science and at that time deputy Sergo Yeritsian, who has never had anything
to do with opposition. Since the draft law of Yeritsian was supported by the
specialized parliament committee, it was presented by Shavarsh Kocharian as
a disciplined Chairman of the committee. However, the circumstance that the
latter at the same time heads one of the opposition parties does not
constitute sufficient ground to ascribe the authorship of the law to the
opposition. The proposal of the President to hold a media monitoring in
Armenia and remove the problem of “A1+” TV company from the agenda, should
it reveal plurality on TV air and access of opposition to it, also has
little ground. Firstly, there are reasons to maintain that the failure to
provide a license to the TV channel has political motivation, that the
number of competitions seemingly lost by “A1+” were conducted with legal
violations and the appropriate suit is currently being considered by the
European Court of Human Rights, and it is hardly fair to link this problem
with the monitoring results. Secondly, during the presidential and
parliamentary elections of 2003 (i.e., after the loss of air by “A1+”) both
the OSCE observation mission and a number of local non-governmental
organizations held monitoring and recorded a generally inobjective coverage
of the elections by Armenian media. It is the elections and political
tensions that allow determining the existence of freedom of expression and
diversity of opinion in the country. During the periods when the political
developments are proceeding relatively calmly, the count of the air access
of certain parties cannot be illustrative enough. Monitoring can of course
be conducted – the media situation analysis and how adequate their coverage
of public and political life is, the degree of satisfaction of information
demands of the citizens are always useful. But regardless of its results,
the problem of “A1+” will remain.

As the only example of positive changes in the sphere of media recently the
seminar participants noted the mildened punishments for libel and insult in
the Criminal Code.

“YERRORD UJ” WEEKLY PUBLISHED

On June 26 the first issue of “Yerrord Uj” weekly was published. The
newspaper has 16/A3 pp. and a print run of 3,000 copies. The founder of
“Yerrord Uj” is “Mission L”, the Chief Editor is Vahram Aghajanian.

When reprinting or using the information above, reference to the Yerevan
Press Club is required.

You are welcome to send any comment and feedback about the Newsletter to:
[email protected]

Subscription for the Newsletter is free. To subscribe or unsubscribe from
this mailing list, please send a message to: [email protected]

Editor of YPC Newsletter – Elina POGHOSBEKIAN
____________________________________________
Yerevan Press Club
9B, Ghazar Parpetsi str.
375007, Yerevan, Armenia
Tel.: (+ 374 1) 53 00 67; 53 35 41; 53 76 62
Fax: (+374 1) 53 56 61
E-mail: [email protected]
Web Site:

www.ypc.am

Major group of counterfeiters detained in Russia

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
July 1, 2004 Thursday 4:29 AM Eastern Time

Major group of counterfeiters detained in Russia

By Svetlana Alikina

MOSCOW

Russian and Armenian police have detained 22 members of an
international group of counterfeiters, the press service of the
Russian Interior Ministry’s department for fight against economic
crimes told Itar-Tass on Thursday.

According to the sources, the group was specializing in
counterfeiting 500-rouble and 1,000-rouble banknotes. An illegal
printing house was situated in Moscow suburbs. From there, the forged
money was transported to other Russian regions.

There are Russian and Armenian nationals among the seized
counterfeiters, the press service reported. Investigators have
already revealed 192 cases in which money was sold in 48 Russian
regions.

The sources said the operation had been carried out jointly by
Russian and Armenian police. Seventeen suspects are already facing
criminal charges. They also stressed that it was not the first
successful operation against counterfeiters by law enforcement
agencies from the two countries.

They said some time ago Russian and Armenian police had exposed a
criminal group that was counterfeiting 1,000-rouble banknotes. A
total of 100,000 counterfeited roubles were seized from them.

The masterminds, Armenian nationals Gevorg Kazaryan and Eduard
Minosyan, were sentenced to 6.5 years in prison.