Commodity Turnover Between Armenia and Turkey In 2004 Made $120 Bill

Pan Armenian Network

COMMODITY TURNOVER BETWEEN ARMENIA AND TURKEY IN 2004 MADE $120 BILLION

14.02.2005 16:54

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The commodity circulation between Armenia and Turkey in
2004 made about $120 billion, Kaan Soyak, the Co-Chairman of the
Armenian-Turkish Relations Development Council, stated in Yerevan today.
According to him, before the formation of the Council in 1997 the turnover
made no more than $60 million. He says, in case of opening of the
Armenian-Turkish border the turnover can increase at least three times. Kaan
Soyak stated he is for soonest opening of the border and invited
representatives of the ARF Dashnaktsutyun to Turkey for establishing
dialogue on urgent issues. “The ARFD is a serious and experienced party and
if they agree I am ready to exert every effort to start this dialogue”, he
noted. When touching upon the Armenian Genocide Soyak said that Turks began
speaking of it during the recent 2-3 years. “Our organization will do its
best to make the historical truth clear to the Turkish people”, he stated.
It should be noted that when commenting on the killings of 1915 in the
Ottoman Empire the Turkish businessman used the word “genocide”.

President of separatist Georgian region sworn in

President of separatist Georgian region sworn in

Associated Press Worldstream
February 12, 2005 Saturday 7:46 AM Eastern Time

SUKHUMI, Georgia — At his inauguration Saturday, the new president
of Georgia’s breakaway Abkhazia region called for closer integration
with Russia and pledged to work for international recognition of the
separatist province as an independent state.

The inauguration of Sergei Bagapsh followed a drawn-out struggle for
control of the Black Sea province, which was paralyzed after a disputed
Oct. 3 election pitting him against ex-prime minister Raul Khadzhimba,
who had Russia’s tacit support. They agreed in Russian-brokered talks
to team up in a new vote last month, with Bagapsh heading the ticket
and Khadzhimba running for vice president.

“Integration with Russia will always be the main issue for me and
for the entire leadership of Abkhazia,” Bagapsh, who has worked to
dispel concerns that he would take a softer line than his predecessor
on relations with Georgia’s central government, said at the ceremony.

He stressed the need to develop a “strategic union with Russia”
and harmonize the region’s legislation with Russian laws.

Abkhazia has run its own affairs since 1993, when separatists drove
out Georgian government troops, and has cultivated close ties with
Russia. No government recognizes it as independent, but many of its
residents – including Bagapsh – have Russian citizenship, and Georgian
authorities accuse Russia of supporting its separatist leadership.

“There is no Abkhazia yet on the political map of the world,
Georgian-Abkhazian relations have not been settled, but with our
domestic success in all areas, we will prove to the world our right to
build an independent state,” Bagapsh said. He said Abkhazia is eager
to cooperate with “all interested states, on the condition that they
respect its sovereignty.”

Georgian president Mikhail Saakashvili has pledged to reunite his
fractured country by bringing Abkhazia and another separatist region,
South Ossetia, into the fold. His offers of broad autonomy within
Georgia have met with rejection.

South Ossetia’s separatist leader Eduard Kokoity attended the
inauguration, as did representatives of two other unrecognized states
on the former Soviet fringes, Nagorno-Karabakh and Trans-Dniester.
Russian lawmakers and the governor of Russia’s Krasnodar region,
which borders Abkhazia, were also among the guests.

Victims of genocide, 2005

Victims of genocide, 2005

ZNet, MA
Feb 11 2005

The UN’s decision, announced Monday, not to follow the US and
categorise what is going on in Darfur as ‘genocide’ reflects the
world’s established caution in applying the term, at least as long as
recognition of genocide implies the right – even the duty – to
intervene militarily to stop it. For if the events in Darfur are
genocide, then we must accept that there are many more genocides than
we normally care to admit. Alex de Waal, one of the world’s leading
experts on the crisis in Sudan, considers the debate over the hardest
word in world politics.

Is the US government’s determination that the atrocities in Darfur
qualify as ‘genocide’ an accurate depiction of the horrors of that
war and famine? Or is it the cynical addition of ‘genocide’ to
America’s armoury of hegemonic interventionism – typically at the
expense of the Arabs? The answer is both. The genocide finding is
accurate according to the letter of the law.

But it is no help to understanding what is happening in Darfur, or to
finding a solution. And this description neatly serves the purposes
of a philanthropic alibi to the US projection of power.

The war in Darfur is thoroughly confusing. Many of those in command
on both sides are themselves unclear why they are fighting – the
conflict has become locked into its own cycle of escalation.

When a band of farmers-turned-guerrillas swept out of their mountain
hideout and stormed the police station at Golo in central Darfur,
their immediate aim was to take weapons. Over the preceding months
and years, the local Popular Defence Forces had been selectively
confiscating guns from the civil populace, leaving other groups well
armed. A young lawyer called Abdel Wahid Nur had been gaoled in the
town of Zalingei for protesting about this. The village elders
selected Abdel Wahid as their political spokesmen.

With some other educated sons of the villages, they announced the
creation of the Sudan Liberation Army. Darfur had already been
flickering with the sparks of conflict, fostered by 20 years of no
government, and endemic banditry. The SLA manifesto blamed the
government in Khartoum for neglect, discrimination and
divide-and-rule tactics. In just a few weeks, SLA fighters were
running rings around demoralised and under-supplied army garrisons;
they even raided the regional capital, El Fasher, destroying six
military aircraft and kidnapping a general.

The PDF in Darfur were local militia set up in the wake of an
incursion by the southern-based Sudan People’s Liberation Army in
1991. For some time they were broadly representative of the
population, but after the ruling National Congress Party split in
1999, the security cabal that controls the government began to
replace the leadership. They brought in loyalists, mostly Darfurian
Arabs from the same groups as an air force general on the
Presidential Council, Abdalla Safi el Nur.

Mostly young men from poor backgrounds, from camel-herding families
who had lost their livestock in the droughts of the 1970s and 1980s,
they were tough and bitter. The next step in the escalation of the
war was when the government franchised these PDF units to take the
lead in counter-insurgency. Using a label formerly applied to Chadian
Arab militias – janjawiid – these paramilitaries have become
notorious for their cruelty.

They have killed, burned, raped and starved their way across the
central belt of Darfur. In doing so, they have killed thousands of
people and deliberately starved thousands more. They have also
managed to stop a runaway insurgency that was rapidly seizing control
of the entire region.

Immediately thereafter, some of Darfur’s Islamists, purged from
government after 1999, formed their own resistance front, the Justice
and Equality Movement. Smaller but better funded, the JEM has raised
the spectre in government that their erstwhile colleagues are aiming
to use Darfur as a springboard to take power.

The Darfur war has ratcheted up through a series of miscalculations,
each time unleashing human suffering and political crisis beyond the
original problems. The peace talks hardly deal with the initial
causes of the war at all, and instead focus on the horrors unleashed
by the PDF massacres, the humanitarian crisis and the government’s
string of broken promises.

On 9 September 2004, US Secretary of State Colin Powell announced
that ‘Genocide has been committed in Darfur and the government of
Sudan and the janjawiid bear responsibility – and genocide may still
be occurring.’ This is historic: it is the first time the US
government has declared ‘genocide’ while events are still in train.

Powell is correct in law. According to the facts as known and the law
as laid down in the 1948 Genocide Convention, the killings,
displacement and rape in Darfur are rightly characterised as
‘genocide’. But his finding has significant political implications.
The genocide determination is a substantial expansion on the use of
the term in contemporary international political discourse – and
arguably, therefore, in customary international law. It is also a
politically significant act in the shadow of the US occupation of
Iraq and the (mis-)characterisation of the war in Darfur as between
‘Arabs’ and ‘Africans’.

According to the letter of the law, it is genocide in Darfur. The
terms of the 1948 Convention, as interpreted by the International
Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, provide us with enough of a case. Let
us examine the objections.

Is it bad enough? Do the nature and scale of the crime qualify for
genocide? After all, critics will argue that among the well over 3
million Darfurian non-Arabs, best estimates are for a death toll of
70,000, mostly due to hunger and disease, not violence. There are
many other contemporary or recent events – including several episodes
in Sudan’s civil war – with higher death tolls, and clear evidence
for ethnic targeting.

However, for an event to count as genocide it does not need to
involve the absolute liquidation of groups. It is enough for them to
be deliberately harmed – physically attacked, driven off their land
or collectively damaged in some way. There is enough evidence for
ethnically-targeted violence across a wide area to meet the
criterion. And in Sudan, the verb ‘to starve’ is transitive – people
are dying of hunger, it’s because someone has deliberately inflicted
this state on them. Today’s Darfur famine is a crime.

Can we identify intent by the perpetrators? Unlike the Holocaust or
Rwanda, there was no blueprint for a transformed, post-genocidal
society, no titanic ideological ambition. Definitely, the murderous
campaign was informed, in part, by dreams of an Arab homeland across
Sahelian Africa. Former members of Colonel Gaddafi’s Islamic Legion,
disbanded for more than a decade, may have continued to nurture those
dreams. But they do not in themselves amount to a grand plan.

The ongoing and extremely violent process of identity change in
Sudan, which long precedes the current government, may also include a
misty vision of a homogenous Arab-Islamic homeland. At some point in
the 1990s, the government did entertain such ambitions – and they
contributed directly to the attempted genocide of the Nuba – but that
was in the heyday of its visions of re-engineering all of Sudanese
society in an Islamist mould.

Many of the ideologues who promoted that dream (notably Hassan al
Turabi) are now in opposition, and some are even aligned with one of
the Darfurian resistance movements, the Justice and Equality
Movement. Those who remain in government are now concerned solely
with staying in power.

However, while the absence of an ideological schema and
transformational blueprint is important for diplomats and genocide
scholars, it does not entail lack of guilt in law. The bar is lower.
This can be inferred from the successful ICTR prosecution of a
Rwandese genocidaire, Jean-Paul Akayesu, in which it was found that
intent could be inferred from a number of presumptions of fact,
including the general context in which deliberate harm was
systematically being inflicted on the target group.

In the Darfur case, the fact that the state did not plan genocide is
immaterial. It planned a counterinsurgency and gave its officers
complete impunity to commit atrocities, which they have routinely
done on a gross scale and an ethnic basis. This was ethics-free
counterinsurgency, escalated to a genocidal extreme.

An interesting and sophisticated objection is that the target group
cannot be adequately defined. In Darfur, the term ‘African’ is
historically, racially and anthropologically bogus. It’s a recent
ideological construct, of which more later. But one can identify
groups subjectively, including by native language. The case of
distinguishing the Hutus and Tutsis in Rwanda was tougher, but the
ICTR overcame that problem. It emphasised what was subjectively
believed in the minds of those perpetrating the acts in question.

The popular racialised or essentialised viewpoint may have been
discredited by scholars, but this scholarly argument cannot be
adduced to explain away the specific labels used and the intent to
kill selectively, based on those labels. The ICTR used the definition
‘a stable and permanent group, whose membership is defined largely by
birth’. That fits Darfur’s complex ethnicities.

Concealed within the ‘arbitrary ethnicity’ objection is another
argument: that declaring genocide itself causes the polarisation and
solidification of ethnic and racial categories. This is significant:
once a conflict is construed in these terms, complex over-lapping or
shifting identities are stamped into a simple bipolar mould. Usually,
the simplified labelling of ethnic groups long precedes outsiders’
designations of genocide. But in Darfur, this may not be the case:
there was an Arab-non-Arab divide, but it was a moot question whether
it would prevail over other identity markers including ‘Darfurian’
and ‘Muslim’.

Ethnicity in Darfur is fabulously complex; to understand, one must
discard all the presuppositions inherited from analysing the rest of
Africa, including the rest of Sudan. Historically, Darfur was an
independent sultanate. It had a structure similar to that of a string
of states across Sudanic Africa. At its core was a ruling ethnic
group (the Keira clan of the Fur), which had adopted Islam and used
Arabic as the language of jurisprudence. This core expanded, drawing
in neighbouring groups.

Indeed, the larger part of the Fur are known as ‘Kunjara’, which
means ‘gathered together’. Beyond this were tributary groups,
including Arabic-speaking Bedouins (closely integrated into the
state, because they ran the trans-Saharan camel caravans on which the
Sultanate depended for its revenue), and a range of others –
non-Arabic speakers and Arabic-speaking cattle herders. To the far
south were the people of the hinterland, forest dwellers who were
raided for slaves. In the Fur language, the collective term for these
people was ‘Fertit’, and there is an amalgam of groups in the western
part of Southern Sudan who still bear this label.

The Darfur Arabs are just as black, indigenous, Muslim and African as
their non-Arab neighbours. To speak of an African-Arab dichotomy is
historical and anthropological nonsense. But Sudan as a whole has
inherited such a distinction between the Arabised ruling elites from
the far north and the Southerners, mostly non-Muslim, who have been
fighting for separation or equal status since Sudan achieved
independence in 1956.

The country has often been regarded as a ‘bridge’ between the African
and Arab worlds, or an amalgam of the two traditions. Within that,
it’s clear that the Southerners belong to an ‘African’ pole and the
ruling elite to an ‘Arab’ pole. (No matter that one of the three
tribes of the ruling elite is in fact Nubian-these are complexities
familiar to the political ethnographer.) The comparable historic
distinction for Darfur would have been ‘Fur’ at one pole and ‘Fertit’
at the other. But, absorbed into a Sudanese state, and compelled to
accept the discourses of the wider nation, Darfur has been shoehorned
into an alien mould.

First to embrace an externally-constructed ethnic label were some of
Darfur’s Arab Bedouins, who lived in Libya and served in Gaddafi’s
‘Islamic brigade’. They found that the label ‘Arab’ was a useful
political tool, buying them identity and solidarity in Libya and also
in Khartoum. In response, educated young men from Darfur’s non-Arab
groups – principally Fur, Masalit and Zaghawa -found the label
‘African’ in use by the Southerners and especially the SPLA leader,
John Garang, who sought to build a non-Arab majority coalition across
Sudan. Political Arabism is therefore fairly recent in Darfur, and
political Africanism an elite construction of just a few years’
vintage. But the war, the atrocities and above all the international
engagement around it may yet set these labels in stone. Already,
community leaders in Darfur are using these labels in their
interactions with aid agencies and diplomats.

Annihilation

If the events in Darfur are genocide, then we must accept that there
are many more genocides than we normally care to admit. At least
three earlier episodes in the Sudanese civil war must count as
genocide – the militia raids into Bahr el Ghazal in the 1980s, the
jihad in the Nuba Mountains in the early 1990s, and the clearances of
the oilfields in the late 1990s. Add to that the mass ethnic killings
in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the persecution of minorities in
Myanmar, and a host of others. Gone will be the doubts over Bosnia,
Cambodia and the Armenian massacres.

In lay usage, and in international relations, ‘genocide’ has always
been reserved for the most extreme cases in which there is a plan,
with realistic expectation of success, for the complete physical
annihilation of a target group. In recent history there are just two
instances of this, the Holocaust and Rwanda. We may call these
‘absolute genocides’ to distinguish them from the much longer list of
cases of ‘convention genocide’. Activists and scholars have long
resisted grading or categorizing genocides: the U.S. determination on
Darfur obliges them to do just that.

One of the reasons why international practice – which we can take to
be customary international law – has been so conservative in using
the label genocide has been the fear of the repercussions. It implies
the right, and perhaps the duty, to intervene militarily. Although
Colin Powell insisted that U.S. policy towards Sudan would remain
unchanged – thereby seeming to defeat the purpose of making the
determination in the first place – there is no doubt that declaring
genocide creates legal and political space for intervention.

The 9 September determination is thus the first time the Genocide
Convention has been used to diagnose genocide (rather than prosecute
it), and it has the effect of radically innovating what counts as
genocide in customary international law.

What does the US determination signify? At one level, it is the
outcome of a very specific set of political processes in Washington
D.C., in which interest groups were contending for control over U.S.
policy towards Sudan. In this context, the call to set up a State
Department inquiry into whether there was genocide in Darfur was a
tactical manoeuvre designed to placate the anti-Khartoum lobbies
circling around Congress (an unlikely alliance of liberal journalists
and human rights advocates, and the religious right), while buying
time for those in the State Department committed to pushing a
negotiated settlement.

It was, in Washington terms, a minor turf war and a policy
cul-de-sac: as Colin Powell remarked after announcing the
determination, US policy will not change. Overstretched in Iraq, the
Pentagon has only reluctantly provided transport planes to help the
African Union observer mission deploy in Sudan. The department of
defense would veto any US military presence.

But at another level, the genocide determination reveals much about
the US role in the world today, and the unstated principles on which
US power is exercised. Those principles are shared by both the
advocates of US global domination and their liberal critics, and are
revealed in the commonest narrative around genocide, which takes the
form of a salvation fairy tale, with the US playing the role of the
saviour.

The term ‘genocide’ consigns its architects to the realm of pure
evil, beyond humanity and politics. They are Nazis. As their sinister
plot unfolds, good people implore America to use its might to
intervene. But, caught up in their own concerns, and ensnared by the
United Nations, America’s leaders are indifferent, and fail to act
until it is too late. The paradigm of this tragic melodrama is
presented at the opening display of the US Holocaust Memorial Museum,
where the visitor is invited to step into the role of the victorious
US soldiers liberating Nazi concentration camps.

For six decades, Americans have been dreaming of redeeming that
historic fatal tardiness, and dispatching troops in time to save the
day. Their failure to do so in Rwanda and Bosnia ten years ago
sparked another round of soul searching and led directly to the
Kosovo bombing campaign and the Darfur genocide determination.

This intervention narrative is a travesty of what actually happens,
especially when we broaden the canon of genocides to include cases
such as Stalin’s persecuted minorities, the Indonesian massacres of
1965, Tibet, Bangladesh, the Guatemalan counter-insurgency, Bosnia,
Chechnya, the Myanmar minorities, Biafra, the Luwero Triangle in
Uganda, Burundi, Congo and at least three previous episodes in
Sudan’s civil war prior to Darfur.

How did these genocides end? With the sole exception of Kosovo, not
with the US cavalry. Usually because the perpetrators decided they
had had enough – they had achieved their goals or changed those goals
– or because the victims were strong enough to resist. Sometimes a
regional power intervened (usually when the worst was over) – India
in Bangladesh, Vietnam in Cambodia. In a couple of cases, of which
Southern Sudan is one, there has been a negotiated settlement.

However, the study of genocide remains dazzled by the reality of the
Holocaust and the redemptive tale of liberating intervention. It’s
easy to understand why such a narrative is so compelling: any story
that puts us at the centre of events is intrinsically more engaging
than one that claims that the events in question proceed regardless
of what we do.

The truth is that the political agendas of the genocidaires in Rwanda
and Sudan have precious little to do with the US, and it is likely
that if solutions are found, the US role will be marginal and will
not involve intervention.

There’s a deeper logic at work. What the melodrama reflects is a
potent mix of untrammelled power and humanitarian sensibility. This
mix persuades us to see the world in a certain way. Increasingly,
it’s a Manichean worldview, in which we – meaning the US and its
close ally Britain – are the upholders of good in a world of evil. Of
course, our actual use of power is far from perfect, and it is this
gap between aspiration and reality that provides the leverage for a
moral critique of power.

We have the power and occasionally the will to intervene militarily
almost wherever we like. And we like to portray these interventions
as humanitarian, and make a humanitarian logic for other
interventions. Furthermore, we are frustrated by the shackles placed
on these actions by international law and its cumbersome procedures.

In the specific case of Darfur, it was the US left that railed
against these shackles and beat the drum for a declaration of
‘genocide’ and a policy of intervention, though it is the right that
will inherit this weapon and, at some future date, perhaps use it.

And the fact that the group labelled as genocidaires in this conflict
are ‘Arab’ is no accident. There’s no covert masterplan in Washington
to brand Arabs genocidal criminals, but rather an aggregation of
circumstance that has led to the genocide determination. It has
special saliency in the shadow of the US ‘global war on terror’,
misdirected into the occupation of Iraq and seen across the Arab and
Muslim worlds as a reborn political Orientalism.

After 11 September 2001, the US sees Muslim Arabs as actual or
potential terrorists targeting the homeland. After 9 September 2004
(and the Darfur atrocities are indeed a crime), Arabs (and perhaps
all Muslims too) are actual or potential genocidaires and their
targets are Africans. It’s sad but predictable that too many Africans
will fall for this trap and that the brave efforts of the African
Union to build a continental architecture for peace and security will
be impaled on an externally constructed divide.

The outcome of the Darfur genocide determination is to lower the bar
on US interventions. It adds another tool to the armoury of an
interventionist hegemonic power. At the appropriate moment – which
isn’t Darfur – a ‘genocide’ finding may be a philanthropic alibi for
an imperial venture.

The genocide determination is correct in law. There are atrocities
that need to be stopped and their perpetrators punished. There’s a
war that needs a negotiated settlement.

The US decision to use the label ‘genocide’ – the outcome of
intra-beltway political calculus as much as anything else – drags
Darfur into a wider global scheme, a polarity in which Arabs are
collectively labelled and stigmatised, and divisive identities
imposed upon poor and strife-ridden parts of the world. In this case,
let us hope that a remedy is snatched for the people of Darfur. But
the people of Africa as a whole are the loser.

Alex de Waal is a writer and activist on African issues. He is a
fellow of the Global Equity Initiative at Harvard University and a
director of Justice Africa. This article appears in a forthcoming
issue of Index on Censorship.

Beirut: ‘Aoun trial was delayed because secret talks failed’

Daily Star, Lebanon
Feb 10 2005

‘Aoun trial was delayed because secret talks failed’
Harb says court ruling in absentia would be legal

Batroun MP confirms that the opposition will vote in Parliament
against the division of Beirut into three electoral districts

By Nada Raad
Daily Star staff

BEIRUT: Batroun MP Butros Harb said Wednesday that the trial of
exiled former army commander General Michel Aoun had been postponed
because secret mediations with the authorities failed.

“I think something happened with the negotiations that were ongoing
(between Aoun and the authorities), which obstructed Aoun’s return to
Lebanon before the parliamentary elections,” Harb said during a news
conference held in Batroun.

However, Harb added that the issue is not yet closed but remains open
for the future.

On Tuesday, the Beirut Criminal Court rescheduled Aoun’s trial until
May 5 as the judiciary did not accept to try the former general in
absentia for charges brought against him in 2003 following remarks he
made to the U.S. Congress supporting sanctions on Syria.

But according to Harb, a lawyer by trade, a political settlement of
Aoun’s case would have been perfectly legal.

“The court is capable of ruling that there is no criminal offense and
announcing his innocence even if he is absent,” he said.

Harb, who is also a member of the Christian opposition Qornet Shehwan
Gathering, said the opposition would remain united during the next
elections.

The opposition aims to hold parliamentary elections under the
umbrella of a neutral government and not the current regime, which
they say is tutored by Syria.

Harb said that the only way for Lebanon to regain its sovereignty and
independence is for its people to vote properly during the
parliamentary elections, apart from personal interests.

“We ( the opposition) call on all citizens to vote away from personal
interests and to support the opposition,” he said.

Harb said that the opposition still supports an electoral law based
on qadas as an electoral district.

“We will vote in Parliament against any draft electoral law which
considers an electoral district different than qadas,” he said.

The Cabinet already approved last month a draft electoral law based
on small electoral districts (qadas). However, the majority of
ministers who voted for the law proposal changed their direction when
the law was handed to Parliament by supporting an electoral law based
on mohafazats, or large electoral districts.

Harb also said that the opposition would vote in Parliament against
the division of Beirut into three districts along sectarian lines.

The draft electoral law stipulates that Beirut be divided into three
electoral districts with the first including a majority of Shiites
and Armenian voters, the second a majority of Sunni voters and the
third a majority of Christian voters. The division is widely believed
to be aimed at undermining the representation of former Prime
Minister Rafik Hariri in Parliament. However, Harb said that Hariri
is not yet considered as an opposition member.

“I think Hariri’s position is still between the opposition and the
government,” he said.

Regarding the Ain al-Tineh gathering at Speaker Nabih Berri’s
residence, held to show allegiance to Syria and considered a reaction
to the so-called “Bristol meetings,” Harb said: “It is now clear to
everyone that the loyalists are frightened, if not terrified, of the
popular gathering around the opposition.”

Diplomatic Mission Of Russian Ambassador To Armenia Nearing Completi

DIPLOMATIC MISSION OF RUSSIAN AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA NEARING
COMPLETION

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 9. ARMINFO. The diplomatic mission of Russian
Ambassador to Armenia Anatoliy Dryukov is nearing completion. The
Ambassador himself made this statement talking to ARMINFO.

He said that his departure was fixed for the second half of March.
The new Ambassador Nikolay Pavlov will arrive in Yerevan also in
March. In response to the question about his next appointment, the
Ambassador answered that he intended to educate his grandchildren.

BAKU: Turkish speaker urges Russia to “use its weight” to solveKarab

Turkish speaker urges Russia to “use its weight” to solve Karabakh issue

Lider TV, Baku
9 Feb 05

[Presenter] The Kremlin may play a big part in resolving the
Azerbaijani-Armenian conflict, the speaker of the Turkish Grand
National Assembly, Bulent Arinc, has said. The Turkish diplomat said
that Armenia is interested in letting the conflict remain unresolved.

[Correspondent over video of a press conference] The Ankara government
wants to develop relations with neighbouring countries. The
strengthening of the Turkic-speaking countries in the region,
including Azerbaijan, is a result of the correct policy conducted
by their governments. This was announced by Bulent Arinc at a press
conference at the end of his visit to Azerbaijan.

Arinc also voiced his view on Armenia’s aggressive policy. He said
that Armenia has taken a non-constructive stance and is not interested
in resolving the Karabakh conflict.

He said that relations between Turkey and Russia are steadily improving
and that the Kremlin may play a big role in resolving the issue.

[Arinc speaking in Turkish] Russia’s contribution to the resolution
of the Karabakh conflict is useful. As you know, the UN has passed
four resolutions on this matter, on the withdrawal of the Armenian
troops from the occupied territories. Regrettably, those resolutions
have not been enforced. At the same time, the OSCE has set up a Minsk
Group to resolve this problem through diplomacy. Unfortunately,
despite having existed for more than 10 years, the group has produced
no results. We believe that progress on this issue can be achieved
if Russia uses its weight or influences the process.

[Correspondent] Arinc said that the Turkish Grand National Assembly
will discuss the Xocali genocide [massacre of Azerbaijanis in a
Karabakh village in 1992]. The Yerevan government which is groundlessly
trying to prove to the world the fact of genocide must realize that it
were the Armenians who carried out the massacre – they killed a lot
of Turks in 1915. There is enough evidence to prove that. A glaring
example of the Armenian fascism is the 26 February 1992 Xocali tragedy,
Bulent Arinc said.

UN plays blame game in Iraqi oil scandal

The Scotsman, UK
Feb 6 2005

UN plays blame game in Iraqi oil scandal

ARTHUR MACMILLAN

NOT for the first time Kofi Annan’s face betrays the look of a
worried man. The secretary general of the United Nations is used to
international scrutiny, but the commission investigating the
oil-for-food programme in Iraq has uncovered a scandal that could
engulf him and fatally damage the institution he leads.

The interim report into oil-for-food payments found persuasive
evidence that Benon Sevan, the director of the programme, used his
influence with Iraq to benefit from the scheme.

Now the blame game is underway and the former UN secretary general
Boutros Boutros-Ghali, who was in charge of the organisation when the
programme began, yesterday moved to defend his position.

He went on the offensive in a series of interviews for the world’s
media and told the BBC: “I share the responsibility, but don’t twist
the whole operation. The basis [of the programme] was decided by the
Security Council, approved by the Security Council, the execution was
done during the mandate of my successor.”

The oil-for-food programme was intended to be a lifeline for Iraq’s
26m population under the Saddam regime. But the report by Paul
Volcker, the former US Federal Reserve chairman appointed by Annan to
investigate the $67bn scheme, which ran from 1996 until 2003, has
found that Sevan used his influence to help a small company gain
profitable rights to sell Iraqi oil.

He did so while urging the UN to provide greater help in rebuilding
Iraq’s oil equipment. Sevan claims he is being made a scapegoat but
the apparent conflict of interest raises the clear possibility that
he took bribes from Saddam Hussein’s regime.

It also questions Annan’s leadership of the UN amid pressure from US
conservatives who have already demanded his resignation over the
corruption allegations and wider criticism of the UN’s role in the
world.

At best Annan was asleep at the switch, but the full investigation
may have more severe implications for him.

Volcker’s interim report also found that Sevan helped steer oil
contracts to a relative of Boutros-Ghali, who headed the UN from
January 1992 until Annan took over in 1997. The report does not
accuse any UN officials of receiving bribes, but Annan has said UN
officials would be disciplined and diplomatic immunity lifted if
criminal acts were committed.

The interim report showed that the programme, which was designed to
allow Iraq to buy food and medicines to ease hardships caused by UN
sanctions, suffered from lax UN controls. Following the overthrow of
Saddam, however, documents emerged showing that the former Iraqi
leader was skimming funds from the scheme, selling oil illegally
outside the programme – often with the knowledge of Security Council
members – and bribing a variety of officials around the world.

A CIA investigation last September found Saddam earned $1.7bn through
kickbacks and illegal surcharges and took $8bn from illegal oil sales
to other countries, all of which went to propping up the dictator’s
regime.

Boutros-Ghali insisted yesterday that the programme was a success: “I
regret the mismanagement and the scandal which appear now with the
Volcker report. I consider that the fact that we have been able to
sign the memorandum of understanding, to obtain the agreement of the
Security Council and to obtain the agreement of the Iraqi
administration, that this was a success for the poor people of Iraq
who were suffering 10 years of economic sanctions.”

Meanwhile, Iraq has called for a widening of the investigation of the
oil-for-food programme, demanding the immediate return of money in
the UN account that paid the humanitarian relief effort’s
administration costs.

Iraq’s UN Ambassador Samir Sumaidaie also reiterated his government’s
demand that the UN stop using oil-for-food money to pay for the
Volcker’s investigation. He said: “It is outrageous that Iraqi funds
were mismanaged and then we have to pay for finding out about the
mismanagement.”

In his book Unvanquished: A US-UN Saga, Boutros-Ghali describes the
trouble he had getting Iraq to commit to the oil-for-food programme.
He was also under enormous pressure late in his tenure, having
learned around the time he was trying to put oil-for-food together
that the United States would block his nomination for a second term
as secretary general. Instead, the United States supported Annan.

The most damaging allegation in Volcker’s report alleges that Sevan,
an Armenian Cypriot, asked senior Iraqi officials to grant oil
allocations to Africa Middle East Petroleum, a company owned by
Fakhry Abdelnour, a cousin of Boutros-Ghali.

But it is Annan who must pick up the pieces. He is already facing a
report on the role of his son, Kojo, who worked for a contractor in
the oil-for-food programme. President George W Bush has been
noticeably reluctant to back Annan who failed to support America’s
invasion of Iraq. Washington has made no secret of its anger at Annan
since he described the conflict as illegal last year.

Mark Malloch Brown, Annan’s chief of staff, said: “The secretary
general is shocked by what the report has to say about Mr Sevan.”

But with the UN diplomats who profited from the discredited programme
being labelled parasites by Iraqi human rights lawyers in a nation
taking the first steps to democracy, and another report from Volcker
to follow, the story is far from over. This time it will be Annan’s
credibility that is at stake.

Computers take students around world for history lessons

Flint Journal, MI
Feb 5 2005

Computers take students around world for history lessons
FLINT
THE FLINT JOURNAL FIRST EDITION

Several Flint Southwestern Academy students wrote essays as part of a
contest sponsored by the U.S. State Department during International
Education Week in November.

Cheryl Jamison, Tionna Lang, Katie McArthur, Shayla Thrash, and
Roneshia Williams, students in John Davidek’s world history class,
won awards for their essays on the topic, “Why I want to be
internationally educated.”

The students received award certificates signed by the U.S.
ambassador to Armenia and an educational CD for their computers,
Armenian postcards and a hand-crafted necklace with silk threads
wound around a walnut.

***

FLINT – Eva Hughes was talking via computer to a student in
Uzbekistan more than 6,000 miles away when her teacher, John Davidek,
urged her not to create an “international incident.”

Eva, 16, was on a Flint Southwestern Academy computer Friday morning
when she was asked a question by her counterpart in Uzbekistan: Did
she think God was involved in natural disasters such as the recent
tsunami in Southeast Asia.

“I myself am not that religious,” typed Eva, an 11th-grader and
member of the Model United Nations class at Central High School. “But
natural disasters do seem to be a Godly thing. God always has a job
in the Earth’s disasters.”

Davidek prodded her to change ‘job’ to ‘hand,’ and she did.Learning
how to communicate with students from around the world has been a
year-long project for students in Davidek’s world history class at
Southwestern.

His students also have regular Internet chats and joint projects with
peers in Armenia, a country near Russia, and are in the process of
getting linked to youth in Rwanda, an East African country, Davidek
said.

The hope is by linking students across the globe they can learn from
each other while studying history.

“The students learn people are all the same,” Davidek said. “Cultures
might vary. Ethnically they might vary, but people are the same. They
all yearn for the same things, especially young people.”

The effort is tied to Davidek’s selection last summer as one of 22
American educators to participate in an international teacher
exchange program called Project Harmony.

As part of the nonprofit program, Davidek spent several days in
Armenia and stayed with a teacher there. In a couple of months the
Armenian teacher will visit Davidek, his students and Flint.

The Flint Southwestern and Armenian students recently had a joint
assignment in which they reported on a historical figure and the
value the person represented. They also both have watched and studied
the Michael Moore movie “Farenheit 9/11.”

“One of the (Armenian) kids did a report on Franklin Roosevelt, and
that was interesting,” said Southwestern 11th-grader Alexandria
Umphrey, 16. “It was interesting to me that they thought he was
important even in Armenia.”

Davidek said there was a learning curve for his world history
students when trying to communicate with the foreign youth.

“There is some sensitivity,” he said. “When we first started doing
this I said use proper English, you can’t say, ‘What’s up’ and stuff
like that because they won’t understand.”

Students said it’s been fun to communicate and learn from youngsters
they would otherwise never meet.

“We learned that the kind of things they value are similar to what we
value,” said Tionna Lang, an 11th-grader.

Film: The Five Best Revivals

FILM: THE FIVE BEST REVIVALS

The Independent – United Kingdom

Feb 05, 2005

1

Every Little Thing & Nicolas Philibert in conversation (today 6.45pm &
8.45pm NFT1)

The inmates and staff of a French psychiatric institution stage their
annual theatrical experience in this documentary from the much-lauded
director of tre et Avoir, interviewed onstage after the screening.

2

Pierlequin (Fri 8.30pm Lumiere)

The first season of Armenian films in the UK for 25 years kicks off
with this award-winning, low-budget love story about a clown, made by
Tigran Xmalian who will be present at the screening.

3

Chain (Tue 6.40pm Curzon Soho)

This first feature by New York film-maker Jem Cohen, which describes
the world as one corporate shopping mall, was shot in seven countries
and took more than six years to make.

4

Pawel Pawlikowski Quadruple Bill (Sun 2.30pm Riverside)

The poet Yerofeev, a war report in Bosnia, a trip round St Petersburg
with the great-grandson of Dostoevsky, and Russian nationalist
Vladimir Zhirinovsky – all the subjects of documentaries by the
talented, UK-based director.

5

The Minders & The Liberace of Baghdad (Wed 7pm Barbican)

Sean McAllister presents two of his documentaries from Iraq – pre and
post the US-led invasion. The first concerns Saddam’s minders sent to
“look after” journalists; the second an eccentric former
concert-pianist now scratching a living in Iraqi bars.

OSCE mission visited Fizuli & Jebrail

PanArmenian News
Feb 2 2005

OSCE MISSION VISITED FIZULI AND JEBRAIL

02.02.2005 15:16

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Yesterday OSCE fact-finding mission visited the
Fizuli and Jebrail regions of the security belt situated near the
Iranian border, south of the NKR territory. As reported by Azg daily,
contrary to Karvachar (Kelbajar), the mission members visited the day
before, only a shepherd, a farmer and some people were found in
Fizuli and Jebrail. According to the daily, Azerbaijan provided the
mission members with maps, which however do not correspond to
reality. When answering a journalist’s question whether PACE is going
to send a similar mission to Shahumian, Northern Mardakert and
Getashen, the Armenian settlements occupied by Azerbaijan, one of the
members said they do not rule out such possibility in case Armenia
makes a corresponding appeal to the UN.