ANKARA: Crusader Murmurs in Cyberspace

Zaman, Turkey
Aug 10 2004

Crusader Murmurs in Cyberspace

SELCUK GULTASLI

Don’t mind the fact that Brussels is in a summer hibernation. There
are plenty of scenarios around about the answer to be given to Turkey
in December.

It is understood from the rumors that the special partnership offer,
which was regarded as a serious option in 2002, is no longer an
alternative. The possible answer fluctuates between a “conditional
yes” and Turkey’s expectation, an “unconditional yes,” and the
formula that also foresees the start of negotiations in February or
in March at the latest. The “‘conditional yes” has many formulas
including one close to saying “no,” and one close to an
“unconditional yes.”

The certain deletion of “no” appears to have stirred up Turkey’s
opponents in Europe even more. Internet sites that are against
Turkey, are putting up a great struggle, thinking that they are
losing the battle on the political level.

The answer to be given to Turkey, is one of the most popular topics
on the Internet sites, that publish news about the European Union
(EU). Every news about Turkey receives dozens of e-mails. Turkey’s
opponents have not only stormed these sites with reactions, they have
also established special Internet sites to prevent the EU membership
of Turkey. Some of these sites have prepared drafts of letters to be
sent to EU countries and leaders, to the European Parliament
president as well as important members, and to EU Commission members,
to brief them on why Turkey cannot be an EU member — in their
opinion. In addition, acting in accordance with the idea that
Turkey’s possible membership is one of the greatest ‘disasters’
awaiting Europe, they want all the EU citizens, who possess “European
consciousness,” to act against Turkey and contribute to this
‘beneficial duty’ of opposing Turkey’s bid, by sending a mail at
least.

Most of us are familiar with the expression, “Turkey would the
greatest disaster to befall Europe.” It is therefore not surprising
that those who refer to Turkey as the greatest disaster, declared
immediately thereafter that a new spirit of Crusaders is needed in
the political area. Those who have lost hope in European politicians
are turning to the Crusaders.

It is understood that the Greek Cypriots, Greeks and Armenians are
active on these sites. That only a small number of Turks send mails
to these sites, coupled with fact that they get easily offended,
prevent the Turkish theses from being properly defended.

There is a government in Turkey now, which sincerely defends the EU
target and is doing all the necessary work towards this goal. Up till
now, the multitude of 70 million, who have generally been deep asleep
in Turkey’s relations with the outside world, need to wake up and
take action on the EU issue. It will be very beneficial for Turks who
are literate and who know foreign languages to come together, just
like the opponents have organized themselves, and straight away
launch a citizen initiative that will speed things up towards
December.

Armenian NGO News in Brief – 08/10/2004

IN THIS ISSUE:

*** AAA NGO CENTER ANNOUNCES RESULTS OF ITS NGO CAPACITY BUILDING GRANTS
PROGRAM

*** PROMOTING PARTICIPATION OF THE DISABLED DURING ELECTIONS

*** CLEANING ACTIVITIES IN STEPANAVAN

*** AWARENESS AND TRAINING PROGRAM IN SHIRAK AND LORI REGIONS

*** PARTICIPATORY DEMOCRACY. INITIATIVES AND RESPONSIBILITY

*** SUPPORT FOR SOUP KITCHENS

*** NEW PUBLICATION

***WEBSITE LAUNCH: COUNCIL OF EUROPEAN INFORMATION OFFICE

*** ANNOUNCEMENT FROM ROA MINISTRY OF CULTURE AND YOUTH AFFAIRS

*** AAA NGO CENTER ANNOUNCES RESULTS OF ITS NGO CAPACITY BUILDING GRANTS
PROGRAM

This grants program is aimed at promoting organizational development of
local Armenian NGOs towards their more effective involvement in delivering
social and/or primary healthcare services and information. Of 47 NGOs
applied for the grants program contest, eight organizations have been
selected by the review board. Their projects are aimed at strengthening of
their organization’s human, financial, physical, public relations and
service capacities. The winning NGOs are: Ozone Young Men’s Christian
Association, Maternity Fund of Armenia, Yerevak, Vanadzor Young Men’s
Christian Association, Women’s Rights Center, Gratemed Scientific Medical
NGO, Asup, and Meghvik Children’s and Youth NGO. Funding for the grants
program is provided by the United States Agency for International
Development.

Contact: Margarit Piliposyan
AAA NGO Training and Resource Center
39 Yeznik Koghbatsi St.
Tel.: (374-1) 54-40-12, 54-40-13
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

*** PROMOTING PARTICIPATION OF THE DISABLED DURING ELECTIONS

After observation activities on behalf of the disabled during the 2003
elections, the International Foundation for Electoral Systems and five
interested NGOs made a statement regarding polling station inaccessibility
for the disabled. The domestic NGOs which were signatories to the
statement – Lusastgh, Paros, Nor Spitak, Liarzhek Kyank and Pyunik – have
developed suggestions and presented them to the National Assembly’s
Committee on Issues of the Disabled. With regard to this, the initiators
organized a roundtable on July 9 with the participation of members of
electoral commissions, and representatives of NGOs and international
organizations to discuss the NGOs’ suggestions and the position of the
National Assembly on incorporating the proposed amendments in the electoral
code. During the meeting, spokespersons presented the issue of the role of
the communities in providing wheelchair accessibility in the polling
station, as well as the participation of mentally disabled, blind and deaf
people in the elections. Upon the conclusion of the roundtable, a working
group was formed. Its members met on July 12 to discuss all of the
suggestions. They prepared a package of suggested amendments to the
electoral code, which was later handed to Artak Arakelyan, Deputy of Armenia
‘s National Assembly (NA) and Coordinator of the Committee on the Disabled
Issues with the ROA NA Chairman.

Contact: Al Decie
IFES/Armenia
9 Alek Manukian St.
Tel.: (374-1) 51-20-51, 51-20-16
E-mail: [email protected], [email protected]
Internet:

*** CLEANING ACTIVITIES IN STEPANAVAN

The Makur Yerevan (Clean Yerevan) project, with the participation of its
volunteers and in cooperation with the Stepanavan Legal, Psychological,
Training and Information Center NGO, carried out cleaning activities in
Loreberd and Ashot Yerkat historical and cultural sites. Dendropark site and
the area adjoining the weaving factory were also cleaned. At the end of the
cleaning project, a literary and musical event was organized to entertain
the project participants. Henceforth, the participants have decided to
devote their time to cleaning activities on the third Saturday of every
month.

Contact: Gerasim Asryan
Stepanavan Legal, Psychological, Training and Information Center NGO
Tel.: (374-56) 3-28-91
E-mail: [email protected]

*** AWARENESS AND TRAINING PROGRAM IN SHIRAK AND LORI REGIONS

The Progress Through Education project of the Asparez Club of Journalists
NGO has come to its end and the results were summarized on July 9. Project
staff presented the three directions of the activities implemented in
Gyumri, Vanadzor, Stepanavan and Alaverdi to representatives of NGOs,
interested international organizations and state structures. These areas
included seminars, TV discussions and social advertising on human rights
protection, local Mass Media, local self-governance and NGO cooperation. As
stated by Project Coordinator Levon Barseghyan, “Such projects are necessary
for information exchange and establishing cooperation between Armenia’s
northern towns.”

Contact: Levon Barseghyan
Asparez Club of Journalists NGO
Gyumri, 96 Pushkin St.
Tel.: (374-41) 2-27-21
E-mail: [email protected]; [email protected]

*** PARTICIPATORY DEMOCRACY. INITIATIVES AND RESPONSIBILITY

This was the title of the international conference, organized by the
Association of Women With University Education NGO on July 9-11 within the
framework of its Democracy and Peace Center Project. Association heads and
activists, NGO heads, representatives of political parties, National
Assembly Deputies, officials of the ROA President Administration and
Government, political scientists, philosophers, historians, lawyers,
sociologists, economists, psychologists, and representatives of NGOs and
scientific institutions of Azerbaijan, Georgia and Russian Federation
participated in the conference. They discussed participatory democracy as a
factor contributing to the establishment of civil society and further
democratization of political life in Armenia and other CIS countries, as
well as issues on forms and initiatives of civic participation, and the
responsibility of citizens and citizen groups in the irrevocable
democratization processes of the society.

Contact: Jemma Hasratyan
Association of Women With University Education NGO
Tel./Fax: (374-1) 58-15-83
E-mail: [email protected]

*** SUPPORT FOR SOUP KITCHENS

Mission Armenia NGO’s Support for Soup Kitchens five-year program, aimed at
addressing nutritional, social and health needs of the disadvantaged older,
disabled persons and extremely vulnerable households, is currently underway.
This USAID-funded program is being implemented in Yerevan and five other
regions of Armenia: Shirak, Gegharkunik, Lori, Syunik and Tavush. The
program objectives are: providing hot, calorie-rich meals, social and
healthcare services, legal, psychological and gerontology-related
consultancies and training. Currently, almost 6,300 vulnerable people
benefit from the program activities through 22 soup kitchens and three
community centers. Concurrently, the NGO initiates activities that are to
promote social partnership, as well as raise public awareness on the given
program and problems which the elderly in our society face. The social
partnership component of the program will promote establishment of
cooperation between parties concerned with finding solutions to the problems
of the elderly. The model developed by Mission Armenia was recently
presented to the Kanaker-Zeytun community’s self-governing body, community
council, local condominiums, NGOs and other structures. As a result of
preliminary discussions with these structures, a social partnership model is
to be developed, which will first be introduced in the Kanaker-Zeytun
community, and later applied in other communities.

Contact: Hripsime Kirakosyan
Mission Armenia NGO
42 Garegin Nzhdeh St.
Tel.: (374 1) 44-47-92; 44-47-93; 44-47-61; 44-47-32
E-mail: [email protected]
Website

*** NEW PUBLICATION

On the initiative of the Caucasus Forum of Non-Governmental Organizations,
the Tradition Of Solving Problems in the Caucasus and Methods of Civil
Society Institutes publication has been published. It is based on materials
from the Traditions of the People Diplomacy and Behavioral Norms in War and
Conflict Conditions in the Caucasus conference. Three chapters of the
publication – Traditions of War and Peace in the Caucasus: View from the
Inside; Self-Consciousness; Possible Activities of Civil Society in the
Caucasus in the Context of Current Conditions – are analytical articles and
reports on historical forms of being, Caucasian identification, traditions,
and localization of the western model of civil society. Opinions and
comments on these topics are also presented.

Contact: Caucasus Forum of Non-Governmental Organizations
25 Demirchyan Cul-de-Sac
Tel.: (374-1) 54-57-27
E-mail: [email protected]

***WEBSITE LAUNCH: COUNCIL OF EUROPEAN INFORMATION OFFICE

The newly-launched website provides information on the
activities of the Council of Europe in general and on CoE in Armenia
activities in particular. This English-Armenian website is both informative
and interactive: while the general materials on the Council of Europe and
Armenia ensure public awareness at large, the daily media digest, press
releases and news/announcements provide up-to-date information on CoE
developments with particular relevance to Armenia. One of the most striking
features of the website is the online virtual library.

Contact: Susan Marukhyan
Council of Europe Information Office in Armenia
10 David Anhaght St.
Tel.: (374-1) 24-38-92
E-mail: [email protected]

*** ANNOUNCEMENT FROM ROA MINISTRY OF CULTURE AND YOUTH AFFAIRS

The Youth Policy Department of the ROA Ministry of Culture and Youth Affairs
Administration is registering NGOs in order to develop a database of
organizations operating in the Republic of Armenia and dealing with youth
issues. Registered NGOs can post information and announcements about their
activities free of charge in the Skizb (Beginning) newsletter, funded by the
ROA Ministry of Culture and Youth Affairs. The NGO registration form is
available at the Youth Policy Department of the ROA Ministry of Culture and
Youth Affairs Administration.

Contact:
3rd Government Building, Republic Square, 7th floor
Tel./Fax: (374-1) 52-62-97
E-mail: [email protected]

____________________________________________________________________________
Armenian NGO News in Brief is a publication of the NGO Training and Resource
Center (NGOC) issued in the Armenian, English and Russian languages for
electronic dissemination inside and outside Armenia. Primary funding for
the NGOC, which is a project of the Armenian Assembly of America, is
provided by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).
Individual NGOs are welcome to submit information for publication to the
NGOC. The NGO Center is not responsible for the clarity of information
provided by individual NGOs.

Dear Readers,

The not-for-profit, non-governmental sector of Armenia is rich with diverse
civic initiatives and activities. This electronic publication, though far
from covering all activities of the sector per any given period of time, is
intended to contribute to raising awareness, both inside and outside
Armenia, of the activities of Armenian not-for-profit, non-governmental
organizations.

Your comments and feedback about this electronic publication are greatly
appreciated.

Thank you.

Contact Information:

In Armenia:
Armenian Assembly of America
NGO Training and Resource Center
39 Yeznik Koghbatsi St.,
Yerevan 375010
Tel.: (3-741) 54-40-12; 54-40-13;
53-92-04
Fax: (3-741) 54-40-15
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

In the United States:
Armenian Assembly of America
NGO Training and Resource Center
122 C Street NW, Suite 350
Washington, DC 20001 USA
Tel: (202) 393-3434
Fax: (202) 638-4904
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

http://www.ngoc.am
http://www.mission.am
http://www.coe.am
http://www.ngoc.am
http://www.aaainc.org
www.ifes.am

BAKU: Azeri diaspora leader accuses Iran of insincerity

Azeri diaspora leader accuses Iran of insincerity

Yeni Musavat
9 Aug 04

In spite of its efforts, Iran will never be a friend of ours, the
deputy head of the Congress of Azerbaijanis of the World, Teymur
Eminbayli, has said. He accused Iran of restricting fundamental human
rights and conducting anti-Azerbaijani propaganda. Eminbayli said that
Tehran had established a “spying centre” in the Azerbaijani exclave of
Naxcivan under the guise of a consulate and also deployed a military
base on the border to monitor Azerbaijan’s territory. The following
is the text of R. Kazimli’s report by Azerbaijani newspaper Yeni
Musavat on 9 August headlined “Iran will not make a friend” and
subheaded “Teymur Eminbayli thinks one should not believe in sincerity
of this state’s officials”; subheadings inserted editorially:

The Iranian president’s official visit to Azerbaijan has
ended. Different opinions have been voiced for a few days about the
visit of the neighbouring country’s leader, his negotiations and
expected results. The statement that Iran regards Nagornyy Karabakh as
Azerbaijani territory has been the main focus of attention.

“Iran will never be a friend of ours”

Will Iranian-Azerbaijani relations really be on the desired level from
now on? Can one believe that our southern neighbour is sincere in
sharing our country’s most painful problems? We have talked to the
deputy chairman of the Congress of Azerbaijanis of the World (CAW),
Teymur Eminbayli, about this and other issues.

Eminbayli recalled that Azerbaijan is smaller than Iran in terms of
territory and population and it is also weaker from a military
standpoint. He said that Iran has always been violating Azerbaijan’s
rights by threatening to violate its airspace and ignoring our
position in the region. “That is despite Iran’s efforts to introduce
itself as a friend, it is absolutely impossible and senseless to
believe this.”

Eminbayli shared his views about political analyst and ex-presidential
advisor Vafa Quluzada’s opinion that relations with Iran should not be
spoilt because of the USA and agreed with Quluzada on some
points. “The USA should actually express precisely its position on
Azerbaijan and have a specific opinion. But it is not doing
so. However, let me add that Iran will never be a friend of
ours. Because our 35 million compatriots live there and the issue of
their rights is very topical today,” Eminbayli said.

He went on to say that Iran was controlling even the Internet and
restricting fundamental human freedoms.

Iran’s “spying centre” in Naxcivan

The CAW deputy chairman said that Iranian President Mohammad Khatami
had managed to deceive Azerbaijan’s late President Heydar Aliyev
during the latter’s visit to Iran in 2002.

“For instance, Khatami asked for permission to open an Iranian
consulate in Naxcivan Azerbaijani exclave and his wish came true. In
exchange, he promised to open our consulate in Iran but did not do
so. The fact is that many facilities in Naxcivan, including some
schools and hospitals, belong to Iranians now. At present, a spying
centre under the guise of a consulate is operating in this region. But
we have only our embassy in Iran which is directly working for this
country,” he said.

Eminbayli said that the Iranian leader’s statement on Karabakh was
insincere as well. “Let me draw your attention to one fact that there
are about 1,000 Armenians in Qarakilsa presumably a village near
Orumiyeh who are carrying out a propaganda campaign against Azerbaijan
and Turkey. The Iranian state television is facilitating the
process. In parallel, they are arresting and torturing our compatriots
who marched to Fort Bazz to mark the anniversary of Azerbaijan’s
national hero Babak .

“The second state language in Finland is Swedish since six per cent of
its population are Swedes. However, Iran does not let our compatriots
study in their mother tongue. How can we regard them as our friends
then?”

Iranian military monitor Azeri territories

The CAW deputy chairman said that Iran’s position on Nagornyy Karabakh
confirmed this opinion. Eminbayli recalled the occupation of Susa
during Azerbaijan’s ex-Speaker Yaqub Mammadov’s visit to Iran in the
spring of 1992 for Azerbaijani-Armenian peace talks .

“However, Iran should have respected the signing of an official
document in its capital. Everyone already knows that Iran does not
want Susa to be a Turkish and Muslim town. Iran has deployed a
military base on Khoroslu mountain near Azerbaijan and is monitoring
our territories from there. The Armenian defence minister was taken to
that base during his visit to Iran and was shown all our facilities
with the help of technical equipment. For this reason, Iranian
officials’ statements is only trickery. We should know this and
establish our ties with Iran as a state in line with our interests. It
is worth learning a lesson from Georgia in issues like this.”

Kerry Lists Endorsements From 204 Corporate Leaders

Bloomberg
Aug 4 2004

Kerry Lists Endorsements From 204 Corporate Leaders

Aug. 4 (Bloomberg) — Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry
released a list of 204 executives who endorse his economic policies,
including Oracle Corp. President Charles Phillips and David
Bonderman, founder of the buyout firm Texas Pacific Group.

Kerry trailed President George W. Bush in the number of chief
executives donating to their campaigns as of last month. Fifty-two
chief executives from Russell 1000 Index companies had donated money
to Kerry’s campaign, compared with 280 who gave to Bush’s re-election
bid, according PoliticalMoneyLine, a nonpartisan group based in
Washington.

Five executives on Kerry’s list joined him in Davenport, Iowa, today
at what the campaign called an “economic summit.” They said the
Bush administration turned a budget surplus into a deficit and is
hurting U.S. standing and business interests around the world by the
way it is conducting foreign policy and the Iraq war.

“I think the deficit is just plain bad for the country and bad for
business,” Peter Chernin, chief operating officer of News Corp.,
told an audience of about 250. “I don’t think you can fight two
wars, one internationally and one domestically, and at the same time
cut taxes.” His company owns Fox News Channel.

In addition to Phillips and Chernin, those joining Kerry in Davenport
were Owsley Brown, chief executive of Brown-Forman Corp.; Charles
Gifford, chairman of Bank of America Corp.; and Penny Pritzker,
president of Pritzker Realty Group.

Kerry’s Plan

Phillips said, “Business people as well as financial markets are
really opposed to risk and uncertainty” and the “radical change in
our foreign policy in the last 12 months” has complicated decisions
about where and how to invest.

Kerry said that, as president, he would cut the deficit in half in
four years, cut corporate taxes by 5 percent while eliminating tax
breaks for companies creating jobs overseas, and relieve employers of
some costs of providing health care.

He also said he and his running mate, North Carolina Senator John
Edwards, who made a fortune as a trial lawyer, will show it’s
possible to cut back on “frivolous lawsuits” through changes to
tort and medical malpractice laws.

“There is a lot of disenchantment with Bush and his handling of the
economy,” said William Kennard, managing director at Carlyle Group
and former Federal Communications Commission chairman. He said some
people, including longtime Republicans, believe Bush “has squandered
an opportunity. He squandered the surplus in 2 1/2 years and he’s
passing on this debt to our children and grandchildren.”

Costco’s Sinegal

Glenn Hutchins, co-founder of buyout firm Silver Lake Partners, said
he tells business friends, “If George Bush was the chief executive
of a company, and we were the board of directors, we would have met
long ago and fired him.”

Also on Kerry’s list of current and former executives is Costco
Wholesale Corp. president and chief executive Jim Sinegal, a Democrat
who says Bush’s $1.7 trillion in tax cuts unfairly benefits the
wealthy. Sinegal, 68, heads the largest U.S. warehouse-club chain.

The Kerry list includes leaders of investment firms and banking
executives such as Thomas Johnson, chairman and chief executive of
Greenpoint Financial Corp., the second-biggest New York savings and
loan. Bonderman is managing partner at Texas Pacific Group, based in
Fort Worth.

“We are now mired in a struggle that is taking on some of the
aspects of a civil war” in Iraq said Johnson in an interview. “I
really question how we’ll be effective in ending that struggle.”

Bush’s Backers

Kerry, 60, a four-term U.S. senator from Massachusetts, said he and
Edwards, 51, are determined to create “a business climate that helps
companies succeed and create good paying jobs right here in
America.”

“We’ve assembled some of the best leaders in our country, who are
supporting my candidacy for president because they believe — even at
the risk of becoming involved in politics, which is not easy for CEOs
and companies — they believe we can do better,” Kerry said.

Bush has won financial backing from the CEOs of nine of the top 10
U.S. companies ranked by market capitalization, including Intel Corp.
CEO Craig Barrett, 64. Pfizer Inc. CEO Hank McKinnell and American
International Group Inc. CEO Maurice Greenberg, 79, each have raised
at least $200,000 for Bush.

“Our campaign enjoys broad support with an array of business
leaders,” said Scott Stanzel, a Bush campaign spokesman. “Small
business men and women throughout this country know that Kerry’s
plans for higher taxes, more regulation and more litigation would
derail our economy and kill jobs throughout the country.”

Giving the Maximum

At least three executives on Kerry’s list also gave the maximum
$2,000 to Bush’s re-election campaign, according to the Center for
Responsive Politics, a Washington-based nonpartisan research group:
August A. Busch IV, president of St. Louis-based Anheuser-Busch Cos.
Inc., the world’s largest brewer; Kirk Kerkorian, chief executive
officer of Las Vegas-based Tracinda Corp., an investment company; and
Jeffrey Smulyan, president of Indianapolis-based Emmis Communications
Corp.

Of the 204 people on the Kerry endorsement list, 67 are now chief
executives. It includes some corporate leaders whose support for
Kerry and for Democrats was already well known, such as Lee Iacocca,
former chairman of Chrysler Corp. He endorsed Kerry in June.

Concern Over Deficit

Other executives include Tom Freston, 58, co-president and co-chief
operating officer at Viacom Inc., the third-largest U.S. media
company, and Bill Hambrecht, 68, founder, chairman and CEO of W.R.
Hambrecht, a San Francisco-based investment bank. Hambrecht in
December gave $2,000 to the presidential campaign of Kerry’s rival,
Howard Dean.

Eli Broad, 71, chairman of AIG SunAmerica Inc., is also endorsing
Kerry. Broad, 70th on this year’s Forbes magazine list of
billionaires with estimated assets of $5.8 billion, in June
criticized Bush for “running these huge deficits in recent years.”

Sarah Bianchi, Kerry’s policy director, said the executives were
drawn to the campaign because they are concerned about the federal
budget deficit, rising health-care costs and, as frequent travelers,
the U.S. reputation around the world.

Assembling Endorsements

Three Kerry supporters in the business community helped assemble the
endorsements for the Democrat, his campaign said. They are Steven
Rattner, managing principal of Quadrangle Group; Roger Altman,
co-founder of Evercore Partners, an investment and advisory firm; and
Blair Effron, vice chairman of UBS Investment Bank’s investment
banking department.

“This level of business support is unusual for a Democratic nominee
and validates the extent to which Kerry is seen as a centrist and a
reliable leader,” Altman, 58, a former U.S. deputy Treasury
secretary, said in an interview. Kerry is proposing to reinstate
federal budget controls that Bush abandoned, leading to a record
deficit of $445 billion for this fiscal year, Altman said.

Effron, in an interview, said two-thirds of those on the list had
never before taken a visible role in a political campaign and said he
hoped their support will encourage other business leaders to back the
campaign.

Key States

The meeting comes on the sixth day of Kerry’s post- convention bus
tour across the U.S., with a focus on states likely to decide the
Nov. 2 election. Bush was also visiting Davenport today, holding a
rally blocks from where Kerry held his economic meeting.

Former Vice President Al Gore, the Democratic presidential nominee in
2000, defeated Bush in Iowa by about 4,000 votes four years ago.

Bush says last year’s tax cuts helped the economy add 1.3 million
jobs in the past six months. Kerry says the added jobs pay, on
average, $9,000 less a year than those that have been lost.

ANKARA: Khatami Conveys Friendship in Azerbaijan

Zaman, Turkey
Aug 6 2004

Khatemi Conveys Friendship in Azerbaijan

Iranian President Mohammed Khatemi started a two-day visit to
Azerbaijan yesterday.

Khatemi is met with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev yesterday.
After the meeting, an agreement was signed addressing a range of
issues including a natural gas transfer to Nahcivan, the exchange of
electric energy, collaboration on highway and railway ransportation,
a mutual relaxation of visa application processing, co-operation on
Caspian Sea related subjects, customs control, the prevention of
double taxation, the fight against terrorism, and smuggling and
organized crime.

Aliyev made a speech after the agreement was signed in which he
stressed that Azerbaijanis are for improving mutual relations and
recalled Iran’s support to Azerbaijan on the issue of
Nagharno-Karabagh’s Armenian occupation.

Khatemi said that Iranians regard the border as a border of
friendship and fraternity and that an Azarbaijani consulate will be
opened in Tabriz shortly. Khatemi conveyed his wish that the
Nagharno-Karabagh issue be solved by peaceful channels.

During his first visit to Azerbaijan, Khatemi will visit the Speaker
of the National Assembly, Murtuz Aleskerov, and make a speech to the
parliament. Khatemi expectedly will go to Armenia on Sunday (August
8) for a two-day official visit.

The last time an Iranian president visited Azerbaijan was in 1993
when Hashimi Rafsancani was in power.

Roddick, Moya, Hewitt win

Canoe
Slam Sports
Thu, August 5, 2004

Roddick, Moya, Hewitt win
By TERRY KINNEY

Andy Roddick returns a volley to Nicolas Kiefer of Germany during their
Tennis Masters second-round match. (AP/Mark Lyons)

MASON, Ohio (AP) – American Andy Roddick didn’t know if it was the best shot
he ever hit, or the luckiest. Either way, it set the stage for his
second-round victory Wednesday over German Nicolas Kiefer at the Tennis
Masters Cincinnati tournament.

In an evening match delayed at the start and interrupted twice by rain,
American Andre Agassi rallied after a second-set lapse to beat Sweden’s
Thomas Johansson 6-1, 3-6, 6-1. Agassi said he was re-energized by the
stalwart fans who stayed through two rain delays in the second set.

“When you see the excitement of people who have persevered, it gets your
juices going,” Agassi said.

Roddick beat Kiefer for the third time in three weeks, this time 6-4, 6-4.
His offbeat but brilliant passing shot evened the score 30-30 in the seventh
game and he won the next two points for the service break he needed to take
the opening set.

When Roddick went to the net after an extended exchange of baseline shots,
Kiefer lifted a lob over his head. Roddick sprinted back to the baseline,
whirled and got his racket on the ball just before it hit the court.

When his shot down the line skipped out of the reach of Kiefer’s forehand,
Roddick raised both hands, palms up, to the crowd in a gesture that could
only mean, “How did I do that?”

Roddick said he could only laugh at his good fortune when he saw the replay.

“I was going to go between my legs, but I couldn’t get there in time,”
Roddick said. “So I just flailed at it, and I figured if I was going to
flail at it, I might as well hit it hard.

“I didn’t really see it . . . but I saw people clapping, so I figured it
went in. It was probably the best shot I ever hit, or the luckiest. It felt
pretty cool, but I didn’t realize it was that drastic.”

Earlier, Australian Lleyton Hewitt beat unseeded Brazilian Gustavo Kuerten,
and Spain’s Carlos Moya beat Croatian Ivan Ljubicic in the $2.5-million US
event after persistent, heavy rains delayed the start of the morning matches
for more than four hours.

Tenth-seeded Hewitt broke Kuerten’s serve in the second game and cruised
through the first set. Kuerten prolonged the second set by breaking Hewitt
to make it 5-3, but both held serve thereafter, and the Australian won 6-3,
6-4.

Fourth-seeded Moya beat Ljubicic 6-4, 4-6, 6-4 in the first match after the
rain delay.

“I had never beaten him on hardcourt, so I didn’t know what to expect,” said
Moya, who came in 0-2 against Ljubicic on this surface but 2-0 on clay.

“The court is really fast, and he served really well,” Moya said. “My serve
wasn’t really good for this match.”

The win gave Moya, who won this tournament in 2002, at least 50 match
victories three years in a row. Still, he was not happy with his play in the
first two rounds because he lost the first set in each. But he said his
desire to win is greater than ever.

“I’m really hungry to win, and I’m more mature than I was five years ago,”
Moya said.

Slovakian Dominik Hrbaty, who upset Switzerland’s Roger Federer on Tuesday
to end the top-seeded player’s 23-match winning streak, lost to Sweden’s
Jonas Bjorkman 6-7 (6), 6-3, 6-3.

Britain’s Greg Rusedski beat French Open champion Gaston Gaudio of Argentina
4-6, 7-6 (3), 6-4. It was an unusually early ending for Gaudio, a finalist
in four of his past five tournaments.

Fourteenth-seeded Russian Marat Safin defeated American Jeff Morrison 6-4,
6-4. Sweden’s Robin Soderling beat Peru’s Luis Horna 6-2, 6-3.

Seventh-seeded John Carlos Ferrero of Spain lost to compatriot Tommy Robredo
7-6 (5), 4-6, 6-4. German Tommy Haas beat Armenia’s Sargis Sargsian 6-3,
6-3.

Australian Wayne Arthurs beat Argentina’s Mariano Zabeleta 6-2, 7-6 (6), and
France’s Fabrice Santoro took Russian Mikhail Youzhny 7-5, 6-3.

Azeri FM issued a statement on military exercises in NKR

ArmenPress
Aug 5 2004

AZERI FOREIGN MINISTRY ISSUED A STATEMENT ON MILITARY EXERCISES IN
NKR
BAKU, AUGUST 5, ARMENPRESS: Azeri foreign ministry did not stay
indifferent to the military exercises conducted in Nagorno Karabakh
jointly with Armenian military force. The agency has come up with a
statement which says that the military exercises together with August
8 elections in Nagorno Karabakh are a “regular provocation” by
Armenia. The military exercises “strain the atmosphere” before the
participation of Armenian representatives in the upcoming NATO
military exercises in Azerbaijan.
“Not only the actions taken by Armenian side sharpen the situation
but create difficulties for the upcoming meeting of Armenian and
Azeri foreign ministers,” the statement says. “Once again the
military exercises indicate the aggression from the side of Armenia
and its desire to keep the issue of Nagorno Karabakh unresolved,”
Azeri foreign ministry concludes.

Majority of Armenia, Azerbaijan Population for Peaceful Coexistence

MAJORITY OF ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN POPULATION FOR PEACEFUL COEXISTENCE

30.07.2004 13:49

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The majority of the population of Armenia and
Azerbaijan is for peaceful coexistence. The results of a sociological
survey, held in Armenia and Azerbaijan by Millenium Educational Research
Association and Azerbaijani Sociological Association with the support of
Texas University, evidence it. 1000 people were questioned in each of
the two countries and 200 Armenians and the same number of Azeris from
Nagorno Karabakh, Azg Yerevan newspaper reported. 74.2% of respondents
from Armenia and 45.8% of those from Azerbaijan come for restoration of
relations between the two countries. 97% of Armenians and 93% of Azeris
interviewed said they wished to coexist peacefully. As a precondition
for restoration of previous ties 60% of Armenian respondents mentioned
the independence of Nagorno Karabakh. 38% of those questioned in
Azerbaijan said liberation of “occupied territories” was such a
precondition. The return of refugees to Nagorno Karabakh was also noted.
Both parties point to the governments of their own countries as the
authors of the conflict.

When it comes to Aliyah, quantity is quality

Israel Insider, Israel
July 29 2004

When it comes to Aliyah, quantity is quality
By Yishai Fleisher

Recently, the Jerusalem Post printed an article titled “Quality, not
quantity, aliya.” (Jul. 25, 2004) In it, the writer Yosef Goell, a
former political scientist, claimed that while “the last thing in the
world we should want is to concentrate all Jews into tiny Israel,” he
still believes that “we should very much want to pick the cream of
the world’s Jewish crop for ourselves.”

Selection of Jews. That is what this educator thinks is good policy
for Israel.

Yet aside from this blatantly bigoted statement, the author Yosef
Goell says many things regarding the issues of the Jewish Diaspora
and Aliyah which one hears regularly.

Goell states: “In a hostile world, politically, economically and
culturally strong Diaspora communities such as in North America are
essential for strengthening Israel’s diplomatic and economic
position.”

The first misconception here is that the Diaspora communities are
“politically, economically and culturally strong.”

Are French Jews politically strong? They are being bombarded by
murderous anti-Semitism and are banned from wearing yarmulkes in
public. Are U.S. Jews strong? In the United States, seventy percent
of non-observant Jews are succumbing to intermarriage while the whole
of American Jewry is aging rapidly, with a birthrate that is below
the regeneration minimum. Today’s Diaspora Jewry is in dire straits.

The second misconception is that Israel needs a strong Diaspora to
survive.

Economically, Israel, the world’s 19th largest economy, would do
better not taking Uncle Sam’s allowance. Like a grown up still living
in his parents home, Israel needs to be weaned off U.S. money if it
is ever to have the self-respect of a grown-up nation.

Politically, a Jewish lobby is not the only reason that the U.S.
supports Israel. The U.S. shares many values and goals with Israel,
such as a free society and fighting terror. A strong Diaspora is not
what will keep the U.S. voting with Israel, rather, a strong and
healthy Israel will draw the admiration and respect of other nations.

Culturally, Israel is the center of the Jewish universe. It is no
coincidence that Birthright, the now-famous free trip, flies to
Israel, not to Brooklyn or the Lower East Side, to show young people
what Judaism is.

The State of Israel has become the center of the Jewish collective
focus. Every Jewish newspaper across the U.S. plasters pictures of
Israel on its front cover, not some local Jewish issue. Israel is
where Judaism is happening, all other places are merely satellites.

The strength of the State of Israel protects all Jews of the
Diaspora, not the other way around. Israel’s long-arm thwarts
violence against Jews worldwide. The truth is that Israel does not
need a strong Diaspora to survive, but rather the Diaspora depends on
a strong Israel to survive both physically and culturally.

Goell continues: “We are similar to other Diaspora peoples like the
Greeks, Armenians and Scots, in their relations between their
far-flung Diaspora and home countries.”

Unlike the “Greeks, Armenians and Scots” we, Jewish people, have been
pining for our homeland for the last two-thousand years, and while
other nations respect their homeland, they seem to be in no rush to
go back to Greece, Armenia, and Scotland respectively. Since the
founding of the State of Israel in 1948, millions of Jews have
immigrated to Israel, and soon the majority of the Jewish people will
live, once again, in Israel. The arrival of almost two thousand
American Jewish immigrants and hundreds of French ones this summer
attests to the fact that the Aliyah revolution continues.

Finally Goell writes: “But let’s stop for a moment and try to imagine
the implications of squeezing an additional seven to eight million
cantankerous, contentious Jews into this tiny country. Life in the
buzzing beehive of Israel would be hell” and “The last thing in the
world we should want is to concentrate all Jews into tiny Israel,
cramming everything into one basket.”

First of all Israel is not “tiny.” New Jersey is about the size of
Israel and has 13 million people in it and still has massive tracts
of open land. Israel has plenty of room for seven to eight million
Jews. From the Galil, to the Negev, from the Jordan Valley to the
mountains of Jerusalem, Israel has tons of space to accommodate all
the Jews of the world.

Second, nothing could be happier than “bringing an additional seven
to eight million” Jews into Israel.

In our daily prayers we say: “Our Father in Heaven, do kindness with
us for the sake of Your great Name that has been proclaimed upon us.
Fulfill for us, Hashem our G-d, what is written: ‘At that time I will
bring you and at that time I will gather you in, for I will set you
up for renown and praise among all the peoples of the earth, when I
bring back your captivity, before your own eyes,’ (Zephaniah 3:20)
said Hashem.”

We also say: “Blessed are you, Hashem, Who gathers in the dispersed
of His people of Israel.”

And we also say: “Blessed are You, Hashem, Who gladdens Zion with her
children.”

We have been praying to G-d for two thousand years to reunite us in
the Land of Israel. It will not be “hell” to have all the world’s
Jews in the Land of Israel, and we need not be afraid of having all
our eggs in “one basket.” G-d has promised to set us up “for renown
and praise among all the peoples of the earth” when we are reunited
in Israel. Indeed life here will be like a “beehive” because Israel
is the Land of Milk and Honey, and bees work nicely together to
create their home.

When talking about Aliyah, quantity is quality, because every Jew is
special and important. The “cream of the crop” of the Jewish people
is the Jewish people. Today, we should be advocating Aliyah for all
the Jewish people and putting it atop our political agenda. Aliyah is
the answer to the Arab demographic onslaught, and it will save Jews
in the Galut from assimilation and Anti-Semitism. Most of all, our
destiny calls for all the Jewish people to return to the Land of
Israel, so let us work to make this vision a reality today.
Views expressed by the author do not necessarily reflect those of
israelinsider.

Seven Armenian officers to attend NATO exercises in Azerbaijan –

Seven Armenian officers to attend NATO exercises in Azerbaijan – official

Arminfo
27 Jul 04

YEREVAN

Seven servicemen from the Armenian armed forces will attend the
upcoming NATO exercises in September 2004 [in Azerbaijan], Armenian
Deputy Defence Minister Maj-Gen Artur Agabekyan told an Arminfo
correspondent today.

He said five Armenian officers will be directly involved in the
exercises and each of them will have his own duty and position during
the exercises. An agreement has been already reached to get entry
visas for them in Tbilisi. In addition, it is presumed that two more
senior Armenian officers will attend the NATO exercises as official
guests, Agabekyan said.