ARF Bureau Representative Holds Political Meetings With Chairmen OfE

ARF BUREAU REPRESENTATIVE HOLDS POLITICAL MEETINGS WITH CHAIRMEN OF EDEK AND AKEL PARTIES IN CYPRUS

NICOSIA, December 16 (Noyan Tapan). December 14, Armenian Revolutionary
Federation (ARF) Bureau representative Hrant Margarian held several
meetings with the leaders of Cyprus political parties, ARF press
service reported.

The ARF delegation, led by Margarian, met with Cyprus Socialist
Democratic Party (EDEK) chairman Yanakis Omiru, who, underscoring the
centuries-long friendship between the Armenians and Greeks, reminded
them of the common enemy, Turkey. He added both Armenians and Greeks
are confident that Turkey does not deserve an EU membership unless
it undertakes certain pre-conditions, including the recognition of
the Republic of Cyprus, and admitting to the Armenian Genocide.

Hrant Margarian pointed to the close ideological ties between the
ARF and EDEK, and noted that the meeting is aimed at conveying
the ARF’s concerns ahead of the December 17 summit over Turkey’s
EU bid. Margarian said that Turkey should not be admitted to the EU
until the Cyprus issue and the issues of the Armenian Genocide and
human rights violations are not settled, reminding that this position
of the ARF is shared by most Europeans.

He added that Cyprus is expected to pose a strong position against
Turkey, and that Cyprus would also raise the Armenian Genocide issue
as Armenians raise the Cyprus issue in the international arena. If
Cyprus says “no” on December 17, many nations, including Armenians,
would welcome such stance. Omiru, in turn, said that his party is
for using the right to veto by Cyrus in case Turkey fails to meet
its requirements.

Hrant Margarian was also received by Dimitris Christofias, president
of the Cyprus parliament and secretary general of the Communist
Party, AKEL.

At the meeting, Margarian pointed to the ARF position and the Armenians
expect from Cyprus, noting that Turkey, by the U.S. blessing and
encouragement, would try to derail the European values and justice,
peace and tolerance systems. He added that the struggle should continue
and a “non” by Cyprus has a unique weight in political developments.

In response, Christofias noted that his heart “demands a veto,”
but questions like why and how the European powers dropped their
objections, raise. He said Turkey is encouraged by the U.S. and
Britain. He also said that President Papadopulos is to make his
decision at the last minute, and whatever the decision, his party
would support it.

Kurdistan Committee calls for recognition of Kurds,Armenian Genocide

Kurdistan Committee calls for recognition of Kurds, Armenian Genocide by Turkey

Yerkir
16.12.2004  17:10    

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – The Kurdistan Committee of Armenia has called on
Turkey to officially recognize the Kurdish ethnicity with mentioning
“Kurd” — instead of the “Turk” used currently — for nationality in
the Kurds’ passports, recognize the Kurdish language as the second
language of Turkey and free their leader Abdullah Ocalan, Armenpress
reported.

Kniaz Hasanov of the Committee said that in their letter to the Yerevan
offices of the European Parliament, European Union, the OSCE, as well
as embassies of UK, US, France and Italy, they demanded also that
Turkey should acknowledgement of the Armenian Genocide and apologizing
for it should be made a pre-condition for Turkey’s accession to the
European Union.

There are 40 million Kurds in the world, with 20 million residing
in Turkey, 9 million in Iran, 5 to 6 million in Iraq, 3 million in
Syria, 2 million in other countries. In Armenia there are 42,000
Kurds and Yezids.

–Boundary_(ID_wJtNeCeQUVytklJlMofSmg)–

Burning body: Yarmouth man charged

Norwich Evening News, UK
Dec 15 2004

Burning body: Yarmouth man charged

A 27-YEAR-OLD Great Yarmouth man has been charged with murdering a
man whose body was found burning in a field two years ago.

Nisham Grigor Bakunts was yesterday charged with murdering Hovhannes
Amirian (known as Sako) on December 20, 2002 in King’s Lynn.

Bakunts was remanded in custody by Norwich Crown Court. He will
appear again at the court for a plea and directions hearing on
February 4.

The body of 42-year-old Mr Amirian was found in the fields between
Upton and Wansford in Cambridgeshire in December 2002. Mr Amirian,
who was also known as Gevorg Galstian, had family connections in
Ukraine and Armenia and an estranged wife and son in Belgium.

A cyclist discovered his body in the early hours of December 21 2002.
He had been set on fire and a post-mortem examination revealed he had
also been shot and stabbed.

Police worked to identify Mr Amirian for nearly a year following the
discovery of his body.

He was finally named at an inquest in January and buried in an
unmarked grave at Eastfield Cemetery, Peterborough last year.

Gazprom to take part in Iran-Armenia pipeline construction tender

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
December 13, 2004 Monday 5:29 AM Eastern Time

Gazprom to take part in Iran-Armenia pipeline construction tender

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN

The Russian Gazprom company will take part in a tender for the
construction of a gas pipeline from Iran to Armenia, which the gas
giant expects to win, the executive director of the ArmRosgazprom
joint venture told Itar-Tass.

The executive director of the Russian-Armenian joint venture, Karen
Karapetyan, said the date of the tender will be announced shortly.
The Armenian government and Gazprom have 45 percent of ArmRosgazprom
shares each, while the remaining ten percent belong to the ITERA
company.

Karapetyan dismissed allegations that the gas pipeline from Iran to
Armenia is intended for the transit of Iranian gas to Europe. The
pipeline of a bigger diameter is needed for the transit, and that
would involve bigger investments, he said. Besides, a free sales
market in third countries is necessary for the transit of gas, and
there is no such market, he stressed.

Iran extends a credit of 30 million dollars for the construction of
the 40-kilometer-long Armenian section, the press service of the
Armenian government told Itar-Tass. An agreement on that was signed
when Iranian President Mohammad Khatami paid an official visit to
Yerevan last September.

The construction of the pipeline will be launched simultaneously on
both sides. A total of 100 kilometers of the pipeline will run across
Iran. The construction is expected to be finished in January 2007,
after which the gas systems of the two countries will be united.
Armenia expects to pay for the supplies of Iranian gas with
electricity.

The Armenian leadership is confident that the gas pipeline from Iran
will strengthen the republic’s energy security.

Ukraine vote acceptance highlights Russian grip on Armenia

EurasiaNet Organization
Dec 13 2004

UKRAINE VOTE ACCEPTANCE HIGHLIGHTS RUSSIAN GRIP ON ARMENIA
Emil Danielyan 12/13/04

Armenian President Robert Kocharian has been embarrassed by his
decision to recognize the “official” outcome of last month’s
Ukraine’s presidential run-off, results that were subsequently
discredited as fraudulent. Kocharian’s action on the Ukrainian vote
underscores that Russia continues to exert heavy influence over
Armenia’s diplomacy.

A new run-off election is scheduled in Ukraine for December 26 after
the country’s Supreme Court tossed out the “official” results from
the late November balloting. That vote was marred by charges of fraud
even before the polls closed. However, the dispute did not prevent
Kocharian from rushing to recognize Russia’s preferred candidate,
Viktor Yanukovich, as the winner. [For background see the Eurasia
Insight archive]. Political observers in Yerevan believe Kocharian’s
quick endorsement was prompted by Russian pressure. Regardless of the
cause, Kocharian’s action is certain to damage Armenia’s effort to
build better relations with Western nations, which did not recognize
the legitimacy of the Ukrainian election results.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has doggedly stood by Yanukovich,
accusing the United States and the European Union of meddling in the
internal affairs of what Russia calls its “near abroad.” Putin was
unusually quick to congratulate Yanukovich on his fraudulent victory
over the Western-leaning challenger Viktor Yushchenko.

Kocharian looked uneasy as he was asked by reporters on November 26
to explain his backing of Yanukovich. “If Yushchenko was elected I
would congratulate him. But it is Yanukovich who was elected and we
congratulated him,” he said, pointing to the figures released by
Ukraine’s Central Election Commission

Kocharian’s foreign minister, Vartan Oskanian, claimed in televised
remarks on December 3 that Yerevan stuck to international law,
whereas the international community was motivated by political
expediency. The explanation became even more questionable the next
day when the Ukrainian Supreme Court voided the official vote
results, endorsing allegations of massive electoral fraud.

Interestingly, news of a congratulatory message sent by Kocharian to
Yanukovich was first reported by state-run Russian media.
Furthermore, Kocharian’s office never issued any statements to that
effect, leading the Yerevan newspaper “Iravunk” to joke that the
Armenian leader had to watch Russian television to find out whom he
has congratulated.

“In my view, [Kocharian’s administration] is not acting independently
and Russia’s influence is clearly visible here,” Stepan Grigorian, a
political analyst critical of the Armenian government, told
EurasiaNet. “I believe that this step was taken at the behest of
Russia.”

Lending credence to this theory is the fact Armenia has little reason
to like Ukraine’s outgoing President Leonid Kuchma, who handpicked
Yanukovich as his successor. Ukraine has repeatedly supported its
arch-foe Azerbaijan in the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, with
Kuchma denouncing “Armenian occupation” of the disputed enclave as
recently as in June. Ukraine was reportedly the sole non-Muslim
nation to have backed a pro-Azerbaijani draft resolution on Karabakh
submitted to the UN General Assembly less than a month before
Kocharian’s letter. Incidentally, Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev
did not congratulate Yanukovich.

In addition, Kocharian likely opposes regime change in Kyiv, given
the ongoing dispute concerning his own re-election in 2003. [For
background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Armenia’s main
opposition parties continue to withhold recognition of Kocharian’s
victory, which they insist was based on widespread voter fraud. As a
result, an opposition boycott of parliament is ongoing. [For
background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

The Armenian president may be worried that the anti-government
protests in the Ukrainian capital, dubbed “orange revolution,” could
have a spillover effect in Yerevan. Kocharian’s political foes have
expressed their solidarity with Yushchenko and are reportedly
regrouping for a fresh push for power. [For background see the
Eurasia Insight archive].

Yushchenko’s likely victory in the December 26 re-run of the
Ukrainian ballot could embolden opposition leaders not only in
Armenia, but also in other CIS states, including Azerbaijan and
Kazakhstan. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Some
Armenian opposition leaders have already declared that the West is
ready to back a similar anti-government revolt in Armenia. Media
reports have suggested that several prominent oppositionists will
soon set up a new opposition alliance with a clearly pro-Western
agenda.

The Kocharian administration itself has sought to forge closer links
with the West in recent years, stepping up Armenia’s participation in
NATO’s Partnership for Peace program and planning to send troops to
Iraq. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Foreign
Minister Oskanian told a German news agency last month that his
country also hopes to join the EU within 20 years.

Some observers believe that Kocharian’s credibility is now damaged in
Western capitals, thus undermining what Oskanian has characterized as
Armenian’s desire to maintain a “complementary” foreign policy. “He
[Kocharian] once again underscored that Armenia remains totally
within the orbit of Russian foreign policy,” wrote a commentator for
“168 Zham,” an independent Yerevan weekly.

Meanwhile, Grigorian, the political analyst, suggested that Yerevan
may have a difficult time in re-gaining Europe’s confidence. “By
congratulating Yanukovich together with Belarus, Armenia acted
against the EU and the OSCE,” he said. “Let them not think Europe
will forget this.”

Editors Note: Emil Danielyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and
political analyst.

On this day – Dec 14

Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia
The Mercury, Australia
Dec 14 2004

On this day

14dec04

1988 – Sixty more survivors are pulled from rubble of earthquake that
rocked Armenia.

1417 – Sir John Oldcastle, a leader of the Lollards religious sect,
is hanged and burned in Britain; he was considered to be the model
for Shakespeare’s character Falstaff.
1542 – Following the battle of Solway Moss, James V of Scotland has a
mental breakdown and dies; his daughter Mary Stuart acceded to the
throne at the age of one week.
1799 – Death of George Washington, first president of the United
States (1789-1797).
1822 – Congress of Verona ends, ignoring Greek war of independence.
1861 – Prince Albert, consort and husband of Queen Victoria, dies of
typhoid at Windsor Castle.
1900 – Max Planck first publishes his Quantum Theory: that radiant
energy comes in small indivisible packets and was not continuous as
previously thought.
1911 – Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen becomes first man to reach
South Pole.
1912 – Louis Botha resigns as South Africa’s Prime Minister.
1913 – Greece formally annexes Crete.
1916 – People of Denmark vote to sell Danish West Indies to United
States for $US25 million.
1918 – Women in Britain vote for the first time in a general election
and are allowed to stand as candidates; first to be elected was Irish
nationalist Countess Markievicz of Sinn Fein, who could not take her
seat as she was in prison; Sidonio Paes, president of Portugal, is
assassinated.
1920 – First fatalities on a scheduled passenger flight occur when an
aircraft crashes into a house killing the two-person crew and two
passengers at Cricklewood, London.
1927 – Britain recognises Iraq’s independence; China and Soviet Union
break relations.
1937 – Japan establishes puppet Chinese government at Peking.
1939 – The Soviet Union is dropped from the League of Nations.
1941 – US Marines make stand in battle for Wake Island in Pacific
during World War II.
1945 – Josef Kramer, known as “the beast of Belsen”, and ten others
are hanged in Hameln for crimes committed at the Belsen and Auschwitz
Nazi concentration camps.
1946 – United Nations General Assembly votes to establish UN
headquarters in New York City.
1947 – Death of three-times British prime minister Stanley Baldwin;
he headed the government during the General Strike of 1926 and the
abdication crisis of 1936.
1959 – Archbishop Makarios becomes the first president of the
Republic of Cyprus.
1960 – Paris convention is signed creating the Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, to come into force in
September 1961.
1962 – North Rhodesia’s first African-dominated government is formed
under Kenneth Kaunda; Mariner II space probe begins sending back to
Earth man’s first information from another planet, Venus.
1968 – Referendum in Tasmania gives go-ahead for Wrest Point casino.
1972 – US Apollo 17 astronauts blast off from Moon after three days
of exploration on lunar surface.
1978 – UN General Assembly calls for an oil embargo against South
Africa.
1981 – Israel annexes Golan Heights captured from Syria in 1967.
1986 – Fifty people are reported killed and 125 injured in ethnic
riots in Pakistan.
1987 – Allan Border becomes highest run-scorer in Australian cricket
with double-century against New Zealand in Adelaide.
1988 – Sixty more survivors are pulled from rubble of earthquake that
rocked Armenia.
1989 – Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov dies; Opposition leader
Patricio Aylwin is elected president in Chile’s first free election
since 1970.
1990 – In Hong Kong, 10 Vietnamese boat people set fire to themselves
to protest against a screening policy that could prevent them from
settling in the West.
1991 – Former East German leader Erich Honecker, facing extraditiion
to Germany and trial on manslaughter charges, is offered asylum in
North Korea.
1992 – Left-wing member of Parliament in Britain introduces
legislation to eliminate the Queen’s job.
1993 – US and European Community set aside a bitter fight over films,
unlocking the door to the world’s biggest-ever trade reform package;
European Union establishes diplomatic relations with South Africa,
putting the final touch to a new policy of cooperation after years of
isolation.
1994 – Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic asks former US President
Jimmy Carter to mediate a lasting peace in Bosnia.
1995 – Australia announces a wide-ranging defence and security treaty
with Indonesia; Heavy fighting erupts in Gudermes, in the breakaway
Russian republic of Chechnya, when rebel guerrillas disrupt
Kremlin-imposed elections; Leaders from former Yugoslavia sign a
Bosnian peace treaty in Paris, formally ending Europe’s worst
conflict since World War II.
1996 – Balancing bundles of food and clothing on their heads, Rwandan
refugees who previously refused to return home begin re-entering
Rwanda after 2-1/2 years in Tanzania; Liberal government wins WA
election, gaining three seats.
1997 – Reform-minded Iranian President Mohammed Khatami says that he
is ready to re-establish dialogue with the United States, the first
such statement since the 1979 revolution in Iran; US comic actor
Stubby Kaye, who endeared himself to movie and theatre audiences as
the gambler Nicely-Nicely in the stage and film versions of Guys and
Dolls, dies aged 79.
1998 – In the presence of US President Bill Clinton, the Palestinian
Council votes to revoke a paragraph in its charter that demanded the
destruction of Israel.
1999 – US and German negotiators agree to establish a fund of $US5.2
billion for Nazi-era slave and forced labourers; Japan says it will
lift all sanctions against North Korea, setting the stage for an
improvement in ties.
2000 – Vladimir Putin, the first Russian president to visit Cuba
since the collapse of the Soviet Union, holds talks with Fidel Castro
in Havana as he starts a trip aimed at warming up ties between the
former Cold War allies.
2001 – Hundreds of US Marines occupy the Kandahar Airport, carefully
picking through unexploded weaponry and debris left by the Taliban as
the US military relocates its main base in southern Afghanistan,
arresting dozens of suspected militants.
2002 – The wooden ferry Papa Friends 2000 pitches its nearly 200
passengers into Lake Piso in Liberia, near the coastal town of
Robertsport, killing all but 15.
2003 – Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf escapes an
assassination attempt when a powerful bomb explodes on a bridge in
Rawalpindi less than a minute after his motorcade crosses it.

Lessons of Integration of Aliens into Finland between 1917 and 1944

Global Politician, NY
Dec 12 2004

Lessons of Integration of Aliens into Finland between 1917 and 1944

12/13/2004

By Antero Leitzinger

When Finland became independent on 6th of December 1917, the
constitution, dating back to Swedish rule over a century earlier,
required all Finnish citizens to be of Evangelical Lutheran faith.
Exceptions had been made regarding other Protestant, Roman Catholic,
and Russian Orthodox religions (after all, the Grand Duke himself, as
Emperor of Russia, was Orthodox). Non-Christians, however, were
excluded from the citizenship. They included Jews and Muslims. Jews
in Finland were Yiddish-speaking immigrants from Russia, who were
later integrated into the Swedish-speaking minority. Muslims in
Finland were mainly Turkic-speaking Mishar Tatars from the Middle
Volga region, who were later integrated into the Finnish-speaking
majority, but who have retained their own mother tongue. There are
still about 1000 Jews and almost equally many Tatars in Finland. How
were they naturalised?

A distinct Finnish citizenship had developed by 1832, when the Grand
Duke (Emperor) declared, that all applications would be subjected to
his approval. Since then, the citizenship was applied and all
applications are preserved in the National Archive. Although Finns
enjoyed full rights everywhere in the Russian Empire, Russian
subjects did not automatically enjoy full rights in Finland. The
Finnish citizenship was a restricted privilege. Because of the
tendencies of Russification, no law of citizenship was passed until
in 1920 when Finland was already independent. Instead, many different
decrees and political considerations regulated the acquisition of
Finnish citizenship.

In 1914, out of three million inhabitants in Finland, an estimated 40
000 were foreigners – mostly Russian subjects. Their number decreased
since then, and only in the 1990s did both the number and the
proportion of foreigners in Finland pass the pre-independence level.
The most alien minorities were the Jews and Muslims, whose
integration within a generation was an interesting achievement. The
Jews have been studied among others by Taimi Torvinen in “Kadimah –
Suomen juutalaisten historia” (Keuruu 1989) [“Kadimah – the history
of Finland’s Jews”], and the Muslims by Antero Leitzinger in
“Mishäärit – Suomen vanha islamilainen yhteisö” (Helsinki 1996) [“The
Mishars – Finland’s old Islamic community”].

Jews in Russia suffered heavily from the pogroms starting in April
1881. Although international attention forced the government to deny
its direct responsibility, laws officially restricted the freedom of
residence, occupation, and education of the Jews even more. In 1891,
Jews were systematically ousted from Moscow. (Torvinen, p. 43-44)
Pogroms were repeated in 1897, 1899, 1903, and 1904-1905. Finland,
however, was more liberal-minded, sought Western support, and
emphasised the rule of law in order to strengthen its autonomy as a
Grand Duchy. After a long legal process, Jews were declared equal by
law on 12th of January, 1918.

Both Jews and Muslim started to apply Finnish citizenship in 1918.
The Muslims, however, could be accepted only after general freedom of
religion was declared in the constitution by 1919. The naturalisation
proceeded slowly, although three quarters of the Jews were born in
Finland by 1920. (Torvinen, p. 107-108)

THE ATTITUDES OF THE FINNISH AUTHORITIES

Finnish authorities were initially relatively positive regarding the
social and political activities of Russian emigrant groups, specially
of the “frontier nations”, among whom the Tatars were considered
potentially influential. Finnish politicians and academicians met
with Tatar leaders, like Sadri Maksudi, president of Idel-Ural, an
autonomous republic in the Middle Volga region in 1917-1918. Even
when it became obvious, that the Idel-Ural autonomy was crushed and
Soviet power established all over Russia, Tatar nationalism was
considered friendly and it was encouraged by Finns. This made a
lasting impression on several Tatar activists, who later promoted
Finland in various international forums. Musa Jarullah Bigi, a
Crimean Tatar cleric, spoke warmly about Finns in a pan-Islamic world
congress in Jerusalem in 1932. (Helsingin Sanomat 28.2.1932)

The Finnish security police (Etsivä keskuspoliisi, EK; later
Valtiollinen poliisi, Valpo) screened through all citizenship
applications and rejected many on accounts of political suspicions,
if the applicants were suspected of communist sympathies. In
September 1920, however, the Border Land commandant Heinrichs
complained to the foreign minister, that most Russian emigrants were
“rich Jews”, and that “appealing to humanity is nothing but a
despicable Jewish business trick”. (Kristiina Erhola: “Suomen
pakolaispolitiikka 1917-1922” [Finnish Refugee Policy], Licentiate
work in the Helsinki University Political Sciences Department, 1994,
p. 233) In July 1921, the Interior Ministry was reported to have
started restricting immigration by turning down asylum applications.
Professor Yrjö Jahnsson intervened in behalf of Tatars and other
“frontier nations” and attributed the change of climate to the
“agitation” of the EK. (File 5 of the private collection of Yrjö and
Hilma Jahnsson in the National Archive)

>From 1921 to 1939, the EK was becoming increasingly defensive and
cautious. This may have been caused by swifts in the personal – many
of the older detectives had been people who knew Russian, had lived
in St. Petersburg or in the frontier area, and used to cross the
border easily, but they were replaced by men who (like the later
president Urho Kekkonen) had no personal experience of Russia and
little interest in contacts with Russians or representatives of
various minorities. A cosmopolitan tendency prevailed in army
intelligence, which employed many Tatars during the Continuation War,
but the EK considered Tatars and other alien groups a potential
source of trouble. Even anti-Semitism became evident.

In May 1926, an EK detective claimed in his report, that Jewish
citizenship applications should be rejected because experience had
shown, that they would not turn into good citizens, and that ethnic
Russians living in the border area should be rejected because there
were living already too few reliable people. The head-division of the
EK put it only slightly less clear by instructing the sub-divisions
to filtrate well especially Russian and Jewish applicants of
citizenship. Next year the same detective regretted in his report,
that the new government did not care to discriminate against Jews,
and was not hostile to emigrants. Even president Lauri Kristian
Relander was criticised in the EK reports for frustrating the
anti-Semitic security police officers. (Documents in a file titled
“Suomen kansalaiseksi ottaminen” [Accepting to Finnish Citizenship]
in the archive of the Directorate of Immigration)

The last Muslim refugees from Russia crossed the border secretly in
1929-1936, some of them escaping from the Solovetsk camp (“Gulag”) by
foot. Among them was also a remarkable Armenian, Anushavan Zatikyan,
who provided the Finnish military intelligence with information and
organised a common Armenian-Muslim resistance against Soviet rule in
the Caucasus. (EK-Valpo head-division interrogation protocol 82/1930
in the National Archive, referred to in my article in the Ararat
Quarterly 37/1996) His case is not only most interesting for Armenian
resistance history, but also because it implied deep-lying tactic
differences between the EK and the military intelligence of Finland.

FINAL TEST: WAR-TIME LOYALTY

The Winter War was a decisive test for the loyalty of various
political and ethnic minorities. Both “Red” (pro-Soviet) and “White”
(including pro-German) Finns, who had been fighting each other in
1918, were united in a national resistance. Also ethnic Russians and
other ethnic minorities, some of whom were not yet Finnish citizens,
proved to be loyal to their new homeland. Although the authorities
did take some communists, ethnic Russians, and other suspect
individuals into custody, in extremely few cases any kind of
pro-Soviet inclination was really recognisable.

Among the most dramatic potential loyalty conflicts were the
encounters between Finnish Jewish officers and Nazi Germans, who were
allied with Finland from 1941 to 1944. When a German Colonel Pilgrim
had been rescued by a Finnish captain, then still Lieutenant Salomon
Klass, the German offered his rescuer his thanks and the Iron Cross,
which Klass however declined to accept. When the German heard that
his rescuer was a Jew, he nevertheless shook the latter’s hand and
said: “I personally have nothing against you as a Jew. Heil Hitler!”
(Hannu Rautkallio: “Suomen juutalaisten aseveljeys”, Jyväskylä 1989,
p. 157-158) [“Finnish Jews as Germany’s Waffenbrüder”].

Soviet Union produced in 1944 a list of suspected war criminals. The
list included also a Jewish Captain Eugen Apter, who remained
innocently imprisoned until 1947. (Rautkallio, p. 142)

In the wars, 23 Jews and 10 Muslims fell for the freedom of Finland.
Many of the Jews and Muslims fought as volunteers, having not yet
received the Finnish citizenship.

NON-CITIZENS UNDER STATE PROTECTION

Those aliens, who had not acquired Finnish citizenship by 1939 –
mostly defined as “subjects of former Russia” – were nevertheless
granted protection as refugees or simply foreigners with residence
permit. Beside the immigrants, Finland hosted also tens of thousands
of ethnic Finns evacuated from the German-occupied Ingermanland
[Ingria], or living in occupied East Karelia. There were also large
numbers of Soviet prisoners of war, and some additional war-time
refugees.

Both Jewish and Muslim prisoners of war in Finland were provided with
religious literature by the Jewish and Muslim congregations. Tatar
prisoners of war were employed by fellow Tatars, and could thus live
outside prison camps in relative comfort. Some of them refused to be
returned to the Soviet Union after armistice in 1944.

Finland had received Jewish refugees from Germany and Austria in the
1930s. The chief of Valpo, Arno Anthoni, however, deported in
November 1942 a group of foreigners, some of whom had committed petty
crimes in Finland, including eight Jews, to Germany. Seven of the
Jews perished in Auschwitz. This action was deeply resented by the
media and by many Finnish politicians, and the situation of Jewish
foreigners in Finland was secured thereafter – some of the refugees
were naturalised, others removed to Sweden. At the same time, Finland
succeeded in protecting half a dozen Jewish citizens living in
Germany and German-occupied countries. (The Finnish refugee policy in
the 1930s and early 1940s has been studied by Taimi Torvinen in her
book “Pakolaiset Suomessa Hitlerin valtakaudella” [“Refugees in
Finland during Hitler’s Reign”], Keuruu 1984.)

The Germans planned that the Finnish Jews would be sent to Maidanek
concentration camp. (Torvinen, p. 139 & 141) It was irony of history,
that a Maidanek survivor was married to Finland after the war, and
his son Ben Zyskowicz became a member of parliament in 1979, and one
of the most respected Finnish politicians. His wife happened to be a
Tatar. Thus, the Zyskowicz family symbolises not only the success of
Jewish integration in the Finnish society, but also the good
relations between Jewish and Muslim communities in Finland. Another
famous Finnish Jew is the retired diplomat Max Jakobson, whose
attempt to become general secretary of the United Nations failed only
because of the Soviet preference for Kurt Waldheim, a former SS
officer.

An Austrian Jewish organisation tried to get financial restitution
from Finland in 1968-1971. This, however, was considered unfair by
the Jewish World Congress. (Torvinen, p. 163)

Finland had also received Estonian refugees in 1943-1944. Among them
there were Tatars, one of whom served among other Estonian volunteers
in the Finnish army until August 1944, when he was given leave to
escape to Sweden. Before the Soviet occupation, Estonia had its own
Tatar community, related to those in Finland, of 200-300 persons.
After the war, they became the nucleus of the first Muslim community
in Sweden.

The article was originally written in October 2000.

Antero Leitzinger is a political historian and a researcher for the
Finnish Directorate of Immigration. He wrote several books on Turkey,
the Middle East and the Caucasus.

Armenian, Russian MPs agree on more active cooperation in world bodi

Armenian, Russian MPs agree on more active cooperation in world bodies

Mediamax news agency
7 Dec 04

Yerevan, 7 December: Armenian and Russian parliamentarians have agreed
upon more active coordination of cooperation within international
organizations, “which will allow the two countries to effectively
protect their interests”, the vice-speaker of the Armenian National
Assembly and co-chairman of the Armenian-Russian interparliamentary
commission, Vaan Ovanesyan, told Mediamax in Yerevan today.

The vice-speaker expressed hope that the agreements reached at the
latest meeting of the commission in Moscow would be put into practice
in the months to come “during the forthcoming serious discussions of
the Nagornyy Karabakh problem and the situation in Chechnya at the
parliamentary assemblies of the Council of Europe, the OSCE and NATO”.

The parliamentarians of the two counties appealed to the co-chairmen
of the Armenian-Russian intergovernmental commission and the Armenian
and Russian foreign ministers, suggesting that a ferry link be put into
operation between the port Kavkaz [in Russia’s Krasnodar Territory] and
Poti [in Georgia] before the direct railway through Abkhazia reopens.

The Armenian vice-speaker said that the operation of the ferry
would allow it to avoid adverse effects on the Armenian economy of
incidents such as the closure of the Verkhniy Lars checkpoint on the
Russian-Georgian border in September-October this year.

Armenian MP denies report on hearings into destruction of Azericultu

Armenian MP denies report on hearings into destruction of Azeri cultural sites

Arminfo
6 Dec 04

Yerevan, 6 December: A representative of the Armenian delegation to
the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe [PACE], Shavarsh
Kocharyan, has denied Azerbaijani media reports suggesting that the
issue of the “destruction of Azerbaijani cultural monuments” was
discussed during a joint meeting of the PACE committees on culture,
science and education in Paris on 3 December.

Shavarsh Kocharyan has told Arminfo that meetings of the subcommittee
on issues of cultural heritage, the committee on issues of science
and education, as well as hearings on the issue of “Religion, culture
and education” were held in Paris on 3 December. He said no issues
concerning Armenia, Azerbaijan and Nagornyy Karabakh had been discussed
during these meetings.

Let’s recall that earlier the Baku media carried reports suggesting
that during a joint meeting of the PACE committees on culture,
science and education Azerbaijani MP Rafael Huseynov had allegedly
drawn the attention of European MPs to “the Nagornyy Karabakh problem,
the occupation of Azerbaijani lands and the ensuing destruction and
desecration of cultural monuments and graves”. Huseynov also said he
had allegedly urged “the Council of Europe to take measures against
the most brutal form of Armenian aggression – destruction of the
cultural heritage”.

BAKU: Armenians vow to prevent Azeri officer extradition after trial

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Dec 2 2004

Armenians vow to prevent Azeri officer’s extradition after trial

Nazeli Vartanian, defense lawyer of Armenian serviceman Gurgen
Markarian, who was murdered by an Azerbaijani officer Ramil Safarov
in Budapest in 2003, and employee of the Armenian Defense Minister
Hayk Demoian held a news conference in the Hungarian capital on
Tuesday.
The two said that Safarov may be sentenced to 10 to 15 years in jail
or life imprisonment under the second provision of Article 166
(murder or murder attempt) of the Hungarian Criminal Code.
`The Azerbaijani side tries to extradite Safarov but we will make
every effort to prevent his hand-over to Azerbaijan,’ the speakers
said.
Lieutenant Ramil Safarov, an officer in the Azerbaijan Army, who was
attending courses in Budapest, murdered his Armenian counterpart
Markarian in a state of affect after the latter used foul language
against the Azerbaijani people, martyrs and the national flag.
The pre-trial hearing held in Budapest on November 25 decided to hold
the Azerbaijani officer’s trial on February 8, 2005.
Hungarian Ombudsman Barnabas Lenkovich, who attended the third
international conference of Ombudsmen in Baku on November 29-30, did
not rule out that the trial of Safarov may be prolonged for another
18 months under the country’s relevant laws.*