ANKARA: Turkey condemns Slovakia for recognizing Armenian genocide

Turkey condemns Slovakia’s parliament for recognizing Armenian genocide

Anatolia news agency
2 Dec 04

ANKARA

The Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) condemned the Slovakian
national parliament, which decided to recognize so-called Armenian
genocide.

Releasing a statement on Thursday [2 December], MFA said: “The
Slovakian national parliament decided on November 30th to recognize
the tragic events of 1915 as genocide with a fait accompli by a
political party. We regret and condemn such a decision of the
Slovakian national parliament.”

“Making judgements about controversial periods in the history of
someone else is not among duties and responsibilities of national
parliaments. Such a decision was taken for political purposes by
distorting events which actually caused Turks and Armenians to suffer
grave pains on the conditions of the World War I,” the ministry said.

MFA added: “In a period during which we are obliged to inherit
friendship and tolerance to the next generations instead of hatred,
this decision of the Slovakian national parliament contradicts
international facts. It is evident that this decision can not serve
any useful purpose.”

‘We were waiting for our time’

Daily News, South Africa
Nov 30 2004

‘We were waiting for our time’
November 30, 2004

‘And every time he tried to eat, they kicked him in the face. And
then they told him to eat again!”

There’s uproarious laughter as the three men seated in the hotel room
reminisce about the abuse and torture they suffered in Black Beach
prison over the last eight months.

Laughter seems inappropriate, but it is no doubt the laughter of
relief. On Friday a judge acquitted these three – Mark Schmidt,
Americo Ribeiro and Ablo Augusto – on charges of participating in a
plot to topple Equatorial Guinea’s President Teodoro Obiang Nguema in
a coup.

On Saturday afternoon they were free men, talking about their
experiences in a Malabo hotel before getting onto an aircraft on
Sunday to fly home.

Five other South Africans were not so lucky. Nic du Toit, charged
with being the ringleader of the group in Malabo, the country’s
capital, was sentenced to an effective 34 years in prison while the
others – George Alerson, Bone Boonzaaier, Jose Domingos and Sergio
Cardoso – each got an effective 17 years in prison. All were also
fined.

Mark Schmidt, the youngest of the South Africans, describes how he
walked wide-eyed into the catastrophe.

“I was working odd jobs, bringing in a little money. I got word from
Bone (Boonzaaier) that there was work for me (in Equatorial Guinea)
for $1 500 (R8 820). It wasn’t much in dollars, but it was double
what I was earning back home.”

“I saw this place as a good place for business. There was timber,
fishing, farming and transport. There was plenty.”

It all fell apart in the first week of March. “On Saturday the
soldiers and police were very busy all around us. We asked the people
what was going on and they said they were arresting strangers.”

On the morning of Monday, March 8, police surrounded
the house Schmidt and the crew of Armenian pilots were staying in.

“I didn’t think anything of it. I thought it was just the way they
handle transport problems around here,” said Schmidt.

Later that evening the soldiers and police made their move.

“Suddenly there was military everywhere, bursting through doors,
windows, lights everywhere. It was so scary. The soldiers were
reeking of alcohol and they were threatening us with weapons. They
threw me down and put a gun to my head. I thought I was going to die
right there,” said Schmidt.

Equatorial Guinean Minister Antonio Javier Nguema was also present at
the arrests, barking orders at the men. Later he was to join the men
in prison.

That night the men were all taken to Black Beach Prison where they
were thrown to-gether in a 20m x 4m cell with hands cuffed behind
their backs – and with more than 200 other foreigners.

This was to be their home for the next eight months, two weeks and
five days.

“Some of the guys were crying, begging for them to loosen the cuffs.
Every time you turned, even a little bit, the cuffs tightened more.
They’d just say: “Too tight?” Then they’d tighten it some more,” said
Augusto.

That day a cycle of system-atic torture started which was to continue
for 10 days.

Videotaped and beaten incessantly, the men were “encouraged” to tell
the truth. Nic du Toit and George Alerson were kept in separate cells
from the rest of the men for the first two months.

The men were taken in a seemingly random order for questioning with
beatings taking place at any time.

“I smiled and this military guy came up and gave me a moer se klap,”
said Schmidt.

But in a bizarre variation from the harsh treatment, the men were
given takeaway food the first week in jail.

“The food never tasted like anything because you were being beaten
while eating,” said Augusto.

“With your hands cuffed behind your back constantly you can’t do most
things. Not even use the toilet. I had to wipe Bone’s bum for him.
Every time I gave him shit he’d remind me that I wiped his bum,” said
Schmidt, making everybody in the room laugh.

Even washing was a humiliating affair and the first time the men were
allowed to wash was almost two weeks after their initial
incarceration.

Taken outside to a wire fence adjacent to the outside public, they
were stripped naked and with their hands still cuffed behind their
backs, one of the prisoners washed them.

“They took Sergio and Bone to a small, dark room where there is blood
splattered on the walls. I think people have died inside that room,”
said Augusto.

It was here the men say Nic was beaten and Sergio was given electric
shock treatment.

Many of the men were also subjected to torture with a lighter held
under their feet.

During Cardoso and Du Toit’s torture sessions, the second most
powerful and most feared man in Equatorial Guinea, Minister of
Security Manuel Mba, was present, said Augusto.

One group, who worked on a Wednesday, were particularly brutal and
seemed to take especially great delight in beating the men.
“They’d say: ‘Eat!’ So you eat and then, boom! they beat you and kick
your plate over. Then they say: ‘Eat!’ And it happens again and
again,” said Augusto.

Later the men learnt to eat and do everything by keeping their eyes
focused on the ground, never making eye contact which would instantly
be seen as a challenge and provoke an attack.
“If you look at anyone, it’s a sin.”

The German national Gerhard Menz died of malaria, according to the
Equatorial Guinean authorities. But the men speak of a different
course of events and cause of death.

“When they hit him, he never said a word,” said Augusto. But this
seemed to provoke the soldiers to beat him even more severely.
“After one beating, he started speaking in German, which he never did
before,” he continued.

Menz was looking in bad shape and repeated calls for medical
attention were ignored.

“They stripped him naked, picked him up and threw three buckets of
water over him. Then they put his body in front of us. His chest was
yellow and swollen and he was still muttering in German,” said
Augusto.

The old man Menz, an avid cigar connoisseur but noncigarette smoker,
asked his fellow inmates for a cigarette on that fateful day.

“We watched him die. We were waiting for our time also,” said
Augusto.

But, then, just as brutally and abruptly as their nightmare had
started, it stopped. The men believe that the death of Menz scared
the authorities.

Shortly after the arrests, Angolan authorities arrived to question
the Angolan-South Africans. Hot on their heels were Zimbabwean
investigators who spent a month questioning the men in minute detail.

Then it was the turn of the South African Scorpions.

After this, as the investi-gation shifted towards the financiers of
the coup, who had not been arrested, the prisoners, still in
leg-irons and handcuffs, were left to start accli-matising to life in
prison.

But Black Beach Prison is like no other. Or perhaps it is not so
different. If you have money, you can have comforts.

By contrast with the brutal-ity and harsh conditions, there was a
flourishing shebeen, and women are brought in to sleep with men for a
fee, and prisoners go walking around at night.

One of the warders was even taking Nigerian prisoners out of the
cells at night to steal cement at a construction site for him.

“I was in the shebeen and drinking a beer when one of the soldiers
(who had been beating them) apologised to me. He said he was just
following orders,” said Schmidt.

“The men who beat us, they are our friends now,” agrees Augusto.

After about two weeks in jail, Schmidt was made the cook in prison
and his leg-irons were removed.

“They’d take me into town with my long beard to do the shopping.
Meat, vegetables and stuff,” said Schmidt.

Schmidt was taken to the largest supermarket in town to shop for
groceries for the men.

All the men agree that they have found great solace in God while in
prison and used to avidly read the Bible and pray together.

As the trial dragged on the men drew some hope from
the government’s statements that it wanted to hold a trial that could
pass international scrutiny.

But throughout the trial, all evidence of torture was suppressed and
translations were often inaccurate and sometimes said exactly the
opposite of what witnesses said.

On judgement day the men stood mystified in the make-shift court room
in the Atepa Convention Centre for the last time as their fates were
read out in Spanish.

Only later in the cells were the men able to piece together what had
happened.

“Thank you God,” said Ribeiro.

“Happiness. I didn’t expect it,” said Augusto.

“I was just relieved,” said Schmidt.

But their personal joy was marred by the pain of leaving their
comrades behind. The Armenian aircrew were particularly shocked to
find five of them sentenced to 14 years each, with the pilot getting
21 years.

As talk turns to the men who are still sitting in Black Beach Prison,
Ribeiro, who had been silent throughout, closed his eyes and started
sobbing un-controllably, tears running over the lines of his
weathered face.

“When I left them I was crying. We were all crying,” stammered
Ribeiro.

“We told them to be strong, keep on praying and we’ll see you soon,”
said Augusto.

As free men, they hope to piece together the life they
once had.

Ribeiro plans to return to Mpumalanga with his common-law-wife and
hopes he can get his old job as a park ranger back.

Schmidt plans to look for a real job.

“You think a lot in prison. I don’t have qualifications, unless my
background in the army gets you a job,” he says.

But first things first.

“I’m going to make love. And then I want to get married
as soon as possible.” – Independent Foreign Service

Karabakh conflict must be settled through dialogue, intl mediation

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
November 30, 2004 Tuesday

Karabakh conflict must be settled through dialogue, intl mediation

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN

Secretary of Russia’s Security Council Igor Ivanov said a settlement
of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict should be found through dialogue
between the parties, with active international mediation.

Ivanov made the statement at the 10th meeting of national security
chiefs of the member-states of the Collective Security Treaty
Organization (CSTO).

“There are mechanisms which are expected to contribute to the search
for a political settlement of conflicts, including the one in Nagorno
Karabakh,” he said, adding that Russia will continue to provide
assistance within the framework of existing mechanisms.

In his view, the present-day task is to use mediating functions to a
greater extent, which are performed by the OSCE trio (Russia, France
and the United States), and promote further dialogue between the
parties.

Ivanov noted the positive fact that the Armenian-Azerbaijani dialogue
“does take place, including at the top level.” There is no need to
introduce the elements that can complicate the development of this
dialogue, he underlined.

Reuters historical calendar – December 7

Reuters historical calendar – December 7

LONDON, Nov 30 (Reuters) – Following are some of the major events to have
occurred on Dec. 7 in modern history:

1916 – Herbert Asquith resigned as British prime minister and was replaced
by David Lloyd George, the war secretary, with a commitment to wage all-out
war on Germany.

1941 – Japanese planes attacked the U.S. Pacific fleet at Pearl Harbour,
Hawaii, destroying many aircraft and ships and precipitating the U.S.
declaration of war on Japan.

1953 – David Ben Gurion, who had been prime minister of Israel since its
foundation, resigned.

1965 – Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras of the Greek Orthodox Church
formally annulled the excommunication pronounced on the Church of Rome in 1054.

1971 – Libya announced the nationalisation of British Petroleum’s assets in
the country.

1972 – Apollo 17, the last Apollo mission, took off on its mission to the
moon.

1975 – The Indonesian army swept into East Timor as civil war broke out
after the Portuguese colonial rulers of three centuries left.

1982 – Charlie Brooks Jr., a prisoner on death row at Fort Worth prison,
Texas, was executed by lethal injection — the first to die by this method in
the United States.

1985 – Robert Graves, English poet and author of the novel “I, Claudius,”
died aged 90.

1988 – In Armenia, an earthquake measuring 6.9 on the Richter scale killed
more than 25,000 people.

1993 – The U.S. government said it had concealed 204 nuclear blasts at its
Nevada test site, more than one fifth of total tests, to keep the old Soviet
Union in the dark.

1993 – Don Ameche, who broke into Hollywood films as a suave leading man in
the 1930s but had to wait five decades to win his first Oscar for his role in
“Cocoon,” died.

1993 – A lone gunman aboard a packed rush-hour commuter train opened fire at
passengers just outside New York, killing six and wounding 19.

1993 – Felix Houphouet-Boigny, Africa’s longest serving leader and the only
president the Ivory Coast had known, died aged 88.

1995 – A probe from the spacecraft Galileo successfully entered the
atmosphere of the planet Jupiter.

1996 – Algerian President Liamine Zeroual signed into law constitutional
reforms that banned political parties based on religion or language.

2001 – Taliban rule over its last bastion of Kandahar in southern
Afghanistan ended with its forces laying down arms.

2002 – Miss Turkey, Azra Akin, won the Miss World competition in London. The
event was moved from Nigeria after 200 died there in violence between
Christians and Muslims sparked by a newspaper article on the competition that many
Muslims found blasphemous.

2003 – Former Nicaraguan president Arnoldo Aleman was convicted of fraud,
money laundering and misuse of public funds and sentenced to 20 years in prison
and fined.

11/30/04 19:02 ET

Juvenile delinquency on rise in Karabakh

Juvenile delinquency on rise in Karabakh

Arminfo, Yerevan
29 Nov 04

STEPANAKERT

The problem of juvenile delinquency was discussed at an operational
meeting of the Nagornyy Karabakh Police.

The meeting pointed to the growing crime rate among underage children
in recent years, especially in the capital, an Arminfo correspondent
reports from Stepanakert. About a third of all crimes have been
committed by minors this year. These mainly included robberies, which
is largely preconditioned by social factors – disadvantaged families,
financial difficulties, etc.

Participants in the meeting pointed to the low effectiveness of work
with adolescents, which necessitates the strengthening of preventive
work in an effort to pre-empt juvenile crimes and offences. Also
discussed was the problem of street children, which is exacerbated by
lack of orphanages in the republic.

The number of thefts has considerably increased over the past several
years. The highest number of thefts is registered in Stepanakert and
Mardakert [Agdara], the meeting participants said.

Teacher saw Patriot Act as lesson in civic action

Brockton Enterprise, MA
Nov 29 2004

Teacher saw Patriot Act as lesson in civic action

By Theresa Knapp Enos, Enterprise Correspondent

BRIDGEWATER – Raymond P. Ajemian is a history professor at two local
community colleges, but on Nov. 8 he held perhaps his largest class
ever when he gave a civics lesson on the USA Patriot Act to 228
residents at special town meeting.

“It is our responsibility, as local citizens, not only to work out
zoning bylaws but also to look at national laws, and that’s all we’re
asking: For this town to send a message to our legislators that we
want them to re-look at this (Patriot) Act,” Ajemian said.

He is a member of Citizens for an Informed Community, which contends
that portions of the Patriot Act – enacted after the Sept. 11, 2001,
terrorist attacks – violate Americans’ civil liberties.

“We’re not opposed to the Patriot Act, just parts of it,” said
Ajemian, 62, of Bridgewater.

Citizens for an Informed Community is a nonpartisan group formed two
years ago in an attempt to prevent the war in Iraq.

Once the war started, Ajemian said, the group changed its focus and
began to hold forums on a variety of national issues, including the
Patriot Act.

Two years ago, Ajemian suggested to the group that Bridgewater enact
a resolution to ask state and national representatives to take a
closer look at the ramifications of the law. The group was not
interested at the time, but this year jumped on board.

“I presented it to the group and I said that if two or three people
from the group from Bridgewater were interested then I would
proceed,” he said.

Residents Vernon Domingo, Mary Pendleton, Frances Jeffries and Andrew
Harding joined Ajemian in a mission to effect change from the local
level’s effort.

The proposed resolution sparked a 30-minute debate at town meeting,
which ultimately passed the article, making Bridgewater the 47th
community in Massachusetts with such a resolution.

“The Patriot Act probably will have absolutely no effect on people in
Bridgewater,” said Ajemian, who commended town meeting for taking a
stand on a national issue. “But that’s not the point.”

Nationally, since President Bush signed the Patriot Act into law on
Oct. 26, 2001, at least 355 communities, four states and hundreds of
organizations, including the American Library Association and the
National League of Cities, have registered their opposition to
sections of the act and to what they see as a general erosion of
civil liberties since Sept. 11, according to Common Dreams, a
nonprofit news service.

The Patriot Act addresses how government agencies may conduct
investigations “to deter and punish terrorist acts in the United
States.” It loosened protections on electronic eavesdropping and
makes it easier for law enforcement agencies to to gather personal
information on Americans, from library loans to medical records.

Supporters say it is a necessary tool for combating terrorism and is
not a dramatic departure from previous laws, but rather an extension
of existing statutes.

Jeffries, a member of the subgroup, said Ajemian was instrumental in
passing Bridgewater’s resolution.

“There is no question that Ray was the one that had the passion and
the drive on the committee,” Jeffries said. “He’s an ordinary citizen
doing extraordinary things.”

Ajemian, who teaches history and politics at Massasoit Community
College in Brockton and Bristol Community College in Fall River,
first got involved with what is now known as the Citizens for an
Informed Community when he saw two people picketing on the Town
Common. He admires people who take a stand on issues that may not
directly affect them. The group now has about 25 members.

“This thing (activism) had been latent within me for quite some
time,” Ajemian said.

He was born in Detroit, received a bachelor’s degree in Middle
Eastern history in 1964 and a master’s degree in American history in
1970 from the University of Michigan. He served in the Army from 1965
to 1967.

He was a teacher in Taunton from 1970 to 1983 and in Dartmouth from
1983 to 1985. He worked for about 18 years in financial services.

Ajemian lives in Bridgewater with his wife, Cristina, also a teacher
at Massasoit Community College, and two children, Peter, 29, and Ani,
25. He is semi-retired and has been teaching at Massasoit for two
years.

“He is a kind gentleman and a good professor,” said Karyn Boutin,
dean of the public service-social science division at Massasoit. “He
is a person of integrity and great respect.”

Paul Bowman, 66, takes Middle Eastern history with Ajemian at
Massasoit. Bowman says Ajemian is a “great instructor and a credit to
the community at Massasoit.”

“I’m not sure if it was personal experience or not, but in our Middle
Eastern class, he brought in a little bit of Armenia when we talked
about Turkey and the (Armenian) massacre,” Bowman said.

In fact, it was from personal experience.

Ajemian’s parents were born in Turkey and were forced to leave during
the Armenian genocide of 1915-18, when an estimated 1-1/2 million
Armenians died during a campaign of deportation, expropriation,
abduction, torture, massacre and starvation.

“Most people aren’t sensitive to the Bill of Rights,” said Ajemian, a
member of the American Civil Liberties Union for 30 years. “I think I
am because both my parents were immigrants that were forced to leave
(Turkey) and come unwillingly to the United States.”

Ajemian said his mother’s family was killed during the genocide. She
was sent to an American orphanage and eventually found her way to the
United States. Ajemian’s father was sent to the United States, when
his grandfather understood there was no other safe choice.

“There are things you learn growing up the child of immigrants. There
were some things my mother would not talk about. That teaches you
something,” Ajemian said. “I think it made me sensitive to government
that can take away people’s rights.”

Other members of the citizens group have had similar life-altering
experiences, including one man who fled South Africa because of
apartheid. Together, they say, they are champions of the U.S.
Constitution.

“The bottom line is, if people don’t speak up, (lawmakers) could
slip,” Ajemian said.

“A lot of people think that it’s not going to happen but it has, and
it could and we have to be vigilant about that,” he said. “I think
that the Patriot Act, at least parts of it, are dangerous.”

Just as Ajemian is passionate about the Patriot Act, he is passionate
about all things Bridgewater, said Town Clerk Ron Adams, who served
with Ajemian on the Planning Board in the 1980s.

During that time, Adams said, the board established the town’s first
master plan with an eye toward increasing lot sizes, saving open
space and preserving the character of the town.

“He has always been community-oriented,” Adams said. “He’s always
been looking for things to do in the town to make it a better place.
The town needs more Ray Ajemians.”

Since passage of the Bridgewater resolution, neighboring communities
have asked for help in passing resolutions of their own, Ajemian
said.

And he hopes the group will continue to spark local interest on
national issues.

Predicted Ajemian, “Patriot (Act) 2 is coming along, but it’s worse
than Patriot 1.”

Parts of the Patriot Act are set to expire in 2005 unless renewed by
Congress. Critics say the renewed law could contain provisions that
would further erode Americans’ rights.

“We can’t leave it up to our representatives to represent us, to make
all the decisions, because sometimes they’re not going to make the
right decisions,” he said. “We have to be heard.”

More information on Citizens for an Informed Community can be found
at

www.geocities.com/informedcommunity.

BAKU: Baku backs Council of Europe’s involvement in Karabakhsettleme

Baku backs Council of Europe’s involvement in Karabakh settlement – official

Turan news agency
26 Nov 04

Baku, 26 November: Azerbaijan is in favour of involving the Venice
Commission of the Council of Europe in preparing the status of
Azerbaijan’s Nagornyy Karabakh region, Deputy Foreign Minister Araz
Azimov told reporters today.

“The Venice Commission has very good rights experts. They could come
up with some suggestions on the issue. However, Armenia is against
this,” Azimov said. He expressed his regret that Azerbaijan’s
proposal to this effect was not accepted during the discussions of
David Atkinson’s report on Karabakh at the political committee of
the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe [PACE].

Commenting on Azerbaijan’s view of Karabakh’s future, Azimov said that
Baku is ready to grant autonomy to the region. It is up to the central
government to deal with issues related to state attributes, he said.

Azimov said that the region could also be granted economic freedom
and certain administrative independence.

BAKU: NATO seminar in Azeri capital debates Karabakh, Caucasus secur

NATO seminar in Azeri capital debates Karabakh, Caucasus security

ANS TV, Baku
25 Nov 04

Azerbaijan is a target of terror plotted by the Armenian special
services, Azerbaijani Interior Minister Ramil Usubov said at the 58th
Rose-Roth seminar of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly in Baku on 25
November. The minister said that 32 terror attacks had been carried out
against Azerbaijan and that the authorities had exposed six branches
of charity organizations suspected of financing terrorists. Also
speaking at the seminar, US political expert Brenda Shaffer said
that Washington should play an active role in the settlement of
the Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagornyy Karabakh conflict and be more
helpful. Asked about NATO’s plans to expand towards the South Caucasus
and Central Asia, NATO Parliamentary Assembly Secretary-General
Simon Lunn said that the aim was to hold peacekeeping operations. The
following is the text of the report by Azerbaijani TV station ANS on
25 November:

[Presenter Natavan Babayeva] Except for Armenian MPs, parliamentarians
of NATO member countries are in Baku today. The 58th Rose-Roth seminar
has been kicked off in Baku. Despite the Armenians’ absence from the
seminar, the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict was in focus.

NATO’s eastward expansion questioned

[Correspondent over the seminar participants] Security issues in
the South Caucasus were the topic of the 58th Rose-Roth seminar of
NATO’s Parliamentary Assembly. Representatives of several states
highlighted the occupation of Azerbaijani territories by the Armenian
army. The Nagornyy Karabakh conflict, including open debates with
the participation of the NATO member countries on the security of
the Euro-Atlantic space, were of special significance, Speaker of
the Milli Maclis Murtuz Alasgarov said, adding that the discussions
in the seminar would contribute to the resolution of the conflict in
conformity with respect for international legal norms, territorial
integrity, and inviolability of borders.

In turn, NATO Parliamentary Assembly Secretary-General Simon Lunn
stressed that NATO is not just a military alliance, but also a
democratic organization. The secretary-general said that as a
democratic body, NATO is concerned about the conflict, like many
other international bodies. Today, 26 countries are members of NATO,
Simon Lunn said, adding that it is a priority issue to expand its
boundaries towards the Balkans, Eastern Europe, the South Caucasus
and Central Asia in the near future.

After his speech, MPs put questions to the secretary-general.

[MP Rauf Qurbanov from the Communist Party of Azerbaijan] What concrete
aims does NATO pursue in eastward expansion and involvement of the
ex-Soviet republics in this military bloc?

[MP Siyavus Novruzov] My question is about combating terrorism,
extremism, drug trafficking and ethnic cleansing. What could be NATO’s
role in dealing with these issues in uncontrolled territories in the
South Caucasus?

[Correspondent] These are Simon Lunn’s answers to the questions:
First, the aim of expanding the military bloc is to hold peacekeeping
operations. As for the other question, NATO can only have an exchange
of opinions based on consultations.

USA’s role in Karabakh settlement

The head of the Caspian Research Center, Dr Brenda Shaffer, did not
agree with the term of frozen conflicts in the region. She believes
that people in the region are not yet ready for the resolution of
the conflict. A special mechanism should be worked out to resolve the
conflict. We are building a bridge between the sides to the conflict,
however, a tornado sweeps it aside. Now we should do our best, build
a bridge and protect it from the tornado, she said.

A Turkish MP made a remark about Shaffer’s opinion. He said that the
talk is not about the conflict, but the occupation. Armenia is not a
party to the conflict, but the occupier. Regrettably, the USA is not
neutral in this issue and is more pro-Armenian. Shaffer consented to
this opinion partly.

[Shaffer in English with Azeri voice-over] As for America as the
super state, I deem this criticism natural. The USA should play an
active role in the resolution of the Nagornyy Karabakh problem and
be more helpful.

[Correspondent] MP Aleksey Volkov from Russia wanted to know when
NATO will deal with the Nagornyy Karabakh problem in earnest. MP
Rizvan Cabiyev from Azerbaijan commented on the OSCE Minsk Group’s
US co-chairman, Steven Mann’s, statement that it will take decades
to resolve the Nagornyy Karabakh problem.

[MP Rizvan Cabiyev] The use of such terms could lay the foundation
of a dangerous tendency which, in turn, may provoke a more perilous
war. In this context, do you, Mrs Shaffer, not think that double
standards exist in dealing with the South Caucasus, in particular,
the Nagornyy Karabakh problem?

[Correspondent] Mrs Shaffer’s answer to the question was that the
Karabakh problem should be resolved between the two sides on the
basis of dialogue.

Azerbaijan target of terror

Speaking about potential factors that could undermine domestic
stability, Interior Minister Ramil Usubov said that Azerbaijan was a
target of terror plotted by the Armenian special services. Thirty-two
acts of terror have been committed against Azerbaijan.

The minister also said that branches of six aid organizations
suspected of transferring money to terrorists were unveiled and 43
people cooperating with those organizations were arrested.

However, Armenian MPs did not hear these accusations. They made up
their opinions at the last minute and refused to arrive in Baku
trying to put the blame on Baku for their refusal to attend the
Baku-hosted seminar.

Let us recall that Armenian MP Mger Shakhgeldyan, who was due in Baku
today, explained the reason for the refusal to visit Baku with the
failure of the Azerbaijani parliament to guarantee their security.

Actually, when our crew members went to Heydar Aliyev airport to film
the Armenian MPs, they saw officers of the presidential security
guard. The 58th Rose-Roth seminar of NATO’s Parliamentary Assembly
will complete its work on 27 November.

Afat Telmanqizi, Azar Qarayev for ANS.

Congress Adopts Key U.S.-Armenia Trade Provision. Bill Headed ForPre

CONGRESS ADOPTS KEY U.S.-ARMENIA TRADE PROVISION. BILL HEADED FOR
PRESIDENTIAL SIGNATURE

WASHINGTON, November 22 (Noyan Tapan). The U.S. Senate, on November
19, unanimously acted to permanently normalize trade between the
U.S. and Armenia, opening the door to expanded economic relations,
new commercial opportunities, and the further strengthening of
the longstanding bonds between the American and Armenian peoples,
reported the Armenian National Committee Of America (ANCA). With the
House version of the measure adopted in October, the bill now goes
to President Bush for signature.

This provision, which grants Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR)
status to Armenia, was adopted in the final hours of the of the
Senate lame-duck session as part of the larger bill, H.R.1047 – the
Miscellaneous Trade and Technical Corrections Act. The bill, which
has been held up due to human rights concerns in Laos, was considered
following a Senate vote to avert a filibuster of the measure.

Armenian Caucus Co-Chairman Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) was the first
to raise the issue of Armenia PNTR in Congress. His legislation,
H.R.528, introduced last year was supported by the Armenian Caucus
and cosponsored by 112 other Members of Congress. A companion bill
was introduced on the Senate side by Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY)
and cosponsored by 21 other Senators. The strong support for these
measures paved the way for their inclusion by members of Congress
negotiating the final version of the larger trade measure.

“The ANCA welcomes the Congressional passage of the Armenia-PNTR
bill and thanks Congressman Knollenberg, Senator McConnell and all
those who played a role in securing its passage,” said Ken Hachikian,
Chairman of the ANCA. “Following Presidential signature of the measure,
we look forward to exploring new opportunities to further expand the
growing U.S.-Armenia economic relationship.”

The Armenian Assembly of America hailed the vote by the United
States Senate to extend permanent normal trade relations (PNTR) to
Armenia. “Well aware that a robust economy is critical to Armenia’s
future development, passage of Armenia PNTR was an instrumental
part of the Assembly’s legislative agenda,” said Armenian Assembly
Board of Trustees Chairman Hirair Hovnanian. “We would like to thank
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-TN) for his steadfast support
of Armenia PNTR and for allowing Senate consideration of this bill.
Additionally, we thank Senate Finance Committee Chairman Charles
Grassley (R-IA) and it’s Ranking Member Max Baucus (D-MT) for their
active involvement and support as conferees to resolve differences
between the House and Senate versions of the MTB.”

The Trade Act of 1974 excluded all Soviet countries from having
normal trade relations (NTR) status with the United States. One
particular provision of the Act, known as the Jackson-Vanik
amendment, required the President to deny NTR to those countries
that restricted free emigration. The policy was adopted, in part,
in response to Communist government restrictions on the emigration
of Jews. According to the terms of the Jackson-Vanik amendment, when
the President determines that freedom of emigration rights have been
reinstated in a country, normal trade relations may be granted. To
maintain NTR, the President must report to Congress twice a year
that Jackson-Vanik requirements have been met. While successive
Presidents have waived the Jackson-Vanik Amendment restrictions on
Armenia during the past decade, the passage of the Knollenberg bill,
would grant Armenia permanent normal trade relations status, without
the need for semi-yearly Presidential determinations.

Europe throws up a volatile challenge to Turkey’s idea of national s

Europe throws up a volatile challenge to Turkey’s idea of national self
By SELCAN HACAOGLU

The Associated Press
11/23/04 19:32 EST

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) – As a child, Hrant Dink dreamed of becoming
a homicide detective, but he faced an insurmountable obstacle. In
overwhelmingly Muslim Turkey, Jews and Christians can’t join the
police.

Now that unwritten rule, product of a history of ethnic strife and
distrust of non-Muslim minorities, is coming into heated debate
as Turkey faces up to the reforms it must undertake to achieve its
cherished goal of joining the European Union.

Things almost came to blows earlier this month at a news conference by
a semiofficial human rights body, when its chairman, Ibrahim Kaboglu,
suggested Turkey must expand minority rights.

Fahrettin Yokus, a civil service union leader, grabbed the papers from
Kaboglu’s hands and ripped them up. “We don’t recognize this report;
it is aimed at dividing the country,” he shouted.

The EU demands, he charged, “are threatening our unity.”

Kaboglu, whose Human Rights Advisory Council was created by the
prime minister’s office, has sought police protection. His critics,
meanwhile, have petitioned state prosecutors to file treason charges
against Kaboglu and those who signed the statement that he read.

Tensions have heightened since an EU panel ruled last month that
for Turkey to negotiate its way into the prosperous 25-nation bloc,
it would have to meet European standards of democracy and human rights.

It urged Turkey to grant more rights to ethnic Kurds and recognize
Alawites, a religious sect rooted in Islam, as a minority. Jews and
Christians already have minority rights, but are still suffering
discrimination, such as exclusion from the police, Foreign Ministry
and military officers’ corps, the panel
said.

But while multiculturalism may be the norm in much of Europe, it’s
an explosive concept in Turkey. Here children open the school day
by saying “Happy is the one who says ‘I am a Turk,”‘ and the word
“minority’ is seen by nationalists as code for national fragmentation.

More than a quarter of Turkey’s 71 million people are either Kurds,
Alawites or share both identities. It has an estimated 130,000
non-Muslims – Greek, Armenian and other Christians, and Jews.

President Ahmet Necdet Sezer says the debate over minority rights is
“destructive,” and that every citizen of the state – Muslim or other –
is a Turk and is bound to the Turkish state.

Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul ruled out any official recognition of
Muslim minorities. As for non-Muslims, he acknowledged that there are
“possible snags,” such as property rights, which the government was
trying to address.

The military, which regards itself as the guardian of a united, secular
Turkey, spelled out its distaste for the idea of Muslim minority
rights in a statement read to a news conference by its deputy chief,
Gen. Ilker Basbug.

“The nation is a whole. It cannot be seen as made up of pieces,” it
said. Otherwise “this would open the way to the breakup of the state.”

This unyielding approach is rooted in the founding doctrines of the
Turkish republic that arose in 1923 on the ashes of the Ottoman Empire.

Although the new constitution was staunchly secular, many Turkish
Muslims regarded Christians and Jews as foreigners in their new
state. They were deeply suspicious of the Greeks and Armenians, the
main Christian communities, which had risen up against the Ottoman
Empire as it collapsed.

The new definition of Turkishness was strictly enforced, especially
on the Kurds who dominate the southeast. Their language was suppressed
and a Kurdish rebellion has left 37,000 dead since 1984.

Sectarian clashes also broke out between Alawites and the Sunni Muslim
majority in the late 1970s and again in the 1990s.

Dink, an Armenian Christian, is now 50 and a journalist. He told NTV,
a private network, that all he wanted was to catch murderers. “But
I was barred from becoming a detective in this country because I am
seen as a security concern.”