BAKU: Azeri leader gives thumbs up to country’s economic development

Azeri leader gives thumbs up to country’s economic development

Azerbaijani TV Channel One, Baku
10 Nov 04

Azerbaijan’s economy is developing fast and the country is going in the
right direction, President Ilham Aliyev has told journalists during his
tour of southern districts. Commenting on a forthcoming NATO meeting in
Baku, Aliyev said that Azerbaijan could not bar Armenian MPs from Baku
because the country should not isolate itself from processes going on
in the world. The following is the text of the report by Azerbaijani
TV on 10 November; subheadings have been inserted editorially:

[Presenter] Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has held a number
of remarkable meetings during his visit to southern districts of
Azerbaijan. During the visit, he answered questions of interest to
media representatives.

[Video shows Ilham Aliyev surrounded by journalists, correspondent
is asking] Mr President, you have signed a new decree which says
that delegations visiting foreign countries should report on their
visits. Why do you think it was necessary to sign such a decree?

[Ilham Aliyev] I think it is necessary because every delegation should
make a report on its meetings and issues that were discussed. Of
course, the president and other relevant bodies should be aware
of that. Because there are issues that are directly related to
ministries. For this reason, such a system will enable all ministries
and state agencies to learn which issues were discussed and which
conclusions were drawn. That is the goal. I think that this will make
a very good contribution to our common work and the issues that are
discussed and the decisions that are made during foreign visits will
be clear to everyone.

Baku cannot bar Armenians from NATO meeting

[Correspondent] Mr President, there is dissatisfaction with NATO’s
invitation of Armenian MPs to Azerbaijan. The Karabakh Liberation
Organization has issued a new statement and expressed its objection. We
would like to learn your attitude to this as the president. Should
Armenian MPs be invited to Azerbaijan and participate in events
here? [Speaker] Murtuz Alasgarov has already met [Armenian Speaker
Armen] Bagdasaryan.

[Ilham Aliyev] Any organization can express its objection to any
issue. There is democracy, freedom of speech and independence in
Azerbaijan, as you know, b ut Azerbaijan has its own interests and
general policy. I would like to tell you that various officials from
Armenia visited Azerbaijan in the past, including Armenian members
of parliament. The Armenian prime minister also visited here several
years ago. And for some reason, this did not cause objections of the
organization you mentioned.

As you know, Azerbaijan did not let Armenian servicemen into
Azerbaijan. Although this did not go down well with international
organizations, we insisted on our position and I personally decided
that Armenian servicemen should not come to Azerbaijan. This is an
issue of principle. A representative of an occupying army cannot
visit Azerbaijan.

As for other international events, we cannot isolate ourselves from
the processes taking place in the world. In general, we cannot isolate
Azerbaijan from this issue. We want international events to be held
in Azerbaijan – conferences, seminars, including those held under the
aegis of international organizations. There is nothing new here. If
we reject this, this will only play into Armenia’s hands. For this
reason, I think that it is wrong to make an unnecessary fuss about this
issue. The government knows everything and the president regulates all
issues. We will never make concessions on issues of principle. But
if we give up this seminar and meeting because of Armenians, this
will not benefit us.

Azeri economy going in right direction

[Second correspondent] Mr President, you often visit regions and
how do you assess the pace of the socioeconomic development of the
regions in general?

[Ilham Aliyev] I assess it highly. The economy in Azerbaijan is
developing and new jobs are being created. I mentioned it during my
meetings today. Over 100,000 new jobs were created in one year. In
which country has it happened? This is the result of the policy that
has been conducted in Azerbaijan.

Very important programmes are being adopted in Azerbaijan –
socioeconomic and regional programmes. Businessmen have been granted
independence. Businessmen are being supported and they feel this
support. If they did not feel it, no great investments would have
been made in the Azerbaijani economy over the last year. Both local
businessmen and foreign companies have a clear attitude to this. There
is great trust in the present and future of Azerbaijan. We have gained
this trust and should keep it. Azerbaijan will continue to develop
at a higher pace.

The growth in GDP will be higher next year. The minimum salary and
pensions will increase. All other social payments will increase. At the
same time, as you know, the social tax will be lowered by 5 per cent
next year. And this represents great support for the private sector
development. The measures being taken in the economic sector show
that the country is developing in the right direction and the results
of that are evident. All we need to do is continue this policy. All
the relevant bodies – the government, private sector, businessmen,
local authorities – must advocate a single position in this issue.

BAKU: Trial of Azeri officer due late in November

Trial of Azeri officer due late in November

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Nov 8 2004

The trial of Ramil Safarov, an officer in the Azerbaijani Army,
will be held on November 23, according to Safarov’s defense lawyer
Adil Ismayilov.

Ismayilov said that the Hungary’s Department of Lawyers will act as
the Azerbaijani officer’s defense in the trial.

Safarov was arrested on February 19, 2004 in Budapest after he murdered
an Armenian officer.*

Exchange students learn Bossier Parish judicial system

Shreveport Times, LA
Nov. 5, 2004

Exchange students learn Bossier Parish judicial system

By Loresha Wilson
[email protected]

By Loresha Wilson
[email protected]

Fatima Ibrahimova asked how inmates get married while incarcerated. She
wanted to know if law enforcement officers are ever arrested and if
anyone has escaped from the Bossier Parish Jail.
Heghine Kosakyan questioned whether men and women share the same cell
blocks and if an inmate’s living condition is based on the nature of
the crime committed.
Ibrahimova and Kosakyan, both 17, are foreign exchange students who,
through the Aspect Foundation, received scholarships from the U.S.
State Department to study democracy and the criminal justice system in
the United States. They, along with two other scholars, live in
different areas of Indiana, but for the next couple of days will spend
time in the Shreveport/Bossier City area visiting a local outreach
mission, delivering goods to a homeless shelter and volunteering at a
nursing home.
On Thursday, the group spent a half day touring the Bossier Parish
sheriff’s office and learning the daily operations of the office. Ed
Baswell, sheriff’s spokesman, showed the students around the courthouse
and it’s maximum security jail and they also visited the Bossier Parish
Penal Farm and the parish’s 600-bed medium security facility in Plain
Dealing, where they stood in the control room and watched about 80
female inmates who share two cell blocks. The women eat together,
shower together and sleep together, which was strange to the students.
`This is a little different than where I am from,’ Kosakyan, of
Armenia, said. `In my country there are people who are in jail and
can’t watch TV. There are only four to five people to a cell and they
have their private bathrooms. Here they have no privacy.’
The group also met an investigator with the district attorney’s office
and set in on a couple of court procedures.
Hasmik Sukiasyan, also of Armenia, was curious if the electric chair is
used for execution in Bossier Parish, then asked how often the inmates
eat.
The girls were four of 300 students awarded scholarships for the
program out of 54,000 applicants, said Jayme Tunis, Indiana regional
development director for the Aspect Foundation. They were chosen for
their academic, civil, and leadership abilities, and are most likely to
become future leaders of free nations once under communist control. The
students spend 10 months in America learning about democracy, community
service, government, cultural diversity and more, Tunis said. Upon
returning to their native countries, they will serve on a panel for
three years discussing their experiences here.
`They have superior IQs,’ Tunis said. `These girls are studying to be
future leaders of their countries. It is hoped that the ideals and
doctrines they experience here in America will enable them to implement
the same in their own countries.’
Ibrahimova, of Azerbaijan, plans to study international law. She speaks
six different languages, but says she’ll return to her native country
to attend college.
`I want to be an attorney,’ she said. `Right now I’m learning
everything I can in case I come back to the United States. I read a lot
of books about the criminal justice system here, and things are pretty
much like what I have read. It’s great.’
Kosakyan and Jasmin Grund of Germany also plan to study law. Sukiasyan,
16, wants to be a doctor.
Ibrahimova said, `I didn’t expect the people here to answer all the
questions I had, but they did.’

AAA: Armenia This Week – 11/01/2004

ARMENIA THIS WEEK
Monday, November 1, 2004

MEDIATORS, ARMENIA CRITICIZE AZERBAIJAN’S KARABAKH TACTICS
Mediators from the United States, Russia and France last week criticized
Azerbaijan for its effort to force a debate on the Karabakh conflict at the
United Nations’ General Assembly (UN GA). Capitalizing on solidarity from
members of the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC) and using a UN
procedural loophole, Azerbaijan was able last week to introduce the Karabakh
issue as an additional item on the UN GA agenda.

UN GA resolutions, unlike those of the UN Security Council, are not
mandatory for member states. The UN consensus is for the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), and not UN, to deal with the
Karabakh conflict.

In a deliberately vague memorandum that does not mention either Armenian or
Karabakh authorities, Azerbaijan alleged that unnamed entities were engaged
in “illegal activities” in Karabakh, “in particular by transfer of settlers
in order to create artificially a new demographic situation in those
territories.”

Azeri officials and government-connected entities have made numerous
unfounded accusations against Armenia and Karabakh over the years. Just last
week, Azeri Deputy Parliament Speaker Ziyafet Askerov told British MP’s
that Osama Bin Laden might be hiding in Karabakh. Armenian observers believe
that Azerbaijan chose the “settler issue” to raise at the UN since that
might resonate the most with Islamic countries, on whose support Azerbaijan
is counting, and which are known for their criticism of Israel’s settlement
policies.

Armenia’s Ambassador to the UN Armen Martirosyan accused Azerbaijan of an
effort to scuttle ongoing peace talks and attempt to add a “religious
dimension” to the Karabakh conflict. Martirosyan also repeated Armenia’s
position that should Baku step back from talks on a comprehensive settlement
of the conflict and make efforts to separately address its individual
components, such as raised in its UN proposal, then Azerbaijan should deal
directly with the Nagorno Karabakh Republic’s (NKR) government. Although
Azeris had negotiated directly with NKR when the sides secured the ongoing
cease-fire, Baku has refused to recognize the existence of Karabakh
authorities since then.

France’s Deputy Ambassador to the UN Michel Duclos, speaking also on behalf
of the U.S. and Russia, argued that Azerbaijan’s proposal “would be harmful
to efforts to find a just, lasting settlement” to the conflict. The
Netherlands’ Deputy Ambassador to the UN Arjan Hamburger, speaking on behalf
of the European Union and several candidate countries, opined that the UN GA
session underway was “neither the time nor the venue to pursue this and that
the Azerbaijan initiative may jeopardize the on-going negotiations.”
Ninety-nine countries, including the United States, abstained from voting on
what are typically consensual decisions.

Azerbaijan’s UN envoy Yashar Aliyev admitted last week that his country’s
initiative in the General Assembly was “meeting numerous resistances,” but
indicated that Azerbaijan would press on for a debate. Turkey, Pakistan and
Iran, along with thirty-eight other, mostly Muslim countries, backed
Azerbaijan’s effort. The Armenian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Hamlet
Gasparian noted, however, that 40 percent of mostly Muslim OIC member
countries did not succumb to pressure from Azerbaijan and Turkey.

Azerbaijan also secured the support of Ukraine after the Azeri President
Ilham Aliyev made an unscheduled visit to meet with the pro-government
candidate facing a tight presidential race there. Georgia did not
participate in the vote.

As part of the UN discussion last week, the three mediators also suggested
sending an OSCE fact-finding mission to the region as a way to address any
concerns about developments there. Armenian officials indicated that they
would welcome such a mission, but noted that it would be up to the NKR
leadership to approve visits to areas under Karabakh’s control and that any
mission should cover both sides of the Line of Contact. Azerbaijan has made
no public comment on the proposal and it had previously opposed similar
missions.

Writing last week, the Azeri daily Zerkalo indicated that Azerbaijan was
deliberately seeking to undermine ongoing talks and that “Baku’s move might
bury pressure exerted on Baku by super powers to make it sign an unfavorable
peace accord.”

Most Armenian observers see Azerbaijan’s latest effort as another indication
that its government is aiming to postpone any settlement. Earlier this year,
President Aliyev stated publicly that he was not “in a hurry” to resolve the
conflict, and that since Baku was anticipating additional revenues from
development of the Caspian oil, the country would soon be better positioned
for a new war in Karabakh.

Armenian officials have in turn warned Azerbaijan of “disastrous
consequences” should its leaders resort to military force as they did in the
early 1990s. (Sources: Armenia This Week 2-13, 4-23, 6-18, 8-2, 8-30; Agence
France Presse 10-20; ANS TV 10-27; UN GA Press Release 10-27, 29; Armenian
Foreign Ministry 10-29; Azertag 10-29; Zerkalo 10-29)

A WEEKLY NEWSLETTER PUBLISHED BY THE ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA
122 C Street, N.W., Suite 350, Washington, D.C. 20001 (202) 393-3434 FAX
(202) 638-4904
E-Mail [email protected] WEB

http://www.aaainc.org

Russian Police Corruption Seen As Major Factor In Ineffective Terror

RUSSIAN POLICE CORRUPTION SEEN AS MAJOR FACTOR IN INEFFECTIVE TERROR PREVENTION

Komsomolskaya Pravda, Moscow
27 Oct 04

A Russian paper has looked at failings in the fight against terrorism
in Russia. It recalled that when an investigation was launched
into how terrorists sneaked into the Dubrovka theatre in Moscow,
it turned out that “more than 100 guardians of law from Chechnya to
Moscow virtually turned a blind eye on their movements”. This “loss
of vigilance” sometimes was not at all for free: some policemen, who
were about to inspect the gunmen’s bags with weapons and explosives,
received a bribe, the paper said. Bribe-taking and betrayal in the
police ranks have been detected by prosecutors everywhere, be it
Chechnya, Dagestan, Ingushetia, North Ossetia or Moscow, the paper
said. It pointed out that the only unit in charge of antiterrorism
in the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) is its operational
investigation directorate, just a dozen committed operatives who
cover the whole of the country, but “even these dedicated officers
cannot do much without a network of agents”. Today, however, for fear
of a furious public outcry the FSB has practically discarded the
“institution” of informers. It has become obvious, the paper said,
that no laws, or antiterrorist commissions of all sort, or endless
bureaucratic conferences with loud agendas can protect Russia from
new explosions. The only way, according to the paper, is to restore
a system of training highly qualified operatives and ensure they are
paid well. The following is the text of the article “Not only force
required to fight bandits” published by Russian newspaper Komsomolskaya
Pravda on 27 October. Subheadings are as published:

A three-million-strong army of security officials works to ensure
security for Russian citizens. Why do they often prove helpless
with terrorists?

After terrorist acts in Moscow and Beslan in August and September, it
was announced to Russians that a terrorist war was declared on them. As
though before they never heard of bombings of houses, trains, railway
stations and cafeterias, captures of aeroplanes, downed helicopters
or raids by Chechen-Arab gangs in Kizlyar, Pervomayskoye, Budennovsk,
Nazran and even Moscow. For some reason, it is specifically now that
the authorities have started drafting yet another security doctrine
and setting up federal and interdepartmental antiterrorist commissions,
coordinating committees and new staffs.

The leaders of power structures are ordered to restructure their
work and submit to the Kremlin and Security Council new plans to
fight terrorism. FSB (Federal Security Service), the Internal Affairs
Ministry and Defence Ministry generals prepare new tonnes of directives
and orders, and develop plans of new exercises. However, the ordinary
man has only one interest in all these reforms: he wants to live
without fearing that he may be blown up tomorrow in his bed, in a bus
or an aeroplane. He wants to understand how a gigantic enforcement
machine, whose operation he funds from his pocket, can be forced or
taught to counter gangs of armed monsters or a lone shakhid (martyr,
suicide bomber) woman. We, too, are going to try to figure it out.

How a “five” slumped to be a “failure”

Of all our secret services, the FSB has the most extensive experience
in fighting terrorism. Back in the Soviet times, when it was called
the KGB, it had to grapple seriously with this problem. In Moscow
in 1977, a home-made bomb exploded on a train before it approached
the Pervomayskoye station. Although the KGB did not yet have its
own criminal institute or antiterrorism experts at that time,
the intelligence officers quickly resolved the crime. People who
organized and perpetrated that terrorist act were arrested, convicted
and executed.

Two other bombings, which were planted by the same Armenian
nationalist group in a store on Nikolskaya Street, near Lubyanka, were
prevented. Antiterrorism fight was assigned to one of the departments
of the famous “Five,” a KGB ideological directorate that was loathed
by anti-party people and fought dissidents (it was apparently equated
with terrorism back then).

A different group of KGB foreign intelligence specialists worked
abroad. Their job was to keep dissidents and terrorists out of the
USSR. In 10 years, the intelligence service managed to create virtually
from scratch an effective counterterrorist system: “TNT saboteurs”
and hostage hunters were often apprehended at a stage when they only
just planned their dirty deeds. Yet, in 1991 the USSR collapsed,
and so did a system of countering terrorism.

Books are already written on how hard some Russian politicians of
the Yeltsin era worked to destroy the KGB. Until the late 1990’s,
the new power had been zealously reforming (or more precisely,
ruining) the security structure, which exists in every civilized
state. The “Five” was reduced to the small Directorate for Combating
Terrorism, a hundred people covering the entire Russia. After the
(Chechen rebel commander Shamil) Basayev gang took hostages in
Budennovsk (in June of 1995), a frenzied sequence of new reforms
came. The Antiterrorist Centre and then the Department for Combating
Terrorism and the Directorate for Constitutional Security (political
extremism) were established. Following the Dagestani events in 1999,
the department and administration were merged. The Russian president
issued a decree creating one of the FSB’s most powerful departments:
for protection of constitutional system and combating terrorism.
But after numerous and bungled reforms, many specialists left for
the civilian sector, while a structure that was supposed to deal day
and night with terrorism never came into being (Alfa and Vympel do
not count because they, like a kind of “antiterrorism ambulance”,
come into action when a terrorist act is committed).

After the air strike on New York on 11 September 2001, the Directorate
for Combating International Terrorism was established. Sounds pretty
big, but “warriors” from the new structure spent most of their time
visiting international conferences. There were some incidents,
too. At a conference on fighting terrorism held in Saudi Arabia,
its staffers made a loud declaration on the need to fight mercilessly
Wahhabism. It would not be that bad if Wahhabism was not the official
religion of the kingdom. The stunned hosts reportedly looked like they
saw a ghost. Funny as all this sounds, the speeches for high podiums
were written and approved in Moscow. Then, what level of personnel
training in the country’s main secret service does this testify to?

Who covers Chechnya with a cloak and dagger?

In fact, the only subunit in charge of antiterrorism in the FSB is
its operational investigation directorate. Yet, it is only slightly
more than a dozen fanatically committed operatives (covering, again,
the entire Russia!). Most of them do not have apartments (this
and miserable pay is why almost half of them have broken personal
lives). Their career records include decorations for successful
operations during missions in North Caucasus.

But even these officers cannot do much without a network of
agents. It is the weakest spot in FSB operations. An agent network
is almost non-existent in Chechnya. Many Chechens who were loyal to
“post-Dudayev” authorities and cooperated with counterintelligence
officers were knifed together with their families.

For the same reason, more than 100 mullahs and local officials
were killed in recent years. Nobody hurries to secret services with
declarations disclosing whereabouts of (Chechen separatist leader
Aslan) Maskhadov and Basayev even for 10m dollars. The FSB Directorate
for Chechnya is only just getting on its feet. The danger of disloyalty
is high (information leaks have been reported all the time). The Moscow
counterintelligence officers are forced to rely mostly on the Chechen
Security Service, led by republic’s Prime Minister Ramzan Kadyrov
as his second job, and also on the Yamadayev brothers, who command
special-purpose troops and managed to build their own networks of
agents (although predominantly on the clan basis). The shuttle tactic
of special composite teams in Chechnya (apart from FSB operatives,
they include special-purpose units of the Interior Ministry Internal
Troops) is also not very effective. Following several major leaks of
information on planned counterterrorist operations, the “neighbours”
have increasingly rarely shared information with each other, while
the real joint work has been conducted mostly on paper.

Who is bothered by the “spectre of totalitarianism”?

In the USSR times, it was enough to call from Lubyanka to Groznyy
to find out on the same day in what mountain village a new hunting
rifle was purchased. If a police gun or a TNT cartridge disappeared
in Chechnya, they were found on the following day.

Today, a gang can spend a night in a village but the FSB Directorate
in Groznyy will find it out only a week later. The bandits bought
a dozen land mines in an army unit but FSB officers learned of this
fact only half a year later.

In the Yeltsin era, political activists liked to yell on squares about
a certain “monster”, the KGB, which wrapped up the whole country
with its networks of squealers. Now that they have sniffed hexogen
under their windows they shout at every corner about the “weakness”
of the FSB, whose staff has been “castrated” to one-eighth of its
former strength in the past 13 years! No sooner had the FSB tried
to restore its old practice of informers, recruiting also concierges
in houses, than some fighters for human rights again started weeping
about the restored “spectre of totalitarianism”.

But under totalitarianism, Lubyanka could see the whole country
almost all the way through – it was aided by more than two million
“volunteers”. Thanks to them, FSB managed to nip in the bud attempts
on life of some party and Soviet leaders, ferret out hundreds of
“werewolves” in government structures, foil armed attacks on industrial
facilities and banks, and prevent many man-made catastrophes. Murders
of people and hostage captures occurred extremely rarely.

Today, however, for fear of a furious public outcry on the part
of some political populists, the FSB has practically discarded the
“institution” of informers and collaborators (even though the law
allows and regulates such practices). Even if there are barely 50
of them for the whole country, they do not have enough strength to
“scan” movements in the terrorist underworld, sending alarm signals to
intelligence officers. We do not even mention that our laws prohibit
recruitment of agents from the criminal community.

Following several years of the terrorist war, it has become obvious
that neither piles of laws, nor antiterrorist commissions of all
stripes, nor endless bureaucratic conferences with loud agendas,
nor the most courageous Alfa or Vympel troops can protect us from new
explosions. Nobody can replace in Russia a secret service “digging”
deeply and silently. To this end, we should at least stop pestering
it with endless reorganization and reforms. We should also restore
a system of training highly qualified operatives. In addition, they
need to be paid – well and regularly.

“Feeding” the police

Let us recall: after the events on Dubrovka, police officials were the
first to demonstrate readiness for an all-out antiterror effort (it
is police that people blamed more than anyone else for what happened:
insufficient vigilance, insufficient checks). After the storm of the
(Dubrovka) House of Culture, then-Deputy Internal Affairs Minister
Vladimir Vasilyev pledged publicly: “We are now going to clean not
only Moscow but even Russia of this filth!”

But when an investigation was launched to find out how the terrorists
sneaked into the Dubrovka theatre hall, the police chiefs’ eyes
nearly popped out of their heads: it turned out that more than 100
guardians of law from Chechnya to Moscow virtually turned a blind eye
to movements of the thugs right under their very nose. This “loss
of vigilance” sometimes was not at all for free: some policemen,
who were about to inspect the gunmen’s bags with weapons and TNT,
received bribes at railway stations and checkpoints and let the
suspicious people go.

The paid neglect was crowned with betrayal: the intelligence officers
arrested one policeman, a senior officer of the Moscow Internal
Affairs Main Directorate, immediately after the terrorist act. He
passed information on details of the hostage-releasing operation
and movements of Spetsnaz (special-purpose) troops to (leader of
hostage-takers) Movsar Barayev’s gunmen.

Bribe-taking and betrayal in the police ranks have been detected
by prosecutor’s office investigators everywhere, be it Chechnya,
Dagestan, Ingushetia, North Ossetia or Moscow. Most of the traitors
wearing police uniforms have been exposed in Chechnya. On this issue,
Akhmat Kadyrov, the late president of the republic, said once: “It
is increasingly difficult for me to tell our policemen from masked
saboteurs.” According to investigators, it is also saboteurs who
killed him.

The worst thing is that all that is taking place in a republic that
has become a hotbed of Russian terror. Of course, one can understand
objective difficulties experienced by the Chechen authorities,
who found themselves in a situation where it is often impossible to
break firm family (clannish) ties between guardians of law and those
who they fight. Our domestic experience of tackling this complicated
problem shows that this will take a decade.

After bandits attacked Ingushetia, the Russian Prosecutor-General’s
Office pressed terrorist complicity charges against two Ingush
policemen. One of them, Magomed Lolkhoyev, personally helped Shamil
Basayev himself travel around the republic by car for reconnaissance
purposes.

As the investigation chief, Mikhail Lapotnikov, declared, “a total of
22 individuals have been put on a wanted list in this case and checks
are being run on more than 60. Cases against 18 individuals have been
sent to court.” In other words, a hundred of professional cops could
have been in the pay of terrorists? Another fact has been revealed:
the terrorists managed to prepare as many as 10 bases on the territory
of Ingushetia and local police were involved in their organization.

Wrongdoers were found also in North Ossetia – and again after, not
before a terrorist act. The Prosecutor-General’s Office instigated
criminal cases on charges of “neglect causing grave consequences”
against Miroslav Aydarov, chief of the district internal affairs
department for Pravoberezhnyy District; Taymuraz Murtazov, deputy
chief for public security; and Guram Dryayev, the district internal
affairs department chief of staff.

Dozens of other “treason” criminal cases clearly indicate that men
of Maskhadov and Basayev conduct effective recruitment work in the
Interior Ministry structures in those parts as well. We cannot do
without a thorough purge here. This is what the situation warrants:
our “southern” police bodies are in need of reliable internal security
structures.

Otherwise, we will hardly manage to prevent the process of intentional
or unintentional integration between uniformed criminals and
terrorists. This problem becomes critical in the centre as well. It
turned out recently that a 1.5m army of guest workers from the Caucasus
entrenched themselves in Moscow Region not without the knowledge of
police. Almost half of them should already be sent back to places
of their permanent residence: these people stand on the wrong side
of the law and law-enforcement agencies have some major complaints
about them. But a question is: what did Interior Ministry staffers
do before? This is exactly where the shoe pinches: some police chase
terrorists while others cover the latter for bribes. And now we are
surprised that caches with weapons and TNT are found right near Moscow
every day.

ANKARA: Erdogan: Opening Of Borders Depends On Armenia’s Attitude

Erdogan: Opening Of Borders Depends On Armenia’s Attitude

Anadolu Agency
10/29/2004

BAKU – Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Friday,
“Turkey has been defending from the very beginning that a solution
should be found to the Upper Karabakh dispute under territorial
integrity of Azerbaijan from the very beginning. Meanwhile, opening
of borders between Turkey and Armenia depends on Armenia’s attitude.”

In an interview with Azerbaijani Three Points newspaper, Prime Minister
Erdogan said, “there are some obstacles in front of normalization of
Turkey-Armenia relations and opening of borders. Ignorance of official
borders by Armenia, Armenia’s efforts for recognition of so-called
Armenian genocide, and long-standing historical problems between
Turkey and Armenia have been affecting our relations negatively.”

“Armenia’s maintaining its occupying policy against all resolutions of
the UN for Upper Karabakh also has a negative impact on our bilateral
relations. In order to normalize those relations, Armenia should
set good neighborly relations with Turkey and the other regional
countries,” he said.

-TURKEY-AZERBAIJAN RELATIONS-

“There have been historic cultural and social relations between Turkey
and Azerbaijan. Our bilateral relations have reached to a perfect level
in only 14 years after Azerbaijan acquired its independence,” he said.

Prime Minister Erdogan noted that the bilateral relations would
further improve after the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil pipeline
project was put into force, adding, “other energy projects will bring
our relations to the level of strategic partnership.”

Referring to Turkish-Azeri economic relations, Erdogan said that
“although political relations between the two countries are excellent,
economic ties are not at a satisfactory level.”

“The annual trade volume between Turkey and Azerbaijan is only
about 430 million U.S. dollars. This is not an amount that makes us
happy. There need to be progress made in the areas of customs and
taxation as well as banking between the two countries.”

-TURKEY’S EU MEMBERSHIP PROCESS-

Referring to Turkey’s EU membership process, Prime Minister Erdogan
said, “we expect the EU to make a decision at its summit on December
17th to open entry talks with Turkey. In that case, accession
negotiations will start in 2005. The negotiation process will be
difficult and take a long time. The process will entail us to work
hard. The process also requires adequate financial source.”

“We are planning to fulfil entry talks in 2010 and reach our target of
EU full membership. Turkey’s membership will have positive impacts in
economy, politics and culture in Europe. Turkey will make a valuable
contribution to the EU in energy. Also, the EU’s influence in the
Islam world will increase with membership of Turkey,” Prime Minister
Erdogan added.

BAKU: Azeri expert hints at biological arms research in Karabakhlabo

Azeri expert hints at biological arms research in Karabakh laboratories

Lider TV, Baku
29 Oct 04

[Presenter Rasad Nasirov] Bio-laboratories have opened on Azerbaijan’s
occupied lands, the Azerbaijani national bioethics commission has
learnt. The commission believes that these laboratories may be used
to produce biological weapons.

[Correspondent, over video of conference] An international conference
on the protection of human rights in biomedical research in the CIS
countries continued today. The CIS Interparliamentary Assembly’s
standing commission on human rights and social policy and the
Azerbaijani national bioethics commission are the co-organizers of
the conference.

Bioethics is a system and issues related to human cloning are a
major part of it, the deputy chairman of the Azerbaijani national
bioethics commission and director of the Human Rights Institute [of
the National Academy of Sciences], Rovsan Mustafayev, said. There are
two opinions on the problem, he added. Some people say that human
cloning is dangerous, but some people support the option of using
a clone as a donor. But despite different opinions, the process of
human cloning is under way.

[Mustafayev] A clone that is created is not different from other human
beings. He has the right to live, i.e. this is his main right. Who
can say that a clone has to be used as a donor in modern society?

[Correspondent] Up-to-date research is being conducted in Azerbaijan
as well and we are not indifferent to the processes that are going
on in the world, Mustafayev said. He spoke about the importance of
holding this event in Baku, because bio-laboratories have already
been established on Azerbaijan’s occupied territories.

[Mustafayev] Their purpose is not fully clear. Who has set them up,
what is their purpose? But there is some information that there is
a connection between them and biological weapons.

[Correspondent] The international conference will continue its work
till 31 October.

Radik Ismayilov, Firuz Rahimov for Lider TV.

List of Lebanon’s new cabinet ministers

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
October 26, 2004, Tuesday
15:55:43 Central European Time

List of Lebanon’s new cabinet ministers

Beirut

Here is a list of the new 30-member cabinet which was formed Tuesday
by Lebanese Prime Minister Omar Karameh. 1 – Omar Karameh, Prime
Minister, Sunni Moslem (new). 2 – Issam Fares, Deputy Prime Minister,
Christian Greek Orthodox. 3 – Elias Saaba, Finance Minister, Christian
Greek Orthodox (new). 4 – Mahmoud Hammoud, Foreign Affairs Minister ,
Moslem Shiite. (change of portfolio). 5 – Suleiman Franjieh, Interior
Minister, Christian Maronite. (change of portfolio). 6 – Abdel Raheem
Murad, Defense Minister, Moslem Sunni. (change of portfolio). 7 –
Elie Ferzli, Information Minister, Christian Greek Orthodox(new). 8 –
Jean-Louis Kordachi, Telecommunication Minister, Christian Maronite. 9
– Yassin Jaber, Public Works Minister, Moslem Shiite (new). 10 –
Adnan Adoum, Justice Minister, Moslem Sunni (new). 11 – Elie Skaff,
Agriculture Minister, Christian Greek Orthodox. 12 – Farid Khazen,
Tourism Minister, Christian Maronite. 13 – Ghazi Zaater, Social Affairs
Minister, Moslem Shiite. 14 – Assem Kanso, Labour Minister, Moslem
Shiite. 15 – Adnan Kasser, Economy Minister, Moslem Sunni. 16 – Talal
Arslane, Minister of Displaced, Druze. 17 – Mahmoud Abdel Khalek, State
Minister, Druze. 18 – Wi”am Wahaab, Environment Minister, Druze. 19 –
Karam Karam, State Minister, Christian Greek Orthodox. 20 – Albert
Mansour, State Minister, Christian Greek Orthodox. 21 – Leila al Solh,
Industry Minister, Moslem Sunni (Woman). 22 – Sami Minakara, Education
Minister , Moslem Sunni (new). 23 – Wafaa Hamzah, State Minister,
Moslem Shiite (Woman). 24 – Youssef Salameh, State Minister, Christian
Maronite (new). 25 – Alain Taburian, State Minister, Armenian (new). 26
– Ibrahim Daher, State Minister for Adminstrative Reforms, Christian
Maronite(new). 27 – Sebouh Hovnanian, Youth and Sports Minister,
Armenian. 28 – Maurice Sehnawi, Energy Minister, Christian Catholic
(new). 29 – Nagi Bustani, Culture Minister, Christian Maronite (new).
30 – Mohammed Khalef, Health Minister, Moslem Shiite (new). dpa wh sr

UN helps Armenian women have say in politics

UN helps Armenian women have say in politics

Noyan Tapan news agency
25 Oct 04

Yerevan, 22 October: The involvement of women in political affairs,
the issue of trafficking and other issues were discussed at a two-day
international conference entitled “To assist women’s progress: the
national programme in action” which started in Yerevan on 22 October.

A nationwide programme for 2004-10 of improving the life of women
and increasing their role in society was presented at the conference.

Armenian Deputy Minister of Labor and Social Security Karine
Akopyan noted that the programme will ensure that men and women have
equal rights and possibilities which is a condition for building
a democratic, legal, and social state. The programme, the deputy
minister said, will help to tackle socioeconomic problems that women
face and to overcome poverty in the country.

According to data cited by the national programme, the republic’s
rate of population growth reduced by a factor of eight and the rate
of birth dropped by a factor of two in the last 10 years.

One of the main reasons for that is infertility which constitutes 31.9
per cent in the republic today. According to the Armenian police,
correspondingly 52, 51 and 55 women apparently became victims of
violence in the republic in 2001, 2002 and 2003.

The conference is being held within the framework of the programme
“Gender policy in the South Caucasus”. The latter is being implemented
in Armenia by the Ministry of Labor and Social Security and the UN
Development Programme [UNDP].

Armenian president meets with Armenian community in Tbilisi

Itar-Tass, Russia
Oct 24 2004

Armenian president meets with Armenian community in Tbilisi

TBILISI, October 24 (Itar-Tass) — Armenian President Robert
Kocharyan, currently in Georgia on an official visit, met with
representatives of the Armenian community in Tbilisi on Sunday.

The meeting was held behind closed doors. `Robert Kocharyan is
satisfied with results of the visit and the state of bilateral
relations,’ Van Baiburt, co-leader of the Armenian community in
Georgia and Georgian parliament member, said after the meeting.

`We discussed problems of the Armenian community in Georgia, which
Armenia can help to resolve, including the delivery of textbooks for
Armenian schools,’ he noted. Bilateral trade, economic and cultural
cooperation was discussed, as well.

Armenians make 5.6% of the Georgian population. According to the
population census of 2002, Georgia has 4.44 million population, 84%
of them Georgians, 6.5% Azerbaijanis and 1.5% Russians. Georgia has
Georgian, Armenian, Russian and Azerbaijani schools.