Soccer / Hapoel TA upends Bnei Yehuda 1-0

Soccer / Hapoel TA upends Bnei Yehuda 1-0

By Haaretz Sports Staff

Hapoel Tel Aviv won the State Cup by defeating crosstown rivals
Bnei Yehuda 1-0 on an 87th minute goal by Ilia Yavorian at the National
Stadium in Ramat Gan yesterday.

Hapoel, which will end the season in second place behind Maccabi
Haifa, already had clinched a UEFA Cup spot, and Bnei Yehuda can still
claim its place in the competition by finishing fourth with a draw
against Upper Nazareth.

The losers were lucky to stay in contention until the dying
moments of an untidy encounter, and had Nigerian keeper Vincent Enyeama
to thank for several spectacular saves that kept Hapoel’s Cup hopes on
ice until three minutes from time.

Hapoel’s fans were the majority among a 40,000-strong crowd, and
erupted with joy as Armenian Yavorian slotted home a shot from close
range after a pass from the right by Nigerian Ibazito Ogabuna.

Hapoel’s typically dogged, defensive counter-attacking style
snuffed out Bnei Yehuda’s flair. Hopes of a repeat of the last of its
two cup victories in 1981, when it beat Hapoel on penalties, were
thwarted by the late goal.

The victory was a fitting farewell for Hapoel coach Dror Kashtan,
and he thanked fans at the end of the match as he prepares to take over
as Israeli national team coach.

“You are the best and most loyal fans. You’ve been our 12th player
throughout the season, and you deserve this victory,” Kashtan told
supporters over the public address system. “Now that I have six Cup
trophies and six league titles, I’m ready to take over the national
team,” Israel’s most successful club coach in history added.

Losing coach Nitzan Shirazi, who had been shooting for his first
piece of silverware, said he was bitterly disappointed by the loss, but
that no one was more worthy of the title than Kashtan.

“I would like to congratulate Dror Kashtan, because no one is more
worthy of it than him,” Shirazi said. “Today we received a lesson in how
cruel this game can be. We conceded a goal in the dying minutes when
there was no way back.

“I’m very proud of my players. Now we have to take a point from
Nazareth, because it would be a bitter blow if we missed out on Europe
as well.”

President Moshe Katsav awarded the trophy to Hapoel captain Shimon
Gershon as fireworks were launched outside the stadium.

“Nothing could be sweeter than this after so many years without a
title,” said Gershon, who very likely will be on the move to Betar
Jerusalem after this weekend’s final league game. “It was a tough game,
and we didn’t play our best, but I felt that we would sting in the final
minutes, and that’s exactly what we did. I couldn’t be happier.”

It was Hapoel’s 11th State Cup win since it became inaugural
winner of the trophy in 1928, and its first since the 1999/2000 season

UN chief appoints advisory committee on genocide prevention

>From Monsters and Critics.com
US Features

UN chief appoints advisory committee on genocide prevention
By Rich Bowden
May 9, 2006, 19:00 GMT

UN Secretary-General, Kofi Annan, has announced the appointment of a new
eight-member advisory committee to counsel him on strategies to prevent
genocide. The formation of the committee answers growing world criticism over the UN’
s inaction in the troubled west Sudan region of Darfur where over 200,000
ethnic Africans have died as a result of conflict since 2004.
According to a 3 May UN press release, Annan said the committee – which
includes such eminent persons as Nobel Peace Prize winner Bishop Desmond Tutu;
International Crisis Group president Gareth Evans and former High Commissioner
for Refugees Sadako Ogata – has been formed to `provide guidance and support
to the work of the Secretary-General’s Special Adviser on the Prevention of
Genocide, Juan E. Méndez, and contribute to the broader efforts of the United
Nations to prevent genocide.’
International censure of the UN’s lack of effective response in Darfur has
been backed up by evidence of the UN’s historical inability to act decisively
to prevent genocides and massacres. In noted cases such as Rwanda in 1994,
East Timor’s 1999 independence referendum and the 1995 Srebrenica massacre,
the mass slaughter of local inhabitants continued unabated despite the presence
of UN peacekeepers.
The UN’s most well-known failing occurred during the genocide in Rwanda from
April to June 1994 when over 800,000 minority Tutsis were massacred in a
100-day period by the dominant Hutus. Calling the massacre an “internal
matter”, the UN Security Council refused all requests from Lieutenant-General
Dallaire – the commander of the United Nations Assistance Mission For Rwanda
(UNAMIR) Force – for permission to intervene to protect innocent Tutsis. Dallaire
had been advising UN headquarters of the impending genocide from as early as
January 1994.
In what has since been described as one of the UN’s darkest hours, UN
peacekeepers were prohibited from acting to prevent the carnage and were ordered
not to turn their weapons against the rampaging Hutu armies.
Darfur
Possibly the single most important present problem facing the newly-appointed
advisory panel is the tragedy occurring in the Darfur region of West Sudan.
It is estimated that government -backed militia – known as Janjaweed – have
killed over 200,000 Africans and displaced some two million people
allegedly with the assistance of the Sudanese army in the world’s latest example of
attempted genocide.
Though the announcement of the formation of the advisory committee comes
amidst some optimism following the signing of last week’s peace deal between
rebel groups and the government of Sudan, the situation remains dire.
`As Rwanda marks a grim twelfth anniversary, we must accept that while vast
human destruction in Darfur has unfolded plainly before us, we have again done
little more than watch,’ says Sudan expert Professor Eric Reeves from Smith
College, Massachusetts.
The need to act urgently in Darfur is not lost on Gareth Evans, president of
the International Crisis Group and one of the members of the group appointed
by Kofi Annan. Speaking just days before his appointment, Evans addressed the
B’nai B’rith Anti-Defamation Commission as guest speaker at the University
of New South Wales, Sydney.
” ‘Never again’ we said after the Holocaust. And after the Cambodian
genocide in the 1970s. And then again after the Rwanda genocide in 1994.
And
then, just a year later, after the Srbrenica massacre in Bosnia. And now we’re
asking ourselves, in the face of more mass killing and dying in Darfur,
whether we really are capable, as an international community, of stopping
nation-states murdering their own people,” said Evans.
“How many more times will we look back wondering, with varying degrees of
incomprehension, horror, anger and shame, how we could have let it all
happen?”
Chaired by David Hamburg, President of the New York Carnegie Corporation, and
with backgrounds in human rights, diplomacy, peacekeeping and conflict
prevention, the diverse group will liaise with the Secretary-General’s Special
Advisor on the Prevention of Genocide Juan E. Méndez.
Mr Méndez, who was appointed in 2004 by Secretary-General Annan to be the UN’
s chief expert on genocide prevention has also spoken of the need to do more
to prevent repeats of Rwanda and Darfur.
`We cannot claim to have learned the lessons of the 1994 Rwandan genocide if
our action in the face of genocidal violence remains half-hearted. Action is
particularly needed in Darfur, where the threat of genocide continues to loom
large,’ he wrote in an article published on the eve of the 12th year of
commemorations for the Rwanda massacre.
The committee’s first meeting is scheduled for 19 June.
Committee Members:
* David Hamburg, President Emeritus of the Carnegie Corporation of New
York (Chair).
* Monica Andersson of Sweden, Senior Adviser, Department for
International Law, Human Rights and Treaty Law, Foreign Ministry of Sweden.
* Zackari Ibrahim of Nigeria, former Minister of State for Foreign
Affairs of Nigeria
* Roméo Dallaire of Canada, Canadian Senator and former Force Commander
of the United Nations Assistance Mission for Rwanda.
* Gareth Evans of Australia, President, International Crisis Group and
former Minister for Foreign Affairs of Australia.
* Roberto Garretón of Chile, former representative of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights for Latin America and the Caribbean and former Special
Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Democratic Republic of the
Congo.
* Sadako Ogata of Japan, co-Chair of the Commission on Human Security
and former High Commissioner for Refugees.
* Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa, winner of the Nobel Peace
Prize and former Chairman of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South
Africa.

© Copyright 2003 – 2005 by monstersandcritics.com.

ANKARA: French historian group protests Armenian genocide bill

Hürriyet, Turkey
May 8 2006

French historian group protests Armenian genocide bill

A group of French historians, who last month put together a letter of
protest against a proposed “Armenian genocide law,” have now come
together again to publish a declaration against the draft of the new
law, which mandates prison sentences for those who deny the genocide.

The bill, which was put together by the opposition Socialist Party in
France, and which will come before the French Parliament on May 18
for debate, has elicited protest from French historians on the
grounds that it carries stiff penalities for those denying the
Armenian claims, and in this sense infringes on freedom of expression
in France. The declaration from the group of historians against the
bill, who have expressed that they are “in a state of deep shock”
about it, notes, among other things, that “history teachers in French
schools will be taken hostage by this law.”

Among the historians signing off on this new declaration of protest
are well-known French academics such as Jean-Pierre Azema, Elisabeth
Badinter, Marc Ferro, Jacques Julliard, Pierre Nora, Mona Ozouf,
Jean-Pierre Vernant, and Pierre Vidal-Naquet.

Comm of interstate aviation comm flies to Adler to probe air crash

Comm of interstate aviation comm flies to Adler to probe air crash
By Yevgeny Nikitin

ITAR-TASS News Agency
May 3, 2006 Wednesday

A committee of the Interstate Aviation Commission headed by its
chairwoman Tatyana Anodina flied to Adler to investigate the causes
of the crash of an airliner A-320 belonging to the Armenian airlines
Armavia. The most experienced specialist of the Interstate Aviation
Commission – deputy chairman of the commission Leonid Kashirsky is in
charge of the technical investigation, spokesman for the Interstate
Aviation Commission Oleg Ermolov told Itar-Tass.

According to him, the Armenian aviation authorities provided all
available information to the committee. “However, it will be very
difficult to find the flight recorders because of a big depth at the
crash site of the airliner and a thick layer of silt (more than 100
meters),” the specialist pointed out.

Technical director for security problems of the Interstate Aviation
Commission Rudolf Teimurazov earlier told Itar-Tass that it will be
difficult to find the flight recorders as the debris of the airplane
is lying at the depth of two kilometers. He noted that the airplane
fell at the depth of 500 meters at the crash moment, but then sank
down deeper because of the hilly sea bottom.

RPT Brussels Airport Fire Destroys Three A-320 Aircraft – SabenaTech

RPT BRUSSELS AIRPORT FIRE DESTROYS THREE A-320 AIRCRAFT – SABENA TECHNICS CEO

AFX Europe (Focus)
May 05, 2006

BRUSSELS (AFX) – A fire that ravaged a maintenance shed at Brussels
airport last night destroyed three planes, two of which belong to
Armenian operator Armavia, said the chief executive of Sabena Technics.

The other plane belonged to Greek charter airline Hellas. All of them
were A-320 aircraft.

Also destroyed was an aircraft used in the Belgian military.

Call Signs Of Second Black Box Of Crashed Airbus A320 Received

CALL SIGNS OF SECOND BLACK BOX OF CRASHED AIRBUS A320 RECEIVED

Yerevan, May 5. ArmInfo. Late at night on 4 May, French specialists
received call signs of the aircraft at the depth of 680 meters in the
Black Sea. They were supposed to come from the second black box of the
crashed. The call signs were got from the very place where those of
the first box had been received earlier on May 4. Special deep-sea
robots will be delivered from Novorossiysk in an hour to pull out
the boxes. French experts also promised their assistance. Transport
Minister of Russian Igor Levitin informed journalists that the bodies
may decompose remaining at the depth for a long time, and the black
boxes and the aircraft parts may get damaged.

Data on the number of the found bodies fluctuate between 49 and 53
according to different sources. The reported numbers of unidentified
bodies are also contradictory: 26-28. 113 people were killed in
the crash. The reasons are still unknown. Criminals cases have been
initiated on the fact both in Russia and Armenia. Investigation is
in process.

Reed Amendment Reaffirms Parity In Defense Department Assistance ToA

REED AMENDMENT REAFFIRMS PARITY IN DEFENSE DEPARTMENT ASSISTANCE TO ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN

ArmRadio.am
06.05.2006 11:02

In a legislative reaffirmation of the 2001 agreement between the
Congress and the White House to maintain military aid parity to Armenia
and Azerbaijan, Senator Jack Reed this week secured the adoption of an
amendment adding Armenia to the list of nation’s receiving Department
of Defense counter-drug assistance, reported the Armenian National
Committee of America.

Commenting to the ANCA following the adoption of his amendment, Senator
Reed said, “I am pleased that the Senate Armed Services Committee
recognized the importance of providing military aid to Armenia for
training and equipment in light of its decision to provide funding
to Azerbaijan. It is essential that we maintain parity between the
two nations, and I am happy that my amendment was accepted.”

ANKARA: Turkey Warns France Over Bill On So-Called Armenian Genocide

TURKEY WARNS FRANCE OVER BILL ON SO-CALLED ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Hurriyet, Turkey
May 4 2006

France was warned by Turkey on Wednesday that bilateral ties could
suffer if the French Parliament adopts a bill that would criminalize
any denial that Armenians massacred during World War I were victims
of genocide.”In our meetings (with French officials), we stress that
adoption of the bill could lead to irreparable damage in long-standing
Turkish-French ties and that this should not be allowed,” Foreign
Ministry spokesman Namik Tan told a news conference here.

Tan said Ankara is doing everything it can to block the bill, adding
that the French government is doing the same.

The bill, expected to be voted on later this month, provides for one
year’s imprisonment and a $57,000 fine for denying Armenians were
victims of genocide, Turkish press reports said.

If adopted, it will follow a 2001 French decision that infuriated
Turkey by acknowledging that the mass killings in the dying days of
the Ottoman Empire amounted to genocide.

Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered in
orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917 by Turks, as the Ottoman
Empire was falling apart.

Turkey categorically rejects the claims, saying 300,000 Armenians
and at least as many Turks died in civil strife.

MFA of Armenia: Minister Oskanian’s Remarks at InternationalConferen

MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
—————————————— —-
PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
375010 Telephone: +37410. 544041 ext 202
Fax: +37410. 562543
Email: [email protected]

PRESS RELEASE

05-05-2006

Minister Oskanian’s Remarks at International Conference in Vilnius

Let me join the others in expressing our appreciation to the Lithuanian
and Polish presidents for organizing this conference and for inviting
Armenia.

It’s been an illuminating and inspiring day. I also would like
to thank President Adamkus and the Lithuanian government for the
wonderful reception and also for everyone’s expression of sympathy
with regard to the tragic airplane accident yesterday morning.

Mr. President, your visit to Armenia is still fresh in our minds,
and the message that you brought – the message of democracy, peace and
cooperation – still reverberates in my mind. We’ve always appreciated
the leadership that Lithuania has shown with regard to bridging our two
regions – the Baltics and the Caucasus – and making your experience
available to us to develop our region and to develop cooperation
among our countries. Your efforts fall within a similar, and broader,
effort by transatlantic organizations. With the benefit of hindsight,
we wonder where we, the countries of the Caucasus, would have been
had there not been the vision demonstrated by the leadership of
these structures to make their knowledge and practice available to
countries like ours in the post-soviet space. Organizations like
the OSCE, the Council of Europe and others opened up and shared
their experience. Even more, there was the foresight to create new
structures, such as EAPC within NATO, to embrace these countries,
to provide a framework for our development.

We, the countries which have been the beneficiaries of those
organizations and the processes created around them, want you to know
that this guidance has been very helpful and useful.

Still, each of us in the post-soviet space, has chosen a different way
to benefit (or not benefit) from the varying options made available
to us.

Those different options fall into three categories:

First, there are those who have chosen the more abrupt and
revolutionary path to reform; then, there are those who have chosen
the more incremental and evolutionary path, and third, there are those
who have dug-in their heels and are not moving in a new direction.

Armenia has chosen the second path – the evolutionary, incremental
approach – because we believe in two principles.

Firstly, as Javier Solana said, democracy is not a one-shot deal, it
does not happen overnight. We know that, and we believe that as long
as you know that you are on the right track and are confident that
you are moving forward and not backtracking, then the evolutionary
and incremental approach to democracy is more effective and enduring.

Secondly, we understand that democracy is a tool for development,
that there is clear linkage between democracy and prosperity. As
much as democracy is a tool for development, we know that economic
development is a facilitator of democratization. I want to emphasize
the EU’s enhanced role in these interconnected processes through
the creation of a new program and a new instrument – the European
Neighborhood Policy and the Action Plan. We are currently negotiating
the Action Plan, the process will be concluded soon, and it will
elevate the level of our relations with the EU to new heights.

It will reinforce the reforms and make them irreversible. Further,
it will increase the integrational options and make available new
possibilities.

Now Mr. Chairman, my second topic: unresolved conflicts. First,
let me address the charges leveled at Armenia by the Azerbaijani
Prime Minister. He basically called Armenia an aggressor, and
called the Armenians inhabiting Nagorno Karabakh terrorists and
drug traffickers. Given the overall spirit of the talks which
are taking place at the highest level, between the presidents,
and given the positive elements that exist at this moment, such
inaccurate and inflammatory comments are not understandable. Nor are
they justified. Especially since territories under Armenian control
today are the consequences of Azerbaijan’s aggression toward people
it considered its own citizens. I don’t think that Javier Solana was
overly optimistic when he said there are positive aspects in this
process, but Mr. Solana, those positive elements can be transformed
to encouraging developments only if the Azerbaijani side is clearly
told and finally understands that they don’t have a military option
here. With their oil resources and with high oil prices, they have
unfortunately come to believe, or at least they publicly proclaim
that there is a military option available to them. With that kind of
thinking, it will not be easy to compromise. But they need to be told
very clearly by the EU and others, that there is no military option,
so that they make the necessary compromises, as Armenia has already
done, to reach a peaceful resolution. Only then, Mr. Chairman, do
we stand a chance of making further progress this year, eventually
bringing peace and stability to this region.

www.armeniaforeignministry.am

Georgia: Despair Of Landslide Villagers

GEORGIA: DESPAIR OF LANDSLIDE VILLAGERS
By Tedo Jorbenadze in Khulo and Olesya Vartanian in Ninotsminda

Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
May 4 2006

The government is accused of failing the victims of environmental
disaster.

Thousands of Georgians are being displaced by landslides from the
Black Sea region of Ajaria, only to be resettled in an area where
the locals greet them with open hostility.

Landslides are destroying houses, pastures and farming land in three
mountainous districts – Khulo, Keda and Shuakhevi – in Ajaria, the
autonomous republic in south-western Georgia.

Close to 5,000 families, around 30,000 people in all, are expecting
resettlement any day now under a new government programme. However,
they are worried by the sight of neighbours who were resettled and
have now returned home.

Residents from the village of Jalabashvilebi, which has all but
disappeared under huge landslides, say they were offered a move to
Tsalka in southern Georgia, but when they arrived with their children
and belongings, there were no houses or land plots for them there.

“We were driven around like cattle,” said one villager who did not
want to give his name. “How long could our new neighbours have fed
us? We finally understood that no one would take care of us. We
borrowed some money and came back.”

Landslides first began causing problems in Ajaria, a mountainous but
densely populated region of Georgia, in the Eighties. Since then,
97 villages have been affected, with 1,500 houses collapsing and
roads and fields becoming unusable. Around 100 people have died and
more than 5,000 families have been relocated.

“Active logging over a number of years has brought the region to
the current environmental crisis,” explained Tariel Tuskia, head of
Ajaria’s geology department, saying the land was simply overpopulated.

“Not a single inch of land remains uncultivated,” he said. “People cut
wood in order to earn a living and it is impossible to blame them for
this. Preventive measures against landslides are so costly that it is
better to spend the money on buying houses for people somewhere else.

“In short, the only way out is to lighten the demographic load on
the region.”

According to Georgia’s ministry for housing and refugees, last year
252 houses were bought for people resettled from Ajaria to other parts
of the country. However the houses still belong to the government,
not the migrants.

In March, Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili participated in
a ceremony to mark the resettlement of ten families from the Khulo
district to the Akhmeta region of north-east Georgia. He made his
official helicopter available to transport the group, and was filmed
holding two-year-old Anri Ghorjomelidze in his arms.

Two months on, the settlers – Anri’s father among them – are still
asking for help to get their belongings transported to their new
places of residence.

“The former owner of this house left nothing for us,” said Jambul
Ghorjomelidze. “Even little Anri sleeps on the floor. We have not
been given land, either, and you cannot even rent it, as all of it
has already been distributed. We now have to go round our neighbours
and persuade them to allow us to cultivate their land and share
the harvest.”

Most of the migrants have been settled in areas with predominantly
Armenian or Greek populations, causing resentment in the host
communities.

“Everyone understands this policy here,” said Sevak Yeranosyan, an
Armenian resident of Ninotsminda district in the southern region of
Javakheti. “They [the Ajarians] should without fail be resettled to
Armenian villages so that there will be a larger Georgian population
here. Their programme is to populate our region with Georgians and
Ajarians.”

Yeranosyan voiced locals suspicions about the incomers, “These people
come here unexpectedly. We residents know nothing about them. We
don’t know who they are or where they come from. Some people here even
believe that most of the new settlers are convicted criminals who get
sent here after doing a deal where they are told, ‘You go and settle
among Armenians and we will stop legal proceedings against you.'”

In March, fights broke out between local Armenians and incomers in
Tsalka. One person died and the local government offices were badly
damaged.

As a result of all these problems, many families have gone back
to Ajaria and are now living either with relatives or in their
half-ruined homes.

Kakha Guchmanidze, head of the Ajarian department for refugees and
housing, admitted to IWPR that the resettlement programme had gone
badly.

“Yes, there was no preliminary work for the programme. No land plots
were prepared for the settlers. No one calculated what each family
would need to set up its own farms and adapt normally to the new
situation,” he said.

Zaza Imedashvili, a high-ranking official in the ministry of housing
and refugees in Tbilisi, admitted that the resettlement programme is
still at a very early stage, and that only now is a database being
created to show who has been resettled to date.

This year, the ministry’s budget for purchasing houses for families
that have suffered from environmental disasters is only 1,227,000 lari
(around 500,000 US dollars). Imedashvili said this was meant to cover
victims of various disasters across Georgia.

“We still think Ajarians can be resettled in high mountain districts,
such as Tsalka, Tetritsqaro, and Akhalkalaki,” said Imedashvili.

“Houses are a lot cheaper there and it is possible to keep within
our price limits – 5,000 lari.”

Vepkhia Beridze and his young wife, who left their destroyed house
for the village of Koreti in Tsalka district, are not impressed by
these arguments. “The floor in one of the rooms of this new house of
ours collapsed on the very first day, and the wall cracked later,”
he said. “We will soon have a child but neither doors not windows
are good for anything in our house.”

Settlers also complain that they are given a one-off sum of just 50
lari (27.50 dollars) per family to help with the relocation.

However, allocation of land is the biggest problem in a region where
the locals already complain of not having enough land for themselves.

Ninotsminda journalist Levon Vartanian predicted, “There will be big
problems, as all the land plots have already been occupied and their
owners will not give up anything to anyone so easily.”

“This year, we will purchase houses with land plots for settlers,”
said Imedashvili. “We will probably buy around one hectare. It is not
much but the issue is still being considered. Ultimately, there will
probably be two or three hectares for each family.”

“If this problem is not solved, I agree that it is not worthwhile
for these people to move.”

Aslan Chachanidze, a lawyer in the Ajarian capital Batumi, said the
law was too vague and that the people affected did not have adequate
welfare provision.

Experts are worrying that Ajaria’s environmental problems are getting
worse. Apart from the mountain landslides, the Black Sea coastline has
advanced by 300 metres in the village of Adlia, destroying a dozen
houses. Nearby Batumi airport is under threat too, and in stormy
weather waves reach its runway, as well as a railway line near the
town of Kobuleti.

Geologist Tariel Tuskia also predicts more problems in the mountains.

“Disasters will become more frequent… when the snow starts melting,”
he said. “In fact, the whole of mountainous Ajaria is already in the
danger zone.”

Tedo Jorbenadze is a reporter for Batumelebi newspaper, in Ajaria.

Olesya Vartanian is a reporter for the IWPR-supported Southern Gates
newspaper in Samtskhe-Javakheti.