BAKU: Armenian officers arrive in Azeri capital for NATO conference

Armenian officers arrive in Azeri capital for NATO conference

Azad Azarbaycan TV, Baku
21 Jun 04

We have just received a report from the [Azerbaijani] Defence Ministry.
According to the report, Col Murad Isakhanyan and Senior Lieutenant
Aram Ovanesyan have already arrived in Baku [for a NATO conference
due to start tomorrow].

The Defence Ministry will ensure the security of the Armenian officers
in Baku. It is reported that immediately after the NATO conference
in Baku tomorrow, they will return home. According to our report,
the Armenians arrived in Baku at the invitation of NATO without visas.

Caucasian leaders with Armenian background judged – paper

Caucasian leaders with Armenian background judged – paper

Iravunk web site, Yerevan
15 Jun 04

The scandal in the Georgian parliament last week connected with the
[ethnic] origin of Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania’s mother could be
carried over into the Azerbaijani Milli Majlis.

The fact that the Zugdidi MP Pipiya distrusts the head of the Georgian
government, because of his Armenian mother, could similarly be
applied to Azerbaijani politicians who might get the nationalistic
bug. Especially as they have their “own Zhvania”: Prime Minister
Artur Rasizade, whose mother is also Armenian.

Despite his ethnic “deficiency”, he has been holding the second post
in order of importance in the hierarchy, for the past eight years.

It is not accidental: Artur Tair ogli belongs to the ruling
Naxcivan-Aliyev clan, and is a nephew of the former deputy chairman
of council of ministers of the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic,
Samil Rasizade.

During Soviet times the present prime minister headed a department
of the Central Committee of the Azerbaijani Communist Party and was
deputy chairman of the state planning committee of the republic. An
experienced leader, he, according to the witnesses, is successfully
combining his professional competency with an ability to perform a
balancing act in the corridors of power.

When it was necessary to vacate the chair of head of the government
for Ilham Aliyev, Rasizade did it without complaint. His sensible
obsequiousness was appreciated accordingly: once Aliyev-junior became
president he instructed his countryman [Artur Rasizade] to form the
cabinet of ministers for a third time. To deprive Artur Tair ogli of
this highest post is beyond the Azerbaijani MP Armenophob’s power.

But neither Rasizade nor his colleague Zhvania are immune to offensive
attacks in the parliament. Nevertheless crude xenophobia does not
change anything: today many Caucasus leaders have Armenian mothers:
apart from the aforementioned two prime ministers, there is also,
speaker of the Georgian parliament Nino Burjanadze, not to speak
of the leaders of Armenia and the Nagornyy Karabakh Republic [NKR],
not only their mothers are the Armenians. Only Mikheil Saakashvili
[Georgian president] does not acknowledge the ethnic background which
MP Pipiya dislikes.

Boxing: Sigh of relief from Harrison

Sigh of relief from Harrison
By STEPHEN HALLIDAY

The Scotsman, UK
June 17 2004

A FEELING of helplessness is not something Scott Harrison is familiar
with in his working life. The WBO featherweight champion has attained
his elevated status in his chosen profession by dint of ferocious
determination and the possession of a firm grip on his own destiny.

It came as the rudest of shocks, then, for Harrison to find his whole
career and the financial security of his family hanging on the outcome
of an event over which he had no control whatsoever.

Happily for the 26-year-old Cambuslang boxer, the not-guilty verdict
delivered by Sheriff Ray Little at Hamilton Sheriff Court last Thursday
erased his worries that his plans to become the undisputed world
featherweight champion would come to an abrupt end outside the ring.

Now cleared of the assault charge which hung over his head for almost
a year, Harrison can retrain full focus on his goal of facing the
best in the nine-stone division and unifying the belts to stake his
claim as Scotland’s finest boxer of the modern era.

But as he completed his preparations yesterday at the Phoenix Gym in
Glasgow for Saturday’s defence of his WBO title against No1 contender
William Abelyan, the Scot revealed for the first time the depths of
his concerns as he sat in court last week.

“Although I always knew I was innocent, what happened was not in
my hands,” said Harrison. “You are in someone else’s world when you
are in court and it’s up to the judge to look at the facts and make
the decision.

“It wasn’t nice. When you see people trying to bring you down and
telling lies about you, it makes you angry. If I had been found
guilty of assault, then I knew it would have affected my career,
so it was a big relief.”

It then transpires that not even Harrison was fully aware of just
how much it would have altered the landscape of his life had the
Sheriff’s judgment gone against him.

Frank Maloney, Harrison’s manager, interrupts his fighter to add:
“The British Boxing Board of Control would have taken Scott’s licence
away if he had been found guilty, it was as simple as that.”

Harrison’s normally implacable features change, his eyebrows raised
and a sobering look of realisation spreading across the eyes which
will bore into the face of Abelyan at the Braehead Arena on Saturday.
“I didn’t realise that,” he mutters. “That makes me feel even more
relieved about the decision.”

Maloney, never a man to avoid over-dramatising any situation in the
quest to hype a fight, has no need for exaggeration on this occasion.

“I’ve seen two of my boxers in the past go to prison for assault,”
adds Maloney. “Their fists are regarded as lethal weapons by the
legal profession. Although the whole team knew Scott was innocent of
the charge, you can never anticipate what will happen in the courtroom.

“It was a really nervous 48 hours last week waiting for the verdict.
Scott’s career was on the line, no doubt about it, everything he has
worked for could have gone. I was running for Mayor of London last
Thursday but I felt like breaking off from the campaigning to open
a bottle of champagne when I heard Scott had been cleared.

“It’s been hard for Scott but he now has to learn to surround himself
with a select group of loyal friends and avoid going out to certain
places. Being a world champion brings a lot of responsibility and I
know it can be hard to avoid hassle when you go out.

“There are always idiots who will want to pick a fight with a world
champion. I’ve seen five-foot midgets trying to have a go at Lennox
Lewis. Scott just has to be more careful now.”

Harrison insists the disruption to his training programme last
week has not been enough to dull his readiness to face Abelyan, the
American-Armenian making plenty of noise about how easy it will be
to take the Scot’s belt.

“I don’t give a damn what he says, I’m ready to do a job on him,”
says Harrison. “I’m in great shape and I’m more determined than ever
to put on a show for the fans who have stuck by me. Abelyan’s awkward
but I’ll take it round by round and knock him out eventually.”

Harrison is about to re-enter the place where he is capable of
exercising total control. He does not intend to leave anything in
the hands of the judges on Saturday.

Opposition To Continue Rallies

Armenia: Opposition To Continue Rallies
By Ruzanna Khachatrian and Hrach Melkumian 15/06/2004 01:55

Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
June 15 2004

The leadership of the Artarutyun alliance, Armenia’s biggest opposition
group, reaffirmed on Monday its intention to continue anti-government
demonstrations in Yerevan despite a clear loss of momentum its campaign
for regime change.

The bloc’s leaders said the next rally, scheduled for Wednesday, will
go ahead as planned. But it remained unclear whether the opposition
will urge supporters to march towards President Robert Kocharian’s
residence or elsewhere in the city center. They said the decision
will be made during the protest jointly with their allies from the
National Unity Party (AMK).

The two opposition forces had for weeks been promising to lay siege
to the presidential palace. The first such action ended in violence
on the night from April 12-13 when riot police used force to disperse
a crowd of more than 2,000 people.

At their last rally on June 4 the opposition leaders effectively
abandoned their plans for another “decisive action,” arguing that
they have so far failed to pull crowds big enough to resist security
forces. The move led local observers to conclude that the three-month
campaign to oust Kocharian has failed.

But speaking to RFE/RL over the weekend, the two most popular
oppositionists said they are determined to continue to fight
against what they see as an “illegitimate” regime.” “This is a
difficult process,” Artarutyun’s Stepan Demirchian said. “There may
be different phases, different manifestations. But the process is
certainly irreversible.”

“Illegalities, arbitrary use of force naturally have a depressing
effect on the people. But this does not mean that the opposition
movement is fading away,” AMK leader Artashes Geghamian agreed.

Another prominent opposition figure, Victor Dallakian, said the
opposition made unspecified “tactical mistakes” in its drive for
power, but insisted that its overall strategy of regime change is
justified. But fellow lawmaker Arshak Sadoyan said that the mistakes
were “serious.” He said the opposition should have opted for a more
“muscular struggle” in the face of a tough crackdown unleashed by
the authorities.

Wednesday’s rally is likely to be first opposition action sanctioned
by the authorities. The organizers formally notified the Yerevan
mayor’s office of the planned gathering in accordance with a new
Armenian law. The municipality has voiced no objections yet.

Opposition officials attributed the effective permission to the
presence in Yerevan of a delegation from the Council of Europe.

AZTAG: Interview with Ben Kiernan

“Aztag” Daily Newspaper
P.O. Box 80860, Bourj Hammoud,
Beirut, Lebanon
Fax: +961 1 258529
Phone: +961 1 260115, +961 1 241274
Email: [email protected]

AZTAG: Interview with Ben Kiernan

Interview by Khatchig Mouradian

10th of May 2004

In April 1998, Pol Pot departed from this world leaving behind a legacy of
death and destruction matched only by a few other leaders in world history.
His Khmer Rouge regime is responsible for the genocide of more than a
million people in Cambodia. A year before his death, Pol Pot said in an
interview, “I did not join the resistance movement to kill people, to kill
the nation. Look at me now. Am I a savage person? My conscience is clear.”
Like the Armenian genocide and the Holocaust before it, and the Rwandan
genocide after it, the Cambodian tragedy reminded us once again, that the
so-called “International Community” is an accomplice or, at best, a
bystander when the “problem from hell” surfaces. However, most probably its
conscience is clear as well. What lessons, if any, have we learned from “the
Age of Genocide”? The current situation in Darfur does not help one to give
an optimistic answer. This does not mean that the lessons aren’t there; just
that the word is looking the other way over and over again.
In an email interview conducted in April 2004, I discussed with Ben Kiernan
the Cambodian genocide, comparative studies of genocide and what change such
studies can make.
Ben Kiernan is a Whitney Griswold Professor of History and Director of the
Genocide Studies Program at Yale University. He gained his B.A. (1975) and
his Ph.D. (1983) in Southeast Asian History from Monash University.
Arguably the most knowledgeable observer of Cambodia anywhere in the Western
world, Kiernan is the author of a number of books and monographs including
“How Pol Pot Came to Power” (London, 1985), “The Pol Pot Regime: Race, Power
and Genocide in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge, 1975-1999” (New Haven,
1996). He is the editor of “Genocide and Democracy in Cambodia: The Khmer
Rouge, The United Nations, and the International Community” (New Haven,
1993) and the co-editor of “The Specter of Genocide: Mass Murder in
Historical Perspective” (Cambridge University Press, 2003). He founded the
Cambodian Genocide Program at Yale University in 1994 and the Genocide
Studies Program, also at Yale, in 1998.
—————————————————————————————————-

Aztag- Why is the comparative study of genocides important?

Ben Kiernan- During 25 years of research on the history of the Khmer Rouge
regime and the Cambodian genocide, it became clear to me that the Khmer
people were victims of unusual historical circumstances, such as the
expansion of the Vietnam War into their country, as well as unique elements
of Khmer Rouge ideology. But I also came across many common features shared
by the Cambodian genocide and other cases of mass murder. Sometimes the
links were political lessons, such as when Pol Pot watched from Beijing in
1965 as the Suharto military regime in Indonesia massacred half a million
communists in Java and Bali. Pol Pot later wrote that, “If our analysis had
failed, we would have been in greater danger than the communists in
Indonesia.” Pol Pot resolved to prevent such a disaster from happening to
his own communist party, so he in turn massacred his opponents in Cambodia
ten years later. Sometimes, the shared features were ideological, such as
the warped lessons Pol Pot also learned from Mao’s disastrous “Great Leap
Forward” in China. From these and other elements of the historical record, I
concluded that if the essential common features of genocides and the links
between them could be studied and identified, perhaps they could be detected
in advance in future cases, giving opponents of genocide the prior
knowledge, the time and thus the opportunity to intervene to prevent vast
human tragedies from recurring.

Other links between disparate global tragedies also merit attention. The
twentieth century opened with the genocide of the Hereros in the German
colony of Southwest Africa. Participants in this brutalizing colonial
experience included the father of Hermann Göring (until recently Göring
Street was the name of a main thoroughfare in Namibia’s capital, Windhoek).
Immediately after the genocide, Eugen Fischer carried out his racialist
research on miscegnation among the mixed Dutch/Hottentot ‘Rehoboth Bastards’
of Southwest Africa. In his 1913 study, Henry Friedlander has pointed out,
Fischer advocated protecting “an inferior race…only for so long as they are
of use to us; otherwise free competition, that is, in my opinion,
destruction.” Fischer, who became head of Germany’s Kaiser Wilhelm Institute
for Anthropology, Human Heredity, and Eugenics, also denounced “coloured,
Jewish, and Gypsy hybrids,” and provided Hitler with a copy of his book
before the latter wrote Mein Kampf. In 1933, Hitler appointed Fischer as
Rector of the University of Berlin, with the task of removing its Jewish
professors.

Vahakn Dadrian’s study, German Responsibility in the Armenian Genocide,
provides further illustration of the linkage between genocidal events of the
early twentieth century. Later, while launching his attack on Poland, Hitler
reportedly said in answer to a question on its international legality, “Who
ever heard of the Armenians?” suggesting a calculation that genocide could
conceivably be perpetrated with impunity. Regarding more recent events,
there is evidence that the perpetrators of the Rwandan genocide in 1994 took
the slow pace of the world’s reaction to genocidal crimes in the former
Yugoslavia as a sign that even worse ethnic cleansing in central Africa
would not provoke rapid international intervention. While perpetrators of
genocide seem to have benefited from their own comparative analysis of the
potential and possibilities for genocide in the modern era, the rest of
humanity has failed as yet to learn lessons from the past that could lead to
meaningful intervention in such catastrophes.

Aztag- It is often said that creating awareness about past genocides will
help prevent future ones. Is the international community learning the
lessons that need to be learned?

Ben Kiernan- The recent attention given to the tenth anniversary of the
Rwandan genocide is overdue, but important. Lessons are being learned from
past mistakes, in this case by the United Nations. The UN has now
established a Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide who will report
to the Secretary General on genocidal threats. It is now a responsibility of
scholars of genocide to make sure this Special Adviser’s office has the most
accurate information possible. Even without attempting comparative research,
just by analysing past cases and publishing the research results, it is
possible to help upgrade the capacity and will of the international
community to respond to future dangers. At least some genocides can be
prevented by better information and more timely action. Comparative research
offers an additional dimension of information.

Aztag- Can you tell us about the Genocide Studies Program at Yale
University?

Ben Kiernan- The Genocide Studies Program (GSP) at Yale University
() aims to contribute to this awareness through its
comparative, interdisciplinary research program. The GSP is developing and
applying new approaches to the documentation and study of genocide and
trauma, and evaluating policy-oriented solutions to detecting and preventing
genocide as well as alleviation of its far-reaching sequelae. We assemble
and display evidence of genocides in large publicly-accessible databases and
satellite imagery of atrocity sites. The GSP is based on the belief that
comparing and contrasting genocidal movements and regimes can help to detect
and analyse the ideological preoccupations that drive political leaders to
order extermination campaigns. We also hope to point to social and
historical factors that foster the growth of such genocidal movements and
enable them to come to power and implement their ideas.

Aztag- Can you please briefly describe the genocidal campaign of Pol Pot’s
Khmer Rouge?

Ben Kiernan- Five years after the Vietnam War spilled over into Cambodia,
Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge forces occupied the capital, Phnom Penh, in April
1975. They deported the city’s two million residents into the countryside,
and established the new state of Democratic Kampuchea (DK). Pol Pot became
DK prime minister while remaining secretary-general of the secretive
Communist Party of Kampuchea (CPK). Other members of the CPK ‘Center’
(mocchim), including Nuon Chea, Son Sen, Mok, and Khieu Samphan, also moved
into Phnom Penh.

The conquered urban populations were now labeled ‘new people.’ Driving them
from the capital in all directions, the Khmer Rouge forcibly settled the
urbanites among the rural ‘base people’ (neak moultanh) who had lived in the
countryside during the 1970-75 war. They were all put to work in
agricultural labour camps without wages, rights, or free time. Before the
rice harvest in late 1975, the Khmer Rouge again rounded up 800,000 of the
urban deportees in various regions and dispatched them to the Northwest
Zone, doubling its population. Tens of thousands died of starvation there
during 1976, while the new regime began exporting rice. Meanwhile, the Khmer
Rouge hunted down and killed thousands of defeated Cambodian officials, army
officers, and increasingly, soldiers, schoolteachers, and alleged
‘pacification agents’ (santec sampoan) who in most cases had merely
protested the repression or just the rigorous living conditions imposed on
them. In 1976-77, the CPK Center and its Security apparatus, the Santebal,
headed by Son Sen and Kang Khek Iev (alias Deuch), also conducted massive
internecine purges of the Northern and Northwest Zone CPK administrations,
arresting and killing large numbers of peasant “base people” who were
relatives of the purged local officials. Starvation and repression escalated
in 1977 and especially in 1978. By early 1979, approximately 650,000 people
or 25% of the Khmer ‘new people,’ and 675,000 Khmer ‘base people’ (15%), had
perished from execution, starvation, overwork, disease, and denial of
medical care.

This severe Khmer Rouge repression of the majority Khmer rural population
was accompanied by intensified violence against ethnic minorities, even
among the ‘base people’. Over half of the ethnic Chinese, a quarter of a
million people, perished in the countryside in 1975-1979, the worst human
disaster ever to befall the large ethnic Chinese community of Southeast
Asia. The Khmer Rouge expelled 150,000 Vietnamese residents from Cambodia in
1975, and ferociously repressed a Cham Muslim rebellion along the Mekong
River. Pol Pot then ordered the deportation of 150,000 Chams living on the
east bank of the Mekong and their forced dispersal throughout the Northern
and Northwest Zones. In November 1975, a Khmer Rouge official in the Eastern
Zone complained to Pol Pot of his inability to implement “the dispersal
strategy according to the decision that you, Brother, had discussed with
us.” Officials in the Northern Zone, he complained, “absolutely refused to
accept Islamic people,” preferring “only pure Khmer people.” In a message to
Pol Pot two months later, Northern Zone CPK leader Ke Pauk listed “enemies”
such as “Islamic people”. Deportations of Chams began again in 1976, and by
early 1979, approximately 100,000 of the country’s Cham population of
250,000 in 1975 had been killed, starved or worked to death. The 10,000 or
so Vietnamese residents remaining in the country were all hunted down and
murdered in 1977 and 1978. Oral evidence suggests that other ethnic groups,
including the Thai and Lao, were also subjected to genocidal persecution;
even the relatively favoured upland minorities suffered enormous losses.

The 1975 Cham rebellion against the CPK regime was followed in 1978 by
another serious uprising in the Eastern Zone, led by ethnic Khmer. From late
1976, the Pol Pot regime accelerated its violent internal purges of the CPK
regional administrations. The Santebal and the CPK Center’s armed forces
subjected all five regions of the Eastern Zone to concerted largescale
arrests and massacres of local CPK officials and soldiers. In May 1978,
these purges reached a crescendo, and provoked a mutiny by units of the Zone
armed forces. The rebels, led by Heng Samrin and Chea Sim, held out for
several months before retreating across the Vietnamese border and requesting
assistance from Hanoi’s army.

Meanwhile, from early 1977, the Pol Pot regime also mounted cross-border
attacks on Thailand, Laos and especially Vietnam. Hanoi was now ready to
intervene. On 25 December 1978, 150,000 Vietnamese troops launched a
multi-pronged assault and took Phnom Penh on 7 January 1979. They drove the
retreating Khmer Rouge forces across the country and into the Cardamom
Mountains along the Thai border. Cambodians welcomed the end of the genocide
which had taken 1.7 million lives of a population of 7.9 million. The
People’s Republic of Kampuchea (PRK) was established, headed by Heng Samrin
and Chea Sim. Foreign Minister Hun Sen became prime minister in 1985.
Vietnamese troops withdrew in 1989, and after UN-sponsored elections in
1993, the regime was re-named the Kingdom of Cambodia.

Aztag- What are some of the common features shared by the Armenian and
Cambodian genocides?

Ben Kiernan- In 1919, an Istanbul court convicted Enver Pasha, the former
Young Turk Minister of War, for “the crime of massacre” during the Armenian
genocide. Following this in absentia conviction, Enver made his way to
Central Asia. On 1 September 1920, Enver caused a sensation at the
Conference of the Peoples of the East at Baku, in Soviet Azerbaijan. Enver
expressed regret for having fought on the side of “the Imperialists of
Germany whom I hate and I curse, precisely as I do those of Britain.” But he
carefully justified his First World War alliance: “We ranged ourselves with
Germany, who had consented to let us live. The German Imperialists used us
to obtain their own brigand ends; but our aim was solely to preserve our
independence. The sentiments which drove us … were not Imperial
sentiments.” He said he now “recognised” that Azerbaijan “should belong to
its own people”. But Enver didn’t mention Armenia. He disguised his
genocidal chauvinism as a desire to live and let live, cherishing national
independence; and even as international solidarity, such as when he praised
his Turkish army for helping to bring down the Tsar.

In this speech, Enver gave further interesting clues to his political
philosophy. His famed Turkish army, he said, drew ‘all its strength from the
rural class.” While denouncing imperialism, he noted: “To my mind, all
who seek to enrich those who do not work should be destroyed.” And he
predicted that “the Oriental world,” which he defined as “all oppressed
peoples,” would “annihilate” the imperialist and capitalist “monsters.”
Enver later led several thousand troops against the Soviet regime, with the
professed aim of “driving the Europeans out and creating the great
Central-Asian Muslim state.”

Pol Pot would have recognised this amalgam of peasantism, ‘class’ violence,
and Third World racism. Enver dismissed the notion of any fellow
oppressed peoples in Europe, even outside that very European construction,
“the Orient”. Enver’s ironic imprisonment in a Western ideology was quite
comparable to that of Pol Pot. They both justified their racialist campaigns
of destruction as class struggle, both portrayed their militaristic
expansionism as national self-defence, and both romanticized the peasantry
of their country while spectacularly failing to improve rural living
conditions.

Enver was convicted in absentia, and was later killed in battle against
Soviet forces. Pol Pot died in 1998 without facing any legal punishment. But
Cambodia and the United Nations agreed last year to establish a special
tribunal to judge the crimes of surviving Khmer Rouge leaders. Pol Pot’s
military commander, Mok, and his security chief Deuch, are both in jail in
Phnom Penh awaiting trial.

Aztag- You have been instrumental in unveiling thousands of documents about
the Khmer Rouge regime. In the case of the Armenian Genocide, detailed
documentation is even harder for historians partly because of the
inaccessibility of the Ottoman archives. What can you say about the
difficulties you faced when trying to unearth the truth?

Ben Kiernan- ‘You are stupid,’ Pol Pot’s deputy Nuon Chea told Deuch, former
commandant of the Khmer Rouge’s Tuol Sleng prison, after learning that Deuch
had failed to destroy the prison’s archives before fleeing from Phnom Penh
in 1979. Deuch had stayed behind for several hours after Vietnamese forces
entered the city on January 9, but instead of burning the archives, he had
preferred to ensure that his last prisoners were murdered. Over 100,000
pages of evidence fell into the hands of the Vietnamese and were soon made
available to scholars. A ‘Tuol Sleng Museum of Genocide’ was set up, with an
archive of the Khmer Rouge ‘bureaucracy of death.’ British journalist
Anthony Barnett visited Cambodia in early 1980 and brought back an extensive
set of photocopies, which formed the basis for a cover story we wrote in
London’s New Statesman magazine (2 May 1980). When another journalist
presented copies of these documents to Pol Pot’s brother-in-law Ieng Sary,
he was caught off-guard and admitted that they were genuine. This admission
was quickly denied by an anonymous Khmer Rouge aide, in an unsigned letter
to the Far Eastern Economic Review. A decade later, another leading Khmer
Rouge official, Son Sen, read through the Genocide Convention and underlined
passages that might be used to prosecute him, including the definition of
the crime, and sections asserting that, “whether committed in time of peace
or in time of war, [genocide] is a crime under international law.” In 1996,
Yale University’s Cambodian Genocide Program located another 100,000 pages
of secret documents, the archive of the Santebal, run by Son Sen. A few
months later, Ieng Sary defected to the Cambodian government and set up his
own “Documentation Center” to defend his record. Pol Pot murdered Son Sen
the next year, and Pol Pot himself died in 1998. But Ieng Sary could still
be tried by the forthcoming UN tribunal.

The evidence against them is strong. A handwritten document dated April 17,
1978, includes a list of names of relatives and associates of a prisoner
named San Eap. A Zone commander had sent the list to ‘Committee 870’, a
title reminiscent of the royal plural, used by Pol Pot. Using a similar
personal alias, Angkar (‘the Organization’), Pol Pot scribbled on the cover
letter in thick red pencil: ‘A/k 19/4/78 Follow up’ (taam daan). This was an
order to arrest those named in the list.

Khmer Rouge leaders became uncomfortable at the publication of such
incriminating internal records. They had had absolutely no idea that one day
their signed murder commands would be made available on the World Wide Web.
Perhaps this possibility will serve as a small deterrent to future
genocidists. Their inability to deny their genocide deprives the
perpetrators of a powerful weapon against the memory of their victims.

Aztag- In recent years, you have written a number of papers related to the
Armenian genocide. When did you start researching this genocide and
comparing it to other cases of mass murder?

Ben Kiernan- I began researching the Armenian genocide in 1989, after
fifteen years’ research on Cambodia. I read work by Ronald Suny on the
social history of the Armenian genocide, before reading other studies of
Young Turk leaders and their ideology. At first, I saw a parallel between
the destruction of the medieval Armenian kingdom in 1375, and that of the
Southeast Asian kingdom of Champa in 1471. In the twentieth century, the
stateless Cham Muslim population of Cambodia became major victims of the
Khmer Rouge, just as the Armenians became victims of the Young Turks.

I also found intriguing comparisons between Pol Pot, Enver Pasha and some
other genocidal leaders, including marginal connections to royalty. The Nazi
leader Heinrich Himmler was the godson and namesake of a Bavarian prince.
Enver Pasha married a daughter of the Ottoman Sultan. Pol Pot’s sister and
cousin were respectively a consort and second wife of the Khmer king. Many
modern genocidists also shared marginal geographic origins. Hitler and other
Nazi leaders were of Austrian background. Enver and other Young Turk leaders
like Talaat and Dr. Nazim came from Turkish minority communities of Eastern
Europe. Khmer Rouge leaders Son Sen and Ieng Sary were from the Cambodian
minority in Vietnam.

Though the French revolution influenced both the Young Turks and the Khmer
Rouge, and the latter were communist, both regimes were also racist and
expansionist, like the Nazis.

http://www.aztagdaily.com/interviews/interviews.htm
www.yale.edu/gsp

Georgian Prime Minister Proud His Mother Is Armenian

GEORGIAN PRIME MINISTER PROUD HIS MOTHER IS ARMENIAN

10.06.2004 17:39

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ My mother is Armenian and I will always speak
proudly about it, Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania stated
in the Parliament today in response to Deputy Gocha Pipia’s claim
that Government members report their and their parents’ national
and religious identity. As reported by Georgian sources, Pipia’s
address caused indignation among the leadership of the Parliament
and Government, who qualified such statements of the Deputy as
anti-constitutional. As a sign of protest members of the Georgian
Government left the conference hall. Zurab Zhvania stated he would
recall it “with shame that such a question was raised in the Georgian
Parliament.”

BAKU: Democratic reforms play imp. role in development of Az

Azer Tag, Azerbaijan State Info Agency
June 9 2004

DEMOCRATIC REFORMS PLAY IMPORTANT ROLE IN DEVELOPMENT OF AZERBAIJAN
[June 09, 2004, 16:41:32]

On June 8, the deputy foreign minister of Azerbaijan Republic Vagif
Sadigov has met with the delegation led by the president of Assembly
of the Turkish Associations of America (ÀÒÀÀ), Erjument Kilinj.

As was informed to AzerTAj from the press center of the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, deputy minister Vagif Sadygov, hospitably having
welcomed visitors, highly has estimated activity of Assembly of the
Turkish Associations of America and has emphasized continuation of
the said work in the same spirit.

Speaking of the Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorny Karabakh conflict, the
work done in the field of its settlement, both refugees and the IDPs
as a result of the conflict, the deputy minister has noted importance
of activation of efforts by the international community for quick
settlement of the said problem on the basis of principles and norms
of international law.

Having noted, that due to the activity which is carried out by the
State Committee on Work with Azerbaijanis Living Abroad, in the
USA were generated the organizations of the Azerbaijan Diaspora,
the deputy minister has emphasized necessity of support of ÀÒÀÀ and
developments of joint cooperation in this business.

Having told that democratic reforms carried out in Azerbaijan play
important role in development of our country, president of ÀÒÀÀ
Erjument Kilinj has emphasized, that serious steps connected to human
rights are undertaken, and has expressed hope for continuation and
henceforth successful internal and foreign policy.

Erjument Kilinj has presented detailed information on activity of the
organization supervised by him, having noted, that is ready to assist
in solution of many questions, including probation of the Azerbaijani
students at the US Congress.

He also highly estimated the attention shown by the Azerbaijan state
to problems of our compatriots, living abroad.

At the meeting, also were exchanged views on a number of other
questions representing mutual interest.

Azerbaijani officer shot dead near separatist-controlled territory

Azerbaijani officer shot dead near separatist-controlled territory

Associated Press Worldstream
June 8, 2004 Tuesday 12:11 PM Eastern Time

BAKU, Azerbaijan — Azerbaijan on Tuesday said an army officer was
killed in shooting near territory occupied by ethnic Armenian forces.

The Defense Ministry said that a 28-year-old battalion commander
was killed and another soldier in shooting in the Fizulinsky region,
the ministry said.

Part of the region has been occupied since 1993 by ethnic Armenian
forces who also control the adjacent Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Azerbaijani forces were driven out of Nagorno-Karabakh in fighting
in the 1990s and the Armenian fighters also occupied other nearby
territory as the Azerbaijani forces retreated.

Before the fighting, Nagorno-Karabakh was predominantly ethnic
Armenian.

A cease-fire was signed in May 1994, but Nagorno-Karabakh’s final
status has not been resolved and firing sporadically breaks across the
“line of control” demilitarized zone that separates Azerbaijani and
Armenian forces.

Nagorno-Karabakh officials said that there had been a small exchange
of fire including a brief sniper duel between the forces dug down
south east of the enclave. They reported no injuries.

Yerevan Municipality Launches Campaign Against Illegal Petrol Statio

YEREVAN MUNICIPALITY LAUNCHES CAMPAIGN AGAINST ILLEGAL PETROL STATIONS

A1 Plus | 16:21:39 | 07-06-2004 | Social |

125 of 270 Yerevan’s petrol stations are due to be dismantled because
they operate illegally without the municipality’s permission and 30
of them are already dismantled, the municipality officials say.

The municipality’s investigation in that field shows 105 petrol
stations need to be reconstructed and adjusted to proper criteria.

Book Review: Genocide’s mark upon a tortured soul

Los Angeles Times
June 5, 2004 Saturday
Home Edition

BOOK REVIEW;
Genocide’s mark upon a tortured soul;
The Daydreaming Boy: A Novel; Micheline Aharonian Marcom; Riverhead
Books: 214 pp., $23.95

by Bernadette Murphy, Special to The Times

“The man who has no mother’s form to form him is a sad man,
unanchored man, vile and demoniac,” confides Vahe Tcheubjian,
narrator of Micheline Aharonian Marcom’s beautiful and disturbing
second novel, “The Daydreaming Boy,” which details in stark terms the
psychic aftermath of the Armenian genocide. Having written
compellingly about the 1915-1918 massacre of more than a million
Armenians in Turkey (“Three Apples Fell From Heaven”), Marcom turns
her attention to the recurring distress of that event as played out
in the life of one man.

A middle-aged, successful Armenian businessman living in 1960s
Beirut, Vahe is haunted by his past. He watches idly, smoking
cigarettes on the balcony of his apartment, his back cooled by the
cracked tiles, as scenes from his younger years replay themselves.
Raised in a Beirut orphanage after having been abandoned in the wake
of the massacre, with no knowledge of his family, he has spent his
lifetime trying to undo the memories of his youth. Over the years, he
has managed to convince himself that the child Vahe, the orphan, did
not exist. He has placed that young boy, and all the other people he
knew back then, in a “walnut box,” he tells us: “I forgot them
completely; I unexisted them and they accordingly disappeared from
the box and then the box itself disappeared.”

But the past has a way of catching up with us even when we close it
off from ourselves, and on Vahe’s 46th birthday his younger self
reappears like some monstrous dark specter, and the film of his
childhood begins “playing and replaying and forward and back,” until
the memories threaten to unravel Vahe and the small comforts he’s
found.

He soon becomes a man who can do little else but indulge in
fantasies, which alternate between scenes of nurturing comfort and
graphic sexuality, of gentle tenderness juxtaposed with
survival-driven cruelty. His desire for his lost mother’s loving
touch converges with adult lust as he hungers after his neighbor’s
teenage Muslim maid. He takes countless walks in the city’s zoo,
imagining in the monkey Jumba a lost soul like himself, and he
envisions viciously killing Jumba to relieve his own misery. Appalled
at his thoughts, he wonders, “How did I become this sort of man?”

Slowly and artfully, Marcom reveals to the reader (and to Vahe
himself) the suffering of his early life. When he was first brought
to the orphanage, he recognized the Armenian word for “mother” but
spoke only Turkish, the language of the enemy. Was his father a Turk
and his birth the outcome of his Armenian mother’s rape? He knows
nothing for sure. In the orphanage, he was taunted by the other boys,
who beat out of him the only language he knew, until he found someone
weaker than himself to be the object of their ridicule and cruelty.
Vahe himself joined in the brutality visited on the newcomer, in an
effort to shut off any tender feelings or signs of frailty. “I cannot
bear it: the wars; the bloodletting; the untold things. I cannot,”
Vahe exclaims as the memories flood back.

>>From his reverie on the balcony he moves on to a reexamination of his
hollow, midlife years married to Juliana, with whom he lives
comfortably in pre-civil war Beirut and in whom he cannot confide —
then on to explicit fantasies of sex and violence before winding his
way back to what he can remember or conjecture about his origins.
Eventually Marcom leads us into the 1980s and the destruction of
Beirut by warring Christian and Muslim factions, mirroring Vahe’s
own, interior self-destruction.

Marcom’s stream-of-consciousness writing is deft and impressionistic:
“I am lying on my back and it comes back to me; harks back to that
other summer 1915, the summer of our death and yet my birth two years
later, mine own birth after the death of a race and our tongue….
How do I know something occurred if I myself have not been witness to
it? How can the invisible history stories be so strong as to engender
a hate that will lift a knife and plunge it into the flesh of another
beast, a man; or to slaughter him with a rifle semi-automatic? … I
am no man to answer such questions, or even to posit them; I think:
what did I do to deserve this?”

Marcom answers Vahe’s initial question — “How did I become this sort
of man?” — by giving us his full and excruciating history, but that
other question, the final one, remains unanswerable. Why do humans do
horrible things to one another? How are we to survive such brutality
— except as Vahe has, by endeavoring to dream it all away?

“The Daydreaming Boy” is a dazzling and disquieting account of what
happens when our dreamscapes stop working as a defense against the
past, and the awful reality of what we do to one another reasserts
itself.

GRAPHIC: PHOTO: VAHE’S STORY: In her second novel, “The Daydreaming
Boy,” Micheline Aharonian Marcom writes about a middle-aged Armenian
businessman living in 1960s Beirut who is haunted by his past.
PHOTOGRAPHER: Lawrence K. Ho Los Angeles Times