Outside view: Truth in Iraq

Outside view: Truth in Iraq
By Ed Hogan-Bassey, Outside View Commentator

United Press International
Feb 7 2005

Washington, DC, Feb. 5 (UPI) — It worked in South Africa after the
demise of Apartheid, preventing bloody civil war and enabling
forgiveness, reconciliation and peace to exist between white and
black South Africans. It worked in Lebanon bringing different
religious groups together to unite and live in peace. It also worked
in Bosnia, allowing Muslims, Christians and others to reconcile and
live together in peace. Iraq is not an exception. The Iraqi people,
young and old, Shiite or Sunni, Kurdish and others, must come to
terms with each other to reconcile, forgive, and move on as one
nation.

The Jan. 30 Iraqi election and the vote for democracy was a
remarkable success and victory for Iraqis. But the next 90 to 120
days will be critical for Iraq’s future as well as for the future of
U.S. policy in the Arab-Islamic world.

In the face of a successful election that has created a road map for
democracy, Iraqi people can now start to smell the sweet scent of
freedom. Thomas Friedman in his New York Times Op-Ed column of Feb. 3
said it best: “Whatever you thought about this war, it’s not about
Mr. (George W.) Bush any more. It’s about the aspirations of the
Iraqi majority to build an alternative to Saddamism. By voting the
way they did, in the face of real danger, the Iraqis have earned the
right to ask everyone now to put aside their squabbles and focus on
what is no longer just a pipe dream but a real opportunity to implant
decent, consensual government in the heart of the Arab-Muslim world”.

But how will the Iraqi majority be able to build an alternative to
Saddamism and implant decent, consensual government without real
unity, forgiveness and reconciliation amongst its divided ethnic and
religious groups? How will the United States claim real success for
bringing democracy to the Iraqi people without a stable and unified
Iraqi government?

The basic, but most strategic, question that inspired the call for
Iraq unification summit was what can the United States do after the
successful election to save Iraq from disintegration and bloody civil
war? Implicit in this question is the ability to define what such
disintegration and bloody civil war would mean in the whole region
and the implication for U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East.

The rising tide of tribal and religious disunity amongst the Iraqis,
including the Shiites, Kurds, Sunnis, and other groups, threatens to
destabilize and it signals a future social disintegration of Iraq and
a grim possibility that a civil war may be looming. If Iraq is
allowed to plunge into a civil conflict, it will be a devastating
blow to the Iraqi people and to America’s reputation in the world
arena.

Fundamental reconciliation of Iraq’s ethnic and religious groups is
critical to building democracy in that country and to establishing a
road map for spreading democracy in the Arab-Islamic world. This is
the reason for holding a high-level Iraq reconciliation summit. It is
designed to create a network and an infrastructure that facilitate
communication and implementation of both short and long-term goals of
reconciliation, forgiveness and unification that will bind the
different tribes, religious factions and ethnic groups in a new Iraq
democratic society.

If we are to take a realistic and honest view of establishing a
successful, stable, functioning, peaceful and democratic government
in Iraq, we must first address the following three essential factors:
reconciliation, forgiveness and unification among the Iraqi ethnic
and religious groups. These groups include: the Kurds, Shiites,
Sunnis, Assyrian Christians, Turkoman, Marsh Arabs and others.
Neither the United States nor the United Nations can bypass these
three essential factors to obtain a real, stable, peaceful and
democratic government in Iraq.

The United States must act now. Unless it act very soon, it faces a
dilemma where all its accomplishments and contributions to rebuilding
Iraq and bring democracy to that volatile part of the world will be
lost. The opportunities that it has for winning hearts and minds,
establishing democratic institutions and creating economic and
political stability in that region may well be washed away.

The immediate aim of the summit is to bring together the Shiites,
Sunnis, Kurds, Turkoman, Assyrian Christians, Armenians, Marsh Arabs,
and others, including various religious factions in Iraq, for a
30-day reconciliation, forgiveness and unification summit. It would
be patterned, organized and similar in nature to that conducted by
the state of South Africa following the demise of Apartheid. The
summit would consciously revitalize the spirit of nationalism,
brotherhood, patriotism, forgiveness and reconciliation among the
various tribes and religious groups.

(Ed Hogan-Bassey is a 22-year veteran of the United States
Information Agency. He is a fellow of the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology Center for Advanced Study and the author of the soon to be
published volume: “United States Foreign Policy and the Rising Tide
of Global Anti-Americanism”.)

(United Press International’s “Outside View” commentaries are written
by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important
issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of
United Press International. In the interests of creating an open
forum, original submissions are invited.)

CSU No. 10 Producer of Peace Corps Volunteers

The Rocky Mountain Collegian, Colorado State University
Feb 7 2005

CSU No. 10 Producer of Peace Corps Volunteers

by Karissa Ciarlelli
February 07, 2005

The organization with the slogan “the toughest job you’ll ever love”
offers some volunteers the adventure of a lifetime.

It involves leaving behind friends and family for two years, traveling
to a foreign nation and submerging oneself into an unfamiliar and
exotic new culture.

It is the Peace Corps.

CSU is among the nation’s leading schools in producing Peace Corps
volunteers. There are 66 CSU alumni serving around the world, which
ranks CSU as the No. 10 supplier of volunteers this year.

Since the Peace Corps’ inception in 1961, 1,281 volunteers have
been CSU graduates, making CSU the No. 14 provider of volunteers of
all time.

“To serve, (in the Peace Corps) one must have an altruistic and
adventurous spirit,” said Christy Eylar, the campus representative
and recruiter of the U.S. Peace Corps.

Peace Corps volunteers primarily serve in education, and additional
service areas include health and HIV/AIDS education, environment,
agriculture, business development and information technology,
Eylar said.

Peace Corps has 7,735 volunteers serving in 72 different countries.
Volunteers are sent anywhere from Asia to Central America, Europe
or Africa.

While volunteers are able to specify regions of the world that interest
them, they are not necessarily able to choose their exact destination,
Eylar said.

Leslie Shay Bright, assistant director of the Office of Conflict
Resolution and Student Conduct Services at CSU, served as a member
of the Peace Corps from 1996 to 1998 in the small country of Armenia.

Growing up in a small Wyoming town, Bright felt from an early age an
urge to travel and see the world.

“Around when I was 15, I saw a commercial for the Peace Corps and
thought, ‘That’s my ticket out!'” Bright said.

In Armenia, Bright taught English as a second language to kindergarten
through 10th-grade Armenian students.

While teaching, Bright experienced a bit of culture shock because
of the country’s different learning styles. While the students
of Armenia are accustomed to very strict, lecture-style learning,
Bright attempted to teach in a more interactive, small-group style,
which confused the children.

“It resulted in complete chaos. The kids were totally out of control,”
Bright said. She said her students would steal her chalk and throw
rocks in from outside.

All Peace Corps volunteers are required to serve 27 months, with the
first three months being training. For Bright, her training involved
half-day language study and half-day job study.

“When you immerse yourself in the culture, you learn (the language)
pretty darn fast,” Bright said.

Certain countries have a language requirement for volunteers. For
example, to serve in Latin America, volunteers must have completed four
years of high school Spanish and two years of college-level Spanish.

Bright said she also experienced kindness from complete strangers
while abroad.

“Armenians are the most giving and compassionate people. They would
do anything for you,” Bright said.

After getting on the wrong bus when she initially arrived, Bright was
taken 15 to 20 miles away from her destination. However, an Armenian
couple brought her to their home for the night and fed and cared for
her until the next day when she left on the correct bus.

In addition to the adventure, Peace Corps volunteers are also
able to develop their leadership and career skills, according to
peacecorps.org.

Jennifer Johnson, the community liaison coordinator for Off-Campus
Student Services, said she is truly an adventurer at heart. She spent
1999 to 2001 in Gambia, which is in West Africa, teaching math and
science to middle school children.

Johnson learned to speak Mandinka, which was also the name of the
tribe she stayed with, and she was taught to carry buckets of water
on her head and adjust to life without electricity.

“It was very challenging at first, but I felt very comfortable after
a year,” Johnson said.

The Peace Corps’ application process takes a year from the time a
person applies to the time he or she gains acceptance.

The main reason people do not make it into the Peace Corps is because
they remove themselves from the lengthy application process, as
something else may come up in their lives, Eylar said.

The Peace Corps, which is funded by the U.S government, pays its
volunteers a monthly living allowance to cover rent, food and travel
expenses, as well as a monthly settlement fund of $225 a month. So
when volunteers complete their service and return, they will have
$6,075 set aside to readjust to life at home.

“My goal going in was very idealistic. I thought, ‘I’m going to help
them.’ However, when I left, I realized that I was the one who had
been helped,” Bright said.

Johnson agreed, saying that her experience left her with a wider
appreciation for cultural differences.

“I learned to appreciate the differences that contribute to our world
in their own unique way,” Johnson said. “And I now approach life with
a different attitude.”

Eylar, who served in Bolivia from 2001-2003, said her life was also
altered for the better.

“I’d say I learned a much richer way of living my life,” she said.

For more information on being involved in the Peace Corps, see Christy
Eylar in

Laurel Hall on the Oval or visit the Peace Corps Web site.

Dark Continent

The Jerusalem Report
February 7, 2005

DARK CONTINENT

by Paula Slier

As the world recalls Auschwitz, a museum in Rwanda looks to the
Holocaust’s themes of grief and hope

Paula Slier Kigali, Rwanda

The air is hot and sticky. Unpaved, red-earth streets wind past tiny
stone houses with corrugated-tin roofs that peep out from behind
one-room shops selling everything from raw meat to imported
chocolates. An occasional modern-looking two- or three-story building
punctuates the poverty. This is Kigali, capital of Rwanda, population
400,000.

A decade after the genocide in which close to a million people – over
a tenth of the population – were killed in a hundred days, Rwanda is
still struggling to rebuild itself. Most of the dead were members of
the Tutsi ethnic group and moderate members of the rival Hutu group;
most of the murderers were Hutus.

As the world prepares to mark the 60th anniversary of the liberation
of Auschwitz on January 27, a Jew visiting this sprawling city is
almost automatically drawn to a hilltop overlooking it, where the
Kigali Genocide Memorial serves as a reminder. Opened in April 2003,
it is situated next to mass graves in which more than a quarter of a
million victims are buried. Its pale pink walls and modern two-floor
structure are surrounded by memorial gardens where visitors are
invited to sit and reflect.

The ground floor of the museum documents the genocide and includes a
large chamber in which glass cabinets exhibit skulls, bones, clothing
remains and photographs of victims. Signs in French, English and the
local language, Kinyarwanda, cater to the hundreds of local and
foreign visitors each day. Upstairs, an exhibition entitled “Wasted
Lives” tells the story of other genocides, among them the murder of
the Hereros in Namibia in 1904, the Armenians in 1915-18, the
Cambodians in 1975-79 and most recently, Muslims and Christians in
the Balkans. Two rooms are devoted to Nazi Germany and the
extermination of the Jews, with special reference to the Treblinka
death camp, where almost the same number died as in Rwanda.

The themes of the museum resonate deeply for any Jew, including the
brutal horror of the murders, the inaction of the international
community, the need for education, reconciliation and rebuilding, the
mandate to care for survivors, the desire to honor the heroes who
saved innocent lives and, perhaps, the difficulty of dealing with the
genocide except as a nearly endless series of separate,
heart-wrenching details.

Two British brothers, Stephen and James Smith, are largely
responsible, through their organization, Aegis, the Genocide
Prevention Research Initiative, for the museum’s final configuration.
Hired by the Rwandan government to create and operate it for three
years (when it is expected to be self-sustaining and will be run by
the Kigali municipality), the Smiths were asked to base the
institution on the Beth Shalom Holocaust Memorial Center they created
near Nottingham in northern England. And that museum, in turn, was
inspired by the brothers’ visit 10 years ago to Yad Vashem in
Jerusalem.

In their early 20s at the time, they returned home and converted
their parents’ small non-denominational Christian conference center
in the Nottinghamshire countryside into a historical museum that
houses a permanent exhibition on the Holocaust, along with seminar
and film rooms, a library and bookshop. “We realized that the
Holocaust is not just a Jewish problem,” says younger brother James
Smith, Aegis executive director, now 35 and married to a Rwandan
genocide survivor he met while working in Rwanda. “It has
consequences for us all.”

Ironically, as the Nottingham Holocaust center was preparing to open
in 1994, the genocide in Rwanda and ethnic cleansing in Bosnia
highlighted the failure of the international community to either
predict or respond effectively to these new tragedies. “Our responses
to genocidal threats are characteristically reactive and too late,”
Smith notes.

Julien Apollon Kabahizi, the Aegis country manager in Rwanda, lost
four members of his immediate family and most of his extended family
in the genocide. He, too, criticizes the international community for
its inaction 10 years ago and is anguished over his country’s
difficulty in coming to terms with its past. He points out that many
of the schoolchildren coming through the museum – a large number of
them children of survivors or perpetrators – know little about the
genocide beyond what their parents have been willing to say. Although
every year, during the three months in which the genocide occurred,
media focus becomes intense, the genocide is not yet part of the
school curriculum, largely because educators are uncertain how to
present the material.

Emmanuel Mugenzira, 48, lost his entire family during the genocide.
Slightly hunched over and almost emaciated, Mugenzira stares across
the vacant school yard in the southern town of Murambi, where 50,000
people were killed. Left for dead himself by the killers, he still
has a deep bullet scar on his forehead. The government told Tutsis to
go to the schools for safety – but the government was Hutu, and
thousands of Tutsis were killed while hiding in classrooms.

“Most of the killers were my neighbors,” Mugenzira recalls. “They
burned my house, they looted everything I had. I am the only Tutsi
living in Murambi now, and I am scared. But they can’t kill me, I’m
already dead. I come here every day to look after my family.” In a
reaction that echoes that of many Holocaust survivors, particularly
right after the war, he adds, “I wish I had died with them.”

As in other genocides, there are not only victims and perpetrators
but also “righteous gentiles.” Marck Msabimana, a Hutu married to a
Tutsi and a former soldier in the Rwandan army, risked his life to
save his wife and her family. “I kept on telling Tutsis to come and
hide in my house, especially the ones who were my wife’s friends. I
hid them under the bed, in the ceiling, in the cupboard. The first
time the Hutus came looking, there were 40 people in my house. I was
very scared hiding them, especially when I found out that outside,
people were collecting money to pay someone to kill me because they
suspected me.” They had collected 26,000 Rwandan francs (about $ 50),
he recalls, but the killer wanted 30,000.

National reconciliation remains a crucial issue in Rwanda. Unlike
Jews, who could leave Europe after the Holocaust, Tutsi survivors
must live with their former killers, including neighbors and even
family members. They know that not all the Hutus regret what occurred
and that some may still dream of a world without Tutsis, as the Nazis
dreamed of a world without Jews. Except for the hope that the
brutality will not erupt again, many survivors in Rwanda would find
it difficult to go on with their lives. Msabimana says he is
convinced that another genocide could never again happen in Rwanda,
that the lessons of the past have been learned – but he offers no
reasons for his hope.

For Emmanuel Muvunyi, the 33-year-old director of the department of
education’s student financing agency, his department’s efforts to
include genocide in the required school curriculum are part of
ensuring a peaceful future for Rwanda. Fluent in English and
passionate in his speech, Muvunyi, who participated in a month-long
educational program in Israel in 2002, insists that the lessons of
the Rwandan genocide are the same as those of the Holocaust: that
racism must be fought and that the intervention of international
organizations is crucial.

But he sees important differences between the Rwandan experience and
the Holocaust. “In Rwanda, the genocide was faster and there was the
deliberate negligence of the United Nations,” he says. After World
War II, the Allied powers mounted the Nuremberg trials, but the era
of public tribunals to deal with war criminals was short, and many
murderers were never prosecuted. In Rwanda, “gacaca” (literally,
“sit-on-the-grass”) village courts are being held all around the
country to try the more than 80,000 alleged killers still in the
country’s prisons.

An estimated 2 million Hutus fled to the Democratic Republic of
Congo. While many may merely fear Tutsi reprisals should they return,
others are armed members of Hutu militias who dream of returning to
Rwanda to continue the killing.

Ezra Birinjira is a Hutu pastor who infiltrated back into the
country, after four years in a Congolese refugee camp, in a group
caught by Rwandan troops. He denies having killed anyone and insists
that he fled the country only out of fear of Tutsi revenge. “I came
back so that I could reach my home. Then I surrendered,” he says.

After his capture, he was required, as are all Hutu returnees, to
take part in a course, organized by the National Unity and
Reconciliation Commission (NURC), to learn “how to follow the rules
of the new Rwandan government and not to start segregating” Hutus
from Tutsis. Established in March 1999 by an act of parliament, the
NURC hopes that national unity and reconciliation can be developed
through social and economic projects. Among its initiatives are
programs throughout the country that bring together survivors with
perpetrators who have served time in jail.

Just under 8 million people live in Rwanda now, 90 percent of them
engaged in subsistence agriculture. A fledgling democracy with few
natural resources, landlocked and with only tea and coffee as
important exports, it is a nation that was constructed by Western
powers. Before colonization by Belgium began in 1916, Hutus and
Tutsis lived side by side in peace. But the dynamics of colonization,
with Europeans manipulating and using the tribes to entrench their
own power, created festering inequalities and jealousies that erupted
when the country’s Hutu president was killed, his plane shot down,
presumably by Tutsi conspirators, in April 1994. Within hours, Hutus
avenging his death began killing both Tutsis and moderate Hutus, who
represented political opposition.

Jews coined the phrase “Never Again!” as a refusal, after the
Holocaust, ever to submit again to the centuries of persecutions and
pogroms that had led to it. But in Rwanda the phrase is commonly used
in a more universalistic sense. For example, survivor Kabahizi, the
Aegis representative, asks, “When they said ‘Never Again!’ after the
Holocaust, was it meant for some people and not for others?” His is
both a cry of grief for what happened to his own people and an
accusation against those who could have helped but did not.

James Smith, too, understands the phrase to refer to a commitment
undertaken long ago by the international community that genocide will
never occur again. “The genocide in Rwanda and ethnic cleansing in
Bosnia threw into relief the failure of the international community
to either predict or respond effectively to these unfolding
tragedies,” Smith said in a telephone interview. “We have no model to
prevent genocide,” he muses, “just principles about our
responsibility to protect.”

It is estimated that 200 million people were murdered by
state-sponsored targeting of civilians in the last century. Another
million lives are at risk today in Sudan. A hillside overlooking the
poverty-stricken city of Kilgari holds the most recent testimony to
both human ferociousness and human hope.

SIDEBAR

Making the Choice to Heal

Tali Nates’s father was a Schindler survivor; her mother fled Warsaw
in the early 1930s. From childhood, says the Tel Aviv-born mother of
two, she felt a calling to pursue a profession that taught the
consequences of intolerance. Now 43 and living in South Africa, where
she lectures and facilitates anti-prejudice and human-rights
workshops, Nates, blue eyes flashing as she speaks and one hand
continuously flicking back curls of reddish-orange hair that keep
falling into her face, remains passionate about the mission she set
for herself long ago.

“I felt a connection between the genocide in Rwanda and the
Holocaust,” she says. “I hoped that by exploring and understanding
man’s immense cruelty to his neighbors, I would perhaps find the key
to educating future generations not to harm one another.” For seven
years she headed the education department at the privately funded
Foundation for Tolerance Education in Johannesburg, a project that
used the experiences of apartheid, the Holocaust and the Rwandan
genocide to teach universal lessons of tolerance, acceptance and
human rights. She has trained hundreds of teachers and thousands of
students in South Africa and now assists with teacher-training
programs in Rwanda; she expects to run seminars this year for the
Rwandan Ministry of Education and the Kigali Memorial Center.

“Rwanda was a Holocaust,” she says. “It was a Holocaust in Africa, in
a place the world didn’t know or care about. It happened to people
who were different and ‘less important’ than ‘us.’ For me, the
Ntarama church (where some 4,000 Tutsis were murdered with grenades
and machetes) felt like Auschwitz. But do we need to compare the two
genocides? They both ended in the silence of millions who could still
have been with us. And after every genocide the world says, ‘Never
Again!’ Until the next time, that is.”

Nates moved to South Africa in 1985 to marry a South African she met
while he was visiting Israel. In 1994, when the genocide was
happening in Rwanda, she recalls watching it “helplessly” on the news
in suburban comfort. “When I lectured about the Holocaust to
students, I always devoted a few lessons to the world’s reaction – to
how little was done. And here I was, living in a world that was doing
nothing about another mass murder. I felt that I betrayed my
grandmother and aunts who were murdered in Belzec if I stayed
silent.” At the Foundation for Tolerance Education in 1998, she
decided to create a “tolerance program” about Rwanda. Rwandan
survivors and refugees in South Africa helped her put together a
program “about people’s choices – the perpetrators, bystanders,
victims and rescuers – and the consequences of those choices,” she
explains.

Last year, she visited Rwanda at last. “I am alive because another
man in another time made a choice and rescued my father. This was a
different country, a different time, different circumstances – but so
many things were familiar and similar. Holding hands with one of the
survivors who lost all her family in the genocide, I felt we were
sisters.”

P.S.

Relatives of 3 killed shepherds break their silence

Roj TV, Denmark
Feb 5 2005

Relatives of 3 killed shepherds break their silence

No case has been opened for 11 years after 3 shepherds who were
killed in Varto, Muþ in 1994 by the Special Forces teams.

Abdurahman Tekal, father of Suphi Tekal who was reportedly killed
along with two shepherds; Mehmet Kýlýç and Izettin Tekal after taken
into custody, stated he informed the governor’s office, gendarmerie
station and prosecutor’ office about that who had been killed by
special forces teams are shepherds and, he became paralyzed from
tortures he had been exposed. Huseyin Kýlýç, elderly brother of
Mehmet Kýlýþç, says: “This cruelty must be punished and justice
should be implemented into practice. This is savageness which a human
cannot do to the other. We demand those who are accountable for that
cruelty to be penalized.”

It is asserted that the special force teams called “Tansu’s soldiers”
who established themselves in Varto Clinic held a military operation
covering Karapinar (Xerepungar) village of Varto, Muþ in August 1994,
and detained Mehmet Kýlýç, Suphi Tekal and Izettin Tekal, shepherds
who had been residing in the village cited and executed them by
shooting in Kuru Gol arean nearby Arpa Upland called ‘Varé Ce’. The
security officials took off shepherds clothes, dressed their robed
them in guerilla dresses and laid down 3 Kalashnikovs by the bodies.

Huseyin Kýlýç, Mehmet Kýlýç’s elderly brother, pointing out the
special force teams took reporters to the spot and told them they had
killed 3 guerillas after incident said: “After showing the bodies
with guns to press as if they had been guerillas, the special force
unites brought funerals to Muþ State Hospital. Upon this, we applied
to the Governor’s Office Varto and Varto Gendarmerie Headquarters
telling the 3 who had been murdered by the special force staff are
shepherds and requested the incident to be revealed. Afterwards,
while were going to Muþ Public Prosecutor’s Office, we were stopped
and threatened to be killed by some armed people dressed in plain
clothes. They wanted us to make depositions that who had been killed
are ‘terrorists’. I answered them: One of died persons is my brother
having 6 children. Since his financial situation was not good, he had
been shepherding for his livelihood. He is not a terrorist.”

Kýlýç expressing they did not permit us, me and other shepherds’
relatives, to go in prosecutor’s office after taking our ID cards and
threatened us to kill saying “If you see the prosecutor, we kill you
as others” said he and the relatives of the 2 killed shepherds were
handed over to a sergeant major. “We were taken out of the
administration of justice by him and told ‘The funerals are in Muþ
State Hospital. Go and receive the corpses there.

Prosecutor: I can do anything

“I and other families returned back to the administration of justice
after walking around for a while and presented a petition bearing the
statement those who had been killed by the special force units are
shepherd to the prosecutor. We requested the funerals to be delivered
us, hereupon; prosecutor said ‘ I cannot do anything’. Indictment
after autopsy alleges that the dead are terrorists who caught killed
after in an armed conflict with troops. After prosecutor’s attitude,
we went to hospital and received the funerals.”

”Difficulty in defining the bodies’

The corpses were unrecognizable reporting Kýlýç said he could
identify his brother from his nose and hair. “The day when we take
the bodies from the morgue, a person dressed in plain clothes who was
calling on the phone called me and asked me to come on the phone. The
individual who was talking on the phone introduced him self to be the
commander of air operation and offered his condolence to me. He said
‘ Come to see me when you received the funerals, so I asked the
person dressed in plain clothes to tell where the commander of air
operation was. The former told me ‘You cannot talk to the commander
of air operation’, swearing at me and added ‘ If you strive much, we
will send you along side them’. We take the delivery of funerals and
turned to our village.”

Military operation on the village

After we took the bodies to the village, a wide-scope military
operation was held over the residence, and the special force units
gathered all the villagers on the boulevard, insulted at and tortured
them. After undressing dwellers, the security officials dragged
villagers on thorns “Militaries wanted to force us to say ‘Died
people are terrorists’. They started to beat us with rifle butts
after getting us down out of vehicles. ‘You burry those Armenians in
these holy grounds’ they told us. Calling imam to come by themselves,
they said ‘Priest, are coming here to pray for these Armenians’. They
ordered all the villagers as well as women and children to lie down
and we waited so for an hour. After they went, we stand up, buried
the funerals and applied to Varto Public Prosecutor’s Office. The
prosecutor asked me why I didn’t come to make the application before.
I answered him I had been afraid of the troops. Then, he said ‘I will
call you later’, but has never done so up to now. This cruelty must
be punished and justice should be implemented into practice. This is
savageness which a human cannot do to an other. We demand those who
are accountable for that cruelty be penalized. The state should not
have done this cruelty to its own citizens” said he.

Father Tekal: They made me paralyzed with torments.

Abdurrahman Tekal recording he became paralyzed due to bruelty
tortures told DIHA what was lived on the incident day as such: “That
my son’s a few sheep had got lost. He and his shepherd friends go
outside the village to look for the animals. The special force units
had come to residing place, too, and they detained him. We were at
home that time. Later some villagers came and told ‘Tansu’s soldiers
brought away your son’. The militaries were killing my son and 2
shepherds more in the evening. We were oppressed too much after the
event. I became paralyzed because of that bad treatment and
pressures. He was killed after 7 months he got married. The
militaries killed our children cutting them into pieces. They must
give the account of what crimes they had committed.”

Application to the ECHR

Selahattin Kaya, the shepherds’ attorney, said he appealed to the
European Court of Human Rights ( ECHR) but the case was rejected
because of incomplete means of domestic laws and added: ” We will
apply to prosecutor’s office for a case to be litigated against the
criminals, an if denied, we will appeal to the ECHR.”

Kevorkian hospitalized for hernia operation

Kevorkian hospitalized for hernia operation

The Daily Oakland Press (Oakland County, Michigan)
Friday, February 4, 2005

JACKSON – Assisted suicide advocate Jack Kevorkian is expected to
undergo surgery today to repair a bilateral hernia, his lawyer said.

Mayer Morganroth said Kevorkian, 76, was taken to a hospital in Jackson
for treatment Thursday.

“It’s very painful,” Morganroth said. “But it, by itself, should not be
life-threatening. I think he’ll be OK. These types of things get harder
as he gets older, though.”

Kevorkian’s health is failing, Morganroth said, and he doesn’t expect
his client to live more than a year. Kevorkian has suffered from high
blood pressure, hepatitis C, a circulation condition and dental problems
in prison.

Leo LaLonde, spokesman for the Michigan Department of Corrections, said
there is a secure unit at the hospital for prisoners. Kevorkian will be
under constant guard while there and will likely be sent back to prison
shortly after the surgery to recover in the Thumb Correctional
Facility’s clinic.

The state will pay for the treatment, LaLonde said, but can seek
reimbursement from prisoners who have assets. LaLonde would not comment
on how much the surgery will cost or about Kevorkian’s medical
condition, citing federal privacy rules.

Morganroth said Kevorkian has been trying to get Gov. Jennifer Granholm
to pardon him or commute his sentence based on his medical condition,
but that request has been denied. Granholm has granted four medical
commutations since taking office.

The Michigan Parole Board recently denied Kevorkian’s request for
parole. He is eligible again in November, Morganroth said.

Kevorkian is serving a 10- to 25-year prison term for second-degree
murder in the 1998 death of a Waterford Township man, 52-year-old Thomas
Youk.

Kevorkian videotaped the death of Youk, who had Lou Gehrig’s disease.
The CBS news show 60 Minutes broadcast the euthanasia and Oakland County
prosecutors charged Kevorkian. Kevorkian has claimed to have assisted in
more than 130 suicides.

http://www.theoaklandpress.com/stories/020405/loc_20050204020.shtml

Shocked Georgians Mourn Prime Minister

Shocked Georgians Mourn Prime Minister

Associated Press
Friday, February 4, 2005

BY JIM HEINTZ, Associated Press Writer

TBILISI, Georgia – Hundreds of shocked Georgians gathered Friday in the
snow in central Tbilisi to mourn Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania, whose
death has left the struggling former Soviet republic worried for its future.

Zhvania was found dead early Thursday in a friend’s apartment,
apparently the victim of carbon monoxide poisoning from a poorly
installed gas heater. The friend, a regional politician, also died.

The 41-year-old Zhvania was a key figure in attempts to lift the country
out of its post-Soviet economic collapse and political turmoil.

Zhvania was one of the leaders of the 2003 “Rose Revolution” protests
that propelled President Mikhail Saakashvili to power and brought down
his predecessor, Eduard Shevardnadze.

Zhvania earned deep respect and affection and was seen as a moderating
balance to the sometimes-incendiary boldness of Saakashvili, who was
elected president in 2004.

“Soon all of Georgia will feel what Zurab Zhvania meant for them,” said
mourner Ksenia Kuparadze, a 70-year-old pensioner outside the apartment
of Zhvania’s grieving mother, where the body was brought late Thursday.

“After the Rose Revolution, when the country was in complete collapse,
he was able to get us out of economic difficulties. Teachers started
getting paid on time, pensioners got their pensions,” Kuparadze said.

Shevardnadze, whom Zhvania helped force out of office, also praised the
late prime minister’s achievements. “I hope the course chosen by him
will be preserved,” he said.

Parliament speaker Nino Burdzhanadze cut short a foreign trip and
returned to Tbilisi on Friday, calling on the government to “continue to
work in its usual rhythm” despite “a big loss for Georgian politics and
the Georgian state.”

That call, alongside Saakashvili’s statement a day earlier that the
country’s government was in control, appeared to hint at wide anxiety
that Zhvania’s death could undermine the stability that has been tenuous
at best in Georgia since its independence in 1991.

Following the breakup of the Soviet Union, Georgia was riven by two
separatist wars that left large regions de facto independent and
courting ties with Russia. Zhvania was a key figure in trying to
negotiate final agreements on those still-unresolved tensions, which had
been exacerbated by Saakashvili’s provocative pledges to re-exert
control over the regions – South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Zhvania also pushed for efforts to wipe out the corruption that had
sapped Georgia’s economy and induced widespread mistrust of authority.
One notable move was a restructuring of the country’s police force,
which was infamous for bribe-taking.

“It will be difficult to be president without Zhvania. In my opinion, he
played the role of a careful and kind magistrate,” said Dzhudzhuna
Kartvelishvili, a 43-year-old scholar. “It will be difficult but I think
we will be able to find people who will be that much useful to the country.”

Authorities called Zhvania’s death an accident, another of the many
carbon-monoxide poisonings that have troubled the capital since its
central-heating system went out of service in 1992 and many residents
turned to wood and gas stoves to keep warm.

In a country with a history of political intrigue and violence, many
Georgians wondered whether authorities were telling them the truth.

“There were plenty of people who envied Zurab, many were hoping that a
conflict would break out between him and the president,” said historian
Grigory Dardzhanian.

Parliament member Elena Tevdoradze, who visited Zhvania’s mother, Rima,
on Friday, said the woman asked her, “What do you think, did they kill
my son?”

Georgian lawmaker Alexander Shalamberidze linked Zhvania’s death to a
car bombing that killed three policemen in Gori, the city nearest to
South Ossetia, earlier this week. Shalamberidze pointed the finger at
“outside forces” in remarks clearly aimed at Russia.

Deadly fighting ripped through South Ossetia last summer, after local
separatists took offense at Saakashvili’s vows to bring the province
back under Tbilisi’s control. Zhvania in recent months was pursuing a
negotiated solution.

It was unclear when a new prime minister would be named, but topping the
speculation of likely candidates was Defense Minister Irkaly
Okruashvili, a strong personality like Saakashvili.

Zhvania’s funeral was scheduled for Sunday.

;cid=535&ncid=535&e=15&u=/ap/20050204/ap_on_re_eu/georgia_prime_minister

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&amp

Azeri minister of culture against cooperation with Armenia

PanArmenian News
Feb 4 2005

AZERI MINISTER OF CULTURE AGAINST COOPERATION WITH ARMENIA

04.02.2005 18:15

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ “The stand of the Azerbaijani Ministry of Culture
is simple. Azerbaijan has never participated and will not participate
in the joint creative and cultural projects, in which Armenian
representatives are engaged”, Azerbaijani Minister of Culture Polad
Bul-bul oglu stated in his interview with Caucasian Knot when
commenting on the recent proposal of German conductor Uwe Berkhemer
on formation of a Transcaucasian chamber orchestra. In the Minister’s
words, he has sent the German director a letter explaining the
reasons of Azerbaijan’s refusal. “We were many times offered
cooperation with Armenia both within the CIS and other international
organizations. However our position is fundamental”, the Azeri
Minister of Culture said.

Construction of new defense ministry building to start in March

ArmenPress
Feb 4 2005

CONSTRUCTION OF NEW DEFENSE MINISTRY BUILDING TO START IN MARCH

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 4, ARMENPRESS: A senior official of the Armenian
defense ministry told Armenpress that the construction of new
premises for the ministry will kick off in March. Colonel Armen
Sarkisian, head of a department supervising construction and utility
affairs, said the new building will be located at Yerevan Jrvezh
borough in the outskirts of Yerevan.
He said a Russian Ingeokom-Yerevan company was chosen as a
sub-contractor. The official said no budget money will be spent on
the building’s construction, adding that the money will be donated by
Armenians who are in the constituent board of Ingeokom. Sarkisian
said the deal was due to defense minister Serzh Sarkisian’s personal
connections with these people.

ANKARA: The letters of Ataturk’s wife to remain closed

NTV MSNBC, Turkey
Feb 3 2005

The letters of Ataturk’s wife to remain closed

Professor Halacoglu proposed setting up an international committee to
discuss the Armenian issue.

Private letters written by the wife of the founder of the Turkish
Republic would not be made public, a leading Turkish historian
announced Thursday.

Professor Yusuf Halacoglu, the head of the Turk History Authority,
said that the family of Latife Hamin, the divorced wife of Mustaf
Kemal Ataturk had applied to the History Authority not have the
private letters disclosed. He said that the Authority could abide by
their wishes.

`This subject is a closed matter. We are the heirs of Ataturk. Our
releasing any matters that could cause harm cannot even be an issue,’
he said.

Latife was married to Ataturk for two and half years, with the
marriage ending in divorce. The ban over the publication Latife’s
letters was lifted by a court decision last month. The letters and
dairies had been preserved by the Turk History Authority and had been
sealed for 25 years in 1980.

ARKA News Agency – 02/02/2005

ARKA News Agency
Feb 2 2005

On Feb 7-9 Serge Sargsian to leave for Iran

On Feb 3-4 RA MFA to leave for Tbilisi

Russian Foreign Minister to arrive in Armenia on February 17

RA President conducts working meeting with RA Minister of Urban
Development

On February 11, the first seminar `Frenchizing as a way for the
development of SME’ to be held in Armenia

15-TH conference of Basel committee on Banking Supervision regional
group opens today in Yerevan

*********************************************************************

ON FEB 7-9 SERGE SARGSIAN TO LEAVE FOR IRAN

YEREVAN, February 2. /ARKA/. On Feb 7-9, RA Minister of Defense Serge
Sargsian will leave for Iran on the invitation of the Secretary of
Supreme Council of National Security of Iran Hasan Rohani, RA
Ministry of Defense press office told ARKA. Sargsian will meet with
the President of Iran, Foreign Minister and Minister of Defense. L.D.
–0 –

*********************************************************************

ON FEB 3-4 RA MFA TO LEAVE FOR TBILISI

YEREVAN, February 2. /ARKA/. On Feb 3-4 RA Foreign Minister Vardan
Oskanian will leave for Tbilisi with a working visit, RA MFA told
ARKA. Oskanian will meet with the administration of Georgia. On Feb
4, he will take part in international conference `South Caucasus in
XXI Century. Challenges and Opportunities’. L.D. –0 –

*********************************************************************

RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTER TO ARRIVE IN ARMENIA ON FEBRUARY 17

YEREVAN, February 2. /ARKA/. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov’s
visit to Armenia is scheduled on February 17. As Armenian Foreign
Ministry Press and Information Department told ARKA, discussion and
exchange of views on the agenda of mutual relations of two countries
are planned n the frames of the visit. During the meeting of two
Foreign Ministers, they will touch issues of bilateral relations and
regional problems.
It is planned that Lavrov’s visit to Armenia will be held within his
regional visits, particularly, his visit to Georgia is scheduled on
February 18. T.M. -0–

*********************************************************************

RA PRESIDENT CONDUCTS WORKING MEETING WITH RA MINISTER OF URBAN
DEVELOPMENT

YEREVAN, February 2. /ARKA/. RA President Robert Kocharian conducted
working meeting with RA Minister of Urban Development Aram
Harutyunian. Harutyunian represented the President the package of
changes envisaged by the law on urban development.
The parties discussed strategy in the field of apartments’
construction, namely construction of new apartments on state budget
assets, completion of construction in rural communities, issues
related to realization of program of provision of order for
apartments in Shirak region. L.D. –0 –

*********************************************************************

ON FEBRUARY 11, THE FIRST SEMINAR `FRENCHIZING AS A WAY FOR THE
DEVELOPMENT OF SME’ TO BE HELD IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, February 2. /ARKA/. On February 11, the first seminar
`Frenchizing as a Way for the Development of SME’ will be held in
Armenia. According to the Centre of Exhibition Projects `EXPOMEDIA’,
representatives of some large companies will participate in the
seminar, including Jean Claude Biguine (a net of beauty centres),
Baskin Robins (catering), EXPOFAR (organization of exhibitions),
Jakitoria (Japanese fast food), Star Galaxy (children entertainment
centres), etc. The following subjects will be discussed at the
seminar: the peculiarities of frenchizing relations in CIS, purchase
of frenchize from `A’ to `Z’, purchase of frenchizing in the sphere
of catering, peculiarities of frenchizing in Russia, the experience
of application frenchizing in the services sector, advantages and
shortcomings of franchising, problems of a and owner and user.
The seminar was organized by Trade -Commerce Chambers of Armenia and
Russia, Centre of Exhibition Projects `EXPOMEDIA’, EXPOFAR Moscow
company and the National Centre for SME Development. A.H. – 0–

*********************************************************************

15TH CONFERENCE OF BASEL COMMITTEE ON BANKING SUPERVISION REGIONAL
GROUP OPENS TODAY IN YEREVAN

YEREVAN, February 2. /ARKA/. 15th conference of the Regional Group of
Basel Committee on Banking Supervision of countries of Transcaucasia,
Central Asia and Russia opens today in Yerevan. As stated Tigran
Toirosyan, the Chairman of CBA addressing the conference, the work of
the conference has a principal importance, as the perfection of the
banking system `may play a decisive role in carrying out economic
reforms for our regional group’. He noted that quite interesting
discussions are carried out in the countries of the region concerning
the priorities in the area of reforms and order of steps in the
financial sector as well. `Exchange of views is always very useful
and the practice of reform implementation helps to a great extent to
figure out which mechanisms and forms of supervision are applicable
on this stage’, said Sargsyan.
In his turn, the President of the Regional Group on Banking
Supervision of countries of Transcaucasia, Central Asia and Russian
Federation, the Deputy Chairman of National Bank of Tajikistan Juma
Eshov noted that such meetings allow exchanging views on current
issues for the implementation of the tasks put before the group and
also help to identify the future direction of its activities. `Today,
we can say that we managed to achieve a lot in our work exactly
thanks to the experience and knowledge we obtain in our cooperation’,
noted Eshov.
15th conference of the Regional Group of Basel Committee on Banking
Supervision of countries of Transcaucasia, Central Asia and Russia is
being held in Armenia on February 2 -4. Within the framework of the
conference, it is planned to discuss the situation in the banking
system of each country, steps to prevent the use of the banking
system for money laundering, peculiarities of supervision over
non-banking financial institutions, as well as issues of an efficient
banking supervision implementation. The procedure of handing over of
the authorities of the President and the Secretariat of the Regional
Group will be held, Armenia being one of the main candidates.
Regional Group of Basel Committee on Banking Supervision was
established in 1995 to solve the problems on the way to bank
formation and coordination of common efforts. The National Bank of
Tajikistan was the President of the Group during the last two years;
the term of office expires in 2005. The election of the next
President of the Group is carried out on the rotation principle.
L.V.–0–