Mexico catches more migrants on way to U.S.

San Jose Mercury News , CA
Tri-Valley Herald, CA
Aug 8 2004

Mexico catches more migrants on way to U.S.

By Ginger Thompson

New York Times

MEXICO CITY – It’s 6 p.m., the busiest time of night during the
busiest time of the year at Benito Juárez International Airport:
Jumbo Hour.

The migration supervisor, Alberto Pliego, has at least six 747s
pulling in from Frankfurt, Germany; Madrid, Spain; Paris; Amsterdam,
the Netherlands; and Vancouver, British Columbia, and just five
agents to check out all the passengers pouring out. Their challenge
is to distinguish true visitors to Mexico from migrants who aim
simply to get past Pliego so they can make it to the United States.

“A migrant who makes it past the airport today,” Pliego said,
“will be in Tijuana tomorrow, and probably in Chicago the day after
that.”

Pliego’s suit and tie made him look a little too buttoned-down to
guard against some of this country’s most unscrupulous criminal
operations. But by the end of the night, he had stopped more than a
dozen Brazilians who tried to enter Mexico as tourists, but lacked
suitcases, hotel reservations or credit cards. He supervised the
deportation of two undocumented Armenians. Three Guatemalans were
caught trying to enter the country with false visas. And one of
Pliego’s agents caught four undocumented Chinese travelers lingering
over soft drinks and sandwiches in an airport restaurant.

The agent spoke no Chinese. The Chinese spoke no Spanish. But in
limited English, each side seemed to completely understand the other.

The agent speculated that the Chinese men were waiting for a guide to
help them get past migration checkpoints.

The Chinese said they were hungry.

The agent asked the Chinese for their travel visas.

The Chinese said they planned to stay in Mexico for only one night.

The agent escorted the Chinese men back to the same airplane on which
they had arrived, ordering them back to Amsterdam.

The Chinese boarded without putting up a fight.

The Mexican authorities report that a surging number of migrants from
all around the world are traveling through Mexico to get to the
United States. So far this year, Mexico has detained nearly 112,000
illegal migrants, compared with 150,000 in all of 2001. Authorities
said they expected total detentions for this year to reach 200,000.
The Mexicans are under tough pressure from the United States, which
since Sept. 11, 2001, has feared that global terrorists could easily
slip into Mexico and then cross into the United States.

The overwhelming majority of those detained are migrants from Central
and South America, authorities report. But there are also increasing
numbers from as far away as Pakistan, Armenia, Bosnia-Herzegovina,
Poland, Ethiopia and China.

The migrants often arrive at Mexico’s main airports and then travel
by land to the border. But illegal migration routes and methods are
as diverse as the people who use them. Wednesday, the Mexican
authorities detained four Chinese migrants on a private jet that made
an emergency landing for fuel in the southern state of Chiapas. The
pilots reported that they had picked up their undocumented passengers
in Caracas, Venezuela, and that they planned to deliver them to
smuggling contacts at a small airport north of Mexico City.

At a migration detention center to the east of Mexico City holding
500 people of every background — farmer, bricklayer, auto mechanic
and accountant — all had an epic story to tell. The director of the
center, Hugo Miguel Ayala, said they had come from more than a dozen
countries.

Among them was a 35-year-old Ethiopian woman named Alemayehu, who
said she had traveled from her homeland to Egypt, Moscow, Havana and
Nicaragua before boarding a bus bound for Mexico City, hoping to be
on her way to New York.

And there was Yu Youqiang, who had left his wife and small daughter
in Fujian, China, to seek work in New York. He said he traveled to
Frankfurt, then to Mexico, taking nothing but a backpack and travel
instructions from a smuggler scribbled on a scrap of paper.

A 32-year-old vegetable vendor, Yu said he had made it all the way to
the border before he was caught by the Mexican authorities in a town
whose name he could not recall. He said he had paid smugglers $5,000
for help reaching the United States. Relatives, he said, had agreed
to pay $25,000 more once he arrived in New York.

“We come through Mexico because it’s cheaper,” he said. He said
some Chinese migrants flew directly to the United States from Hong
Kong. But false visas cost a lot. And entering the United States
through an airport is much harder than entering through the border.

“They say that it’s easy to get across,” Yu said. “You just have
to walk.”

Contract killings hit record high in Russia

Contract killings hit record high in Russia

Irish Times
Aug 05, 2004

Chris Stephen in Moscow

Russia: Contract killings in Russia have hit record levels, puncturing
the hope that the country has left the era of “gangster capitalism”
behind, according to a senior crime official here.

Between 500 and 700 Russians a year are killed by business rivals,
according to crime official Mr Leonid Kondratyuk, a top Interior
Ministry official.

The news comes a month after American journalist Paul Klebnikov,
editor of Forbes Russia, died in a hail of bullets fired by an
assassin in Moscow. Mr Kondratyuk told the Moscow Times that even his
estimate of 500 to 700 was conservative because it counted only those
murders definitely linked to organised crime, and that the true figure
could be “two to three times higher”.

His statement follows similar claims earlier this year by a former
prosecutor, Mr Valentin Stepankov, who said total crimes attributable
to mafia groups had passed the 25,000 mark in four years.

Russia attracted the nickname the “Wild East” in the 1990s, when
gangsters fought turf wars in the free-for-all that followed the end
of Communism.

The government hoped the arrival of tough central control from
President Vladimir Putin, coupled with rising prosperity, had put an
end to these murders, but this prosperity may actually be encouraging
a new wave of blood-letting.

Klebnikov was one of two journalists murdered in Moscow last month –
also killed was Paila Peloya, editor of an Armenian-language
newspaper, who, like Klebnikov, was shot dead in broad daylight. Since
Mr Putin took office in 2000, 15 journalists have been murdered, along
with six MPs and dozens of suspected gangster bosses.

Prominent killings include the shooting last summer of Igor Klimov,
chief of defence giant Almaz-Antei. The option of contract killing is
sometimes used as a last resort in business disputes. Typically, if a
firm refuses to honour its end of a contract, remedies such as going
to court may be useless, with judges sometimes bribed or the state law
simply unable to get back money owed.

The rise in contract killings comes despite a fall overall in recorded
crime. The number of murders in Russia fell 8 per cent last year,
though remained high at 16,240. Some doubt the official claims. Andrei
Konstantinov, a crime journalist with the Agency of Journalistic
Investigations in St Petersburg, said his interpretation of official
figures is that there are fewer contract killings, not more.

Konstantinov said police often know the identity of contract killers,
but lack evidence, and in particular witnesses, to bring the guilty to
court. He blames a collapse in moral values for the high level of gun
crime.

“It is wrong to blame the police or courts. You have to educate the
people that it is wrong, and the people in the state.”

But contract killings are not the sole preserve of the mafia. While
some killings are said to cost tens of thousands of dollars to
organise, at the other end of the spectrum a murder can be arranged
for as little as $300.

Russia’s media regularly report on husbands killing wives or
mothers-in-law by paying homeless people small amounts of money to
carry out the killings. These crimes are rarely solved because the
murderer has no connection to the victim.

40% of Tenders Announced to Render Services Didn’t Take Place H1/04

40% OF TENDERS ANNOUNCED FOR RENDERING SERVICES DIDN’T TAKE PLACE IN
FIRST HALF-YEAR

YEREVAN, August 4 (Noyan Tapan). In 7 months of 2004 purchases
amounting to more than 20b drams (about $38.5m) were made for RA state
government bodies, which exceeded the index of purchases made in 2003
by about 4b drams. Gagik Khachatrian, the Head of the Agency of State
Purchases, said at the August 4 press conference that the growth of
the volumes of purchases is conditioned by allocation of savings of
2003 state budget amounting to 12b drams for the sphere of
construction. The realization of 8.5b drams from this sum will be
organized by means of the Agency of State Purchases. It was mentioned
that already 5.6b drams were realized through the tenders organized
only in July. According to G.Khachatrian, the market of services
hasn’t been formed in Armenia yet. In connection with this it was
mentioned that 40% of the tenders announced for rendering of services
didn’t take place in 6 month of this year. The head of the Agency also
mentioned that the growth of exchange rate of dram in relation to the
US dollar gave an opportunity of saving 30m drams from the resources
of RA Ministry of Health. G.Khachatrian reported that a new system of
setting up of tender prices is being prepared at present. According to
this, in particular, it’s envisaged to set up season prices for
food-stuffs and a number of goods, proceeding from which the changes
of market prices will ba taken into consideration in the term
contracts. The variations of market prices will be periodically
studied for this purpose and the contractual prices will be
resonsidered on the basis of them.

Iranian president inaugurates 184 telecommunication projects

Iranian president inaugurates 184 telecommunication projects

IRNA web site, Tehran
3 Aug 04

Tabriz, East Azarbayjan Province, 3 August: President Mohammad Khatami
here Monday 2 August inaugurated 184 telecommunication projects in
this northwestern province.

Over 20bn rials has been spent on the projects which include a major
one providing audio and visual telecommunication facilities between
Iran and Armenia through the use of optic fibres.

The project with a cost of over 4bn rials, covers a distance of 140 km
of which 71 km is within the Iranian territory.

Addressing the opening ceremony of the launching of the projects, the
president referred to the contract to have a second operator in
country’s telecommunications system as a very well-calculated and
valuable plan.

He said the contract will make it possible to offer an extra 5m
telephone lines within two years.

Pointing to the exclusive geo-strategic and geo-political situation of
Iran, Khatami described the country as the linking point of East and
West and said making investments in telecommunications and information
is very important and valuable.

Talking in the same ceremony, Minister of Communications and
Information Technology (CIT) Ahmad Mo’tamedi said his ministry was
aiming at updating the communications system in all parts of the
country.

He said 15,340,000 telephone lines were currently used by people while
3,450,000 cell phone numbers have been sold in the country so far.

U.S. Military Officers To Be Stationed Near Azerbaijan-Iran Border

Tehran Times, Iran
Aug 1 2004

U.S. Military Officers To Be Stationed Near Azerbaijan-Iran Border

Tehran Times Political Desk
TEHRAN (MNA) — Azeri military forces are stationed near the borders
with Iran will come under the command of U.S. military officers, a
news website reported on Sunday.

According to an agreement between the Azeri army and the NATO
military alliance, U.S. officers will be stationed in one out of four
prominent border posts near the Azerbaijan-Iran border, the Baztab
said in a report posted on its website.

Most of the Azeri army officers being stationed on the
Azerbaijan-Iran borders have been given special training by NATO.

In every selected border post four U.S. officers will be stationed;
each of the officers are trained in border, intelligence, security,
and military affairs. Some of the officers are members of the U.S.
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

The stationing of officers near Iranian borders is taking place as
the Republic of Azerbaijan imports modern warfare equipments aiming
to regain Karabakh from Armenia.

The military equipment will be delivered to Baku following
negotiations between Azeri diplomatic delegation with Turkish, and
U.S. officials.

BAKU: Armenia may send troops to Iraq

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
July 30 2004

Armenia may send troops to Iraq

Armenia may send troops to Iraq, Russia’s RIA Novosti news agency has
reported.
The Armenian government has approved the decision by the country’s
defense ministry to join the memorandum `On commanding and regulating
the work of the multi-national stabilization force in Iraq’.
Earlier, Armenia announced that it was ready to send trucks, ten
field engineers and three military doctors to Iraq.*

NATO Secretary-General to Visit Armenia November 2004

NATO SECRETARY-GENERAL TO VISIT ARMENIA NOVEMBER 2004

Noyan Tapan news agency, Yerevan
26 Jul 04

Brussels, 26 July: NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer is to
visit Armenia in early November this year, it was learned from NATO
headquarters.

Scheffer’s visit could be linked to implementing the decisions taken
during NATO’s Istanbul summit. As is known, in Istanbul NATO decided
to step up work in the South Caucasus and Central Asia.

We note that the Armenian side has repeatedly said that future NATO
membership is not on official Yerevan’s agenda. Armenia is also
preparing to announce individual partnership with NATO (Individual
partnership plan) and has expressed its readiness to have exercises
from NATO’s “Cooperative Associate 2005” on its territory.

Days of Armenian Culture to be Held in Strasbourg Sept 2005

DAYS OF ARMENIAN CULTURE TO BE HELD IN STRASBOURG SEPT 2005

YEREVAN, JULY 23. ARMINFO. Days of Armenian Culture will be held in
Strasbourg in Sept 2005, says the letter sent by Armenia’s permanent
representative to the CE Christian Ter-Stepanyan to the chairman of
the Strasbourg Municipality Robert Grossman after his meeting with
Armenia’s Deputy Culture and Youth Minister Karine Khodikyan.

The days will include chamber, traditional and jazz music concerts,
Armenian cinema shows, exhibitions, ancient book presentations.

Supporting the event will be the Strasbourg Municipality, the
Strasbourg Philharmonic Orchestra, Odysseus Movie Theater, Archive
Department.

Erdogan: No to conditional approval at December summit

Turkish Daily News
22 July 2004

Erdogan: No to conditional approval at December summit

The prime minister says the December summit will be the time for decision on
accession talks, not for membership of Turkey and he is confident that a
reversal at the summit would not be a fatal blow

ANKARA – Turkish Daily News
Turkey is not over-ambitious to get membership in the European Union and it
would stick to its reform process even after a failure in its drive for
accession, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said.

He was speaking in France, where public skepticism over Turkey’s membership
runs high, after talks with President Ahmet Necdet Sezer and Prime Minister
Jean-Pierre Raffarin.

The prime minister moved to address French concerns, saying Turkey’s
membership would be a blow to the thesis of a clash of civilizations and
bring economic benefits to both France and the EU and conveying the message
to the French leaders that Turkey is making the changes required to meet the
so-called Copenhagen criteria for membership and is counting on France not
to withdraw its support.

But he said a failure to get into the union would not be the end of the
world. “Turkey doesn’t ask to join at any price. Joining the EU is not a
must for Turkey,” Erdogan said at a press conference. “We have embraced the
Copenhagen criteria in order to raise the living standards of our people. If
this (the membership bid) fails, we would rename the Copenhagen criteria to
Ankara criteria and carry on with our path.”

EU leaders will decide in their mid-December summit whether Turkey is fit to
start the long-delayed accession talks. An EU Commission report which will
be released in autumn will largely shape the December decision. In meeting
with Erdogan, Chirac reiterated French position that Paris would await the
Commission’s assessment.

A spokeswoman for Chirac told reporters after the meeting that Turkey’s
entry into the 25-nation bloc was “desirable as soon as it actually becomes
possible. “Turkey has made considerable progress. It should continue and
intensify the implementation of democratic and economic reforms,” Chirac’s
spokeswoman quoted him as telling Erdogan.

Erdogan suggested that there was no reason for the EU leaders to be
hesitant, saying the December summit would make the decision on talks with
Turkey, not on the membership. “We don’t know if the accession process will
take five years or ten years. This is something that depends on our
performance throughout the talks process,” he said at the press conference.

Conditional approval not acceptable
The prime minister also said that Turkey cannot be held to a higher standard
than the other EU members or the two nations hoping to join in 2007, Romania
and Bulgaria.

“The EU regulations do not allow a conditional date for talks or conditional
approval of membership. Conditions are clear and we have so far worked
towards meeting them,” Erdogan said. He warned a conditional go-ahead for
talks at the December summit would undermine the EU’s credibility.

Employment concerns
The prime minister also moved to address European worries that entry of
Turkey, a country with a population of 70 million, saying Turkish membership
would not lead to difficulties in employment in Europe.

“We acquired the right for the free circulation of labor in 1985. Turkish
labor should have been roaming across Europe since then. We have never tried
to impose things on Europe since then and we are ready now to make the
necessary pledges,” said the prime minister.

He argued instead that Turkish accession would help the EU reach out to the
Islamic world.

Economic relations
While in France, the prime minister also highlighted the bilateral economic
relations between Turkey and France and prospects of further cooperation in
an attempt to woo both the politicians and business leaders.

“France is ranked first among countries investing most in Turkey. Our trade
volume stands around $7 billion,” Erdogan said, adding that French companies
were also bidding in serious privatization tenders in Turkey.

Turkish and French authorities agreed on purchase of some 36 planes by the
Turkish Airlines (THY) from the French-German maker Airbus and discussed
French participation in Turkey’s plans to build nuclear energy plants.

No crisis with Israel
Responding to questions on Turkey’s relations with Israel, Erdogan
underlined that there was no crisis between Ankara and Tel Aviv and
explained his recent criticisms of Israeli actions against Palestinians were
simply a “warning from a friend.”

“There is no crisis between Turkey and Israel,” Erdogan said. “I have told a
fact and I have to tell this. These are not things that would overshadow our
economic, trade and military ties,” he said.

‘Armenian genocide’ no condition for EU
Erdogan also touched on the issue of an alleged genocide at the hands of the
late Ottoman Empire against Armenians, saying the Armenian allegations did
not constitute a membership criterion.

He reportedly told a meeting with members of the French Parliament’s Foreign
Relations Committee that Armenia was making a mistake by trying to keep the
genocide allegations alive all the time.

“People do not want a world driven by hatred and enmity. They want to see
leaders who can remove them. Hand in hand, we’ll resolve them,” Erdogan said
at his press conference.

Turquie. Trois jours pour convaincre

Le Télégramme
20 juillet 2004

Turquie. Trois jours pour convaincre

Le Premier ministre turc Recep Tayyip Erdogan est arrivé hier et
restera jusque demain à Paris pour plaider en faveur de l ‘ entrée de
son pays dans l ‘ UE .

Il s’agit d’une visite importante pour la Turquie. Car le Premier
ministre turc Recep Tayyip Erdogan entend promouvoir auprès des
dirigeants français la candidature de son pays à l’Union européenne.
Aujourd’hui il sera reçu à l’Elysée par le président Jacques Chirac
lors d’un déjeuner de travail.

La Turquie a obtenu le statut de candidat à l ‘ UE en 1999 et la
Commission européenne doit en octobre recommander ou non l ‘
ouverture des négociations d ‘ adhésion sur laquelle se prononceront
les dirigeants européens en décembre.

Les critères requis sont remplis

Jacques Chirac est favorable à l ‘ adhésion si les critères requis
sont remplis. Il a qualifié, lors du sommet de l ‘ OTAN à Istanbul le
29 juin, la marche d ‘ Ankara vers l ‘ UE d’ « irréversible » ,
insistant sur la « vocation européenne, historique, très ancienne »
de la Turquie.

Son parti, l ‘ Union pour la majorité présidentielle (UMP), s ‘ est
en revanche prononcé contre une adhésion, tout comme les autres
partis de droite.

La gauche y est globalement favorable même si le Parti Socialiste a
mis comme préalable la reconnaissance par Istanbul du génocide
arménien de 1915.

Une majorité de Français est contre

Pourtant selon un chercheur de l’Institut français de relations
internationales, « Tous les sondages récents, sauf un, indiquent qu ‘
une majorité de Français est contre l ‘ adhésion de la Turquie » .

La France « est le seul pays européen à avoir instrumentalisé cette
question lors du pseudo-débat sur les élections européennes » ,
souligne un autre chercheur de l’Institut de relations
internationales et stratégiques.

Se servir des relations économiques

Lors de sa visite Erdogan doit également évoquer les relations
économiques.

Les échanges entre les deux pays se sont chiffrés en 2003 à quelque 6
milliards d’euros. La France est le deuxième partenaire commercial de
la Turquie et son quatrième fournisseur.

La compagnie nationale Turkish Airlines se prépare à acheter près de
50 avions de ligne, notamment moyen et long courrier, pour renouveler
sa flotte vieillissante.

Le consortium aéronautique européen Airbus et l’américain Boeing sont
en lice. Le Premier ministre turque souhaiterait se servir de ce
contrat de deux milliards de dollars (1,6 milliard euros), qui
devrait en principe être partagé entre les deux constructeurs, pour «
inciter » les Français à donner leur aval à l’ouverture des
négociations d’adhésion avec Ankara, a-t-on indiqué de source proche
du dossier.