ANKARA: Moscow Supports Turkey For Cyprus

Moscow Supports Turkey For Cyprus

Zaman, Turkey
May 21 2004

Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, currently in Moscow attending a
series of meetings as part of the Organization of Islamic Conference
(OIC) Troika, secured Russia’s full support of Turkey in the Cyprus
issue.

Gul met with his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, and requested
that Russia, as a United Nations (UN) Security Council member, support
the lifting of the international sanctions imposed on Turkish Republic
of Northern Cyprus (TRNC). Gul, talking about the meeting afterwards,
conveyed that Lavrov said Russia supports the removal of TRNC sanctions
because establishing trade relations and ending the economic isolation
of TRNC is the right thing to do.

Gul added that Russian companies would not act as obstacles to ending
TRNC’s isolation. Russian companies have investments totaling over
US$40 billion in the Cypriot Greek side.

Gul, the first Turkish Foreign Minister to visit Moscow in eight
years, said that he and Lavrov discussed the Georgian issue and that
the both Turkey and Russia reached a consensus on the Adzharia issue.

Lavrov also thanked Gul for supporting Russian membership to OIC. The
Nagarno Karabag issue between Azerbaijan and Armenia was also
underlined during their talks.

05.21.2004
Mirza Cetinkaya

Armenia focus of proclamation

The Topeka Capital-Journal
Published Monday, May 17, 2004

Armenia focus of proclamation

The Capital-Journal

Gov. Kathleen Sebelius has signed a proclamation acknowledging the
“outstanding success” of the Kansas National Guard Partnership Program in
establishing improved security cooperation between the United States and
Armenia.
The proclamation said the program has established a military-to-military,
military-to-civilian and civilian-to-civilian association and improved
security cooperation between the two countries.

The proclamation was submitted by Alex Kotoyantz, of Junction City, a
retiree from the Kansas Department of Transportation, and signed by the
governor recently. It expresses gratitude for the contributions of Armenian
Americans who have chosen Kansas as their adopted homeland and enriched the
character of the state with their wisdom, courage and centuries-old
traditions.

Armenian Genocide cannot be denied

Daily Targum
University Wire
April 22, 2004 Thursday

Armenian Genocide cannot be denied

By Avo Youmshakian, Daily Targum; SOURCE: Rutgers U.

NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J.

On April 24, 1915, the Turkish government apprehended, deported and
brutally murdered 300 Armenian intellectuals and professionals in
Istanbul, Turkey. Later that day, 5,000 of the poorest Armenians were
savagely murdered in their communities. This day was the beginning of
the tragedy that came to be called the Armenian Genocide — which is
defined as the systematic execution planned and ordered by the
Ottoman Turkish government and carried out by the Turkish army — of
1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and 1923.

The Turks started and nearly achieved the goal of wiping out the
entire Armenian population of western Armenia within the borders of
the Ottoman Empire, which stretched from Eastern Europe to the Middle
East, including what is known today as the country of Turkey. After
89 years, Armenians still possess animosity against members of the
Turkish race not only because they murdered the Armenians but also
because they still continue to deny the existence of the Armenian
Genocide.

The Central Committee of the Young Turk Party, which was controlled
by the most racist individuals in the government in 1915, devised the
Armenian Genocide. The genocide was directed by a special
organization set up by the Committee of Union and Progress, which
created special butcher battalions composed of extremely violent
Turkish criminals who were released from prison for the sole purpose
of exterminating the Armenians from the Ottoman Empire.

As if this inhuman act was not a crime itself, Turkish governments
since the fall of the Ottoman Empire have continuously denied the
genocide. Some government officials claim Armenians were removed from
their homes because they were living in the Eastern War Zone and the
Turks feared for the safety of the Armenian people.

This claim is false because fact proves Armenians were massacred in
cities in western, central and southwest Turkey as well as on the
coast of the Black Sea. Christians were not allowed to carry firearms
in the Ottoman Empire, thus defeating another claim the Turks were
protecting themselves from Armenian rebellion.

Despite the approval of the Armenian Genocide by the majority of
Turks in the Ottoman Empire and the denial of its occurrence, there
were a few righteous Ottoman officials such as Celal, governor of
Aleppo; Mahzar, governor of Ankara; and Reshid, governor of
Kastamonu. These three officials were dismissed from their offices
for not complying with the extermination campaign. Any common Turks
who protected Armenians during the genocide were also taken on the
death marches and slaughtered.

In late 1915, Henry Morgenthau Sr., the neutral American ambassador
to the Ottoman Empire, sent a message to the United States State
Department. “Deportation of and excesses against peaceful Armenians
is increasing, and from reports of eye witnesses, it appears that a
campaign of race extermination is in progress under a pretext of
reprisal against rebellion.”

Even though historic facts, eyewitness reports and especially the
stories of surviving victims all prove the Armenian Genocide’s
existence, Turkish officials struggle to deny it. One questions why.
In an interview with a reporter from the French newspaper Le Figaro,
Armenian President Robert Kocharian publicly discussed recent
developments on the recognition of the Armenian Genocide. He provided
an explanation that the recognition of the genocide does not provide
legal basis for territorial demands. While most Armenians do not
agree with the way the president’s remarks were interpreted by
Turkish journalists, one fact remains: The Turkish government is
actually concerned with Armenian territorial demands. Turkish
leadership is well aware of the possibility of redrawing geographical
boundaries. Through the elimination of Armenians from the western
provinces of Armenia, entire Armenian regions eventually became part
of present Turkey.

Armenian people in Armenia and all over the world struggle daily to
have the genocide remembered. Every year, on the Sunday before the
saddening day of April 24, thousands of Armenians gather in Times
Square in New York. They hold a march and a rally to educate the
public about the existence of the massacring, the butchering, the
genocide the Armenians lived through between 1915 and 1923. Educating
the public and having Turkish officials accept the sad reality,
Armenians believe, are important to prevent similar crimes against
humanity.

Eight days before invading Poland in 1939, Adolf Hitler — commander
of the Nazi forces during World War II — said, “Go kill without
mercy. Who today remembers the extermination of the Armenians?” I
remember it.

(C) 2003 Daily Targum via U-WIRE

Upheaval in Ajaria may ease trade concerns in Armenia

Welcomed Change: Upheaval in Ajaria may ease trade concerns in Armenia

By Julia Hakobyan
ArmeniaNow.com reporter
May 7, 2004

The departure of Aslan Abashidze from the Georgia autonomous region of
Ajaria on Wednesday, may mean relations between Armenia and its neighbor can
proceed more smoothly than recent conflict in Ajaria has allowed.
“Ajarian Lion” left.

Abashidze fled for Moscow, under threats from Georgian president Mikhail
Saakasvili that military force would be used if necessary to achieve a
settlement between Georgia’s capital, Tbilisi, and the troubled region.

Saakashvili went to the Ajaria port city of Batumi late Wednesday night
where he proclaimed that “Ajaria is free” and that “its dictator left”.

Tensions between the region and Georgia proper have been strained since
Saakashvili was elected to office in January, following the overthrow of the
government of Georgian president Eduard Shevardnadze.

Following a weekend meeting with President Robert Kocharyan in Yerevan in
early March, a Saakashvili motorcade was fired upon as the Georgian
president attempted to enter Ajaria.

In retaliation, the Georgian president imposed an embargo on Ajaria. The
sanction lasted only two days, but, because its main city, Batumi, is a
Black Sea port, the threat to restricted trade was felt severely in Armenia.
About 90 percent of Armenia’s imports and exports are dependent on Georgia’s
ports, the nearest of which is Batumi. More than 1,000 freight cars of food
and fuel per month enter Armenia, having originated in Batumi.

(Due to closed borders with Turkey and Azerbaijan, Armenia’s only waterway
outlet, except via distant Iran, is through Georgia.)

Abashidze, 66, has been the strong arm of Ajaria since 1991 and, in 1995,
his Georgian Revival Union became the second largest political party in
Georgia’s National Assembly.

The recent clashes with Saakashvili reached the boiling point last month,
when two bridges connecting Georgia and Ajaria over the Choloki River were
blown up on Abashidze’s orders.

Some 300,000 residents make up Ajaria, including about 11,000 Armenians,
most of whom live in Batumi. Earlier this week masses took to the streets to
demand Abashidze’s removal, a condition that was achieved with help from his
friend, National Security Council of Russia’s Igor Ivanov, who gave the
leader sanctuary in Moscow.

Abashidze’s departure was welcomed by official Yerevan, which repeatedly had
been calling sides for a dialog.

“Armenia welcomes the consistent and decisive policy of the Georgian
authorities that has helped to overcome that serious obstacle,” said Hamlet
Gasparyan, spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia. “The
denouement of this problem is another important step on the way of
establishing stability and peace in Georgia and thus on the entire South
Caucasus.”

Stepan Safaryan, an analyst at the Armenian Center for National and
International studies said that the outcome of the Georgia-Ajaria
confrontation was predictable.

Saakashvili after his third victory.
“Some people expected Saakashvili to start ‘ Georgia’s unification’ with its
hottest spot, Abkhazia,” the analyst said. “However he began with Ajaria and
will apparently use the ‘Ajaria model’ for bridging relations with Abkhazia
and South Osetia. Besides, the leadership of those regions might realize now
that in case of their confrontation they probably will follow Abashidze’s
fate.”

In Ajaria, the Armenian community has been divided over the region’s
political conflict – some siding with Abashidze and some with Saakashvili.

“I accept as very normal what happened, because time goes on and the new and
young generation come to change the old,” 73-year old Batumi resident Gevorg
Khachatryan told ArmeniaNow. “I can not say anything negative concerning
Abashidze’s regime. Besides, the situation in Ajaria was more calm than in
other Georigian regions.”

Georgian Armenian Arthur Ohanisyan, a reporter for Ajaria TV, left his
position to join demonstrators who opposed Abashidze.

“We are tired of seeing how Ajaria TV only praises Abashidze,” he said.
“That was the reason why we couldn’t continue working there. Our other
colleagues followed our example and are leaving the company one after
another.”

In Tbilisi yesterday (May 6), the Georgian Parliament adopted a decree
according to which the President of Georgia was authorized to cancel the
current Ajaria Parliament. A special governmental commission was set up
chaired by Saakashvili to prepare new elections of the Ajaria Parliament
which would be held within five to six weeks.

The Armenian and foreign analysts are calling the end of the standoff
between Tbilisi and Batumi “the third bloodless victory of Saakashvili” – a
reference to the resignation of Shevardnadze, and to Saakashvilis’s
election.

(ArmeniaNow reporter Suren Deheryan contributed to this report from
Tbilisi.)

AAA: Pan-Armenian Conference Salutes Reps. Knollenberg, Pallone

Armenian Assembly of America
122 C Street, NW, Suite 350
Washington, DC 20001
Phone: 202-393-3434
Fax: 202-638-4904
Email: [email protected]
Web:

PRESS RELEASE
May 6, 2004
CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
E-mail: [email protected]

PAN-ARMENIAN CONFERENCE SALUTES ARMENIAN CAUCUS CO-CHAIRS KNOLLENBERG,
PALLONE

Washington, DC – Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues Co-Chairs Joe
Knollenberg (R-MI) and Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ), both well-known champions
of Armenian issues, were honored with a major public service award during a
pan-Armenian advocacy conference held in Washington last month.

The Congressmen were presented with the Armenian Assembly’s Deukmejian Award
for Public Service April 19 during a banquet at the Mayflower Hotel – part
of a three-day advocacy conference sponsored by the Armenian Assembly of
America, the Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) and Eastern and
Western Diocese of the Armenian Church.

Event organizers devised the conference, the first of its kind, to relay to
Washington decision makers that non-partisan community leaders and
organizations are united in purpose and priorities.

Pallone, on accepting the award, said it is crucial for the community to
stand united as they advocate of behalf of Armenia and Armenian-American
issues. “The bottom line is that if you’re out there working as
Armenian-Americans pressuring Congress, meeting with your congressmen and
women, meeting with your senators, and telling them that you want the U.S.
government to be a better friend to Armenia, I think that is going to happen
primarily through your efforts,” said Pallone.

Armenian Caucus member Representative Thaddeus McCotter (R-MI) accepted the
Assembly award on behalf of Knollenberg who was unable to attend.
Knollenberg, in expressing thanks for the award, recently told the Assembly,
“By standing together and presenting a common voice, the Assembly, AGBU and
Diocese Church present a stronger case to public policymakers. Your unity of
purpose will have a very positive effect both within the Armenian community
and outside.”

Throughout their tenure in Congress, both Knollenberg and Pallone have been
steadfast supporters of issues facing the Armenian community. They have
repeatedly fought for affirmation of the Armenian Genocide, co-sponsoring
legislation that would properly recognize the cataclysm of 1915 and urging
President Bush, as well as his predecessors, to accurately characterize the
events as genocide. The Congressmen, working closely with their House
colleagues on both sides of the political aisle, have also fought for
increased funding to Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh, U.S.-Armenia trade
normalization, the re-opening of Armenia’s borders and maintaining Section
907 of the Freedom Support Act, among other critical issues.

Pallone, who created the Caucus in the mid-1990s, has traveled to Armenia
and Karabakh on numerous occasions, most recently with fellow Caucus member
Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-TX) as part of an Assembly-led delegation.
Knollenberg, also a frequent visitor to Armenia, earned a unique distinction
when in 2001 President Robert Kocharian awarded him the Order of Mkhitar
Gosh.

Since 1997, the Assembly has given the Deukmejian award, named after former
California Governor George Deukmejian, to individuals who embody the
qualities of an exemplary public servant. Among those who have received the
award are: Representatives David Dreier (R-CA), Anna Eshoo (D-CA) and John
Sweeney (R-NY), as well as Armenia’s former Minister of Trade and Industry
Garnik Nanagoulian.

The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based nationwide
organization promoting public understanding and awareness of Armenian
issues. It is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership organization.

NR#2004-051

Photograph available on the Assembly’s Web site at the following link:

Caption: Congressman Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ), in accepting the Deukmejian
Award for Public Service, praised the public cooperation of the Armenian
Assembly, AGBU and Eastern and Western Diocese of the Armenian Church.

http://www.aaainc.org/images/press/2004-051/2004-051-1.jpg
www.armenianassembly.org

Babcock is Liberty Bell Award winner for 2004

Iosco County News Herald, MI
May 6 2004

Babcock is Liberty Bell Award winner for 2004
by John Morris

EAST TAWAS – A Tawas City businessman who runs a longtime
family-owned business, Iosco County Abstract Office, and who has been
involved with many community activities and boards is the 2004
recipient of the 23rd Circuit Bar Association’s Liberty Bell Award.

He is Carl “Butch” Babcock of East Tawas who is a lifelong resident
and native son of the Tawases. The Award was presented Friday at the
Tawas Bay Holiday Inn Resort in East Tawas during the bar
association’s annual Law Day luncheon.
Nichol Palumbo, president of the 23rd Circuit Bar Association, said
Babcock is a valuable asset not just to her profession in matters of
real property and information, but as a historian to the community,
especially as the area grows. Babcock’s business deals primarily in
land abstracts, title insurance and mortgage closings.

“He constantly donates his time and energy to the community,” Palumbo
said of Babcock. “And he is always available.

“What he brings to us is something that can’t be measured. He is a
valuable source of information and a lot of questions of him.”

Babcock said he is shocked, surprised and honored to receive the
award.

“I consider everyone in this room a friend,” he said. “There’s a lot
of sharing between attorneys and land title concerns. Likewise, I ask
a lot of questions of you.”

The Liberty Bell Award was established by the American Bar
Association about 35 years ago to acknowledge outstanding community
service to a person who is not an attorney. The 23rd Circuit Bar
Association has historically presented its award to those who have
dedicated careers to promoting better understanding and respect for
the rule of law, good government of the area or community service.
Law Day is May 1.

Keynote speaker for the luncheon was retired 23rd Circuit Judge J.
Richard Ernst who recently returned from a year’s trip to Armenia.
Ernst said Armenia uses a civil law system, a system that goes back
to the Roman Empire.

He call Armenia a “unique country” fought over by Mongols, Turks,
Persians and Russians. “It’s little country with a rich history,” he
said.

“The Armenian people are a proud people,” he said. “There are more
Armenians in the world — six million — than in their own country —
2.3 million.”

Ernst said the Armenian legal system is derived from its 80-year
existence an a Soviet Union state. “Judges receive a lifetime
appointment from the president,” he said. He said an Armenia judge
can be removed, although it is rare when it happens.

The Armenian legal system is in three branches: a Court of First
Instance (one judge); a three-judge Court of Appeals; and a Court of
Cassation which is split into two divisions — civil and criminal —
with seven judges in each division.

Ernst said Armenia courts are located in “very dilapidated quarters.
In earthquake-ravaged areas, the judges were too embarrassed to show
me their quarters,” he said.

A temporary cage holds defendants while they are in the court and in
recently history, there’s only been seven acquittals, Ernst said.

“They don’t try people if they’re not guilty,” he said. “Judicial
independence is practiced in theory, but obviously it does not exist.

“The judge will naturally favor the party that supples the largest
bribe.”

He said an attorney in Armenia received a law degree after four years
of college and can purchase grades and purchase a position.

There’s also no time constraint for court cases. For example, he said
one case began in 1998 and is continuing to this day. “There’s no
finality,” Ernst said. “There’s no date for trail and no date for
when he trial ends.

That is, he said, unless the defendant pleads guilty.

Ernst said the court system in Armenia made him reflect “how
fortunate we are in what we have and what we have the possibility to
lose.”

CR: Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide – Rep. Costello

COMMEMORATION OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

______

HON. JERRY F. COSTELLO

of illinois

in the house of representatives

Tuesday, April 27, 2004

Mr. COSTELLO. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to pay tribute to the
victims of one of history’s most terrible tragedies, the Armenian
Genocide. April 24, 1915 is remembered and solemnly commemorated each
year by the Armenian community and others throughout the world. On
that day, Armenian religious, political, and intellectual leaders were
arrested in Constantinople, taken to the interior of Turkey and
murdered. In the years that followed, Armenians living under Ottoman
rule were systematically deprived of their homes, property, freedom,
dignity, and ultimately their lives. By 1923, 1.5 million Armenians
had been massacred and 500,000 more had been deported. The Armenian
Genocide is a historical fact, despite the efforts of some to minimize
its scope and deny its occurrence. Many of the survivors of the
genocide came to the United States, where they and their descendants
have contributed to our society in countless ways. In my district,
there is a significant population of Armenian survivors and their
families that showed heroic courage and a will to survive. With faith
and courage, generations of Armenians have overcome great suffering
and proudly preserved their culture, traditions, and religion and have
told the story of the genocide to an often indifferent world. As
Members of Congress and people of conscience, we must work to overcome
the indifference and distortions of history, and ensure that future
generations know what happened. Mr. Speaker, genocide is the most
potent of all crimes against humanity because it is an effort to
systematically wipe out a people and a culture as well as individual
lives. Denying that genocide took place when there are recorded
accounts of barbarity and ethnic violence is an injustice. This was a
tragic event in human history, but by paying tribute to the Armenian
community we ensure the lessons of the Armenian genocide are properly
understood and acknowledged. I am pleased my colleagues and I have
this opportunity to ensure this tragedy is remembered.

OSCE expresses “deep” concern about lack of progress in Armenia

OSCE expresses “deep” concern about lack of progress in Armenia

Mediamax news agency
30 Apr 04

YEREVAN

The OSCE office in Yerevan has expressed “deep concern” about an
increase in the number of violent incidents, “an alarming lack of
progress” in the punishment of those guilty and an atmosphere of
intolerance in Armenian society, the head of the OSCE office and
ambassador, Vladimir Pryakhin, has said in a letter to Armenian
Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan.

Vladimir Pryakhin recalled that a deputy of the Armenian parliament,
Viktor Dallakyan, was attacked on 23 March and the chairman of the
Helsinki association and human rights activist, Mikael Danielyan, was
beaten up on 30 March and well-known politician Ashot Manucharyan on
22 April.

Pryakhin expressed regret about a lack of progress in the
investigation of these incidents and of the attacks on journalists
during the rallies on 5 and 13 April

Opp confident Armenian president will resign, rally planned 4 May

Opposition confident Armenian president will resign, rally planned 4 May

Mediamax news agency
3 May 04

YEREVAN

The opposition is confident that Robert Kocharyan will resign from the
post of the Armenian president, one of the leaders of Justice
opposition block, former Prime Minister Aram Sarkisyan told a briefing
in Yerevan today.

Aram Sarkisyan said that the opposition’s confidence is based on the
fact that “the people have livened up and come out against the illegal
President,” Mediamax reported. He said that “the opposition is going
to act in accord with the following scenario – changing of power,
holding of pre-term presidential elections, dissolution of the
National Assembly and holding of pre-term parliamentarian elections.”
Aram Sarkisian said that the opposition will stage a regular rally on
Freedom Square in Yerevan on May 4 at 1800 [presumably local time].

He noted that despite the law “On the procedure of staging meetings,
rallies, marches and demonstrations” adopted by the Armenian
Parliament last week, which contained certain restrictions, “we will
stage rallies wherever we find it expedient; guided by the UN
Convention on Human Rights.”

Journalists who lie and journalists who die

Poynter.org, FL
April 27 2004

Journalists Who Lie, Journalists Who Die

A veteran journalist assesses the international trend of journalists
targeted for their truth-telling against a backdrop of recent fraud
in American newsrooms.

By Betty Medsger (more by author)

I wonder if Jayson Blair, Jack Kelley and Stephen Glass, the best
known of American journalism’s recently discovered practitioners of
fraud, know about Manik Saha, Sajid Tanoli and Ruel Endrinal. While
the U.S. trio wrote stories composed of lies, the other three
journalists were among the many journalists in other countries who
paid the ultimate price for revealing the truth.

Manik Saha, a veteran journalist in Bangladesh for the daily New Age
and BBC’s Bengali-language service, died January 15 when a bomb was
hurled at his rickshaw and decapitated him. He was well known in his
home country for bold reporting on criminal gangs, drug traffickers,
and Maoist insurgents.

Sajid Tanoli, a reporter with the Urdu-language daily Shumal in
Pakistan, was shot and killed in Pakistan January 29 by a local
government official who was enraged about an article Tanoli had
written a few days earlier about an allegedly illegal liquor business
run by the official.

…most journalists who were killed were hunted down and murdered,
often in direct reprisal for their reporting.
Ruel Endrinal was killed February 11 by two unidentified gunmen. They
shot him in the foot and then continued shooting him in the head and
body until he fell dead. His death is believed by investigators to be
the price he paid for speaking out against local politicians and
criminal gangs on a political commentary program he hosted on a
broadcast outlet in Legazpi City in the eastern Philippines.

It is a striking aspect of the changing international journalism
landscape that American journalism, however fine much of it is,
currently is best known for the fraud some journalists have committed
as journalists, sinking their own careers and damaging the reputation
of the profession by reporting stories that were lies in full or in
part. Blair, Kelley, and Glass have become household names, symbols
of a corruption and malaise that many in and out of journalism fear
may be far more widespread than we now know. In recent weeks I’ve
heard several very worried editors, most of them people who have
judged major journalism competitions, wonder how many more are hiding
in their newsrooms.

The slashes to journalism’s reputation have occurred with painful
frequency since 1998. They have ranged from a lack of editorial
involvement at CNN, Time Magazine, the San Jose Mercury and the
Cincinnati Enquirer that led to publication and broadcast of major
accusations the truth of which is still unknown. In some cases,
journalists were condemned because of accusations of criminal
activity in the gathering of information (the Enquirer) and in other
instances because of insufficient evidence for powerful claims. Since
dozens of journalists have been forced out of the profession for
fabricating and distorting.

Meanwhile, Saha, Tamoli, and Endrinal and many others were killed.
According to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ), an international organization that defends the right of
journalists to report the news without fear of reprisal, their plight
represents a tragic trend: the literal killing of the messenger by
people who don’t want truth revealed. Every week there are new
reports on the CPJ website of deaths of journalists or threats to
journalists and news organizations for trying to reveal the truth.
Some current ones:

· April 11: Four Armenian journalists were seriously beaten in
Yerevan simply for covering an opposition rally.

· April 13: Early morning arson destroyed the building that housed
the printing presses of the biweekly The Independent in Banjul in
Gambia. Six armed men stormed the building, fired guns, then doused
printing equipment with gasoline and set it on fire. When journalists
arrived at the scene, the armed arsonists tried to lock them inside
the burning building.

· April 12: Three Czech journalists and a Japanese journalist were
abducted in Iraq. Their captors threatened to burn the Japanese
journalist alive, along with two Japanese aid workers, if Japan did
not recall its troops from Iraq.

· April 9: Cheng Yizhong, editor-in-chief of Nanfang Dushi Bao, a
weekly newspaper in the Guangdoing Province in China, was arrested on
suspicion of corruption. His home was searched and publications about
Chinese politics were confiscated. As people in the region have come
to depend on the newspaper for investigative reporting about issues
important to them, such as the beating death of a student last year
while in police custody, the government took steps against the
editors.

These and other recent actions against journalists in other countries
contrast sharply with the breaking in the U.S. of the de facto
promise journalists have with the public to provide truthful accounts
of events.

There is a strong impression among many that journalists are killed
primarily in the crossfire of wars and street violence. Research by
CPJ found instead most journalists who were killed were hunted down
and killed, often in direct reprisal for their reporting. Of the 346
journalists killed in the last 10 years for carrying out their work,
only 55 journalists, 17 percent of the total killed, died in
crossfire, while 263, 76 percent, were killed in reprisal for their
reporting. The others were killed in other violent situations, such
as violent street demonstrations.

In its investigations of slayings of journalists in the last decade,
CPJ, a New York-based organization that tracks attacks against
journalists and defends press freedoms, found only 25 cases in which
the person or persons who ordered or carried out a journalist’s
killing have been arrested and prosecuted. That means that in more
than 90 percent of the cases, those who killed journalists did so
with impunity. The motive usually was to prevent journalists from
reporting on corruption or human rights abuses, or to punish them
after they have done so. Of the 263 who were murdered, 53 were
threatened before they were killed. In 20 cases, journalists were
kidnapped and subsequently killed. While the kidnap and murder of
Wall Street Journal journalist Daniel Pearl in 2002 is well known,
there have been several cases, most notably in Algeria and Turkey,
where journalists have disappeared and never been seen again after
being taken into custody either by government or opposition forces.

More than 30 journalists were killed during the last decade in
Russia, 19 of them targeted, often by the mafia, in retaliation for
their stories, according to CPJ. In Chechnya, 11 were killed in
crossfire or by mines, but at least four were killed there for their
reporting on the war, usually for investigating human rights abuses
by the Russian military. In Rwanda 16 journalists were killed in the
last decade, 14 of them massacred by Rwandan Armed Forces and Hutu
militias in April 1994.

…in more than 90 percent of the cases, those who killed journalists
did so with impunity.Like their fallen and imprisoned colleagues
abroad, most American journalists produce honest work that they hope
will help citizens be informed and active participants in democracy.
They realize that the use of false information destroys trust, the
most essential ingredient in the bond between journalists and the
public, and they are rigorous in their efforts to be accurate.

In addition to being tainted by the actions of journalists who have
lied, American journalists have been criticized in the past year for
being timid in their coverage before the war against Iraq. Some
critics say journalists should have displayed more skepticism and
independence in their coverage of the Bush Administration’s case for
going to war, including the claim that Iraq possessed weapons of mass
destruction. Given what we now know could have been known before the
war started, that criticism carries serious implications for the
potential power of missing information in a democracy.

Some foreign journalists are startled when they look at the
malfeasance that has been occurring here since 1998.

Peruvian journalist Gustavo Gorriti, who has endured severe
persecution for his reporting, wrote eloquently in 1998 of the
influence of American journalists in inspiring some of the most
important investigative reporting in Latin America in the last two
decades. There, in national cultures in which journalists often had a
reputation for corruption, the ones who boldly revealed official
corruption gained the confidence and respect of the public. In
numerous instances, governments have been forced to change, indeed,
have forced out, because of stories that revealed corruption.

“…..The influence of American journalism was decisive,” wrote
Gorriti. “Its principles of thoroughness, fact-checking, editing, the
effective separation between editors and publishers – all this
influenced us profoundly.

“Given these standards, we can scarcely fathom the recent
journalistic wreckage in the United States. How did competence and
integrity dissipate in so many American newsrooms?”

We need to search for the answers to his question. We also need to
ask how the trust can be rebuilt – among journalists and between
journalists and the public. Since public relations has come to
dominate many public and private institutions, people have felt that
it was very difficult, if not impossible, to separate fact from spin
in news stories. In the present season of malfeasance, many readers
feel they are being asked to separate fact from fiction. What a
mockery of the trust essential between journalists and the public,
and what a mockery of the courage displayed daily by journalists
everywhere who risk their lives in order to deliver truthful
information to the public.

There probably are numerous personal and institutional factors that
have contributed to the individual acts of dishonesty that are now
being revealed. Surely one of them is me-ism, an overwhelming
preoccupation with the promotion and success of the self. For that
reason, I think it is unlikely that Blair, Kelley and Glass could
understand the idealism that shaped the courage of Saha, Tanoli and
Endrinal.

Betty Medsger, a former Washington Post reporter, was the founder of
the Center for the Integration and Improvement of Journalism at San
Francisco State University. She currently is a writer and journalism
education consultant based in New York. ([email protected])

http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=64562