Armenia: Unity Dance (1918-2005)

Armenia: Unity Dance (1918-2005)

Azad-Hye, Dubai
June 1 2005

AZAD-HYE (Dubai, 1st June 2005): May 28, is a great day for Armenians,
the day of the independence declaration of the first republic (1918),
established after miraculous victories in Sartarabad, Pash Abaran
and Gharakilise.

Commemorating this historical event Armenians decided to have a great
national festivity this year with an aim of displaying unity. The
result was the performance of the first circle dance of its kind
in the world, with the participation of about 150 thousand dancers,
encircling Armenian~Rs highest mountain Arakadz and creating a human
dancing chain of 163 kilometres.

The chain passed through several regions and involved more than 100
communities in the Arakadzodn and Shirag regions, in addition to
thousands of participants who poured in from the capital Yerevan,
driving on some 60 kilometres.

The dance started under the rhythm of traditional music at 3 p.m. and
lasted for 15 minutes. The participants were standing at about
one meter distance from each other, wearing apricot coloured caps,
symbolizing one of the colours of the Armenian flag. Each group was
assigned to a particular section of the area.

President Robert Kocharian and his guest famous French-Armenian
singer Charles Aznavour took also part in the spectacular dancing
session. Foreign tourists were seen in several points of the cheerful
chain.

Along the highway of this round dance a tree planting program (called
tree of love to the fatherland) was carried on since April. The
evening just before the dancing, great fireworks were lighted up,
symbolizing Saint Krikor the Illuminator~Rs lamp, traditionally
believed to brighten the sky dome over Mount Arakadz, professed to
be seen by the believers only.

Television news had several great shots of the dance. Four helicopters
were covering the event from different locations.

Vanoush Khanamiryan, President of the Dance Union, took part in the
dance together with 6000 professional dancers, representing some 50
dancing groups, all wearing national dresses. Famous musician Ara
Gevorgyan composed a song dedicated to the event.

Hundreds, maybe thousands, spent the night before the dance along
the dance route, singing and dancing around fires, while the day
of the dance had such huge numbers of people that the line at times
became five or six rows deep. In one case, the dancer was one of the
Armenian soldiers who danced the Kochari in Berlin, celebrating the
Soviet takeover of the city in World War II.

The enthusiasm was so obvious that people started expressing the wish
to organize next dance around biblical Mount Ararat.

A parallel unity dance was organized in Artsakh.

Some saw in these festivities a trace of an old Armenian worship of
stone and nature elements.

Videotapes will be sent to the Guinness headquarters for evaluation
and probably there would be reference to this dance in the Guinness
Record Book.

Let us hope that this dancing ceremony will turn into a tradition
connected to 28th May and will symbolize the Armenian unity and joy
of communication and solidarity under the free sky of the motherland.

Competition of violinists in Yerevan

AZG Armenian Daily #099, 01/06/2005

Culture

COMPETITION OF VIOLINISTS IN YEREVAN

Aram Khachatrian International competition of violinists continues
in Yerevan. The first stage of the competition will finish today.

The Preparatory Committee informed that Prof. Grigory Zhislin from the
Royal College of Music in London failed to arrive in Armenia due to
technical problems. The organizers are also saddened that 23-year-old
Chinese Tzin Yunyuan could not come because of health problems. Only
12 of overall 18 participants who presented works of Bach, Paganini,
Mozart and Khachatrian will enter the next stage.

On occasion of the competition at the House-Museum of Aram Khachatrian
Swiss Suzy Meter displayed her photos of Khachatrian during his last
London visit. London-born Armenian, Asatur Gyuzelian, introduced
the photographer to Khachatrian while in London in 1977 and she has
been taking his photos for 2 months. Suzy Meter presented 25 photos
to the Museum yesterday. They depict the composer surrounded by his
friends and family members.

By Tamar Minasian

ANKARA: The Armenian Issue Revisited

Assembly of Turkish American Associations
May 31 2005

The Armenian Issue Revisited

An Armenian and Muslim Tragedy? Yes! Genocide? No! By Bruce Fein

I. Both Armenians and Muslims in Eastern Anatolia under the Ottoman
Empire experienced harrowing casualties and gripping privations
during World War I.

Hundreds of thousands perished. Most were innocent. All deserve pity
and respect. Their known and unknown graves testify to President John
F. Kennedy’s lament that “Life is unfair.” An Armenian tombstone is
worth a Muslim tombstone, and vice versa. No race, religious, or
ethnic group stands above or below another in the cathedral of
humanity. To paraphrase Shakespeare in “The Merchant of Venice,” Hath
not everyone eyes? hath not everyone hands, organs, dimensions,
senses, affections, passions? fed with the same food, hurt with the
same weapons, subject to the same diseases healed by the same means,
warmed and cooled by the same winter and summer…If you prick
anyone, does he not bleed? if you tickle him, does he not laugh? if
you poison him, does he not die?

These sentiments must be emphasized before entering into the
longstanding dispute over allegations of Armenian genocide at the
hands of the Ottoman Turks during World War I and its aftermath.
Genocide is a word bristling with passion and moral depravity. It
typically evokes images of Jews dying like cattle in Nazi cyanide
chambers in Auschwitz, Bergen-Belson, Dacau, and other extermination
camps. It is customarily confined in national laws and international
covenants to the mass killing or repression of a racial, religious,
or ethnic group with the intent of partial or total extermination.
Thus, to accuse Turks of Armenian genocide is grave business, and
should thus be appraised with scrupulous care for historical
accuracy. To do less would not only be unjust to the accused, but to
vitiate the arresting meaning that genocide should enjoy in the tale
of unspeakable human horrors.

It cannot be repeated enough that to discredit the Armenian genocide
allegation is not to deny that Armenian deaths and suffering during
the war should evoke tears in all but the stone-hearted. The same is
true for the even greater number of contemporaneous Turkish deaths
and privations. No effort should be spared to avoid transforming an
impartial inquest into the genocide allegations to poisonous
recriminations over whether Armenians or Turks as a group were more
or less culpable or victimized. Healing and reconciliation is made of
more magnanimous and compassionate stuff.

In sum, disprove Armenian genocide is not to belittle the atrocities
and brutalities that World War I inflicted on the Armenian people of
Eastern Anatolia.

I. Sympathy for All, Malice Towards None “War is hell,” lamented
steely Union General William Tecumseh Sherman during the American
Civil War. The frightful carnage of World War I confirmed and
fortified that vivid definition.

The deep pain that wrenches any group victimized by massacres and
unforgiving privation in wartime, however, frequently distorts or
imbalances recollections. That phenomenon found epigrammatic
expression in United States Senator Hiram Johnson’s World War I quip
that truth is the first casualty of war. It is customary among
nations at war to manipulate the reporting of events to blacken the
enemy and to valorize their own and allied forces. In other words,
World War I was no exception, about which more anon.

II. The Armenian Genocide Accusation
The Ottoman Turks are accused of planning and executing a scheme to
exterminate its Armenian population in Eastern Anatolia beginning on
or about April 24, 1915 by relocating them hundreds of miles to the
Southwest and away from the Russian war front and massacring those
who resisted. The mass relocation (often mischaracterized as
“deportation”) exposed the Armenians to mass killings by marauding
Kurds and other Muslims and deaths from malnutrition, starvation, and
disease. After World War I concluded, the Ottoman Turks are said to
have continued their Armenian genocide during the Turkish War of
Independence concluded in 1922.

The number of alleged Armenian casualties began at approximately
600,000, but soon inflated to 2 million. The entire pre-war Armenian
population in Eastern Anatolia is best estimated at 1.3 to 1.5
million.

A. Was there an intent to exterminate Ottoman Armenians in whole or
in part?

The evidence seems exceptionally thin. The Government’s relocation
decree was a wartime measure inspired by national self-preservation,
neither aimed at Armenians generally (those outside sensitive war
territory were left undisturbed) nor with the goal of death by
relocation hardships and hazards. The Ottoman government issued
unambiguous orders to protect and feed Armenians during their
relocation ordeal, but were unable because of war emergencies on
three fronts and war shortages affecting the entire population to
insure their proper execution. The key decree provided:

“When those of Armenians resident in the aforementioned towns and
villages who have to be moved are transferred to their places of
settlement and are on the road, their comfort must be assured and
their lives and property protected; after their arrival their food
should be paid for out of Refugees’ Appropriations until they are
definitively settled in their new homes. Property and land should be
distributed to them in accordance with their previous financial
situation as well as current needs; and for those among them needing
further help, the government should build houses, provide cultivators
and artisans with seed, tools, and equipment.”

“This order is entirely intended against the extension of the
Armenian Revolutionary Committees; therefore do not execute it in
such a manner that might cause the mutual massacre of Muslims and
Armenians.”

(Do you believe that anything comparable has been issued by Yugoslav
President Slobodan Milosevic to his troops in Kosovo?)

The Ottoman government prosecuted more than one thousand soldiers and
civilians for disobedience. Further, approximately 200,000 Ottoman
Armenians who were relocated to Syria lived without menace through
the remainder of the war.

Relocation of populations suspected of disloyalty was a customary war
measure both at the time of World War I and through at least World
War II. Czarist Russia had employed it against Crimean Tatars and
other ethnic Turks even in peacetime and without evidence of
treasonous plotting. The United States relocated 120,000 citizens and
resident aliens of Japanese ancestry during the Second World War
despite the glaring absence of sabotage or anti-patriotic sentiments
or designs. Indeed, the Congress of the United States acknowledged
the injustice in the Civil Liberties Act of 1988 which awarded the
victims or their survivors $20,000 each.

In sum, the mass wartime relocation of Ottoman Armenians from the
Eastern front was no pretext for genocide. That conclusion is
fortified by the mountains of evidence showing that an alarming
percentage of Armenians were treasonous and allied with the Triple
Entente, especially Russia. Tens of thousands defected from the
Ottoman army or evaded conscription to serve with Russia. Countless
more remained in Eastern Anatolia to conduct sabotage behind Ottoman
lines and to massacre Turks, including civilians. Their leaders
openly called for revolt, and boasted at post-World War I peace
conferences that Ottoman Armenians had fought shoulder-to-shoulder
with the victorious powers. Exemplary was a proclamation issued by an
Armenian representative in the Ottoman parliament for Van, Papazyan.
He trumpeted: “The volunteer Armenian regiments in the Caucasus
should prepare themselves for battle, serve as advance units for the
Russian armies to help them capture the key positions in the
districts where the Armenians live, and advance into Anatolia,
joining the Armenian units already there.”

The Big Five victors -Great Britain, France, the United States,
Italy, and Japan acknowledged the enormous wartime service of Ottoman
Armenians, and Armenia was recognized as a victor nation at the Paris
Peace Conference and sister conclaves charring the post-war map.
Armenians were rewarded for their treason against the Ottoman Empire
in the short-lived Treaty of Sevres of 1920 (soon superceded by the
1923 Treaty of Lausanne). It created an independent Armenian state
carved from large swaths of Ottoman territory although they were a
distinct population minority and had always been so throughout the
centuries of Ottoman rule. The Treaty thus turned President Woodrow
Wilson’s self-determination gospel in his Fourteen Points on its
head.

The Ottoman government thus had overwhelming evidence to suspect the
loyalty of its Armenian population. And its relocation orders
responded to a dire, not a contrived, war emergency. It was fighting
on three fronts. The capital, Istanbul, was threatened by the
Gallipoli campaign. Russia was occupying portions of Eastern
Anatolia, encouraging Armenian defections, and aiding Armenian
sabotage. In sum, the mass relocation of Armenians was clearly an
imperative war measure; it did not pivot on imaginary dangers
contrived by Ottoman rulers to exterminate Armenians.

The genocide allegation is further discredited by Great Britain’s
unavailing attempt to prove Ottoman officials of war crimes. It
occupied Ottoman territory, including Istanbul, under the 1918 Mudros
Armistice. Under section 230 of the Treaty of Sevres, Ottoman
officials were subject to prosecution for war crimes like genocide.
Great Britain had access to Ottoman archives, but found no evidence
of Armenian genocide. Scores of Ottoman Turks were detained on Malta,
nonetheless, under suspicion of complicity in Armenian massacres or
worse. But all were released in 1922 for want of evidence. The
British spent endless months searching hither and yon for evidence of
international criminality- even enlisting the assistance of the
United State yet came up with nothing that could withstand the test
of truth. Rumor, hearsay, and polemics from anti-Turk sources was the
most that could be assembled, none of which would be admissible in
any fair-minded enterprise to discover facts and to assign legal
responsibility.

None of this is to deny that approximately 600,000 Ottoman Armenians
perished during World War I and its aftermath. But Muslims died in
even greater numbers (approximately 2.5 million in Eastern Anatolia)
from Armenian and Russian massacres and wartime privations as severe
as that experienced by relocated Armenians. When Armenians held the
opportunity, they massacred Turks without mercy, as in Van, Erzurum,
and Adana. The war ignited a cycle of violence between both groups,
one fighting for revolutionary objectives and the other to retain
their homeland intact. Both were spurred to implacability by the
gruesome experience that the loser could expect no clemency.

The horrifying scale of the violence and retaliatory violence,
however, were acts of private individuals or official wrongdoers. The
Ottoman government discouraged and punished the crimes within the
limits of its shrinking capacity. Fighting for its life on three
fronts, it devoted the lion’s share of its resources and manpower to
staving off death, not to local law enforcement.

The emptiness of the Armenian genocide case is further demonstrated
by the resort of proponents to reliance on incontestable falsehoods
or forged documents. The Talat Pasha fabrications are emblematic.

According to Armenians, he sent telegrams expounding an Ottoman
policy to massacre its Armenian population that were discovered by
British forces commanded by General Allenby when they captured Aleppo
in 1918. Samples were published in Paris in 1920 by an Armenian
author, Aram Andonian. They were also introduced at the Berlin trial
of the assassin of Talat Pasha, and then accepted as authentic.

The British Foreign Office then conducted an official investigation
that showed that the telegrams had not been discovered by the army
but had been produced by an Armenian group based in Paris. A
meticulous examination of the documents revealed glaring
discrepancies with the customary form, script, and phraseology of
Ottoman administrative decrees, and pronounced as bogus as the
Protocols of the Elders of Zion and the Donation of Constantine.

Ditto for a quote attributed to Adolph Hitler calculated to liken the
Armenians in World War I to the Holocaust victims and to arouse anger
towards the Republic of Turkey. Purportedly delivered on August 22,
1939, while the Nazi invasion of Poland impended, Hitler allegedly
declared: “Thus for the time being I have sent to the East only my
Death Head units, with the order to kill without mercy all men,
women, and children of the Polish race or language. Who still talks
nowadays of the extermination of the Armenians.”

Armenian genocide exponents point to the statement as evidence that
it served as the model for Hitler’s sister plan to exterminate Poles,
Jews, and others. Twenty-two Members of Congress on or about April
24, 1984 in the Congressional Record enlisted Hitler’s hideous
reference to Armenian extermination as justification for supporting
Armenian Martyrs’ Day remembrances. As Princeton Professor Heath W.
Lowry elaborates in a booklet, “The U.S. Congress and Adolph Hitler
on the Armenians,” it seems virtually certain that the statement was
never made. The Nuremburg tribunal refused to accept it as evidence
because of flimsy proof of authenticity.

The gospel for many Armenian genocide enthusiasts is Ambassador Henry
Morgenthau’s 1918 book, Ambassador’s Morgenthau’s Story. It brims
with assertions that incriminate the Ottoman Turks in genocide.
Professor Lowry, however, convincingly demonstrates in his monograph,
“The Story Behind Ambassador Morgenthau’s Story,” that his book is
more propaganda, invention, exaggeration, and hyperbole than a
reliable portrait of motivations and events.

According to some Armenian circles, celebrated founder of the
Republic of Turkey, Atatürk, confessed “Ottoman state responsibility
for the Armenian genocide.” That attribution is flatly false, as
proven in an extended essay, “A ‘Statement’ Wrongly Attributed to
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk,” by Türkkaya Ataöv.

Why would Armenian genocide theorists repeatedly uncurtain
demonstrative falsehoods as evidence if the truth would prove their
case? Does proof of the Holocaust rest on such imaginary
inventiveness? A long array of individuals have been found guilty of
participation in Hitler’s genocide in courts of law hedged by rules
to insure the reliability of verdicts. Adolph Eichmann’s trial and
conviction in an Israeli court and the Nuremburg trials before an
international body of jurists are illustrative. Not a single Ottoman
Turk, in contrast, has every been found guilty of Armenian genocide
or its equivalent in a genuine court of law, although the victorious
powers in World War I enjoyed both the incentive and opportunity to
do so if incriminating evidence existed.

The United Nations Economic and Social Council Sub-Commission on the
Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities examined
the truthfulness of an Armenian genocide charge leveled by Special
Rapporteur, Mr. Benjamin Whitaker, in his submission, “Study of
Genocide,” during its thirty-eighth session at the U.N. Office in
Geneva from August 5-30, 1985. The Sub-Commission after meticulous
debate refused to endorse the indictment for lack of convincing
evidence, as amplified by attendee and Professor Dr. Ataöv of Ankara
University in his publication, “WHAT REALLY HAPPENED IN GENEVA: The
Truth About the ‘Whitaker Report’.”

B. If the evidence is so demonstratively faulty, what explains a
widespread credence given to the Armenian genocide allegation in the
United States?

As Napoleon once derisively observed, history is a fable mutually
agreed upon. It is not Euclidean geometry. Some bias invariably is
smuggled in by the most objective historians; others view history as
a manipulable weapon either to fight an adversary, or to gain a
political, economic, or sister material advantage, or to satisfy a
psychological or emotional need.

History most resembles truth when competing versions of events do
battle in the marketplace of ideas with equally talented contestants
and before an impartial audience with no personal or vested interest
in the outcome. That is why the adversarial system of justice in the
United States is the hallmark of its legal system and a beacon to the
world.

The Armenian genocide allegation for long decades was earmarked by an
absence of both historical rigor and scrupulous regard for reliable
evidence and truth. The Ottoman Empire generally received bad reviews
in the West for centuries, in part because of its predominant Muslim
creed and military conquests in Europe. It was a declared enemy of
Britain, France, and Russia during World War I, and a de facto enemy
of the United States. Thus, when the Armenian genocide allegation
initially surfaced, the West was predisposed towards acceptance that
would reinforce their stereotypical and pejorative view of Turks that
had been inculcated for centuries. The reliability of obviously
biased sources was generally ignored. Further, the Republic of Turkey
created in 1923 was not anxious to defend its Ottoman predecessor
which it had opposed for humiliating capitulations to World War I
victors and its palsied government. Atatürk was seeking a new,
secular, and democratic dispensation and distance from the Ottoman
legacy.

Armenians in the United States were also more vocal, politically
active and sophisticated, numerous, and wealthy than Turks. The
Armenian lobby has skillfully and forcefully marketed the Armenian
genocide allegation in the corridors of power, in the media, and in
public school curricula. They had been relatively unchallenged until
some opposing giants in the field of Turkish studies appeared on the
scene to discredit and deflate the charge by fastidious research and
a richer understanding of the circumstances of frightful Armenian
World War I casualties. Professor of History at the University of
Louisville, Justin McCarthy, and Princeton Professor Heath Lowry
stand at the top of the list. Professor McCarthy’s 1995 book, Death
and Exile: The Ethnic Cleansing of Ottoman Muslims, 1821-1922, is a
landmark. Turkish Americans have also organized to present facts and
views about the Armenian genocide allegation and other issues central
to United States-Turkish relations. But the intellectual playing
field remains sharply tilted in favor of the Armenians. Since public
officials with no foreign policy responsibilities confront no
electoral or other penalty for echoing the Armenian story, they
generally acquiesce to gain or to solidify their standing among them.

The consequence has been not only bad and biased history unbecoming
an evenhanded search for truth, but a gratuitous irritant in the
relations between Turkey and the United States. The former was a
steadfast ally throughout the Cold War, and Turkey remains a
cornerstone of NATO and Middle East peace. It is also a strong
barrier against religious fundamentalism, and an unflagging partner
in fighting international terrorism and drug trafficking. Turkey is
also geostrategically indispensable to exporting oil and gas from
Central Asia to the West through pipelines without reliance on the
Russian Federation, Iran, Afghanistan or other dicey economic
partners.

Finally, endorsing the false Armenian genocide indictment may
embolden Armenian terrorist organizations (for example, the Armenian
Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia) to kill and mutilate
Turks, as they did a few decades ago in assassinating scores of
Turkish diplomats and bombing buildings both in the United States and
elsewhere. They have been relatively dormant in recent years, but to
risk a resurgence from intoxication with a fortified Armenian
genocide brew would be reckless.

III. Conclusion
The Armenian genocide accusation fails for want of proof. It attempts
to paint the deaths and privations of World War I in prime colors,
when the authentic article is chiaroscuro. Both Muslims and Armenians
suffered horribly and neither displayed a morality superior to the
other. Continuing to hurl the incendiary charge of genocide on the
Turkish doorstep obstructs the quest for amity between Armenia and
the Republic of Turkey and warmer relations between Armenians and
Turks generally.

Isn’t it time to let the genocide allegation fade away and to join
hands in commemorating the losses of both communities during World
War I and its aftermath?

Letter from Mr. E. Vartanian, an Armenian-American Volunteer in the
Russian Service, to His Brother-in-law in Egypt; Dated 9th /22nd
July,1915, and Published in the Armenian Journal “Houssaper,” of
Cairo.

” We have been here three days. Some of us are going to be sent to
Erivan; the rest of us are starting in two days for Van.

The enthusiasm here is very great. There are already 20,000
volunteers at the front, and they are trying to increase the number
to 30,000. Each district we occupy is placed under Armenian
administration, and an Armenian post is running from Igdir to Van.
The Russian Government is showing great goodwill towards the
Armenians and doing everything in its power for the liberation of
Turkish Armenia.

When we disembarked at Archangel the Government gave us every
possible assistance. It even undertook the transport of our baggage,
and gave us free passes, second class, to Petrograd.

At Petrograd we received an equally hearty welcome, and the Governor
of the city presented each of us with a medal in token of his
sympathy. The Armenian colony put us up in the best hotels,
entertained us at the best restaurants, and could not make enough of
us. This lasted for five days, and then we continued our journey,
again at the Government’s expense, to Tiflis.

Everywhere on the way the population received us with cheers and
offerings of flowers. Just as we were leaving Archa gel, a young
Russian lady came with flowers and offered one to eaeh of us. I also
saw a quite poor man who was so moved by the speech in Russian that
one of our comrades had made, that he came and put his tobacco into
the pipe of a comrade standing next to me, and kept nothing for
himself but a bare half-pipeful. A third, an old man, was so moved by
the speech that he began to cry and nearly made off, but a little
while after I saw him standing in front of the carriage window and,
with a shaking hand, holding out a hard-boiled egg to our comrade the
chemist Roupen Stepanian. Probably it was his one meal for the day.

And so at every step we found ourselves in the midst of affecting
scenes. At Petrograd Railway Station the crowd was enormous. There
was an Armenian lady there who offered each of us a rose. There were
boys and young men who wept because they could not come with us. At
Rostov a young Russian joined our ranks. He was caught more than once
by his parents at the stations further down the line, but he always
succeeded in escaping them and reioining us. We have christened him
Stepan.

When we arrived at Tiflis, we marched singing to the offices of the
Central Armenian Bureau, with our flag unfurled in front of us, and
the people marched on either side of us in such a crowd that the
trams were forced to stop running.

That is enough for to-day. My next letter shall be written from
Armenia itself..

Please say nothing to my sister about this resolution that I have
taken. I hope, of course, that she would know how to sacrifice her
affection for her brother to her love for the nation and for
liberty.. I should curse any of my relations who lament my
resolution; they would have committed treason against the nation.
There are five of us brothers; was it not imperative that at least
one of us should devote himself to the cause of a national
emancipation ? Let us keep up our courage, realise the urgency of the
moment and do our duty. ”

Author is an attorney and Adjunct Scholar of ATAA.

–Boundary_(ID_iJZ4bxhY84NQXPh9FQ1P9A)–

More Than 1.1 Bln Drams Allocted From State Budget For Major Repairs

MORE THAN 1.1 BLN DRAMS ALLOCTED FROM STATE BUDGET FOR MAJOR REPAIRS OF YEREVAN SCHOOLS

YEREVAN, MAY 30, NOYAN TAPAN. Deputy Mayor of Yerevan Kamo Areyan
stated at the May 30 press conference that repair work of 1 bln 102 mln
drams (about 2.4 mln USD) will be done this year at Yerevan schools
with funds of the RA state budget. According to him, 952 mln drams
was allocated to carry out major repairs at 14 schools, and 150 mln
drams to extend classrooms and reconstruct 7 schools. It is planned
to complete the work by the start of the new school year.

Top prize for utter stupidity: to drink and drive over this of allwe

The Times, UK
May 31 2005

Top prize for utter stupidity: to drink and drive over this of all weekends
LA Notebook by Chris Ayres

I LEARNT something very important about Los Angeles on Memorial Day
last year. As with many cultural revelations, it came at about 1am,
when I was standing on the patio of the Saddle Ranch Saloon on Sunset
Strip, looking at the Ferarris and SUVs rolling by. In my hand was a
pitcher of Long Island Iced Tea. Somewhere behind me, a miniskirted
18-year-old was riding a mechanical bull.

“Hey,” I said, turning to my friend Jeff, who seemed to be swaying
in the desert breeze. “Do you think everyone here is going to
drive home?” Before he could answer, a white Hummer H2 filled with
high-school students rumbled past us, swerved and shunted into the
back of a LADP squad car, which was parked on the central reservation.

The police car bounced forward with an indignant squawk, causing it
to smash into another LAPD vehicle, which was parked in front of it.

For about half a second, the patio of the Saddle Ranch fell silent.

Then, as four whiplashed, angry and heavily armed patrol officers
stumbled out of their cars, the Hummer reversed, corrected its path,
and continued westward, with rather more urgency than before. The
patio burst into spontaneous applause.

“Oh dear,” said Jeff, a celebrity photographer who knows a thing or
two about the traffic laws of Los Angeles. “Hitting a squad car while
driving under the influence is a federal offence. Leaving the scene
of a federal offence? That’s, oh, 15 years. Easy.”

Within seconds, four highway patrol motorbikes had flanked the Hummer
and brought it to a halt at the roadside. The driver, I assume,
is still in jail.

So my lesson was this: nearly everyone who drinks and drives in Los
Angeles ends up drinking and driving. Not that Angelinos will ever
admit it. During my first few months in California, I kept being
invited to restaurants or bars that were halfway up mountains, on
remote beaches, or out in the desert suburbs. No one took taxis.

There was no public transport. The car parks were full. Yet everyone
seemed to drink. It didn’t make sense.

Then an American friend gave me a lift to one of these bars, where
he quickly sank four rum and Cokes. As he climbed back into his BMW,
he said: “One day, when I’m not driving, we should go out and have
a drink.” From then it all started to make sense.

I mention all of this, of course, because of Oliver Stone’s arrest this
Memorial Day weekend for drink-driving and drugs. Consuming alcohol
before operating a vehicle is more than usually stupid in Los Angeles,
where you stand as much chance of hitting a Beverly Hills lawyer as
you do the kerb. It is prize-winningly stupid during the Memorial Day
holiday – the official start of summer – when LADP officers set-up
“mobile command centres” along Sunset Strip, complete with random
alcohol-testing facilities and flatbed lorries on to which they will
roll your car after giving you a fine, a ban and a date with a judge.

But the Oscar-winning film director’s behaviour doesn’t surprise me.

Angelinos are some of the laziest, most selfish people on earth. I
know this because I’m one of them. I will get in my car to cross
the road, then valet-park when I get there. The very thought of
Angelinos taking taxis to restaurants or bars is laughable. This is
a city where every second car is a Bentley Continental. Turning up
for dinner at Morton’s in a Checker Cab, while trying to convince
the Armenian driver to wait for you, would be social suicide.

Fortunately, I’m such a bad driver when sober that I would never risk
limiting my concentration further with booze. Alas, I cannot say the
same thing for my friends.

“The safest way to drink and drive is to avoid Sunset Strip and
take Mulholland Drive,” a friend told me, with a straight face, at
a barbecue on Sunday. Mulholland, I should add, is one of the most
treacherous stretches of road anywhere in California, traversing
the crest of the Santa Monica mountains from east to west. The LAPD
doesn’t patrol it, because it assumes no one would be stupid enough
to drive along it drunk.

“As long as you don’t fall into a canyon, or get lost, you’re fine,”
continued my friend.

It was then, of course, that she offered me a ride home in her
Porsche. I politely declined.

Next Memorial Day, I plan to drink at home.

War Reporting for Cowards, by Chris Ayres, will be published by John
Murray on June 6.

Russia as a Creditor

Russia as a Creditor
Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. – 5/30/2005

Global Politician, NY
May 30 2005

Russia is notorious for its casual attitude to the re-payment of
its debts. It has defaulted and re-scheduled its obligations more
times in the last decade than it has in the preceding century. Yet,
Russia is also one of the world’s largest creditor nations. It is owed
more than $25 billion by Cuba alone and many dozens of additional
billions by other failed states. Indeed, the dismal quality of its
forlorn portfolio wouldn’t shame a Japanese bank. In the 18 months
to May 2001, it has received only $40 million in repayments.

It is still hoping to triple this trifle amount by joining the
Paris Club – as a creditor nation. The 27 countries with Paris
Club agreements owe roughly half of what Russia claims. Some of
them – Algeria in cash, Vietnam in kind – have been paying back
intermittently. Others have abstained.

Russia has spent the last five years negotiating generous package
deals – rescheduling, write-offs, grace periods measured in years –
with its most obtuse debtors. Even the likes of Yemen, Mozambique,
and Madagascar – started coughing up – though not Syria which owes
$12 billion for weapons purchases two decades ago. But the result
of these Herculean efforts is meager. Russia expects to get back
an extra $100 million a year. By comparison, in 1999 alone Russia
received $800 million from India.

The sticking point is a communist-era fiction. When the USSR expired
it was owed well over $100 billion in terms of a fictitious accounting
currency, the “transferable ruble”. At an arbitrary rate of 0.6 to the
US dollar, protest many debtors, the debt is usuriously inflated. This
is disingenuous. The debtors received inanely subsidized Russian goods
and commodities for the transferable rubles they so joyously borrowed.

Russia could easily collect on some of its debts simply by turning
off the natural gas tap or by emitting ominous sounds of discontent
backed by the appropriate military exercises. That it chooses not to
do so – is telling. Russia has discovered that it could profitably
leverage its portfolio of defunct financial assets to geopolitical
and commercial gain.

On March 25, 2002 Russia’s prime minister and erstwhile lead debt
negotiator, Kasyanov, has “agreed” with his Mongolian counterpart,
Enkhbayar, to convert Mongolia’s monstrous $11.5 billion debt to
Russia – into stakes in privatized Mongolian enterprises.

Mongolia’s GDP is minuscule (c. $1 billion). Should the Russian
behemoth, Norilsk Nickel, purchase 49% of Erdenet, Mongolia’s copper
producer, it will have bagged 20% of Mongolia’s GDP in a single debt
conversion. A similar scheme has been concluded between Armenia
and Russia. Five enterprises will change hands and thus eliminate
Armenia’s $94 million outstanding debt to Russia.

Identical deals have been struck with other countries such as Algeria
which owes Russia c. $4 billion. The Algerians gave Gazprom access
to Algeria’s natural gas exports.

Russia’s mountainous credit often influences its foreign policies to
its detriment. Prior to the Iraq (Second Gulf) war, It has noisily
resisted every American move to fortify sanctions against Iraq and make
them “smarter”. Russia is owed $8 billion by that shredded country and
tried to recoup at least a part of it by trading with the outcast or
by gaining lucrative oil-related contracts. The sanctions regime was
in its way – hence its apparent obstructionism. Its recent weapons
deals with Syria are meant to compensate for its unpaid past debts to
Russia – at the cost of destabilizing the Middle East and provoking
American ire.

Russia uses the profusion of loans gone bad on its tattered books
to gain entry to international financial fora and institutions. Its
accession to the Paris Club of official bilateral creditors is
conditioned on its support for the HIPC (Highly Indebted Poor
Countries) initiative.

This is no trifling matter. Sub-Saharan debt to Russia amounted to c.
$14 billion and North African debt to yet another $11 billion –
in 1994. These awesome figures will have swelled by yet another 25%
by 2001. The UNCTAD thinks that Russia intentionally under-reports
these outstanding obligations and that Sub-Saharan Africa actually
owed Russia $17 billion in 1994.

Russia would have to forgo at least 90% of the debt owed it by
the likes of Angola, Ethiopia, Guinea, Mali, Mozambique, Somalia,
Tanzania, and Zambia. Russian debts amount to between one third and
two thirds of these countries’ foreign debt. Moreover, its hopes to
offset money owed it by countries within the framework of the Paris
Club against its own debts to the Club were dashed in 2001. Hence
its incentive to distort the data.

Other African countries have manipulated their debt to Russia to their
financial gain. Nigeria is known to have re-purchased, at heavily
discounted prices, large chunks of its $2.2 billion debt to Russia in
the secondary market through British and American intermediaries. It
claims to have received a penalty waiver “from some of its creditors”.

Russia has settled the $1.7 billion owed it by Vietnam in 2001. The
original debt – of $11 billion – was reduced by 85 percent and spread
over 23 years. Details are scarce, but observers believe that Russia
has extracted trade and extraction concessions as well as equity in
Vietnamese enterprises.

But Russia is less lenient with its former satellites. Five years ago,
Ukraine had to supply Russia with sophisticated fighter planes and
hundreds of cruise missiles incorporating proprietary technology.
This was in partial payment for its overdue $1.4 billion natural
gas bill. Admittedly, Ukraine is also rumored to have “diverted”
gas from the Russian pipeline which runs through it.

The Russians threatened to bypass Ukraine by constructing a new,
Russian-owned, pipeline to the EU through Poland and Slovakia.
Gazprom has been trying to coerce Ukraine for years now to turn over
control of the major transit pipelines and giant underground storage
tanks to Russian safe hands. Various joint ownership schemes were
floated – the latest one, in 1999, was for a pipeline to Bulgaria
and Turkey to be built at Ukrainian expense but co-owned by Gazprom.

After an initial period of acquiescence, Ukraine recoiled, citing
concerns that the Russian stratagem may compromise its putative
sovereignty. Already UES, Russia’s heavily politicized electricity
utility, has begun pursuing stakes in debtor Ukrainian power producers.

Surprisingly, Russia is much less aggressive in the “Near Abroad”. It
has rescheduled Kirghizstan’s entire debt (c. $60 million) for a period
of 15 years (including two years grace) with the sole – and dubious –
collateral of the former’s promissory notes.

Russia has no clear, overall, debt policy. It improvises – badly –
as it goes along. Its predilections and readiness to compromise change
with its geopolitical fortunes, interests, and emphases. As a result
it is perceived by some as a bully – by others as a patsy. It would
do well to get its act together.

Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. is the author of Malignant Self Love – Narcissism
Revisited and After the Rain – How the West Lost the East. He served
as a columnist for Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline,
and eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business
Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe
categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.

Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government
of Macedonia. Sam Vaknin’s Web site is at

http://samvak.tripod.com

France’s No is not all bad

Financial Times
FT.com
May 30 2005

France’s No is not all bad

The clear French No vote to the European Union’s constitutional treaty is a
grave blow both to President Jacques Chirac and to the EU as a whole. Not
for the first time, the French president has made a huge political
miscalculation, by calling a referendum at a moment of deep unpopularity for
his own government, and then by failing to fight it in a whole-hearted and
positive way. But the price will be paid not only by the French government.
It will also cause confusion and possibly a political stalemate in the wider
EU.

The reasons for the French No are diffuse. There is no simple answer to the
voters’ revolt. Part is clearly a backlash against Mr Chirac from the left,
combining frustration at the failure of his government to reduce
unemployment, and a powerful anti-globalisation movement blaming
international competition for France’s plight. But that fear of competition
has been confused with anxiety about the effect of EU enlargement, with
France losing influence in a 25-member union and losing jobs to cheaper
labour in the east. On the right, there is strong opposition to launching
membership talks with Turkey later this year.
There was never an instant Plan B on how to respond to the French decision.
All 25 members have signed the treaty, and all are committed to debating and
ratifying it by November 2006. Several more may say No, including the
Netherlands where a referendum is to be held on Wednesday. But that is not a
good reason to stop the process. Nine states have already said Yes,
including two of the largest, Germany and Spain. Their views should not
simply be dismissed because France has voted No. Nor should those of the
countries yet to decide.
What the debates in France and the Netherlands have demonstrated is a great
desire among ordinary voters to have a real say on the future of the EU.
They have not been properly consulted for far too long. The wrong reaction
would be for EU leaders to retreat once more behind closed doors, call off
the political process and try to save the parts of the treaty they like best
in a constitutional fudge.
They must avoid the other danger lurking in the French No vote: that Mr
Chirac will seek to revive his political popularity in ever more defensive
positions, encouraging others to do exactly the same. That is the way
towards prolonged political stalemate on economic reform, the Doha round of
trade liberalisation, negotiations on the long-term EU budget, and the
future enlargement process. Hence the need not to over- react and to seek
more time for a level-headed debate.
On balance, it would seem most sensible to allow the ratification process to
continue, even if it does mean that others may vote No, including the UK.
Only when it is clear where all the members stand can a sensible effort be
made to rework the treaty. The French No is a shock. It is also an
opportunity: for a fundamental debate to be held on the shape of the future
EU.

King Fahd sends cable of congratulations to Kocharian

Saudi Press Agency
May 27, 2005 Friday 5:37 PM EST

King Fahd sends cable of congratulations to Kocharian

Riyadh, May 27

The Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Fahd bin Abdulaziz sent a
cable of congratulations to President Robert Kocharian of Armenia on
the occasion of his country’s Independence Day.

In his own name and on behalf of the people and government of the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the Monarch wished the President of Armenia
continuous good health and happiness and his people steady progress
and prosperity.

King Fahd also hailed the existing close relations between the two
friendly countries..

Charles Aznavour will not dance

A1plus

| 13:51:52 | 27-05-2005 | Social |

CHARLES AZNAVOUR WILL NOT DANCE

Worldwide famous singer Charles Aznavour is in Armenia. He arrived in
Yerevan the previous night. He has already had meetings with Robert
Kocharyan and the students of the French University in Armenia. And at 4:00
p.m. in the cinema «Moscow» the presentation of Aznavour’s book «Past Days»
will take place.

«PAST DAYS» is Aznavour’s last book where he recalls his childhood and
youth, the days of war, and his road to worldwide fame. Aznavour writes
about his recollections of the Armenian atmosphere where started his
affection towards theater, cinema, and music.

The book has been translated into Armenian by Hamlet Gasparyan and published
with the support of the Pan Armenian Youth Fund.

By the way, answering the journalists’ questions in the airport, Charles
Aznavour said that he will not take part in the Unity Round Dance. «My age
does not allow me», he said.

Specialist of Ministry of Education of Holland to visit Armenia

Pan Armenian News

SPECIALIST OF MINISTRY OF EDUCATION OF HOLLAND TO VISIT ARMENIA

27.05.2005 03:55

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian Parliamentary Speaker Artur Baghdasarian met with
the professor staff of the Institute of International Relations in
Netherlands, reported the Press Service of the National Assembly of Armenia.
In the course of the meeting issues referring to the EU Wider Europe: New
Neighbors program were discussed. A. Baghdasarian presented in detail the
reforms being implemented in Armenia. In the course of the meeting with
Minister of Education, Science and Culture of Netherlands Maria van der
Hoeven bilateral cooperation questions were discussed. An agreement was
reached over establishment of ties between higher education institutions of
the two countries, introduction of the Dutch experience during the
restoration of the system of specialized secondary education, as well as a
visit of the Ministry specialists to Armenia.