NKR: Liberated Territories In Light Of Human Rights

LIBERATED TERRITORIES IN LIGHT OF HUMAN RIGHTS
Hovanes Asrian

Azat Artsakh, Nagorno Karabakh Republic [NKR]
10 April 2006

The question of liberated territories of Artsakh cannot be viewed
apart from the human rights factors. The most essential of these
is the right of people for self-determination. As characterized by
the UN Human Rights Commission, the right for self-determination
is essential to the encouragement and development of individual
human rights. The right for self-determination is set down in the UN
Conventions, the International Bill of Human Rights, the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International Covenant
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, as well as a series of other
international agreements and documents. Being one of the main rights
and having a practical role in geopolitical processes, the right
for self-determination is also widely and constantly manipulated
and distorted by countries and international organizations. A more
popular distortion is when it is opposed to the territorial integrity
of countries. If viewed from the aspect of law, this opposition becomes
groundless and illegal. Different experts have covered this question,
therefore we will dwell on other questions, related to the liberated
territories of Artsakh. The problem of liberated territories should
be viewed from the beginning, i.e. the division of Armenia in 1921. In
1921, under the March 16 agreement of Moscow and October 13 agreement
of Kars, as well as the July 5 decision of the Plenum of the Caucasian
Bureau of Central Committee of the Communist Proletarian Party of
Russia, a major part of East Armenia was annexed to the Turkic states
of Turkey and Azerbaijan. This was done with an overt violation of the
right for self-determination, and was accompanied by crimes against the
humanity, massacres, assassinations, extermination, and displacement
of people. These crimes perpetuated until the liberation of Artsakh.

It is notable that the Central Committee of Azerbaijani Communist
Party was instructed to draw the borders of the region of Artsakh
(the Autonomous Region of Nagorno Karabakh). Thus, the territories,
disputed at various international organizations, are the result of
the division of Armenia and Artsakh.

>From this point of view, these organizations may be driven by political
interests and motives in accepting the borders drawn under Stalin, but
legally and morally this is not reasonable and valid. It is obvious
that the Artsakh was joined to Azerbaijan against the will of the
native people, encroaching upon their right for self-determination,
and in law this is annexation. All the other territories inside
the Autonomous Region of Nagorno Karabakh and outside its “borders”
have the same status. These are illegally annexed and later partly
liberated territories, and now are an indivisible part of Nagorno
Karabakh Republic. The annexation of these territories by Azerbaijan
for several decades cannot act as a legal factor to underlie the
territorial claims of Azerbaijan. Still at the time of division
of Armenia the principle “Ex injuria non oritus jus” worked in
international law. In other words, no right emanates from limitations
if the state of things is the result of illegal actions.

Therefore the attempts of Azerbaijanis to refer to the documents on
Soviet administrative divisions are groundless. First, the annexation
of Artsakh was illegal, second, the law was violated by the Soviet
government, and third, by the October 18, 1991 constitutional act
on the independence of the Republic of Azerbaijan Azerbaijan was
declared the successor of the first Azerbaijani republic (1918-1920)
and not Soviet Azerbaijan, and Karabakh has never been part of the
first Azerbaijani republic. The constant violation of the right for
self-determination of the people of Artsakh since 1921 was ended
by the proclamation of NKR in 1991 and the liberation of part of
these territories. Returning these territories to Azerbaijan would
mean returning the situation when human rights were constantly
violated. Countries are to honour human rights and abstain from
actions of violating these rights. Therefore, countries, including
the Republic of Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh Republic, must never
consider any question of possibility or adequacy of violating human
rights. Moreover, under Articles 55-56 of the UN Conventions the
members of the UN must honour the equality of peoples, their right
for self-determination, basic human rights and freedoms. In addition,
under the principles of the international law on friendship and
partnership of states, countries must abstain from actions involving
force, that deprive peoples of their right for self-determination,
otherwise the declaration provides for the right to solicit and accept
assistance from other countries. Besides, this declaration points
out that each country must assist in the fulfilment of the principle
of equal rights and the right for self-determination of peoples. In
debates on the Karabakh state and the liberated territories of Artsakh
countries often use the formula-motto “resolution without winners and
losers”, which would not fit into the real essence of the problem. The
Azerbaijani mini-empire simply lost part of its annexed territories in
the result of the establishment of NKR and liberation of some annexed
territories. Hence, presenting Azerbaijan as a loser gives birth to
and nourishes revenge in this country, and Azerbaijan draws farther
from the settlement of the problem. After the independence of colonies
a colonial country cannot be considered a loser, because annexation
and colonization are generally against the law. The countries of
Western Europe, losing their colonies in the past decades, did not
become losers and are not trying to return the countries that became
independent. Lasting peace in the region is possible through resolution
of problems on the basis of the international law.

Commerce Bank Opens Commerce Ctr. at TecPort Bus. Ctr in Harrisburg

PRESS RELEASE
Source: Commerce Bank/Harrisburg, NA
Commerce Bank Opens Commerce Center at TecPort Business Center in
Harrisburg
Wednesday April 5,

New headquarters, operations and training center reflects Commerce’s
unique retail culture inside and out
HARRISBURG, Pa.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–April 5, 2006–Commerce
Bank/Harrisburg, NA, the sole banking subsidiary of Pennsylvania
Commerce Bancorp Inc. (NASDAQ:COBH
< &d=t> – News
<; ), has opened Commerce Center, the
bank’s new headquarters, operations and training center, to accommodate
its fast-paced growth. The 56,000-square-foot, two-story facility is
located at TecPort Business Center in Harrisburg, prominently visible
from Interstate 83.
Commerce Center houses the bank’s executive offices, operations and
support services departments, and customer service call center. The
building also houses commercial, consumer and residential mortgage
lending operations for the bank’s East Shore and West Shore regions in
Harrisburg. Additionally, it is home to Commerce University, the bank’s
in-house training, development and education department, which helps
every Commerce team member develop his or her expertise and advance
along a Commerce career path.
“Commerce Center reflects our unique retail culture, inside and out,”
said Commerce Bank Chairman, President and CEO GARY L. NALBANDIAN. “The
facility is immaculate in appearance, just like our convenient prototype
stores. It creates the same welcoming experience for our team members as
they create for our customers. Commerce Center is now the central point
from where our organization will continue to grow and turn more
customers into Commerce fans.”
About 275 Commerce team members work at Commerce Center, nearly one
third of the company’s workforce. The facility’s total capacity is about
400. It combines Commerce’s previous headquarters in Camp Hill and
operations center in Mechanicsburg, PA.
Commerce’s well-known brand and “WOW! the Customer” service philosophy
is celebrated throughout Commerce Center. Wall art consists of nearly 40
poster-size images featuring “slices of life” at Commerce such as grand
openings and community involvement. Two four-panel wall collages each
feature nearly 80 images from the bank’s Annual WOW! Awards, an Academy
Awards-style event to honor the “best of the best” in customer service.
Wall displays also highlight real fan mail from real Commerce fans.
“The features and amenities of Commerce Center are all about creating an
extreme sense of camaraderie, pride and morale among our team,”
Nalbandian said. “Every detail conveys the spirit of our ‘WOW! the
Customer’ service philosophy.”
The architectural centerpiece of the facility is a 2,062-square-foot,
glass-enclosed atrium. Other distinct features include: large-format,
flat-screen displays throughout the building to inform team members
about news and upcoming events; nearly 600 square feet of red neon
accents; a 60-seat cafe with full-service vending; a sound-masking
system to increase privacy and reduce audible distractions; and water
conservation via the sites own well to water the landscaping.
Commerce Center’s training facilities, under the direction of Commerce
University, include a 75-seat-capacity seminar room; teller training
room; customer service representative training room; call center
representative training room and computer lab. With a visually
stimulating appearance, the training area features actual Commerce
retail store equipment — including teller stations and even a miniature
size walk-in bank vault — to simulate a branch environment.
The Call Center at Commerce Center houses more than 30 representatives
in high-energy, motivating surroundings. The hub of the Call Center is a
high-tech raised platform from which team leaders proactively manage
resources to maximize service levels. The Call Center’s technology also
enables the bank to forecast staffing needs down to the half-hour based
on historical data.
Commerce Bank/Harrisburg, “America’s Most Convenient Bank,” opened its
first office in 1985. In the years since, the bank has cultivated a
unique retail model that has produced continuous strong growth. The bank
has doubled its number of branches in Pennsylvania in recent years,
growing a network of 28 stores in Berks, Cumberland, Dauphin, Lebanon
and York counties.
Commerce’s hallmark products and services include seven-day banking,
free personal checking, free instant-issue ATM/Visa check card, free
interactive Penny Arcade coin-counting machines, free online banking and
24/7 bank-by-phone. In addition to retail banking, Commerce offers a
diverse portfolio of commercial banking services including term loans,
commercial mortgages, commercial leasing and lines of credit, and cash
management services.
Commerce Bank/Harrisburg currently has assets exceeding $1.6 billion.
For more information about Commerce Bank/Harrisburg, visit the bank’s
web site at commercepc.com.
Editor’s Note: To arrange media tours of Commerce Center including
photography, please contact Jason Kirsch at (717) 412-6200 or
[email protected].

Contact:
Commerce Bank/Harrisburg, NA
Jason S. Kirsch, 717-412-6200
[email protected]

http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=cobh
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=cobh&gt

A Genocide Documentary That Will Resonate

The Armenian Reporter
April 8, 2006

Editorial

A Genocide Documentary That Will Resonate

A few years ago, when “Images of the Armenian Spirit” aired on PBS,
its producer, Andrew Goldberg, made public his intention of making a
documentary specifically devoted to the Armenian Genocide and launched
a campaign to raise the necessary funds to bring that project to
fruition. At the time, members of the American-Armenian community
questioned the desirability, even the necessity of such a documentary,
given the existence of several devoted to said topic. Some even
doubted Goldberg’s qualifications and/or motives, despite his having
already produced two credible documentaries on the Armenians — the
aforementioned one, and its predecessor, “The Armenians: A Story of
Survival.”

A week or so from now, people in practically all parts of the United
States will be able to judge the merits of “The Armenian Genocide” for
themselves. If the reaction of some hundred persons who previewed the
film this Monday evening at the Tribeca Film Center in New York City
is at all indicative, viewers on the night of April 17 will consider
the end product well worth the time, effort and money spent.

“The Armenian Genocide” is a welcome, innovative contribution to the
genre of Armenian Genocide films. Faced with the daunting task of
compressing a topic of epic dimension into the time frame of just one
hour, Goldberg has managed to create as comprehensive and balanced a
story as possible. He has quite seamlessly pieced together
photographs, film footage, interviews, and commentary, which
complement each other to make the parts into a forceful whole.

What makes “The Armenian Genocide” stand out, in particular, is its
inclusion of remarks from Turks — genocide experts living not only in
the West but also in Turkey, who acknowledge the Genocide as
historical fact; ordinary Turkish citizens, who relate what they
remember from their parents and grandparents, as well as “scholars”
and others who continue to refute the Genocide. It would be an
understatement to say that the latter are much less convincing than
the former.

By watching “The Armenian Genocide,” viewers who were previously
unfamiliar with the topic will learn what happened to the Armenian
people in 1915-1923 and why. They will also learn why the denial of
genocide by subsequent Turkish governments down to the present has
prevented the matter from being relegated to the dustbin of history
and, on the contrary, kept it on the front burner.

Two Cats Productions and Andrew Goldberg, in particular, as well as
Oregon Public Broadcasting, deserve our deep thanks and appreciation
for this noteworthy achievement. So do the individuals whose
contributions made it possible. We are buoyed by the realization that
over 90% of America will have access to “The Armenian Genocide” in the
coming days. However, in order for the Armenian Genocide to become
common knowledge among the vast masses of the population of this
country, “The Armenian Genocide” must be given wider exposure, ideally
by being shown and discussed on the major networks, such as ABC, CBS
and NBC.

Making such exposure a reality should be a cause taken up by our
national organizations. In the meantime, we strongly recommend that
all American Armenians watch “The Armenian Genocide” (even those who
think they know the Genocide story will learn something new). Equally,
and perhaps more importantly, they should likewise inform
non-Armenians in their business, professional and personal circles of
this unique opportunity to learn about this 20th-century catastrophe,
the effects of which are still lingering in the 21st.

Will Azerbaijan agree to join the anti-Iranian coalition?

Regnum, Russia
April 8 2006

Will Azerbaijan agree to join the anti-Iranian coalition? Azeri press
digest

Politics

`If the Karabakh peace talks give no results, we’ll have to choose
another way to liberate our lands and to restore our territorial
integrity,’ Azeri Foreign Minister Elmar Mamedyarov says Mar 30. He
says that the last statements by Armenian diplomats were just a show
for their own public: `Such statements are for their home politics
and mostly reflect the position of military men, who have a big
authority in their country. So, these words must not be taken
seriously.’

Mamedyarov says that the talks with the Armenian community of Nagorno
Karabakh are possible if Armenia comes out of the negotiating
process, and if the Karabakh Armenians admit that they are Azeri
citizens and recognize Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity and laws.
`But I am afraid Armenia itself doesn’t want Azerbaijan to directly
negotiate with the Karabakh Armenians,’ says Mamedyarov. (525 Daily)

Apr 1 Azeri Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov finished his official
visit to the US and Canada, reports AzerTag. In Ottawa Azimov spoke
about Azerbaijan’s `concern,’ particularly, that some Canadian
companies are prospecting gold fields in the Kalbacar district,
`occupied by the Armenians’. But the Canadian officials said they
have nothing to do with the above companies and do not interfere in
their activities. In Washington the agenda was the same: ensuring
Azerbaijan’s national and regional security, developing relations in
the framework of NATO, enhancing the OSCE’s role, resolving the
regional conflicts, relations between the Caspian countries, the
military-political situation in the Caspian region.

Azimov says: `The complex of risks and threats in the Caspian region
is complicated enough. Its peculiar elements are war, terrorism, and
environment. Here, the USA will closely cooperate with Azerbaijan. We
have achieved some agreements. Some groups of experts will arrive in
Baku to study ways to involve Azerbaijan in energy and sea safety
initiatives, and also the initiative by G8, against proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction.’

Asked if they spoke about Iran, Azimov says: `We told them that a
130-km section of the Azeri-Iranian border is under occupation.’ `The
ensuing threats should be considered by all means. We also discussed
the situation in the sector of the Caspian Sea adjacent to Iran.
Azerbaijan is worried about certain steps Iran is undertaking in this
area.’

`The US supports the quick settlement of the Karabakh conflict and is
ready to make active efforts in this direction. Azerbaijan supports
peaceful co-existence of the Armenian and Azerbaijan communities in
Nagorno Karabakh and their provision with relevant guarantees.
America should understand and Armenia should remember that Azerbaijan
will not only object to the partition of its lands, will but also
take action to prevent it. It should not be perceived as toughening
of our position. It is a position of principle Azerbaijan has had
from the very beginning, from the first day of the conflict. We shall
stick to this position. We are ready to show appropriate flexibility
in settling the conflict. These words are also for my compatriots –
the Armenian community living in Nagorno Karabakh should be provided
with some framework of self-government. The Armenians claim that
political forces of Azerbaijan want to expel the Armenians of Nagorno
Karabakh from this region. It is not true. We have never objected to
their residence in Nagorno Karabakh as citizens of Azerbaijan. On the
contrary, we consider that these people should be given appropriate
social-political freedoms. This should not be regarded as weakness on
our part. As a strong, modern, democratic state, Azerbaijan is ready
to provide normal life to each citizen of any ethnic origin.’
`Armenia should renounce its the extreme position that Nagorno
Karabakh has never been and will never be a part of Azerbaijan. In
its turn, the Azeri government should provide the Armenian population
of Nagorno Karabakh with model of self-government. Based on the
European standards, this model should recognize our territorial
integrity and inviolability of borders. One should not forget that
Azeris also lived in Nagorno Karabakh side by side with Armenians.
The Azeri community should come back to Nagorno Karabakh without fail
to use, together with the Armenians, the same model of
self-government in line with the Azeri legislation. This is our
constructive position. We are ready to pass from such a hard line as
non-recognition of the rights of the Armenians to such a moderate
position as maintenance of their rights. Thus, Armenia and Azerbaijan
can come to a common denominator. This question has been brought to
the attention of the American side,’ says Azimov. (AzerTag)

In 2005, international organizations allocated $30 mln as
humanitarian aid to displaced persons in Azerbaijan and will allocate
as much this year, says Azeri Deputy Premier, Chairman of the State
Refugee Committee Ali Gasanov. He says that the rest is provided by
Azerbaijan itself. `If 10 years ago international organizations
provided displaced persons with $75-80 mln annually, today the Azeri
authorities spend on them $100 mln a year,’ says Gasanov. There are
also refugees from third countries – Chechens, Afghanis, Iraqis and
Palestinians – a total of 13,000-14,000. Gasanov says that the Azeri
authorities are not going to give them official refugee status as
they have enough of own refugees in the country. Still some 50 people
have got the status. Gasanov disagrees with the US State Department’s
criticism that Azerbaijan is violating the rights of Chechen
refugees. `The Chechens crossed the border illegally, there were
problems with their identification and we sent relevant inquiries to
Russia,’ says Gasanov. (New Time)

Zerkalo says: `It is noteworthy that increasingly more attention has
been recently given to the social-humanitarian aspects of the
Armenian-Azeri conflict. Unfortunately, we may `come a howler’ in
this issue. We will reap the fruits of the mistakes we have made for
the sake of momentary political gains. The point is that Armenian
NGOs are going to ask the European Human Rights Court to oblige
Azerbaijan to reimburse material and moral damage to Armenian
refugees. So, we can sum up certain results here: first, if we give a
thought to Azimov’s words, it turns out that the US still hopes that
Azerbaijan will accept the co-chairs’ (OSCE Minsk Group – REGNUM)
`Prague Process’ scenario. Or he wouldn’t say right after coming back
from the US that `America should understand and Armenia should
remember…’ Second, after the failure of the `Prague Process,’ the
Armenians are eager to show as if it is Azerbaijan who wants a new
war. No coincidence that the Armenian media report Yuri Merzlyakov
(OSCE MG Russian co-chair – REGNUM) to say that it is Azerbaijan who
is responsible for the growing tensions and that such actions will
lead to nothing good. But if we give a good thought to this, it turns
out that it is exactly Armenia who wants a new war at the present
stage.’

The daily says: `Despite its growing military expenses, Azerbaijan
has not yet got overwhelming military prevalence over Armenia. But
otherwise it will not be able to attain drastic results in the battle
field. In the coming few years Azerbaijan may bring its military
spending up to the level of 3-4 Armenian state budgets.’

First: Armenia’s economy will not be able to keep pace. Second: by
debarring Armenia from regional projects, Azerbaijan is depriving it
of any economic prospects. The last such serious project may be the
building of the Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku railroad. Armenia is
not only pronouncing but is also acting against this project. US
Senators Rick Santorum and Robert Menendez have already drafted a
bill urging the Senate to ban any support of this project linking
Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey and bypassing Armenia, reports the
Armenian Assembly of America. And third: in a few years, when
Azerbaijan gets an overwhelming military prevalence over Armenia,
first of all, in quality, it will be able to speak `from a position
of strength.’

Such tactics will be good for Azerbaijan if it `preserves the
situation’ for a while and waits for better times, while Armenia
can’t wait for `better times.’ That’s why its officials openly say
they are not going to wait for Azerbaijan to get stronger and may
deal `a preventive blow.’

And now let’s return to the social-humanitarian problems we may have
if the conflict is resolved. Unfortunately, Armenia’s threats to
appeal to the European Human Rights Court for refugee compensation
are not as absurd as they may seem. 250,000 Azeris have left Armenia
since the beginning of the conflict, i.e. since 1988, against 350,000
Armenians leaving Azerbaijan. That is, Armenia has gained a seeming
prevalence over us due to its `creeping deportation’ of Azeris during
the Soviet times. But we have made things even worse by fully
integrating the refugees from Armenia into our society. That is,
today almost all the refugees from Armenia have Azeri citizenship and
can no longer be regarded as refugees by the international law. By
speculating on the social-political problems of the refugees from
Armenia, the ruling party and some opposition forces have got them
fully integrated into the Azeri society and have deprived Azerbaijan
of this serious tramp. They should have kept them `refugee’ – with
certain civil and political restrictions – by stipulating that their
status will be finalized after the settlement of the Armenian-Azeri
conflict. While now, with just a few thousands of official refugees
we may see our next generations working hard to `feed’ some 200,000
Armenians. To avoid this, we must, first, try to change the situation
with the refugees from Armenia, that is, to change their legal status
so that international organizations regard them as `refugees.’ This
is a hard thing to do, at least, because we’ll have to deprive them
of some of their civil and political rights. Not being a lawyer, I
can’t say if this is legally possible at all. Second, we must
urgently find who to oblige to reimburse the `displacement’ and
`occupation’ damage. This will be Armenia provided that Azerbaijan
has taken the Armenian-Azeri problem back to the UN Security Council
and gets it to recognize Armenia as an aggressor. This will not only
equalize our chances but will even give us advantage… (Zerkalo)

Speaking of peace opportunities in Nagorno Karabakh at the RFE/RL
Washington Office, the director of the Caucasian project of the
International Crisis Group Sabine Freizer says that the Karabakh
conflict is not frozen: dozens of soldiers and civilians are dying on
the contact line because of cease fire violations. This line is
closer to Azeri villages, that’s why Azerbaijan is sustaining more
casualties. Frazer says that even though she does not believe in a
new war in the coming years, she is seriously concerned over the
growing military activity on both sides, which makes the situation
worse and allows such strong regional players as Russia, the US,
Iran, Turkey to deeper interfere in the conflict.

Frazer says that there is a big possibility that a compromise peace
agreement will be signed by the leaders, but there is a small
possibility that this agreement will be supported by the peoples.
Hence, in order to foster mutual confidence, the sides should not
only actively negotiate but also encourage contacts between Armenians
and Azeris. Freizer says that it will be hard to implement any signed
agreement. For example, the level of destruction in the `occupied’
Azeri territories is much higher than in the Balkans. These
territories are in such a deplorable state that the return of
displaced persons there will take several years, at least, says
Freizer.

Iran

The preliminary agreement on Azerbaijan’s accession into the
anti-Iranian coalition was reached in Washington in late Mar during
Azeri Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov’s meetings with US
diplomats, reports Aina Mar 31.

Zerkalo says: `The decision to take part in the anti-Iranian
coalition is very hard for Azerbaijan. Particularly, the Americans
may use the Iran-based ethnic Azeris as a force center. They may
become a kind of `fifth pillar’ for the US and, naturally, Iran is
already taking action to intercept any messages to its ethnic
minorities. And this is only preliminary reaction. If Azerbaijan
takes more specific action to support the US, Iran will certainly
response in much tougher measures.’

It is more than probable that in this case Iran, together with
Russia, will do its utmost to fuel the tensions on the Armenian-Azeri
contact line. This will benefit both Tehran and Moscow as this will
allow them to manipulate both Azerbaijan and Armenia. This will make
Yerevan and Baku think ten times before providing even tiniest help
to the US. Besides, the resumption of even local military actions on
the Armenian-Azeri conflict zone will strongly reduce the possibility
of anti-Iranian strikes from the territory of Azerbaijan – one can’t
wage a war from the territory of a country who is at war itself. To
this end, Iran and Russia may start inciting both sides to war. To
Azerbaijan they may promise: `Start and we will help you to get back
some of your districts.’ With Armenia things are much easier: Iran
and Russia are its strategic, economic and political partners in the
region and may well claim repayment of `debts’…

`The other `response’ Azerbaijan may get from Iran may be the Islamic
factor. Until recently Azerbaijan has paid no special attention to
the Islamic factor and Iran’s relevant activities. They in Baku
believed there were no strong pro-Iranian Islamists in Azerbaijan.
But the `cartoon scandal’ and the reaction to it in Azerbaijan have
proved otherwise. We do have Islamists, and Iran may well use them if
Azerbaijan supports the US initiatives.

Given the extreme religiousity of the Baku villages and Southern
Azerbaijan, `a good push’ may set a critical mass of people into
action that will be hard to stop. Even more, Iran may raise the whole
so-called `Arab Street’ against us, and it is a big question if our
police will be able to cope with a cohort of extremists from the
Middle East.’

Echo reports the US to be considering a scenario of military
assistance of Azerbaijan. Experts say that Azerbaijan must be ready
for Iran’s counter-attack. `Experts say that today the threat of a
military strike on Iran is as real as never before. In its article
`Scenarios of American Strike’ Al Ahram daily from Egypt says that in
case of war Iran will counter-act by striking on the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline. Its missiles can well hit the US
and European oil facilities in the Caspian Sea,’ says Echo.

Independent military expert Uzeir Jafarov says: `The US certainly has
a specific plan on Iran, and this plan has several possible
scenarios. The Americans always have several scenarios – both
optimistic and pessimistic. No coincidence they are exercising the
possibility of aggression against Azerbaijan by an imaginary
neighbor. After the USSR collapse we have liquidated half of our
chemical troops and should there be a chemical attack on Azerbaijan,
both our army and people will have serious problems. That’s probably
why the Americans are considering this scenario at exercises and are
training our specialists at seminars how to be most efficient during
such force majeure situations.’

`I feel there will be really hot in our region in April. We should be
ready for aggravating situation in all directions. America has
specific plans, Iran has reasons of its own. So, I am sure that if
American strikes a crushing blow on Iran, we will hardly avoid its
repercussion. Even if Azerbaijan gives no official consent to the use
of its territory by the US troops, Iran may still hit at the objects
of the US economic interest in Azerbaijan: the oil facilities in the
Caspian Sea, the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline. This all may be an act of
despair by the Iranian regime,’ says Jafarov.

Primary Medical Aid Likely To Be Free in Javakhk

PROBABLY PRIMARY MEDICAL AID TO BE FREE IN JAVAKHK

AKHALKALAK, APRIL 7, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Georgian
Ministry of Health has planned to make primary medical aid
free. According to the A-Info agency, it will be first applied in the
mountainous regions. The Samtskhe-Javakhk health regional department
already plans the technology of free primary medical aid. Not only the
first medical aid, medical examination, but also the respective
preventive measures: notification of the population, sanitary control,
etc. will be free of charge. The first-aid posts and out-patient’s
clinics will be reequipped for this purpose. It is also envisaged to
reorganize the Akhalkalak Polyclinic, the Abastuman Tuberculosis
Hospital and the Borzhom Children’s Polyclinic from considerations of
rendering free service, with the funds of the World Bank.

A Lesson from the Holocaust for Us All

April 6, 2006

“There is No Remedy Against the Language of Truth”
A Lesson from the Holocaust for Us All

By ROBERT FISK
The Independent

At a second-hand book stall in the Rue Monsieur le Prince in Paris a
few days ago, I came across the second volume of Victor Klemperer’s
diaries. The first volume, recounting his relentless, horrifying
degradation as a German Jew in the first eight years of Hitler’s
rule–from 1933 to 1941–I had bought in Pakistan just before
America’s 2001 bombardment of Afghanistan.

It was a strange experience–while sipping tea amid the relics of the
Raj, roses struggling across the lawn beside me, an old British
military cemetery at the end of the road–to read of Klemperer’s
efforts to survive in Dresden with his wife Eva as the Nazis closed in
on his Jewish neighbours. Even more intriguing was to find that the
infinitely heroic Klemperer, a cousin of the great conductor, showed
great compassion for the Palestinian Arabs of the 1930s who feared
that they would lose their homeland to a Jewish state.

“I cannot help myself,” Klemperer writes on 2 November 1933, nine
months after Hitler became Chancellor of Germany. “I sympathise with
the Arabs who are in revolt (in Palestine), whose land is being
‘bought’. A Red Indian fate, says Eva.”
( 041511/counterpunchmaga)
Even more devastating is Klemperer’s critique of Zionism–which he
does not ameliorate even after Hitler’s Holocaust of the Jews of
Europe begins. “To me,” he writes in June of 1934, “the Zionists, who
want to go back to the Jewish state of AD70 … are just as offensive
as the Nazis. With their nosing after blood, their ancient ‘cultural
roots’, their partly canting, partly obtuse winding back of the world
they are altogether a match for the National Socialists…”

Yet Klemperer’s day-by-day account of the Holocaust, the cruelty of
the local Dresden Gestapo, the suicide of Jews as they are ordered to
join the transports east, his early knowledge of Auschwitz–Klemperer
got word of this most infamous of extermination camps as early as
March 1942, although he did not realise the scale of the mass murders
there until the closing months of the war–fill one with rage that
anyone could still deny the reality of the Jewish genocide.

Reading these diaries as the RER train takes me out to Charles de
Gaulle airport–through the 1930s art deco architecture of Drancy
station where French Jews were taken by their own police force before
transportation to Auschwitz–I wish President Ahmadinejad of Iran
could travel with me.

For Ahmadinejad it was who called the Jewish Holocaust a “myth”, who
ostentatiously called for a conference–in Tehran, of course–to find
out the truth about the genocide of six million Jews, which any sane
historian acknowledges to be one of the terrible realities of the 20th
century, along, of course, with the Holocaust of one and a half
million Armenians in 1915.

The best reply to Ahmadinejad’s childish nonsense came from
ex-president Khatami of Iran, the only honourable Middle East leader
of our time, whose refusal to countenance violence by his own
supporters inevitably and sadly led to the demise of his “civil
society” at the hands of more ruthless clerical opponents. “The death
of even one Jew is a crime,” Khatami said, thus destroying in one
sentence the lie that his successor was trying to propagate.

Indeed, his words symbolised something more important: that the
importance and the evil of the Holocaust do not depend on the Jewish
identity of the victims. The awesome, wickedness of the Holocaust lies
in the fact that the victims were human beings–just like you and me.

How do we then persuade the Muslims of the Middle East of this simple
truth? I thought that the letter which the head of the Iranian Jewish
Committee, Haroun Yashayaie, wrote to Ahmadinejad provided part of the
answer. “The Holocaust is not a myth any more than the genocide
imposed by Saddam (Hussein) on Halabja or the massacre by (Ariel)
Sharon of Palestinians and Lebanese in the camps of Sabra and
Chatila,” Yashayaie–who represents Iran’s 25,000 Jews–said.

Note here how there is no attempt to enumerate the comparisons. Six
million murdered Jews is a numerically far greater crime than the
thousands of Kurds gassed at Halabja or the 1,700 Palestinians
murdered by Israel’s Lebanese Phalangist allies at Sabra and Chatila
in 1982. But Yashayaie’s letter was drawing a different kind of
parallel: the pain that the denial of history causes to the survivors.

I have heard Israelis deny their army’s involvement in the Sabra and
Chatila massacres–despite Israel’s own official enquiry which proved
that Ariel Sharon sent the murderers into the camps–and I remember
how the CIA initially urged US embassies o blame Iran for the gassings
at Halabja.

Indeed, it is easy to find examples of one of the most egregious lies
uttered against the 750,000 Palestinians who fled their land in 1948:
that they were ordered by Arab radio stations to flee their homes
until the Jews had been “driven into the sea”–when they would return
to take back their property.

Israeli academic researchers have themselves proved that no such radio
broadcasts were ever made, that the Palestinians fled–victims of what
we would today call ethnic cleansing–after a series of massacres by
Israeli forces, especially in the village of Deir Yassin, just outside
Jerusalem.

So what is there to learn from the second volume of Klemperer’s
diaries? Just after he received word from the Gestapo that he and Eva
were to be transported east to their deaths, the RAF raided Dresden
and, amid the tens of thousands of civilians which the February 1945
firestorm consumed, the Gestapo archives also went up in flames. All
record of the Klemperers’ existence was turned to ash, like the Jews
who preceded them to Auschwitz. So the couple took off their Jewish
stars and wandered Germany as refugees without papers until they found
salvation after the Nazi surrender.

Just before their rescue, they showed compassion to three distraught
German soldiers who were lost in the forests of their homeland. And
even during their worst ordeals, as they waited for the doorbell to
ring and the Gestapo to arrive to search their Dresden home and notify
them of their fate, Klemperer was able to write in his diary a
sentence which every journalist and historian should learn by heart:
“There is no remedy against the truth of language.”

Robert Fisk is a reporter for The Independent and author of _Pity the
Nation_
( N/1560254424/counterpunchmaga)
. He is also a contributor to CounterPunch’s collection, _The Politics
of Anti-Semitism_
( unterPunch/CounterPunch_Bookshop.html).
Fisk’s new book is _The Conquest of the Middle East_
( 041511/counterpunchmaga) .

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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1400

3 Out Of 4 Games Of RA Football Cup Tournament 1/4 Final End In A Dr

3 OUT OF 4 GAMES OF RA FOOTBALL CUP TOURNAMENT 1/4 FINAL END IN A DRAW

Noyan Tapan
Apr 06 2006

YEREVAN, APRIL 6, NOYAN TAPAN. The first games of 2006 Armenian
Football Cup Tournament 1/4 final were held on April 5 and 6. 3 of them
ended in a draw: “Pyunik” (Yerevan) – “Ararat” (Yerevan), “Kilikia”
(Yerevan) – “Banants-2” (Yerevan) games ended with a score of 1 to 1,
“Shirak” (Gyumri) – “Banants” (Yerevan) games ended with a score of
0 to 0. The Kapan team won in the game between “Gandzasar” (Kapan)
and “Mika” (Ashtarak). The return games of 1/4 final will be held on
April 9 and 10.

Statement Of Artur Baghdasaryan, President Of The National Assembly

STATEMENT OF ARTUR BAGHDASARYAN, PRESIDENT OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY

National Assembly of RA, Armenia
April 6 2006

On the occasion of the establishment of the Armenian National Chapter
of “Global Organization of Parliamentarians Fighting Corruption”
(GOPAC), and taking into account the procedures of that world
organization, Artur Baghdasaryan, Speaker of the National Assembly,
made a statement, where it reads: “On the initiative of the National
Assembly within the framework of international anti-corruption
conference to be held in Yerevan, having as a basis the agreement
made with John Williams, Chairman of “Global Organization of
Parliamentarians Fighting Corruption” (GOPAC), an Armenian National
Chapter of GOPAC was established with the participation of the MPs
of all factions/group presented in the National Assembly.

“Global Organization of Parliamentarians Fighting Corruption” was
established in 2002 on the initiative of the parliamentarians of
more than 70 countries by the assistance of the World Bank and other
international authoritative institutions and is aimed at promoting
the strengthening of the monitoring role of the parliaments with the
participation of all concerned actors against corruption, boosting
the deepening of democratic developments. This global organization has
regional and national institutions in all the countries and regions,
where the corruption continues to remain the hindering factor of the
development of the societies and where the fighting against those
phenomena is highlighted.

By establishing the Armenian National Chapter of GOPAC we once again
re-establish the necessity and resolve of eradicating the corruption
in our country. I’m confident that the consistent combating against
corruption and the unbiased application of the law will greatly
promote the deepening of democratic reforms, the development of free
and competitive market. It’s without doubt that the participation and
effective cooperation through the parliament, civil society institutes
and mass media will greatly promote the defeat of corruption, which
finally is accompanied with the victory of democracy.

Genocide Survivors To Spotlight Darfur Horror

GENOCIDE SURVIVORS TO SPOTLIGHT DARFUR HORROR
Jim Doyle, Chronicle Staff Writer

San Francisco Chronicle
April 6 2006

A monthlong effort to focus attention on the atrocities being committed
in Sudan will begin tonight with a gathering of survivors of the
Holocaust and genocides in Rwanda, Cambodia, Armenia, Nanking and
Bosnia at a San Francisco synagogue.

Eltayeb Ibrahim, whose family has lost more than 200 relatives in
Sudan’s genocide since early 2003, will be one of several speakers
at Temple Emanu-El.

The event marks the beginning of an effort called “National Days
of Conscience,” a grassroots campaign that will culminate on April
30 with a silent vigil on the Golden Gate Bridge, a rally at Crissy
Field, and similar demonstrations in Washington and other U.S. cities.

Ibrahim, whose family is of the tribe of Tunjur Sultanates that
ruled Darfur since the 12th century, lives in Oakland. He said the
whereabouts of many of his family members are unknown, as the genocide,
by the Arab-dominated Sudanese troops and militias against non-Arab
Darfurians goes on.

“My home village of Korma and the villages surrounding it were burned
last year, and 132 people were killed,” said Ibrahim, who left Sudan
15 years ago to study economics in India. “All of them were related
to me. These are people from my tribe.”

Violence is escalating in Sudan’s provinces of Darfur, according
to the United Nations. Earlier this week, the Sudanese government
refused to allow a U.N. representative to enter Sudan.

“Four months ago, the Janjaweed (militia) came and burned all the
homes in my cousin’s village. … They killed him in front of his wife
and five kids,” Ibrahim said. “He was like my brother. We grew up in
the same house. He was a very simple man. He didn’t even understand
politics.

“A week ago, I called home and got the news that two of my cousins
were killed. It’s painful to hear that a relative got killed. But
it’s even more painful to have a relative and not know whether they
are alive or dead.”

Six other survivors of genocides will also share their memories
of atrocities committed and light candles in honor of lives lost,
including Elvir Camdzic, a survivor of the genocide in Bosnia.

Salih Booker, executive director of the Africa Action humanitarian
group, plans to speak about the systemic use of rape against Darfurian
women by Sudanese troops and militias.

The rallies scheduled for later this month are part of the “Million
Voices for Darfur” campaign to collect signatures for tens of thousands
of postcards for delivery to the White House — cards urging President
Bush to redouble his efforts to stop the genocide in Sudan. The rallies
are being organized by the Save Darfur Coalition (),
an alliance of more than 150 religious and humanitarian organizations.

“How can we as a civilized nation sit around for three years while
it happens again?” said Gayle Donsky, a coordinator of tonight’s
event for the San Francisco Bay Area Darfur Coalition, which includes
dozens of nonprofit organizations, religious denominations and human
rights groups.

Tonight’s free program is at 7 p.m. at Temple Emanu-El, 2 Lake St. It
also includes the short film “Witnessing Darfur.”

www.SaveDarfur.org

Over 400m Dollars Invested In Armenia’s Economy In 2005

OVER 400M DOLLARS INVESTED IN ARMENIA’S ECONOMY IN 2005

Mediamax news agency
6 Apr 06

Yerevan, 6 April: The volume of foreign investment in Armenia’s
economy made up 404.4m dollars in 2005, having increased by 32 per
cent as against 2004.

Deputy Trade and Economic Development Minister Tigran Davtyan said
today that the volume of direct investment in the economy totalled
244.4m dollars in 2005, Mediamax has reported.

The deputy minister expressed the hope that the volume of foreign
investment in Armenia would remain at the same level as in 2005 unless
it increased in 2006.

In 2005, 132.1m dollars were invested in communications, 97.5m dollars
in the mining industry, 53.3m dollars in metallurgy, 26.4m dollars
in food and beverage production.