List of officials confirmed for Auschwitz commemoration

Agence France Presse — English
January 26, 2005 Wednesday 3:37 AM GMT

List of officials confirmed for Auschwitz commemoration

WARSAW Jan 26

Survivors of the Auschwitz death camp and Red Army soldiers who
prised the camp from the Nazis will gather Thursday at the site in
southern Poland, along with officials from around the world, to mark
the 60th anniversary of the camp’s liberation.

There follows a list of officials the Polish presidency has confirmed
will attend the commemorative events at the camp on January 27:

Albania: Prime Minister Fatos Nano

Armenia: Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan

Austria: President Heinz Fischer

Azerbaijan: Parliamentary Speaker Murtuz Alasgarov

Belgium: King Albert II, Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt

Belarus: Council of the Republic Chairman Gennady Novitsky

Bosnia-Hercegovina: Chairman of the Presidency Borislav Paravac

Britain: Foreign Minister Jack Straw, Prince Edward

Bulgaria: President Georgy Parvanov

Canada: Governor General Adrienne Clarkson

Cyprus: President Tassos Papadopoulos

Croatia: President Stipe Mesic

Denmark: Prince Joachim

Estonia: President Arnold Ruutel

Finland: Parliamentary Speaker Paavo Lipponen

France: President Jacques Chirac, Foreign Minister Michel Barnier

Germany: President Horst Koehler

Greece: President Konstantinos Stefanopoulos

Spain: Senate President Francisco Javier Rojo Garcia

Hungary: President Ferenc Madl

Ireland: President Mary McAleese

Israel: President Moshe Katzav

Italy: Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi

Kazakhstan: Senate Chairman Nourtay Abikayev

Lithuania: Prime Minister Algirdas Brazauskas

Luxemburg: Grand Duke Henri

Latvia: President Vaira Vike-Freiberga

Macedonia: Deputy Foreign Minister Fuad Hasanovic

Netherlands: Queen Beatrix, Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende

Norway: Crown Prince Haakon, Prime Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik

Portugal: Prime Minister Pedro Santana Lopes

Czech Republic: President Vaclav Klaus

Romania: President Traian Basescu

Russia: President Vladimir Putin

Serbia and Montenegro: President Svetozar Marovic

Slovakia: President Ivan Gasparovic

Slovenia: President Janez Drnovsek

Sweden: Crown Princess Viktoria, Parliamentary Speaker Bjorn von
Sydow

Switzerland: President Samuel Schmid

Turkey: Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul

Ukraine: President Viktor Yushchenko

United States: Vice President Dick Cheney

Vatican: Mgr Jean-Marie Lustiger

European Union: Commission President Manuel Barroso, Parliamentary
President Joseph Borell Fontelles

Armenian neo-Nazi leader charged with inciting ethnic hatred

Agence France Presse — English
January 26, 2005 Wednesday 2:47 AM GMT

Armenian neo-Nazi leader charged with inciting ethnic hatred

YEREVAN Jan 26

The controversial leader of Armenia’s neo-Nazi Armyano-Arian Order
was arrested late Tuesday for inciting ethnic hatred with his
frequent anti-Semitic statements, the prosecutor general’s office
said.

Armen Avetisyan may face up to six years in jail for inciting
inter-ethnic and inter-religious hatred, propagating superiority of
one race over another and insulting the Armenian nation’s dignity,
officials said.

Avetisyan, who during his latest news conference called Armenia’s
authorities “yid and Mason agents that must be swept off the face of
the earth”, said “his trial will turn into a Nuremberg trial of the
Jews,” a local newspaper reported.

Avetisyan has also drawn up lists of those high-ranking officials he
says are homosexuals, demanding that they be fired and threatening to
publish the lists if they are not.

Partnership not for peace

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
January 26, 2005, Wednesday

PARTNERSHIP NOT FOR PEACE

SOURCE: Novye Izvestia, January 24, 2005, p. 4

by Mekhman Gafarly

BAKU FEARS THAT AZERBAIJAN WILL BE DRAWN INTO THE WAR THE UNITED
STATES MAY DECLARE ON IRAN

The words of the US President on the possibility of hostilities as a
solution to the problem of Iraq caused panic, and not only in the
United States, Baku fears that Azerbaijan will be drawn into the
American war on Iran.

Aina newspaper (Baku) reported in November 2004, that over 50
servicemen of the US Army were quartered on the military base near
the settlement of Chukhanly, Saljan district. Ilgar Verdiyev of the
Defense Ministry PR Department confirmed the information but pointed
out that the servicemen in question had come to Azerbaijan within the
framework of NATO’s Partnership for Peace Program. Azerbaijani
military experts do not think so. Former officers of the Defense
Ministry say that co-operation between Baku and NATO has already
exceeded the boundaries of Partnership for Peace Program. The
statement made by NATO General Secretary Jaap de Hoof Scheffer was
revealing in itself. He said in Baku the other day that Azerbaijan
had already been given its homework and had to do it now.

NATO’s Training and Equip Program is under way in Azerbaijan now. It
is under way on the testing site in Garaeibat near Baku and in the
environs of Chukhanly near the border with Iran. Both settlements are
located near military airfields. Recently upgraded to NATO standards,
the airfields may be used for air strikes at Iran.

Zerkalo Internet edition reports that there are reasons to believe
that the Americans intend to deploy TRML-3D mobile radars in
Azerbaijan. This is how Baku explains it: should they decide to
strike at Iran, the Americans can hardly expect any information from
the Russian radar in the Gabala district of Azerbaijan.

The rumors on the forthcoming are only intensified when the
Azerbaijan media reported with references to the Canadian Cmag that
the United States is preparing to attack Iran and that Washington
already began consultations with its allies, Azerbaijan included. The
United States is compelled to make Azerbaijan one of the key
countries in the war on Iran. It understands that in the war on Iran
the United States cannot count on as many allies as it had in the war
on Iraq. The European Union categorically objects to the military
operation. Its countries have too many interests in Iran,
particularly in the energy sphere.

Turkey, Washington’s ally in the region, is against the hostilities
too. Ankara depends on fuel from Iran as much as Europe does. Along
with everything else, it does not want another source of armed
Kurdish separatism near its borders.

In theory, Washington may use the territories of Armenia, Syria,
Iraq, Afghanistan, and Azerbaijan for the invasion. Armenia and Syria
are automatically out, as former Russia’s ally, the latter as
Washington’s enemy. Iraq and Afghanistan, where guerrilla fighters
are active, are not exactly safe and reliable. Besides, pro-Iranian
Shiah parties led by as-Sistani may win the forthcoming parliamentary
election in Iraq. All these considerations make the territory of
Azerbaijan the only reliable bridgehead for America.

It goes without saying that Iran is doing what it can to safeguard
itself from an attack from the Azerbaijani territory. In the hope to
improve its relations with Baku, official Tehran even permitted it to
open a consulate general in Tebriz (denied Azerbaijan for a decade).
When President of Azerbaijan visits Iran soon, he will be permitted
to visit Tebriz, mostly populated by ethnic Azerbaijanis. The series
of visits to Baku is quite revealing too. In the last few months, the
capital of Azerbaijan received special envoy of the president of Iran
for the Caspian region, minister of health care, security minister,
and defense minister. The latter, Ali Shamkhani, was particularly
eloquent. “Security of Azerbaijan is our security,” he said. “Our
defense capacity is your defense capacity.”

Iran is trying to tackle all moot points in the relations with
Azerbaijan as soon as possible. Baku still remembers how Iranian
ships and aircraft crossed the Azerbaijani borders in August 2001.
These days, Tehran is prepared to offer guarantees to Azerbaijan that
Iran will never resort to sheer strength in addressing moot points.
Iran is even prepared to sign the Caspian agreement on the terms
suggested by Ilham Aliyev (divide the sea into national sectors and
work the deposits whose ownership is disputed together). In return,
Tehran wants guarantees that the Americans for the attack on Iran
will not use the territory of Azerbaijan. That is why representatives
of Tehran already hinted that should the Americans attack their
country from the territory of Azerbaijan; a retaliation strike at the
Azerbaijani territory would be inevitable.

Translated by A. Ignatkin

Looking for a security model

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
January 26, 2005, Wednesday

LOOKING FOR A SECURITY MODEL

SOURCE: Voyenno-Promyshlenny Kuryer, No. 2, January 19-25, 2005, pp.
1, 10

by Alexander Orlov

(…) The former Soviet republics have been trying to create their
armies for over 14 years.

(…)

The shield of the states, which was created on the fragments of the
former Soviet Army, bears the mark of the Soviet system. The military
infrastructure of the former USSR and material resources stored in
ammunition depots let the post-Soviet states ensure their fragile
military security. However, the armies of the post-Soviet republics
have not been rearmed, they continue using Soviet weapons. At the
same time, the post-Soviet republics receive weapons from NATO and
China, which testifies to the importance of competing for this market
and influence in this region. Military analysts state that the CIS
market of weapons amounts to around $30 billion. The airspace council
of the Duma committee for industry, construction and science
intensive technologies reports that this includes the market of
warplanes and combat helicopters, it amounts to $5-$7 billion or 70%
of the Russian military budget.

What are the peculiarities of military construction in the
post-Soviet armies in 2004? What are the differences between the
reforms carried out in the CIS armies? What is the possibility of
interior and exterior conflicts in the former USSR?

Let’s try to answer these and some other questions linked with the
military factor in the post-Soviet republics.

(…)

Military construction in the CIS

Despite military-economic differences, the armies of the CIS nations
have a range of similar traits. For instance, several trends are
common for practically all armies of the CIS.

Military spending increased along with optimization of the armies.

(…) It would not be a mistake to state that practically all CIS
nations reorganized their control structures in 2004. This
reorganization will continue in 2005. The main changes took place in
the Russian Army within the framework of the administrative reform in
2004. At present Russia has the Defense Ministry, the General Staff,
three new federal services (for military-technical co-operation, the
state defense order and the technological and export control) and one
federal agency (the Special construction department). Russia
established a three-branch structure of military control: ground –
air – sea.

Similar reforms began in Ukraine. For instance, military-technical
co-operation bodies work independently in Ukraine. Ukraine does not
have building units. At the same time, the Russian and Ukrainian
armies have much in common. For instance, Russia created a
three-branch structure of its army in 1998, Ukraine initiated such
changes not long ago. At present it merges anti-aircraft and air
units.

Practically all CIS nations, except for Russia and Kazakhstan, use
the territorial principle of recruitment. However, draftees must
serve at least 50 kilometers from their native towns in Armenia. The
republics, which have superfluous call-up resources (Uzbekistan,
Belarus) established military service in reserve. Uzbekistan and
Turkmenistan call-up young people to an alternative civilian service
(so-called labor armies). These people work in cotton fields and at
plants. Uzbekistan was the first country in the CIS to legalize
evasion of military service. Draftees pay $150 for the right to avoid
military service.

In the meantime, people who have not served in the Army cannot work
in public structures in Uzbekistan, which is why military service is
popular in the republic.

Practically all countries have professional units. Armenia and
Karabakh have the most skilled units. The share of such units is 18%,
and it is intended to use them during first minutes of armed
conflicts in order to be able to deploy territorial defense units in
Armenia and Nagorny Karabakh. The share of professional servicemen in
Kazakhstan is 65%. It should be noted that Russia plans to increase
the share of contract service to 50% by 2008.

Practically all CIS nations plan to cut the strength of their armies.
Ukraine plans to dismiss 50,000 servicemen in 2005, Uzbekistan will
dismiss 15,000 people, Tajikistan will dismiss 3,000 servicemen.

(…)

The legislative foundation of the military construction process
improved too. Practically all countries have passed military
doctrines and national security conceptions. In addition, all
republics have laws, which regulate military service.

(…)

The place of armies in the political system

One of the peculiarities of the development of the Armed Forces of
the post-Soviet republics is linked with the fact that the military
does influence the interior and foreign policy. The armies have not
managed to restore territorial integrity to the countries where the
separatist feelings are strong (the Trans-Dniester territory in
Moldavia, Abkhazia and Southern Ossetia in Georgia, Nagorny Karabakh
in Azerbaijan). At the same time, the armies have not managed to
become an independent political force, and the threat of coups
organized by the military is insubstantial in the CIS.

Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma replaced pro-Western Defense
Minister Yevgeny Marchuk with neutral and tolerant General Alexander
Kuzmuk on the eve of the first round of the presidential election in
September 2004. Kuzmuk ensured the Army’s neutrality during the
election. Military experts did not hide the fact that the majority of
officers and ensigns voted for Yanukovich because they remembered
that Yushchenko had cancelled all benefits when he was prime
minister. Yanukovich increased servicemen’s money allowances
substantially.

Staff reshuffles of the security ministers in Georgia in December
2004, and the appointment of the new defense minister in Moldavia had
political reasons. As is known, Tbilisi and Kishinev established the
GUAM bloc (it also included Azerbaijan and Ukraine), which was an
alternative to the pro-Russian Organization of the collective
security treaty. Uzbekistan joined GUAM in 1999. To all appearances,
Georgia and Moldavia decided to ensure NATO’s and the OSCE’s support
in order to reform their security ministries because they are tired
of the separatism.

(…)

“Muslim” armies of the Central Asian republic and Azerbaijan deserve
special attention. The military help the authoritarian regimes of
Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan retain power. The attempted assault on
President Saparmurat Niyazov of Turkmenistan in 2002, and permanent
terrorist acts in Tashkent, Bukhara and other Uzbek towns testify to
the presence of terrorist organizations and irreconcilable opposition
in these republics.

It is hard to say who supports this opposition. It is not Russia
because the replacement of the leaders of these countries would mean
economic and political disadvantages. It should be noted that Niyazov
and Karimov banned Western remedial organizations, including the
Soros foundation, after “the revolution of roses” in Georgia. In
addition, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan increased servicemen’s money
allowances in 2004, despite serious economic problems. (…)

The armies play a stabilizing role in so-called “semi-democratic”
countries: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Azerbaijan.
Nazarbayev’s clan is creating elite units in Kazakhstan, fearing
coups in the republic. The leadership of the Kazakh Army and the
Interior Ministry consists of people originally from Kazakhstan. As
is known, almost 50% of the population of this republic are
representatives of Slavonic nations, Tatars, Uzbeks and more. In the
meantime, Kazakhstan’s economic successes minimize the possibility of
political activity of this group of the population.

The situation in Tajikistan is somewhat different. Fearing mutinies,
President Imomali Rakhmonov abolished elite units of the National
Guard and dismissed former field commanders, who helped him come to
power, in early 2004. A bit earlier, he dismissed representatives of
the Uzbek lobby from the security ministries. Tajikistan has managed
to stabilize the situation in the republic thanks to Russia’s
support. The presence of Russian military advisors, Russian-Tajik
border guards and representatives of the religious opposition in the
Army increased servicemen’s indifference towards politics. Meanwhile,
economic problems and weakening of Russia’s control over the
Tajik-Afghan border may encourage some military units to
unconstitutional activities. However, such revolts would have social
reasons, not political. At the same time, it is very likely that the
Tajik Army (the republic spends around 3% of GDP on its maintenance)
and the 201st motorized infantry division will be able to support
Rakhmonov’s course aimed at the revival of the economy for a long
time.

(…)

In other words, the armies of the post-Soviet republics present an
important tool of their interior and foreign policy. At the same
time, it is an alarming fact that the Trans-Caucasian nations, which
have uncontrolled territories, have increased their military budgets.
(…)

Aliyev: whether peaceful of military settlement depends on talks

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
January 26, 2005, Wednesday

ILHAM ALIYEV: WHETHER PEACEFUL OR MILITARY SETTLEMENT OF THE KARABAKH
CONFLICT IS TAKEN DEPENDS ON THE TALKS

“Azerbaijan would never reconcile itself to the loss of territories;
we’d reclaim them at any cost. Whether peaceful or military ways are
used, it depends on the talks, as well as other factors,” President
Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan stated at the media briefing for Russian
journalists in Baku last Saturday. According to the president, the
world community finally recognizes now that Armenia has occupied the
territories of Azerbaijan. “The fact of occupation has been
recognized, the UN and almost all the world has recognized the
territorial integrity of Azerbaijan. We think this problem should be
settled in compliance with international laws, rather than according
to someone’s fantasies, wishes or assumptions,” Aliyev said. (…)

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Turkey wins removal of Armenian genocide from German schools, report

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
January 26, 2005, Wednesday
10:34:20 Central European Time

Turkey wins removal of Armenian genocide from German schools, report

Berlin

Pressure from Turkey has resulted in the removal of a reference to
the Armenian genocide from a German school curriculum, reports said
Wednesday.

The eastern German state of Brandenburg has eliminated half a
sentence on the Armenians included in ninth and tenth grade history
classes after a Turkish diplomat complained to state Prime Minister
Matthias Platzeck, the newspaper Die Welt reported.

In a chapter entitled “War, Technology and Civilian Populations” the
school book text said “for example, the genocide of the Armenians
population of Anatolia.”

That passage has now been removed from school textbooks, the
newspaper said.

Platzeck met regularly with Turkish diplomats and was “steeled”
against their influence, the newspaper quoted him as saying. The
prime minister added that genocide was too important an issue to be
dealt with in just half a sentence.

“Brandenburg’s curriculum was the only one in Germany which up until
now included a reference to the murder of the Armenians,” said Die
Welt.

Most historians say that between 600,000 and 1.5 million Armenians
were killed in 1915 and 1916 under the Ottoman Turks during World War
I. The Turkish government, which denies that a genocide took place,
speaks of 200,000 dead.

A Turkish embassy spokesman in Berlin declined to comment directly on
the report, but noted the initiative had come from the Turkish
consulate responsible for Berlin and Brandenburg – not from the
embassy itself.

Prime Minister Platzeck is a member of Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder’s
Social Democrats (SPD). Schroeder is a strong supporter of Turkey’s
bid to become a member of the European Union. Germany has almost two
million resident Turks – the biggest Turkish minority in the E.U.

The Christian Democratic Union (CDU), which serves as junior
coalition partner in Brandenburg’s government, is infuriated over the
change to the state’s schoolbooks.

“The impression created is fatal,” said Sven Patke, the state CDU
secretary general.

The head of the Central Committee of Armenians in Germany, Schavarsh
Ovassapian told Die Welt the move was “a scandal.”

“It is depressing, if what’s in schoolbooks in Brandenburg can be
dictated from Ankara,” he said. dpa lm pb

Armenian president decorates Ilya Klebanov with order

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
January 26, 2005 Wednesday 2:52 PM Eastern Time

Armenian president decorates Ilya Klebanov with order

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN

Armenian President Robert Kocharyan decorated Ilya Klebanov, the
Russian president’s envoy in the North-Western Federal District, with
the St. Mesrop Mashots Order on Wednesday.

Klebanov received one of Armenia’s highest state awards to commend
his contribution to developing and strengthening Russian-Armenian
economic ties at a time when he chaired the Inter-governmental
commission for economic cooperation with Armenia.

The Klebanov-led Russian delegation comprises the leader of the Komi
Republic Vladimir Torlopov and representatives of the business
circles of the North-Western Federal District.

The Russian and Armenian sides discussed Russian-Armenian economic
ties. Kocharyan noted that they had become more intensive. He thinks
that ties between entrepreneurs in both countries have also grown
stronger.

Iran-Azerbaijan: aliyev visit marks new age in relations

ANSA English Media Service
January 25, 2005

IRAN-AZERBAIJAN: ALIYEV VISIT MARKS NEW AGE IN RELATIONS

TEHRAN

By Alberto Zanconato

(ANSA) – TEHRAN, January 25 – Iran and Azerbaijan, both
oil-rich Shiite countries on the Caspian Sea but divided by
contrasts in interests were trying to turn a new page in their
relations as Azeri President Ilham Aliyev visited Iran on Tuesday.

Tehran and Baku should remain side by side, Supreme Leader of
the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Ali Khamenei told Aliyev on
receiving him in Tehran.

Aliyev is on a state visit to the Islamic Republic only five
months after Iranian President Mohammad Khatami visited
Azerbaijan.

The bilateral relations were strained for several years, both
for the support which Tehran gave Armenia in the war for Nagorno
Karabakh, an enclave of Armenian majority in Azeri territory,
and for the division of the waters in the Caspian Sea, 13 years
after the disintegration of the Soviet Union.

The problem on the partition of the oil and gas deposits in
that basin brought the two countries on the brink of an armed
conflict four years ago when an Iranian military unit intervened
to block drilling by the Azeris in a contested sea territory.

“All the problems, including the one on the Caspian Sea, can
be resolved in a amicable way,” Ayatollah Khamenei said.

He warned Azerbaijan to beware of efforts of foreigners to
ruin the bilateral relations. That was a reference first of all
to the United States but also to Israel with which Baku has good
relations.

Azerbaijan keeps good relations also with Britain given the
fact that oil giant BP will lead the consortium of companies
which will exploit the Azeri oil. That deal should bring in the
next few years up to $90 billion to the country of eight million
which went out devastated from the disintegration of the USSR
and the war for Nagorno Karabakh with Armenia.

It is exactly on the Nagorno Karabakh issue that the
bilateral relations could make a decisive improvement.

Receiving his guest, Khatami used hard words to defend Baku’s
right to regain control of that enclave where more than 10 years
ago the Armenian majority proclaimed an “independent republic”
which no one has internationally recognised.

Answering a question of an Azeri journalist who compared the
Armenian occupation of Nagorno Karabakh with the Israeli
occupation of the Palestinian Territories, Khatami said there
were obvious differences but the occupation of only one
centrimetre from other’s territory should be condemned and the
international community should help put an end to the occupation.

That statement was a decisive step ahead after Baku had
accused Tehran for years of having lined up with a Christian
country in a conflict against a Muslim Shiite nation which cost
Azerbaijan at least 30,000 deaths and one million refugees who
moved to other parts of the country.

The war and the fall of the USSR made the Azeri gross
domestic product (GDP) fall by 60 percent between 1990 and 1995.

Aliyev thanked the Iranian authorities but also underlined
the complexity of the issue when he wished peace and stability
would return to the region but only after the rights of the
Azeri people will be recognised.

Azerbaijan has still to settle the issue on the Caspian Sea
with Iran which has not recognised the agreements between
Azerbaijan, Russia and Kazakhstan to which Turkmenistan could
also join.

Tehran was further annoyed by Azerbaijan’s decision to export
crude oil via a pipeline for $3 billion which will run through
Georgia and arrive at Turkey’s Mediterranean coast. That project
which has to start operation next summer excluded Iran as a
possible route for Azerbaijan’s oil sales abroad. (ANSA).

PACE resolution on Georgia touches upon Javakhk problems

PanArmenian News
Jan 26 2005

PACE RESOLUTION ON GEORGIA TOUCHES UPON JAVAKHK PROBLEMS

26.01.2005 15:38

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ January 24 PACE session participants adopted a
resolution, which maintains items immediately related to the
Armenian-inhabited Javakhk. As reported by A-info agency, the
resolution urges Georgia to sign and ratify the European Charter on
the languages of the national minorities or regions by September
2005. Let us remind that the new bill on languages in Georgia almost
deprives the national minorities of the possibility of receiving
education in native tongue. Within the same terms Georgia is to
ratify the convention on national minorities’ protection.

OSCE: We can’t solve problem instead of parties to conflict

PanArmenian News
Jan 26 2005

“WE CANNOT SOLVE PROBLEM INSTEAD OF PARTIES TO CONFLICT”, OSCE MINSK
GROUP RUSSIAN CO-CHAIR STATED

26.01.2005 17:36

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ During the discussion in PACE of the report on
Nagorno Karabakh the parliamentarians called to OSCE Minsk Group
Co-Chairs to activate steps for the Karabakh problem settlement. MG
Russian Co-Chair Y. Merzlyakiov stated in the interview with RFE/RL,
“sometimes we are more active than the conflicting parties but we
cannon solve problems in their place”. He expressed opinion that
considerable progress in the negotiation process will be observed
this year. “NKR is party to conflict as the Defense Minister of
Karabakh of that time put his signature to the agreement on armistice
next to the signatures of the representatives of Armenia and
Azerbaijan”, the Russian diplomat said.