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  • On The Nagorno-Karabakh Frontlines

    ON THE NAGORNO-KARABAKH FRONTLINES
    Zoe Powell

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Dec 14 2006

    Recent announcements by Azerbaijan and Armenia have spurred hopes that
    a Nagorno-Karabakh peace settlement is within reach. But on a windswept
    Karabakh military post northwest of the disputed territory's capital,
    Stepanakert, the struggle over this self-declared state seems far
    from over.

    At this position, roughly 300 to 400 meters from the Azerbaijani
    lines, exchanges of gunfire are a daily occurrence, soldiers said. A
    seven-person unit that is refreshed every seven days mans the post.

    An Azerbaijani sniper recently killed a Karabakhi soldier not far
    from here.

    In a recent tour of the frontline organized for international
    journalists by Nagorno-Karabakh's de facto Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
    officers were reluctant to discuss their views on the ongoing Karabakh
    negotiations, and on the potential impact of a settlement on the
    separatist government and military they serve.

    "That's for the politicians," said one army representative, a veteran
    of the 1988-1994 conflict with Azerbaijan who gave his name as Artur,
    when asked to comment about recent announcements of a breakthrough
    in the negotiations. "The military doesn't mix with politics. Nor
    should we, right? We'll do what we're told."

    The size of the Karabakh army is "a state secret," officials say, and
    information about the defense budget is not readily available. A 2005
    report by the International Crisis Group, however, cites an unnamed
    official in Nagorno-Karabakh's Yerevan mission who stated that the
    army has 20,000 soldiers. Another source cited in the report, a US
    military expert, put the number at 18,500 soldiers.

    Along with military hardware, Armenia is thought to provide some
    of the troops in Karabakh defense force. Former Armenian conscripts
    interviewed by Crisis Group in Yerevan reported that they had been
    sent to serve in Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Conscripts serving at the frontline post, a bleak collection of
    trenches, observation hut, one-room office and one-room living
    quarters, asserted that they came from Nagorno-Karabakh, adding
    that they were there "to serve the homeland." A clock with a large
    image of Jesus dominates the office visually, standing across from
    a Russian-language wall poster describing how to fight tuberculosis.

    "This isn't the American army," one defense ministry representative
    on hand for the tour commented with a laugh about the stark scene.

    "This is the Karabakh army. They have to be tough."

    Young men in Karabakh are required to serve two years of military
    service. The government says conscripts are paid 3,000 Armenian drams
    per month (about $6.83) for "extras." Army representatives detailed
    a long list of food items - including first and second courses,
    salad and soup for dinner -- reportedly brought in to feed frontline
    soldiers daily -- and, indicating one particularly bulky conscript,
    claimed that they're fed meat each day.

    An academy "with a military inclination" exists in Stepanakert, but
    students who wish to serve as officers in the Nagorno-Karabakh army
    do their training in Yerevan, army representative said. Plans exist,
    however, to open a more formal military academy in Karabakh, where
    students would be taught, "as in Tsarist Russia," foreign languages
    and ballroom dancing along with their regular course of study, he said.

    Twelve years after the cease-fire agreement that ended the 1988-1994
    war over the territory, ruined houses and other buildings still dot
    the landscape outside of Stepanakert. The military did not allow
    photos to be taken, but the images seen suggest a conflict indelibly
    engraved in residents' minds.

    The economy appears to be recovering slowly, but independently
    verifiable economic data is unavailable. At a December 6 plenary
    parliamentary session, de facto Minister of Economy and Finance Spartac
    Tevossian reported that Karabakh's Gross Domestic Product expanded
    by 20.8 percent for the first nine months of 2006, as compared with
    the same period in 2005, reaching $97.4 million, the Armenian news
    bulletin service De Facto reported. Monthly salaries average around
    36,605 Armenian drams, or about $83.38, the minister claimed.

    Primarily an agrarian society, Karabakhis are returning to
    cultivating vineyards and wheat fields. A gold mine opened in 2002,
    and construction projects - including a new parliament building and
    adjoining hotel - can be seen throughout Stepanakert, often financed
    by diaspora Armenians. The separatist leadership is also putting
    increased emphasis on tourism: The government claims that in 2006
    some 3,750 foreign tourists visited this rugged region, prized among
    Armenians for its monasteries and churches, and that the number of
    such visits is steadily increasing.

    Security concerns remain foremost in Karabakhis' minds. Interviewed
    residents routinely cited maintaining an adequate defense against
    Azerbaijan, which formerly controlled Nagorno-Karabakh, as their
    territory's largest problem. Many cast a doubtful eye on the return of
    the seven territories surrounding their region to Azerbaijani control.

    "If Armenia frees those territories, without a doubt, then, Azerbaijan
    should take reciprocal steps and recognize our independence or, in the
    worst case, recognize our right to a free choice," commented Vahram
    Atanesian, chairman of the Nagorno-Karabakh parliament's foreign
    affairs committee. "We went toward independence because it was the
    best way to guarantee our security."

    While war veterans, refugees from Azerbaijan and long-term residents
    interviewed by EurasiaNet all spoke out strongly against any resumption
    of armed hostilities with Azerbaijan, feelings were mixed about the
    return of Azerbaijani refugees to this predominantly ethnic Armenian
    land. The government of Azerbaijan has insisted on such a right
    of return as one of the conditions for a lasting peace resolution
    with Armenia.

    "There's no chance we can live together now," said octogenarian
    Areg Oganisian, an Azeri-speaking ethnic Armenian refugee from
    the Azerbaijani town of Sumgait who returned to his family village
    outside of the Karabakhi town of Shushi after the 1988 pogrom against
    Armenians in Sumgait. "But I also can't say that all Azerbaijanis are
    bad. They are civilized, too . . . . If it hadn't been for Sumgait,
    we could have worked things out, but Sumgait was a detonator."

    "We took Karabakh by blood," said a Karabakh war veteran, who gave
    his name as Artur. "How will there not be a war if Azerbaijan tries
    to take it back?"

    Editor's Note: Zoe Powell is the pseudonym for a journalist based
    in Tbilisi. Sophia Mizante is a freelance photojournalist based
    in Tbilisi.

    Dec 14 2006

    France trying to cover up its role in genocide Wednesday, 13th
    December, 2006

    Alfred Ndahiro

    By Alfred Ndahiro

    Rwanda's decision to sever diplomatic relations with France continues
    to be a subject of animated discussion among those who have an interest
    in the political evolution of Rwanda, and the proxy war that France has
    waged since the defeat of the Interahamwe extremists who masterminded
    the 1994 Rwandan genocide.

    The recently published report by Judge Jean-Louis Bruguière, now
    discredited by most legal experts and even those he claims to be his
    informers, can only be construed as a facet of that proxy war.

    >>From the time of the downing of the plane carrying Habyarimana
    and his Burundian counterpart, credible commentators and analysts
    concluded that extremists in the Habyarimana government, with the
    help of the French army, brought down the plane.

    Yet, Judge Bruguière brushes this aside and instead indicts the
    leadership of Rwanda and senior aides of the Rwandan president. In
    so doing, Bruguière aims to cover the role of the French government,
    by intimidating Rwandans and attempting to divert them from their
    effort to unearth the truth about French involvement in Rwanda.

    The following are but a few of the facts that Judge Bruguière knows
    but chooses to ignore: At the time of the plane crash, the entire
    airport and the surroundings were under the control of the French
    soldiers and the then Rwandan presidential guard.

    When soldiers of the United Nations peace-keeping force in Rwanda
    attempted to reach the scene of the plane crash, they were blocked
    and prevented from accessing it by those same forces. That is how
    the whereabouts of the black box have remained a mystery to-date,
    although French officials admitted having it, at some stage.

    France trained, armed, and fought alongside the former Rwandan forces
    before, during, and after the 1994 genocide, just as its soldiers
    trained the Interahamwe militias.

    The Rwandan Patriotic Army fought and single-handedly stopped the
    genocide.

    France continues to harbour and give sanctuary to the architects
    of the Rwandan genocide, including Agathe Habyarimana, Fr Wenceslas
    Munyeshyaka, and others, who masterminded the carnage.

    Judge Bruguiere's so-called evidence is based on false testimonies
    provided by genocide fugitives and Rwandan dissidents who aim to
    use it either to deny the occurrence of the Rwandan genocide or to
    advance their misguided goals and justify their applications for
    political asylum.

    The French government has never come to terms with the regime change
    in Rwanda and have worked ceaselessly towards achieving their hope
    that some day, their former proteges would be reinstated.

    In ignoring the above facts, Judge Bruguière's injudicious project
    serves to advance the broader political enterprise and hidden agenda
    of the French government.

    All this, however, is beginning to crumble, and many legal experts
    and his alleged informers are distancing themselves from his findings.

    One such alleged informer, quoted in his report, is Emmanuel
    Ruzigana. In a letter addressed to Bruguière on November 30, Ruzigaza
    draws the attention of the judge to the fact that he was forcefully
    picked from the airport in Paris and taken to Bruguière's office by
    his members of staff on March 29, 2004.

    In Bruguière's office, Ruzigana was questioned as to whether he
    belonged to the "Network Commando" and whether he knew the person
    who shot down the Habyarimana plane. In spite of having denied both
    allegations, Ruzigana appears in the judge's report as having confirmed
    the allegations.

    Another of his principle informers by the name of Abdul Ruzibiza was
    a nursing assistant in the north-west of Rwanda, far away from the
    scene of the plane crash. How such a fellow can claim to be privy to
    the plans of an operation of such sensitivity boggles the mind.

    Besides, he is a convicted criminal, having stolen soldiers' allowances
    before his escape.

    A third key witness, a certain Innocent Marara, claims he was privy
    to RPA planning to assassinate Habyarimana in 1993. Yet Marara joined
    the RPA in 1994, and not 1990 as Bruguiere claims.

    The missiles Judge Bruguiere claims shot down Habyarimana's plane
    were found to have been a hoax, foisted upon the world by a French
    Parliamentary mission of information. One of the launchers allegedly
    used to down the plane still had its missile unfired when it was
    allegedly photographed after the event.

    Finally, Judge Bruguiere, without a shred of evidence, accuses key
    regional leaders, including President Museveni, of being complicit
    in the killing of Habyarimana, a thinly veiled political attack on
    what the French call their "Anglo-saxon" enemies.

    There is no doubt that France can do a lot of good for itself by
    coming clean. It cannot blame Turkey for refusing to acknowledge the
    genocide of the Armenians in 1915 and at the same time withhold its
    own 'mea culpa'.

    In any case, France, even in its might, should have understood that the
    Rwandans are a people with a proud legacy of a rich culture, history
    and values. They will not allow France to subdue and subjugate them.

    France should also learn that people who uphold the truth, and who
    have the right cause, will always triumph. It was so when Rwandans
    fought the genocidaires on the battlefield, it will be so on the
    'diplomacy-field'!

    The writer is the advisor in communication and public relations in
    the office of the President of Rwanda

    http://www.newvision.co.ug/D/8/459/537612

    --Boundary_(ID_qu4hhDgjWiHpLs2o7Sacyg)--
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