Author: Aylin D. Miller

  • China Reports Breakup of More Suspected Terrorist Groups Ahead of Olympics

    China Reports Breakup of More Suspected Terrorist Groups Ahead of Olympics

    China Reports Breakup of More Suspected Terrorist Groups Ahead of Olympics


    16 July 2008
     

    Chinese anti-terrorist team during drill to show response to terrorist attack in Xian, northern China’s Shaanxi province, (File)

    Chinese state media says authorities have broken up 12 terrorist organizations in the western region of Xinjiang so far this year.

    Officials in the city of Kashgar says the groups, including the East Turkistan Islamic Movement and Hizb ut-Tahrir, were linked to international terrorist organizations.

    In recent weeks Chinese authorities have reported disrupting or dismantling several terrorist groups that allegedly posed a threat to August’s Olympic Games in Beijing. The state-run news agency Xinhua announced last week that police broke up five groups in Xinjiang and arrested 82 suspected terrorists.

    Beijing  has repeatedly said that terrorism poses the biggest threat to the Olympics. But human rights groups say the government is using terrorism as an excuse to crush dissent in Xinjiang.

    Xinjiang has eight million ethnic Uighurs, most of whom are Muslims. The Chinese government has cracked down on separatist activity in the area, and accused Uighur activists of trying to make Xinjiang an independent state.

    Some information for this report was provided by AFP, AP and Reuters.

  • East Turkistan: Munich Uyghurs Protest Executions and Arrests

    East Turkistan: Munich Uyghurs Protest Executions and Arrests

    East Turkistan: Munich Uyghurs Protest Executions and Arrests

     Monday, 14 July 2008

    Over 200 protesters met in Munich on 12 July 2008 to bring attention to the continuing and escalating human rights violations towards the Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities in China.

     

    Below is an article by UNPO:

     

    In Munich this Saturday, 12 July 2008, Uyghur protestors and supporters gathered together at Karlplatz Stachus, a central and highly touristic part of the city, to demonstrate against recent arbitrary arrests and executions in East Turkistan. More than 200 participants attended the demonstration, according to the World Uyghur Congress, but numerous of passer-bys stopped to show support for the Uyghur cause.

    Currently, East Turkestan and Tibet are both in a state of emergency, living in fear of oppression by the Chinese government. On 9 July 2008, police shot to death five young Uyghurs in Urumchi, under the auspice that they were involved in an alleged “holy war training” against the state. Later the same day, there was a mass sentencing in Kashgar where two Uyghurs were executed and 15 others were handed sentences ranging from 10 years in prison to the death penalty. Although charged with terrorism, the accused had no evidence presented against them to substantiate these claims.  

    In light of the upcoming Olympic Games, starting 8 August 2008, international pressure has intensified concerning the human rights situation in China. Unfortunately, the added attention is not enough to persuade the Chinese government away from its oppressive policy towards ethnic minorities, particularly in East Turkistan and Tibet. The Olympic Charter obliges the host country to a strict adherence to the international standards of human rights, yet the Chinese government has failed to live up to these standards.

    The World Uyghur Congress and UNPO continue to urge Chinese government to end persecution of ethnic minorities in China as well uphold the international standards of fundamental human rights. UNPO stands in solidarity with the oppressed peoples in China.

     

  • House Panel Blocks Sharp Cut In U.S. Aid To Armenia`

    House Panel Blocks Sharp Cut In U.S. Aid To Armenia`

     

    House Panel Blocks Sharp Cut In U.S. Aid To Armenia`

     

     

     

     

    By Emil Danielyan

    A key subcommittee of the U.S. House of Representatives rejected late Wednesday an almost 60 percent cut in regular U.S. economic assistance to Armenia which is sought by the administration of President George W. Bush.

    The administration’s draft foreign assistance budget for the fiscal year 2009 submitted to Congress in February would cut funding to Armenia to $24 million from this year’s level of $58 million.

    In what has been a pattern, the House Foreign Operations Subcommittee raised the proposed allocation to $52 million at the urging of leading pro-Armenian lawmakers. It also approved $8 million in separate direct aid to Nagorno-Karabakh and voted to maintain parity in U.S. military assistance to Armenia and Azerbaijan. The armed forces of the two warring nations would each continue to receive $3 million worth of aid.

    Joe Knollenberg, a Michigan Republican co-chairing the congressional Armenian Caucus, demanded that U.S. military aid to Azerbaijan be cut altogether because of its continuing threats to resolve the Karabakh conflict by force. The motion was narrowly voted down by the subcommittee.

    The two leading Armenian-American lobby groups in Washington commended Knollenberg for nearly succeeding in pushing the measure through the panel. “We are confident that Members will be looking at additional steps to address Azerbaijan’s war mongering,” Bryan Ardouny, executive director of the Armenian Assembly of America, said in a statement.

    The aid allocations need to be approved by the full House Appropriations Committee before they can be considered by the full chamber. A corresponding committee of the U.S. Senate was scheduled to debate the Senate version of the foreign aid bill late Thursday.

    The volume of U.S. aid to Armenia, which has totaled about $2 billion, has slowly but steadily declined since the 1990s when it averaged over $100 million per annum. U.S. officials have attributed the drop to an overall reduction of its foreign aid budgets and Armenia’s economic growth. They have also pointed to the Bush administration’s decision in 2005 to provide the country with $236 million in additional assistance under the Millennium Challenge Account program.

     

    Thursday 17, July 2008

  • Key Strategic Issues List for US Army on PKK

    Key Strategic Issues List for US Army on PKK

    Key Strategic Issues List, July 2008

    Edited by Dr. Antulio J. Echevarria, II.

    Added July 16, 2008
    Type: Book
    170 Pages
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    The Key Strategic Issues List (KSIL) offers military and civilian researchers a ready reference of topics that are of particular interest to the Department of the Army and the Department of Defense. The KSIL performs a valuable service by linking the research community with major defense organizations which, in turn, seek to benefit from focused research. It thus forms a critical link in an ongoing research cycle. With the publication of the AY 2008-09 KSIL, the Strategic Studies Institute and the U.S. Army War College invite the research community to address any of the many strategic challenges identified herein. Further information regarding specific topics can be obtained by contacting SSI faculty or relevant KSIL sponsors.

    *************

     

    United States European Command

     

    IV. Kurds (Kongra Gel/PKK):

    1. Case study of the potential impact and implications, both to Turkey

    and to the Kongra Gel/PKK, of the transition of the Kongra Gel from

    an insurgency to a political movement supporting the Kurdish cause

    2. Case study of factors enabling the Kongra Gel, as a Marxist insurgency

    made up of primarily of Muslims, to mitigate pressures to adopt more

    of a radical Islamic agenda and maintain its focus on the basic Marxist

    (secular) tenets of the organization

    3. Case study of Kongra Gel/PKK insurgency from the basis of its ability

    to avoid/prevent serious schisms or splintering, even after its leader’s

    imprisonment, at least up to the current potential split. What are the

    potential implications of the apparent division of the Kongra Gel into

    “reformist” and “hardline” camps?

    4. Case study of the effectiveness of Turkish Jandarma paramilitary

    police forces in combating the Kongra Gel/PKK

    5. Case study of the effectiveness of Turkish military operations against

    the Kongra Gel/PKK inside northern Iraq from the 1990s to present.

    Were these operations successful in disrupting the KGK/PKK, for

    the long term, short term, or has there been little actual disruption to

    Kongra Gel operations?

     

  • Can Football Diplomacy Lead To Peace?

    Can Football Diplomacy Lead To Peace?

    Can Football Diplomacy Lead To Peace?

     

    Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian

    July 16, 2008
    By Brian Whitmore

     

    Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian has decided to try a little “football diplomacy” to defuse longstanding tensions with neighboring Turkey.

    During a visit to Moscow in June, Sarkisian made waves by publicly announcing that he would like his Turkish counterpart, Abdullah Gul, to come to Yerevan to watch a World Cup qualifying soccer match between the two countries in September.

    The Armenian leader repeated the invitation in a commentary titled “We Are Ready To Talk To Turkey,” published in the U.S. daily “The Wall Street Journal” on July 9.

    “There is no real alternative to the establishment of normal diplomatic relations between our countries,” Sarkisian wrote. “It is my hope that both of our governments can pass through the threshold to this new open door.”

    The Turkish Foreign Ministry says it is “studying” the proposal.

    The sports element lends Sarkisian’s overture a tantalizing historical appeal, evoking memories of the “ping-pong diplomacy” of the 1970s — when an exchange of table-tennis teams helped set the stage for eventual rapprochement between the United States and China.

    But what caused many observers to wonder aloud whether the current initiative might just lead to something serious was Russia’s apparent willingness to throw its diplomatic weight behind the idea — and grab the mantle on an issue where U.S. diplomats have, until now, played the leading role.

    “Russian diplomats have been given the task of moving beyond the American initiative to normalize Armenian-Turkish relations,” David Hovhannisyan, a former Armenian diplomat and Yerevan-based political analyst, says.

    Hovhannisyan adds that it is highly unlikely that Sarkisian would have made his dramatic gesture in Moscow without his host’s consent. Moreover, just a week after Sarkisian’s visit to Moscow, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov traveled to Istanbul, with the Armenia issue reportedly part of his agenda.

    Adding to the air of anticipation, Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian flew to Washington for an official visit this week.

    “Moscow has developed a good relationship with Ankara, and being able to continue to develop that relationship, without complications emanating from its support for Yerevan, would be something that I think the Russian government would welcome,” says Bulent Aliriza, director of the Turkey Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

    Mosaic Of Distrust

    Turkey’s frosty relations with Armenia, however, are part of a larger mosaic of deep animosities, historical grievances, and bitter tensions that have long plagued the region.

    Turkey was among the first countries to recognize Armenian independence after the breakup of the Soviet Union. But when Armenian forces occupied Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh region, Ankara broke off diplomatic ties with Yerevan and closed its border with Armenia.

    Most analysts say it is highly unlikely that Turkey would make any moves toward rapprochement with Armenia without Azerbaijan’s consent — making Armenian-Turkish reconciliation tightly bound to a settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh issue.

    Moreover, Yerevan’s claim that the mass killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire at the end of World War I constitutes genocide is angrily rejected by Turkey and continues to be a major roadblock in normalizing relations. In an attempt to entice Istanbul, Sarkisian has offered to have a joint commission of Armenian and Turkish scholars investigate the claims.

    Observers in Turkey nevertheless remain skeptical.

     

    Turkey’s president, Abdullah Gul

    “It looks like Armenia seriously wants to negotiate, but as far as we see there is no change in their position on Karabakh or on questions of Turkey’s territorial integrity,” Omer Lutem, TURKISHFORUM ADVISORY BOARD MEMEER and  head of the Armenia department at the Istanbul-based Eurasian Strategic Research Center told RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service in a recent interview. “Will they give up on their claims of genocide, or will they fight? Will they make changes or not? It is not clear. If there will not be any changes, how will the question be resolved?”

    Alizira agreed that untangling this web and resolving these issues would prove to be a complicated task. “There have been a lot of false dawns on this front,” he said.

    But some observers say that the politics of the region at this particular time gives Moscow plenty of incentives to try.

    Moscow’s Motives

    Russia has been steadily losing influence in the South Caucasus in recent years. Relations with Georgia are embroiled in deep hostility over the pro-Moscow separatist regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, and over Tbilisi’s bid to join NATO. Azerbaijan, whose energy wealth grants it a degree of independence from Moscow, is increasingly looking West as well.

    Russia maintains a large degree of influence in Armenia, where it maintains a military base and has invested heavily — particularly in the energy sector.

    Alexander Iskandarian, director of Caucasus Media Institute in Yerevan, calls Armenia “Russia’s only trusted partner in the South Caucasus,” adding that it is not in Russia’s interests to have such an ally isolated, with its borders with Turkey and Azerbaijan closed. Moreover, Russian firms investing in Armenia badly want the border opened so they can use the country as a springboard to expand into markets throughout the region and beyond.

    “When Russia was in a different position in the South Caucasus, the fact that Armenia was so isolated wasn’t so troublesome. Since the situation has changed, Russia is less satisfied with this situation,” Iskandarian says. “If the road to Turkey were open, and it will open if there would be normal diplomatic relations, Russian capital here could use this. It could go to the Turkish market, export goods and services. And Russian capital and Russian investment in Armenia is not small. This opens possibilities and makes entry into the Southern European and Middle Eastern markets cheaper.”

    Total Russian investment in Armenia reached $1.2 billion this year. A spin-off company of Russia’s former electricity monopoly Unified Energy Systems operates Armenia’s only nuclear power plant and would like to use Armenia’s grid to sell power to Turkey and elsewhere in the region. The state-controlled natural-gas monopoly Gazprom owns a majority stake in Armenia’s gas-distribution network. Russian investment is also heavy in the banking and gaming sectors.

    Questions remain, however, about whether Russia has enough over Turkey and Armenia to broker a deal.

    “I don’t think that they have much leverage on the Turkish side of the fence, and I’m not sure how much leverage they have on the Armenian side of the fence,” Aliriza says. “Secondly, the Russian-Turkish relationship, which is so important to Moscow and to Ankara for so many reasons, is not going to be a function of the Turkish-Armenian relationship from Moscow’s point of view.”

     

  • Norway’s Nazi offspring claim compensation

    Norway’s Nazi offspring claim compensation

    From
    March 8, 2007

    In a landmark case, a group of Norwegian war children whose mothers were deliberately impregnated by German soldiers as part of a Nazi plan to build a blond-haired blue-eyed race, are today demanding a payout from Oslo for the suffering and discrimination it has caused them.

    The applicants — numbering 154, plus four Swedes and a German — claim that the Norwegian Government was guilty of failing to protect them from the Nazis’ Lebensborn scheme during the German invasion of Norway in the Second World War between 1940 and 1945. They also claim the state institutionally discriminated against the children of Nazi soldiers for years afterwards.

    Up to 12,000 children with a Norwegian mother and German father were born under the scheme, meaning Fountain of Life, which was founded by Heinrich Himmler, the SS chief, in 1935.

    Norway was the jewel of Himmler’s programme and, if today’s cases at the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) are successful, they are expected to lead to a flurry of complaints from other Nazi children in the country as well as children of German troops from neighbouring Sweden, which was also part of the scheme.

    “We want it to be recognised that the Government of Norway violated the rights of these people, and we are asking for financial damages,” Randi Hagen Spydevold, a lawyer for the group, said.

    The application was lodged with the ECHR after Oslo’s City Court in 2003 rejected a case by seven of the applicants because their claims came too long after a statutory time limit.

    Norwegian courts have always ruled against any compensation claimants in the past, saying the country’s government cannot be held responsible for failing to sufficiently protect the Lebensborn children before 1953, when it signed the European Convention on Human Rights — however, the group of claimants argues that the ill-treatment continued long afterwards.

    “They claim the violations are continuing in the sense that they are still reminded in negative terms of their origin and value,” the ECHR said in a statement.

    The court said that many mothers of war children claimed they had been marginalised, had difficulties in obtaining employment, and their children were often adopted or placed in foster homes or institutions for their own protection.

    Many Norwegian war children, meanwhile, were deprived of their original names and identity, subjected to discrimination, harassment and ill-treatment and left with psychological problems and registered disabled at an early age, the statement adds.

    The cases include that of a woman who was regularly locked up when she was a child, sometimes with a dog chain, by her foster father, and had a swastika marked with a nail on her forehead when aged nine or 10.

    One man, Paul Hansen, claims he was placed in psychiatric institutions until 1965 without his mental health ever having been assessed, while another, Karl Otto Zinken, said he was placed in a school for mentally disabled children where he was raped by two men.

    In an attempt to settle the dispute, the Norwegian Government in 2002 offered to pay the children 200,000 kroner (now worth £16,700), provided they could prove that they had suffered sufficient discrimination. However, the group is now demanding £34,000 per person, and up to four times as much for those who suffered the most.

    The ECHR will hear the group’s arguments today before deciding whether the case is admissible. A decision could take several months.

    One of the world’s most famous Nazi children is Anni-Frid Lyngstad, the brunette member of the pop group Abba, who was one of thousands of Swedish children known to have been born to a German soldier.

    In Sweden the youngsters were often referred to as Tyskerbarnas, or German children, and Ms Lyngstad has spoken in the past of being persecuted and isolated in her own country.

    It is a shame that these children have received no compensation and are discrminated against by their own countrymen. Countries need to admit their wrong doing and begin to make compensation instead of trying to continue the coverup.

    Kay Merrill, Baltimore , United States/Maryland

    I think piggy Kruger needs to brush up on his WW2 History and show some humanity and compassion for his fellow men – two things neither Hitler or Stalin were capable of. Holding the children begotten by this eugenics experiment responisble for the actionsof their fathers is despicable and barbaric . They are as much victims as the thousands of childern murdered by lethal injection through the Nazi’s Euthanasia programme for the disabled and mentally ill.

    island monkey, Shropshire, England

    I never cease to be amazed at how adults blame children for the sins of their parents. The Norwegian state and society should be ashamed for not protecting these children. Their only crime was to be born.

    Finn Olav, Drammen, Norway

    If Hitlerism had succeeded, and these Nazi-fathered children had grown up holding authority in the German empire, would they have been as bestially cruel as their fathers and leaders?. We can only thank God, and Stalin, and Churchill, and all the millions of decent men and women who stood up against fascism, that we never had to find out.

    Piggy Kruger, Bridgwater, UK

    If Hitlerism had not been destroyed, largely through Russian efforts, and these Nazi- fathered children had held the whip, would they have been as beastly as their fathers and leaders?. We can only thank God, and Joseph Stalin, and Sir Winston,and Roosevelt, that we never had to find out.

    Piggy Kruger, Bridgwater, UK