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**And further note, I do not intend to notify ThuranX of the decision; he has not edited the disputed article and only replied to the noticeboard posting. I will remind him, however, that as admins we should be trying to raise the level of discourse, not get dragged down by it. [[User talk:Thatcher|Thatcher]] 07:01, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
**And further note, I do not intend to notify ThuranX of the decision; he has not edited the disputed article and only replied to the noticeboard posting. I will remind him, however, that as admins we should be trying to raise the level of discourse, not get dragged down by it. [[User talk:Thatcher|Thatcher]] 07:01, 8 January 2008 (UTC)

[[User talk:Thatcher|Thatcher]] got it! the point you're making is that I should just stay cool and keep smiling to your interpretations of this case? I guess I do feel lucky since in case [[User:Vecrumba|PetersV]] is getting notified for asking too many times for an apology for the ethnic epithet, it feels like I should have been straight out banned for agreeing with a senior editor who called it "bigoted statement". Since you do have history with me and [[User:Vecrumba|PetersV]] and with EE topics in general [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Occupations_of_Latvia/Archive1], I don't think I can accept your opinions here as an "uninvolved administrator". And therefore I'm going to dismiss your notices, also the one given to [[User:Gatoclass]] and the ones given here before, since its not coming from an uninvolved administrator who has not been involved with the "EE" controversies before. Thanks! --[[User:Termer|Termer]] ([[User talk:Termer|talk]]) 08:12, 8 January 2008 (UTC)


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==[[User:TDC|TDC]]==

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Edit this section for new requests

Andranikpasha

Macedonia edit wars

Can somebody please have a good look at Ireland101 (talk · contribs) and Tsourkpk (talk · contribs) and apply Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Macedonia#Discretionary sanctions as seen fit? These guys have been fighting a bit too much for my taste recently. I'd do something myself, but I'm probably a bit too non-uninvolved by the Arbcom's current standards. Fut.Perf. 09:36, 31 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

A little more to go on? Which article(s) should we look at? Thatcher 14:24, 31 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Basically every article Ireland101 has been editing lately has been in an edit-warring situation with either Tsourkpk, Megistias (talk · contribs), Kékrōps (talk · contribs) or other Greek users. See Vergina Sun (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views), Bryges (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views), Rosetta Stone (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views), Macedonian dynasty (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views), Macedonians (ethnic group) (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views), Hellenization (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views), and so on. It's all over the place. Difficult to say who's picking these fights, whether it's Ireland editing tendentiously everywhere, or the others stalking him (as he evidently feels), or both. Also see the current complaint thread at WP:ANI#Ireland101 and Tsourkpk. Fut.Perf. 15:29, 31 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for pointing this out Future Perfect. In almost all of those situation those editors/meat puppets were reverting my edits with no explanation.Ireland101 (talk) 17:35, 31 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
What would you think about a 1 revert per week per page limit for Ireland101 and Tsourkpk? Thatcher 15:34, 31 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I've put Ireland101 on revert parole and logged it, holding off for now on other actions (which I believe are needed). Kékrōps (talk · contribs) is also coming up reverting in quite a few of those page histories listed above. Thoughts? Moreschi If you've written a quality article... 17:11, 31 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I do not understand why I was put on revert parole considering that I always include edit summaries and have no history of edit warring. I have only reverted vandalism and thought that was the purpose of the Counter-Vandalism Unit. Ireland101 (talk) 17:21, 31 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
No, that's not what the CVU is for. Evidently your definition of vandalism is a little off. Moreschi If you've written a quality article... 17:26, 31 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • In response to Moreshi's request for "thoughts", reverting is not an endorsed editing method anyway, so 1RR is probably the least restrictive sanction we can think of, certainly less so than page or topic bans, and I would think it could be liberally applied, although with either an expiration date or a promise to review (after 3-6 months perhaps). Thatcher 17:55, 31 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]


Giovanni33

Pocopocopocopoco

User:Pocopocopocopoco is mass reverting and reinserting the closed Wikiproject [60] Karabakh tag, without leaving any comment [61], [62], [63], [64], [65], [66], [67], [68], [69], [70], [71], [72], [73], [74], [75], [76], [77]. That's 17 reverts or (re)insertions within 30 minutes. Atabek (talk) 22:12, 1 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Is he the subject of any arbitration ruling? I can't see that he is. This is for enforcing arbitration decisions only, not dealing with disputes. Contact him via his talk page and if necessary go the administrators' board.
When you do ask for an arbitration ruling to be enforced, please list each new case at the bottom. John Smith's (talk) 22:26, 1 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

The contributor is already involved in edit wars in several articles on the topic of Armenia-Azerbaijan. The relevant ArbCom stated a remedy on applicability to all disruptive editors, under which User:Aynabend and User:Andranikpasha have already been placed under parole for disruptive editing. That's why I reported the mass reverting to WP:AE as it deals specifically with Armenia-Azerbaijan related articles. Thanks. Atabek (talk) 22:45, 1 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Bah. I've rolled back all his edits, which made no sense as that WikiProject isn't going to be allowed to exist for at least another month. Thinking about other stuff as well, maybe. Moreschi If you've written a quality article... 22:50, 1 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

No, leaving this for now. I've left a warning against making future mass reverts. He's not an ultra-regular participant in the Armenia-Azeri conflicts and edits regularly in other areas, nor is he subject to any of the AA2 restrictions: moreoever, his recent block for edit-warring was related to another topic altogether. Moreschi If you've written a quality article... 22:58, 1 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Well shouldn't User:Parishan be placed under AA2 restrictions then? Since he mass reverted and is an ultra-regular participant in the Armenia-Azeri conflicts and all his blocks are related to the conflict.-- Ευπάτωρ Talk!! 23:13, 1 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I reverted them before the warning was issued. I've only been blocked three times and my most recent block was not related to the conflict, and was carried out almost 10 months ago. Parishan (talk) 23:27, 1 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Hi, I want to state that I wasn't aware of any of this drama when I reverted back in the wikiproject template to the articles and I apologize if it's caused grief to anyone. The reason for the revert was summarized in the edit summary of my first revert.[78] I felt (and still feel) that adding this wikiproject would facilitate greater collaboration and participation to the articles and hence facilitate the improvement of the articles and the project. One of the areas that I edit are unrecognized countries and hence I joined this wikiproject and I find it useful to collaborate with other editors interested in Nagorno-Karabakh. I am neither a participant in WikiProject Armenia or WikiProject Azeri (although they are probably both interesting topics). My understanding is that Atabek's (and other peoples) concerns are with the image in the template. Could we lift the moratorium on this project if we change the template to a neutral template? Please see the template in Wikipedia:WikiProject_Abkhazia. Pocopocopocopoco (talk) 04:53, 2 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Not only. Provided that this POV project is currently forwarded to Wikiproject Armenia, it's sufficient to add Wikiproject Armenia along with Wikiproject Azeri on disputed topics. Atabek (talk) 07:59, 2 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Every project has a POV and you can not censor a project because you don't agree with it. VartanM (talk) 08:15, 2 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The vast majority of WikiProjects are not out to push a POV, believe it or not. Moreschi If you've written a quality article... 18:49, 2 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

The concern is that this is an ethnic POV project about a region which has diverse ethnic and historical identity. Nagorno-Karabakh is a conflict between Azeris and Armenians, between Azerbaijan and Armenia, not between Azeris and some non-existent ethnic group Karabakhis. History of Karabakh does not exist outside and independent of Azeri or Armenian domain. Atabek (talk) 08:39, 2 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

That makes no sense. Wikiproject Azerbaijan is an ethnic POV project about a region which has diverse ethnic identity. There are group of members who are feeling there is a need to collaborate in a common project and no real life conflict or dispute can not stand on their way. We are here to build an encyclopedia and no one has the right to stop us from doing that. Moreschi censored the project simply because it was hurting some users feelings. Expect to see those project tags to go back up once the project is re-opened. Maybe then you'll come to terms that Nagorno-Karabakh Republic exists. VartanM (talk) 09:01, 2 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
De facto yes, de iure no. Vartan, you know this - you're deliberately trying to fan the flames here just to piss off the Azeris, quite frankly. Why? Down that route lies wiki-suicide, I warn you. More on this to come below. Moreschi If you've written a quality article... 18:54, 2 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I only said the opposite of what Atabek said, where is the warning to Atabek for calling Nagorno-Karabak people non-existent? Or was that non inflammatory? It was the direct cause of my suicidal comment. VartanM (talk) 00:50, 3 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

As I see it, the issue of Nagorno-Karabakh is the source of almost all the conflict between Armenian and Azeri editors. This conflict has reached fever pitch over the past few weeks, as anybody can tell from looking at this very Arbitration Enforcement page. We should be looking to cool things down not inflame them. Promoting Project:Karabakh right now is definitely not going to help matters. The only reason we have projects in the first place is to help build Wikipedia. They are not there to demonstrate editors' allegiance to a particular stance, although inevitably this is a big temptation with "national" projects. Nobody needs a project to edit a topic area anyway and people have worked on NK articles long before the existence of Project:Karabakh, which was virtually dormant until a couple of days ago. As I've said, we should be looking to turn the heat down on the current Armenia-Azerbaijan dispute on Wikipedia, otherwise I can see another ArbCom coming round the corner - and that will benefit nobody. --Folantin (talk) 09:33, 2 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Sounds right to me. I think somebody needs to patiently explain that, while we appreciate and understand their national pride and historic grievances, Wikipedia is not the place to refight old battles, but to document them in terms on which both sides can agree. I'm guessing most of them don't have English as a first language, which often makes nuance conversation more difficult. Guy (Help!) 10:46, 2 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Let me ask a question: Would Atabek and Grandmaster, for example, be welcomed at WikiProject_Karabakh? Thatcher 19:01, 2 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Absolutely. Pocopocopocopoco (talk) 01:35, 3 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Joining the project would go against their belief of Nagarno-Karabakh being non-existent[79], [80]. Other then that, they are welcome to join, the same way some of them joined project Armenia and versa. VartanM (talk) 02:31, 3 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Let's start with this: none of you should want to go down the route of Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Armenia-Azerbaijan 3. The arbitrators will lose their patience and ban the lot of you, which would be sad, really. The conflicts over Nagorno-Karabakh have got to stop, or at the least slow down, because I know this could so easily be the blue touchpaper that gets everyone kicked out. Trust me: I spend a lot of time hanging around ArbCom-related stuff and know quite well the limits of the arbitrator's patience.

Another point is this: nobody needs a WikiProject to edit, and if it's collaboration needed or some such concept, use the talk page or existing projects - Wikipedia:WikiProject Armenia or WP:AZERI. Don't use this ghastly creation that's only going to aggravate one side of the conflict, is only ever going to push a POV, and as Vartan's "Maybe then you'll come to terms that Nagorno-Karabakh Republic exists" gives away, is only ever going to a statement of intent along the lines of "We believe in the NKR. Amen.".

That's pointless. It's got nothing to do with the encyclopaedia. You don't need to this WikiProject to do this. At the moment, both sides here are potentially staring at the abyss over the edge of the proverbial cliff edge - I urge you all to step back before you pull each other over. ArbCom is the whirlpool waiting at the bottom. Moreschi If you've written a quality article... 19:16, 2 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I am not doing anything deliberately, if you're gonna enforce any policies, then you have to assume good faith on me the same way you seem to always assume good faith for the other side, who just recently created and mass voted against the deletion of a FORK of 4 or even 5 articles. I haven't seen you say anything about it. Or their opposition to the renaming of a category which claims Azerbaijani Khanates, when most of the results on google book call them Persian or Iranian Khanates (how is this not provocation, and how is this not a deliberate attempt to fan the flame war against Iranian users?). The category on Artsakh, call it what you want should exist, and only the fact that various articles can be included in it is strong evidence. Other similar categories about other non de jure republics exist, I haven't seen you say anything about for instance this category. Also, I'd like Thatcher to clarify on what he means by welcomed? Why should they not, is Thatcher insinuating that they won't? When anything prevented Grandmaster or Atabek contributing before? I am surprised that Administrators are still consistent and systematic on taking one sided position on this issue.
If you wanted to help, you would have brought the two side to discussion to know what to do to satisfy both, but instead, you removed the category and excused a user who again massively reverted (Parishan). And for your information, the reason why I have chosen Artsakh and not Karabakh, is because both are not the same, Artsakh encompassed a larger territory and has a history in the BCs. But that could have been debated. It is sad that Golbez got pushed out from mediation, when he was known to revert both sides, he was replaced by administrators, who under the guise of arbitration enforcement systematically make one sided decisions. It is also fishy that I am included in the probation for something as ridiculous as an edit summary which has everything to do with the content of the article, but that Parishan who has a much longer edit warring history than me and who can make such remarks: ...you deleted it just because you personally disagreed with it. [81] systematically gets away from such a probation.
And Thatcher, before claiming that Eupator action of renaming an article could have warranted a block, you should have understood the rational behind it. The talkpage was full of justification and Eupator had to deal with users who claimed Turkmen (aka Turkoman) as Azeri (eg. [82], and ironically seen in this diff., he's only recently accepted Turkic in the article, but it's still inaccurate) to dump all Turks or Turkic people as Azeris (from Moreschi's logic, should this not be to fan a flame war, after all Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan have some problems in terms of their relations these days). This was all I had to say. VartanM (talk) 21:51, 2 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I don't know why User:VartanM decided to include issues regarding the Azeris in Armenia discussion here, and I could not help but notice that he has presented facts one-sidedly which is why I thought I should leave a quick comment. I apologize if I am going offtopic. Eupator's rationale (which participants of the discussion had no chance to review, since the user renamed the article from the very moment he presented his arguments) was challenged by me presenting a number of neutral sources equating the terms for Turkic-speakers of pre-Soviet Armenia to Azeris [83]. All Eupator said in responce could be classified as original research, i.e. inventing terms ("proto-Azeris") and facts ("Turkic population living there were not identified by one group", "Turkic population there could have been identified as Turkmen, Turkish, Tatars"), restating his disproved rationale and ultimately failing to prove that the subject of the discussion had anything to do with Turkey, or Tatarstan, or Turkmenistan, similar to VartanM's claims above. Original research is also defined by Wikipedia as unsourced information obtained from personal experience, so I don't believe there was anything incivil in saying "you personally disagreed".
As for my reverts, I removed a link to a non-existing project, one time per page, before the discussion over WP:Karabakh was in progess. I was not edit-warring, nor proving a point, nor making incivil comments. Parishan (talk) 07:49, 3 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
That's not true, the discussion was started here on the arbitration enforcement, most users implicated did engage. Eupator continued the discussion on that article, you knew that Eupators claim was sourced and you accused him of original research even though couple of sources were already provided. Several of the administrators were witness of the discussion which was if I remember correctly closed by Thatcher. Also, I don't see why you bring proto-Azeris, where did anyone requested this to be added in the article? Also, it's funny, now recently you just agreed with Eupator rational in your reply to Ulvi just here, if you knew this and agreed with this why did you continue the flame the war then? But this is still not accurate, because those people were as Turkish, Turkmen etc., and if you are going to cover them you can not restrict them in an article about Azerbaijani's, when that section was taking a very significant portion of the article.
As for the removal of the WPNK project tag, you actually removed it when you knew I was going to appeal for the removal of the project itself. It is not the first time you mass reverted, we brought this during the last arbitration, and you did it again afterwards when you retaliated and made a POINT by adding Azerbaijani terms in 21 articles about Armenia. Anyway, we're off topic and I agree that I have my share of responsibility. VartanM (talk) 19:59, 3 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Moreschi, the problems with collaborating with regard to Karabakh stuff within the two wikiprojects you mentioned is that could take up a lot of space within WP:Armenia or WP:Azeri and this might not be ideal. Please have a look at these articles that were to be created. I was planning to add a whole bunch more related to companies operating and based in Karabakh. I think this could potentially swamp WP:Armenia or Azeri. Perhaps some Armenian and Azeri wikipedians are not all that interested in Karabakh (I believe user:Aramgutang was one of them) and they join there respective wikiprojects in order to collaborate on Armenian or Azeri culture. Another option would be to create a sub-project within the respective wikiprojects similar to how WP:MILITARY has many task forces we could set up a task force within one of the wikiprojects. This would be the worst option IMHO because setting up a Karabakh task force within one wikiproject would make it tempting for the editors of the other wikiproject to also set up a Karabakh task force within their wikiproject. Hence editors that aren't of either ethnic background (such as myself) would be left having to pick a side and offending the other side and it would further cause strife between the two groups of wikipedians. Hence I feel a Wikiproject Karabakh that is inclusive to all editors regardless of ethnic background and is independent of the two wikiprojects is the best option. I fully understand if the consensus is to wait a little while to let things cool off so I will take your sugestion and put the relevant pieces in my user space as I feel this project was gaining momentum and I would like that to continue. Please see User:Pocopocopocopoco/Karabakh_collaboration and let me know if this is OK for a temporary collaboration until the moratorium is lifted on Wikipedia:WikiProject_Karabakh. Once it is lifted, I will update the project from this my user space. Pocopocopocopoco (talk) 01:56, 3 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Let's imagine that I and other Azerbaijani users signed up for Karabakh wikiproject, will you be for instance willing to remove all the "NKR" emblems from wikiproject userboxes and tags? Since the region is de-jure part of Azerbaijan, I believe that Azerbaijani colors should be included there. From what I see, this wikiproject is intended for Armenian users only, and participation of people not sharing pro-separatist POV will lead to conflicts over every minor detail. That's why I said that this wikiproject is divisive, which wikiprojects should not be, as they are intended to help editors to actually collaborate on creating a good encyclopedia. I don't see how this wikiproject is any useful and if there's anything this wikiproject could do that cannot be done in Wikiproject Armenia. Btw, Vartan's claim that "Wikiproject Azerbaijan is an ethnic POV project" is clearly bad faith. See how many people of various ethnic and national affiliations signed up for it and how good we cooperate on creating articles covering various Azerbaijan related topics. This wikiproject could be an example for others. I always welcomed Armenian users singing up for Azerbaijani wikiproject, see the talk of Azeri Wikiproject. If anyone needs more than one wikiproject to cover the NK issue, you are welcome to sign up to more than one well-established wikiproject. Grandmaster (talk) 10:32, 3 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I envision that WikiProject Karabakh will be run similar to Wikipedia:WikiProject_Palestine in terms of emblems and tags. If you notice that WP:PALESTINE has both Israeli and Palestine participants and they have two user boxes. One userbox has the palestinian flag and the other is a non-political userbox. WP:KARABAKH can also have two sets of user boxes, one with the flag and the other say with image of the region. For participants that don't want a userbox with the flag they can use the one with the region. For participants who don't like userboxes they don't need to use userboxes. Pocopocopocopoco (talk) 17:43, 4 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

If I AGF, I'd say that you don't get it. NKR has a government, has schools, has libraries, has many other municipal infrastructures, has elections, has TV stations, newspapers etc., where, oh god where do those go? Project about Armenia?, project about Azerbaijan? Of course not. The Turkish republic of Northern Cyprus has its category, and has its flag on it, has all those emblems and logos which doesn't seem to bother the Greeks. And unlike what you claim, NK is not de-jure part of Azerbaijan, it is only officially part of Azerbaijan, NK used the Soviet law (legal) to separate itself, and declared its independence according to the law at about the same time as Azerbaijan. NK has a legal ground as a republic to exist, it is just that since Azerbaijan has oil, that NK is not recognized.

Are you telling me that you are willing to work for example in an article about the Armenian schools in NK? Armenian libraries, Armenian presidents in NK, ministers in NK etc.? Where have you ever contributed in those articles? You're making this as if you are prevented to contribute as if anything has ever prevented you to contribute before.

And we all know what happened when the Azerbaijan category was incorporated, users started removing Armenia and replace it with Caucasian Albania, removing Armenian and replacing it with Caucasian Albanians, adding Azerbaijani terms, for historic places, which were never called that way. By having one Wiki project about NK and replacing both Armenia and Azerbaijan is the only reasonable thing to do, all the other disputed territories have them, why shouldn't NK have one? VartanM (talk) 19:47, 3 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

If NK had had any right to secession by the Soviet laws, it would have been recognized as a state long ago, no matter if Azerbaijan had oil or not. It does not happen and is not gonna happen, because it is not so. There's not a single authoritative source that supports such legal claims, and obscure law schools are definitely not such. I am not aware of any other similar wikiproject. You just acknowledged that this wikiproejct is intended for Armenian users only, which is not the way Wikipedia works. I don't understand why you need this particular wikiproject to contribute to all the topics you have just mentioned, if all the Armenian users are already members of another wikiproject (Armenia), which helps them to coordinate their activities? And yes, you can use Azerbaijan wikiproject to cover this particular topic, I see no real problem with that. Wikiproject Azerbaijan is not intended for Azerbaijani users only, and considering that NK is legally part of Azerbaijan, why not? Alternatively you can use the Armenian wikiproject, which aims to cover the Armenian people all over the world, as you do now. And your claims about Caucasian Albania is another bad faith accusation, I never added it to any topic not related to this ancient state. And the place names issue is another long standing dispute, that has not been resolved by now. I don't think divisive wikiprojects is something that we need now, considering that we have plenty of other unresolved disputes. Grandmaster (talk) 20:49, 3 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Your assumption is original research, Artsakh declared independence before the Red Army invaded it, de jure is a legal concept, legally NK was never part of Azerbaijan, Nariman Narimanov who was the head the Soviet Azerbaijan threatened the Soviet Union to block its oil if NK was incorporated into Armenia. Since then, oil was an issue which passed before any laws (they already declared independence then), it is your original research to assume that oil which runs the politics on the region is not a factor. The Soviet Union does not exist anymore, and NK has used legal means to declare its independence. And the New England Center for International Law and Policy is not an obscure law school, the research here clearly say that NK has used legal means to declare its independence according to the Soviet Law, if we are not going to respect Soviet Law, then the pre-Soviet NK also declared its independence.

NK is only officially part of Azerbaijan, not De Jure, according to law NK should be independent, Azerbaijan is aware of this, thats why they boycotted every conflict resolution where NK is represented, because NK unlike Armenia has bases to apply to Hague according to the specific article on territorial claims which requires the two party to be present, Armenia is not considered to be a party according to Hague article on disputed territories while NK is. Various other articles also claim that the legal process was followed under which NK declared independence, like this. [ Here from a history course, it doesn't even say de facto or officially.

For decades NK has used legal Soviet means to gain independence from Azerbaijan, which were almost always granted and then reversed because Soviet Azerbaijan used its oil resources to threaten and have what it wanted even if the requests were made according to law. If Azerbaijan didn't have oil, NK would have never been granted to it in the first place. CIA declassified files show that US government underground is very well aware that NK has for centuries been semi-autonomous under the rule of Armenian princes and was as an Armenia's cultural and religious center [84], [85]. Even during the Soviet era, the CIA recognized the legitimacy of NK requests when it was again brought to the table (in 1978): the inhabitants of another turbulent area in the Caucasus, the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast, are able to make a better argument that their oblast should be transferred from one republic to another. The Karabakh Oblast is part of Azerbaydzhan, yet over 80 percent of its population is Armenian and it lies close to the border of the Armenian Republic. In 1975, according to the Azerbaydzhan Republic newspaper, virtually the entire leadership of the Karabakh Oblast was ousted for supporting a movement to detach the oblast from Azerbaydzhan and join it to Armenia. [86]

Given that Artsakh has a history of over 2 thousand years, which had kingdoms, principalities etc., and which is now currently an unrecognized republic, which has a VERY OLD history OLDER than Azerbaijan, it is legitimate to have such a wikiproject. It is not part of Azerbaijani history, nor the article is about Azerbaijan, and it's not part of current Armenia and not its Wikiproject, you can do this as the way you want, but it is obvious that a wikiproject of this entity should exist. As for your request to assume good faith, I wasn't specifically refering to you, but the general thrend to turn Armenian churchs as Albanian, the Armenian scholars as Albanians, the Armenian population as Albanian, Armenian princes as Albanian, Armenian principalities as Albanian and to make matter worst dump them as part of Azerbaijani history. The only legitimate move would be that Artsakh has its category with its own separate wikiproject. VartanM (talk) 01:24, 4 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I don't want to turn this page into the dispute about the legal side of "NKR", this one is for different issues. It is enough to refer you to the International Status section of the article about "NKR", it is pretty obvious that NK is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan and “NKR” is considered illegitimate by the international community. This is the position of UNO, PACE, EU, USA, etc. Since NK is de-jure, i.e. in accordance with the international laws part of Azerbaijan, I don't see why it should be considered a separate entity. And since the region was in ancient times part of Armenia and Caucasian Albania, it could be pretty well covered by the Azerbaijan and Armenia wikiprojects, which cover those ancient states. You still have not answered my question if you would be willing to remove “NKR” symbols from Karabakh Wikiproject tags if I signed up for it. And as the admins notified you, [87] the category and stub for NK were deleted as result of voting, obviously there’s no need to recreate them due to reasons cited by the admin. Grandmaster (talk) 16:03, 4 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Thats wrong, NK is not de-jure part of Azerbaijan, it is only officially part of Azerbaijan. I have already explained above that NK has used existing Soviet laws to acquire its independence, during the independence movement it was shortly accepted before being denied illegally by the Soviet because of Azerbaijan SSR threats. De Jure means according to law, according to law NK is independent, but is not recognized as such, for the obvious reason of oil.
It's a Separate entity, because before the 20's, back from BC, that region was Artsakh, and for centuries at different times it was autonomous. It was the Armenian Cultural and Religious center on various occasions as the declassified CIA files say. Artsakh existed way before Azerbaijan, its population was and still is not Azeri Turks but Armenians, and plus it is an unrecognized republic. We have three legitimate arguments to have a wikiproject.
And it is not Karabakh Wikiproject, Karabakh and Artsakh have different delimitations, the current republic while in English is considered to represent the Soviet NK, it does not, it is not the same as Artsakh the republic, one contains Lachin for exemple, but the geographic NK excludes it. Many regions while not part of NK are included in historic Artsakh or the current NKR.
And it is also not exactly true that Artsakh is not recognized by Armenia, since Armenia officially calls it the Artsakh province, which means while not public it recognizes it as a province of Armenia. Both Armenia and Georgia have border disputes with Azerbaijan and according to international law, since neighbors dispute the borders its borders are not internationally recognized. So by citing names of organizations which consider NKR as illegitimate, you are not showing that the republic is illegal under international law, until Azerbaijan accepts NKR as a party and NKR bring this to international court, any claim that it is de-jure part of Azerbaijan as a statement of fact would be POV.
In short, the Wikiproject should exist, and I don't see why I should answer your question when you don't recognize the legitimity of such a Wikiproject. When other break away republics have such Wikiprojects. VartanM (talk) 05:41, 5 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Grandmaster, we have WikiProject: Kurdistan, which is not separated from Iraq or Turkey. Do you think all the Iraqi and Turkish users are welcoming it? Andranikpasha (talk) 17:58, 4 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
And I explained you that Soviet laws did not allow autonomies to secede, contrary to what some law schools may think. Officially = de-jure. International community does not recognize "NKR" and considers its government and president illegitimate. See declarations of CoE, EU and others about this: [88] [89] [90] A state that does not have international recognition does not exist as a subject of international law, i.e. de-jure. I think this issue has been discussed enough, I see no point in existence of another regional wikiproject of a clearly divisive nature, while we have the ones on Armenia and Azerbaijan. Grandmaster (talk) 07:53, 5 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
WikiProject:Kurdistan supports another practics! And no need to explain Soviet laws, USSR wasnt even a democratic state, and not Stalin's decision over Karabakh/Artsakh, nor tragic events as Sumgait Pogrom or Black January give any chances to Soviet laws. We have also a de-facto side: hundred thousands of peoples who dont want to live under the Azerbaijani rule and according to all the int'l reccomendations for people's self-determination formed a republic in 1991. De-jure recognitions is not the all, I can say we even cant compare it with the existed fact, the factual truth.Andranikpasha (talk) 13:16, 5 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]


Another Eastern European spat

Question and an important one: What is the user supposed to be doing now that prompts intervention? I understand that Piotrus has a big book of misdeeds from the past, and the user sure seems from such evidence to be unpleasant, but let's be very clear: the user posted to Piotrus's user talk page, and that's why there is supposed to be intervention? The statements that Piotrus points to as being the offensive ones that are supposed to be triggering this really don't seem like a big deal. I doubt that anyone believes that Piotrus is going to be driven away, and anyone attempting such a thing would have to really be misjudging things. I'm entirely uninvolved, although obviously contacted to take a look in, and even I thought that DYK was having a tremendous number of Polish themed mentions that seemed a bit trivial. I have little doubt that Matthead has/will cross the lines dramatically and be subject to sanction, but this really seems a bit minor to be bringing in all of this. Ioeth is correct to notify, but I would also like to say that it would be nice to bring in matters here only with better cause. Geogre (talk) 20:14, 5 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

the related decision in the arbitration case Wikipedia:Requests_for_arbitration/Digwuren#General_restriction

Gatoclass justifies his opinions under an "Eastern European topic" with an ethnic epithet [101] The way I see the statment is spelled out by a third party ThuranX comment addressed to Gatoclass:your comments, as linked from that AN/I, are defintiely bigoted assumptions that those who opposed your edits all lump into some vague anti-you category of eastern europeans. You're making an ad hominem attack on all those opposing you, suggesting that all they are interested in is emotional outbursts, not rational thought, based on your presumptions about their origins.. Further on, instead of withdrawing the ethnic epithet, Gatoclass doesn't agree with calling the ethnic epithets "bigoted statements" according to ThuranX and has started harassing me who has agreed with ThuranX comment and ThuranX [102] with "Breach of WP:CIV"

I believe Gatoclass actions are in conflict with the decision of the arbitration case. Thanks!--Termer (talk) 06:16, 6 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

PS. since Gatoclass should be well aware of the General restriction by now, I don't mind starting all over and I'd suggest, once again. Gatoclass please consider withdrawing the argument based on the 'presumptions about the other editors origins' so that the matter could be put behind us. There is no need to apologize to me personally since I can't be offended with such general remarks unlike many other editors have claimed they have and have asked for an apology from you, something you're are aware of. Thanks!--Termer (talk) 22:04, 7 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Response Section blanked to start over. Let's be very clear; this page is to request enforcement of Arbitration remedies, not to make rulings on article content. The ruling in this case says that editors of Eastern European topics who "make any edits which are judged by an administrator to be uncivil, personal attacks, or assumptions of bad faith...may be blocked for the duration specified in the enforcement ruling below." The ruling may be enforced only after the editor has been notified of the restriction. If you believe an editor has made personal attacks, failed to assume good faith, or been uncivil, please add some diffs here as examples, and admins will either warn the editor (if he has not already been warned), or block, or do nothing, depending on the evidence. No one will rule on the content of the article. Please use the dispute resolution process including RFC, third opinion, and mediation. If you believe that the dispute resolution process has already been tried and failed, you need to go back to Arbcom and ask for a review of the case to consider additional editing restrictions. Only the ruling against incivility, bad faith and personal attacks in enforceable. Thatcher 20:21, 7 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

You have got to be joking. "Please add some diffs as examples"? I must have had fifty diffs in my evidence related precisely to incivilities and other shenanigans. NONE of my evidence had a thing to say about content disputes. Gatoclass (talk) 20:27, 7 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I've been uninvolved in this whole thing. What appears to be the root cause of this was after Gatoclass' AfD nomination was unanimously defeated, he assumed bad faith and justified his stance with an ethnic epithet here [103] and went on attack by tag warring, and lashing out at Termer when uninvolved third party ThuranX said of Gatoclass' uncivil behaviour: your comments, as linked from that AN/I, are defintiely bigoted assumptions that those who opposed your edits all lump into some vague anti-you category of eastern europeans. You're making an ad hominem attack on all those opposing you, suggesting that all they are interested in is emotional outbursts, not rational thought, based on your presumptions about their origins.. All that is being asked here is that Gatorclass be noticed in on the Digwuren general restriction. How hard is that? Martintg (talk) 20:46, 7 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

  • Marting, please link to diffs by Gatoclass, not to characterizations of his comments by others. Gatoclass, please list the editors whom you believe have been uncivil and give a few (3-5_ example diffs. Be concise. If the situation is so nuanced that it takes 3400 words to explain, it probably can't be enforced by this board. You may be looking for mediation or a user conduct RFC. The Arbitration case is enforceable against incivility, failure to assume good faith, and personal attacks. This should be easy to document in a concise manner. Thatcher 21:07, 7 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Nobody is forcing you to read every diff, or every word. If you only want to read "3-5 diffs" from those I presented, there's nothing to stop you doing that. I can hardly make my case without presenting evidence, and more importantly, I can't defend myself from the charges that are made against me without doing so.
I don't believe you have any good reason to remove my evidence, and I will not be restoring any of it until I have had time to take advice from others on what steps I can take to see that all of it is presented as appropriate. But all that will now have to wait until tomorrow. Gatoclass (talk) 21:13, 7 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Thatcher I'm sorry but I'm not getting it why do you keep ignoring the diff [104] by Gatoclass that has been also listed in Martintg's posting. The only reason the third opinion by ThuranX is there, is to express my own understanding how exactly Gatoclass has been 'uncivil, used personal attacks, or assumptions of bad faith . Thanks!--Termer (talk) 21:16, 7 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Sigh. I guess many can't see anything wrong with applying an ethnic epithet "East European" against a whole group of editors from different backgrounds in an assumption of bad faith after an AfD is comprehensively defeated. Had some admin acted promptly to notice Gatoclass in, this whole thing would have cooled down, but what we have here are some admins who appear to be stoking the fire by being seemingly blind to the issue and siding with an individual who clearly has been disruptive, against a community of editors who have been stigmatised by the epithet "East European". With the amount of text generated here, you would think people are asking for a year long ban, not just a simple notice of a requirement for civility in East European articles. Martintg (talk) 22:37, 7 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Marting, if I had a more prickly nature I might decide to notice you in for that "uppity East European" comment. I simply do not want to read 10,000 words about the Holodomor when a few diffs are sufficient. I would prefer to see a couple more diffs from Gatoclass because one remark by itself could be an aberration, or a slip of the tongue. If he has acted as you say then one or two more diffs should not be hard to produce. Thatcher 23:49, 7 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
If the "uppity East Europeans" comment offended you, then ofcourse I apologise and withdraw the remark, the line between robust discussion and offence can be at times narrow. Gatorclass offended many more people, as evidenced in the previous comments of the other parties that were deleted. If it was an aberration or a slip of the tongue, he was given every opportunity to atleast acknowledge that his comment offended many people. Instead of acknowledging that his statement could be construed as bigoted, as pointed out by uninvolved third party ThuranX [105], he started harassing ThuranX [106] with bad faith accusations of incivility. Martintg (talk) 01:05, 8 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Did I get it right Thatcher? in case I'd use one remark against about 12 of my opponents in a content dispute, lets say hypothetically: "you're all wrong because I think you might come from Africa" and would never admit there is anything wrong with it. It could be considered that it might be just a slip of the tongue and therefore it would be OK? In any case more diffs would be required to make sure what exactly was I talking about, hypothetically in this case?--Termer (talk) 01:56, 8 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Ah, but you see, Termer, as George Orwell put it in Animal Farm: "All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others." -- Turgidson (talk) 05:21, 8 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Statement by User:Gatoclass

I have been considerably upset by the personal attacks and harassment I have been subjected to now for days on end, largely because of dissenting views I expressed at Holodomor denial, culminating in the frivolous report against me here. In that regard, I prepared a case against my opponents - whom I believe that unlike me are clearly in breach of the Digwuren general restriction - which was also intended to serve as my defence against these charges. I posted that here last night but User:Thatcher removed it on the basis that it was too long and asked me to shorten it.

Having had some time to reflect, I feel obliged to make one final offer of reconciliation before pursuing this matter any further.

For my part, I concede that perhaps I behaved a little dickishly on my first arrival at the page. I was angered by the tag-team removal of the disputed tag I placed on the page and by the brush-off and bad faith assumptions I was subjected to on the talk page, and I think I overreacted, first by repeatedly restoring the tag, then by dragging the page to AFD, and finally by bringing the matter of tag removal before AN/I. It was only after I got almost no response to the tag removal complaint at AN/I, that I had cause to examine my prior assumption about the essential inviolability of a disputed tag placed by a user in good standing, and to reflect that my attitude to tag removal was a tad unrealistic and that therefore I may have overreacted. I maintain however, that there is no excuse for the avalanche of bad faith assumptions and at times quite hurtful personal attacks that were directed at me for taking the position I did.

If the other users involved in this dispute - primarily User:Turgidson, PetersV, User:ThuranX and User:Termer will now agree to withdraw this frivolous charge against me here, to withdraw their offensive remarks that I am "racist" and "bigoted" and to commit not to repeat them in future, and above all, to drop this relentless pursuit for an "apology" based on a bad faith assumption about the meaning of a single comment I made, then I in turn will agree to pursue this matter no further. Regards, Gatoclass (talk) 06:03, 8 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

  • The purpose of being "placed on notice" is to make sure no editors are not blocked for incivility without being aware of the case. Obviously you all are aware having commented extensively here or at the AN/I discussion of the matter. [107] If you want a formal decision, here it is:
  • Gatoclass (talk · contribs) placed on notice, disparaging editors by their status in a group [108]
  • Turgidson (talk · contribs) placed on notice, assumption of bad faith [109]
  • Vecrumba (talk · contribs) placed on notice, badgering in response to Gatoclass' comment (asking nicely once or twice is one thing, but you can't force someone to apologize, or coerce them by threat) [110]
  • Termer (talk · contribs) placed on notice. He was, by in large, responding to Gatoclass' disaparagement of a group of users by national or regional origin. However please be mindful that the proper response to incivility is not to return insults, nor is name calling ever conducive to good editing. "Your remarks were inappropriate because they disparaged a group of editors by national origin" is much more civil and uses neutral terminology, while "your remarks were bigoted" is highly inflammatory and uses language with extremely negative connotations. Thatcher 06:26, 8 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

RE:Thatcher "you're a bigot"? Please point out exactly where have I said things like "you're a bigot". I have never said anything like this! just that perhaps there is a difference saying "you're a racist" and agreeing with someone else's posting that a "racist statement" has been used?--Termer (talk) 06:33, 8 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

  • I have made a minor factual correction but my original concern is the same. I understand the distinction you are trying to make [111] [112] [113] but I am not convinced there is any important difference between "you have made bigoted statements" and "you are a bigot". (This kind of logic is common, "I didn't say you were a jerk, I said you were acting like a jerk," but I don't necessarily buy it.) Bigoted was an extremely loaded and unfortunate word to have used. The bottom line is to keep your cool and keep smiling even when the other guy loses his cool. Thatcher 07:01, 8 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    • And further note, I do not intend to notify ThuranX of the decision; he has not edited the disputed article and only replied to the noticeboard posting. I will remind him, however, that as admins we should be trying to raise the level of discourse, not get dragged down by it. Thatcher 07:01, 8 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Thatcher got it! the point you're making is that I should just stay cool and keep smiling to your interpretations of this case? I guess I do feel lucky since in case PetersV is getting notified for asking too many times for an apology for the ethnic epithet, it feels like I should have been straight out banned for agreeing with a senior editor who called it "bigoted statement". Since you do have history with me and PetersV and with EE topics in general [114], I don't think I can accept your opinions here as an "uninvolved administrator". And therefore I'm going to dismiss your notices, also the one given to User:Gatoclass and the ones given here before, since its not coming from an uninvolved administrator who has not been involved with the "EE" controversies before. Thanks! --Termer (talk) 08:12, 8 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]