ARF Against The “Union In Favor Of Armenia”

ARF AGAINST THE “UNION IN FAVOR OF ARMENIA”
Anna Israelian

Aravot.am
01 June 06

A new scandal inside the authority.

The ARF bureau representative Hrant Margarian alluding to the Public
Prosecutor Aghvan Hovsepian said in his interview given to “Azatutiun”
b/s; “There is some sort of feudalism in Armenia. There are some
people who consider themselves the feudalists of a region. I mean
the feudal of Aragatsotn region, who thinks that region belongs to
him. And if it is so the region mayor should obey him. But when he
doesn’t see it he can’t bear it and tries to use police ways, making
pressure on him.” And the checking of the activities of region mayor
Gabriel Sundukian who is from the ARF the ARF representative explained
by political reasons. Hrant Margarian had also spoken about the case
happened to the chairman of Oshakan electoral commission Spartak
Eghiazarian; ”He made a speech in the parliament and spoke about
rigged elections. The Chief of Police, Lyova Khachatrian who was
close to the Prosecutor worked with him and he declared at once that
it was lie”. We were interested from Lyova Khachatrian elected from
Aragatsotn whether he had played his role that Spartak Eghiazarian
refused of his declarations and began criticizing the region mayor
of Aragatsotn. ”We should address that question to Egiazarian whom
I haven’t known, don’t know and began know during last some months. I
know him now. He has come we helped him to fill a post.”

Hrant Margarian mentioned on the occasion of the prepared materials
against the region mayor of Aragatsotn Gabriel Gyozalian; “The
fact is that examinations which last some months didn’t give any
result.” To our question whether they have any discrepancy with the
region mayor Levon Khachatrian answered; ” There aren’t such things
in my functions, to examine cases or bring criminal cases”. But
to the question whether he is satisfied with the region mayor’s
work Levon Khachatrian answered; “The ARF has carried out a lot of
patriotic activities and does up to the present day both in Armenia
and abroad. And if there are some ARF members aren’t in their right
places or make some declarations about our relations let them find
the reason inside them. I don’t complain about anybody. And if those
persons complain of anything, let them find the reason inside them.

We should remind that Levon Khachatrian is also the member of “Union
in favor Armenia” initiating group. The ARF Bureau representative
Hrant Margarian assured in his interviews given to both “Azatutiun”
and “Iravunq” that party was formed by the Public Prosecutor Aghvan
Hovsepian. “The RA current Prosecutor has no right to form a party. He
can’t carry out political activities either in direct or indirect
way. This is the end of everything”, he said. But the political groups
are still sure that it is just the Public Prosecutor’s structure. Levon
Khachatrian answered to it; “I consider this simply a political game,
throwing obstacles in our way. There is no reason for it. We all know
very well that the Public Prosecutor doesn’t carry out such problems
and he simply isn’t inclined in playing political and party games. He
spends his free time on public activities.”

–Boundary_(ID_3sbFgCWoFWPRBn5neMUDu w)–

Armenian Army ‘Scapegoats’ Facing Life In Prison

ARMENIAN ARMY ‘SCAPEGOATS’ FACING LIFE IN PRISON
By Emil Danielyan

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep
June 1 2006

Three Armenian army soldiers are facing a life in prison, accused
of a double murder which they say they did not commit and which
their lawyers believe was the work of their military commander in
Nagorno-Karabakh.

An appeals court in Yerevan convicted this week Razmik Sargsian,
Musa Serobian and Arayik Zalian of killing two fellow conscripts
in December 2003, in a trial denounced by Armenian human rights
organizations as a parody of justice.

The high-profile case has cast a rare media spotlight on dozens of
out-of-combat deaths that occur in Armenia’s Armed Forces each year.

Official figures show that Armenian servicemen are at much greater risk
of dying at the hands of their commanders and comrades than from enemy
fire. Hundreds of them have lost their lives as a result of hazing and
other chronic army abuses since a Russian-mediated ceasefire agreement
stopped the Armenian-Azerbaijani war in Karabakh 12 years ago.

Young conscripts Roman Yeghiazarian and Hovsep Mkrtumian added to
this grim statistics when their swollen corpses bearing traces of
violence were recovered from a reservoir in Karabakh’s northern
Martakert district in January 2004. Several soldiers of their unit
were promptly arrested by military prosecutors on suspicion of
involvement in the crime. One of them effectively testified that the
killings were committed by none other than Captain Ivan Grigorian,
the Karabakh Armenian commander of their battalion.

The investigators, however, dismissed the testimony, releasing the
suspects and arresting three other soldiers that were subsequently
given life sentences. The conviction was based on a videotaped
“confession” made by one of them, Razmik Sargsian, after fours
days of interrogation in April 2004. Sargsian and a team of lawyers
representing the three men insists that the confession was extracted
under sadistic duress and threats of rape. The 20-year-old has alleged
that Armenia’s chief military prosecutor, Gagik Jahangirian, personally
punched him in the face.

Although Sargsian’s face was clearly swollen and bruised in video of
the interrogation shown during a court session in Yerevan last year,
the investigators have strongly denied torturing him. A court in the
Karabakh capital Stepanakert, which has a legally questionable status
of an Armenian district court contradicting Armenia’s constitution,
refused to investigate the torture allegations before sentencing the
three servicemen to 15 years in prison one year ago.

On Tuesday, Armenia’s Court of Appeals not only rejected an appeal
filed by their attorneys but also replaced the lengthy jail terms
with a life imprisonment at the behest of the military prosecutors.

Anahit Yeghiazarian, the trial prosecutor, argued in a court speech
on April 18 that Sargsian could not have been severely beaten up
as he hismself had written his self-incriminating testimony with a
“nice and neat handwriting.”

Yeghiazarian added that the court should take into account not
only factual evidence but also her and other prosecutors’ personal
beliefs. “I am guided not only by evidence but also by my internal
conviction,” she declared.

Zaruhi Postanjian, one of the defense lawyers, condemned the resulting
harsh verdict on Thursday and said she will appeal to the Court of
Cassation, Armenia’s highest criminal justice body. “I am convinced
that my clients are innocent,” she told RFE/RL, adding that the appeals
court deliberately refused to question most of the key witnesses in
the case.

Postanjian also claimed that the lower-court ruling against her
clients was toughened to discourage anyone from challenging military
prosecutors in the future. “Their message boils down to the following,
‘Look, power is in our hands. If you appeal our rulings, then rest
assured that you’ll end up in even greater trouble.'”

Human rights campaigners who have closely monitored the case also
strongly criticized the ruling. “It will further deepen public distrust
in Armenia’s judiciary and armed forces,” said Avetik Ishkhanian of
the Armenian Helsinki Committee. “It is a vivid of example of the
state of criminal justice in Armenia.”

Larisa Alaverdian, Armenia’s former human rights ombudsperson who has
personally dealt with the case, likewise decried “blatant violations”
of due process which she believes were committed during the pre-trial
investigation and the court hearings in Stepanakert and Yerevan.

According to the official version of events, Sargsian, Serobian and
Zalian brutally murdered the two other soldiers near the Karabakh
village of Mataghis and dumped their bodies into the reservoir
on December 24, 2003 after a dispute over a food parcel that was
delivered to one of the servicemen. The defense lawyers say there are
numerous facts disproving the charges and have come up with a totally
different theory. According to it, Grigorian, the battalion commander
who allegedly suffers from alcoholism, beat Roman Yeghiazarian to
death and killed the other victim, Hovsep Mkrtumian, after the latter
refused to “confess” to the crime.

Lawyer Postanjian claimed that there are eyewitness soldiers who
would testify that Mkrtumian was still alive as of December 31, 2003.

She pointed to a January 2004 autopsy which found that Mkrtumian died
at least two weeks after Yeghiazarian.

It has also emerged that the commander of the Karabakh Armenian army,
Lieutenant-General Seyran Ohanian, sent a letter to the top military
prosecutor in Yerevan in early 2004 asking him not to bring charges
against Grigorian. Ohanian argued in the letter that the Karabakh
captain is a prominent veteran of the 1991-1994 war with Azerbaijan.

The three young men may now spend the rest of their lives behind bars
because of what another human rights campaigner, Mikael Danielian,
regards as yet another high-level cover-up of army deaths. “This case
is not unprecedented,” he told RFE/RL. “There have been numerous such
cases. It’s just that they did not have so much resonance.”

Danielian cited the fate of Artur Mkrtchian, who was sentenced to death
in 1996 for allegedly murdering five other soldiers despite pleading
not guilty to the accusations. The death penalty was subsequently
commuted to life imprisonment.

The Armenian military insists that the number of deaths within its
ranks has steadily declined since the late 1990s. However, even the
official death statistics shows that it is still far from eliminating
the problem. According to the Military Prosecutor’s Office, 89 soldiers
died in the course of last year and only 15 of them were shot dead
in skirmishes with Azerbaijani forces on the Karabakh frontline and
the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

Ishkhanian estimated that at least 1,000 Armenian conscripts aged
between 18 and 20 have lost their lives in out-of-combat incidents
since the 1994 truce. He could not recall any instances of senior or
mid-ranking army officers prosecuted in connection with those deaths.

MFA: Minister Oskanian in Kazakhstan

MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
—————————————— —-
PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
Government House # 2, Republic Square
Yerevan 0010, Republic of Armenia
Telephone: +37410. 544041 ext 202
Fax: +37410. 562543
Email: [email protected]
<;

PRESS RELEASE

01-06-2006

Minister Oskanian Visits Kazakhstan

Minister Oskanian is in the Republic of Kazakhstan on a two-day official
visit.

On June 1, Minister Oskanian met with Kazakhstan¹s Foreign Minister,
Kasymzhomart Tokayev in Astana. During the meeting, the two discussed a
number of issues of bilateral and international importance. They both
expressed their satisfaction with the level of political relations between
the two countries, and expressed interest in deepening economic cooperation.
In this regard, the Armenian-Kazakh Intergovernmental Commission for
Economic Cooperation, as well as the existence of legal documentation and
absence of political disagreement between the two countries contribute
greatly to this cooperation, they said.

For activating trade and economic relations, Minister Oskanian attached
importance to organizing meetings between businessmen and hosting cultural
events in Armenia and Kazakhstan.

Further, the colleagues stressed the importance of mutually beneficial
economic cooperation in the framework of CIS, CSTO and Eurasian economic
cooperation organization, as well as international organizations.

They focused especially on energy and transport issues. In this regard,
Minister Tokayev presented Kazakhstan¹s position on his country¹s
involvement in a number of regional programs, specifically in Caspian
projects.

Taking into account the fact that Kazakhstan is aspiring to take over the
chairmanship of the OSCE in 2009, the Armenian Minister detailed for his
counterpart the latest developments of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict
settlement process.

Toward the end of the meeting, Minister Oskanian invited Minister Tokayev to
pay an official visit to Armenia.

The same day, the Armenian Minister met with Nursultan Nazarbayev, President
of the Republic, and addressed students of the Diplomacy Institute.

On June 2, in Almaty, the Minister will meet with representatives of the
Armenian community of Kazakhstan, after which he will return to Armenia.

http://www.armeniaforeignministry.am/&gt
www.armeniaforeignministry.am

OMI/FARFAA Teleconference in Armenia on Pediatric Nephrology

PRESS RELEASE
Fund for Armenian Relief’s Fellowship Alumni Association
29 Rubinyants Street,
Yerevan, Armenia
Contact: Bella Grigoryan
FARFAA-Salzburg Medical Program Coordinator
Tel: (37410) 249677, 541128
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

OMI/FARFAA VIDEOCONFERENCE
“PEDIATRIC NEPHROLOGY ”

Yerevan, May 30, 2006

Salzburg Medical Seminars Program, the Open Medical Institute (OMI)
program of the American Austrian Foundation, together with FARFAA
(Armenia) and with the technical support of the <<Arabkir >> Medical
Center organized a videoconference on “Pediatric Nephrology”.

All the equipment and technical support in Armenia was provided by the
<<Arabkir>> Medical Center with the kind support of its chief Prof. Ara
Babloyan.

The videoconference took place on May 30th. 17 doctors from different
Yerevan hospitals have participated.

Dr. Kevin Meyers from The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP),
USA led the seminar.

The lectures covered Chronic Kidney Disease (Dr. Jorge Baluarte),
Vitamin D Nutrition (Mary Leonard), Renovascular Hypertension (Kevin
Meters).

The goal of the videoconference was to present the latest information,
experience and knowledge of the international faculty members to English
speaking Armenian doctors.

This was our first videoconference experience with the Salzburg Medical
Seminars Program, (OMI). We hope that this activity will be continued in
the future and more and more Armenian specialists will be involved in
the Salzburg Medical Seminars Program to enhance their professional
level through theoretical knowledge and discussions.

Some quotations of the videoconference participants:

<< The videoconference helped me to get new approaches to the old,
well-known pathologies>>.

<< The videoconference gave us a possibility to participate in some of
the Salzburg seminar’s lectures both passively as a listener and
actively in discussions staying at home.>>

<We would highly appreciate to have this kind activity in future>>.

We wish to acknowledge and to express our deep appreciation to Katharine
Aulitzky ,

Dr Kevin Meyers, Prof. Ara Babloyan, John A. Riehl, Dr Gevorg Yaghjyan,
Dr. Mary Leonard, Dr Jorge Baluarte without whom this teleconference
would never take place .

We extend special thanks to Arman Babloyan and Andreas Thauerer for
their help in the technical support of the teleconference.

Open Medical Institute (OMI) is a program of the American Austrian
Foundation (AAF) whose main goal is to educate physicians and health
care providers from countries in transition and foster their
professional growth ()

FAR FAA is a non-for-profit organization of medical professionals, aimed
at improving the health care system of the community and advancing
medical sciences in Armenia.

www.farfaa-salzburg.am
www.aaf-online.org

BAKU: Turkey’s Foreign Ministry Confirms Unofficial Talks With Armen

TURKEY’S FOREIGN MINISTRY CONFIRMS UNOFFICIAL TALKS WITH ARMENIA

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
May 31 2006

“Turkey intends to continue to make efforts to normalize relations
with Armenia,” spokesman of Turkey’s Foreign Ministry Namig Tan stated
(APA).

He said that effectiveness of Turkey’s efforts depends on Armenia’s
ability to objectively assess the processes.

“Turkey intends to have relations with Armenia like between two
neighboring countries. Therefore, we continue making efforts to
normalize the relations with Armenia. We proposed to investigate
the 1915 events with the participation of both Turkish and Armenian
historians by using archives of other states. This proposal was
mentioned in the letter Prime Minister Erdoghan addressed to Armenia’s
President Robert Kocharian last year,” Namig Tan said.

The spokesman also confirmed the fact that Turkish and Armenian
diplomatic circles had unofficial talks. He said these talks are
held between assistants of councilors of Foreign Ministers. The third
phase of these talks is already over.

BAKU: Grichenko: Ukraine’s Military Cooperation With Armenia Won’tHa

GRICHENKO: UKRAINE’S MILITARY COOPERATION WITH ARMENIA WON’T HARM OTHER STATES

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
May 31 2006

“Ukraine recognizes sovereignty and territorial integrity of
Azerbaijan,” Ukraine’s Defense Minister Anatoli Grichenko told
following the meeting of the CIS Board of Defense Ministers in
Baku today.

He gave this answer to APA’s question “The declaration on conflicts
signed by heads of state in latest GUAM Summit reads that Azerbaijan’s,
Georgia’s and Moldova’s territorial integrity has been violated. Two
days later Ukraine signed a contract on military cooperation with
Armenia. What cooperation does this contract mean and isn’t it contrary
to the declaration signed by the presidents?” (APA).

Mr.Grichenko said that Ukraine’s cooperation with Armenia does not
mean any harmful actions against other partner states.

Vacant Parliament Posts Will Be Taken Up

VACANT PARLIAMENT POSTS WILL BE TAKEN UP

Lragir.am
30 May 06

An extraordinary meeting of the National Assembly will be held on May
31 to elect a new speaker. Earlier on May 29 a consultation was held
late in the event at the office of the president of Armenia with the
Republican Party, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation and other
pro-governmental forces of the National Assembly. It was decided that
the Republican Party will nominate Tigran Torosyan. The vacant posts
of chairs of committees were distributed as well. Dashnakatsutiun
will probably receive the post of the chair of the Committee of
Defense, Security and Internal Affairs. The post of the chair of the
Health and Social Committee will be handed over to the Republican
Party.

“From Need to Greed” film on illegal logging to be screened

“From Need to Greed” film on illegal logging to be screened in Yerevan

ArmRadio.am
30.05.2006 18:15

To celebrate World Environment day the American University of
Armenia’s Environmental Conservation and Research Center, Armenian
Forests NGO and the Armenia Tree project will present the film “From
Need to Greed” at 18:30 in the small auditorium of the American
University of Armenia. The film will address the issue of illegal
logging in Armenia.

This is the fourth in a series of environmental films produced by Vem
Media Arts in Yerevan to be released. The 20-minute documentary film
on illegal logging and the deforestation of Armenia, titled “From Need
to Greed,” was funded by Armenia Tree Project, Armenian Forests NGO,
and the World Wildlife Fund Caucasus Office.

Produced by Manuk Hergnyan of Vem and written by Inga Zarafyan, the
documentary explains that forests provide food, shelter, clothing, and
fuel for people, but over time humans have started to destroy this
vital lifeline. According to historical data, forests covered 20
percent of Armenia at the turn of the 20th century, but by the early
1990s this area was reduced to 11 percent and is now below 10 percent.

Anniversary Of The Heroic Battle Of Bash-Aparan Celebrated In Aparan

ANNIVERSARY OF THE HEROIC BATTLE OF BASH-APARAN CELEBRATED IN APARAN

ArmRadio.am
29.05.2006 13:27

May 28 hundreds of people gathered in Aparan to celebrate the
anniversaries of creation of the firs Republic of Armenia and the
heroic battle of Bash-Aparan. Later the celebration continued in the
square of stone-letters.

Hovhannes Tumanyan’s monument has been erected next to the letters
and the Anania Shirakatsi’s monument. It will be officially opened
next week.

When putting up the stone-letters, the initiators promised
that a complex of memorials would be founded all around Aragats
Mountain. Honorary President of “Nig Aparan” patriotic union Aghvan
Hovsepyan assured that monuments of all who created outstanding works
in Armenian will be erected in the square of letters.

Economist: Inside the mad despot’s realm; Turkmenistan

The Economist
May 27, 2006
U.S. Edition

Inside the mad despot’s realm; Turkmenistan

ashgabat and mary

A rare visit to one of the world’s most secretive and repressive
countries

THERE is not much to laugh about on state television in Turkmenistan.
But viewers may be forgiven for feeling a little quiet satisfaction
at the spectacle, late last month, of Gurbanbibi Atajanova, the
former chief state prosecutor otherwise known as the iron lady,
tearfully begging not to be sent to prison after being accused of
possessing 25 houses, 36 cars and 2,000 head of cattle. Ms Atajanova
led the purges that, in recent years, systematically removed anyone
who tried to challenge, or simply to rein in, President Saparmurat
Niyazov, the self-styled Turkmenbashi, or “father of Turkmen”.

Not, of course, mentioned by state television was the fact that, on
the very same day, Mr Niyazov was himself under attack. A
London-based human-rights organisation, Global Witness, was accusing
him of siphoning off most of the country’s estimated $2 billion a
year in gas revenues and concealing them in offshore accounts. One of
these contains $4 billion, alleges one well-informed insider.

Such topics cannot be discussed in Turkmenistan. Any criticism or
dissent is defined as treason and is punishable by long prison terms,
confinement to psychiatric hospital or internal banishment, mostly to
arid salt flats by the Caspian Sea. Private conversations everywhere
are monitored by eavesdropping informers, as well as bugs and
phone-taps. E-mails are monitored (there is only one
service-provider) and internet access rare: a trawl of the capital
reveals not one functioning public outlet. Surveillance, already
tight, has been ratcheted up after a failed coup attempt in 2002.

Yet there is much that needs to be discussed. Ashgabat, the capital,
is a surreal showpiece of grandiose, neo-Stalinist buildings of
gleaming white marble, with giant portraits and gold statues of the
Turkmenbashi everywhere – including one, arms aloft, that constantly
revolves through 360 degrees, so that it always faces the sun. Behind
the glitz lies a grim reality; rutted tracks leading from four-lane
highways to windowless, one-room homes, including converted railway
containers, surrounded by debris and animals. Some of these are
inhabited by those whose homes – and entire neighbourhoods – were razed
to make way for “renovation” and offered no compensation. In one, a
middle-aged woman struggles to bring up her nephew (her sister, a
heroin addict like many in Turkmenistan, is too ill). But Olga has
lost her job under new laws because she is of Armenian and Ukrainian
descent.

Such are the priorities of a regime that squanders money on prestige
projects of dubious benefit, including an ice-rink, a huge
half-finished artificial lake, vast mosques, gold-domed palaces and
soon a new zoo, complete with penguins, in a country where the summer
temperature tops 50°C. At the same time, public health and
education – the only worthwhile legacies of the Soviet Union, from
which Turkmenistan became independent in 1991 – have been all but
dismantled.

This year’s outlook is even grimmer than last’s. In January, 100,000
people had their pensions cancelled, those of another 250,000 were
severely cut back, and sickness and maternity benefits were ended.
Unusually, the decrees led to protests, including demonstrations in
the port town of Turkmenbashi, while a Niyazov statue in the city of
Mary (once known as Merv) had its arm sawn off and a bucket of human
faeces thrown over it.

Then, in April, Mr Niyazov announced a further “reform” to the
already crippled health service, adding new charges that will make
its few remaining services yet more inaccessible. Most hospitals
outside the capital have closed and the remainder offer only
rudimentary care, lacking staff, equipment and medicines, condemning
thousands to death from common, treatable illnesses such as
tuberculosis.

Every Monday at 8am, Turkmenistan’s schoolchildren line up to recite
the oath of allegiance to the president, part of a
youth-indoctrination programme that is progressively replacing the
conventional curriculum. Its core is the two-volume Ruhnama, “The
Book of the Spirit”, a homespun collection of thoughts on Turkmen
history and culture that pupils are required to spend hours studying.
Visits to bookstores reveal shelves lined with nothing but the
president’s works. Meanwhile, mandatory education has been reduced
from ten years to nine and most rural kindergartens have closed, as
have all libraries outside the capital. Russian-language teaching has
been largely phased out, music and ballet schools closed and almost
all teachers of ethnic-minority origins sacked under rigorously
enforced “Turkmenisation” policies that demand racial purity,
traceable back three generations, for all workers in state
institutions, including hospitals.

Higher education is severely run down. The annual intake is now under
3,000, a tenth of the pre-independence figure, courses have been cut
to two years and standards are so poor they are unacceptable abroad.
Worse, the president has ordered that no foreign degrees will
henceforth be recognised. Anyone with a qualification gained abroad
is either being sacked or refused a job. One economist says that all
but two of her high-school class of 30 have emigrated because they
see no future at home. “You have students returning with degrees from
the world’s best universities – MBAs from Stanford, for instance – who
can’t get jobs,” she says. “We are the last educated generation,”
sighs another professor.

In rural areas, the problems are different. Cotton is the main crop,
but the past three harvests have been catastrophic because of a
requirement to sell at state-set prices so low that farmers are left
with annual incomes of around $100. Unemployment is estimated at over
70%, exacerbated by public-sector layoffs, and by laws restricting
job-seekers to their home towns. Such is the pressure to obtain work
that bribes are standard. Even the scarf-swathed army of women
sweeping Ashgabat’s streets with twig brooms have to pay officials,
Turkmen say.

Despite widespread unhappiness with the regime, most Turkmen do not
see a way out. Rebellion looks impossible, given the level of
repression and fear; and state benefits (free gas and electricity and
highly subsidised fuel, since plentiful gas and oil are
Turkmenistan’s only blessing) take some of the edge off discontent.
Besides, people are brainwashed by a relentless propaganda machine
orchestrated by four state-television channels, two radio stations
and several newspapers propounding the idea of a “golden age”. Exiled
opposition groups have little influence, and pressure from the
outside, given Turkmenistan’s large mineral reserves, is shamefully
muted.

There is, though, much speculation about the 66-year-old
Turkmenbashi’s health. He has had heart surgery, and has a team of
eight top-notch German doctors constantly on call. This raises other
problems, most obviously the lack of a mechanism for an orderly
transfer of power, coupled with the lack of any democratic tradition
in a conservative, tribal society. Pessimistic Turkmen fear that a
lost generation, uneducated beyond the Ruhnama, may fall prey to
Islamic radicalism – and create a nasty failed state that could
destabilise an already volatile region. A fine mess for a father to
leave to his children.

GRAPHIC: Facing the sun, presiding over ruin