Duke student released by Armenian court after detention

Yes! Weekly, NC
Aug 24 2005

Duke student released by Armenian court after detention
Jordan Green
Staff Writer

Photo: The trial of Yektan Turkyilmaz, seated second from right,
generated international attention. Also shown are Turkyilmaz’s lawyer
(right) his translator and two Armenian police officers. (photo by
Onnik Krikorian)

A doctoral student at Duke University was released Aug. 16 after
being held for two months in a high-security jail in Armenia for
violating a law regulating the removal of cultural artifacts. The
scholar’s imprisonment spurred support from hundreds of fellow
academics from national groups that have in the past remained divided
over questions of genocide and nationalism.

Yektan Turkyilmaz, 33, was pulled off a plane at Yerevan Airport in
Armenia’s capital city on June 17 at the end of his fourth visit to
Armenia. He was there to conduct research for his dissertation on
nationalist conflicts between the Armenian, Kurdish and Turkish
communities in the region of eastern Anatolia during the period of
Turkey’s national formation, according to a website developed by his
supporters.

The authorities seized about 100 books Turkyilmaz had purchased at
used bookstores and open-air markets, along with several CDs that
contained his research. He had planned to fly to Istanbul and later
to Paris to work on his dissertation before returning to Duke for the
2005-2006 academic year.

Turkyilmaz’s dissertation advisor, Orin Starn, who is the director of
graduate studies for Duke’s cultural anthropology program, traveled
to Yerevan to attend the trial, said Duke spokesman David Jarmul.

`We are so happy to celebrate his release,’ said his friend, Ozlem
Dalkiran, a human rights activist who was reached in Istanbul on Aug.
16. `His morale was fine. They were treating him okay, but of course
he didn’t have access to a telephone, which was not a regular thing
for prison. [After the sentencing] he himself called. He was out
there drinking coffee.’

Turkyilmaz received a two-year suspended sentence said Charles
Kurzman, a professor of sociology at UNC-Chapel Hill who is a member
of Turkyilmaz’s dissertation committee.

Dalkiran added that the judge upheld the confiscation of the books
but ordered that Turkyilmaz’s CDs be returned. He is required to stay
in the country until Aug. 31.

Turkyilmaz was charged with violating an Armenian law that lumps
cultural artifacts together with radioactive material, narcotic
drugs, weapons of mass destruction and missile delivery systems as
items whose export is prohibited or regulated, according to his
website. His supporters say Turkyilmaz did not realize he was
required to declare books more than 50 years old at customs.

The fact that Turkyilmaz is a Turkish citizen and a member of the
Kurdish ethnic minority has made his supporters question whether he
was singled out by the Armenian authorities because of his
nationality. Relations between Turkey and Armenia have remained
strained since World War I, when the Turkish government is reported
to have killed more than a million Armenians in a genocide that was a
forerunner to Nazi Germany’s Jewish holocaust. Among Turks, there are
many who question whether the genocide actually occurred.
Turkyilmaz’s supporters say they are mystified by his detention
because his scholarship takes a critical view of the official version
of Turkish history.

`The irony is that the Armenians arrested one of the Turkish citizens
that is most sympathetic to their cause,’ Kurzman said. `A number of
Turkish scholars over the last several years have started to question
the official narrative of late Ottoman and Turkish history. Yektan is
among those scholars. Yektan, by learning Armenian, has become
central to those efforts. Turkish scholars generally ignored the
experiences of other groups by downplaying the massive death of
Armenians during the period of 1915 to 1920. On the Armenian side,
there’s been a hostility towards Turkish and Kurdish people.’

Dalkiran said many of Turkyilmaz’s supporters suspect that the
scholar’s detention was politically motivated.

`We learnt that during the first days of his custody he was being
interrogated about his research, political affiliations and
relations,’ she wrote in an e-mail message. She cited a report by
Radio Free Europe, which has been covering the story from Yerevan, as
the main source of information that Turkyilmaz’s treatment might have
been motivated by something more than enforcement of customs law.

The article reported that the Armenian National Security Service, the
successor to the Soviet-era KGB, had considered charging Turkyilmaz
with espionage and held the scholar in its most tightly guarded jail.
Ozlem added that books Turkyilmaz left with friends in Armenia were
also seized by the police, also indicating that the authorities’
interest in him went beyond customs enforcement.

Many Armenians in the United States rallied to Turkyilmaz’s side
during his imprisonment.

`I’m a little puzzled by the fact that he was detained,’ said Marc
Mamigonian, director of programs and publications at the National
Association for Armenian Studies and Research in Belmont, Mass. `I
can’t really fathom why he wasn’t released in a week. If he’s being
singled out because he’s a Turkish national, then I don’t understand
because I don’t believe he’s some sort of genocide apologist or
denyer.’

As a matter of establishing his importance as a scholar, Turkyilmaz’s
supporters say he was the first Turkish citizen given access to the
Armenian National Archives and that he has the largest collection of
Armenian-language books in Turkey, a resource that has been used by
many international scholars.

His most prominent supporter in the Armenian community is perhaps
Richard Hovannisian, who chairs the modern Armenian history
department at the University of California-Los Angeles, and wrote a
letter to the chief judicial prosecutor offering to post bail for the
young scholar.

`Because I’ve met Yektan, I regard him as a bright graduate student
with a promising career,’ he said. `He’s a person who tries to deal
with controversial issues in an objective manner. I believe he was in
good faith conducting research in Armenia. If he broke the law
technically I don’t think he realized the seriousness of the
consequences.’

Hovannissian’s son Raffi was the Republic of Armenia’s first foreign
minister after the country gained independence from the Soviet Union.
As the president of the Armenian Center for National and
International Studies in Yerevan, he is regarded as a political
opposition figure to the current government.

The case also caught the attention of former US presidential
candidate Bob Dole, who said he was asked to intervene because of his
reputation as a longtime supporter of Armenia and because his wife,
North Carolina Republican Senator Elizabeth Dole, is a an alumna and
former trustee of Duke University.

`Elizabeth and I remain prominent supporters of your country, but the
issues raised by Yektan’s detention go beyond our ties to Armenia and
past support by raising questions about Armenia’s democratic progress
and commitment to the rule of law,’ he wrote in a letter to President
Robert Kocharian on Aug. 2. `Your treatment of Yektan makes Armenia
look bad – with good reason. Armenia has many friends in the United
States, but we cannot and will not defend the indefensible.’

Kurzman said he believes Turkyilmaz’s ordeal has helped create more
understanding between academics in Armenia, Turkey and in those
countries’ national communities abroad.

`Yektan has yet to write his dissertation, but he’s already changing
relations between these countries,’ he said. `He is the only scholar
of his generation, possibly alive, that can work in all three
languages of eastern Anatolia: Armenian, Kurdish and Turkish. There’s
an open letter signed by more than two hundred scholars from Turkey
and Armenia. By cosigning an open letter appealing for Yektan’s
release, it’s a sign that all parties respect Yektan’s work and his
potential. Perhaps there is a thaw in relations between these
academic communities.’

;SubSectionID=1&ArticleID=495&TM=59836.07

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Antelias: His Holiness Aram I meets with members of the St. Egidiobr

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr. Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

HIS HOLINESS ARAM I MEETS WITH MEMBERS OF THE ST. EGIDIO BROTHERHOOD

His Holiness Aram I met with around 30 members of the St. Egidio
secular brotherhood which functions under the patronage of the
Roman Catholic Church. His Holiness briefed the visitors about the
birthplace of Christianity, the Middle East and the long history of
Christian-Muslim coexistence.

“The Christian Muslim dialogue has its toots in the Middle East, where
these two monotheistic religions have witnessed a dialogue unfolding
over the centuries. Lebanon is in this sense a mosaic of religions
and this gives it a unique character and identity,” said His Holiness.

Aram I pointed that while international conferences and seminars
about dialogue can sometimes be fake, the Christian-Muslim dialogue in
Lebanon is not based on conference agendas. “Rather, it is everywhere:
in people’s homes, shops, on the streets, in other words, in everyday
life.”

The members of the Brotherhood attended the Holy Mass conducted in
the Chapel of St. Asdvadzadzine. They also visited the St. Gregory
the Illuminator Cathedral and the Martyrs’ Chapel in Antelias.

The St. Egidio Brotherhood often organizes international conferences
with the aim of developing a dialogue between religions. His Holiness
Aram I has frequently been invited to attend these conferences.

##

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates
of the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the
Ecumenical activities of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer
to the web page of the Catholicosate, The
Cilician Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is
located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/

News magazine in secular Turkey honors al Qaeda

News magazine in secular Turkey honors al Qaeda

By Nicholas Birch
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
August 22, 2005

ISTANBUL — A new magazine titled Kaide — Turkish for al Qaeda — praises
terror mastermind Osama bin Laden, glamorizes the July 7 bombings in London
and vividly illustrates that extremism lurks in this secular nation where
Islam is tightly regulated.

Edited in Turkey’s most cosmopolitan city, Istanbul, and available on
newsstands everywhere, the magazine veers between the laughable and the
horrible.

Headlines such as “The Taliban have killed 600 GIs” jostle for space
with proud revelations of yet another jihadist decapitation in Iraq.
U.S.-led forces ousted the hard-line Taliban regime from Afghanistan in late
2001.

The main editorial sets “domination” as its goal and
“Christian-Jewish-Western imperialism” as its main object of hate.

With investigations continuing into a Turkish group that took
responsibility for four suicide bombings in Istanbul in November 2003 that
killed 62 persons, the magazine underscores the continuing appeal of
militant Islam in a nation that seeks to join the European Union.

“Our souls are tied with al Qaeda,” Kaide editor Ali Osman Zor told the
secular weekly Tempo at his magazine’s office in Kasimpasa, a poor Istanbul
district in which Turkey’s prime minister grew up. “We are honored to have
this tie.”

Asked to explain the magazine’s cover headline — “Al-Qaeda is
liberating the world” — he described recent bomb attacks on London and the
Egyptian resort of Sharm el Sheik as “payback” for the “100,000 Iraqi
civilians … killed in the name of what [President] Bush calls ‘liberating
Iraq.’?”

“I do not consider those killed in the London attacks as innocent,” he
said, “because [they] paid taxes to the English government … which is
responsible for the killing of thousands of Muslims.”

Barely two years ago, Mr. Zor and his editorial colleagues seemed likely
to spend most of the rest of their lives in jail.

A former spokesman for the Great East Islamic Raiders Front or IBDA-C —
an extremist Salafist group set up in the late 1970s — Mr. Zor was
imprisoned in 1999 for “attempting to overthrow Turkey’s secular state by
force.”

The group’s leader, Salih Izzet Erdis, is still in solitary confinement,
but many of his followers were pardoned last year.

It is a decision the government may have regretted when IBDA-C took
responsibility later last year for the four Istanbul bombings — a claim met
with skepticism within the Turkish intelligence community.

Like another newsletter the group publishes, Aylik, the main aim of
Kaide appears to be to broaden support, but it is difficult to tell whether
it will succeed.

Support for Islamic extremism in Turkey always has been limited and
appears to be diminishing. Seven percent of Turkish respondents to a Pew
poll released last month expressed “some confidence” that bin Laden would
“do the right thing regarding world affairs.”

http://www.washingtontimes.com/world/20050821-112113-2372r.htm

BAKU: Mine Explosion Kills Soldier, Injures Another

Mine Explosion Kills Soldier, Injures Another

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Aug 18 2005

A 19-year-old Azerbaijani soldier was killed and another one seriously
injured in a mine explosion on the Azeri-Armenian frontline.

Ilgar Nuraliyev died in a blast close to the Gapanly village of Terter
District, northwest Azerbaijan early on Wednesday morning.

The wounded soldier Zamig Aslanov, who is currently receiving treatment
in hospital, is in satisfactory condition, the Ministry of Defense
told AssA-Irada.

Iberian Resources in Armenia JV with Global Gold Corp

Iberian Resources in Armenia JV with Global Gold Corp

RWE Australian Business News
August 16, 2005 Tuesday

Sydney – Tuesday – August 16

(RWE Aust Business News) – Iberian Resourcees Ltd (ASX:IBR) has
entered a joint venture agreement with Global Gold Corp USA to acquire,
finance and develop the Lichkvaz gold project in Armenia.

The company’s shares have been reinstated to quote on the announcement
and last traded at 36 cents.

The Lichkvaz project is a very large, high-grade gold/silver/copper
project that can be quickly brought into production.

The target estimate based on former soviet category estimates is
approximately 3.6 to 4.0 tonnes containing 650,000 to 750,000 ounces
of gold at a grade of 5.5 to 6.0 grams per tonne gold.

In addition to gold the estimates show the above tonnage could hols
silver at grades between 35 and 40 g/t and copper at 0.35 to 0.45pc.

Global Gold Corporation has an option agreement to acquire 100oc of
the Lichkvaz gold project.

On successful completion of due diligence Iberian Resources (80pc)
and Global Gold Corp (20pc) will control a 100pc equity interest in
the Lichkvaz.

Indian vice-prez to visit Armenia early Oct, 2005

INDIAN VICE-PRESIDENT TO VISIT ARMENIA EARLY IN OCT, 2005

ARKA News Agency
Aug 16 2005

YEREVAN, August 16. /ARKA/. Indian Vice-President Bhairon Singkh is
to pay a visit to Armenia early in October 2005, Indian Ambassador to
Armenia Dipak Vohra stated at his meeting with RA President Robert
Kocharyan. According to him, the visit will give an impetus to
Armenian-Indian partnership. The outgoing Indian Ambassador thanked
Armenia’s authorities for their help in his diplomatic mission in
Armenia. Vokhra added that that working in Armenia has been great
honor for him and he has made many friends and is leaving the country
with impressions and good memories. Ambassador Vokhra will continue
his diplomatic mission in Sudan.

In his turn, the RA President pointed out a high level of
Armenian-Indian relations and thanked the Indian Ambassador for his
active and effective work. P. T. -0–

Archbishop heads to camp

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

August 16, 2005
___________________

PRIMATE VISITS WITH YOUNG CAMPERS

In the summer, many kids go to camp for arts and crafts, fun and games,
and lessons and learning.

So do archbishops.

Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Diocese of the Armenian
Church of America (Eastern), has been busy this summer traveling to
Armenian summer camps in upstate New York, in Illinois, and at the St.
Nersess Seminary in New Rochelle, NY.

The Primate has also visited all three filled-to-capacity sessions of
the Diocese’s St. Vartan Camp. Held at the Diocese’s Ararat Center, ,
in Greenville, NY, the Armenian Christian camp this year expanded to
three sessions, each with almost 100 campers.

Along with celebrating the Divine Liturgy, he has joined in meals and
fun and games with the campers, who come from communities across the
Diocese.

On August 4, the Primate headed to Illinois, to spend a couple days at
the Diocese’s Midwest Hye Camp. Its unique setup brings whole
communities together, as parents and parishioners turn out to volunteer
for the one-week program.

“It’s always wonderful to see so many young Armenians celebrating their
faith and heritage,” the Primate said. “And it’s important to show our
young people that being an Armenian is a positive thing. Our summer
camps are obviously a good way to accomplish that, and encourage a
feeling of pride.”

Numerous clergy and community leaders have also attended sessions at
both St. Vartan and Hye Camp. The expanded St. Vartan Camp had 230
campers, while Hye Camp hosted 135 campers.

“At each camp we did a discussion with campers about the Diocesan ‘Year
of the Youth’ and carrying the flame. The kids really were excited to
be at a camp that was an Armenian Christian camp,” said Jennifer Morris,
the Diocese’s coordinator of youth outreach who spent time at each camp.
“Through our camps we hope to strengthen their faith in our Lord and
Savior Jesus Christ, and help them understand the history of our
people.”

On July 30 and 31, 2005, the Primate traveled to the town of Andes, in
upstate New York to visit with the campers at Camp Nubar, sponsored by
the Armenian General Benevolent Union. The Primate arrived on Saturday
afternoon in time to celebrate “Christmas in July” with the campers,
before celebrating the Divine Liturgy on Sunday.

Along with his stops at summer camps, the Primate has also made several
visits to the St. Nersess Seminary Summer Sessions. The seminary has
been bustling with activities as it hosts young people — from junior
high school students to college graduates — for intense and exciting
programs that bring them closer to their Armenian heritage and Christian
faith.

One special feature this summer at the seminary was a deacon’s training
program, that gave young altar servers a hands-on study of the role of
deacons in the Armenian Church.

“All these young people are extremely committed to serving their
communities and their church. By attending these summer sessions at St.
Nersess, they are taking advantage of one of the most spiritually
enriching activities we offer,” the Primate said. “They are taking the
first steps to becoming future leaders of our churches and communities.
I encourage every parish to invest in the next generation of leaders by
sending their young people to the seminary’s summer sessions and our
summer camps.”

— 8/16/05

E-mail photos available on request. Photos also viewable in the News
and Events section of the Eastern Diocese’s website,

PHOTO CAPTION (1): Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate, celebrates the
badarak with campers at the Diocese’s St. Vartan Camp program.

PHOTO CAPTION (2): Campers at the Diocese’s Midwest Hye Camp visit with
the Primate during his stop at the camp in Illinois.

PHOTO CAPTION (3): Archbishop Barsamian delivers communion during his
stop at the AGBU Camp Nubar.

PHOTO CAPTION (4): The Primate takes time to visit with participants in
one of the summer sessions at the St. Nersess Seminary in New Rochelle,
NY.

# # #

www.armenianchurch.org
www.armenianchurch.org.

“You Are Wrong, Thinking That Authorities Are Strong: Once You Will

“YOU ARE WRONG, THINKING THAT AUTHORITIES ARE STRONG: ONCE YOU WILL GET
UP AND SEE THAT THEY DO NOT EXIST ANY MORE,” ALEXAN KARAPETIAN STATES

YEREVAN, AUGUST 15, NOYAN TAPAN. “I state for political slow-witted
persons: we have a clear party line, and it is worked out not in
foreing states and not at international organizations.” Alexan
Karapetian, the Deputy Chairman of the “National Unification” party
made such a statement at the August 13 press-conference. According
to him, main intrapolitical developments of the nearest future will
be connected with the discussion of the project of the constitutional
reforms. A.Karapetian informed that Artashes Geghamian, the leader of
the party prepares a speech containing some details of “traitorous
machinations” of the rulling regime. A. Geghamian is going on
to present those facts at the August 29 session of the National
Assembly. “Waiting for death is worse than death itself, and our
people knows that the day will come when those authorities will go
away, and we’ll help to quicken that day,” A.Karapetian stated. He
expressed a confidence that the authorities will surely go away,
as the situation matures gradually: one day you will get up and see
that they don’t exist any more,” the Deputy Chairman of the “National
Unification” party stated. He also exposed to strong criticism the
position of the Armenian All-National Movement: “You support Robert
Kocharian and Serge Sargsian, and your newspaper “Aravot” spreads
different rumours about Geghamian. But you will not succeed!”

Georgian president calls for greater economic links with Armenia

Georgian president calls for greater economic links with Armenia

Imedi TV, Tbilisi
15 Aug 05

[Presenter] About an hour ago President Saakashvili opened the
newly-renovated boulevard in Batumi. Our correspondent Diana Trapaidze
is in Batumi and has the details.

[Passage omitted]

[Correspondent] We said that many Armenian people have come here
on holiday and some Armenian journalists are here too, reporting on
Ajaria. Naturally, they are interested in Ajaria because many of their
fellow citizens are holidaying here. The president met the Armenian
journalists and we can now listen to what he said to them.

[Saakashvili, in Russian] I see with delight how rapidly the Armenian
economy is developing. Annual growth in Armenia is about 10 per cent.
I think that there are many things we should learn from Armenia, for
example how to organize the banking system, a system for micro-loans,
a cooperative system in agriculture and the export of agricultural
produce.

I think that we do not just need to learn about these areas, we should
establish links. We should also develop links to organize visits to
both countries, so that people who go to Armenia also come to Georgia
and vice versa. There should be no border obstacles.

I think there are good opportunities for working together in the
energy sector, not just bilaterally, but also the transit of energy,
electricity or gas.

There are also opportunities that have not been exploited at all.

Over the years we have had two feudal economies. This era will end. I
think Armenia emerged from this crisis earlier and Georgia is now
enjoying rapid economic growth. Developing without each other would
not be rational, natural or right.

[Passage omitted]

Turks rethink idea of EU membership

Turks rethink idea of EU membership
By Seth Rosen

The Washington Times

THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Published August 14, 2005

ANKARA, Turkey — Turks are becoming increasingly disillusioned with
the European Union’s stringent stipulations for membership and are
rethinking entering a club they have yearned to join for 40 years.

After the initial jubilation in December 2004 of securing an October
date to begin accession talks, the need to make concessions on
politically sensitive issues has engendered a tide of uncertainty in
this expanding nation of 70 million.

In a poll conducted in May, 63 percent of the Turks who responded
said that they would like to see their country attain membership —
down from 75 percent in December.

“The general enthusiasm about membership is eroding, and as the EU
demands become clearer, the public will shy away more and more,”
said Hasan Unal, a professor of international relations at Bilkent
University in Ankara.

French and Greek officials called last week for Turkey to recognize the
Greek Cypriot government in Cyprus or risk derailing its EU bid. This
is part of a mounting list of demands from EU members that challenge
Turkish identity and fundamental values, politicians and analysts
here said.

“Europeans don’t fully understand the limits to patience on this
side,” said Suat Kiniklioglu, director of the Ankara office of the
German Marshall Fund of the United States. “We’re not yet counting
on Plan B, but the euphoria is gone.”

Expectations were raised after the December decision, as Turks
anticipated an immediate flood of foreign investment and a decrease
in unemployment. A disappointment has permeated the nation as no real
benefits have accrued to date, said Emine Sirin, an independent member
of Parliament.

Since December, many Turks have seen a significant change in the
attitude of Europeans. As public opinion in most EU countries has
crystallized against Turkish accession, European politicians have
started taking a firmer stance as well.

One of the central reasons cited for the rejection of the European
constitution in France and the Netherlands in May was disgruntlement
with past and future enlargement of the bloc, especially for
predominantly Muslim Turkey.

More worrying for Turkey is the German election scheduled for
September, in which the Christian Democrats are favored to win. Their
leader, Angela Merkel, is an adamant opponent of Turkish membership and
instead advocates a “privileged partnership.” French President Jacques
Chirac has vowed to hold a separate referendum on Turkey’s membership.

This is part of an increasingly unjust treatment of Turkey’s
application, said Onur Oymen, the vice chairman of the Turkey-European
Union Joint Parliamentary Committee, who points out that French
citizens did not vote when Bulgaria, Croatia and Romania applied.

Some European politicians, emphatically led by the French, have called
on Turkey to recognize the mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman
Turks in 1915 as “genocide,” a red line for all Turkish politicians.

“People are disappointed with the double standards we are facing,”
said Hasan Ali Karasar, a researcher at Ankara’s Center for Eurasian
Strategic Studies. “What they ask for is against our tradition,
culture, history and strategic location.”

Others are more cynical and think that the European Union is meddling
in Turkey’s internal affairs to dissuade it from continuing with
negotiations.

“What the EU is trying to do is frustrate us with unacceptable demands
so that Turkey will say ‘We give up and don’t want to be a member,’
” said Mr. Unal, the professor at Bilkent University. “This way,
they don’t have to turn us down.”

A growing chorus of pundits in Turkey, frustrated with perceived EU
interference in internal matters, is beginning to see a “privileged
partnership” as an attractive measure. A special status would pull
the country closer economically to the European Union but allow it
to retain its sovereignty.

It would also restore a sense of balance to Turks, who currently
possess little leverage in their discussion with the European Union,
Mr. Unal said.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/world/20050813-113817-6834r.htm
www.washingtontimes.com