Union Of Young Conservatives Files Application To French Ambassador

UNION OF YOUNG CONSERVATIVES FILES APPLICATION TO FRENCH AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA REGARDING SARGIS HATSPANIAN’S ISSUE

NoyanTapan
Jan 14, 2010

YEREVAN, JANUARY 14, NOYAN TAPAN. The leaders of the Union of Young
Conservatives (UYC) on January 13 filed an application to the French
Ambassador to Armenia Serge Smessof, informing him that "the father
of political prisoner, French citizen Sargis Hatspanian is on the
verge of death".

The UYC expects that in this connection the French ambassador will
insist that the right of prisoners – Armenian citizens, who are
allowed to say last farewell to a deceased parent, be extended to
Sargis Hatspanian. "We hope that the Armenian authorities will not
reject this humane demand of France, an ally of the Armenian people,"
is said in the UYC’s application.

‘Star Players Were Injured’: Hatis Head Coach Provides Explanation F

‘STAR PLAYERS WERE INJURED’: HATIS HEAD COACH PROVIDES EXPLANATION FOR DEFEAT

Tert.am
13:14 ~U 15.01.10

"Our leading players were playing in Orenburg with injuries. That
played a certain decisive role and contributed to Nadezhda’s victory,"
said Hatis Yerevan’s head coach Gia Ghazanchian, after yesterday’s
game in Nadezhda’s hometown, Orenburg. According to him, "it was the
team who wanted to succeed more that won. Nadezhda is a pretty strong
team, which has really good players."

As reported by Armsport.am, Nadezhda head coach Yuri Karandashov,
in turn, noted that they didn’t play with the best group of players,
they were putting the stress on 5 players. "A pretty tough fight took
place; the players were fighting for each individual square inch.

Sheana Mosch showed an amazing game, which contributed to Nadezhda’s
victory,"s aid Karandashov.

As previously reported, Hatis lost (65-80) in yesterday’s game
and is no longer in the running for the 2009/10 FIBA EuroCup Women
Sixteenth-Finals championship.

Some 314 Companies With Foreign Capital Registered In Armenia Last Y

SOME 314 COMPANIES WITH FOREIGN CAPITAL REGISTERED IN ARMENIA LAST YEAR

ARKA
Jan 13, 2010

YEREVAN, January 13, /ARKA/. In 2009 a total of 314 companies with
foreign capital were registered in Armenia, the country’s National
Statistical Service reported.

According to official figures, a total of 2.5 billion Drams were
invested in these companies. Some 1.9 billion were invested in 115
companies which had both foreign and local capital. The other 199
companies had only foreign capital. In 2009 some 2,465 corporate
companies were registered in Armenia with a total investments of 3.9
billion Drams. ($1 – 378.08 Drams).

Las Vegas: Victim Had Hopes For Citizenship

VICTIM HAD HOPES FOR CITIZENSHIP
By Mike Blasky

Las Vegas Review – Journal
for-citizenship-81305367.html
Jan 13 2010

She had to wait only one more month.

After nearly two decades battling to become a U.S. citizen and keep
her family together, Anoush Sarkisian — living illegally in the
country — finally had a hearing scheduled for February.

Her case in immigration court had been reopened, and it was the
biggest hearing of her life, Arsen Baziyants said.

"Once (a case) is re-opened, that’s 99 percent of your problems
solved right there," said Baziyants, Sarkisian’s Las Vegas lawyer
and longtime family friend. "It’s about the best news you can hear."

Sarkisian, 50, and her daughter Mariam, in her early 20s, were shot
and killed in their home Sunday when Gregg Thomas, Mariam Sarkisian’s
23-year-old boyfriend, entered their residence at 1809 Warrenville St.,
near Charleston Boulevard and Hualapai Way.

Mariam Sarkisian was the mother of Thomas’ 1-year-old daughter, police
said. He was upset at the lack of time he was being given with his
child, police said.

In what police are saying appears to be a murder-suicide, Thomas shot
Mariam Sarkisian, shot her mother and then went outside and turned
the gun on himself.

"He was all about that baby; he was insane about it," said Mariam
Sarkisian’s friend Ashley, who asked that her last name be withheld.

"I never thought he’d do what he did, though."

Court records show Thomas had no local criminal convictions, and Las
Vegas police said he had only traffic citations. There are no Family
Court records involving Thomas or the girl’s mother.

The child is being cared for by Emma Sarkisian, Mariam’s older sister,
a family member said.

Gonya Sarkisian, the sisters’ aunt, said Anoush Sarkisian’s four
remaining daughters are staying with relatives in Las Vegas. Three
of the girls are teens, she said.

"They’re all very fragile," she said. "This is very shocking."

The girls’ father, who was out of town, is returning to Las Vegas
today, she said.

The Sarkisian family has been in the news before, with their journey
toward U.S. citizenship well-documented by Las Vegas media.

Anoush Sarkisian immigrated to the United States from Soviet Armenia
in the early 1990s with her husband, Rouben, and their two daughters,
Mariam and Emma. The family members arrived at different times.

Rouben and Anoush Sarkisian divorced in 1999; he married an American
woman and obtained U.S. citizenship.

That same year, Anoush Sarkisian was ordered deported after losing
an appeal to receive political asylum from the government.

But she would not voluntarily leave her five daughters, three of
whom were born after she and Rouben Sarkisian immigrated. Those three
daughters received automatic U.S. citizenship.

Anoush Sarkisian might have expected the government to come for her,
but officials first sought to deport her two eldest daughters.

In 2005, Mariam and Emma — then ages 17 and 18, respectively — were
rescued from the brink of deportation to Armenia after Sen. Harry Reid,
D-Nev., petitioned then-U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Tom Ridge
to release the girls and delay their deportation.

The girls would have been sent back to the land of their birth despite
not speaking the language or having the resources to survive in the
struggling nation that once was part of the Soviet Union.

"They went through hell. Can you imagine?" Baziyants said.

The Sarkisian sisters would remain in the United States, but their
future was uncertain, as was their mother’s.

In early 2009, Anoush Sarkisian was arrested and jailed for two months
at the North Las Vegas Detention Center.

Baziyants said she could have been deported, but because of a
technicality, her case was deferred.

Neither Armenia nor Ukraine, the U.S. government’s alternative
destination, would recognize her as a citizen, he said.

"Our argument was that she was stateless, the whole family was
stateless," Baziyants said. "All she had was an expired Soviet
passport."

The mother would rejoin her family, but uncertainty continued to swirl.

The family’s success in the court system, Baziyants said, was a result
of a loophole he recently discovered.

There is an immigration provision for citizens of former Soviet
republics who immigrated to the United States before October 1990,
he said, and Anoush Sarkisian and the eldest daughter, Emma, fit
the requirements.

But Mariam Sarkisian, who immigrated a few months after the deadline
with her father, did not meet the requirements.

"I remember telling Anoush about the good news," Baziyants said.

Still, the likelihood that Mariam Sarkisian would have been able to
receive citizenship was remote, he said.

Because Emma and Anoush were possible candidates for citizenship,
Baziyants said, there was a slim chance for Mariam, whose child is
a U.S. citizen.

"We still probably wouldn’t have been successful," he acknowledged.

Emma Sarkisian will be present for next month’s court hearing, he said.

Baziyants said he felt he "owed" Anoush Sarkisian, whom he had known
since childhood, and would continue to fight for her family.

Anoush Sarkisian had been craving U.S. citizenship, in large part
because she had not been to Armenia to see her mother for 19 years.

"I hope Emma gets her papers," he said. "That’s the least I can do
for Anoush."

http://www.lvrj.com/news/victim-had-hopes-

Nagorno-Karabakh Peaceful Settlement Agreement Cannot Not Consider K

NAGORNO-KARABAKH PEACEFUL SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT CANNOT NOT CONSIDER KARABAKH PEOPLE’S POSITION: LAVROV

Tert.am
16:32 ~U 14.01.10

During today’s press conference, Armenian journalists asked Russian
Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergey Lavrov whether Russia’s interests in
the energy sector (that is, Russia’s cooperation with Turkey in that
sphere) could be more important than the Nagorno-Karabakh people’s
right to self-determination.

"They can’t be," Lavrov responded laconically. He then turned his
attention to the issue of connecting the Nagorno-Karabakh issue with
Armenian-Turkish relations.

"We see no connection whatsoever between the settlement of the Karabakh
conflict and the normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations.

It’s not right to look for any sort of tie between them," said Lavrov.

The Russian foreign minister also added that, in the issue of resolving
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the Russian side, along with the other
two Minsk Group co-chair countries, strives to assist the two parties
to reach an agreement that will stem from the interests of both the
Armenian and Azerbaijani peoples.

Continuing, Lavrov said that when talk turns to the current stage of
the co-chairs’ efforts in assisting the two state leaders to agree
to those principles on which the conflict settlement is to be based,
that means that those principles will also become grounds from a
legal perspective for the preparation of a peace agreement mandated
to be put into effect.

"We are also working from that [perspective] which, in the process
of preparing the agreement, cannot not take into account the Karabakh
people’s position. As for how that will be carried out, that’s still a
subject of discussion. However, for me, it’s clear," concluded Lavrov.

Close Session On Protocols Gets Underway

CLOSE SESSION ON PROTOCOLS GETS UNDERWAY

Aysor
Jan 12 2010
Armenia

Chairman of Armenia’s Constitutional Court Gagik Harutyunyan said at
the beginning of the open hearing on Armenian-Turkish protocols that
court’s members had taken into account the statement by ARFD made on
the protocols.

ARFD pointed in the statement that "the protocols contained threats
to Armenian national safety."

Court’s members left the hearing for a close meeting to make a decision
to continue the session or not.

Armenia: Court Gives Green Light To Peace Plan With Turkey

ARMENIA: COURT GIVES GREEN LIGHT TO PEACE PLAN WITH TURKEY
Marianna Grigoryan

EurasiaNet
Jan 12 2010
NY

Armenia’s Constitutional Court on January 12 approved a draft agreement
for reconciliation with Turkey, but heated opposition to the agreement
shows no sign of dying down.

As protestors in downtown Yerevan yelled for "No concessions to
the Turks!," the Court, guarded by a police line, ruled that the
"[o]bligations" contained in the protocols signed on October 10, 2009
by Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan and Turkish President Abdullah
Gul" comply with the Constitution of the Republic of Armenia. [For
details, see the Eurasia Insight archive.]

The protocols will next go to Armenia’s National Assembly for a vote
on ratification. Turkey’s parliament has yet to ratify the documents.

The protests and the Court’s prolonged deliberation – Sargsyan
submitted the protocols for review on November 19, 2009 – sparked
some speculation that a decision by the body’s nine judges might be
delayed. But the final verdict took few Armenians by surprise. The
Court is not known for going against the Sargsyan administration’s
policies.

Controversy over whether or not the protocols will hold Armenia to
so-called "pre-conditions" – an expression that embodies multiple
popular misgivings – nonetheless looks set to continue.

Many Armenians fear that the protocols presume an Armenian withdrawal
from territories surrounding the disputed region of Nagorno Karabakh
that are claimed by Turkish ally Azerbaijan. Others take issue with
the formation of a commission of historians to review materials
related to Ottoman Turkey’s 1915 slaughter of ethnic Armenians; an
event most Armenians see as an indisputable case of genocide. Still
others worry that the protocols’ call for the recognition of the
Armenian and Turkish borders means the permanent loss of lands in
Turkey once held by Armenia.

Ruling Republican Party of Armenia spokesperson Eduard Sharmazanov
counters that the reconciliation process is proceeding according to
plan, and presents no cause for alarm.

"We will never agree to establish ties [with Turkey] with any
preconditions, as we have repeatedly declared," Sharmazanov told
EurasiaNet.

The Court found that the protocols’ terms "have an exclusively
bilateral, interstate character and cannot relate to or be attributed
to a third party. . ."

But that finding will most likely do little to persuade domestic
critics of the peace process. The nationalist Armenian Revolutionary
Federation – Dashnaktsutiun and 14 other political groups have
announced plans for a joint lobbying effort to persuade parliament
to vote against ratification. Protestors earlier burned copies of
the documents outside the Constitutional Court.

"The Armenian authorities got carelessly stuck in the Armenian-Turkish
process, but cannot master it," fumed Armenian Revolutionary Federation
– Dashnaktsutiun member Armen Rustamian at a January 11 rally in
Yerevan. "The earlier they realize their mistakes, the easier it will
be to avoid the threats looming over the country and the people."

Armenia’s government coalition holds a clear majority in parliament,
but that tactical advantage does not discourage key members of one
minority opposition party allied with the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation-Dashnaktsutiun.

Oppositi on Heritage Party parliamentary faction leader Stepan Safarian
charged that Turkey’s ongoing references to Nagorno Karabakh leave
but one option open for Armenia’s opposition, despite government
reassurances that concessions on the issue will not be made. "We will
do our best both in the parliament and outside it to suspend this . .

. unpatriotic process," Safarian pledged.

Editor’s Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based
in Yerevan.

BAKU: Turkish American Cultural Alliance Reacts Homework On So-Calle

TURKISH AMERICAN CULTURAL ALLIANCE REACTS HOMEWORK ON SO-CALLED "GENOCIDE"

Today
ws/politics/59227.html
Jan 11 2010
Azerbaijan

According to , one of the well established
Turkish organizations in United States, Turkish American Cultural
Alliance stated that there are certain schools in United States which
assign students with homeworks on so called Armenian "genocide."

Calling Turkish families to be aware, Chairman of Turkish American
Cultural Alliance Hamit Demirkan, Advisors for Public and Media
Relations Ibrahim Kurtulus, Ali Cinar and Ceran Olga Gokdeniz announced
that Turkish families should take necessary measures and ask their
children whether they have assigned with homework on so-called Armenian
"genocide" or not.

Underscoring that the issue is very important, Administrators of
Turkish American Cultural Alliance stated that families who have
information on this issue may send the information to the address:
[email protected]

In one of the most important schools in New York, a Turkish student
was assigned with homework on 1915 incidents. Turkish-American student
and American students in the class were urged to use only the sources
that are prepared in accordance with Armenian thesis.

Getting information about the situation, officials of Turkish American
Cultural Alliance stated that they are working on the issue and they
will have a meeting with school management.

http://www.today.az/ne
www.historyoftruth.com

ANKARA: Military’s Political Status No Longer Sustainable, Says LacI

MILITARY’S POLITICAL STATUS NO LONGER SUSTAINABLE, SAYS LACINER

Today’s Zaman
Jan 11 2010
Turkey

Omer Laciner, editor-in-chief of the socialist monthly Birikim, has
said some circles in the military realize that the military’s current
political status is no longer sustainable and therefore support the
government-initiated probe into the system.

He said the military has lost credibility as there have been more
revelations about illegal connections within it.

"For example, the Council of State attack was linked to the Ergenekon
network, and there were reports that security flaws played a large
role in the deaths of many soldiers in the Daglıca and Aktutun
attacks [by the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK)]," he told Today’s
Zaman for our Monday Talk interview, referring to the ongoing probe
into the Ergenekon criminal network accused of plotting to overthrow
the government.

‘The Council of State attack was linked to the Ergenekon network;
there were credible reports that security flaws played a large role in
the deaths of many soldiers in the Daglıca and Aktutun attacks. All
that did not give the military the upper hand; on the contrary,
it left big blemishes. Therefore, some forces in the military have
realized that its current political status is no longer sustainable’

The 2006 Council of State attack left a senior judge dead. Although it
was initially presented as an attack by a religious fundamentalist,
the gunman’s links to Ergenekon were later confirmed during the
investigation. The PKK’s attack on Daglıca in 2007 and on Aktutun
in 2008, in which dozens of soldiers died, raised serious questions
about how and why the respective military units were slow to act and
take the necessary precautions to prevent the attacks in time despite
the existence of intelligence reports warning of the terrorists’ plans.

"These have left big blemishes on the military; therefore, some
forces in the military realize that its current political status is
not sustainable," he added. He was referring to the ongoing civilian
search of a Special Forces Command facility in Ankara where the
military’s top-secret documents are archived.

The search started about two weeks ago as part of a probe into a
potential assassination plot against Deputy Prime Minister Bulent
Arınc allegedly devised by a group in the military.

Regarding repeated messages from the president and the prime minister
about harmony among state institutions, Laciner said it is impossible
not to have conflict.

"Indeed, conflict is required in this process," he said.

You wrote an article in mid-2008 saying the Turkish military acts
like a political party. Has this changed at all?

This is what I have been saying for years. A military force acting
like a political party does not occur easily, and it is hard to
maintain. Political parties in Turkey try to live with this fact. This
also goes for the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party),
despite its apparent support for a legal investigation into the
strike forces of shady mechanisms inside the military such as the
Special Forces."

Are you referring to the Ergenekon investigation and the ongoing
search at the Special Forces Command?

The role of the Special Forces was clear even in the first Ergenekon
indictment. But the prosecutor was unable to move forward to further
investigate it. The fact is that this approach has been a part of
the policies of the government, which has a certain strategy. They
had to choose their fights.

Omer Laciner, editor-in-chief of socialist monthly Birikim

A graduate of the 1966 class of the Military Academy, he was arrested
in 1971 because of his connections with the Turkish People’s Liberation
Party/Front (THKP/C). He was expelled from the military for political
reasons. Upon his release from prison in 1975, he was among the
founding members of Birikim, a socialist cultural periodical.

Following the Sept. 12, 1980 coup, he was in exile in France.

What fights do you think the government was able to undertake?

We have to go back in time to revisit the environment that brought
the AK Party to power. They saw an unprecedented rise from the ashes
of the Welfare Party (RP), which was closed for becoming a "focus of
anti-secular activities." AK Party politicians did not even know if
they could pass the 10 percent election barrier. But they received the
votes of the pious Muslims — more than even the center-right, which
was fragmented. It had two goals: to alleviate or eliminate fears
(stemming centrally from the military in addition to other forces)
about the party’s intentions toward secularism and to consolidate its
center-right votes. In order to consolidate its center-right votes, the
government left some issues out of its agenda, such as the headscarf
ban and religious education, after some initiatives in that regard,
but stepped back as those issues were not central to center-right
voters. The government also had knowledge of the military’s role
in Turkey.

Please elaborate.

The military’s social engineering plans were revealed on several
occasions. Examples include the "postmodern" Feb. 28, 1997 military
coup, the West Study Group (BCG) and others like "The Plan to Shape
Turkey." There were also a number of attacks, such as the one on the
Council of State [that left a senior judge dead and seriously injured
four others in 2006] and assassinations, such as that of Hrant Dink
[a Turkish-Armenian editor murdered by an ultranationalist youth in
January 2007], through which status quo forces intended to create an
impression that the government was unable to lead the country. When
did the government start to investigate these issues?

Turks and Kurds: From marriage of love to marriage of interest

You wrote a book in 1991 on the Kurdish problem titled "Henuz Vakit
Varken" (When We Still Have Time). Do you think there is still time
to solve the Kurdish problem?

There is some emotional breaking off. Both sides are in their
nationalistic identity boxes now. Both sides lost a lot of energy in
efforts to fuse with each other. But neither side can take the risk
of a legal and physical break-off, though they feel that they should
stay in their own homes.

The government’s initiative was hurt by the closure of the pro-Kurdish
Democratic Society Party (DTP), but do you think the Kurdish initiative
will still continue?

It has to. The government will have no other opportunity. But the
initiative should have an element to prevent this emotional break-off
from going further. If not, there might be conflict that cannot be
prevented. We had an example recently in Mersin where Kurds and Turks
clashed. Tomorrow, such clashes might get out of hand. The government
should therefore change its approach.

What should the government do, exactly?

The government should not start initiatives as if it is granting some
rights to Kurds out of kindness. Before TRT-6 began broadcasting,
Kurds wanted to be included in the process. They have to have a say
in it. That’s why they say the government should talk to them.

There should be talks on the basis of equality. Indeed, both sides
should be stripped of their nationalistic identities and uncompromising
positions. One side’s loss should not be considered the other’s
gain. At the end, the issue is about what kind of society they want
to be. Are we just trying to keep the Kurds inside the sovereign area
of Turks, or are we trying to consolidate the feeling of togetherness
that has been damaged among people from different ethnic backgrounds
in Turkey? Can we have the people say that they are first and foremost
"Turkiyeli" and then Turks, Kurds, etc?

Right now, the government steps back when nationalistic elements get
loud. The situation is so serious that when people joyfully celebrated
the arrival of Kurds from the Makhmour camp in northern Iraq, the
government became full of anxiety. If Kurds, who had suffered greatly
in the past, were celebrating, Turks should have been joyful, too.

When?

When the status quo forces tried to prevent the election of Abdullah
Gul to the presidency. It was then that the government started to
fight. During the Ergenekon investigation, the government realized
that standing firm against status quo forces, and especially the
military, works. The government was able to get even more votes from
supporters of center-right parties — the True Path Party (DYP) and
the Motherland Party (ANAVATAN), both of which had seen decreasing
support and were finally eliminated from the political arena —
because of its firm stance. As a result, the government had to face a
counter-attack: a closure case against it. This was a demonstration
of how the judiciary was used by status quo forces in that fierce
battle [the Constitutional Court declared the party a "focal point
of anti-secular activity" but fell short of closing it].

‘There is conflict among institutions’ With an investigation currently
going deeper into the military’s secret files, what is the status of
military-civilian relations now?

The AK Party’s recent operations are about having the military on
its side. I don’t think the government is trying to make the military
conform with the standards of developed democracies where militaries
are silent on political issues.

Do you think the chief of General Staff supports these operations?

It is not something that the chief of General Staff can support
all alone. There is no doubt that the upper echelons of the military
support the Ergenekon operation. Some forces in the military are aware
of the fact that the military’s politicization cannot go on like this.

In 2002, they were able to have some people believe the AK Party
had a "hidden agenda," that it was promoting radical Islamization in
Turkey, that Shariah was the end goal. But it has become harder for
the military to push for that view seven years after the AK Party
came to power. This argument no longer has much credibility.

What else? What makes the military more prone to lose its highly
respected status?

Additionally, the military lost more credibility as increased
revelations showed there were some illegal connections within it. For
example, the Council of State attack was linked to the Ergenekon
network, and there were credible reports that security flaws played a
large role in the deaths of many soldiers in the Daglıca and Aktutun
attacks [by the PKK]. All that did not give the military the upper
hand. On the contrary, it left big blemishes on the military.

Therefore, some circles in the military realize that its current
political status is not sustainable. But even as those circles desire
to normalize the military, they do not want to give up all of their
financial privileges and status.

President Gul and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan insistently say
that there is no conflict among state institutions. Is this possible?

How can this process of normalization be completed without conflict?

It is impossible not to have conflict. Indeed, conflict is required in
this process. The status quo — pro-republican and staunch secularist
forces — was clearly defeated in the 2007 elections. But it does not
want to leave the arena without putting up a fight. And one of the
fiercest battles is going on at the level of the high judiciary. There
are government operations at this level, too — some through new
appointments. So at some point the judiciary will have to become
accountable. But we do not yet know if the judiciary will turn out
to be a pro-AK Party force or a clean, impartial one. The AK Party
is not very clear and straightforward in that regard.

What makes you say that?

One example in that regard is how the media sector operates. Instead
of having rules to make the sector a diverse, free, independent
and reliable one, the AK Party uses its power to bring the media in
line with the government. There is no effort by the government to
make the media fall in line with the media ethics standards of the
European Union.

If we go back to our former discussion about civilian-military
relations, do you think the period of military coups is over in Turkey?

In Turkey, the military and judiciary are still state institutions.

The majority of society still has the mentality that these institutions
should protect the state. On the other hand, it would be hard for
the military to stage coups because it has lost some prestige. If the
military stages a coup at this time, it would not have the support it
had in the past. But society unfortunately still has a pro-military
mindset rather than a democratic approach. And this mindset will be
seen clearly if society is in chaos. People would say the military
should come and correct the situation.

‘Feelings of jealousy and degradation toward new bourgeoisie’ Where
does the Republican People’s Party (CHP) stand in this debate?

The CHP is in a position to protect the military’s political role,
which became institutionalized in the 1980s. At the end of the 1990s,
the Social Democratic People’s Party (SHP), which played the role of
the CHP at the time, had a leading role in the democratization of
society. It was a party of change until shortly before the rise of
the RP. When the AK Party became a party of change, the CHP became
resistant to change. The CHP could have chosen to become more radical
in its stance and said that the AK Party’s democratization moves were
not enough. But it did not.

In your opinion, why did it not do so?

Apparently, its traditional middle-class urban supporters in western
Anatolia have felt jealous and degraded by the new bourgeoisie class
represented by the AK Party. The CHP gave in to that. Today’s debate of
secularism versus anti-secularism is indeed a class conflict between
the two middle-class segments of society.

Do you believe the Turkish left will have a say in society any
time soon?

The main problem is about finding an answer to society’s demand
for equality. Socialism should be remade. I don’t think people who
accept the old definitions of socialism would be able to play a role
on the left. There needs to be a new approach taking into account all
inequalities in the lives of humans, not only in the area of profit
sharing. Right now, the left does not have anything new or exciting to
say in that regard. But I am hopeful that it will in the near future.

Armenian citizen murdered in Moscow

news.am, Armenia
Jan 9 2010

Armenian citizen murdered in Moscow

12:20 / 01/09/2010An Armenian citizen, 39-year-old Vardan Grigoryan,
was murdered in Moscow, Russia, on the January 9 night. His body was
found in a Daewoo Espero car in Shkulev St. at 00:50 p.m.

Referring to law-enforcers, Interfax reported that the death was
caused by multiple fractures and two gunshot wounds.

Further investigation showed that the man had a conflict with his
companion. The victim must have been beaten up and later shot dead in
his own car. According to Gazeta.ru, it may have been a contract
murder: the criminal made two shots and a check shot in the victim’s
head.

Law-enforcers are now looking for two suspects.

T.P.