Airport workers take over sacred job handled for centuries by clergy

Kansas City Star, MO
Sunday, Oct 19, 2008

Nation

Airport workers take over sacred job handled for centuries by Armenian clergy

By LOUIS SAHAGUN

Los Angeles Times

MICHAEL ROBINSON CHAVEZ

Muron, a holy oil used by the Armenian Church, has been concocted in
an Armenian cathedral for 1,707 years. Every seven years since
A.D. 301, priests have trekked to the Cathedral of Etchmiadzin in
Armenia.

They go to retrieve freshly brewed muron ‘ a sweet-scented holy oil
stirred with what is said to be the tip of the lance driven through
Jesus’ side ‘ and carry it back to their dioceses.

Prepared in a massive silver caldron, the mixture of herbs, flower
extracts, spices, wine and pure olive oil is derived from an original
batch mixed at the Armenian Church’s founding 1,707 years ago. It is
replenished every seven years by pouring old into new, continuing a
mysterious connection between distant generations.

The priests traditionally have traveled home with their portions in
jars cradled in their arms, because muron is supposed to be handled
only by ordained clergy.

That all changed late in September when ancient tradition collided
with a 21st-century obstacle put in place since the last trip for the
holy oil: As a liquid, muron cannot be taken aboard commercial
airliners, according to airport security rules.

`We were very worried. In the old days, we carried the muron in our
hands,’ said His Eminence Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, primate of the
Western Diocese of the Armenian Church of North America, which is
based in Burbank, Calif. `I would never have given away that
privilege, but we had no option.’

Derderian bundled up six containers in cloth and packed them snugly in
three suitcases. Airport baggage handlers took it from there.

`I was confident that nothing would happen to it,’ he said. `You do
your best, and then trust in God.’

Derderian’s containers arrived safely after a 20-hour flight.

Derderian declared mission accomplished Oct. 7 when priests from
churches across Southern California gathered in his office.

Their 7-ounce portions of the amber-hued oil were presented on a
silver tray: 15 small glass jars with white screw-cap lids.

Over the next seven years, the muron will be used ‘ a few drops at a
time ‘ primarily for christenings.

`It’s important to be a part of the muron process,’ Derderian
said. `It really takes you back in time.’

Valley Beth Shalom rabbi a treasure for humanity

Los Angeles Daily News, CA

Valley Beth Shalom rabbi a treasure for humanity
By Holly J. Andres, Staff Writer

Article Last Updated: 10/17/2008 11:37:30 PM PDT

ENCINO – He’s at an age when he could add "emeritus" after his title,
but "retired" isn’t part of Rabbi Harold M. Schulweis’ vocabulary.

The 83-year-old rabbi from Valley Beth Shalom isn’t lounging around
his Encino home watching TV. Teaching, writing and speaking out about
injustices and unkindness in the world continues to be a never-ending,
full-time job.

"He is a magnificent human being. He’s a great Torah scholar and a man
of great moral consciousness. He is an inspiration to me," said Marcy
Rainey, a member of Valley Beth Shalom in Encino who has known
Schulweis for 14 years.

Schulweis will receive the John Allen Buggs Humanitarian Award for his
interfaith leadership from the Los Angeles County Commission on Human
Relations on Thursday at a luncheon in Monterey Park.

Buggs was a civil-rights leader and was part of the commission from
1954 to 1967.

"I am particularly moved about the award, even though I’m a strong
believer of the separation of church and state," Schulweis said. "I’m
not a guy who is a political individual. I was totally dumbfounded. I
accepted with great delight."

Schulweis founded a group called Jewish World Watch to monitor
human-rights violations around the world. Among his efforts on that
front last year was to offer solidarity with the Armenian community.

"He came here to the diocese with Jewish World Watch with a proposal
to recognize the Armenian Genocide. He comprehended that the truth is
the truth and that it’s not political," said Archbishop Hovan
Derderian from the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church of North
America. "His role in the community is very important. He has a
genuine respect for all humanity and he has the ability to bring
communities closer."

The 1,700 families at the conservative Jewish congregation treasure
Schulweis, and there was no surprise that their beloved rabbi is among
Newsweek magazine’s list of the "Top 50 Inspirational Rabbis in
America" – and in the top 20 for two years in a row.

"He is really a remarkable man with an intellect above and beyond most
of us. He has a deep goodness," said Rabbi Bradley Artson, dean of the
Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies and vice president of the American
Jewish University in Los Angeles.

Janice Kamenir-Reznik, president of Jewish World Watch, has known
Schulweis for 25 years as a member of Valley Beth Shalom. She admires
the way he brings together theology, philosophy and Torah to call
people to humanitarian action.

"He was revolutionary in turning around how we see the Holocaust," she
said. "He said, `Where was the godliness? Find those godly people who
saved Jews."’

Schulweis also has contributed to the anthology of Jewish learning
through authoring books on Jewish philosophy, life-cycle events,
poetry and daily meditations.

His latest book, "Conscience: The Duty to Obey and the Duty to
Disobey," published in September, considers the "hidden inner compass"
that leads people to ethical and moral decisions.

"What would I like people to remember about me? That I helped break
down the insularity of faith and that I urged people to have the
wisdom to look through the eyes of the other."

[email protected] 818-713-3708

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

India has a fair chance

Hindu, India
Sunday, Oct 19, 2008

India has a fair chance

Manuel Aaron

CHENNAI: A 62-player Indian chess contingent will arrive in Vietnam on
Sunday to participate in the World Youth Chess Championships in the
under-8, 10, 12, 14, 16 and 18 categories, in open and girls only
draws.

India has the second largest contingent after host Vietnam with
96. The next highest is Russia with 48. The total strength of the
Indian contingent is 110 including the coaches and others.

The first of the eleven Swiss rounds begins on Sunday and the
tournament ends on October 30.

Fair chances

Indians have a fair shot at medals in the five Open and three girls
categories.

In the under-8, Jeet Jain, Abhimanyu Puranik and Bhaskar Gupta are
seeded one, two and four. Diptayan Ghosh and Sidhant Mohapatra are
seeded two and five among 91 players in the under-10 category. In the
under-12, Shiven Khosla and Girish Koushik are seeded second and
fifth.

In the under-14, N. Srinath is seeded second and will have to battle
it out with top seed Polandâs Swiercz and 2007 World Under-12
champion Daniel Naroditzky of USA.

India has three International Masters in the under-16 ‘
S.P. Sethuraman, B. Adhiban and M. Shyam Sundar. But the top seed in
this category is Ter Sahakyan, an Armenian with a near grandmaster
rating of 2495.

The under-18 has one British and two Vietnamese grandmasters as top
seeds.

Clear favourite

In the under-8 girls’, Riya Savant of Goa is the top seed as she is
the only FIDE-rated player among 55. In the under-10 girls’ section,

Sweety Patel is seeded second and Ivana Furtado fourth. In the
under-14 girls’, the Orissa talent Padmini Rout is top seed with last
year’s bronze medal winner in the under-12 girls, Shalmali Gagare
seeded sixth.

At the same championship last year at Antalya, Turkey, India had one
gold (Ivana Furtado, under-8 girls), two bronze (Prince Bajaj, u-10
and Shalmali Gagare, girls u-14). A disastrous last round had cost the
country quite a few medals.

Will the `Bradley Effect’ decide outcome of poll?

Daily Nation, Kenya

Will the `Bradley Effect’ decide outcome of poll?

By GITAU WARIGI
Posted Saturday, October 18 2008 at 16:51

In Summary Some whites had told American pollsters that they would
vote for Bradley only to vote Deukmejian instead

For years, there was something embarrassing that was taken as a given
in Kenya.

There was this ingrained belief that a certain community could never
get any of its members elected president, perhaps due to cultural
reasons.

One of the most important outcomes of the December election was the
way this myth was directly confronted. Even though Raila Odinga
narrowly missed being elected president, there is no question that
this myth was finally exploded.

Something similar is unravelling in America, but with far more
potentially momentous consequences.

Ignore the talk about economic turmoil or about Republicans and
Democrats and all that. The central issue there, or call it the
elephant in the room, is race.

Can an African-American be elected to the White House, only a mere
generation or so after the 1965 Voting Rights Act guaranteed black
Americans their right to vote?

IN MY ESTIMATION, THE MOST momentous speech Barack Obama has ever
given is one he delivered on March 18 this year on the question of
race in America.

The venue he chose, Constitution Hall in Philadelphia where the
country’s founders debated the framing of the US constitution, was
symbolic.

He was forced to speak out at a time when his campaign was threatened
with destruction by the controversy over the Rev Jeremiah White.

But rather than just respond to the pastor’s rhetoric in the manner
politicians usually do, he did something startling by placing the
matter of race in its wider context as something that was a specific
problem for America and whose resolution required deep soul-searching.

Obama’s speech may not have finished off the bigots, but it raised the
bar on the conversation of race higher than probably any other
mainstream American politician has ever placed it.

Prejudice is something that works in subtle, corrosive ways.

Once upon a time, in 1982 to be precise, a black man called Tom
Bradley, who had been mayor of Los Angeles, decided to run for
governor of the state of California. By all accounts, he was a good
and capable man.

His opponent was a white Armenian-American called George
Deukmejian. All the polls indicated Bradley was way ahead of
Deukmejian as election day approached. But when voting was over,
Deukmejian had beaten Bradley.

Ever since, this phenomenon — where white voters tell pollsters they
will vote for a black candidate when in reality they won’t — has come
to be known as the Bradley Effect.

Could this Bradley Effect ultimately undo Obama? We will soon know in
November.

All the polls in the US say Obama is way ahead of John McCain. But
people have a tendency to lie to pollsters.

Nobody likes being called a racist, or a tribalist for that
matter. Rather than risk being called that, some whites in America are
almost certainly telling the pollsters they will vote for Obama when
their real intention is to vote for McCain.

Many voters who had already cast their vote for Deukmejian in
California told exit polls they had voted for Bradley.

Then there is a fairly large and troubling group calling themselves
`Undecideds,’ meaning that they have not quite made up their minds for
whom to vote.

But surely, could anyone not yet have made up their mind with election
day less than three weeks away?

There is a tendency in Kenya, which is overwhelming among
African-Americans, to denigrate McCain as some old coot, maybe even a
bigot himself. That would be unfair.

Not many people perhaps know that, from the outset, McCain strictly
forbade any of his campaign team members from ever bringing up or in
anyway exploiting the Jeremiah Wright-Obama connection.

An even more unfortunate by-product of the American election campaign
is the manner in which African-Americans came to despise Bill Clinton
because of the bitter primary battle for the Democratic Party
nomination between Obama and Hillary Clinton.

THIS RIFT IS ONLY NOW BEING repaired after African-Americans realised
Obama stood no chance on November 4 unless the Clintons helped out. No
doubt some racial innuendoes had been peddled from the Clinton
machine.

Nonetheless the fury of the African-American reaction was completely
out of proportion.

In his appointments and even his social habits, Bill Clinton, when he
was president, was someone who showed real empathy with
African-Americans in a way no other American president had done
before.

* * * *

The Waki report has finally buried the myth peddled by certain guilty
politicians that the Rift Valley killings were `spontaneous.’

The importance of constituting a tribunal to deal with these little
Satans cannot be over-emphasised.

ANKARA: Turkey needs a Praesenz Schweiz

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
19 October 2008, Sunday

Turkey needs a Präsenz Schweiz

A recent Turkish media delegation visit to Switzerland organized by
the country’s official public diplomacy agency has revealed Turkey’s
urgent need for a similar agency. Präsenz Schweiz (Presence
Switzerland) invited a group of Turkish journalists for a three-day
visit to Zurich, Bern and Lausanne in order to introduce the Turkish
media to the Swiss democratic system and economy ahead of the first
ever Swiss presidential visit to Turkey.

Swiss President Pascal Couchepin will come to Turkey on the occasion
of the third meeting of the Turkish-Swiss Economic Forum.

The Swiss president met the Turkish media delegation during the
Präsenz Schweiz working trip and assured Turkish readers, through the
journalists, that Switzerland wants to look to the future — not to
the past — by means of Turkish-Swiss relations. Couchepin’s
future-oriented remarks came as a response to the Turkish journalists’
questions about the bad reputation of his country in Turkey, a
reputation nurtured by the fact that Switzerland refuses to name the
Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) a terrorist organization and rejects
extradition requests of Turkey for renowned terrorists residing in
this country. The Swiss president reminded the Turkish delegation that
his country does not label any organization, save the ones declared to
be so by the UN Security Council, as terrorists. "And that includes
only the Nazis and al-Qaeda," he said. Asked about how the Israelis
respond to the fact that Switzerland does not designate organizations
such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad as terrorists, he explained, "Israel
is not always happy with us, and we are not always happy with Israel,"
adding, "But this does not prevent us from loving that country."

A second issue that was voiced in the meeting between the Turkish
delegation and the Swiss president was the infamous anti-racism law in
Switzerland that penalizes denial of the alleged genocide against the
Armenians of Anatolia at the beginning of the 20th century. A citizen
of Turkey has already been convicted of this so-called crime and
another case is still pending. The Swiss president claimed that the
genocide law was a judicial issue and not a political one. Couchepin
said the law was originally passed in reference to the genocide
against the Jews during World War II. "But the judiciary has the
authority to interpret the laws, and judges decided that this law
should apply to the events of 1915, also," he explained. The Swiss
president noted that his country’s official position on the genocide
claim is that history belongs to the historians. "The historians have
to find a common interpretation for these tragic events," Couchepin
said.

Despite the tense question-and-answer session, the Swiss president’s
visit with the Turkish media delegation was able to impress the
Turks. The president was apparently well informed about how to appeal
to the hearts of the Turks, and he accordingly told the Turkish
delegation about his prior visits to various Turkish cities and how
impressed he was by Turkey’s natural environment and
history. Commenting on Switzerland’s position on the Ilısu Dam — a
controversial dam project that will leave one of the oldest human
settlements in the world submerged under water and will, if certain
obstacles are overcome by Turkey, be financed by Germany, Austria and
Switzerland — he said Turkey is a country that does not lack history
and archeology even in one inch of its lands, and thus it has to make
a decision about its priorities. The president thereby both explained
his country’s willingness to support the project and win the hearts of
the Turkish delegation.

The trip featured several other important meetings that aimed to
introduce the Turkish journalists to the seemingly complex and
difficult-to-grasp political system of Switzerland. The journalists
met with former Swiss Parliament Speaker Christine Egerszegi, who gave
a brief lecture on the working procedures of lawmaking in her
country. Ms. Egerszegi commented on a recent public initiative to pass
a law banning the construction of minarets in Switzerland. "If you are
able to collect 110,000 signatures to call for a referendum, you can
suggest any law you want. If you want that all the doors in
Switzerland should be painted blue and if you have enough signatories,
you can do that. That will be put to a referendum," she explained. The
Federal Council and the parliament are not altogether silent in the
face of public-initiated lawmaking processes, but their reports can
only play an advisory role to help the public decide how to vote. The
Federal Council decided that the public initiative was valid because
building minarets is not related to the freedom of conscience, but the
council warned that banning minarets could be a nullification of the
freedom of expression of a faith.

As the visit of the Swiss president coincided with the 80th
anniversary of the opening of the Swiss Embassy in Ankara, the Turkish
delegation also received a lecture by Ambassador Christian Meuwly
about the past 80 years of diplomatic relations between Switzerland
and Turkey. Ambassador Meuwly is head of the Europe and Central Asia
Division of the Political Directorate of the Swiss Foreign Ministry,
and his division covers Turkey. During his presentation Ambassador
Meuwly reminded the Turkish journalists of a statement by Swiss
Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey: "The relations between
Switzerland and Turkey are good and solid and based on a long and rich
tradition." Ambassador Meuwly also read the first article of the
first-ever treaty of friendship between Switzerland and Turkey, signed
in Geneva in September 1925: "There shall be established inviolable
peace and sincere and perpetual friendship between the Swiss
Confederation and the Turkish Republic, as also between the nationals
of the two states." The Turkish-Swiss friendship treaty was second
only to the Turkish-Polish friendship treaty that was signed in
Lausanne during the Lausanne Treaty negotiations in 1924. Asked about
the extradition of PKK terrorists to Turkey, Ambassador Meuwly said
that the extradition process is working fully and that several PKK
terrorists arrested in Switzerland had been extradited to
Turkey. Meuwly didn’t give any numbers or particular names, but
assured the Turkish journalists that the two countries’ ministries of
justice are cooperating fully on the issue and that the Turkish side
is satisfied with the results.

Präsenz Schweiz had cleverly booked the Château d’Ouchy for the
Turkish media delegation to stay in Lausanne. Château d’Ouchy is the
place where the negotiations for the Lausanne Treaty took
place. During their stay in Lausanne the Turkish delegation received
lectures on the new Constitution of the Swiss Confederation and the
country’s supreme court. Professor Luzius Mader told the Turkish
journalists about the process through which the new constitution had
been prepared. The process took some 30 years and the public was fully
enabled to contribute. Mader was himself an influential figure in the
preparation of the final draft of the constitution. He explained how
the committees working on the new constitution adapted certain
principles along the way about the use of an understandable
language. The fact that terms "secular" and "secularism" never appear
in the constitution attracted the attention of the Turkish
delegation. Asked whether the Swiss Constitution has any "untouchable
articles" Professor Mader replied in the negative and added, "You have
to trust the people."

Another principle adapted by the constitution-preparation committees
was that of "adequate normative density." This meant giving the
appropriate amount of place and emphasis to issues in the
constitution. According to the information provided by Mader, the
former Swiss Constitution had five pages of articles on alcoholic
beverages, their preparation, marketing and even consumption. "The new
constitution has only two articles about alcohol, and they say that
the confederation is responsible for making the legal regulations
about alcohol production and that while doing so the confederation
shall in particular take into account the harmful effects of alcohol
consumption," Mader said.

During their stay in Switzerland, the Turkish media delegation visited
Neue Zürcher Zeitung (NZZ), Turkish Ambassador to Switzerland Alev
Kılıç, the headquarters of Nestlé and the Paul Scherrer Institute
(PSI), where Swiss researchers are applying the state-of-art
technology of proton therapy for treatment of cancer tissues.

The overall message of the trip organized by Präsenz Schweiz was
summarized in the very personality of the guide for the trip,
Dr. Sibylle Ambühl. Dr. Ambühl is the wife of the state secretary of
the Swiss Confederation and guides foreign delegations to
Switzerland. With her humble manners and punctual programming, Ambühl
managed to give the Turkish delegation the sense of "European-ness"
and the vision of establishing a similar agency for Turkey.

Präsenz Schweiz is the organization that coordinates the Swiss
presence all over the world. It links Swiss organizations from the
fields of business, politics, culture, tourism, sports and youth in a
single network in order to promote the image of Switzerland
worldwide. The organization was first established to break the
negative image created in the 1990s when historical documents proved
that Switzerland had been unable to maintain its neutrality during
World War II and had a certain amount of responsibility in the
atrocities perpetuated against the Jews during the war. A diplomat
from Präsenz Schweiz told Sunday’s Zaman that his organization
supplies the missions of the Swiss Confederation all over the world
with know-how and financing for cultural activities that will promote
Switzerland’s image.

Präsenz Schweiz publishes booklets about Switzerland in several
languages, including Turkish, and runs a Web site at swissworld.org, a
gateway to Switzerland. There is no turkishworld.org or .com yet.

19 October 2008, Sunday
KERİM BALCI ANKARA

Aguilera concert to storm palace

The National, United Arab Emirates
Sunday, October 19, 2008

Aguilera concert to storm palace

Loveday Morris

Last Updated: October 18. 2008 8:53PM UAE / October 18. 2008 4:53PM GMT
Singer Christina Aguilera at the Africa Rising Festival in London, Oct
14, 2008. J Ryan / AP

ABU DHABI // Christina Aguilera’s concert at the Emirates Palace hotel
on Friday will be the biggest-budget music production the country has
ever seen, with a 14-piece backing band, a light show and a fireworks
display.

The Grammy award-winning singer, whose hits include Genie in a Bottle,
will perform on the lawns of the hotel to an expected audience of
20,000 people.

`The show will have all the bells and whistles associated with a big
American songstress,’ said Lee Charteris, the event’s producer.

The stage for the concert will be built across a large central
stairway, with 200 lights and three video screens, the largest of
which is 10 metres wide. Radio 1 DJs will appear on a second stage
before and after the concert.

Tickets, which are priced from Dh295 to Dh890 (US$80 to $222), are
still available.

Aguilera is the latest in a series of stars, including Justin
Timberlake, Bon Jovi and Elton John, to perform at the Emirates
Palace. The success of previous shows has prompted the hotel to
consider building a permanent concert stage in the grounds.

The Abu Dhabi show is part of the singer’s `Back to Basics’ tour, to
promote her latest multi-platinum-selling album. More subdued and
sophisticated than some of her earlier shows, the tour has seen
Aguilera return to her soul roots, the genre she has said most
inspires her music.

Aguilera, 27, who has sold more than 25 million records worldwide, is
scheduled to release her sixth album next year.

Born on Staten Island, New York, she was known to her neighbours as
`the little girl with the big voice’. She got her break at the age of
12, on the US talent show Star Search, which led to a role in the
Disney Channel’s children’s television show The New Mickey Mouse
Club. Her recording of the theme song for the 1998 Disney film Mulan
landed her a record deal with RCA.

The opening act for the concert was confirmed last week as Taleen
Kalbian, an Armenian-American singer.

Four years ago, Taleen, then 16 years old, debuted in the UAE by
headlining her own concert in Abu Dhabi.

Taleen, now 20, is classically trained and has been described as `the
next Christina Aguilera, meets Aaliyah and Cher seasoned with a pinch
of Celine Dion’ with a sound that is a blend of `pop, hip-hop, opera
with R&B sensibilities’.

`With a powerful voice and dynamic stage presence, Taleen was the
obvious choice to be the opening act for a superstar such as
Christina,’ said John Lickrish, managing director for Flash, the
company that organised the event.

A website, , has been set up for the Emirates
Palace concert to keep fans updated.

[email protected]

www.christinaaguilera.ae

ANKARA: Landmark Ergenekon case may face many tough hurdles ahead

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
19 October 2008, Sunday

Landmark Ergenekon case may face many tough hurdles ahead

The trial of suspected members of Ergenekon is due to start tomorrow
in the town of Silivri, where Workers Party members have announced
they will protest the trial.

Sometimes one might find a legal proceeding or an investigation to be
threatening for one reason or another. Take, for example, the case of
Ergenekon — a shadowy network with dark links to individuals and
groups nested within the state that is accused of murders and attacks
over several years to serve its purpose of social engineering and
perhaps taking over the government.

Sunday’s Zaman explains what steps would prevent a court case from
being resolved and some key facts from being illuminated.

First, here’s some background about Ergenekon: Eighty-six suspects
will stand trial starting Monday in the Silivri courthouse in
TekirdaÄ?. They face charges of provoking the people to revolt
against the government and other crimes. The charges were brought as
the result of an investigation that started accidentally when
ammunition and weapons were discovered in a house in a poor
İstanbul neighborhood in June 2007.

During the course of the investigation, which lasted more than a year,
dozens of suspects were detained, released or arrested on suspicion of
trying to take over the state. Journalists, academics, writers and
retired senior army generals are being held as suspects in the
case. So how might the whole process be stalled and the public’s
attention diverted?

1) Exclude vital evidence

First, if the case you are working to stop has gotten this far, you
should not have let that happen in the first place. But still, the
Ergenekon case offers an excellent example of how there is still hope
if your case is in deep trouble.

The prosecution’s most significant weakness in the Ergenekon case is
the absence of the diaries allegedly belonging to a former general
chronicling coup plans against the Justice and Development Party (AK
Party) in 2004 and 2005. Many experts agree that it was smart to try
to keep these diaries out of the indictment, as without such vital
evidence, the case might have been covered up like the Susurluk affair
of 1996.

In that case, the relationship between a police chief, a Kurdish
deputy who led his personal army against the Kurdistan Workers’ Party
(PKK) and an internationally sought mafia boss was fully exposed. The
three were in a Mercedes that crashed in the town of Susurluk, killing
the mafia boss and the police chief on the spot.

Although the relationship was revealed, the Susurluk affair was
masterfully covered up, and the image of the state’s criminal joyride
was soon forgotten, leaving the public with only a hunch, which later
died and evaporated completely.

While you’re at it, you should obscure the most vital evidence of the
case. Fikri SaÄ?lar, who used to be a member of a parliamentary
commission established to investigate the Susurluk affair, says it’s
certain that the lack of the diary evidence will hurt the
prosecution’s case. SaÄ?lar explained to Sunday’s Zaman that the
indictment includes two main accusations against the suspects:
"establishing a terrorist organization" and "attempting to overthrow
the government and Parliament of the Republic of Turkey."

SaÄ?lar says the first claim can be proven easily because hand
grenades belonging to Ergenekon suspects found in the beginning of the
investigation were of the same batch as those used in an attack at the
Cumhuriyet daily in 2006. But proving the accusation of plotting to
overthrow the state or the government is possible only by using
journals kept by Navy Commander retired Adm. Ã-zden Ã-rnek as
evidence for the jury.

"If the coup diaries are not included in the indictment,"
SaÄ?lar said, "this case cannot be solved."

The choice to exclude the diaries is also confirmed by the Democratic
Society Party’s (DTP) Å?ırnak deputy Hasip Kaplan, who
says the Ergenekon investigation might become a fiasco without the
diaries.

Make the indictment lengthy

According to the most recent information from the prosecutors, the
Ergenekon indictment comprises 2,455 pages and 441 folders filled with
papers, reports, photographs and other documents that serve as
evidence to the accusations. It is practically impossible for the
already slow Turkish judiciary to overcome the gruesome task of
reviewing the massive Ergenekon indictment and its evidence
files. Experts agree that this is one of the most important problems
the prosecutors face.

Judging from what Parliament’s Susurluk Commission member
SaÄ?lar says, another way to doom the case is to politicize
it. SaÄ?lar said, "Everyone who opposed the prime minister or
the government was detained as part of the investigation at some
point, which complicated the already monolithic proportions of the
indictment." He also said that looking at Ergenekon from a left,
right, neo-nationalistic or other ideological perspective would render
the case fruitless.

"Tens of thousands of pages of evidence annexed to a 2,455 page
indictment. New detentions or arrests could kill the case,"
SaÄ?lar said, emphasizing that mixing politics with the
judiciary will ensure that the case leads nowhere.

Study earlier cases

Revisiting the Susurluk case is another way to bring one closer to the
goal of ensuring a fruitless investigation and trial. Mehmet
ElkatmıÅ?, who led the Susurluk Commission, said the
biggest mistake so far in the Ergenekon investigation was waiting to
start one trial against so many suspects instead of trying those
suspects against whom the prosecution already had a case. "And the
remaining extensions of the gang should have been discovered as those
trials went on," ElkatmıÅ? said.

"Ergenekon is not a new phenomenon," ElkatmıÅ? said. "It
has existed since Susurluk. If the mistakes in Susurluk are repeated,
this is over before it begins."

ElkatmıÅ? said that retired Gen. Veli
Küçük — currently under arrest as a major
Ergenekon suspect and a former army member whose name was implicated
in Susurluk in 1996 — and former Police Chief Mehmet AÄ?ar were
able to refuse to testify to the Susurluk Commission under laws
designed to protect "state secrets." ElkatmıÅ? said a
similar mechanism might be used to stop some Ergenekon suspects from
testifying. ElkatmıÅ? said that if some invisible power
is hindering prosecutors, then granting the prosecutors special powers
could be a solution.

Musa SıvacıoÄ?lu, formerly the head of a
commission set up in Parliament to shed light on a similar incident
that exposed links between the military and a bombing in the
southeastern township of Å?emdinli in November 2005, also
expressed concern that the "state secret" path could work in
Ergenekon, which reveals another important hint about how to doom a
case: Pull some strings, but don’t give the prosecutors time to react.

Like SaÄ?lar, ElkatmıÅ? said detaining everyone who
criticizes the government might damage the course of the trial and
could be a way to ensure that nothing significant comes out of it.

Other potential ways to kill a case

Other experts in dealing with similar shady affairs point to potential
difficulties that might arise for the prosecution. Listen to them
carefully, for some of these potential pitfalls could emerge if you
try hard enough or get really lucky.

Ersönmez Yarbay, who headed a commission in Parliament to
investigate the 1993 killing of journalist UÄ?ur Mumcu — an
assassination now suspected of Ergenekon — said the greatest danger
threatening the case is Parliament not exerting greater effort to shed
light on the facts. Similarly, Hasan Fehmi GüneÅ?, who
was the interior minister of 1978, when journalist Abdi
İpekçi was shot dead in an assassination also attributed
to "deep state" elements, says, "A common will and approach in all
state agencies is necessary for successfully resolving the case."

Sadık AvundukluoÄ?lu, who headed a parliamentary
commission into unresolved murders that occurred between 1990 and
1995, said foreign centers supporting Ergenekon should be
exposed. Yusuf AlataÅ?, former president of the Human Rights
Association (İHD), said he believes there are serious
differences of opinion among the three state prosecutors on the
Ergenekon case. "The chief prosecutor is giving the impression that
things are happening outside his control," he said. "The prosecution
is a single unit. Every other prosecutor should work for him. This
handicap should be removed; otherwise, the trial might be
unsuccessful."

Accusations against Ergenekon suspects

The indictment made public last month claims the Ergenekon network is
behind a series of political assassinations over the past two
decades. About 90 suspects will stand trial starting Monday.

The victims of alleged Ergenekon crimes include a secularist
journalist, UÄ?ur Mumcu, long believed to have been assassinated
by Islamic extremists in 1993; the head of a business conglomerate,
Ã-zdemir Sabancı, who was shot dead by militants of the
extreme-left Revolutionary People’s Liberation Party/Front (DHKP/C) in
his high-security office in 1996; secularist academic Necip
HablemitoÄ?lu, who was also believed to have been killed by
Islamic extremists, in 2002; and the 2006 Council of State attack.

The indictment also says Küçük, believed to be
one of the leading members of the network, had threatened Hrant Dink,
a Turkish-Armenian journalist slain by a teenager in 2007, before his
murder — a sign that Ergenekon could be behind that murder, too. The
indictment also accuses the group of plotting to assassinate Turkey’s
Nobel laureate author Orhan Pamuk and of a plan to attack DTP
deputies. The group also had close ties to terrorist organizations
including Hezbollah and the PKK, according to the indictment.

The Ergenekon indictment accuses a total 86 suspects, 70 of whom are
in jail, of links to the gang. Suspects will face accusations that
include "membership in an armed terrorist group," "attempting to
destroy the government," "inciting people to rebel against the
Republic of Turkey" and other similar crimes.

19 October 2008, Sunday
ERCAN YAVUZ ANKARA

Leinier Dominguez to Play in Wijk ann Zee

Cuba News, Cuba
October 19, 2007

Leinier Dominguez to Play in Wijk ann Zee

HAVANA, Cuba, Oct 18 (acn) Cuban chess Grandmaster Leinier Dominguez
will play in the Corus Championships in the Dutch city of Wijk Aan
Zee, announced the renowned player this Friday to Granma newspaper.

This is a dream come true" declared Leinier referring to the fact that
this is the world´s second most competitive tournament, with only 14
elite players Dominguez (2719 ELO) ranks 21st in the world according
to the last standings given by FIDE at the beginning of this month,
and leads Latino America, enough merits to be invited to such a high
class tournament, which will run from Jan. 16, 2009 to February 1st.

The last Wijk ann Zee tournament was won by Norway´s Magnus Carlsen
(2,786) and Armenian Levon Aronian (2,757), who won eight of the 11
rounds.

Before Wijk ann Zee, at the beginning of November, the Cuban will
participate in the Speed Chess Tournament in Kazajstan and then move
on to the Dresden Olympiad in Germany.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

San Fernando Valley is no longer Reagan Country

Contra Costa Times, CA

San Fernando Valley is no longer Reagan Country
By Tony Castro, Staff Writer

Article Launched: 10/18/2008 12:00:00 AM PDT

It is a shift that has turned what once was Reagan Country into
Democratic territory in recent presidential campaigns, with this
year’s landmark Nov. 4 election expected to be no different.

"The San Fernando Valley was historically conservative, and it was
Reagan Country when Reagan was governor and later president," said
Allan Hoffenblum, a Los Angeles-based Republican consultant and
strategist. "Outsiders still think of it that way. But it’s no longer
true. It’s an area that still has a lot of active Republicans, but
they’re by far the minority.

"The Valley today is Latino. It’s Jewish. It is almost the Westside of
L.A."

Once ethnically isolated from Los Angeles – from which it sought to
secede just six years ago – the Valley today is far removed from the
Valley of the 1980s, when it was known as "America’s Suburb," the home
of shopping malls, car dealerships, Valley Girls and Republican
conservatism. Now, it has become a reflection of L.A.’s diversity.

The locals in the sun-reddened hills above Chatsworth have long called
a hillside rock formation "The 12 Apostles," but in the 1980s a few
jokingly rechristened it "Ronnie and his Kitchen Cabinet."

"It’s Reagan Country," said Shep Woods, who grooms horses at one of
the stables off Lake Manor Drive, which snakes through the hillside
and becomes Box Canyon Road overlooking the Ronald Reagan Freeway on
the way to Simi Valley. "Or used to be."

In the generation since Reagan was president, the political landscape
of the San Fernando Valley has undergone a dramatic shift shaped by
demographic, racial, ethnic, religious, cultural and socioeconomic
changes that have altered the reality, if not the perception, of the
area. Population now diverse

In 1950, non-Latino whites accounted for at least 90percent of the
Valley’s population, and in 1980, that figure was still 74percent.

Today, the Valley is 42percent Latino, 10percent Asian and almost
5percent African-American. And 25percent of the Valley falls under the
Census Bureau data description that includes Armenians, Iranians and
other Middle Eastern ethnic groups. More than 40percent of the
Valley’s residents are foreign-born.

"Individually, as groups, the numbers are significant," said Daniel
Blake, professor of economics and director of the San Fernando Valley
Economic Research Center at California State University, Northridge.
"As a whole, the numbers are staggering."

Those statistics do not begin to include the role that religion and
lifestyle play in the Valley. The Jewish population is significant,
estimated by some analysts at 15-20percent. Muslims account for an
estimated 5percent.

Homayoon Hooshiarnejad, publisher of Asre Emrooz, a Valley-based daily
Farsi-language newspaper, goes so far as to liken the Valley to the
Middle East, where historically rival religions, cultures and people
have forged a confluence of identities that no one individually
controls.

"It is hard to say what the cultural influence of Iranians, some of
them Jewish and some of them Muslim, has been on the traditional San
Fernando Valley, but it is important," he said. "By sheer presence
there is influence. The culture, heritage, values."

So, too, has been the quiet impact of alternative lifestyles, most
noticeably by gays and lesbians, whose presence has come to the
forefront this year. The first gay couple to marry in Southern
California was from North Hills, and more marriages of same-sex
couples from the Valley have followed.

"Imagine all that in the Valley Girls days," said University of
Southern California professor and author Elizabeth Currid, who
specializes in the role of popular culture in shaping society.

"You add more people into the mix with different ideas, different
backgrounds, different values, it’s just implicit that you’re going to
change the dynamics, and I would argue that more diversity is always
better."

The political impact is telling. By the 2004 presidential election,
almost two-thirds of voters in the five City Council districts wholly
within the Valley voted for Democratic nominee John Kerry. That
exceeded how he did in Los Angeles County or California – or even in
his home state of Massachusetts.

Republicans say the changing of the guard in the Valley was the
product both of the demographic shift of the last generation and the
state party’s own ultra-conservative positions of the 1990s.

Possibly no one personifies that change more than Alex Wisner, 46, of
Chatsworth, a one-time foot soldier in what became known as "The
Reagan Revolution" in American politics.

A small-business man and lifelong Republican, Wisner once registered
Valley voters for Reagan and recalls that time fondly.

"I was a Ronald Reagan Republican," he said. "I remember registering
so many Democrats who were re-registering as Republicans, all because
of Ronald Reagan. I still consider myself a conservative, but I’ll be
voting for Barack Obama. He’s the new Ronald Reagan."

Such words would seem like political blasphemy to most Republicans,
especially when just to the west of the Valley earlier this year, all
the GOP presidential hopefuls sought to out-Reagan one other and claim
his legacy when they debated at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library
in Simi Valley.

Significantly, it is now Simi Valley and nearby Santa Clarita that
have become what the Valley once was politically – the "New Reagan
Country," said Raphael Sonenshein, a political science professor at
California State University, Fullerton.

"It’s away from the midpart of Los Angeles … and the Valley," he
said. "And it’s where Republicans all sort of worship at the shrine of
Ronald Reagan."

But Lynn Kissinger of Chatsworth remembers all too well when that
shrine encompassed much of the Valley.

Kissinger, 80, and her husband, Ed, are lifelong Republicans whose
presidential voting history chronicles the GOP story of the past five
decades: Dwight Eisenhower in the 1950s, Richard Nixon and Barry
Goldwater in the 1960s, Nixon and Gerald Ford in the 1970s, down to
Reagan in the 1980s and on to the Bushes.

For the past half-century from her home just below Box Canyon,
Kissinger has seen the West Valley bloom from an extended orchard to a
suburban oasis whose occasional shifts of underground faults have been
no match for the changes in the human landscape.

"The Valley homestead after World War II was fairly simple with
returning GIs, mostly white, looking for a nice safe space to live and
raise their kids," said Elizabeth T. Adams, a professor of popular
culture and folklore at CSUN. "What has happened is that a diversity
of folks have moved to the Valley since then for a variety of reasons.

"And over time, neighbors having normative experiences with people of
different backgrounds and different religions realize that they
actually do have a lot more in common than they have differences.

"There comes a multicultural understanding that conquers irrational
fears."

Lynn Kissinger, for one, knows that something became different in the
past few years, something that, while she can’t put her finger on it,
nonetheless has altered the way she views her world. Her children are
grown, and she now has a family legacy in her grandchildren.

What brought about her change is personal, and she is hesitant to talk
about it publicly. But she has confided to her daughter, Holly Huff,
57, of Santa Susana Knolls, who said her mother will soon be doing
something that would have been anathema to Republicans of an earlier
time.

"She says she won’t be voting for a Republican for president," Huff
said. "It’s the first time. She will be voting for Obama, and it has
nothing to do with race. Race isn’t an issue for her. What is an issue
for her is the world and all the challenges we face. And she has had a
change of heart as to who she has faith in to meet up to those
challenges.

"She has seen change, and it doesn’t frighten her."

[email protected] 818-713-3761

Baku: LTP: Reduced influence of Russia in Caucasus soonest resolutio

Today.Az, Azerbaijan

Levon Ter-Petrosyan: "Reduced influence of Russia in the Caucasus
proves the soonest resolution of the Karabakh conflict not in
Armenia’s favor"

18 October 2008 [13:11] – Today.Az

Speaking at a meeting last Friday, first president of Armenia, head of
the Armenian National Congress Levon Ter-Petrosyan urged the country’s
parliament to recognize independence of "Nagorno Karabakh".

Ter-Petrosyan considers that the external policy of powers puts the
state interests of Armenia under threat. He considers that in the
established situation West will not miss a chance to settle the
conflict and it will occur in conditions when trying to prove his
legitimacy, Serzh Sargsyan is rushing for West, simultaneously obeying
the policy of the latter and driving Russia out of the negotiation
process on the Karabakh conflict.

Explaining the actions of once pro-Russian Sargsyan for changing the
orientation, Ter-Petrosyan noted that "Russia does not have to prove
something to him and he does not expect something from Russia, so his
main task is to attain West’s favor. What can Sargsyan offer to the
West? Armenia has no natural resources.

It has nothing except a state interest and the president has chosen
the way of sacrificing the state interests.

At the same time, the leader of the Armenian opposition said that he
is against any orientation, as it leads to bitter results, like in
Georgia’s case. He noted that when being a president he conducted a
balanced policy, while Kocharyan chose a complementary one and the
difference is only in terminology.

"The aforementioned facts and reduced influence of Russia in the
Caucasus after recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia prove the
soonest resolution of the Karabakh conflict not in Armenia’s favor",
noted Petrosyan.

He said Sargsyan was provided with a deadline to fulfill his pledges
on the Karabakh settlement until PACE January session. Ter-Petrosyan
lists the way, which will allow to preserve Armenian statehood: soften
the sociopolitical tensions in the country, improve relations with
Russia and eliminate all differences, paying special attention to the
Karabakh issue, which means that Armenian powers should spare no
efforts for specifying the issue about possible referendum in
Karabakh.

He noted that Armenia should refuse to represent the so-called
"Nagorno Karabakh Republic" in the talks and demand involvement of
Khankendi as a party in the negotiation process.

/ARMENIA-Today/

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress