BAKU: Sargsyan anti-Azerbaijani statements related to election campa

Top official: Serzh Sargsyan’s anti-Azerbaijani statements related to
election campaign

20 January 2013, 11:22 (GMT+04:00)

Azerbaijan, Baku, Jan. 20 / Trend M. Aliyev /

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan’s anti-Azerbaijani statements are
related to the election campaign and aimed at collecting votes, the
deputy head of the Presidential Administration of Azerbaijan, head of
the foreign relations department Novruz Mammadov said on Sunday,
commenting on the negative statement of the president Sargsyan against
Azerbaijan in Yerevan.

“Unfortunately, the Government of Armenia uses people to their
advantage,” Mammadov said.

“This statement of Sargsyan shows that he uses the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict as a tool for staying in power, and therefore blames
Azerbaijan for everything. However, the international community and
some Armenian circles understand that the responsibility for the
conflict lies with Yerevan,” he noted.

Mammadov added that Azerbaijan seeks to resolve the conflict
peacefully and demonstrates it to the global community.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
armed forces have occupied 20 per cent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts.

Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The
co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia, France and the U.S. – are
currently holding peace negotiations.

Armenia has not yet implemented the U.N. Security Council’s four
resolutions on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh and the
surrounding regions.

Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink commemorated

Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink commemorated

“We are here today with our grief and honor. We are here today for
justice and righteousness,” his wife, Rakel Dink told the crowd.

World Bulletin / News Desk
11:48, 20 January 2013 Sunday

Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was commemorated on Saturday on
the 6th anniversary of his murder.
A large crowd attended a ceremony held outside the offices of his Agos
weekly in Istanbul, carrying banners that read “We are all Hrant, we
are all Armenians” and laying carnations and lighting candles at the
very spot Dink was shot dead on January 19, 2007.
“We are here today with our grief and honor. We are here today for
justice and righteousness,” his wife, Rakel Dink told the crowd.
American linguist and philosopher Noam Chomsky also attended the commemoration.
Chomsky was in Turkey to participate in “the 2013 Hrant Dink Human
Rights and Freedom of Expression” conference hosted by Istanbul’s
Bogazici University.
A juvenile court in Istanbul sentenced in July 2011 the gunman in
Dink’s murder, Ogun Samast, to nearly 23 years in prison.
A separate Istanbul court sentenced Yasin Hayal, another suspect in
the slaying, to life in prison for instigating the murder but it
stopped short of convicting him on the charges of acting under orders
from a wider criminal network which had been suspected of involving
high level state officials, police and military officers.
The court acquitted Erhan Tuncel, a second suspected instigator, of
charges of being involved in the suspected criminal network.
The European Court of Human Rights ruled in September 2010 that Turkey
had failed to protect Dink’s right to life.
Last week a chief prosecutor asked for the annulment of the Dink
verdict arguing that the murder involved “an organized attempt.”
“The murder was not just an ordinary killing of a person. The act had
the intention to destroy the unity of the Turkish state and create
chaos in the society. Dink’s murder was an organized assassination,”
the chief prosecutor from the Turkish Court of Appeals, said in a
petition for re-trial of the suspects.

http://www.worldbulletin.net/?aType=haber&ArticleID=102036

Entertainment: Aznavour is still young at heart

China Daily European Edition
January 13, 2013 Sunday

Aznavour is still young at heart

by Zhang Kun in Shanghai

Charles Aznavour watched the students playing and offered a helping
hand when he saw anyone in difficulty.

Few at the mental health school in Shanghai’s Yuyuan community
realized he is an internationally renowned singer, songwriter and
activist.

Aznavour, born in 1924, made his second trip to Shanghai in
mid-December. It was a private trip, accompanied by his youngest son,
but even so he was happy to set some time aside for a trip to Home of
Sunshine.

He met 30 students who ranged in age from between 19 and 35 and when
one of the teams had problems sucking at a slip of paper with a straw,
Aznavour came to the rescue.

“Some people retire, but he never will,” says his son, Patrick, the
youngest of five children.

Aznavour constantly hummed tunes as he strolled around and at 88, he’s
still touring, performing and composing.

He has just completed a tour of South America and will fly to Britain
to record a new song next month.

Aznavour made his first visit to China in June, when he performed
three songs at a gala dinner during the Shanghai International Film
Festival.

“I have sung in 19 countries, and I’d love to introduce French music
to China,” he says.

Aznavour has been one of the most enduring singers in France, famed
for his clear tenor voice and is often compared with Frank Sinatra.

He has acted in more than 60 movies and composed about 1,000 songs, in
several languages.

Aznavour’s parents were from Armenia, and he has been heavily involved
in humanitarian and charity initiatives for the country. He is the
ambassador of Armenia to Switzerland, as well as the UNESCO cultural
ambassador for Armenia.

With an artistic career spanning more than 60 years, he has
collaborated with many great artists, such as Sinatra, Edith Piaf,
Fred Astaire, Andrea Bocelli, Elton John and others.

“He has a traditional way of singing, characterized by poetic lyrics
and melodic music,” Patrick says.

“He’s an open book,” says Prestige PR’s Sarah el Asri, who organized
his Shanghai trip. Listening to him singing is like sharing French
musical history, she adds.

“He performs with a unique style. He’s like an actor that sings, and
his songs have inspired many artists.”

On China’s video sharing website Youku.com, one of Aznavour’s most
popular videos sees him collaborating with Edith Piaf, produced
through 3D digital imaging.

No, Piaf didn’t help him with his career, comments Aznavour. “She used
to promote her lovers, but I was only a friend.”

“Lovers pass by, but friendships last longer,” he says.

ANKARA: Supreme Court head prosecutor: Dink killed by an organizatio

Cihan News Agency (CNA) – Turkey
January 12, 2013 Saturday

Supreme Court head prosecutor: Dink killed by an organization

ISTANBUL (CIHAN)- The moment people heard that journalist Hrant Dink
had been murdered, on Jan. 19, 2007, many people across Turkey felt
the same thing: “This was a deep murder, and behind it stands the deep
state.” The public was well aware of the lynch campaign that had
surrounded Dink in the time before his death. In fact, in his final
two columns for Agos, a newspaper of which he was one of the founders,
he had literally described why he would be murdered, and who would
commit the act. Most of the defendants in the Ergenekon case today are
those who kept a close eye on Hrant Dink. It was as though a button
had been pressed.

All of sudden, one sentence was plucked out of a series of columns
that criticized the Armenian Diaspora; this sentence was brought to
the top of the agenda, carefully removed from its larger context to
make Dink appear to be an enemy of the Turks. And that was not all
that was done; what followed were accusations of guilt, and a legal
case was taken out against Dink, asserting that he had “belittled
Turkishness.” In the meantime, Hrant Dink himself was so sure of his
own innocence that on one television program, he asked “How could I
look at the faces of those I had belittled; how could I live with
them? I am sure I will be acquitted, but if I am not, I will leave
this country.” He was that honest and sincere of a person.

But what was at hand was neither justice, nor reality. There was an
inauspicious plan already underway against Dink, and the justice
system actually played an important role in this plan. The 301st
article of the Penal Code was then used to convict Dink. Despite three
expert witnesses telling the court, “There are no elements of
criminality in his writings,” certain circles pressed for Dink’s
imprisonment, since this would cause him to lose esteem, and make it
easy to simply eliminate him then. In short, an atmosphere ripe for
murder was being prepared. At each hearing for this case, Dink was
painted as being an enemy of the Turks by some of the same people who
today are Ergenekon suspects; he was even pushed around at the
hearings. The sentencing itself as well as all the propaganda that
took place during his trial wound up carrying Dink step by step
towards death.

The case went to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court head prosecutor,
in a notification he prepared with regards to the decision, noted that
words written by Dink in fact did not constitute the alleged crimes.
But the Supreme Court went ahead and approved of the proposed
punishment. And one of those who approved of the punishment has just
begun his job as Turkey’s first ombudsman. And another who signed off
on the punishment is also a member of the the Parliamentary Joint
Commission. Unfortunately, Turkey experienced this shame.

Consequences of the court’s ruling

In referring to this court decision, Hrant called it “My death edict.”
In his final column for Agos, entitled “Why I was targeted,” he talked
about some of the strange things that had happened in the past few
years, about the threats received by him and his family, how he felt
the walls closing around him. At the same time though, he still
thought that this country would protect him, and that this whole
lynching process was not going to end in death. And the truth is, as
someone who was writing supportive columns for Agos at the time, I
also — clearly mistakenly — believed that no one would really hurt
such a person of peace and love as Hrant Dink. I still do not
understand how we were so mistaken in this belief, or how we could
have been so naive. In fact, all of Dink’s friends share this same
sense of regret. We will always live out the regret that we didn’t
send him away, somewhere far away, during that time when he was made
into a symbol of hatred with his Armenian identity. This despite that
we all know this country so well and we were all so aware of all the
unsolved murders from the past.

And so, the assassination that occurred that Jan. 19 was carried out
by one 18 year old Ogün Samast, who came from the poor Trabzon
neighborhood of Pelitli. Yasin Hayal, who pushed Samast to carry out
the murder, as well as Samast himself and Erhan Tuncel, the man who
completed the links between Hayal and the state, were all captured. As
for the case itself, which went on for nearly five years, it was an
absolute comedy. What we witnessed over the five years it lasted was
that these suspects would sometimes threaten the Dink family, and
other times mock them. At each hearing, thousand of people would
gather in front of the courthouse to shout slogans about justice. But
from the very beginning, the court gave off signals about how it was
intent on putting this case firmly on the shoulders of these three
young men, and that despite all the glaring evidence, it would ignore
the deep darkness behind it all. There was much evidence which was
simply destroyed. A resistance of a level I won’t even bother to
explain here was shown. It was impossible to include certain pertinent
state officials in the trial. In fact, most of those whose testimonies
were relevant were promoted during the period of the trial, moving on
to higher positions.

The case ended even worse than some had expected. The court was
literally mocking the public with these results. The court delegation
rendered the decision of a life sentence in the case of Hayal,
convicting him of, “Encouraging the pre-conceived murder of Hrant
Dink.” As for Erhan Tuncel, the key assistant in the deep state ties
with Yasin and Ogün, he was acquitted, and discharged because he had
already been imprisoned for awhile.

Samast’s fate

As for Samast, who actually pulled the trigger and killed Hrant Dink,
he was convicted on charges of “pre-conceived murder” and “possessing
an unregistered gun,” and sentenced thus to 22 years and 10 months of
prison time. All other suspects were acquitted. The court lacked such
seriousness that it even forgot to issue any decision in regards to
Hayal’s brother-in-law, Coskun Igci, who had also been a suspect!
Later, it added this decision, and as it turned out, he too was
acquitted.

The court also decided that there was no organized murder of Dink that
occurred. After this decision was made public, there was a
full-fledged debate that broke out between the court judge and the
prosecutor over the “organization.” This was the first time in Turkish
history that such a prominent judge and prosecutor were fighting
before the public. The prosecutor, for his part, asserted that Dink
was the victim of a political and organized murder, and that all the
available signs pointed to this being a murder carried out by the
Ergenekon organization, which was intent on breaking down the
political system.

For awhile, the case waited for approval from the Supreme Court. And
the Supreme Court head prosecutor last Thursday shared its analysis of
the decision. The head prosecutor said the murder had been carried out
by an organization. In short, he said: “The Dink murder was not any
ordinary murder; it is clear that some of the aims involved were to
destroy the unity of the state, to weaken authority, to cause chaos
and confusion throughout the country, to lay the groundwork for
clashes, and to push our country into the middle of the international
stage.”

Because, he said, no one could come together out of the blue simply to
have others praise them for forming an organization. There is no need
to search far to determine the types of activities the said
organization, to which the defendants belonged, was involved in across
the country. For disrupting the unity of the state is a dangerous
crime and with this last act that was carried out, this danger was
realized.

When the personal attributes of the defendants, their pasts, and the
ethnic and religious make up of the those who were targeted, as well
as the profile of the people who live in our country are taken into
consideration; even though it was not possible to determine the goals
of the accused, the defendants acted in accordance with the intention
of article 302/1 (disrupting political order and the unity of the
state) of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK).

In other words, like the prosecutor for the original case, the Supreme
Court head prosecutor also examined the available evidence, and in a
very level-headed and conscientious manner, said “Hrant Dink was not
murdered by a handful of youth, but by a deeply rooted organization.”
As it is, this case caused Turkey to go before the European Court of
Human Rights (ECtHR).

I am not sure what final decision the Supreme Court will make. Because
throughout history, justice has been used in Turkey like an
ideologically created crime tool. The reforms that have been passed
over the last decade make it possible to now try the deep state and
coups, though at the same time, embarrassing cases like the Hrant Dink
case continue. It is not easy to get the thousands of prosecutors and
judges that fill the giant justice system to change gears in one day,
getting them to render a freedom-supporting decision now after they
convicted Dink when he was innocent.

That is why we said and continue to maintain that it is an absolute
must that we see political resolution and support during cases
involving the deep state and coups. In the Hrant Dink case, for as
long as we do not see more political resolution and determination, the
justice system will continue getting the message that it is “without
ownership,” and it will thus continue rendering the decisions we are
all used to. I do hope that this is not what happens this time.
Because illuminating what really happened in the Hrant Dink case means
revealing the deep state for all to plainly see.

MARKAR ESAYAN

Armenian defence ministry hails military ties with Russia

ITAR-TASS, Russia
January 18, 2013 Friday 04:12 PM GMT+4

Armenian defence ministry hails military ties with Russia

YEREVAN January 18

– The Armenian defence minister hailed on Friday the level of
military-technical cooperation with Russia, stressing that it had been
upgraded to the interstate level.

“Our military and military-technical cooperation with Russia is at a
high level,” the minister stated summing up the last year cooperation
results. Russian-Armenian military-technical cooperation has been
upgraded from the intergovernmental to the interstate level, he
stressed. Defence Minister Seiran Oganyan reminded the audience that
an intergovernmental agreement on military-technical cooperation was
signed by the two countries back in February 2003.

According to him, “a draft agreement on the development of
military-technical cooperation, this time already an interstate
agreement, has been worked out and is at the final stage of
consideration by the Russian side”. The minister marked that the new
document envisages the possibility for signing contracts in the
military-technical sphere between organizations and enterprises of the
two countries, and besides on preferential terms.

Oganyan called work on that agreement “a major achievement”. According
to him, “military-technical cooperation with Russia sees a new stage
of development,” and apart from that Armenia has “a vast field for
updating military-technical cooperation also with other CSTO member
countries”.

Last year Moscow and Yerevan agreed to set up joint defence
enterprises in Armenia, the minister said. “This will give us a
possibility to develop the defence industry,” Oganyan believes.

Focusing on the activity of a Russian military base in Armenia, the
minister said in August 2010 he and the Russian counterpart signed
within the framework of a Russian president’s visit “an agreement in
which once again stated that during its long-term stationing in
Armenia the military base will be responsible equally with the
Armenian Armed Forces for ensuring security of the republic”.

“At the present moment this base fulfils its role also with taking
into consideration the aims of the neighboring on Armenia states and
their intentions towards Armenia,” the defence minister stressed. “Of
course, certain problems exist in the activity of the Russian military
base,” he admitted.

“We would like that the resources of the base that have
operational-strategic role be deployed in Armenia,” Oganyan reported.
According to him, necessary steps are being made in that direction
within the framework of the Collective Security Treaty Organization.

When asked whether Armenia is ready to have a Russian radar station on
its territory after Moscow’s refusal to use the Gabala Radar Station,
the minister said “we would not object”.

Syrian Christians are Syrians first

Gulf News (United Arab Emirates)
January 17, 2013 Thursday

Syrian Christians are Syrians first

by Joseph A. Kechichian | Senior Writer

If misguided Christian religious leaders attempted to portray the 2011
revolution as a conflict that did not concern them, and if they stood
by the Baath regime to protect their respective communities from
alleged “terrorists,” most of their flocks finally rejected the
official propaganda that drowned them in the rhetoric of victimisation
so dear to the regime of President Bashar Al Assad. What triggered
the transformation and will this radical shift accelerate the fall of
the Baath?

Inasmuch as fear, intimidation, bigotry, putative financial gains, and
latent racism coloured much of the oratory that was uttered by a few
company clerics, Christian civilians were not only perceived as mere
victims but became casualties as well. To be sure, some were kidnapped
and killed as extremists gained ground, although many more were fodder
in the hands of state authorities. Several prelates counselled
prudence as they positioned themselves on the side of the powerful
with the likes of Greek Orthodox Bishop Louqa Al Khoury or the Syriac
priest Gabriel Dawood participating in pro-government demonstrations
that supported Bashar Al Assad.

Such mixed messages confused masses, who believed that their leaders
rejected the revolution, though most quickly became victims of the
dreaded Mukhabarat. Indeed, some Christians were prosecuted, arrested
and sometimes executed by revolutionaries, but not because they were
Christians. Rather, as was the case with others, they died and
continue to perish because they collaborated with the regime, engaged
in spying activitiess, or otherwise assisted Damascus.

Christians were also caught between Free Syrian Army and Al Shabiha
confrontations, which eliminated any neutrality they professed, and
that translated into deaths and mayhem. Of course, and this was worth
repeating, such casualties were not the result of belonging to any
particular community, for deaths befell on all without discrimination.
If churches were destroyed, so were mosques and, it may be safe to
write at this stage that many more mosques were razed than chapels and
monasteries.

If many Christians were forced to abandon their homes, many more
Muslims were in similar situations, as looting was widespread and
indiscriminate. If about 200,000 of the estimated 3.5 million Syrian
Christians were displaced, it was also critical to note that their
forced departures were not related to their religious affiliation, but
the evolution of fighting on the ground, especially in Aleppo.

Several million Muslim Syrians became refugees and were also forced
out of their homes.

Naturally, Damascus successfully presented its quest for order, as
well as its justification on the use of extreme violence during the
past two years, as a posse effort to protect Christian communities.
The latter were “victims of the revolution,” everyone was told, as the
state played its “protection of minorities” song time and again. Yet,
and though Christian clerics polarised their communities by labelling
revolutionaries “rebels” or “bandits,” such erroneous sentiments were
corrected by intellectuals who gradually restored their tarnished
reputations as they insisted that Syrian Christians were Syrians
first.

Starting in March 2011, Christians questioned church authorities, as
they informed the clergy that the uprising was not about a class,
community or a particular religion. They insisted on freedom,
diversity, respect for life and property, all majestically commended
in the Gospels. Most important, intellectual voices cautioned the
clergy not to become a tool for the moribund political system that,
regrettably, failed to register. Leading political activists
intervened to tell the leaders of their communities to desist from
regurgitating the state’s arguments.

A 30-years old Jesuit priest, Nibras Chehayed, the `poet’ of the
revolution on account of his carefully drafted missives against the
blatant use of weapons to destroy Syria, was perhaps the most
eloquent. He replaced Father Paolo Dall’Oglio, the Italian-born cleric
who served at the Mar Mousa monastery for three decades, and who was
expelled by the regime in October 2012.

They were not alone. A Canadian-Syrian attorney, Hind Aboud Kabawat,
promoted interfaith tolerance and cooperation, while Marie Mamarbachi
Seurat, the Syriac faithful whose parents were forced out of Anatolia
during the 1915 Armenian massacres and whose erudite Middle East
scholar husband, Michel Seurat, was brutally murdered in 1986 (his
remains were found in Beirut’s Southern suburbs), fought to restore
Christian credibility in the country.

Ayman Abdul Nour, who ran the online news site All4Syria, as well as
the popular singer Lina Chamamyan, along with the president of the
Syrian National Council, Georges Sabra, all added their voices to the
chorus. None has been as eloquent as Michel Kilo, who insisted on his
patriotic stances irrespective of faith, and whose eloquence in logic
and word remained unparalleled.

As civilians warned priests, bishops and patriarchs against the
machinations of the intelligence services, it was gratifying to
finally note that, after much soul-searching, a few bold clerics
changed their discourse and literally sanctioned members of the clergy
whose actions aroused many months of faithful irritation. Those who
routinely appeared on official television were asked to end their
activities since they did not reflect the positions of the
overwhelming majority of Christians who aspired towards a civil
society.

Interestingly, the newly elected patriarch of the Greek Orthodox
Church of Antioch and all the East, joined the intellectual voices
that called for a careful reappraisal. During his first press
conference after his appointment in late December 2012, Bishop Yuhanna
Yaziji insisted that what happened to Christians happened to all other
Syrians and that Syrian Christians were “in the same situation as
any”. This was a breath of fresh air.

It illustrated that not all were mesmerised by cheap rhetoric and that
a new reading to realities on the ground showed the way for the
future.

Dr Joseph A. Kéchichian is the author of Legal and Political Reforms
in Saudi Arabia.

Intl community should recognize Nagorno-Karabakh – Sargsyan

Interfax, Russia
Jan 15 2013

Intl community should recognize Nagorno-Karabakh – Armenian president

YEREVAN. Jan 15

Armenia’s victory in its war against Azerbaijan for Nagorno-Karabakh
should be legally consolidated, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan
said.

“Our foreign policy’s main goal is a definitive legal consolidation of
the victory in the war unleashed by Azerbaijan against
Nagorno-Karabakh,” Sargsyan said at an expanded session at the
Armenian Defense Ministry attended by top-ranking officials from the
legislative, executive, and judicial branches.

“The international community should recognize Nagorno-Karabakh,
because there is no logical explanation why the nation that lawfully
exercised its right to self-determination and then defended it in an
uphill battle should be part of Azerbaijan,” he said.

Sargsyan accused Azerbaijan of continuing to violate the ceasefire
accords, the Armenian press service told Interfax. “The truce signed
at Azerbaijan’s request 19 years ago formalized the victory of the
Armenian self-defense forces. However, ignoring the truce, Azerbaijan
is shelling borders of not only Nagorno-Karabakh but also the Republic
of Armenia,” he said.

“I think our neighbors understand that a war, if it happens, will be
just as devastating for Azerbaijan as it is going to be devastating
for Armenia. They will be ready to resume the war if they believe they
have absolute superiority over Armenia,” Sargsyan said.

Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh do not wish a war but “nobody should
doubt that we will give a worthy response to any challenge,” he said.

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Azerbaijan to keep to its territorial integrity principle in settlin

ITAR-TASS, Russia
January 15, 2013 Tuesday 09:30 PM GMT+4

Azerbaijan to keep to its territorial integrity principle in settling
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

BAKU January 15

– President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan has vowed his country will keep
to the principle of the country’s territorial integrity in its efforts
to settle the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

“There are principles we are not going to budge from. This problem
[the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict] must be tackled only on condition of
Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. All occupied territories must be
liberated,” Aliyev said on Tuesday at a government meeting dedicated
to the results of the country’s socio-economic development in 2012.
“This is a fair position, which is based on the international law. Our
position is immutable both in the legal and political terms.”

The Azerbaijani leader also noted that the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement
talks had been suspended “because of Armenia’s non-constructive
approach.” “I am sure that those forces in Armenia that are tackling
this issue in the light of reality are fully aware that the conflict
with Azerbaijan is fraught with nothing good,” he said.

Touching the subject of Azerbaijan’s defence potential, the president
said that the country’s defence-related expenses exceeded 3.5 billion
U.S. dollars in 2012 and will reach 3.7 billion U.S. dollars in 2013.

Baku asks OSCE to verify alleged resettlement of Syrian Armenians to

Interfax, Russia
Jan 14 2013

Baku asks OSCE to verify alleged resettlement of Syrian Armenians to Karabakh

BAKU. Jan 14

The resettlement of Syrian Armenians to the occupied Azeri lands is in
the focus of Baku’s attention, Azeri Foreign Minister Elmar
Mammadyarov told a Monday press conference.

“We have asked the OSCE Minsk Group cochairmen to monitor the illegal
resettlement of Syrian Armenians to these lands,” the minister said.

Mammadyarov said though that even if some Syrian Armenians had moved
to the occupied lands their number was insignificant.

Te jv

Origins of Caspers Hot Dogs: A tale of immigration and success out w

San Jose Mercury News (California)
January 10, 2013 Thursday

Origins of Caspers Hot Dogs: A tale of immigration and success out west

By Robert Rogers Contra Costa Times

Tracing the history of one of the Bay Area’s most enduring eateries is not easy.

“Nobody kept books or coherent records,” said Ron Dorian, grandson of
an original partner in Caspers Hot Dogs. “A lot of my knowledge of
company history was passed on from conversations with older relatives
and not from anything in writing.”

Dorian, 54, is the grandson of Steve Beklian, one of the five men who
established Caspers Hot Dogs in the East Bay between the 1920s and the
1940s.

It started in the 1920s, when Kasper Koojoolian, an Armenian
immigrant, decided to flee Chicago for the warmer climate and business
opportunities of California.

Dorian said the first store was in Oakland, and it was called “Kaspers.”

Kaspers’ success soon drew friends and family, including cousins like
Steve Beklian, business savvy restaurateur Paul Agajan, Hagop Beklian
and brother Paul Koojoolian.

“Agajan operated two cafeterias in Cicero before moving to California.
You had to be tough to operate businesses like that in Chicago in the
1930s,” Dorian said.

New stores popped up in Oakland and surrounding suburbs, including the
Richmond store in 1947.

As often happens in business startups, the family relationships were
strained by the growing enterprise. Kasper and his brother Paul
Koojoolian broke away and retained his “Kaspers” name, while the other
partners branched out and expanded their “Caspers” brand, Dorian said.
Paul’s son, Harold Koojoolian, still operates the Kaspers in Oakland.

Tragically, Kasper Koojoolian died in 1943 while en route to Fresno,
where he was looking for a ranch to buy. He always wanted to leave the
city and retire as a rancher, Dorian said.

Today, there are eight Caspers with 12 owners, including Dorian, all
descendants of the original five.

But it all started with a dream and impossible odds.

“The Koojoolian brothers and Beklian brothers emigrated as young boys
— all together with no adults — fleeing Turkey with money their
parents gave them,” Dorian said. “The parents couldn’t leave — and
they knew their children would be killed if they stayed. The five of
them made it from their village in Turkey to France and sailed to
Philadelphia and crossed to Chicago at a time in their lives that kids
today would still be in school. Their closeness cannot be
underestimated.”