Armenian Immigrant And 5 Others Convicted Of Military-Weapons Charge

ARMENIAN IMMIGRANT AND 5 OTHERS CONVICTED OF MILITARY-WEAPONS CHARGES IN FBI STING
By Larry Neumeister

San Diego Union Tribune, CA
July 24 2007

NEW YORK – An Armenian immigrant accused of plotting to sell
anti-aircraft missiles and other military weapons from the former
Soviet Union to an FBI informant was convicted Tuesday along with
five co-defendants.

Artur Solomonyan could face up to life in prison on charges including
arms trafficking conspiracy, firearms trafficking conspiracy,
interstate firearms trafficking and illegal transfer and possession
of a machine gun.

The charges accused the men of conspiring from December 2003 to March
2005 to import shoulder-fired surface-to-air missiles, rocket-propelled
grenade launchers, anti-tank guided missiles and machine guns without
a license.

The weapons were "all designed to shoot down airplanes in the sky,
all designed to pierce through armored tanks," Assistant U.S.

Attorney Marc P. Berger said his closing argument.

Berger said the motivation was greed.

"They were opportunists. They were money makers," he told jurors.

Solomonyan’s lawyer, Louis V. Fasulo, told the jurors the case was
set up to entrap his client, who was merely leading on a government
informant who had promised to get him a green card.

"It is patently unfair for the government to entrap an individual in
a desperate situation," he said.

The only weapons actually delivered in the case were a dozen firearms,
including a machine gun.

Sentencing for all six men was set for Dec. 14. (AP)

Armenian Politicians Assess The Parliamentary Election In Turkey Dif

ARMENIAN POLITICIANS ASSESS THE PARLIAMENTARY ELECTION IN TURKEY DIFFERENTLY

arminfo
2007-07-23 15:19:00

Armenian politicians are very cautious in assessing the Parliamentary
Election held in Turkey the day before, according to the results of
which the leading proislamic Justice and Development Party gained
a victory.

Member of the faction of the Republican Party of Armenia Gagik
Minassyan said on Monday in the "Mirror" club that Turkey’s
unpredictability has always been the most predictable about the
country. Islamists’ victory is alarming. However, Turkey’s history
has already had examples when most radical powers have led the country
by the secular way. It is no secret that it was the country’s present
authority that spoke of their orientation towards European integration
and towards entering the European Union, the parliamentarian said.

Board Member of the ex-leading All Armenian Movement Party Aram
Manukyan emphasized that Armenia is interested in "predictable" Turkey,
and Turkey can be "predictable" and "controllable" only being a member
of international structures-NATO and European Union. That is why,
Armenian must be interested in Turkey’s entrance into the European
Union, Aram Manukyan said.

Masis Mailyan Congratulated His Rival With Victory At Presidential E

MASIS MAILYAN CONGRATULATED HIS RIVAL WITH VICTORY AT PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION IN NKR

arminfo
2007-07-23 10:38:00

After promulgation of the presidential election’s final results by
NKR CEC, Masis Mailyan congratulated Bako Sahakyan with his election
to the post of NKR president and wished him successes in the work.

ArmInfo’s special correspondent in Stepanakert recalls that at July
20 press-conference ma. Mailyan said that he is ready to congratulate
his main rival Bako Sahakyan with victory.

RA NA: Presidential Elections In Karabakh Met International Standard

RA NA: PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS IN KARABAKH MET INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS

PanARMENIAN.Net
23.07.2007 17:40 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian parliamentary observation delegation
announced preliminary conclusions on the NKR presidential elections,
the RA NA press office reported. The report issued before the counting
of votes and announcement of official results of the elections says,
in part, "The presidential elections gained wide public support. These
polls once again proved that the election institute is an essential
element of democratic power formation.

The authorities demonstrated political will.

Violations fixed during the elections were of technical nature and
cannot have any impact on the final results."

The Armenian parliamentarians pointed out to the progress fixed during
the vote and issued some recommendations for the NKR leadership.

The document says the July 19 vote was held in a quiet atmosphere. The
appearance was high and was reported every three hours. 76,25% of
those eligible to vote took part in the elections.

"The presidential elections in NKR held on July 19, 2007 met the
international standards of holding democratic elections and the
national legislation," the report says.

The RA NA observation mission led by vice speaker Ishkhan Zakaryan
included Gagik Minasyan (RPA), Armen Rustamyan (ARFD), Gagik Gevorgyan
(ARFD), Artashes Avoyan (OY) and Larisa Alaverdyan (Heritage party).

Karsh suite at the Chateau Laurier reopens to public

Guelph Mercury (Ontario, Canada)
July 21, 2007 Saturday
Final Edition

Karsh suite at the Chateau Laurier reopens to public

Canadian Press

For almost two decades, Yousef and Estrellita Karsh called Suite 358
at the Chateau Laurier home.

Now the simple yet elegant, multiroom suite is home to the likes of
Ernest Hemingway, Pablo Picasso and George Bernard Shaw.

They are portraits, of course. Karsh portraits.

And recently, no less than Estrellita Karsh herself was there to
reopen the newly refurbished apartment where she and her renowned
photographer husband lived and entertained between portrait sessions
with many of the greatest leaders, celebrities and cognoscenti of the
20th Century.

"It was a wonderful apartment; we loved being there,” Estrellita
Karsh said in an interview. "And, more than anything, we loved being
in the Chateau.

"They all became our family. A hotel, by its nature, is a transient
place. And we were there, permanently. So that made a huge difference
in the relationships with the staff. We were the Ma and Pa Kettle of
the hotel.”

Estrellita hasn’t stayed in the suite since the couple moved out in
1998, but she has often visited and says the "spirits” in the suite
remain "very, very good,” much as they did the first time the couple
walked in.

"It’s just one of those apartments where your heart leaps, you know
it’s ‘it.’ And we did know.”

One’s heart might leap at the price: $1,800 a night to sleep with the
ghosts of greatness.

Virtually everybody who was anybody sought immortality through the
lenses of Karsh’s cameras.

Known worldwide as Karsh of Ottawa, his sixth floor studio at what is
now called the Fairmont Chateau Laurier became a waypoint for titans
of the 20th Century. And if they couldn’t come to him, Karsh went to
them.

Kennedy, Castro, Hepburn, Einstein, Churchill, Mandela, Schweitzer,
Kruschev. Presidents and prime ministers. Kings and queens.
Scientists and doctors. Authors, composers and artists. The list
seems endless.

"When the famous start thinking of immortality, they call for Karsh
of Ottawa,” George Perry once wrote in London’s Sunday Times.

Karsh, born in Turkey on Dec. 23, 1908, left his native land to
escape the persecution Armenians endured and came to Canada in 1924
to live with his photographer uncle in Sherbrooke, Que.

He dreamed of becoming a doctor but didn’t have the money for medical
school. After a brief apprenticeship his uncle sent him off to Boston
to study photography under eminent portraitist John H. Garo.

It was there, in Boston’s museums and galleries, that Karsh refined
his understanding of light and shadow.

He launched his Ottawa studio in 1932, moving to his famous digs at
the Chateau, just a stone’s throw from Parliament Hill, in 1972.

"As a capital city, I knew Ottawa would be a crossroads for statesmen
coming from London and Washington,” he once recalled. "I felt there
would be great advantages here and I would be ready for them when
they came.”

Karsh loved people, and could hold his own with the best of them.

His sessions were events in themselves and became renowned for their
repartee. An engaging, intelligent personality, he had a gift for
disarming his subjects, for dismantling the walls that people erect
between themselves and the camera — exposing, it seemed at his best
times, their very souls.

"He had a great ability to get right to the heart of the matter and
be able to put it into a photograph,” his late brother, Malak Karsh,
a renowned architectural and landscape photographer in his own right,
once said of him.

Karsh was polite and curious. He asked questions, elicited answers,
reflections, profound moods. His sessions became known as "visits”
and his subjects gave of themselves "with love and respect,” said
his brother.

His innovative use of light and composition — he worked most often
in shades of grey — helped turn a formidable portraitist into a
brilliant artist.

In September 1992, the Karsh Photographic Studio finally closed its
doors to allow the master more time to pursue books and international
exhibitions, which he did right up until he died.

In 1997, he bid farewell to Ottawa and he and Estrellita, a medical
researcher, packed their bags and headed for Boston. Upon leaving, he
presented a small collection of classic portraits to the Chateau.
Hanging in the lobby is his iconic portrait of Winston Churchill,
along with those of Albert Einstein, humorist Stephen Leacock,
cellist Pablo Casals, and artists Georgia O’Keeffe and Jean-Paul
Riopelle.

The recipient of 17 honorary degrees and the only Canadian named one
of the 100 most influential people of the 20th century by the
International Who’s Who (he had photographed more than half of the
others), Karsh left behind a legacy for all the world.

His work is in the permanent collections of the National Gallery of
Canada, New York’s Museum of Modern Art and Metropolitan Museum of
Art, George Eastman House, La Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris, the
National Portrait Gallery in London, the National Portrait Gallery of
Australia and many others.

The National Archives of Canada holds his complete collection,
including negatives, prints and documents. His photo equipment was
donated to the Museum of Science and Technology.

Karsh died in Boston in July 2002, at the age of 93. He was buried at
Ottawa’s Notre Dame Cemetery — fittingly, beside the ornate
gravesite of Sir Wilfrid Laurier, the hotel’s namesake.

–Boundary_(ID_Ern+wxtHrBx5xkpFGFbeIw)- –

The Destruction Of Iraq’s Christians

THE DESTRUCTION OF IRAQ’S CHRISTIANS
By Rayyan al-Shawaf

Daily Star – Lebanon,
July 20 2007

Last month, a Chaldean priest, Ragheed Ganni, and three sub-deacons
were murdered by Islamist terrorists in Mosul, Iraq. Before being
executed, they were informed that they would be spared on the condition
that they converted to Islam. All refused. Ganni was one of many
Iraqis killed since 2003 for no reason other than their Christian
identity. Additionally, thousands of Christians have been expelled
from their homes, extorted, harassed, beaten, raped and ordered to
covert to Islam, spawning a frantic and ongoing exodus. As a result,
Iraq’s Christian community stands on the verge of extinction. Other
religious minorities have also been persecuted, including the Yazidis
of the north and the tiny Mandaean community of the south.

Until recently, the Iraqi diaspora was relatively small. The 1980-1988
war between Iraq and Iran, which was accompanied by an economic boom,
did not prompt mass emigration of Iraqis. Large-scale emigration
began with Saddam Hussein’s 1988 Anfal campaign against Kurds, and
skyrocketed with the 1991 Gulf war, Saddam’s crushing of a Shiite
rebellion, and international sanctions. The resulting economic
deterioration led large numbers of Christians to leave. Saddam’s
post-war Islamization drive provided an added incentive.

Most of Iraq’s Christians are Chaldo-Assyrians, an ethnic group
comprising several Christian sects, including Chaldean Catholics (the
largest), two factions of the Assyrian Church of the East, and Syriac
Orthodox and Catholics. Iraq is also home to Armenian Orthodox and
Catholics, and smaller groups like Anglicans, Protestants, and Roman
Catholics. On the eve of the invasion of Iraq in 2003, the number
of Christians was often generously estimated at 800,000; the real
figure was likely no higher than 500,000. The violent and anarchic
period following the invasion has proven disastrous; some estimates
indicate that in the past four years, the Christian population of
Iraq has halved.

Although bombings of churches receive media attention, assassinations
and kidnappings go largely unnoticed. Recently, however, expulsions
and large-scale harassment of Christians, such as those under way in
the southern Baghdad neighborhood of Al-Daura, have been reported.

"The Islamic State of Iraq," a Sunni terrorist umbrella group which
includes Al-Qaeda, ordered Christian residents of Al-Daura to pay a
jizya, the Islamic poll tax historically imposed upon non-Muslims.

The money would go to financing the very activities that threaten the
future of Christians in Iraq. Seventy percent of the neighborhood’s
Christians subsequently fled.

It is crucial to understand that Christians in Iraq are not simply
suffering from the general violence and anarchy plaguing the
country, but are being targeted as Christians by Islamists as well
as criminal gangs. While Islamist terrorists openly aim to rid Iraq
of all "infidels," criminals seek to exploit the perceived wealth
of Christians. Thus, many Christians who were middle-class are now
destitute, having paid exorbitant ransoms for kidnapped loved ones –
some of whom were killed nonetheless.

Though Christians have been persecuted by Muslims in the past, today’s
Islamist onslaught against Christians in Iraq has led to something
virtually unprecedented in the history of Islam in Mesopotamia:
Christians must hide their identity so as to avoid being harassed
or killed. Christian women routinely don the hijab, and men and
women with identifiably Christian names have taken to concealing
them. Concomitantly, Christians have been forced to remove the cross
from public view, including church steeples and domes as well as from
around their necks. This is a hugely symbolic act that powerfully
illustrates the tragic position of Christians in Iraq today.

Church services are regularly cancelled; when held, many parishioners
are understandably too scared to attend. During parliamentary
elections, Chaldo-Assyrian political parties didn’t dare to
mount a public election campaign, for fear this might be deemed
"provocative." Physical danger stalks Christians everywhere; Islamist
groups have launched sectarian cleansing operations against Christian
enclaves in virtually all Iraqi cities. Christians are targeted by
both Sunni and Shiite violence. Though some have sought sanctuary
among coreligionists in the Kurdish-controlled north, for many there
is no option but to leave Iraq altogether.

Women are especially vulnerable. Theological justifications for the
rape of non-Muslim women and their forcible betrothal to Muslims are
widespread – Mandaean women have been specifically targeted – as are
rulings permitting the summary murder of all non-Muslims who violate
Islamic law. Violations can be selling liquor, dressing "immodestly,"
refusing to pay a jizya, expressing a political opinion, or even just
professing one’s faith openly. In the worst circumstances, the very
act of being non-Muslim is perceived as an offense; many Islamist
militias simply present non-Muslims with the choice of converting to
Islam or being killed.

Significantl y, however, it isn’t just terrorists who target
Christians. A previously latent anti-Christian animus among large
sections of the Muslim populace has manifested itself. There are many
recorded instances of politically unaffiliated Muslims turning on
their Christian neighbors, of others refusing to pay debts owed to
Christians, and of acts of individual extortion. Fatwas authorizing
the seizure of abandoned Christian property inevitably encourage
Muslims to expel Christians or intimidate them into fleeing, while
invidious rumors of wholesale Christian "collaboration" with the
occupation forces prompt anti-Christian violence. This is part of
the general Islamization engulfing Iraq, turning ordinary Muslims
against their Christian compatriots, who are denigrated as "unclean"
and physically threatened for being "Crusaders."

Western countries, terrified of being perceived as biased toward
Christians, have maintained a studied indifference, while the Iraqi
government and security services have been heavily infiltrated by
members of anti-Christian Shiite militias. Unlike Shiites, Sunnis,
and Kurds, Christians field no militias and are easy prey for their
oppressors.

Iraqi Muslim leaders’ condemnation of sectarian violence is woefully
insufficient, as they refuse to acknowledge – let alone confront –
the extremism in their midst. Influential Muslim clerics like the
Sunni cleric Hareth al-Dari and the Shiite Muqtada al-Sadr flatly
deny that their communities produce extremists; instead, each blames
the other community and the American military for all outrages. This
doesn’t apply only to anti-Christian violence. Incredibly, Sunni
leaders accuse Shiites of being behind attacks on Shiite holy sites,
while Shiite leaders straight-facedly accuse Sunnis of the mass
kidnappings and executions of unarmed Sunnis. As a result, there
is little introspection and no self-criticism on the part of either
community. Indeed, Muslim leaders often condemn the atrocity while
exonerating the perpetrator.

The tragedy is that we will likely soon find ourselves writing the
epitaph of Iraq’s Christian community. Indeed, even if the situation
were suddenly to improve – a highly unlikely prospect – it is
already too late to reverse the effects of the hemorrhaging. Massive
emigration has altered Iraq’s demography irrevocably, and certain
groups will never recover. Figures for members of the Assyrian Church,
for example, have plummeted, and the Armenians of Iraq have virtually
disappeared. Other minorities besides Christians are also endangered;
according to the Mandaean Society of America, 85 percent of Iraq’s
Mandaeans have fled since 2003.

Eventually, the violence in Iraq will subside and a modicum of security
will return. Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds will arrive at a modus vivendi,
however imperfect. In attempting to forge some semblance of unity,
a nationalist historiography will likely blame the occupation forces
for Iraq’s post-Saddam violence. And this will be the second crime
perpetrated against Iraqi victims of Islamist terror. After all,
there can be no greater insult to the murdered than to exonerate
their murderers.

For the Christians of Iraq, indeed, for all Iraqis who have been
killed or otherwise persecuted for their religious affiliation, this
would mean exonerating the Islamist purveyors of holy war, Sunni or
Shiite, who incite against one another and against non-Muslims. It
would mean "moving forward" without ever confronting the Islamist
theologies of murder, rape and genocide, whose adherents have forever
disfigured Iraq.

Rayyan al-Shawaf is a freelance writer and reviewer based in Beirut.
He wrote this commentary for THE DAILY STAR.

http://www.dailystar.com.lb

Presentation Of Armenian Judicial System’s Website Held In Yerevan

PRESENTATION OF ARMENIAN JUDICIAL SYSTEM’S WEBSITE HELD IN YEREVAN

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
July 18 2007

YEREVAN. July 18. /ARKA/. A presentation of a website of Armenia’s
judicial system was held Wednesday. Chairman of the
Court of Cassation of Armenia Hovhannes Manukyan pointed out at the
presentation, the website was created under the Judicial code of
Armenia in order to create a database about the judicial system’s
activity.

"The creation of the database is an attempt to increase the judicial
system’s transparency and make it more available for the community,"
Manukyan said.

He pointed out that in its judicial system Armenia uses case law that
may really work provided that given legal proceeding becomes open to
the community.

"In this context, that portal is an important means for Armenian
citizens to get access to this information," Manukyan said.

He expressed confidence that this information portal will not be a
regular internet page as some, but will become one of the most active
and frequently updateable governmental internet resources.

The bilingual site provides information about the current judicial
system in Armenia. Separate sections are about the Court of Cassation,
Economic Court, and courts of first instance.

The site contains information not only about its structure,
organization, and powers of courts, but also profiles of judges,
their biographies, as well as the procedure of applying to these
courts. Also, the site provides information about the Council
of Justice and its decisions, the Council of Courts’ Chairmen,
Association of Judges, Judicial Department, and Judicial Schools.

The Library section contains decisions of the Council of Justice
and Council of Courts’ Chairmen, materials of judicial practice,
research works of judges and a sample form of all documents, required
for application to courts. The site also provides the information
about the procedure of applying to courts, judicial expenses, and
schedules of court sittings.

In addition, it contains Proposals sections, where everyone can leave
his or her proposals that can be anonymous.

The website was developed with the support of UNDP, USAID, American
Bar Association, and Bearing Point.

www.court.am

Construction 2007 Congress To Launch Friday In Armenia

CONSTRUCTION 2007 CONGRESS TO LAUNCH FRIDAY IN ARMENIA

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
July 17 2007

EREVAN, July 17. /ARKA/. Construction 2007, a four-day international
congress organized by Master international integration promotion
center, is to launch on Friday in Armenian resort of Tsakhkadzor,
the center press office reports.

Armenian construction sector’s strategy as well as issues related to
international and interregional cooperation in investment area will
be discussed at the congress.

Five key topics are put on the agenda: construction prospects in
the region, heating technologies, design, materials for repair and
construction and real estate and investment programs.

Over 100 Armenian firms as well as construction companies from Russia,
Ukraine and Iran will take part in the congress.

Armenian Urban Planning Ministry, Armenian Union of Manufacturers and
Businessmen and the Union of Armenian Constructors provided support
to the event.

BAKU: Ruling party MP: corruption one of "many" problems in Azerb.

Ruling party MP says corruption one of "many" problems in Azerbaijan

Yeni Musavat, Baku
11 Jul 07

A senior figure of the ruling New Azerbaijan Party, MP Malahat
Hasanova, has said that "Azerbaijan has many problems including
bribery, corruption, laziness, and bureaucracy". Speaking to the
opposition daily Yeni Musavat, Hasanova did not rule out the
possibility of jailed journalists being pardoned. She also hailed
recent visits by a group of Azerbaijani intellectuals to Nagornyy
Karabakh and Armenia. The following is an excerpt from an interview
with MP Malahat Hasanova in Yeni Musavat newspaper on 11 July headlined
"’Ali Insanov should serve his punishment’" and subheaded "A member of
the political board of the NAP, Malahat Hasanova: There is bribery,
corruption, and bureaucracy in Azerbaijan. The court verdict on Huseyn
Abdullayev was fair"; subheadings have been inserted editorially:

Functionaries of the ruling New Azerbaijan Party [NAP], including those
who until recently did not see problems in being interviewed by our
paper, have now imposed an unofficial embargo against Yeni Musavat
newspaper. In light of this, we were not fully sure that our
conversation with MP Malahat Hasanova, member of the political board of
the NAP, will take place.

Nevertheless, the member of parliament lived up to her promise given
during the spring session of the Milli Maclis [parliament] and finally
honoured her promise to grant an interview to our paper. Anyway, we
would like to believe that "the ice is broken" and from now on NAP
representatives will review their attitudes towards our paper.

No journalist appealed for pardoning

First, we asked Malahat xanim [mode of address], who is a member of the
State Pardoning Commission [under the president], whether or not our
jailed colleagues will be pardoned.

[Hasanova] No journalist has personally appealed to me. Nevertheless,
there is a copious amount of appeals from other inmates. Every appeal
is thoroughly scrutinized. Nowadays there are reports on hunger
strikers at the Qobustan prison. I have familiarized myself with some
of their cases. They committed horrible crimes. However, the opposition
media has politicized lifers’ cases.

[Correspondent] [The head of the public and political department of the
presidential administration] Ali Hasanov has said that jailed
journalists could be pardoned. Generally speaking, has the commission
held a sitting and is a pardon possible in the near future? To what
extent is it possible for the journalists to be released ahead of
National Press Day [22 July]?

[Hasanova] The pardoning commission functions uninterruptedly and deals
with any appeals effectively. However, the president has the power of
pardoning. The pardoning commission sticks to unrestricted humanity.
Thousands of prisoners have been pardoned in the past few years. I
believe that any appeal for pardoning irrespective of it being from a
journalist or any other criminal could be satisfied in conformity with
the commission’s statute.

[Passage omitted: Hasanova plans to have a rest in Agstafa with her
mother]

Hails visits to Karabakh and Armenia

[Correspondent] The visits by Azerbaijani intellectuals to Nagornyy
Karabakh and Yerevan received varying reactions. There are reports that
a visit by parliamentarians is also in the pipeline. Have you been
offered such a visit?

[Hasanova] I have not been offered such a visit. I completely support
the president’s policy. At the same time, I fully back the president’s
Karabakh policy. On the other hand, we are doomed to be neighbours with
Armenia. The saying goes "change your place of residence if your
neighbour is bad". However, neither we, nor Armenians will go anywhere.
I am sure that we shall resolve this problem either by peace or war.
Even after this, we shall remain neighbours. From this vantage point, I
do no see anything calamitous and wrong in the visit by our
intellectuals to Susa. The visit by our intellectuals to Karabakh has
once again proven that it is our soil. I do not second claims that this
visit will contribute to the recognition of the separatist regime. I
could say I am the US Congress speaker. However, naturally, no-one will
believe this. True, we have suffered huge losses in this conflict. But
once the problem is resolved, Armenians have to live there too.

[passage omitted: Hasanova says people should be thinking about
resolving the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict all the time]

Bribery, corruption, laziness, bureaucracy

[Correspondent] Is it possible that [President] Ilham Aliyev will sign
defeatist peace under international pressure?

[Hasanova] No, I do not think so. I believe that Mr President and the
chairman of my party will never do this. He withstands all possible
pressure and is able to resist it. The Karabakh problem will soon be
resolved owing to his principled policy. Because nowadays everything is
based on economic interests. Azerbaijan is developing and thriving…

[Passage omitted: The Azerbaijani Oil Fund received an international
award]

[Correspondent] What is your attitude towards the fact that Ilham
Aliyev’s name is mentioned along with dictators and is on a blacklist?

[Hasanova] Undoubtedly, I want to see Azerbaijan as the most beautiful
country in the world. We thank God for granting us an independent
state. We also are fond of our president. Nevertheless, Azerbaijan has
many problems including bribery, corruption, laziness, and bureaucracy.
At the same time, Azerbaijan comes from another system. There are
problems which require people’s involvement for their resolution and
public control should be strict and effective. People should also
change their way of thinking.

[Correspondent] Maybe bureaucrats hinder development more than ordinary
people?

[Hasanova] To a certain extent, I do share your view. Part of our
generation which is under the influence of the Soviet totalitarian
regime cannot adapt to current processes. At one time [former Turkish
President] Turgut Ozal replaced bureaucrats with those bright young men
who studied abroad.

[Correspondent] Why does Ilham Aliyev not want to get rid of officials
who have been in office for over 10 years?

[Hasanova] This cannot be done once and for all… Time resolves some
issues. We have chosen an evolutionary way and are far away from
revolutionary processes. God willing, I believe everything will be fine.

[Passage omitted: Hasanova justifies former health minister’s arrest
and blames media for defending him]

[Correspondent] To what extent is it convincing that NAP members amount
to 400,000 people?

[Hasanova] I am against the total politicization of our society. About
600 people have appealed for party membership since I was elected
chairman of the Nasimi branch of the NAP. Here is a list, if you wish,
you can go and ask each of them.

[Passage omitted: Hasanova slams a parliamentary brawl between two
members of parliament]

[ellipsis as published throughout]