Gagrule.net

Gagrule.net News, Views, Interviews worldwide

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • GagruleLive
  • Armenia profile

Greek PM Tsipras to call snap election – State TV

August 20, 2015 By administrator

Protesters attend a rally in front of the parliament building in AthensGreek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is set to announce snap elections later on Thursday, according to state broadcaster ERT. The move comes after Athens managed to pay a huge piece of its debt – €3.4 billion ($3.79 billion) – to the ECB.

Numerous sources earlier speculated that the snap elections may be held in September (13 or 20), other spoke of October, after all the scheduled repayments to international lenders are through. Report RT

Local media have been speculating about the possible upcoming announcement since Thursday morning.

Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos, in particular, told ERT that this time the election “will not be the same as those of 2012, because now there is agreement, and there is a framework for the recapitalization of banks.”

An unnamed Greek official, when asked by journalists if Tsipras could announce snap elections in coming hours, said “everything is possible“, Reuters reports.

READ MORE: German parliament approves €86 billion Greek bailout

Energy Minister Panos Skourletis and other politicians have been recently calling for the government to return to the ballot box.

“The political landscape must clear up. We need to know whether the government has or does not have a majority,” he told ERT.

On Friday, eurozone finance ministers agreed to a third bailout program for the crisis-stricken country. Athens will receive a total of €86 billion over three years.

The same day, the Greek parliament approved a draft law enacting a third bailout plan. Forty-three members of Tsipras’s Syriza party, including former Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis, voted against the bill or abstained. The party holds 149 seats in the parliament.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: BALLOT TO PARTICIPATE IN THE ELECTIONS OF DEPUTIES TO THE PARLIAMENT OF WESTERN ARMENIA, Election, Greece

Bernie Sanders Only 2016 Candidate Drawing Tens of Thousands to Rallies

August 10, 2015 By administrator

Bernie-Sanders for President

Bernie-Sanders for President

A self-described socialist, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders has just set a new record for the largest political event of the 2016 presidential contest at a campaign rally in Portland, Oregon.

Roughly 9,000 people gathered around the Moda Center on Sunday in Portland for Sanders’ campaign rally. And these were just the people who couldn’t get in. The large arena itself was packed with an estimated 19,000 people, as the remaining thousands were directed to overflow areas to listen to the Senator on loudspeakers outside.This brought the total number of attendees to 28,000, breaking Sanders’ own records as his populist message continues to draw in larger and larger crowds.

“Whoa. This is an unbelievable turnout,” Sanders said after taking the podium at Moda Center. “Portland, you have done it better than anyone else!”

For months, Sanders has been attracting an overflow of crowds at campaign rallies across the country, including events held in conservative states like Texas and Arizona. The continued upward trend in turnout and both state and national polling has reflected the growing resonance of the Vermont Senator’s populist message, centered on an agenda of challenging the economic and political status quo.

During his campaign, the presidential hopeful has vowed to take on the “billionaire class,” take money out politics, fight corporate greed, and combat climate change.

‘”Almost all the wealth is held by a small handful of people and together, we are going to change that,” Sanders said at Sunday’s rally, Common Dreams reported. Adding that he wanted to end corporate tax breaks and break up major Wall Street financial institutions, he said “if they’re too big to fail, they’re too big to exist!”

Sanders’ large crowds have become a huge talking point for political pundits, as the Independent senator continues to attract more people than Hillary Clinton, his contender for the Democratic Presidential nomination. So far, Clinton’s largest campaign event has gathered an estimated 5,500 people, a far cry from the crowds Sanders draws in.

“He listens I think, more than she does,” Claire Met, who attended Sunday’s rally, told CNN. “She seems more out of touch.”

“I appreciate his honestness and his frankness,” Brian Foren, another attendee said. “She has a lot of baggage and I worry that her baggage might cost us the election.”

Meanwhile, after his Saturday address in the University of Washington, Seattle was interrupted by Black Lives Matter protesters, Sanders’ campaign has added a “Racial Justice” tab to his website as a new campaign issue.

“There is no candidate who will fight harder to end institutional racism in this country and to reform our broken criminal justice system,” Sanders said at Sunday’s rally, adding that “bringing people together” was at the core of his campaign.

Sanders also released an updated issue statement on Sunday, in which he detailed the need to address the “four central types of violence waved against black and brown Americans: physical, political, legal and economic.”

Source: sputniknews

Filed Under: Events, News Tagged With: Bernie Sanders, Election, US

American socialist: Bernie Sanders’ long shot presidential campaign gains steam

July 9, 2015 By administrator

sanders-electionHillary Clinton’s path to the nomination is uncontested no longer. Senator Bernie Sanders is drawing huge crowds and gaining in the polls. But can a democratic socialist win over America? Spencer Kimball reports.

It’s a dirty word in American politics. But Bernie Sanders embraces it.

“I wouldn’t deny it, not for one second, ” Sanders told the Washington Post when he was running for Vermont’s senate seat back in 2006. “I’m a democratic socialist.”

Sanders is not a conventional American politician. He’s the longest serving independent in the history of the US Congress. Though he’s long worked with Democrats, Sanders officially joined the party just this year to challenge Hillary Clinton for the presidential nomination.

Initially considered a fringe candidate, he’s defying expectations. In May, Sanders trailed Clinton by 45 percent in Iowa, a key early primary state. He’s reduced the margin to 19 percent. In New Hampshire, the Vermont senator is behind by only eight points.

Sanders drew a crowd of some 10,000 people in Madison, Wisconsin earlier this month. It was easily one of the largest rallies of the 2016 campaign to date – in either party. And he’s no one-hit wonder. On Monday, he drew more than 7,000 people in Portland, Maine.

“No one in the White House will have the power to take on Wall Street alone, corporate America alone, the billionaire classes alone,” Sanders told his supporters in Maine.

“The only way that change takes place is when we develop that strong grassroots movement, make that political revolution, stand together, and then we bring about change,” he said.

Scandinavian America

What would the US look like after Sanders’ political revolution? Think Scandinavia – Denmark, Norway and Sweden.

“In those countries health care is a right of all people, in those countries college education, graduate school is free, in those countries retirement benefits, child care are stronger than in the United States of America,” Sanders said in an interview on the Sunday morning talk show This Week.

“In those countries, by and large, the government works for ordinary people and the middle class rather than, as is the case right now in our country, for the billionaire class,” Sanders said.

It’s a message that appeals to progressives. But will the broader American public support a self-proclaimed democratic socialist who wants the nation to look more like northern Europe?

“This is a country that had a McCarthy era and a red scare,” John Nichols, Washington correspondent for “The Nation” magazine, told DW. “It had red baiting and attacks on socialists, that’s part of our media life even in recent years.”

Challenging economic orthodoxy

Nichols has covered Sanders for years and introduced the Vermont senator at his packed rally in Wisconsin. Though America is very different from Europe structurally and economically, Nichols believes the country is ripe for the populist anti-austerity message that has swept the Old Continent in recent months, and Sanders is trying to tap into that sentiment.

According to Gallup, two out of every three Americans are dissatisfied with the way wealth is distributed in the United States. It’s a bi-partisan issue. Three-quarters of Democrats and even 54 percent of Republicans are concerned about income inequality.

“There’s space in the 2016 race for messages that really do challenge the economic orthodoxies of the United States,” Nichols said.

Generational gap

While the older baby-boom generation is more invested in the status quo and came of age when the socialist label was taboo, Alexandra Reckendorf believes the younger millennial generation is more open to radical change.

“They’re a little bit more compassionate and empathetic on these issues of economic inequality,”

Reckendorf, an expert on US politics at Virginia Commonwealth University, told DW. “A lot of them either find themselves in that boat or are still young and idealistic enough to think that these changes could work.”

Young Americans have racked up $1.2 trillion (1.08 trillion euros) in student debt due to the rising cost of college tuition. Sanders has introduced legislation to make all four-year public colleges tuition free, and would finance it through a tax on Wall Street speculation.

Uphill battle

But according to Arthur Sanders (no relation), the broader public just is not there yet. The US politics expert points to Obamacare. Only 43 percent of the public has a favorable view of President Obama’s signature domestic accomplishment, according to a Kaiser Health Tracking poll. Senator Sanders, on the other hand, thinks Obama’s health care reforms don’t go far enough.

“If he’s going to argue as he did in the past for single-payer government health care, the public is not ready for that, they’re barely ready for Obamacare,” Arthur Sanders, a professor at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa, told DW.

And so far, Senator Sanders also hasn’t made inroads with African American and Latino voters, who overwhelmingly support Hillary Clinton. Though he was involved in the civil rights movement in Chicago during the 1960s, he now represents an overwhelmingly white state in New England.

He’s also refused to accept corporate money out of principle. While Hillary Clinton has raised $45 million, Senator Sanders has pulled in $15 million from small donors. Regardless of whether or not he can secure the nomination, the democratic socialist senator from Vermont is already having a significant influence on the debate. And perhaps that’s his real objective.

“He’ll push Clinton to the left, he’ll push the debate to the left,” Arthur Sanders said. “He’ll never say that’s why he’s running, because you can’t say that’s why you’re running.”

 Source: DW.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Bernie Sanders, Election, US

Iraqi Kurdistan sets Aug 20 date for presidential election

June 13, 2015 By administrator

city of Erbil, Sep. 21, 2013. Photo: Reuters

city of Erbil, Sep. 21, 2013. Photo: Reuters

ERBIL-Hewler, Kurdistan region ‘Iraq’,— Iraq’s Kurdistan region will vote for its president on August 20, a top Kurdish official announced on Saturday.

Fuad Hussein, chief of staff to the Kurdistan Region presidency, told local reporters on Saturday that President Masoud Barzani had set the date for the region’s presidential election.

According to the source, Barzani has called on all related government’s agencies and organizations to prepare for the election. report Ekurd

The current president has also asked all sides to work for a democratic, free and fair election, Hussein has added.

The spokesperson of Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) Jafar Ibrahim Eminki has said the current situation in Iraqi Kurdistan requires President Barzani to stay in office.

Massoud Barzani will have served 10 years as president when his current term ends on August 19, 2015. Political discussions have been taken place for some time about whether or not to renew his mandate.

Meanwhile, many political parties believe that the President must be elected through a Parliamentary system.

Barzani has led Kurdistan region as president from 2005 for two executive terms and his last term was extended in 2013 by ruling Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) for two more years on the condition that he can no longer run as president.

Barzani approves the extension of his 3rd mandate as president of Kurdistan late July 2013.

Former leading council member of the Kurdistan Democratic Party KDP and Massoud Barzani’s cousin, Adham Barzani, stated that extending Massoud Barzani’s presidential term is against the laws and regulations of Kurdistan region. Adham Barzani critised other senior members of KDP for obeying whatever the leader says and not having their own opinion on any decision; added this will create a dictatorship.

More about The Monarchy of Iraqi Kurdistan

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Election, iraqi kurdistan

Turkey The elected Armenian HDP, Garo Paylan wants genocide recognition

June 11, 2015 By administrator

arton112950-480x270Garo Paylan, one of three elected Armenians in the Turkish parliament under the HDP label, reportedly promised to challenge the denialist stance of Ankara on the 1915 genocide.

In an interview with Ermenihaber.am, released Wednesday, Garo Paylan was confident that recognition of the genocide is essential for the normalization of relations between Turkey and Armenia.

He also said he will fight against the “deniers policies” both on behalf of the HDP and personally. “ The HDP is the only Turkish party to have described the massacre of Armenians as genocide.

For him, this is “first and foremost, to acknowledge the genocide in Turkey, and to abolish the animosity towards Armenia,” he he said. Adding: “Armenia and its diaspora worldwide must focus on Turkey in pursuit of greater international recognition of the genocide. “I call on all Armenian parties, including the ARF, to lead this fight here.” Every Armenian in Turkey who just has an impact. “

Garo Paylan described Selina Dogan, the Armenian elected for the CHP (Republican People’s Party) as a “close friend” with whom he is prepared to cooperate in parliament. But it is much more skeptical about Markar Esayan (AKP), a reporter for the pro-government newspaper “Yeni Safak” citing the continued support of the latter to the Government of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Thursday, June 11, 2015,
Jean Eckian © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Election, Garo Paylan, Genocide, HDP, Turkey

Turkey Election Divisions in AK Party emerges on post-election scenarios

June 8, 2015 By administrator

divisions-in-ak-party-emerges-on-post-election-scenarios_6667_720_400In the aftermath of the June 7 general elections, which ended the AK party’s chance to form a government on its own, divisions are emerging within the party over what strategy to proceed with.

The Justice and Development Party (AK Party) is divided between exiting delegates and the new entries to the party on whether to seek a partner for a coalition, form a minority government or embark on early elections. Report BGNNews

The AK Party only managed to get 259 delegates in the Parliament, well short of the 276 required to form government and way below the 330 delegates President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan dreamed of to push forward a constitutional change for the sake of granting his presidency supreme powers.

In around 12 days the High Electoral Board (YSK) will release the final tally of the election. Afterwards the newly-elected parliamentarians will be sworn in and the president will designate an individual from the assembly, most likely Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu, to establish a government and get a vote of confidence in 45 days. Failure to do so may result in the president calling for early elections.

A high number of prominent AK Party delegates, totaling 68, who will no longer be in the government now that their third term in the party will expire after the new government is formed. They include heavyweights such as spokesperson Bülent Arınç, Turkey’s highly credited economy tsar Ali Babacan, Minister of Labor Faruk Çelik, Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, Minister of Energy Taner Yıldız, Mehdi Eker, Nurettin Canikli as well as Ömer Çelik.

They are against a coalition or a minority government and will instead want to take their chances to run for Parliament in the early elections.

The new parliamentarians of the AK party on the other hand view the idea of early elections as a risk, and believe that the options of forming a coalition or minority government need to be explored to the fullest.

Swept off in east and southeast

The shocking election results saw the AK Party being swept off the map in the east and the southeast of Turkey, losing the Kurdish vote to the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP).

The AK Party was unable to get a single delegate out of five provinces of Ağrı, Tunceli, Şırnak and Hakkari in addition to Iğdır, where it also lost seats to the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP).

The sweep of AK Party votes in the southeast was most prominent in Turkey’s main southeastern province of Diyarbakır, where it was only able to get one seat as opposed to its 11 in the 2011 general elections.

The picture overall in Turkey also struck a crushing blow to their leadership. In 2011 the AK Party which was able to get all the available seats in 12 provinces was only able to repeat the feat in 3 provinces.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: AKP, divition, Election, Turkey

Greece PM SYRIZA: WE WELCOME THE BIG SUCCESS OF HDP IN THE PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS

June 8, 2015 By administrator

by hdpenglish

main_Greece_Syriza-cropSYRIZA is monitoring the very important developments for the future of Turkey with great interest, wishing to underline that political stability and democracy in Turkey is of special importance both for our relations and for the wider region.

In parallel, we welcome the big success of HDP in yesterday’s parliamentary elections in Turkey.

The people of Turkey are increasingly choosing to defend diversity, human rights, diversity in beliefs and personal life, to build a society without authoritarianism and discrimination based on origin, language, gender and religion.

The increase of the electoral percentage of the nationalists of MHP may be a concern and highlight the contradictions of our times, but we are confident that the dynamic entrance of HDP in the Turkish National Assembly will help to deepen democracy, combat nationalism and fundamentalism of all kinds, promote the peace process and strengthen the current rise of leftist and democratic forces in the Mediterranean and Europe as a whole.

Athens, 8 June 2015
SYRIZA Press Office

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: Election, HDP, syriza, welcome

TURKEY Elections in Turkey: anti-HDP leaflets

June 7, 2015 By administrator

CG40bYMVIAA-LZg-480x360-480x360This morning the leaflets were posted in front of each door in Istanbul claiming that the HDP party was anti-Islam and pro-Armenian.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: anti-HDP, Election, leaflets, Turkey

Dozens injured in Turkish election protests against pro-Kurdish poll rally

June 4, 2015 By administrator

Police fire tear gas and water cannon to disperse nationalists demonstrating against pro-Kurdish poll rally.

Turkish nationalists clash with riot police during an election rally by the opposition HDP in Erzurum [AFP]

Turkish nationalists clash with riot police during an election rally by the opposition HDP in Erzurum [AFP]

Dozens of people have been injured in eastern Turkey, local officials say, after police fired tear gas and water cannon to disperse nationalists protesting against an election rally by the pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic Party (HDP).

Thursday’s clashes in the northeastern city of Erzurum were the latest in a string of incidents in the run-up to Sunday’s parliamentary elections, in which the HDP is trying to clear a 10 percent threshold for entering parliament as a party under proportional representation.

The unrest erupted a day after unidentified men opened fire on a HDP campaign bus in Kurdish-majority eastern Bingol province, killing the driver.

The governor’s office for Bingol said an investigation into the shooting had been launched.

Around 1,000 Turkish nationalists stormed the rally in the main square of Erzurum, an area seen as a bastion for Turkish nationalists.

About 2,000 HDP supporters had gathered to hear Selahattin Demirtas, the party leader, speak at the rally.

His appearance had been seen as a bold statement in a region where his party is far from popular, as it tries to win votes from outside its southeastern Kurdish-majority heartland.

Should the HDP pass the 10 percent threshold, it would become more difficult for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to reach his goal of changing the constitution to boost presidential powers.

Private NTV television showed the demonstrators breaking through police barricades, before security forces responded with tear gas and water cannon.

The demonstrators, mostly young people, waved Turkish flags and chanted slogans such as “This is Erzurum, there is no way out from here” and “God is greatest”.

A minibus driver suffered severe burns when his vehicle, covered with HDP flags, was set on fire, the Dogan news agency said.

Security forces thanked

Ahmet Altiparmak, Erzurum’s governor, said in a statement quoted by Turkish media that 38 people had been wounded, including 11 police, 17 HDP supporters and 10 protesters.

But he also thanked the security forces and public for showing sensitivity so that the situation did not get out of hand.

The injuries were said to be not serious.

Demirtas went on with the rally and urged caution, saying: “There are only three days left. We will continue to work with patience, without allowing provocations.”

The HDP has long been accused by Turkish nationalists of being linked to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has waged a decades-long armed insurgency in the southeast for Kurdish autonomy.

In May, two blasts targeting HDP’s headquarters in the southern cities of Adana and Mersin injured several people.

Source: aljazeera.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: against, Election, pro-kurdish, protests, Turkey

Turkey’s election system the ‘most unfair’ in the world “10% threshold”

June 4, 2015 By administrator

0,,17844320_303,00Turkey is set to hold parliamentary elections on June 7. But, under the country’s unique voting system, any outcome is set to be biased. Sertan Sanderson reports.

With days to go until general elections, the fairness of Turkey’s voting system has come under international scrutiny. When compared with other democracies, the Turkish voting system would appear to be biased toward winners, deliberately leaving political underdogs in the lurch.

The British daily newspaper The Guardian reported that Turkey had “the world’s most unfair election system.” This was based on the fact that a 10 percent threshold kept smaller political movements from entering parliament – forfeiting dozens of seats to their rivals under the so-called d’Hondt voting system, which allocates parliamentary seats proportionally according to vote totals.

The Guardian, however, criticized that Turkey only allocated seats in proportional numbers to political parties that won at least 10 percent of the vote.

Threshold not unique to Turkey

Though such a barrier is not exclusive to Turkey, 10 percent is the highest threshold of its kind. German politics employ a 5 percent threshold, and many other countries – the United Kingdom, France and Portugal among them – don’t feature any such hurdle.

The Turkish voting system is also regarded as unjust for facilitating minority governments. Under certain circumstances, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP) could manage to gain a majority of parliamentary seats with merely 45 percent of the popular vote, in which case the wishes of 55 percent of the electorate could effectively be ignored.

These elections guidelines could create an unpredictable outcome at Sunday’s polls. While AKP has managed to grow support in its 13-year-reign, taking full advantage of the 10 percent threshold, the latest polls suggest that its luck may change. The Konda Research and Consultancy institute in Istanbul gave the party of President Erdogan and Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu only about 41 percent of the vote.

The rise of HDP supporters

0,,17800154_404,00The reason for this shift could be the rise of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP). With the latest projections showing the new movement dangerously close to reaching 10 percent, Erdogan took to the streets in person to attract more AKP votes – despite a ban prohibiting the president from campaigning for elections.

If the HDP were to win 10 percent, the AKP would lose 70 seats in Turkey’s Grand National Assembly, and with it its majority status. Sinan Ulgen, head of the Centre for Economic and Foreign Policy Studies in Istanbul, said that this election was going to be fraught with surprises:

“The outcome of the June 7 elections will be a lot more difficult to predict than the last two campaigns,” he told DW. “The truth of the matter is that HDP has come very close to overcoming such a great political hurdle as the 10 percent rule. In fact, it will likely overcome it.”

Historically attracting between 5 and 6 percent of the vote, the HDP’s momentum could therefore be a direct threat to 13 years of the AKP’s unchallenged rule. But a coalition between the two parties has largely been ruled out.

Other contenders, such as the Republican People’s Party (CHP) and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), should be growing equally worried. Anti-AKP voters are seen as strategically aligning their vote with the HDP (in lieu of other opposition parties), hoping to keep the anti-establishment spirit of the 2013 Gezi Park protests in Istanbul alive at the ballot boxes. The HDP was the biggest party supporter of the protests.

Even if the three opposition parties were to gain more seats combined than the AKP, a coalition looks highly unlikely because of their fundamental differences.

Turkey’s unusual approach to democracy

As president, Erdogan would also have the liberty to give the AKP a mandate to build a minority government – another odd feature of Turkey’s distinctive approach to democracy. Despite having more combined votes and seats than the AKP, a hypothetical coalition of all opposition parties would therefore still remain just that: the opposition.

In a show of pro-democracy attitude, the AKP has eased procedures involved in casting votes abroad, inviting almost 3 million Turks living in foreign states – including more than 1 million in Germany – to partake in elections. In the end it was reported that the initiative attracted 37 percent of those living abroad, or slightly over 1 million votes in total.

Turkish elections tend to attract some of the world’s highest turnouts, averaging about 85 percent voter participation – partly because of to the fact that voting was made compulsory as part of electoral reforms in 1983. The 10 percent threshold was also introduced then.

Ironically, all this was done in order to keep pro-Kurdish factions out of parliament, feeding the pro-Kurdish HDP’s ambition to break this barrier even more. But, at the same time, it is exactly a high turnout that opposition parties should dread most, as high attendance is statistically linked in Turkey to re-electing incumbent governments.

Erdogan needs majority to change constitution

With Erdogan hoping to change Turkey’s constitution if the AKP wins re-election, there is more at stake than merely a balance sheet of parliamentary seats. Depending on the election’s outcome, the president could push a referendum or single-handedly change the constitution if the AKP were to win a two-thirds majority of parliamentary seats.

Erdogan wants to give the presidency, hitherto only a ceremonial head-of-state role, far-reaching powers under proposed changes to the constitution – a move that many experts have interpreted as a further step away from democracy.

The upcoming 25th general elections will be closely monitored as they could decide the ultimate fate of Turkey’s democracy. With a voting system in place that has already been attacked for its imbalances and injustices, it might be hard to imagine that things could get worse.

Source: DW.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Election, most unfair, system, Turkey

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • Next Page »

Support Gagrule.net

Subscribe Free News & Update

Search

GagruleLive with Harut Sassounian

Can activist run a Government?

Wally Sarkeesian Interview Onnik Dinkjian and son

https://youtu.be/BiI8_TJzHEM

Khachic Moradian

https://youtu.be/-NkIYpCAIII
https://youtu.be/9_Xi7FA3tGQ
https://youtu.be/Arg8gAhcIb0
https://youtu.be/zzh-WpjGltY





gagrulenet Twitter-Timeline

Tweets by @gagrulenet

Archives

Books

Recent Posts

  • U.S. Judge Dismisses $500 Million Lawsuit By Azeri Lawyer Against ANCA & 29 Others
  • These Are the Social Security Offices Expected to Close This Year, Musk call SS Ponzi Scheme
  • Breaking News, Pashinyan regime has filed charges against public figure Edgar Ghazaryan,
  • ANCA’s Controversial Endorsement: Implications for Armenian Voters
  • (MHP), Devlet Bahçeli, has invited Kurdish Leader Öcalan to the Parliament “Ask to end terrorism and dissolve the PKK.”

Recent Comments

  • administrator on Turkish Agent Pashinyan will not attend the meeting of the CIS Council of Heads of State
  • David on Turkish Agent Pashinyan will not attend the meeting of the CIS Council of Heads of State
  • Ara Arakelian on A democratic nation has been allowed to die – the UN has failed once more “Nagorno-Karabakh”
  • DV on A democratic nation has been allowed to die – the UN has failed once more “Nagorno-Karabakh”
  • Tavo on I’d call on the people of Syunik to arm themselves, and defend your country – Vazgen Manukyan

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in