Sat, May 26 2012
Kurdish protesters clash with Turkish riot police in Diyarbakir, December 14 2009.
Photo: Reuters
While observers say there is a feeling Turkey has its best opportunity for peace in decades, with the country going to the polls in less than a year, there's also a fear that election politics could yet destroy those hopes.
Public opinion surveys show that Turkey is split on the proposed changes and that the country's large Kurdish population might determine the outcome.
Observers say the latest sentencing of Ozan Kilinc will raise questions again in the EU over freedom of the press in Turkey, and whether it is really making sufficient progress in its bid to join its ranks.
Turkey’s constitutional court, in a December 11 2009 ruling, banned the DTP for being linked to the PKK and putting at risk the integrity of the Turkish state.
Government officials in Sofia have stoutly denied of arms sales to Iraq without the knowledge of the Iraqi government. Regarding a Washington Post front-page article published on November 23, which accuses Bulgaria of organising the sale and shipment of three plane-loads of weapons and ammunition to the Kurds in northern Iraq that allegedly took place in September, the spokesman of the Bulgarian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Dragovest Draganov, has told the Bulgarian National Radio (BNR) that Bulgaria did not sell arms to private individuals or non-government organisations, and that no such transaction ever took place.
The global food import bill in 2012 could decline to $1.24 trillion, down slightly from last year’s record of $1.29 trillion.
Boevski has been under arrest in Brazil since October, when he was arrested at Sao Paulo's international airport with nine kg of cocaine in his luggage.
Whereas foreign media ownership is perceived as advantageous for media outlets and journalists, Bulgarian owners are perceived as investors with short-term vision who strive for immediate profits.
Killing spree in Norway in July 2011 and the arrests of individuals in a number of EU member states for the preparation of terrorist attacks, are proof of the continuing need for vigilance, Europol says.
In her message to mark the Day, Bulgaria's Bokova said that books are 'valuable tools' for knowledge-sharing, mutual understanding and openness to others and to the world.