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?Masters and US Open -champion Jordan Spieth will return to Sydney in late -November to -defend his Australian Open -title Nike Air Max 2018 Kopen Nederland , organizers said Tuesday.

The 21-year-old American won the Stonehaven Cup by six shots last year and with his recent run of form is bound to increase the size of the galleries at
The Australian Golf Club in Sydney from November 26 to 29.


Spieth came within a stroke of joining a four-hole playoff for the British Open title at St -Andrews on Monday, which Zach Johnson went on to clinch over
South Africa's Louis Oosthuizen and Australia's Marc Leishman.


"I'm absolutely thrilled to -return to Sydney Nike Air Max 2018 Kopen ," Spieth said in a statement on Tuesday. "I had a fantastic time in Australia. I can't wait to come back and hopefully defend
the Stonehaven Cup."


Spieth, who turns 22 next week Kopen Heren Nike Air Max 270 Just Do It Zwart Oranje , used last year's victory in Australia as a springboard for a run of success on the PGA Tour this
season.


He won the Hero World Challenge in December and then the Valspar Championships before clinching his first major title at Augusta National in
April by four shots. He then claimed the US Open at Chambers Bay by one stroke
last month.


Spieth was ranked 11th in the world when he hoisted the Stonehaven Cup, but after winning the Australian Open Nike Air Max 270 Wit Oranje Aanbieding , the Hero World Challenge, the Valspar Championship and the Masters Dames Nike Air Max 270 Light Grijs Zwart Sale , he reached No.2.

"It has been an amazing six months since I left Australia," he said.

"To see my name on the Stonehaven Cup alongside all the champions of the game gave me great confidence."


by Xinhua writer Yi Aijun

ISTANBUL, Nov. 27 (Xinhua) -- An unyielding push for a presidential system in Turkey by the ruling party, at a time when the country is facing a plethora of
crises both at home and abroad, seriously risks deepening the polarization in
society to a point of conflict, analysts have warned.


"This system may further endanger the integrity of Turkey which already has some major ethnic and religious fault lines," observed Bican Sahin, president of
the Ankara-based Freedom Research Association.


The ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) is seeking to replace the country's parliamentary system with an executive presidency.


That indicates, as earlier remarks by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan revealed, a president in charge without strong checks and balances.


The AKP government and the president have long been criticized by opposition parties and the West for an increasing trend of authoritarianism and growing
pressure over the judiciary and freedom of speech and the press.


In the view of Sahin, also a professor of political science with Hacettepe University in Ankara, the minorities in Turkey may feel more alienated in a
presidential system as the winner takes all in it.


"The presidential system is more appropriate for societies with less ethnic and religious cleavages," he opined.


Turkey has long been grappling with a Kurdish ethnic problem, while Alevis represent the country's major religious minority whose members are devout
supporters of secularism.


Alevis, many Kurds and those who advocate a secular way of life feel more and more alienated in the Islamist AKP-ruled Turkey.


The main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) and the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) are vehemently opposing a shift to the
presidential system, arguing that it would lead to an authoritarian one-man
rule.


The HDP, whose two co-chairs and eight other deputies were recently arrested on charges of having links to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), is
the third biggest party in the parliament.


Despite the clamor, only some unconfirmed details about the AKP proposal have so far appeared in the Turkish press. The government is working on a fortified
presidential system, government spokesman Numan Kurtulmus said this month.


According to some recent reports, the president under the new system will be entitled to select half the members of the Constitutional Court as well as the
country's top judicial board, the Supreme Board of Judges and Prosecutors. The
heads of universities will also be tapped by the president.


A draft proposal about the constitutional amendments, which the AKP recently presented to the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) for negotiations, also
reportedly authorizes the president to dissolve the parliament.


"The system proposed by the ruling party is more conflict-prone (as compared to the current parliamentary system)," remarked Ersin Kalaycioglu, a political
scientist with Sabanci University in Istanbul.


According to a survey made public early this year, the polarization among supporters of Turkey's major political parties was alarmingly high.


Seventy-six percent of those polled did not want to become neighbors with voters of a party they dislike, showed the survey by the Corporate Social
Responsibility Association.


And 83 percent of the respondents said they would not want their daughters to marry a man who supports a party they disapprove.


The adoption of the presidential system would not only aggravate the already very high polarization in society, but could also risk disintegrating the
nation, some fear.


A major problem that risks increasing the country's fragility is the decades-old fight against the PKK which aims to establish an independent Kurdish
state in the country's Kurds-dominated southeast.


The Kurds, with an estimated population of nearly 20 million in Turkey, have felt deeply frustrated following the collapse last year of a peace process that
had lasted for more than two years.


Meanwhile, Turkey has plunged militarily into war-torn Syria and strained its relations with the United States, the European Union and Iraq, and faced at home
a divided society and a slowing economy.


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Posted 18 Oct 2018

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