During a plenary session, bringing together the European components of the Green Party in Istanbul from 7 to 9 November 2014, the spokesperson of the Greens Turks told #greenCouncil “We recognize unequivocally the Armenian genocide.”
US Recognition of Genocide ‘Would Be Nightmare for Turkey’
ANKARA (ArmRadio)—Turkey needs to develop a strategy to counter pressure to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide as the 100th anniversary of the atrocities looms, a top Turkish diplomat said Monday, Agence France-Presse reports.
Altay Cengizer, director general for policy planning at the Turkish Foreign Ministry, told the Hurriyet daily that U.S.-based Armenian diaspora groups saw the centenary as an opportunity to prove that genocide was carried out and planned by the Ottoman authorities.
He likened the anniversary to a “penalty kick” that some saw as a chance to settle the issue, adding that the biggest nightmare for Turkey would be for the United States to recognize the mass killings and deportations as genocide.
“We are challenging the fact that it was a penalty. But they will take their chance,” he said.
He made it clear that Turkey – which has always categorically rejected the term genocide – had no intention of shifting its position.
“Genocide is a political concept. Turkey does not deserve to appear before the world as a nation that committed genocide,” he said.
Cengizer said he had just returned from Washington and saw that “a great campaign of accusations” was being prepared by Armenian diaspora groups.
“Their aim is to leave Turkey with a past that it won’t be able to overcome. And 2015 is their target,” he said.
“Turkey will make every effort to say what we believe is right against these claims, which target our very identity,” said Cengizer.
“But time will tell how successful this is. If we are not successful we are going to have to determine a strategy for post-2015. There is no other way,” he said.
Jabhat al-Nusra blows up Armenian church in Deir el-Zour: A savage blow that echoes through Armenian history
Photo surfaces of Baghdadi’s ‘slain’ ISIS aide
Sources told Al Arabiya News Channel Saturday that Baghdadi (R) was ‘critically wounded’ and his close aide, Abu Suja (L), was killed. (Photo courtesy: The Telegraph/Reuters)
An image of the close aide of ISIS chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, believed to have been killed in a U.S.-led air strike on a convoy of militants in Iraq, was revealed on Sunday.
The aide Auf Abdulrahman Elefery, who went by the code name Abu Suja, was reportedly killed after the strike, which targeted the western Iraqi border town of al-Qaim, tribal sources told Al Arabiya News Channel on Saturday.
The fate of Baghdadi, the leader of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria militant group, remains unclear following reports stating he had been critically injured in the strike.
“He [Abu Suja] and Baghdadi were rarely separate. It’s for this reason that it could be possible that Baghdadi was with him [at the time of the attack],” Hisham al-Hashimi, an Iraqi security strategist, told The Telegraph, which posted the image of Abu Suja.
Iraqi officials said Sunday Baghdadi was wounded in an air strike over the weekend, the Associated Press reported.
Pentagon officials, however, said they had no immediate information on such a strike or Baghdadi being wounded, the agency said.
Both Iraq’s Defense and Interior Ministries issued statements saying Baghdadi had been wounded, without elaborating, the AP reported.
On Saturday, tribal sources told Al Arabiya News Channel that Baghdadi was “critically wounded” when an air strike targeted the western Iraqi border town of al-Qaim. They said other senior ISIS members were killed in the air strike that targeted a gathering of ISIS leaders.
The Associated Press on Sunday quoted an Iraqi Interior Ministry intelligence official as saying the strike happened early Saturday in the town which is located in Iraq’s Anbar province.
The official, citing informants within the militant group, said the strikes wounded Baghdadi, AP reported.
A senior Iraqi military official also said he learned in operational meetings that Baghdadi had been wounded, the agency also said.
Neither knew the extent of Baghdadi’s apparent injuries.
Both officials said the operation was carried out by Iraqi security forces. Neither knew the extent of Baghdadi’s apparent injuries
A fiery phone call between Erdoğan and Putin ended in firing mutual threats
Source: awdnews.com
Moscow- Nov 09, 2014, The pugnacious Turkish President made a rare telephone call to his Russian counterpart to discuss the latest regional developments, particularly Syria’s raging conflict.
According to Moscow Times, a renowned Russian English-language daily newspaper, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan who stepped up his customary belligerent rhetoric against the Syrian government of Bashar al-Assad, told his Russian counterpart that Turkey has allegedly reached a threshold where it cannot remain indifferent toward the “human carnage” in the Arab war-torn country, but to Erdoğan’s surprise, Putin was infuriated and vehemently warned Turkish President from further interfering in Syrian internal affairs otherwise Russia is ready to thwart Turkey from triggering a catastrophic war in the region.
The Turkish flabbergasted president then asked Putin whether his fiery remarks meant a direct threat against Turkey and Putin replied:” Mr. President, You may construe whatever interpretations you wish from my words.”
The Russian president also reminded Erdoğan to the bitter fact that it is Turkey’s erroneous and bellicose policies vis-à-vis the Syrian crisis which claimed the lives of tens of thousands of innocent civilians and further urged the Turkish megalomaniac president to desist from supporting Jihadi terrorists whom set up training camps and safe havens inside the Turkish territories.
Dr. İsmet Bayraktar , a distinguished University professor ,specialized in the political and social history of the Ottoman Empire and modern Turkey believes that Erdoğan during his phone call, tried to somehow dissuade Putin from continuing Russia’s considerable military and political support to embattled Syrian president but as it appears Moscow cannot find more loyal and trustworthy alternative to Assad’s regime.
The two Black Sea neighboring countries differ extremely in regard to their approach to the Syrian conflict. Turkey is keen for a regime change in Syria, while Russia remains one of the staunchest supporters of the Bashar al-Assad regime.
Tweet by maria luis
@gagrulenet A fiery phone call between Erdoğan and Putin ended in firing mutual threats
http://t.co/Mwq8F3yhUs
— maria luis (@maria91luis) November 9, 2014
More than 1,000 killed in battle for Syria’s Kobane: Monitor
BEIRUT – Agence France-Presse
More than 1,000 people, mostly jihadists, have been killed in Kobane since the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) launched an offensive on the Syrian town nearly two months ago, a monitor said Nov. 9.
ISIL jihadists, who proclaimed a “caliphate” in June straddling territory captured in Iraq and Syria, launched their offensive for the town – also known as Ain al-Arab – in mid-September.
“At least 1,013 people have been killed in fighting in Ain al-Arab from the beginning of the offensive till last night,” said Syrian Observatory for Human Rights director Rami Abdel Rahman.
Militants from the Sunni extremist ISIL group accounted for 609 of those killed in the Kurdish town on the Turkish border, he said.
Another 363 of those killed were members of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), 16 were Kurdish volunteers, and one was a Syrian Arab fighter who had joined the ranks of the Kurds.
There were 24 civilians among the dead, said the director of the Britain-based group which relies on a network of sources on the ground for its information.
The toll for jihadists excludes those killed in U.S.-led strikes on ISIL.
Syrian Kurdish forces have been battling to repel ISIL militants from Kobane since September 16.
The fighters from the town have been joined by Syrian rebels who have fought both President Bashar al-Assad’s regime and ISIL, as well as by Iraqi Kurd peshmerga forces.
November/09/2014
With Egyptian President on his side, Greek Cypriot leader accuses Turkey
CAIRO – Agence France-Presse
In this photo provided by Egypt’s state news agency MENA, Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades (from left), Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi and Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras shake hands to pose for photos after a press conference in Cairo, Egypt, Nov. 8, 2014. AP Photo/MENA, Mohammed Abd el-Moaty
Greek Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades on Nov. 8 accused Turkey of “provocative actions” that he said are hindering the island’s peace talks and compromising security in the eastern Mediterranean.
Last month Greek Cyprus suspended its participation in UN-led peace talks with Turkey amid tensions over Ankara’s determination to search for oil and gas in the same region where the Greek Cypriot government has licensed exploratory drills in an exclusive economic zone.
“Turkey’s provocative actions do not just compromise the peace talks, but also affect security in the eastern Mediterranean region,” Anastasiades said during a visit to Cairo.
“For the (peace) negotiations to succeed Turkey needs to show positive intention and adopt a constructive stance through positive and effective steps in this direction,” he said, according to a translation.
The Greek Cypriot leader was speaking at a joint news conference in Cairo with his Egyptian counterpart Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras.
Since Oct. 20 a Turkish survey vessel has encroached Cyprus’s exclusive economic zone off the island’s southern coast, according to Nicosia.
Ankara had issued a notice that a Turkish seismic vessel would carry out a survey until Dec. 30 in the same area where the Italian-Korean energy consortium ENI-Kogas is operating.
Ankara opposes the Cypriot government’s exploitation of offshore energy reserves before a deal is reached to solve the decades-long division of the east Mediterranean island.
Anastasiades, Samaras and Sisi were at a summit in Cairo on Nov. 8 to discuss regional security and economic cooperation.
November/08/2014
The Cut, Fatih Akin, the film is going to cringe in Turkey
Presented for the first November 7 in Paris, the film German-Turkish filmmaker Fatih Akin, may grind more than one tooth in Turkey. It should indeed out on the screens of 5 cities, 5 December, Ankara, Istanbul, Izmir, Antalya and Eskişehir.
In France, the film will be screened in 120 theaters, on January 15, 2015, with dialogue dubbed in Armenian, Turkish and Arabic subtitled in French. Distribution Pyramid Films.
At the end of the projection preview, Fatih Akin was willing to bend the game of questions and answers asked by reporters about the shooting conditions and the Turkish-Armenian issue (see here). Of these, the question of whether he was worried for directing this film, Fatih Akin says that only “fascists” Turkish threatened.
Jean Eckian
France: The stars of the Armenian song are packed in Décines
Saturday, November 8 room Toboggan Décines (Rhône) was packed. More than 600 spectators were present to witness the spectacle of the stars of the Armenian song variety. The evening, organized by the “Armenian Nour ‘association, presented by comedian Ashot Ghazarian kept his promise. In turn, Vartan Badalian, Hamlet Kevorkian, Kohar HOVHANISSIAN and Aghassi Ispirian accompanied by dancers of the troupe of folk dances Nairi (Lyon) enchanted the room. The popular Kohar HOVHANISSIAN even down from the stage to invite the public to some kotcharis. For a few hours, the public-including a large part of Armenia-native was taken in the mountains and plains of Armenia. Mush in Van, Sasun in Van, Armenia was present at Décines. A successful evening with applause from delighted by this heat Armenian public. The president of the association “Nour Armenia” Vartouhi Sahaguian and Caroline Kennedy (Secretary) and Aline Kouyoumdjian (Treasurer) assisted by Anna Ham (representative of the Twinning Committee Décines) were widely praised for their initiative in favor dissemination of Armenian culture with these stars of Armenia in France found an opportunity to rediscover their art. Finally, late in the evening, the audience was invited to a photo-break action “Recognise the Armenian genocide.”
Krikor Amirzayan text and photo-reportage in Décines
US air strike on Islamic State convoy killed leader’s key aide
US unable to confirm if Isis leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi among casualties, amid warning that Isis leadership would regenerate
A key aide to the leader of Islamic State (Isis) was killed in a US strike on a convoy near the Iraqi city of Mosul that destroyed 10 vehicles carrying a number of the group’s top militants.
Abdul Rahman al-Athaee, also known as Abu Saja, is known to have died in the attack on Friday. A key aide to the Isis leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, he travelled frequently with the group’s top leadership.
Colonel Patrick Ryder, a spokesman at US central command, said on Saturday: “I can confirm that coalition aircraft did conduct a series of air strikes yesterday evening [Friday] in Iraq against what was assessed to be a gathering of Isil [Isis] leaders near Mosul. We cannot confirm if Isil leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was among those present.”
Iraqi officials were also unable to confirm whether Baghdadi was among the 50 casualties. Isis did not immediately issue any statement on the strikes.
The news came as Britain’s chief of the defence staff, General Sir Nick Houghton, warned on Sunday that the Isis leadership would regenerate itself even if Baghdadi had been killed.
In a sign that the UK believed there was a strong chance Baghdadi died in the air strikes, Houghton spoke of “potential death” as he said it would take some days for the US to confirm whether the Isis leader was alive or not.
Speaking on the Andrew Marr Show on BBC1, the general said: “I can’t absolutely confirm that al-Baghdadi has died. Even the Americans themselves are not yet in a position to do that. Probably it will take some days to have absolute confirmation.”
But Houghton warned that Isis would fight back if its leader had been killed. He said: “What I wouldn’t want to do is rush to the sense that the potential death of one of their totemic leaders is going to create some strategic reverse within Isis. They will regenerate leadership … because of the current potential attractiveness of this warped ideology. Unless we get the political dimension of the strategy in place then Isis has the potential to keep regenerating and certainly regenerating its leaders.
“In Iraq what is needed is government of national unity, inclusive government, so that all the ethnic dimensions of Iraq are combined. This is where the [Nouri] al-Maliki government got it horribly wrong.”
He added that it was important Maliki administration had been removed and that the Haider al-Abadi government – “which, in its early days is promising to be inclusive” – had support.
Baghdadi, who was said to keep a low profile even among his own armed supporters, made a rare public appearance at a mosque in Mosul in July in which he declared himself the leader of the new caliphate.
A US-led coalition has been launching air strikes on Isis militants and facilities in Iraq and Syria for months as part of an effort to give Iraqi forces the time and space to mount a more effective offensive.
The Pentagon announced on Friday that 1,500 additional US troops would boost the 1,600 military advisers that were already in Iraq to assist the country’s army.
Barack Obama also plans to request $5.6bn (£3.5bn) from Congress, including $1.6bn to be used to train and arm Iraqi forces.