Gagrule.net

Gagrule.net News, Views, Interviews worldwide

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • GagruleLive
  • Armenia profile

Turkey helping ISIL terrorists gain independence – analyst

August 12, 2014 By administrator

Press TV has interviewed Veterans Today’s Jim Dean to talk about Turkey’s role in the strengthening of ISIL Takfiris who are currently engaged in terrorist activities targeting erdogan-isilcivilians in Iraq.

Press TV: Your take sir. It appears that during the reign of Erdogan as prime minister, Turkey has gone through many changes, economically and politically. Has it been odd to you at all that more and more Ankara has become allies, at one point to Riyadh and then now we see to extremist elements even like ISIL?

Dean: Well, we really were surprised when Endogen really stood up for Turkey during the Mavi Marmara incident. They had very close relationship with Israel for a long time; joint military work, even allowing the Israeli military to train and do low-level bombing in Turkey in preparation for practicing attacks on Iran nuclear facilities, as a matter. And then, when the Mavi Marmara situation happened, everything changed on a dime and we are not used to seeing that happen for people who have had any close relationship with Israel, because usually the parliaments have a lock on what the presidents do. So, relations were very cold there and we saw a very independent asserting manner there in NATO and not subservient.

And then when the Syrian war came, at first he started just taking care of refugees, and then after about a year, we began to see that he was siding with the West, he had thrown in with their destabilization program with Turkey, and then even got in heart and soul into supporting the insurgency, training facilities, really quite more than has been in the newspapers. And as we had always been advising them, once you start working, particularly, the terrorist groups in northern Syria, they tried to get a second flight going, you are letting Frankensteins loose all over the region, which is the last thing the region needs, because no matter what happens in Syria, all of these people with all of these fighting experience, they are going to be looking for another fight to get in to. And we are going to be living with this possibly for decades with this horrible mistake.

Press TV: As you have talked about the seizing of the 49 diplomats, we know that it took a long time just recently the last couple of days, that Ankara even talked about that situation in public. They hadn’t even really acknowledged it in public. So looking at that, Mr. Dean, it appears that Ankara has been basically in bed with these terrorists in one way or another. I want you to expand on that. What is your perspective on that?

Dean: Well, I think they just didn’t jump in with both feet. It started and it became… it kind of grew. We have tracked the phony sarin gas attack which was going to be tried to be used to trigger an American involvement. That came down through the Republic of Georgia and was transmitted through Turkey. So he was going to conduit there, some of it we do not know, they intercepted some shipments, which may have been for show and they let some go through so they…
We have seen some cooperation there. And recently, we are tracking now ISIL and other jihadists that are taking over the oil areas, most of that oil, they are selling it, transporting it to Turkey. So Turkey is actually helping them fund themselves, which is making them independent even from the Gulf states, and we are working now to see how that is flowing and we are pretty sure oil is being trucked over, it is being taken to tank farms and some of the oil field they have there, and then actually flowing in to the oil pipeline to the Ceyhan Port, and of course Exxon runs that and wherever that extra oil goes into the pipeline and gets loaded on a ship, somebody has to ride a check to somebody and that is being done by Exxon.

So we are seeing the possibility of some rather very larger powers involved in helping launder this oil money, which by the way is a very serious felony of a large number of international crimes. Money laundering is supporting terrorism.

Press TV: There are many paradoxes in the situation when you look at Turkey and its relationship with many entities. As Mr. Richard Weitz has pointed out, he looked back at the Mavi Marmara incident, of course we know on the one hand that Erdogan was very adamant when he was talking to Shimon Peres. However, we also know that actually nothing happened on the ground and the Israeli embassy was still there and Israeli companies still functioning and basically, nothing happened. Now, we look at this situation. On the one hand, as you have seen some of our viewers are saying, what proof do you have? Actually, they are working hand in hand with ISIL and you just talked about first of all, the oil, and the overall situation. However, what is trying to be shown perhaps is something different. The bottom line to this is why would Erdogan want to work with these extremist elements? What is he getting or what does he think will be attained for propping up the extreme elements in the region?

Dean: Well, as Mr. Weitz said it is a very complex political situation which Turkey, the country has always been a key area between East and West and the politics there and the intrigue is going on for centuries. But we have to look at it little broader because it is not only Erdogan, but look at the Gulf states and their support for not only these terrorists operations, but feel the terrorist groups in brigade formations. We were stunned when we saw that they were actually funding brigades. In fact there were advertisements in Saudi Arabia, where it was almost like you could buy a piece of a football club by putting $1,000 in and you can have a video made of a beheading for a certain amount of money.

It was absolutely incredible and of course the Gulf states are also at risk that once these terrorist groups as we see, they may be dependent on them in the beginning for funding, but they are smart enough to realize that while they are out there in the field, they have got to rob and steal everything they can get, form other relationships, so they are not totally dependent on one group. And then they can turn around and bite the hand that feeds them, which means they can be paid off once the war is over rather than be cast aside as the Americans did with the Taliban after the Soviet-Afghan war and that came back to bite us in the behind. So, and then lastly what we always have in politics is they never accept responsibility for their mistakes.

Press TV: And Mr. Dean, how likely re the policies that have already been implemented by Erdogan likely to backfire as we have seen him support these extremist elements and of course being that Turkey is secular itself. How likely is this all going to backfire and blow up into space right there in Turkey itself?

Dean: Well it easily could and his relationship with the military are strained because of all the trials and some of the opposition, still he has been clearing out the military and now also the police. So he could find himself in a no man’s land, where when he needs the security people, they are not really sure he is going to stand because he has said, you can use us one day to help you and save you and support you, and then you can be prosecuting us in a year or a couple of years from now. So I think we are going to see a very delicate balancing act as people juggling for influence and power and it is really in determinant.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, ISIL, Turkey

Turkey starting new Jihadist “Egyptian ‘Revolutionary Council’ in Istanbul”

August 9, 2014 By administrator

Representatives of the Egypt’s opposition groups including former ministers from the toppled Muslim Brotherhood administration have declared the establishment of “Egyptian Revolutionary Council” against Egyptian Egyption-counsilPresident Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi in Istanbul. report Turkish hurriyet daily news

“The revolutionary and national forces, a year after the situation was exposed, are capable of confronting the bloody terrorist coup which stole our revolution, killed and imprisoned our people, sold our country and spread destruction and fear through the land and kidnapped Dr. Mohammed Morsi”, the spokesperson of the council which consist of 60 people, Mohammed Sharif Kamil, said during a meeting held in Istanbul on August 8.

“We call on all patriots inside and outside egypt to gather around the revolution and its idals and to unify all efforts to confront the counter revolution and its military coup”, Kamil added.

Kamil said the council refused the involvement of the military establishment of a civil state.
“We therefore declare to the Egptian people the establishment of this council in support of the popular resistance affirming that we are not an alternative to the popular resistance inside Egypt which we fully support,” he added.

The group’s targets are uniting all revolutionary forces and youths who are opposed to the military regime, mobilizing international support for the January 2011 revolution, and fulfill the right of the Egyptian people to establish a civil and constitutional state, Kamil said.

Kamil also said they made a call on “all goverments and citizens throughout the world who uphold and defend the rights of people to support our cause of freedom, justice and human rights in Egypt.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Egypt, revolutionary, Turkey

Kurdish security chief: Turkey must end support for jihadists

August 7, 2014 By administrator

Residents inspect damage at a site which activists said was caused by a suicide bomber in the middle of a market last night in Tirbespiye village, east Qamishli

Author Wladimir van Wilgenburg 
Read more: http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/08/syria-kurd-pyd-asayish-isis-turkey-islamic-state.html#ixzz39jTOJs5b

QAMISHLI, Syria — The head of the Kurdish security police in northeast Syria, Ciwan Ibrahim, said that his security forces are willing to cooperate with Turkey if it ends its support for radical jihadist groups.

In an exclusive interview with Al-Monitor, Ibrahim accused Turkey of continuing to support jihadist groups such as the Islamic State (IS), which is in the throes of a major and vicious assault against Kurdish populations in Syria and Iraq.

The Kurdish security police, known as Asayish in Kurdish, operates in Syrian Kurdish cities to combat crime and terrorism. Amid the turmoil of Syria’s civil war, the Kurds established their own autonomous system and security apparatus in northeastern Syria in January.

The Asayish is seen as being affiliated with the Democratic Union Party (PYD), although Ibrahim denied any link to any political party.

Relations between the Syrian Kurds, steered by the PYD, and Turkey have been hostile, fueling repeated accusations from the PYD and the Asayish that the Erdogan government is supporting the radical IS, which is currently besieging the Kurdish enclave of Kobani and massacring Kurdish Yazidis in Iraq.

Ibrahim also accused the Syrian government of backing IS to prevent the Kurds from achieving autonomy in northeast Syria.

“Ali Mamlouk, the head of the intelligence, is responsible for all IS attacks in the Kurdish region,” he said.

The Asayish head rebutted claims that the Kurds sought independence from Syria, stating that they only seek to be part of Syria where all their rights are respected.

Speaking on the fight against IS, Ibrahim urged Western powers to provide technology to his forces to help beat IS.

“If they would support us some way with technology, we would not have this problem.”

The text of the interview follows:

Al-Monitor:  There have been media reports that Turkey is backing jihadist groups, such as IS and Jabhat al-Nusra. Do you agree with these reports?

Ibrahim:  Ankara supports radical groups. Near the border with Rojava [Syrian Kurdistan], a refugee camp is used as a training camp for jihadist fighters. They also support them with medicine and treat wounded jihadist fighters in their hospitals. Ankara does not control the border’s security and allows Islamist groups to operate under the name Free Syrian Army, Islamic Front or IS. These groups are collaborating together in the Jazeera area against the Kurds to destroy the region.

Al-Monitor:  Why would Turkey support IS? Are they not a threat to Turkey?

Ibrahim:  The Turkish government is afraid of Rojava because of the new self-rule system here. Turkey does not want to happen here what happened in northern Iraq. If Turkey did not support people fighting our revolution, we would not have any problems with having ties with Turkey. They always say that we are the PKK [Kurdistan Workers Party], but we are not the PKK.

Al-Monitor:  Do you think ties with Turkey could improve in the future?

Ibrahim:  If Turkey changes its behavior regarding its support for radical groups, then we don’t have any problems with the government of Turkey, or the people of Turkey.

Al-Monitor:  Do you have any relations with your counterparts in Iraqi Kurdistan?

Ibrahim:  Officially, we have relations with the Asayish of the PUK [Patriotic Union of Kurdistan]. We have good connections with the people in Bashur [Iraqi Kurdistan]. But we do not have any relations with the Asayish of the Kurdistan Democratic Party [KDP]. The KDP sides with Turkey, and they are an enemy of the Rojava revolution. We want to have a good relationship with the KDP, and the Asayish in Erbil and Dahuk, but they are taking Turkey’s side.

Al-Monitor:  There are accusations that the Syrian government has also supported IS. In June, Syrian Kurdish politician Abdullah Ahmad Qirtimini was assassinated and his son blamed it on the government. What do you think of these accusations?

Ibrahim:  The main security risks for us are the regime and IS. I can assure you 100% that there is a connection between the Syrian regime and IS. So far, the regime has not attacked IS bases because IS is fighting Jabhat al-Nusra and the Free Syrian Army.

Al-Monitor:  Is it just IS fighting the Kurds in the Hasakah region, or are there other groups as well?

Ibrahim:  Here in the Cizire canton [Kurdish for Hasakah province], IS and other groups have united to fight the Kurds. They are afraid of the Kurds and say the Kurds want their own country and want a piece from Syria. But the truth is that the Kurdish movement just wants the rights of Kurds. This whole situation is created by the Syrian intelligence. Ali Mamlouk united every group that did not accept Kurdish rights. They’ve turned the opposition into just IS. They want IS to fight Arabs who are not with the regime. Ali Mamlouk, the head of the intelligence, is responsible for all IS attacks in the Kurdish region. Damascus has failed in its attempt to unite all radical groups against the Kurds.

Al-Monitor:  Do you have problems with the Arab tribes in Hasakah province?

Ibrahim:  In Tirbespiyeh [Al-Qahtaniyah], some Arab tribes brought by the regime in the late 1960s and 1970s, and that are supporting IS, are trying to create problems. There are IS sleeper cells. Mohammed Fares’ tribe [the pro-government Tay tribe] can become an IS partner in the future and create problems in the region. The Arabs don’t mind who the ally is, they just want to fight the Kurds. In Sweidiah village, near Rumeilan, there are connections between the local Arab population and radical groups.

Al-Monitor:  Does that mean you have problems with Arabs?

Ibrahim:  We have a future to live all together. Our problem is the al-Qaeda ideology that came here and brought terror. It’s not an ethnic problem. Some Arabs accept the new Kurdish system, and some Kurds work with IS. We do not want independence from Damascus, we want to be a part of Syria, with all our rights.

Al-Monitor:  The West has not supported your struggle against jihadist groups. How has that hindered your fight?

Ibrahim:  If you fight terrorism, you need support, like from the West. They had explosions in London and Madrid. We need Europe and the United States to support us with technology. Detectors and explosive deactivators are needed to fight IS. If they would support us in some way with technology, we would not have this problem.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ISIL, kurdish security, support, Turkey

Saudi businessman al-Qadi met with Erdoğan 7 times while he was banned

August 5, 2014 By administrator

August 04, 2014, Monday TODAY’S ZAMAN / ISTANBUL

A Saud189191_newsdetaili businessman listed as a terror financier by international organizations entered Turkey seven times before his name was taken off the lists of those suspected of supporting terrorist activities, according to claims put forward in a summary of proceedings prepared by the police as part of a graft investigation intended to be launched into the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government.

The Cumhuriyet daily has been publishing the details of the summary of proceedings of the investigation since Sunday. Initially, the prosecutor conducting the investigation was planning to detain the suspects mentioned in the summary on Dec. 25, 2013. However, the government found out about the investigation and reacted preemptively, appointing new police officers loyal to it and later gradually changing laws to ensure that the investigation stalled. Some details about the allegations leveled at the government — including Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his family members — have been leaked, but the prime minister has successfully managed to portray the investigation as a coup attempt against his government.

Cumhuriyet’s Can Dündar has been sharing the details of the summary of proceedings of the investigation that never happened but would have resulted in a series of detentions and arrests had the prosecutor been allowed to continue his work independently.

Dündar recalled that certain pieces information about the nature of the relationship between Erdoğan and Saudi businessmen Yasin al-Qadi have been public for some time. For example, the two have met through Cüneyt Zapsu, who was a prominent advisor to the prime minister while Erdoğan was still mayor of İstanbul. After Dec. 17, 2013, when the police detained several businessmen and the sons of three ministers as part of the same corruption investigation, Erdoğan publicly mentioned al-Qadi as a “Saudi businessman who would like to invest in Turkey.” Erdoğan also said that al-Qadi is not a terrorist. “He has been acquitted by international courts. He is a family friend. What’s wrong with that?” he had asked, adding, “Will you not be able to do business in Turkey if you are the son or groom of the prime minister?” In an earlier statement, he had vouched for al-Qadi saying: “I trust Mr. al-Qadi as much as I trust myself. He is a charitable person.”

Dündar noted that the same al-Qadi, about whom Erdoğan speaks so highly, is a “global terrorist” according to an FBI list and is considered to be a “terror financier” by the UN Security Council. All his assets were frozen across the globe and he was banned from Turkey. Later, al-Qadi won several court cases in Europe and the US and was able to remove his name from terror lists.

However, the Dec. 25 graft investigation, according to Dündar’s report, has shown that al-Qadi actually entered Turkey with Erdoğan’s help at a time when he was legally barred from doing so. The summary of proceedings states that al-Qadi entered Turkey without any paperwork at various airports, where he arrived on his private jet with the full knowledge and protection of the Prime Ministry. He was also given an official vehicle, a protection officer and a driver by the Prime Ministry, according to the summary of proceedings. In other words, at a time when a group of police officers was protecting this illegal visitor, another group of police officers was monitoring his every move and recording his conversations.
12 meetings between Erdoğan and al-Qadi

According to the claims put forward in the Dec. 25 proceedings summary, al-Qadi and the prime minister have had 12 meetings in Turkey. The summary also notes that this is the number of meetings that the police have been able to monitor. Seven of these meetings took place at a time when al-Qadi was barred from entering Turkey as a terror suspect. In other words, when the Turkish police were looking for him, he was meeting with the prime minister.

The summary also indicates that the secret guest, called “Amca” (the uncle) by those around him, met with National Intelligence Agency (MİT) Undersecretary Hakan Fidan five times during the time when he was not allowed to enter Turkey. Those organizing his entries and meetings took the utmost care to ensure secrecy and took immense pains to ensure that the name al-Qadi was not recorded by any eavesdropper.

Dündar also shared the transcript of a recorded phone conversation between Usame Kutub, an associate of al-Qadi, and Hasan Doğan, the prime minister’s chief of staff. The transcribed recording indicates that although al-Qadi is the one seeking to schedule an appointment, the relationship of superiority between the prime minister and him is reversed. In the conversation, recorded on April 26, 2013, Kutub says, “‘The uncle’ will be in İstanbul in an hour,” and tells Doğan: “It would be great if it [the meeting] could be today or tomorrow. He wants to see the both of them.” Kutub is referring to Hakan Fidan as the second person. Doğan asks in the same conversations: “Should we arrange a meeting with ‘the gentleman’ [Erdoğan] first?” Kutub replies: “Yes, let him meet with ‘the gentleman’ first. This will be a lengthy meeting. Don’t arrange any other meetings. A meeting of at least three hours.”

The transcription clearly shows that a Saudi businessman can order a meeting with the prime minister, can easily say that the MİT undersecretary should attend and that the prime minister should not have any other meetings on the same day.

Cumhuriyet provided transcripts of phone conversations recorded at other times, further proving the suspicious nature of the relationship. The summary of proceedings also provides photographs of all three men — Erdoğan, al-Qadi and Fidan — entering a prime ministry building. These photographs are included in the case file as evidence.

The first recorded meeting between Erdoğan and al-Qadi took place on April 14, 2012 at the Haliç Congress Hall. Fidan was also present at this meeting. The second meeting was held on June 25 in Ankara. Usame Kutub also was present during this meeting. On July 1 and July 12, and later on Sept. 22, they met at the house of Latif Topbaş in İstanbul. Erdoğan’s son Bilal Erdoğan and al-Qadi’s son Muaz also attended these meetings. On Sept. 29, they met in Ankara at a hotel, where al-Qadi first met with MİT’s Fidan and later Khaled Mashal, the leader of Hamas, who was visiting Ankara to attend an AK Party congress. They had several other meetings after al-Qadi’s travel ban to Turkey came into force. Although the summary does not include concrete information about what they talked about in these meetings, there are some clues. For example, on June 9, 2013, Usame Kutub called Hasan Doğan to send a message from “the uncle” to the prime minister. “Tell the prime minister that if there is no emergency intervention in the neighbor next door, Homs will fall. If Homs falls, that means a new state will be born on the [Turkish] border.”

In another conversation, al-Qadi is heard telling Bilal Erdoğan: “Tell your father not to be angry at our people. I’ll tell why when we meet.” Dündar also noted that Erdoğan’s anti-Saudi attitude changed after that. In another phone conversation — which was leaked earlier — Erdoğan angrily says, “It turns out that the enemy was among us after all,” in response to a tweet from Bilal criticizing perceived Saudi support for the coup in Egypt.

The summary of proceedings suggests that politics was certainly an important issue taken up during the meetings, but it was not all. Other transcripts Cumhuriyet shared reveal that the parties often discuss business details. There are conversations that seem to prove allegations that al-Qadi is a confidential partner in a new development investment that will be built on land owned by the Police Academy in the Etiler neighborhood of İstanbul, along with businessman Cengiz Aktürk and Bilal Erdoğan. The date of one of these conversations, June 25, 2012, matches the period when Bosphorus 360 — the developer in which al-Qadi is said to be a secret partner — lobbied actively to buy the Police Academy land in Etiler. Other phone conversations seem to verify the allegation that al-Qadi was given money through the al-Baraka bank in a covert transaction.

Another conversation suggests that the prime minister personally promised to give Turkish citizenship to Nebil Hakimi, al-Qadi’s Jordanian business partner. In another conversation, Kutub complains about Turkey’s consul-general in Jeddah in a conversation with Doğan. The consul-general had asked too many questions about Hakimi’s citizenship request. Hasan Doğan says in the same conversation, “I will put him in his place, don’t you worry.”

The conversations also suggest that Hakimi met with Hakan Fidan and Erdoğan on Oct. 9, 2013. The main topic discussed seems to be the development project on Police Academy land in Etiler. Cumhuriyet also shared the photographs of these alleged meetings that were included in the proceedings file as evidence.

Dündar ended his article with a sentence from Cengiz Aktürk, uttered months before the graft investigation during a phone conversation with Fatih Saraç, whose appointment to the Habertürk daily as a government commissioner was exposed in March this year. Aktürk is heard saying: “This affair [with al-Qadi] will bring trouble to the prime minister. They will refer it to it as the ‘Susurluk of the AK Party’,” referring to the illegal and powerful Susurluk scandal which was exposed in 1996, when shady relationships between a deputy, a police chief and a mafia boss became publicly known.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: al-Qadi, Erdogan, Turkey

Akin delays Turkish film on murdered Armenian journalist

August 2, 2014 By administrator

0,,17827783_303,00Turkish-German film director Fatih Akin says a film he wants to make about the murdered Armenian journalist Hrant Dink remains on ice because no Turkish actor was ready to play the lead role. Dink was shot dead in 2007.

Akin, who has collected a string of German and European cinema awards over 2 decades, told Saturday’s edition of the Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos on Saturday that the risks for Turkish actors were still too high and so he had put the project “in the freezer.”

Dink was shot dead by a teenage Turkish ultranationalist on a busy Istanbul street in 2007, outside the offices of Agos.

The 52-year-old Dink had campaigned for reconciliation between Turks and Armenians, who say that up to 1.5 million people were killed in 1915, during World War I, as the Ottoman Empire fell apart.

Turkey has long denied that the deaths amounted to a massacre, although in April Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan spoke of “our shared pain.”

Script ‘too strong’

0,,15672278_404,00Akin said he had drafted a very text-rich script based on 12 of Dink’s articles published in Agos.

“However, I couldn’t convince any actor from Turkey to accept the role of Hrant [Dink]; they all found the script too strong,” Akin said.

“I didn’t want to put any actor at risk, but it was also important that a film about Hrant would be a Turkish film,” he added. “An American or French actor couldn’t have been cast as Hrant. We have to deal with this alone.”

Different entry at Venice festival

Akin said instead he combined parts of the Dink script to complete a different film, “The Cut,” which will premier at Italy’s Venice International Film Festival later this month.

“The Cut,” starring French actor Tahar Rahim, tells the story of an Armenian man who survives the 1915 killings and embarks on a journey across the world to find his daughter.

Dink’s assassination drew international attention and grew into a wider scandal with accusations of a Turkish state conspiracy.

At his funeral, an estimated 200,000 people marched, chanting “We are all Armenians.”

In February this year, the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists ranked Turkey as the world’s leading jailer of journalists.

ipj/slk (AFP, Reuters)

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Film, Hrant dink, Turkey

Group with alleged links to Islamic State gathers in Istanbul

July 31, 2014 By administrator

There has been much speculation over the past three years about Turkey’s supporting radical Islamist groups in an attempt to end Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Militant Islamist fighters wave flags as they take part in a military parade along the streets of RaqqaErdogan’s government, however, has categorically denied these allegations.

By Tulin Daloglu
Yet the release of a video, allegedly showing a “jihadist” crowd gathering in Istanbul on July 28 for the prayers marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan, has sparked controversy. The recording was released by takvahaber.net, described by Turkish media as an online portal close to the Islamic State (IS).

This website was the only source that reported the assembling of this crowd in Omerli, on the Anatolian side of Istanbul. The 26-minute recording includes a long preaching segment. “Let God make us fight the just war of jihad,” the preacher says. “May God help jihadists and those who are patient for victory. May God help their shots hit the mark.”

Although the Turkish parliament was in summer recess, Sezgin Tanrikulu, a main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) deputy, submitted a written query through the speaker’s office, asking that it be answered by Interior Minister Efkan Ala. Asking the security establishment to confirm first whether this gathering took place in Istanbul and whether this was really a crowd affiliated with IS, Tanrikulu asked whether there were any IS camps within Turkey’s borders.

“Are the allegations true that the IS militants also use this open field for militant training?” Tanrikulu asked. “Have these people asked for any official permission to gather this crowd to mark the end of Ramadan? If so, who gave them this permission? What were the Istanbul security director and the head of gendarmerie in the Istanbul area doing when these people were calling for jihad there?”

He added, “Is it true that both the police department and the gendarmerie units were ordered not to interfere when the group, the extension of a terrorist organization, was calling for jihad in Istanbul? Who gave these orders?”

No Turkish government official has yet said a word about the affair. Speaking to Al-Monitor, Turkish authorities said they were so far dependent on this website’s allegation that this event took place in Istanbul. “Although we cannot provide you any official confirmation that this event took place in Istanbul, it seems quite likely that it was recorded where they claim it was,” one official who asked to remain anonymous told Al-Monitor.

These authorities also note various challenges they face. Although Turkey designates al-Qaeda as a terrorist organization, there is a big question mark whether IS militants are also categorized as “terrorists.” Once the state depicts a group as a terror organization, it activates all its tools to fight against its members. “It is not really clear whether there is any such order here,” this official told Al-Monitor. “What makes everything more complicated is that IS kidnapped Turkey’s Mosul Consulate members, and there are rumors about a tough ransom negotiation to rescue them.” The rumor is that Turkey will pay about $300 million to get its diplomats back.

IS stormed the Turkish Consulate in Mosul on June 11, taking hostage all 49 members of its staff hostage, including Consul General Ozturk Yilmaz.

The same authorities Al-Monitor talked to suggested that IS has actually shown its muscle to the Erdogan government by releasing this video. “The government has already put a gag order on the media not to report anything that could offend the IS. And they release this video footage — all in Turkish, shot in Istanbul, and there is no word from the government yet. They have taken the government hostage as well with this video,” this official told Al-Monitor. “If they don’t act today for the sake of saving these 49 diplomats, it is not clear what they can do next. It is a very delicate and tough decision for the government, but one has to draw the line before it gets too late.”

Put simply, whether the Erdogan government helped the radical Islamic groups fight against the Assad regime could be irrelevant, as these groups already openly operate in Turkish territory. What is relevant today is that these groups are posing a threat to Turkey in terms of potentially recruiting and radicalizing its own population. If IS is not really considered a terrorist organization, the security establishment is quite restricted in how it may act against these militants. Therefore, only the government can determine when it is time to call them one. The media, however, remain restricted in talking about this group until the Turkish diplomats’ fates become clear.

Tulin Daloglu
Columnist

Tulin Daloglu is a columnist for Al-Monitor’s Turkey Pulse. She has also written extensively for various Turkish and American publications, including The New York Times, International Herald Tribune, The Middle East Times, Foreign

Filed Under: News Tagged With: islamic state, İstanbul, Turkey

Turkey: allocation of camps to ISIL in Istanbul spark debate

July 30, 2014 By administrator

ANKARA

 ISIL-turkeyThe related video was released through a Turkish website administered by a group apparently close to ISIL.

The release of a video allegedly showing a group of jihadists gathered for prayer in the rural part of Istanbul has sparked concerns in Turkey.

The video has prompted deputy Sezin Tanrıkulu of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) to question whether the gathering took place upon consent from both the police department and the Gendarmerie Command.

“Is the claim that the group alleged to have been the Turkey-branch of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant [ISIL] has been allocated a campground or other places in Istanbul? Who is this group? Of whom does it consist?” asked Tanrıkulu in a motion filed to the parliamentary speaker’s office on July 30 in order to be answered by Interior Minister Efkan Ala.

Tanrıkulu asked for the locations of the camps if the claim was true and added: “Where is the field where the group, alleged to be the Turkey-extension of ISIL, used for holiday celebration that it organized in Istanbul on July 28, to which hundreds of people attended, as openly seen in the photographs?”

The related video was released through a Turkish website administered by a group apparently close to ISIL. According to the website, the group gathered in the rural part of Istanbul for prayer and celebrations on the first day of the Eid al-Fitr holiday, July 28.

Tanrıkulu also asked whether it is true that the group “declared jihad in Turkey on July 28,” and whether the field in the footage was being used by the group for military training.

“Did the organization ask for permission, arranged in the name of holiday celebrations? Which authorities granted the group official permission? Why weren’t these people directed to mosques for Eid prayer, but were let to organize a holiday celebration in a field? What were the Istanbul Provincial Police Department and Provincial Gendarmerie Command doing during the hours when the group, which is the extension of the ISIL terrorist organization, was calling for jihad in Istanbul? Is it true that Istanbul Provincial Police Department and Gendarmerie Command were ordered not to interfere when the group, the extension of a terrorist organization, was calling for jihad in Istanbul? Who gave these orders?” Tanrıkulu asked.

ISIL recently renamed itself simply as the Islamic State (IS). The IS stormed the Turkish Consulate-General on June 10 and has since been holding all 49 there hostage, including Turkey’s Consul General Özturk Yılmaz.

July/30/2014

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ISIL, Turkey

Turkish deputy PM slams women ‘having vacation without husbands’

July 30, 2014 By administrator

Turkey’s Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç has defended his claim that his recent criticism against women “laughing” was interpreted out of context, while slamming women “who go no-woman-vacationfor a vacation without their husbands and who can’t wait to climb poles when they see one,” the Hurriyet Daily News reports. 

“My speech was not just about a few reminders for women; it was targeting men, too,” Arınç said while answering public broadcaster TRT Haber’s questions on July 30.

Speaking during an Eid al-Fitr meeting on July 28, Arınç described his ideal of the chaste man and woman, saying they should both have a sense of shame and honor.

“Chastity is so important. It is not only a name. It is an ornament for both women and men. [She] will have chasteness. Man will have it, too. He will not be a womanizer. He will be bound to his wife. He will love his children. [The woman] will know what is haram and not haram. She will not laugh in public. She will not be inviting in her attitudes and will protect her chastity,” he had said, sparking a heated debate.

On July 30, Arınç defended his words, saying the speech took some 1.5 hours, but complained that “some people pick a section of it and criticize” it.

“I stand by my words,” Arınç said, arguing that urging just women to not laugh is “irrational,” but his speech was about “general rules of ethics and good manners.”

“There are some artists who now laugh artificially and send me their photos. Real laughs relieve a person, but these are artificial ones. Those who go for a vacation without their husbands and can’t wait to climb poles when they see one,” Arınç added.

Arınç did not name any names, but Asena Erkin, wife of Fenerbahçe footballer Caner Erkin, had recently shared a photo on her Instagram account, reading, “When I find a [dancing] pole, I never miss the chance.”

Arınç’s controversial remarks had sparked a social media protest with hundreds of women in Turkey posting photos that show them laughing, shared under the hashtags #kahkaha (laugh) and #direnkahkaha (resist, laugh). Over 300,000 tweets were posted for the campaign, according to BBC Trending.

FEMEN Turkey was the latest participant of the protest, claiming in a tweet that ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) officials “can keep crying on TVs to deceive people, but women will keep on laughing.”

“You can live such a life. Instead of being angry at you, I only feel pity for you,” Arınç told TRT Haber.

“I personally think the act of adultery shouldn’t be committed and I condemn it,” he added.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: husband, no vacation, Turkey, woman

Turkey: Urfa’s old Armenian church of the Ramadan demand

July 29, 2014 By administrator

The two former republics in Urfa during the Armenian church converted into a mosque, while the almost empty for eleven months only in the month of Ramadan are interested. Urfa is Urfa-old-Armenian-churchwhy fasting these “air-conditioned mosque” s Iftar in the rest of your time waiting.

SERDAR GUARDS
My serdarkorucu@hotmail.co

The two former republics in Urfa during the Armenian church converted into a mosque, while the almost empty for eleven months only in the month of Ramadan are interested. Urfa is why fasting these “air-conditioned mosque” s Iftar in the rest of your time waiting.

After the Genocide of Armenians in Urfa in 1915 after being empty last 60 years, the church converted into a mosque situated in the city center at the beginning of the Holy Asdvadzadzin (Blessed Virgin Mary), and the Holy Arakelots (the Apostles) is coming. Or with the current name Saladin and New frilled mosques …

Surp Surp not Asdvadzadzin that Astez!

Fish Lake is located near campus, old photographs and postcards of the city skyline holds an important place in the Church of Surp Asdvadzadzin, archbishops was the center until 1915. ‘Big Church’ next to the so-called Armenian Surp Asdvadzadzin College and Middle School is located in the Republic today than there were in the church.

Describing the history of the sign at the entrance to the Holy Asdvadzadzin name ‘Armenian Holy Church Astez’ he does not see the mosque is still expected demand. Urfa window on the edge of the dragon reliefs available, church history known mosque, the city instead of the old Muslim places of worship kullanıyor.soyk am after Urfa Castle dating back to the Armenian quarter, along with past deleted from the church, first in Anatolia, like, for many years a tenement was left, after the power plant were used. Last olaraks in 1993 Saladin Mosque converted to the worship of the Muslim community was opened a year later.

Governor of Urfa ‘Armenian’ does not say

Surp Asdvadzadzin 37 years ago from a similar fate in 1956, converted into a mosque in the Church of the Holy Arakelots lives. Inscription were lost and the exact date can not be known church door any information is absent, the governor’s web site Armenian heritage is not mentioned, only this place is important, an old church that following sentence says: “Christianity in terms of great importance Foil cross in 1092 in Urfa brought to this church was put. “

If the Council’s web site governorship structure which is different from that of the former Armenian Church, New Church as the frilled for a while before changing the decision taken in 1956 states that used as a prison.

According to some accounts, the pre-1915 stone ornaments in the Church was, according to some accounts located at the top in that period due to wind roses ‘frilly’ structure called the Prophet by the name of the muftis. Iyaz Bin Ganem Memorial Church replaced as the demand is not recognized by the Council, the structure of Christian history in the region continues to remain in the memory. Therefore, as Salahaddin Mosque Mosque in New frilled not interested in the congregation for 11 months. Place could be found in the surrounding sidewalks, even to the mosque prayer rug laid kılınırk, Muslim worship filed not be subjected to these two old churches. 2-3 Fridays even the most pure, while maintaining the old church new mosques, just over a month is filled by the congregation. The reason for this lack of interest often exceeding 40 degrees sweltering in Urfa iftar in Ramadan of the Muslim community structure your time in air-conditioned waiting …

Source: AGOS

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Holy Church, orfa, Ramadan, Turkey

Women should not laugh in public, Turkish deputy PM says

July 29, 2014 By administrator

Women should not laugh out loud in public, Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç has said while complaining about “moral corruption” in Turkey, the Hurriyet Daily News reports.

woman-shouldSpeaking during an Eid el-Fitr meeting on July 28, Arınç described his ideal of the chaste man or woman, saying they should both have a sense of shame and honor.

“Chastity is so important. It is not only a name. It is an ornament for both women and men. [She] will have chasteness. Man will have it, too. He will not be a womanizer. He will be bound to his wife. He will love his children. [The woman] will know what is haram and not haram. She will not laugh in public. She will not be inviting in her attitudes and will protect her chasteness,” Arınç said, adding that people had abandoned their values today.

People needs to discover the Quran once again, Arınç said, adding that there had been a regression on moral grounds.

“Where are our girls, who slightly blush, lower their heads and turn their eyes away when we look at their face, becoming the symbol of chastity?” he said.

He said some TV series geared toward young people had because teenagers to grow up only as “sex addicts,” accusing those who abuse the excitement of youths with publications on TV, the web, newspapers, or in educational places, especially in universities.

Arınç also complained about high consumption, referring to the number of cars and mobile phones that individuals have.

Targeting women once more, Arınç said women talk about unnecessary things on the phone.

“Women give each other meal recipes while speaking on the mobile phone. ‘What else is going on?’ ‘What happened to Ayşe’s daughter?’ ‘When is the wedding?’ Talk about this face to face,” he said.

People should not use their personal cars unnecessarily, he also said, adding that even if the Nile River was full of oil, there would not be enough fuel to power cars.

Ekmeleddin İhsanoğlu, who is running for the presidency against Arınç’s boss, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, commented on Arınç’s statement via Twitter, saying Turkey needed women to laugh, as well as to hear everybody’s happy laughter more than anything.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: laugh, Turkey, woman

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 242
  • 243
  • 244
  • 245
  • 246
  • …
  • 271
  • 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

  • Pashinyan Government Pays U.S. Public Relations Firm To Attack the Armenian Apostolic Church
  • Breaking News: Armenian Former Defense Minister Arshak Karapetyan Pashinyan is agent
  • November 9: The Black Day of Armenia — How Artsakh Was Signed Away
  • @MorenoOcampo1, former Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, issued a Call to Action for Armenians worldwide.
  • Medieval Software. Modern Hardware. Our Politics Is Stuck in the Past.

Recent Comments

  • Baron Kisheranotz on Pashinyan’s Betrayal Dressed as Peace
  • Baron Kisheranotz on Trusting Turks or Azerbaijanis is itself a betrayal of the Armenian nation.
  • Stepan on A Nation in Peril: Anything Armenian pashinyan Dismantling
  • Stepan on Draft Letter to Armenian Legal Scholars / Armenian Bar Association
  • administrator on Turkish Agent Pashinyan will not attend the meeting of the CIS Council of Heads of State

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