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Turkey: Prominent Turkish Hurriyet journalist injured in gang attack

October 1, 2015 By administrator

n_89272_1Two of the four suspects who were detained after a physical assault that injured prominent Turkish journalist Ahmet Hakan have been revealed as members of the Justice and Development Party (AKP).

Four men, arriving in a black Honda at 12:35 a.m. on Oct. 1, attacked the daily Hürriyet columnist in Istanbul’s Nişantaşı neighborhood as he was returning home after hosting his television program on CNNTürk.

Private broadcaster Kanal D reported Oct. 1 that the four men were relatives originally from the eastern province of Van and two of them were registered as members of the AKP in Istanbul’s Fatih district.

Uğur Adıyaman, a 29-year-old private security officer, was convicted over drug-, threat- and fraud-related crimes. According to the report, he was registered as a member of the AKP on Oct, 12, 2010. His brother, Seyhan Adıyaman, had joined the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) 24 years ago.

The second assailant, Fuat Elmas, 29, became a member of the AKP on June 19, 2007, and worked at a private security firm until 2010, the report added.

The third assailant, Kamuran Ergin, 29, had previously faced drug- and armed assault-related charges in the court. He works at a textile company.

The report did not provide any background information about the fourth assailant, identified as Ahmet Güler.

“Whoever uses it for whatever reason, it is not possible to approve of violence. I always condemn violence and disapprove it, particularly when it targets journalists,” Davutoğlu said when journalists asked him about the incident in his plane as he was returning from his official visit to the United Nations headquarters in New York.

Attack targeting Hakan was the latest assault against daily Hürriyet and its journalists in the past month.

Hürriyet’s headquarters in Istanbul were attacked by pro-AKP protesters on Sept. 6, while AKP MP Abdurrahim Boynukalın was filmed threatening both Hakan and Hürriyet Editor-in-Chief Sedat Ergin. A second attack followed it in less than 48 hours.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: AKP, attack, Journalist, Turkey

Turkey: 2 civilians killed, AKP official injured in PKK attacks in eastern Turkey

September 5, 2015 By administrator

Miran Kaya, a local official from the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) in the Hakkari province

Miran Kaya, a local official from the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) in the Hakkari province

At least two people were killed on Sept. 5 in separate attacks by the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) militants in Turkey’s eastern provinces, official security sources have told state-run Anadolu Agency.

In the first incident, militants reportedly blocked the Tuhi Bridge on the Şemdinli-Yüksekova highway near the village of Yufkalı in the southeastern Hakkari province late Sept. 4. They stopped two vehicles and set them on fire after forcing their drivers out.

Celal İnan, driver of the pick-up truck that was passing by, tried to escape but was killed when militants shot at his car with long-barreled weapons, according to officials.

Miran Kaya, a district official from the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) who was travelling in the truck driven by İnan, was injured in the attack.

Security forces launched a wide-scale operation in the area to apprehend the assailants.

Meanwhile, a woman, who was critically wounded during a PKK attack on a police station in the eastern Tunceli province on Sept. 4, died at Tunceli State Hospital.

According to hospital sources, 32-year-old Ayten Günhan succumbed to her wounds at the intensive care unit on Sept. 5.

Her body was sent to Malatya Forensic Medicine Institute for autopsy.

The attack is the latest in a litany of violence that has swept eastern Turkey since the collapse of a ceasefire between the PKK and the government in July.

Late Sept. 4, clashes between Turkish security forces and PKK militants intensified in a number of southeastern towns.

A curfew was ordered in the Şırnak province’s Cizre district, where unconfirmed reports said there have been several casualties in fierce clashes.

The Şırnak Governorate issued a written statement on Sept. 5, noting that the curfew was extended.

The statement said security forces were dispatched in Cizre to remove ditches and barricades on the town’s streets that PKK militants reportedly placed bombs and mines inside.

Source: hurriyetdailynews.com

September/05/2015

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: AKP, attack, PKK, Turkey

Turkey: Former head of AKP youth branch killed in gun attack in Diyarbakır

August 31, 2015 By administrator

DİYARBAKIR – Anadolu Agency

AA photo

AA photo

A former head of the Justice and Development Party (AKP) youth branch was killed on Aug. 31 in a gun attack in the southeastern province of Diyarbakır. the Hurriyet Daily News reports

Unknown assailants attacked Yunus Koca, who was a pharmacist, in front of his drugstore in Diyarbakır’s central Yenişehir district. Koca was badly wounded and rushed to hospital, where he later succumbed to his injuries.

Security forces have opened an operation to find the assailants, while the police are investigating whether the attack was linked to terrorist groups in the area.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: AKP, Killed, PKK, Turkey, youth branch

Turkey: AKP may resort to civil war to remain in power: Turkey opposition

August 30, 2015 By administrator

292ec4ac-cc13-440b-95a3-c5a905c90a8aTurkey’s opposition parties have warned that the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) may resort to any possible means, even a civil war, to delay the November elections and maintain its grip on power.

“When they [AKP leaders] realize they will lose [the upcoming election], they will resort to all means possible, including igniting a war, to ensure that the election is postponed,” Erdal Aksünger, a senior member of the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), said in an interview with the Turkish Today’s Zaman daily on Saturday.

Aksünger further referred to the recent flare-up of violence between Ankara and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), saying the opposition parties fear that the AKP may intentionally exacerbate the military conflict with Kurdish militants in an attempt to delay the polls.

“Such a development will greatly harm the country and the nation and will cause irreparable damage,” he went on to say, noting, “I don’t think they will show a democratic maturity when they understand they will not be able to win the election again.”

There has been renewed conflict between the PKK and Turkish security forces since July. Turkey has been launching airstrikes against purported Daesh targets in Syria as well as PKK positions in Iraq after a bomb attack, attributed to Daesh, left 32 people dead in the southeastern Turkish town of Suruc on July 20.

Meanwhile, Ayhan Bilgen, the spokesman for the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), said that the ruling party’s leaders are anxious about the results of the upcoming elections because they know that they will be legally held accountable for their wrongdoings once they are removed from power.

“We are faced with a party that is obliged to stay in power out of fears of being on trial,” he stressed.

Source: presstv.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: AKP, civil war, Turkey

Turkey: AKP district head kidnapped by PKK members in Turkey’s east

August 30, 2015 By administrator

akp.thumbThe district head of the Justice and Development Party’s (AKP) Mazgirt branch in Turkey’s eastern province of Tunceli was kidnapped by members of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) on Aug. 29, Doğan News Agency has reported.

A group of PKK militants hijacked a road near the Mazgirt district of Tunceli and started conducting ID checks, where they came across the head of the AKP in Mazgirt, Süleyman Canpolat, along with the village headman of Göktepe, Gökhan Sonar.

PKK members set the car on fire after pulling Canpolat and Sonar out of the car, taking Canpolat while setting Sonar free.

The militants allegedly told Canpolat that they had warned him several times but as he had continued on conducting the post of AKP district head, they were going to “take him with them.”

Speaking to state-run Anadolu Agency, the provincial head of AKP’s Tunceli branch, Erkan Eroğlu, confirmed the abduction of Canpolat, saying that they had learned the news from the security forces.

Meanwhile, two main roads in Tunceli have been closed for three days due to security reasons, Cihan News Agency reported Aug. 30.

Two separate roads connecting Tunceli to the neighboring province of Erzincan and Tunceli’s district of Ovacık have been closed in order to conduct operations in the region against members of terrorist organizations, a decision made by the Tunceli governorate.

PKK members have hijacked the two roads and have been conducting ID checks for a while, diminishing the security of the roads.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: AKP, kidnapped, PKK, Turkey

Police officer wounded in bomb attack on AKP HQ in Turkey’s Diyarbakir

August 16, 2015 By administrator

f55d06e11a2ff4_55d06e11a3014.thumbOne police officer was wounded late on Aug 15 in an outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party(PKK) bomb attack targeting the Justice and Development Party’s (AKP) provincial headquarters in the southeastern province of Diyarbakir, Hurriyet Daily News reported.

PKK militants staged an attack on the AKP provincial headquarters in Diyarbakır with a cluster bomb at around 9 pm. One police officer on duty was wounded and immediately taken to hospital for treatment.
Meanwhile, security forces found an unexploded second bomb during the subsequent investigation. Bomb disposal experts were called to the area and defused the bomb.
A broad-scale operation has been started to apprehend the militants responsible for the attack.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: AKP, bomb attack, Diyarbakirr, HQ, Turkey

Report: Erdogan AK Party has destroyed 2 truckloads of documents since election

August 11, 2015 By administrator

AP Photo)

AP Photo)

The Justice and Development Party (AK Party) has destroyed two truckloads of official documents since it lost its overall majority in Parliament for the first time in 13 years in the June 7 general election, according to a report in the Taraf daily.

The report, published on Monday, claims that sources within the civil service told Taraf that, following June 7, the AK Party ordered civil servants to destroy official documents such as those pertaining to discretionary fund expenditures and documents profiling dissenters, which could implicate AK Party officials if a coalition is unable to be formed or if the AK Party falls from grace in a snap election.

The report also claims that official papers pertaining to expenditures by the Prime Ministry via the discretionary fund have been destroyed and that most of the destruction has been done in the Prime Ministry and its lower departments. In addition, the report said that mail pertaining to exceptional appointments to certain government posts by direct ministerial authorization have been destroyed to prevent any possible liability.

The AK Party has been meeting with other parliamentary political parties in what many consider to be an insincere attempt to form a coalition to govern Turkey. So far, the secular main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) has emerged as the only contender for a viable coalition government.

Taraf’s report states that the go-ahead for the eradication of documents, which the AK Party has labeled a “clean-up,” came on June 8 — one day after the AK Party lost its single-party majority but continued to command a presence within the ministries. Some of the destroyed documents are said to be concerned with the recruitment process to the civil service, in which acts of nepotism and favoritism by the AK Party were reported earlier this year. There have been claims that, when it was in power, the AK Party appointed its own partisans to public offices to ensure that the party’s brand of Islamist political ideology would become dominant within the government bureaucracy.

Even after the defeat on June 7, the AK Party has been accused of making last-minute appointments to important posts, such as appointing the deputy heads of provincial health directorates in 41 provinces to ensure an AK Party mindset in the bureaucracy. The Council of State even had to cancel a number of appointments to public institutions on the grounds that the postings were made at a time when a government has not yet been formed. It ruled recently that the appointment of the deputy directors of provincial health directorates did not serve the public good and was not considered within the scope of service requirements. The court’s decision constitutes a precedent that may have a similar effect on other appointments made recently in the absence of a new government.

Source: Zaman

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: AKP, destroyed, documents, Turkey

Turkey’s AKP deputy prime minister sparks new sexism row

July 29, 2015 By administrator

0,,18617156_303,00Senior government official Bulent Arinc told a female lawmaker ‘as a woman, you should shut up’ during an emergency session in the Turkish parliament. The televised incident prompted outrage and demands for an apology.

The altercation took place on Wednesday night, while the deputy prime minister Arinc was holding a speech justifying the government’s decision to attack Kurdish militants in Iraq. He grew increasingly agitated with a group of pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic Party (HDP) members who were loudly mocking his comments.
“Madam shut up! As a woman, you should shut up!” he yelled at a female lawmaker Nursel Aydogan on live television.
His remarks immediately provoked a flood of criticism on social media, with hashtags such as #BirKadinOlarakSusmayacagiz (as women we are not going to be silent) #KadinDusmaniArinc (Arinc is an enemy of women).

Both HDP and Republican People’s Party (CHP), demanded an apology from the government official.
“We as the CHP strongly condemn the sexist, discriminatory and humiliating comments violating women’s rights,” said CHP deputy leader Selin Sayek Boke.
“Making such a comment under the roof of parliament is unacceptable. We invite him to apologize,” she added.
Nursel Aydogan, to whom Arinc directed her remarks, said: “I don’t take it personally. It is an insult against all women including their own (ruling party) lawmakers.”
A history of gaffes
This is not the first time Arinc has drawn attention and ridicule from women’s-rights activists.
In a widely publicized incident last year, he publicly stated that women should protect their “chasteness” and not laugh in public.
This triggered an online response from women around the world, including British actress Emma Watson, posting pictures of themselves laughing.
Critics of the ruling AKP party, of which Arinc is a member, say it is eroding women’s rights in Turkey.
dj/sgb (AP,AFP)

Source: dw.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: AKP, deputy, sexism, 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

Turkey: AKP vs. crusaders, June election Slogan no more “parallel state”

April 15, 2015 By administrator

By İHSAN YILMAZ

The pope has presented the Justice and Development Party (AKP) with a golden opportunity. You should not be surprised if the Erdoğan-Davutoğlu pair go on to inflate the recent hot debate on the tragic deaths of about 800,000 Armenian civilians because of the brutal acts of the Committee of Union and Progress officials and their civilian co-perpetrators.

The pope has referred to these tragic events that paved the way for the evaporation of the Armenians from the lands that they had inhabited for many hundreds of years as genocide. The Erdoğan-Davutoğlu pair reacted very harshly. One of their ulterior motives is to mobilize their voters before the elections once again on the basis of their national and religious emotions.

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has been very skillful at this game. He has done it repeatedly. The Islamophobic former hegemons of Turkey, the Kemalists, have given him plenty of opportunities. When they stupidly banned headscarved women from entering universities and closed down Islamist parties, Erdoğan declared himself as the champion of oppressed Islam. If economic success is the main reason why his vote increased to 47 percent in 2007 from 34 percent in 2002, the Kemalists’ attack on public manifestations of Islam was the second main reason. Whenever the idiots attacked Erdoğan’s religiosity, his headscarved wife, praying bureaucrats and so on, Erdoğan always scored goals.

Nevertheless, the Kemalists are first and foremost weaker and secondly wiser. The army has learnt to be calm on political issues and the Republican People’s Party (CHP) has been transforming its Kemalist ideology to a social democratic one under the leadership of Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu. Thus, whenever Erdoğan tries to create a position in which he wants the secularists to attack Islam, Kılıçdaroğlu does not fall into the trap.

The last time Erdoğan used Islam to cover his wrong deeds, smokescreen his illegal acts and polarize society to fortify his electoral support was during the Gezi events. He was determined to corrupt the true environmentalist, anti-corrupt and pro-pluralism nature of the Gezi events and tried to present them as an attack against the leader of the Muslim world. He kept repeating the lie that the protesters consumed alcohol in a mosque and that they attacked his “headscarved sister.” He was very successful; his dropping votes started increasing again because the conservative sections of society believed his fabricated narrative, which included fantasies such as Jews, the EU, the US, businesspeople and so on all being against the promised role of the Muslim world.

Then, he had to face the Dec. 17 and 25, 2013 corruption investigations. He developed his Gezi narrative and firmly argued that shadowy international forces used the secularists during Gezi to topple his government and that this time they were using the ostensibly Muslim-looking Hizmet movement, which is actually a tool of the CIA and Mossad, to topple him. At one stage, about 40 percent of Turkish voters believed this and most of them were AKP voters.

But after one and half years of using the entire state power against the movement, he has not been able to prove his accusations that Hizmet is a CIA-Mossad puppet, Fethullah Gülen is a leader of a terrorist organization and that the movement’s participants are corrupt. His intelligence organization has been searching everything but has not been able to find a shred of evidence to support these ridiculous claims. Their solution is to fabricate the evidence. But they are so stupid that even Erdoğan’s true believers did not believe in the Israeli- Gülen-CHP conspiracy to assassinate Erdoğan’s daughter, even though the so-called evidence was published on the front pages of several Erdoğanist newspapers. Now, it has become impossible to mobilize voters by using the “parallel state” accusation. He and his mentee, Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu, have to find a new enemy: It is the crusaders. Erdoğan hinted at this when responding to the pope. He said something like, “The pope has attacked us, just like they did in the past.” He was not blunt enough to say the word “crusader” but this is what he was trying to describe.

Now, this is what he will do: He will ask his pollsters to ask some questions on this pope-crusader issue and if he sees that this debate will bring him votes, you must be ready to listen to the harangues of postmodern Saladin the anti-crusader for two months!

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: AKP, crusaders, Turkey, VS

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