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Libya’s PM says Turkey supplying weapons to rival Tripoli group

February 27, 2015 By administrator

Abdullah al-Thinni (Photo: Reuters)

Abdullah al-Thinni (Photo: Reuters)

libya‘s internationally recognized Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thinni said his government would stop dealing with Turkey as it was sending weapons to a rival group in tripoli so “the Libyan people kill each other,” ramping up his rhetoric against ankara.

Two administrations, one in the capital and Thinni’s in the east, have been vying for power since an armed group called Libya Dawn seized Tripoli in July 2014 — four years after Muammar Gaddafi’s ousting — and reinstated lawmakers from a previous assembly.

“Turkey is a state that is not dealing honestly with us. It’s exporting weapons to us so the Libyan people kill each other,” he told Egyptian TV channel CBC late on Thursday.

A spokesman for Turkey’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs strongly denied Thinni’s allegations. “Instead of repeating the same baseless and untrue allegations we advise them to support UN efforts for political dialog,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Tanju Bilgiç told Reuters.

“Our policy in relation to Libya is very clear. We are against any external intervention in Libya and we fully support the ongoing political dialog process under UN mediation,” he added.

Thinni’s government said this week it would exclude companies from future deals, accusing Ankara of backing the Tripoli government and its allied armed groups. He repeated that Turkish firms would be excluded from contracts in territory controlled by his government in the CBC interview, noting that any outstanding bills would be paid. “We don’t say we are hostile to Turkey but we say we won’t deal with it,” he said.

Turkey is one of a handful of countries that has publicly received officials from the Tripoli government and parliament. Critics of Ankara say its Libya policy is an extension of a pro-Islamist agenda that has already seen relations sour with other former regional allies, notably Egypt.

Thinni also accused Qatar of giving “material” support to the rival side in the Libyan conflict. He did not elaborate.

Army general Khalifa Haftar, who merged his forces with the army in the east to fight Islamist militants, is seen as a potential rival to Thinni. While the alliance between the groups has enabled them to win back territory, Haftar has been criticized for air strikes on civilian airports and seaports.

On Wednesday, a spokesman for Thinni’s parliament said the assembly’s president would appoint Haftar as top army commander.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ankara, Libya, tripoli, weapons

A Blow to Ankara: Syrian Army Makes Advances in Aleppo Offensive

February 21, 2015 By administrator

By: Hassan Illeik, Rida al-Bacha

1163804The Syrian army and its allied forces are continuing the battle to besiege neighborhoods under the control of the opposition in the city of Aleppo, and to break the siege around the towns of Nubl and al-Zahraa in the city’s northern countryside — a move significant for its timing. The operation is reminiscent of the army’s surrounding of Eastern Ghouta, on April 7, 2013, which sought to prevent attacks on the nearby capital, and besieged the fighters. Starting yesterday, the army has been trying to perform the same feat in Aleppo, the capital of northern Syria.

Aleppo — The battle’s significance stems from several factors. First, it coincides with United Nations envoy to Syria Staffan de Mistura’s UN Security Council briefing, after the Syrian government agreed to his plan to halt the fighting in the city of Aleppo. The Syrian government seems to be saying that its agreement to go along with De Mistura’s plan will not bind its hands in Aleppo’s northern countryside, an area which Turkey openly wants to transform — with Western help — into a buffer zone.

Second, it coincides with a major battle the Syrian army is waging in the south (Daraa’s northwestern countryside and Quneitra’s countryside) to further protect Damascus and prevent opposition forces in the south from becoming a strategic threat to the capital. These simultaneous battles mean the army is capable of waging major battles on more than one front. Further, they deprive the opposition of the ability to create a balance on the battleground — a balance that would render the army’s achievements meaningless, be they military or in terms of morale.

Third, this operation — if successful — will cut off the last main road connecting Aleppo’s eastern neighborhoods (subject to opposition control) to Turkish territories.

Fourth, encircling the neighborhoods under opposition control will eventually help bring them back under the authority of the Syrian state, which would constitute a military, political and moral blow to proponents of toppling the regime and establishing a buffer zone in the north. To shed light on this issue, it is enough to remember what Hakan Fidan, Turkey’s strongman and former head of the National Intelligence Organization (who resigned to take on a more important post in Ankara), told Arab officials who met him in 2013. At the time, the Syrian army was thwarting opposition attacks on Damascus and advancing in the Qusayr area. Fidan told those who met him (based on their statements to Al-Akhbar): “All this progress will not benefit the Assad regime. When Aleppo falls in the hands of the opposition, the central region in Syria will fall entirely within a few days.”

Fifth, breaking the siege around the towns of Nubl and al-Zahraa will constitute a major moral blow to the Syrian opposition whose multiple forces (including al-Nusra Front and Jaish al-Muhajireen wal Ansar [Army of Emigrants and Supporters]) have spared no effort to occupy them. To that end, they waged more than one vicious attack in the past few weeks, all of which have failed.

The opposition is mobilizing its forces from various villages and towns in the Aleppo countryside and some from the Idlib countryside, as well, in an attempt to repel the army attack.

Sixth, the Syrian army has adopted a somewhat new policy. A day before the attack began, it leaked information about mobilizing its forces north of the city of Aleppo ahead of its push to completely surround the city. Nevertheless, the fighters were surprised by the attack that began yesterday at dawn, allowing Syrian troops to enter three villages (Bashkoy, Hardetneen, Ratyan) on the way to Nubl and al-Zahraa.

Fighting in these areas is not easy, according to sources on battlefield. The opposition is mobilizing its forces from various villages and towns in the Aleppo countryside and some from the Idlib countryside, as well, in an attempt to repel the army attack. However, some of its forces were preoccupied on another front at Aleppo’s northwestern entrance, which the army attacked on purpose.

How did the battle begin?

Shortly before dawn yesterday, the Syrian army and Local Defense Committees began infiltrating from the village of Saifat heading north towards Hardetneen, Raytan and Bashkoy, in an encirclement operation aimed at isolating the fighters and cutting off their supply routes. The infiltration process continued for more than three hours during which hundreds of army fighters were able to position themselves at several points inside these towns and set up barriers. The battle began at 6:00 am when the Syrian army opened fire at armed groups in Bashkoy, before the forces that set up barriers inside the three towns began their operation from inside to prevent fighters from retreating, and cut their supply routes off. This element of surprise flustered the fighters, who were expecting the army from Bashkoy only.

Less than an hour after the operation began, Local Defense Committees and the army managed to seize control of Hardetneen, but they were met with resistance in Bashkoy and Ratyan. Clashes continued in those two towns until noon when opposition fighters in Bashkoy began to lose ground. This led to the fall of most of Ratyan in less than half an hour after the army seized control of Bashkoy. As the army went into Ratyan, opposition groups declared a general state of mobilization in the northern countryside and asked civilians to carry arms to stop the Syrian army from advancing. They were afraid the army would reach Marasta al-Khan and Bianoon, which would allow it to open the road to Nubl and al-Zahraa, divide Aleppo’s northern countryside into two parts and cut off the supply routes from Turkey.

The state of mobilization enabled the armed groups to wage a counter-offensive, reopen the Raytan front, and make advances in the town which witnessed the worst clashes in this battle. A group of 30 soldiers, however, managed to infiltrate from Ratyan to Nubl and al-Zahraa. A source on the battlefield told Al-Akhbar: “We came so close to al-Zahraa, we were able to see our comrades inside the town with our own eyes. The only thing standing between us is a few pockets in which fighters are trying to mobilize their forces and fortify their positions.”

“We came so close to al-Zahraa, we were able to see our comrades inside the town with our own eyes. The only thing standing between us is a few pockets in which fighters are trying to mobilize their forces and fortify their positions.” — Source on the battlefield

While the Syrian army was waging a battle in the northern countryside, it opened the front of the Shihan Roundabout — al-Maamel area on the western side of Aleppo — in order to move towards Sheikh Maqsood and lay siege to the fighters in the eastern neighborhoods.

Advancing on al-Maamel front was tough given the nature of the area and its buildings. The army simultaneously fought on the Mazare al-Mallah front with the support of al-Quds Brigade (which includes fighters from the southern and southeastern countryside). It was able to control a number of farms in the west near Haritan and get close to the Castello crossroads, Aleppo’s northwestern entrance, which is connected to the international road that links Aleppo to Turkey through Haritan, Bianoon, al-Zahraa and Azaz.

Opening several fronts deprived opposition fighters of the ability to focus on Jamiat al-Zahraa and al-Rashidin al-Rabia neighborhood west of Aleppo, which enabled Air Force intelligence forces stationed in the area to advance and control seven urban blocks in the vicinity of the Air Force Intelligence building and al-Rasoul al-Azam Mosque. The army was also able to advance in al-Rashidin al-Rabia while opposition fighters failed to ease the pressure on the city of Aleppo fronts by trying to infiltrate the Bustan al-Qasr, al-Qalaa and Old Aleppo fronts. The battles subsided with the approaching sunset, except for the Ratyan front where the fighting continued between the two sides until midnight. The battles subsided but did not end. Military leaders, meanwhile, stress that the decision to break the siege around Nubl and al-Zahraa is final and completely encircling the city of Aleppo is irreversible, and that it should be completed before de Mistura’s plan is implemented.

This article is an edited translation from the Arabic Edition.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: advances, Aleppo, Ankara, Army, Syria

Hall Ankara will distribute to schools a series of revisionist literature related to the Armenian Genocide

February 21, 2015 By administrator

arton108134-480x329The Turkish website Haberler says “knowing that 2015 marks the 100th anniversary of the event is sure to put the Armenian issue the order of the international day Hall of Ankara on the topic distribute a book and a plate.” According to Haberler, the publishing house “New Turkey” published a series of 5 books and pamphlets that press council services Ankara distribute generously to foundations, associations, libraries, centers of analysis and school. The press service said that “these books are prepared to contribute to develop students’ knowledge and present the culture and history of Turkey.” A “literature” well-known Holocaust denier to maintain the state lies on which the Republic of Turkey since 1923! A Turkey that arose from the ashes of the Armenian genocide.

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Ankara, book, Genocide

Yerevan: Ankara makes another attempt to conceal its inability to face history

February 2, 2015 By administrator

Angry-ErdoganYEREVAN. – It turns out that it’s acceptable for the Turkish diplomacy not to respond to the invitation to attend the events dedicated to the Armenian Genocide Centennial sent by President Sargsyan, Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharyan told Armenpress agency.

He emphasized that it turned out to be acceptable for the Turkish side to move to that very day the events devoted to the anniversary of the Battle of Gallipoli and, furthermore, to dare to send an invitation to the Armenian leader contrary to all moral standards.

“By such simple deceptions, Ankara makes another unsuccessful attempt to conceal its inability to face with the past and accept the historical truth, which can pave way for the regulation of the Armenian­Turkish relations. To avoid appearing in such absurd situations, the Turkish authorities should have changed not the traditional day of marking the anniversary of the Battle of Gallipoli, but change their way of thinking, which is continuation of the policy of genocide,” Kocharyan added.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: #armenianGenocide, Ankara, conceal, History, Yerevan

Islamists clash with Charlie supporters at Turkish university

January 19, 2015 By administrator

n_77145_1A group of Islamists at Ankara University have clashed with another group of students who were commemorating both the victims of the Charlie Hebdo attack and the Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was killed eight years ago.

Both groups gathered at Ankara University’s Cebeci campus on Jan. 19. According to the Doğan News Agency, stones and bottles were thrown after one of the groups attempted to release a press statement in favor of the Charlie Hebdo victims and Dink.

Police dispersed the groups by using tear gas.

The students, who had announced the Jan. 19 demonstration earlier through Ankara University’s Facebook page, were threatened by Islamist students on the same platform. Referring to the students who had pinned posters that said “Je Suis Charlie” and “We Are All Hrant,” an Islamist student had written on Facebook that the campus “would see unprecedented violence” if the posters were not taken down.

Thousands of people commemorated Hrant Dink in Istanbul on Jan. 19, the eighth anniversary of his killing.

January/19/2015

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ankara, attack, Charlie Hebdo, clashed, Hrant dink, Islamists

Erdogan, Turkey will fight “actively” qualification Armenian Genocide

January 7, 2015 By administrator

arton106721-460x276Ankara, (AFP) – Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan vowed on Tuesday to oppose “actively” in any campaign for recognition by Turkey on genocidal massacres of Armenians in 1915, whose centenary is celebrated this year.

“The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and institutions will actively fight these allegations,” Erdogan said during a speech to the Turkish ambassadors gathered in Ankara.

One session of the annual conference of Turkish ambassadors is precisely on the definition of a strategy against Armenia’s efforts and the Armenian diaspora, who advocate that Ankara recognize genocide.

Turkey has so far always refused to admit any planned disposal, citing the massacre by the Ottoman Empire some 500,000 Armenians who had sided with his enemy Russia in fighting or because of famines .

In April, Mr Erdogan, when he was prime minister, had offered unprecedented condolences for the massacres of Armenians (1.5 million Armenians and 500,000 according as Turks), citing a “joint pain”.

Turkey and neighboring Armenia, which does not have diplomatic relations, signed in 2009 called protocols in Zurich to normalize their relations, but five years later these texts have still not been approved by their parliaments.

Armenia will commemorate the 100th anniversary of the genocide on April 24, when, in 1915, hundreds of Armenians were arrested and later massacred in Constantinople, the ancient Istanbul, marking the beginning of the massacres.

Wednesday, January 7, 2015,
Ara © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Ankara, armenian genocide, denial, Erdogan

Ankara court begins Erdogan wiretapping case

January 2, 2015 By administrator

erdogan_wiretapping.thumbAn Ankara court will begin the first hearing of a case into the illegal wiretapping of then-Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s offices on Jan. 2, Hurriyet Daily News reports.

However, five former policemen, who have been sought by police, are still on the run in the case which includes President Erdoğan.

A prosecutor had issued search warrants for the police officers involved in the probe last June. Eleven officers, including Erdoğan’s former chief bodyguard, were then detained at their homes on June 17, while a local police chief, who is suspected of planting the bug, was not detained because he was out of the country at the time.

The bugging devices, which have already been erased, were sent to the prosecutor in May and taken in by the court’s evidence unit.

Mehmet Sürer, the sought policemen’s attorney, said he had no contact with his clients and he did not know if they would be present in the court room.

The prosecutor’s indictment says the suspects had planted bugs inside three electricity plugs in the working office of Erdoğan at the Çankaya Palace, and the devices were used for political spying from Nov. 24, 2011 to Dec. 29, 2011, when they were discovered.

The indictment also questions six other bugs inside plugs in Erdoğan’s office at his residence in Ankara.

Edoğan made public on Dec. 21, 2012 that wiretapping devices had been found in his office and home, describing the move as “open espionage.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ankara, Erdogan, wiretapping

Turkey, Police disperse teachers’ protest in Ankara, detain 100

December 20, 2014 By administrator

ANKARA

n_75863_1More than 100 people were detained Dec. 20 following a police crackdown on a demonstration in central Ankara organized by a teachers’ union. Report hurriyet daily news

The demonstrators gathered in the morning in the Turkish capitol’s Tandoğan Square upon a call from teachers’ union Eğitim-İş to demand “Respect to Secular Education and Labor.” Police used water cannons and tear gas to disperse the protestors when a group reportedly insisted on marching towards Kızılay.

More than 100 protesters, most of whom were members and executives of the union, were detained.

Mehmet Balık, head of the union’s Antalya branch who was being kept in custody at the police headquarters for interrogation, said that the police crackdown came without a warning.

“We arrived in two buses from Antalya in the Tandoğan .Square around 10:30 a.m.” said Balık. “The police attacked with TOMAs [ant-riot vehicles with pressurized water cannons] and tear gas without any warning. They soaked down the group, which also included children and the elderly.”

Balık said they were only guilty of “defending the homeland’s unity and protesting the thieves.”

“We stood up for the rights of our teachers and civil servants, but we were the victims of a police attack without any warning,” he added.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ankara, police, Protest, teachers, Turkey

RUDAW reporters were attacked in Ankara Turkish capital

November 16, 2014 By administrator

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region – A team of Rudaw reporters were attacked in Ankara on Saturday by the supporters of the People’s Democratic Congress (HDK) outside the left-wing organisation’s party congress.

Report79758Image1er Asad Ayidin and technician Farouq Albayraq were injured in the attack and a camera was broken, Rudaw Media Network said in a statement. Other equipment was seized by the attackers.

Rudaw reporter Sawkat Harki asked the attackers to calm down and tried to explain that the team was there at the request of the HDK to cover the congress of the party, which supports Kurdish rights.

The attackers accused Rudaw’s team of collaborating with the Turkish MIT intelligence services. The incident was reported to police and legal action was being pursued, the statement said.
The Rudaw statement strongly condemned the attack and said it regarded the incident as an attack on the free media.

It urged HDK officials to take a stand against the attack.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ankara, attack, reporter, rudaw

Ankara Mayor Makes Bigoted Remarks Against Armenians, Kurds

October 17, 2014 By administrator

ankara-mayorANKARA—Ankara Mayor Melih Gökçek made provocative remarks concerning Kurds, Armenians and atheists on his Twitter page on Tuesday, reports Today’s Zaman.

The mayor shared three consecutive tweets about Kurds, religion, and Armenians. He first shared a video from the Cihan news agency containing old footage of Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) members entertaining other PKK members with a comedy skit poking fun at salat (Islamic ritualistic prayer). Alongside the video, the mayor commented: “It’s these types of PKK [members] that don’t want a peace process or an end to war. They are the enemies of Islam. Here is proof.”

He continued in another tweet, “Peace to the Kurds in the east who are putting their lives on the line for the nation and solidarity and for Islam.” In his next tweet, Gökçek continued, “But there are those posing as Kurds but are actually Armenian atheists… (By the way, I absolve our Armenian brothers and sisters that are citizens of their nation.)” The mayor later deleted two of the controversial tweets (keeping the one with the video), though Twitter users were quick to respond with comments.

What the mayor is referring to are “hidden” Armenians who were often forcefully Islamified and Kurdified among Kurds in the Dersim mountains to avoid continued persecution during the Genocide of Armenians in 1915. There are Armenians among Alevi and Turkish communities as well.

Hayko Bağdat, an Armenian columnist for the Taraf daily, tweeted back to the mayor, “Which category do I fall under, boss?” Later, Today’s Zaman spoke over the phone with Bağdat, asking him about his views on the matter, and he explained: “This is plain racism. It’s prejudice on many levels. It’s not just against one demographic of people but against several: Armenians, Kurds, atheists. It is hate speech, and if this [Turkey] were a civil country then he [Gökçek] would be removed from his position for these remarks. But these types of remarks have become commonplace with [Justice and Development Party] AK Party politicians; we see it in the president.”

In August, a similar incident involving racist comments came from President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan just two weeks before the presidential elections. During a television broadcast on Star TV and NTV, President Erdoğan said: “Let all Turks in Turkey say they are Turks and all Kurds say they are Kurds. What is wrong with that? You wouldn’t believe the things they have said about me. They have said I am Georgian … they have said even uglier things — they have called me Armenian, but I am Turkish.” Criticisms were raised about Erdoğan’s assertion that being Armenian is “ugly.”

The mayor’s Twitter account continuously draws public attention, as Gökçek is known to tweet on many topics regardless of their relevance to his political responsibilities. He has over 2 million followers.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Ankara, Armenian, gokcek, Kurd, mayor

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