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More Serbs Back Alliance With Russia as Support for EU Entry Falters

January 18, 2016 By administrator

1029336426According to the latest poll by popular Serbian politics magazine New Serbian Political Thought, Serbs’ support for the idea of joining the European Union is continuing its downward slide, while support for an undefined ‘alliance with Russia’, or for the country’s neutrality, continues to grow.

Interviewed by Sputnik Serbia, Djordje Vukadinovic, the editor in chief of the independent magazine, revealed that “at the moment, according to our research, support for joining the European Union stands at about 47%. Among that figure, 25% is the ‘backbone’ which has always been (and will remain) in favor of the EU.”

Ultimately, he notes, “most respondents see in Europe a chance for a better future for the next generation, rather than a chance for themselves. However, undoubtedly, the number of Eurosceptics is growing.”

Interestingly, when the question is not a yes/no proposition, but an explicit choice between the EU and Russia, the answers change. Also speaking to Sputnik Serbia, Srdjan Bogosavljevic, country manager for the Ipsos Strategic Marketing market research firm, explained why this is so.

 “When one asks people: ‘Are you for EU membership or for a union with Russia’, the ‘alliance with Russia’ option (whatever it means), receives 20% more support than the EU.”

“We are now finding,” Bogosavljevic explained, “that a large number of people support both the EU and Russia. But when we force them to choose between them, about 15% choose the EU, while 33% choose Russia, and 35% step out in favor of neutrality.”

In any case, Vukadinovic noted, “support for European integration has faced a slow but consistent decline. We see it drop from poll to poll, and now support is down to less than 50%.”

Noting that there has been a marked spike in Euroscepticism, the magazine editor explained that “when we talk about those who support the European Union, this is a broad but fragile group. Eurosceptics on the other hand are much more implacable – much firmer in their convictions. Of the 45% of respondents who support the EU, only about half of them can boast such firm convictions.”

“The rest are on the fence; after all, the ruling Serbian Progressive Party has evolved from a Eurosceptic to a ‘Euroreformist’ party, and voters followed their leader, who told them that it is necessary to join the EU.” 

The Serbian Progressive Party emerged in 2008 as a result of a split with the Serbian Radical Party –a Eurosceptic party which at the time was the country’s leading opposition force.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: alliance, back, Russia, Serbs, with

Turkey Have no friends left in Middle-East Turning back to Israel seek to mend ties,

December 17, 2015 By administrator

© Reuters

© Reuters

A preliminary “understanding” to normalize relations between Ankara and Jerusalem has been reached by top-level officials, anonymous sources reported. If signed, the pact will see ambassadors returning to both countries.

The deal was reached at a meeting in Switzerland, Reuters and AFP reported citing Israeli officials who spoke on condition of anonymity on Thursday.

A senior official in Jerusalem also told Haaretz that two Israeli officials, PM Benjamin Netanyahu’s envoy in the contacts with Turkey and the current national security adviser and incoming Mossad chief, met with a Turkish diplomat in Zurich to finalize the principles of the agreement.

A senior Turkish official confirmed that the reconciliation pact had been reached, Turkish TRT World reported.

Its framework reportedly sees Israel paying $20 million in compensation to address the killing of Turkish citizens aboard a pro-Palestinian activist ship when it tried to break Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip in 2010. The incident in the Mediterranean led to the bad blood between the two nations.

Ankara would then drop all legal claims against the Israeli Defense Forces in connection with the incident, with Turkey and Israel renewing their diplomatic relations and returning ambassadors.

The preliminary agreement also mentions Ankara expelling senior Istanbul-based Hamas member and limiting the group’s operations in Turkey, Haaretz reported.

Moreover, as a future step in normalizing relations, the countries will explore cooperation in the trade of natural resources, with Turkey reportedly set to buy “gas from Israel’s offshore oil fields and the laying of a gas pipeline that would run via Turkey and through which Israel would export gas to Europe,” the Israeli media reported.

 

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: back, Israel, Turkey

Greece: Triumphant Tsipras returns to fight for Greek economy, debt relief

September 21, 2015 By administrator

s3.reutersmedia.netATHENS | By Renee Maltezou and Lefteris Papadimas  Reuters

Alexis Tsipras said on Monday he would revive Greece’s banks and its crippled economy, while demanding debt relief from creditors in his “first big battle” following an unexpectedly clear election victory that returned him to office as prime minister.

Preparing to be sworn in for a second term, he set those priorities at the top of a dauntingly long “to do” list that also includes implementing austerity polices and dealing with waves of migrants landing on Greek shores.

In Sunday’s election, voters gave Tsipras and his Syriza party a second chance to tackle Greece’s problems, and with it the benefit of the doubt over a dramatic summer U-turn, when he ditched his anti-austerity platform to secure a new bailout and avert ‘Grexit’ – a Greek exit form the euro zone.

His immediate objective would be the full restoration of stability in the economy and Greek banks, a Syriza official quoted Tsipras as telling party officials on Monday. The banks were shut for three weeks and the wider economy set back sharply in July before Tsipras caved in to accept austerity terms and an 86 billion euro bailout.

The official said Tsipras had also announced that his “first crucial battle” would be securing debt relief.

Tsipras has promised to implement the tax increases, spending cuts and market reforms mandated by creditors under the bailout program, which restrains much of his ability to set policy. But his party says there is still enough flexibility to cushion the impact on the most vulnerable Greeks.

Its election manifesto refers to “grey areas” in which details can still be adjusted, such as labor reforms – important in a still heavily unionized country – pension cuts, and plans to tackle the non-performing loans that have crippled banks.

Creditors say that if Greece seeks to adjust the terms by easing austerity in one area it must tighten somewhere else.

STRONGER THAN EXPECTED

Syriza’s stronger-than-expected win secured it 145 of 300 parliamentary seats, meaning the party requires only one small coalition partner to form a government in Greece’s notoriously fractious legislature.

It will govern with the same junior party it teamed up with in January, the once stridently anti-bailout right-wing Independent Greeks (ANEL), which won 10 seats. Its leader Panos Kammenos said Tsipras would announce his cabinet by Wednesday.

Related Coverage

  • › Greece’s Tsipras sworn in as new prime minister

That alliance gives Tsipras more authority to steer the implementation of the bailout than he might have enjoyed with a broader coalition. He says his victory gives him a mandate for a full four-year-term, extraordinary in a country that has gone through five general elections in six years.

“This is a major personal triumph for Tsipras,” said political commentator Aristides Hatzis. “His political hegemony is (now) unprecedented.”

But some analysts said creditors would have preferred Tsipras were restrained by a broader coalition, and that his stronger position would keep the threat alive of a future quarrel with the creditors – and even Grexit.

“Tsipras managed to convince a large part of the electorate that he was a tougher negotiator than previous governments,” said Mujtaba Rahman, of political risk consultancy Eurasia Group.

“The return of a second Syriza-ANEL government will concern Greece’s creditors …(and we) maintain a 30 percent risk of Grexit over the next two years.”

The big victory makes it easier for Tsipras to reinstate trusted members of the cabinet that served during the often turbulent seven-month coalition he formed after his first election win in January.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: back, fight, Greece, Tsipras

Turkish PM Davutoğlu promises to bring ‘Ottoman Empire drawing on Turkey’s geography, economic power

July 17, 2015 By administrator

AFP Photo

AFP Photo

Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu has vowed to bring the “order and justice” of the Ottoman Empire to today’s world.

“God willing, we will bring the order and justice of the Ottomans to today and into tomorrow,” he said while congratulating party members at his Justice and Development Party’s (AKP) Istanbul headquarters for the Eid al-Fitr holiday on July 17.

Davutoğlu’s remarks came after a group of party members started chanting “Ahmet Hoca [teacher], bring us to Ottoman [times],” while he was giving a speech about the political outlook after last month’s general election, in which the AKP lost its parliamentary majority.

In his 2001 book “Strategic Depth” (which had its 100th print run last year), the former professor Davutoğlu articulated a vision drawing on Turkey’s geography, economic power and imperial history to reconnect with its historical “hinterland” in the former Ottoman territories.

As Aaron Stein, the author of “Turkey’s New Foreign Policy,” told the Hürriyet Daily News in an interview earlier this year, Davutoğlu is regarded as the architect of a dramatic shift in Ankara’s regional policy after the AKP came to power in 2002.

Davutoğlu’s interpretation of geopolitics “is based on an assumption that the spread of Western power into the Balkans, Central Asia and the Middle East is incongruent with Turkish national interests and must be reversed,” Stein suggested.

Critics are skeptical about the suggestion that Turkey should become more involved in the Middle East, but weeks before he was picked by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan as his successor as prime minister, Davutoğlu slammed such skepticism in a fiery speech during Ramadan last year, again delivered at the AKP’s Istanbul headquarters.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: back, Davutoglu, ottoman, Turkey

Washington Post: Georgia turns its face to Russia as West backs away

July 4, 2015 By administrator

194536In this fiercely pro-Western nation that fought a brief war with Russia in 2008, few thought the Kremlin could ever regain a toehold. But with the West backing away from Georgia’s path to EUand NATO membership after a year of conflict in Ukraine, pro-Russian sentiments are on the rise, the Washington Post reports.

The former Soviet nation’s leaders are warning that Russia may yet prevail if Georgia is shut out from Western clubs. Wary of further provoking Russia, Western politicians have quashed talk of NATO and the European Union expanding eastward any time soon. Russia has stepped into the vacuum, increasing its presence by opening Georgian-language outlets of its state-owned news network and deepening investments in the energy industry and other key sectors.

“Stability and security cannot be maintained with this paradigm, with Russia’s paradigm of having special rights towards other countries,” said Georgian President Giorgi Margvelashvili, in an interview in the presidential palace on a bluff overlooking the old city of Tbilisi. “Russia is working pretty actively, not only in Georgia, but all around the world,” to expand its influence, he said. Despite the growing Russian presence, Georgia remains unshakably committed to eventual membership in NATO and the E.U., he said.

EUleaders squabbled at a summit last month about whether to offer even the faintest prospects for membership to Georgia, Ukraine and Moldova, which have said they want to join. The EUleaders decided against it, and they also delayed plans to ease visa rules for Georgian travelers, a bitter disappointment for Georgia’s leaders. The EUcaution stemmed from a desire not to inspire backlash from Russia, diplomats involved in the discussions say.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who has taken the role of the lead European interlocutor with Putin, has played down expansion prospects. So has President Obama.

“Neither Ukraine or Georgia are currently on a path to NATO membership. And there has not been any immediate plans for expansion of NATO’s membership,” Obama said last year.

Now support for pro-Russian politicians in Moldova and Georgia is growing, while Ukraine is so consumed by conflict that it has made little progress in instituting reforms necessary for westward integration. Armenia, a fourth post-Soviet country that had been in talks with EUleaders about a trade deal, last year abandoned the discussions altogether, allying itself with the Russian camp.

Many here say that Russia has skillfully outmaneuvered the West.

“The Russians are working to dominate this part of the world. They calculate, they plan, and they know this region much better than the Europeans and Americans,” said Tedo Japaridze, the chairman of the Georgian parliament’s foreign relations committee.

The United States has tried to offer some consolation measures. U.S. troops did training exercises with Georgian soldiers in May, and Georgia’s leaders present an upbeat face about their westward efforts.

Spurned by the West, Georgians are starting to look elsewhere. Support for signing the EUtrade agreement is down to 68 percent in April polls from the National Democratic Institute, down from 80 percent immediately before the Ukraine crisis started. Support for Georgia’s joining the Russian-dominated Eurasian Economic Union, meanwhile, is up to 31 percent.

By 2012, however, many Georgians were ready to embrace the leadership of their nation’s wealthiest man, Bidzina Ivanishvili, who promised to improve relations with Russia while maintaining ties to the West. The payoff for Georgia was swift. Russia lifted a ban on imports of Georgian wine in 2013, and trade spiked.

Pro-Russian parties are expected to make gains in parliamentary elections next year. For now, even some of Georgia’s most committed pro-Western politicians say that their best hope is to hold tight to their goals but to expect little from their partners for now.

Related links:

Russia Today: СМИ: Улучшая отношения с Грузией, Россия обводит Запад вокруг пальца
The Washington Post. Spurned by the West, Georgians look to Russia despite past quarrels

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: back, Georgia, Russia

Turkish women turn their back in protest at Erdoğan

June 3, 2015 By administrator

n_83396_1Thousands of Turkish women have posted their photos on social media showing them turning their backs in protest at President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s latest rebuke targeting women.

“It is very interesting that a group here… I beg your pardon but my decency does not permit me to put it another way… turned their backs on me while making the victory sign,” Erdoğan said in the eastern Turkish province of Iğdır on June 1.

“If you have a modicum of politeness, honor and ability, then the place for politics is parliament,” he added, claiming that the women needed to be deputies to have the right to protest the Turkish president.

In response to Erdoğan, thousands of women posted photos of them turning their back on June 2. Photos included not only women, but also some men, and of course cats, almost all accompanied by remarks criticizing Erdoğan.

According to social media analytics firm topsy, the social media action’s hashtag, #SırtımızıDönüyoruz (We Are Turning Our Backs) was used in 122,138 tweets on June 2. The hashtag even topped Twitter’s trending topics list in Turkey and climbed as high as third spot in the global ranking.

Local media reported that the women that were slammed by Erdoğan were supporters of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), which is focused on the Kurdish issue.

“We will keep turning our back on this president,” HDP co-chair Figen Yüksekdağ said, while HDP co-chair Selahattin Demirtaş described Erdoğan’s remarks as “a vulgar, immoral insult.”

This is not the first time that women have taken social media by storm in a protest against Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP).

In July 2014, hundreds of women shared their photos while laughing with hashtags #kahkaha (laugh) and #direnkahkaha (resist, laugh) to protest Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç’s call on them to “not laugh in public.”

Source: hurriyetdailynews

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: back, Turkeish, turn, wonan

1915-2015: Looking Back and Going Forward Armenian Genocide

May 12, 2015 By administrator

By David Boyajian,

armenian-genocide-1024x683There is a cynical saying that contains a kernel of truth: “One death is a tragedy, a million deaths is a statistic.”
This may apply to the Armenian genocide committed by Turkey from 1915 to 1923.  It truly is hard to conceive of 1,500,000 murders unless you or your family experienced this genocide.
And it wasn’t only the murders of the men, women, and children — the clergy, community leaders, intellectuals, doctors, extended families, housewives, peasants, teachers, students, businesspeople, merchants, farmers, craftspeople, writers, poets, artists, musicians, and resistance fighters. Nor was it only that many Armenian women and children were abducted by Turks, forcibly Islamized, and worse.
No, the ancient Western Armenian culture was virtually destroyed: Our people’s way of life, traditions, folklore, Bibles, ancient manuscripts, books, maps, historical artifacts, family histories, birth records, stories, art, music, dance, and traditional clothing, as well as homes, farms, orchards, schools, monasteries, and thousands of churches belonging to the three Armenian denominations.
Even the Western Armenian language — somewhat different than the Eastern Armenian dialect of present-day Armenia — was dealt a severe blow.  It is officially considered endangered by the United Nations.
Against All Odds
Yet, against all odds, the survivors — our parents, aunts, uncles, cousins, grandparents, great-grandparents and you — rose from the ruins and built lives, families, communities, and churches. But then, isn’t starting over what we Armenians have done many times for thousands of years?
The survivors found refuge in many other countries, such as America, helped by their generosity and that of the Near East Relief and churches worldwide.
Other Armenian survivors fled east to the Armenian region of the Russian Empire and the then Republic of Armenia, which was reborn in 1918. These, too, were invaded and targeted for genocide by Turkey during and after WW1, until the Armenian Republic was taken over by the Soviet Union in 1920.
The genocide of 1915 was preceded by what the world today would also call genocides: Massacres in the Cilicia region in 1909 and on the Armenian Plateau — now referred to as eastern Turkey — in the 1890s. Some Armenians who lived through those bloodbaths escaped abroad before 1915.
During the period of the Armenian genocide, Turkey also perpetrated genocides against Assyrian and Greek Christians.
Though we may think of its occurring only in 1915, the Armenian genocide continued until at least 1923, five years after WW1 ended.
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the first president of the so-called Turkish Republic founded in 1923, is still continually praised in the U.S., Europe, and elsewhere as some kind of hero. They are really just parroting Turkish propaganda.
Atatürk continued the genocide begun by his predecessors. And in 1920, he ordered his generals to “destroy Armenia politically and physically.” They failed, otherwise today there would no Armenia whatsoever.
Atatürk brought Turkish officials who had carried out genocide, such as Abdülhalik Renda and Şükrü Kaya, into his new government.
Though Turkey and its defenders deny that it committed genocide, they acknowledge that many Armenians died in that period. Turkey alleges that Armenians rebelled and so had to be “deported” and that famine, disease, inclement weather, and Turkish and Kurdish bandits, not the Turkish government itself, took Armenian lives.
The real reasons are otherwise.
Pan-Turkism and Turkification
In 1914, Turkey entered WW1 to enlarge its empire, which already encompassed much of the Middle East, including today’s Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Palestine, Jordan, Israel, and more.
Turkish foreign policy was based on Pan-Turkism. Turkey aimed to expand eastward, toward the Turkic-speaking Muslim regions, what are now Azerbaijan and countries such as Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan.
The political philosophy known as Turkification had also taken hold. Non-Turkish and non-Muslim peoples of the Turkish Empire were considered undesirables. Moreover, the Armenian regions of the Turkish and Russian empires stood in the path of Turkey’s eastward thrust. Armenians had to be eliminated.
What historian Vahakn Dadrian refers to as “a culture of massacre” also played a major role.
Acknowledging and punishing the crime of genocide are, of course, central to preventing present and future genocides in the world. But is the Armenian Genocide relevant to Armenia today? It is.
The Genocide Matters
First, the reduced population of today’s Armenia makes it more vulnerable and can be traced in large part to the genocide.
Due to broken promises by the world powers in the 1920s, Armenia became landlocked and greatly limited in size. As a result, Armenia now lacks direct access to the Black Sea and, therefore, to Europe and Russia. Armenia must depend on problematic routes, notably through Georgia, for all overland imports and exports. Of course, Turkey and Azerbaijan’s borders with Armenia remain closed.
Moreover, Pan-Turkism poses largely the same dangers now as during the genocide. Turkey is extending its reach into Azerbaijan and Central Asia’s newly independent Turkic-speaking states.
Pan-Turkism may be even more of a threat today because the United States, Europe, and NATO actually support the spread of Turkish influence to the east. For example, they’ve built pipelines to pump oil and natural gas from Azerbaijan and Central Asia through Turkey into Europe, and more are planned. The West also seeks to remove Russian influence from the region. This would deprive Armenia of its only ally.
Greek, French, and other intelligence agencies say that in 1993 Turkey would have invaded Armenia during the Artsakh/Karabagh war had a coup d’état against Russian President Boris Yeltsin succeeded.
Whether we like it or not, Armenia’s military alliance with Russia is a natural one because, like Armenia, Russia opposes Pan-Turkism.
Some Armenians believe that Armenia is not an important country. The contrary is true: Armenia is pivotal in the continuing confrontation between Western countries and Russia.
Without Armenia, Russia’s position in the Caucasus would collapse since Georgia and Azerbaijan are essentially anti-Russian. That makes Armenia not only an essential ally for Russia but also a potential prize for the U.S., Europe, and NATO. This is why both sides have been courting Armenia.
Unfortunately, it’s impractical for Armenia to join the West’s military alliance, NATO. That’s because Turkey, a NATO member with 80 million people and a large land mass, would carry much more weight than Armenia.
Of course, the U.S. and Europe have always had excellent relations with Armenia. History tells us, sadly, that Western countries would probably not restrain Turkey should it try to dominate or invade Armenia.
The Diaspora must continue to support Armenia in every way possible, something that you and our many friends continue to do. If Armenia is overrun, which is possible, the genocide will be virtually complete.
Moreover, many Armenian communities of the Middle East are under attack and endangered in ways not unlike in 1915.  We must continue to support them too. Each of our Diasporan communities is precious.
The 100th Commemoration
Many in the Armenian Diaspora have wondered if it would rise to the occasion on the 100th commemoration. Armenians worldwide have responded magnificently, beyond expectations.
So far this year, literally thousands of events and activities have taken place with huge crowds, including many supportive non-Armenians, in Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, Paris, and elsewhere: Commemorations, demonstrations, marches, conferences, lectures, concerts, art exhibitions, billboards, books, films, radio and TV programs, and very supportive editorials and articles.
The Vatican has re-affirmed the Armenian genocide.  So have Chile, the Czech Republic, and the European Union Parliament. Austria and Bulgaria have formally recognized the genocide.  It again shows just how essential the Diaspora is.
Yes, Armenia must survive and prosper, but so must the Diaspora. Without the Diaspora, Armenia will face the future alone. Without Armenia, what is the Diaspora?
Ultimately, our response to the genocide is for Armenians and Armenia to survive and prosper. Only we can do this.
The author is a freelance Armenian American journalist. Many of his articles are archived at Armeniapedia.org.
# # #

 

 

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: 1915-2015, Armenian, back, Forward, Genocide, Going, Looking

Armed PKK back in Turkey, senior group leader says

October 11, 2014 By administrator

n_72836_1The Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) has deployed armed forces back to Turkey, said Cemil Bayık, a senior leader of the  organization, also retreting his pessimism about the recent talks between the Turkish government and the PKK.

The PKK will restart fights in case killings of Kurds continue in Kobane, the Syrian border town where the clashes between the armed Kurdish forces and Islamist State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) have contiued since more than three weeks.

News agencies report that ISIL keeps advancing in and outside the town, from where more than 150,000 people fled to Turkey.

“If things continue this way, the guerrilas will fight to defend our people. The core task of the guerillas is to defend the people,” Bayık reportedly said.

A group of PKK  launched the symbolic withdrawal in May 2013, as part of the talks to resolve the decades-long Kurdish issue.

Bayık did not mention how many militants were sent back to the Turkish soil.

“As the government continues to deploy soldiers to the southeast and east, we decided to take action,” saying that a military action motion approved at the Turkish Parliament on earlier this week was “a declaration of war” against them.

A total of 37 people were killed this week’s unrest that broke at demostrations in the country, densely at provinces with high Kurdish population.

The PKK calls on government to do more for the Kurds trapped in Kobane. Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Yalçın Akdoğan said Oct. 10 that Turkish soldiers were not mercenaries.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: back, ISIS, Kurd, PKK, Turkey

First liturgy served in Armenian Church after liberation of Kessab

July 28, 2014 By administrator

On July 25Kessab-Back leader of Armenian Diocese of Berio St. Shahan archbishop Sargsyan has reanointed the Armenian St. Astvatsatsin Church in Kessab’s Garaturan region, reports the Facebook page of “Gandzasar” weekly.

In July 27 Holy Father has served the first liturgy after the liberation of Kessab. There were many people present at the liturgy.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: back, Kessab

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