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Turkish Journalist EMRE USLU: #Turkey Do not lend support to al-Qaeda

February 28, 2015 By administrator

EMRE USLU

EMRE USLU Turkish Journalist

By EMRE USLU  –

Message to #Turkey Do not lend support to al-Qaeda

Do you think Western countries are stupid?

No one but your trolls accepts this Eastern guile. Are Westerners stupid and silly? Do you think Germany, which acknowledged it had wiretapped your communication, does not know what you are up to? Do you think the United Nations, which examined arm shipments and drafted a report about it, does not know what you are doing? Former US Ambassador to Turkey Francis J. Ricciardone openly said: “The [Turkish] government was supporting al-Nusra. We warned, but they didn’t take heed. They continued to work with al-Nusra.” The US already knows what you are doing, so they don’t need the perception-engineering efforts of mine as you claimed. In the White House, US President Barack Obama once accused Turkey of backing al-Qaeda.

Read more EMRE USLU 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Al Qaeda, emre uslu, support, Turkey

Columnist Uslu denies he is whistleblower Fuat Avni, says claim is attempt to cover up gov’t failure

February 16, 2015 By administrator

Columnist Emre Uslu. (Photo: Cihan)

Columnist Emre Uslu. (Photo: Cihan)

US-based Turkish journalist Emre Uslu has categorically denied claims made by pro-government newspapers suggesting that he is responsible for a Twitter account that reveals inside information about the Turkish government, saying those making such claims know that they are false and are merely trying to cover up the government’s failure to find the real party behind the account.

On Monday the Sabah, Star and Güneş dailies, known to have close ties with the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government, ran a story on their front pages headlined “Here is Fuat Avni” above a photo of Uslu. Fuat Avni is the name on the whistleblower Twitter account, which discloses plans for government operations as well as other information about the inner workings of the government. The dailies alleged that Uslu gathers and reports intelligence gleaned from police officers and others in exchange for money and promises of promotions. They also published conversations that allegedly took place using Twitter’s direct messaging service between Fuat Avni and police officers.

In a statement on his website, e.uslu.com, the Today’s Zaman and Taraf columnist said he knows that direct messages on Twitter are monitored in Turkey and added that he has even mentioned this fact to his followers when he contacts them via direct message.

He also referenced earlier reports in pro-government dailies claiming that he was managing the Fuat Avni account and indicated that he is suing those dailies.

Uslu underlined that he is sure that those making these claims also know very well that he is not behind the Fuat Avni account. Uslu assessed the reports as being a reflection of the government’s anger with him.

The journalist suggested that his coverage of the failures of former National Intelligence Organization (MİT) head Hakan Fidan — who recently resigned to run for Parliament — may have enflamed government anger with him. He added that government circles are trying to defame him because of what they claim are efforts to prevent Fidan from becoming the next prime minister in his writing.

The second possibility for the allegations, Uslu said, is to prevent criticism from being aimed at Fidan for failing to find the real person behind the account — especially since general elections are slated to be held on June 7 and Fidan is planning to run for Parliament on the ruling party ticket.

“I think the most reasonable scenario is this: The undersecretary of MİT not finding out who Fuat Avni is remains a big failure in his career. [So] they ‘found’ a Fuat Avni so that the he would not enter politics as an undersecretary who failed to reveal him,” Uslu said, adding that Fidan will probably start making TV appearances to talk about how he “found” the person managing the account.

Sabah said in its Monday report that police officers told Uslu on Feb. 12, 2014 that they were preparing to launch an operation against the Zaman daily, apparently suggesting that Uslu then transmitted that information via the Avni Twitter account. However, Fuat Avni made no mention of such an operation at that time and no such operation took place, calling the report’s suppositions into question. Some 10 months later, in mid-December, Avni did announce that an operation would take place targeting Zaman. Police conducted an operation and detained the Zaman daily’s editor-on-chief, as well as others, on Dec. 14, 2014.

 

Yakında bu hesabın kullanıcı adını değiştirip farklı bir isim ama yine aynı formatla kullanacağım.Twitlerimi RT yaparak hesabımı not edin.

— Fuat Avni (@FuatAvni) April 11, 2014

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: emre uslu, Fuat Avni, hakan-fidan, MIT, pro-government-newspapers, Turkey, whistleblower

Turkey, In the footsteps of the murders of Hrant Dink and Nihat Kazanhan

February 5, 2015 By administrator

e-uslu-b-1By EMRE USLU

The murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, the killing of the priest Andrea Santoro and the massacre of missionaries at the Zirve Publishing House in Malatya are the most famous of the unresolved murders that have been committed during the Justice and Development Party’s (AKP) rule. Only the hired killers who committed the murders were caught, and the people who masterminded the attacks could not be found.

Dink’s murder was very dramatic. Hired killers are still being actively used. Many years after the murder the killer contacted the prosecutor’s office and gave information on several police officers whom he claimed “had a hand in the murder.” Some police officers were arrested, but there was something those behind the murder had not calculated. They had promoted the person who was the head of the intelligence branch at the Trabzon security directorate at the time of murder and assigned him as the head of the National Police Department’s Intelligence Unit. They had appointed his assistant as a “reliable” man to Cizre, the center of recent skirmishes.

As the investigation led to the head of the Intelligence Unit, they stalled the investigation once again. They tried to save face with campaigns to manipulate the public’s perceptions on the matter.

Let us proceed with the correct analysis of what happened. After an investigation was launched into Ergenekon — a clandestine organization nested within the state trying to overthrow or manipulate the democratically elected government — unresolved murders came to an abrupt halt in Turkey. The defendants in the Ergenekon case were released from prison and the murders resumed. The recent incidents of tension in Cizre can hardly be seen as mere coincidence.

I wouldn’t have noticed this if one of my sources hadn’t drawn attention to the interesting link between Dink’s murder and the Cizre incidents.

A number of books note that Veli Küçük, who was accused of being the head of the Ergenekon organization, had conducted certain activities in Trabzon in the run up to Dink’s murder. Two critical people in Trabzon were mentioned as being involved in the preparations for the murder: Trabzon gendarmerie commander Col. Ali Öz and Ercan Demir from the Trabzon Police Department’s Intelligence Unit.

Much was written about Öz. My source draws attention to the interesting ties held by Police Chief Demir, who was arrested in connection with Dink’s murder.

My source claims that Demir had contacted Küçük on the phone 26 times before Dink’s murder.

My source further argues that at the time, Demir had prevented his staff from gathering intelligence in the gendarmerie’s area, particularly in the town of Pelitli, where Ogün Samast, the hitman in the Dink murder, lived.

It is claimed that while Yasin Hayal, who was eventually convicted of Dink’s murder, was being pursued by the police and went to Pelitli, Demir told his team not to pursue him, citing previous problems with the gendarmerie over jurisdiction.

My source also explains that Demir has close relations with Öz at that time. This piece of information was also verified by one of my sources from the military, who worked in Trabzon in the past.

For my source, it is not a coincidence that tensions in Cizre skyrocketed after Demir was appointed to a position in Cizre. Of course, he also does not believe that it is a coincidence that the timing of the release of the Ergenekon defendants and the start of incidents in Cizre coincide.

After Demir was assigned to Cizre, there was a sharp rise in mass demonstrations. We all observed what happened this year in Cizre when a 12-year-old boy, Nihat Kazanhan, was shot dead on Jan. 14.

Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) deputy Altan Tan was the first politician who argued that incidents in the district skyrocketed after Demir was appointed.

Of course the court will investigate if there was a link between Küçük and Demir. It is the duty of the court to find out if this link had something to do with the murder.

But I don’t think it is a coincidence that the incidents halted abruptly when the Ergenekon defendants were jailed in 2007, but resumed after they were released from prison; and that children were being killed by the police and the prime minister and interior minister try to conceal this fact.

Given the rumors that Ergenekon had made a deal with the government, I believe these incidents are expected.

My source is of the same opinion. “Ergenekon has become extremely successful with the minor efforts it exerted in previous governments’ terms and it has secured its former position in the state thanks to the agreement it made with the ruling party. Our country is in a difficult position compared to the past, and we now face the risk of division of our territory.”

Previously, the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) had chosen Yüksekova as its pilot area. Now, it has picked Cizre as a more suitable place for Serhildan (rebellion in Kurdish). Is it a coincidence that Demir was appointed to Cizre? Perhaps Demir has nothing to do with these incidents, but others may be laying a trap for him. The court must investigate it…

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: emre uslu, Hrant dink, murder, Turkey

Turkey Court issues arrest warrant for columnist Emre Uslu, report says

December 16, 2014 By administrator

e-uslu-b-1A court has issued an arrest warrant for Today’s Zaman and Taraf columnist Emre Uslu as part of an ongoing trial against the columnist over claims that he slandered Humanitarian Aid Foundation (İHH) Chairman Bülent Yıldırım in a column he wrote for Taraf, a news report says.

The Vatan daily reported on its website that the 2nd Anadolu Criminal Court of First Instance issued the warrant upon the request of Yıldırım’s lawyer on the grounds that “the journalist could not be found despite all attempts to search for him.”

Uslu’s lawyer said his client is currently working at a university in the US and demanded Uslu’s testimony be taken via the Foreign Ministry.

The indictment seeks up to seven years in prison for Uslu on charges of “slander through the media” over his column dated Jan. 15, 2014, titled “Al-Qaeda, İHH, trucks, etc…” In it, he questioned the alleged ties between al-Qaeda and the İHH, which is the organization that organized the Mavi Marmara flotilla campaign to Gaza which was stormed by Israeli forces in international waters, resulting in the killing of eight Turkish citizens and one Turkish-American.

Emre Uslu is one the best Turkish Journalist that exposing Turkish Government crime

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: capture, emre uslu, ihh, Turkey

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