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Erdogan Suggests Release of Jailed U.S. Pastor in Exchange for Gulen Extradition

October 1, 2017 By administrator

ANKARA, Turkey—Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has suggested that Ankara will free detained American pastor Andrew Brunson if Washington extradites exiled Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen.

“‘Give us the pastor back,’ they say. You have one pastor as well. Give him to us…then we will try him and give him to you,” Erdogan said during a speech to police officers at the presidential palace in Ankara on Sept. 28, RT reported.

Turkey accuses Gulen of being behind last year’s failed coup attempt in the country.

“The [pastor] we have is on trial. Yours is not—he is living in Pennsylvania. You can give him easily. You can give him right away,” Erdogan went on.

Brunson was detained in Turkey on terrorism charges last October. As the pastor of the Izmir Resurrection Church—a small Protesant church with about 25 congregants—Brunson was applying for Turkish permanent residency, having lived there 23 years, when he was imprisoned on Oct. 7, 2016, accused of being a member of the Gulen movement.

The U.S. says the pastor has been wrongfully imprisoned and has called for his release. According to a letter to the president of Turkey signed by 78 members of the U.S. Congress in February, “There appears to be no evidence to substantiate the charges against him for membership in an armed terrorist organization.”

U.S. President Donald Trump also asked Ankara to return Brunson to the U.S. in May, according to a statement released by the White House.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, exchange, Gulen, pastor

KDP media silent on Erdoğan’s insults against Barzani

September 28, 2017 By administrator

After the independence referendum in Southern Kurdistan, Turkish president Erdogan continues to insult Barzani and Kurdish people.

Speaking at the graduation ceremony of the Police Academy, Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan addressed Barzani in degrading manner. “Just sit back. You’ve got money, oil, so stay where you are! (He says that) it would be an independent state (!). This adventure will end in disappointment” he said.

BARZANI THREW HIMSELF INTO FIRE

Stating that KDP’s leader threw himself into fire Erdoğan said “We are disappointed by the latest developments in northern Iraq, but that’s not something we can’t overcome.”

“Who will recognize your independence? Just sit back. You’ve got money, oil, so stay where you are! He must have been enticed to take this step. Masoud Barzani has thrown himself into fire” Erdoğan said in a degrading manner.

“You have a 350 km-long border with us. Did you even consult with us or Iran in this regard? We will keep warning till the end. We will stop this mischief in Iraq, just as we did not allow the Syria problem to affect our country,” he added.

LAWRENCE PARANOIA

Comparing the Kurdistan Regional Government’s bid for independence to the Arab revolt against the Ottoman Empire during the First World War, Erdoğan said “New Lawrence cases will not be successful this time.”

He added that if Iraqi Kurds serve “other actors’ interests in the region,” they will not be able to ask for help from Turkey.

KDP MEDIA REMAINS SILENT

While Erdoğan continues to insult Kurdish people and Barzani, the media of KDP remains silent. There is no single article about Erdoğan’s statements on newspapers or TV channels. On the contrary some media institutions are still publishing reports claiming that the AKP is a friend of Kurdish people.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Barzani, Erdogan, insults, kdp, silent

Erdogan warns Iraqi Kurds will go hungry if sanctions imposed

September 26, 2017 By administrator

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday warned that Iraqi Kurds would go hungry if Turkey decides to halt the flow of trucks and oil across its border with northern Iraq, and said all military and economic measures were on the table.

The comments, some of the harshest yet from Erdogan about Monday’s referendum in Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region, came as Iraqi troops joined the Turkish army for joint military exercises near Turkey’s border with northern Iraq, Straitstimes.com reports.

Turkey has long been northern Iraq’s main link to the outside world, but sees the referendum as a threat to its own national security, fearing it will inflame separatism among its own Kurdish population.

“(They) will be left in the lurch when we start imposing our sanctions,” Erdogan said in a speech broadcast live on television. “It will be over when we close the oil taps, all (their) revenues will vanish, and they will not be able to find food when our trucks stop going to northern Iraq.”

Erdogan has repeatedly threatened economic sanctions, but has so far given few details.

Hundreds of thousands of barrels of oil a day flow through a pipeline in Turkey from northern Iraq, connecting the region to global oil markets.

 

He said that all options – from economic to military measures that involved land and air space – were on the table.

Iraqi soldiers joined Turkish troops for military exercises in southeast Turkey near the border with Iraq on Tuesday, a Reuters witness near the border said, as the two countries coordinate steps in response to the referendum.

Erdogan also accused Massoud Barzani, the president of the Kurdistan Regional Government, of “treachery” over the vote. “Until the very last moment, we weren’t expecting Barzani to make such a mistake as holding the referendum, apparently we were wrong,” Erdogan said.

“This referendum decision, which has been taken without any consultation, is treachery.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Iraqi, Kurds, warns

Erdogan warns of armed action over Iraqi Kurdistan vote ‘Null and void’

September 25, 2017 By administrator

Saying that the Turkish military stands ready, president threatens to cut the Kurds’ oil exports through his country.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has denounced the independence referendum in Iraqi Kurdistan, and will not rule out a potential military action to stop efforts to usurp his country’s territory.

The warning came as people in the Iraqi autonomous region voted on Monday in an independence referendum, amid rising tensions and international opposition.

Balloting took place in the disputed areas between the northern city of Erbil and the capital Baghdad, as well as the oil-rich province of Kirkuk, which is ethnically mixed.

“Our armed forces are on the borders with Iraq to do whatever it takes,” Erdogan said, adding that Turkey could block key oil exports of the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) over the vote.

“We will never allow anyone or anything to go from Turkey to Iraq. This week we will adopt so many other measures. We will close the borders. Nothing will go across the borders.”

“Entrance-exit will be closed” at the Habur border crossing, Turkey’s sole land border crossing with Iraq, Erdogan said in a speech in Istanbul.

He said there were currently crossings allowed to the Iraqi side only but travel would be closed in both directions this week.

“After this let’s see through which channels they will send their oil through … and who they will sell to. The valve is with us. It’s finished the moment we close it,” he said.

Iraqi Kurdish oil is exported through Turkey and its southern Ceyhan port, a key economic lifeline for the region.

‘Null and void’

Erdogan said “irrespective of the result, we see this [referendum] as null and void and say it is illegitimate”.

He also said Turkey was ready to take “all the steps” needed “on political, economic, trade and security fronts” and appeared not to rule out military action.

Last week the Turkish armed forces began a military drill in the region around the border town of Silopi, including 100 military vehicles, which continued with reinforcements this weekend.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: armed action, Erdogan, Kurdistan vote

Breaking News: Turkey Erdogan threatens to shut off oil pipeline, to close border on Kurdistan

September 25, 2017 By administrator

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region — Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Monday that Ankara would close its border with northern Iraq over an independence referendum and threatened the Iraqi Kurds with blocking their key oil exports.
Erdogan commented on the Kurdistan referendum from the Islamic Cooperation Ombudsmen conference.

“Entrance-exit will be closed” at the Habur border crossing to the Kurdistan Region, Erdogan said in a speech as he angrily denounced Monday’s referendum as “illegitimate,” according to AFP.

He added: “After this let’s see… who they sell (their oil) to. The valve is with us. It’s finished the moment we close it.”

The president didn’t rule any possibilities out.

“If there is a threat against us in Iraq and Syria, all options are on the table,” he said.

“We are not and will not threaten Turkey’s national security, and neither will we intervene in the Turkish affairs, not today, and neither in the future. We want to be a good neighbor,” Barzani said.

He added that that Turkey, and others should see the vote for what it is — an expression of the will of the people exclusive for the Iraqi Kurdistan.

“It has been two months that I have been trying and requesting to visit Turkey so that I will explain that this process of ours is not a threat to Turkey. It is unfortunate that they did not agree to this opportunity to me — or us — to explain it to them up close,” Barzani said adding that other relations with Turkey are continuing such as continued phone calls.

Source: http://www.rudaw.net/english/middleeast/turkey/25092017

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, oil, threatens, Turkey

‘Rally for Freedom’ Against Erdogan and Aliyev’s Dictatorships Takes Place in New York

September 23, 2017 By administrator

Armenian, Hellenic, Kurdish, and Other Groups Raise Their Voices against Erdogan and Aliyev

NEW YORK (A.W.)— The North American Kurdish Alliance, the “Kevok” Foundation, the Hellenic American Leadership Council, the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) Eastern Region, as well as other pro-democracy and human rights groups held a “Rally for Freedom” on Sept. 20 demanding an end to the dictatorial rule of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev. The rally took place in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza in front of the United Nations headquarters in New York City as the two leaders addressed the UN General Assembly.

“The serious deterioration of democracy and disrespect of fundamental human rights in Turkey and Azerbaijan are of grave concern, and reflect the contempt both regimes have for international law,” said ANCA Eastern Region Chairman Steve Mesrobian. “When the world community does not hold them accountable for treating their own citizens so poorly, it should be no surprise that these regimes are emboldened to commit brutal violence and war crimes against Armenians, Kurds, and others outside their borders in Artsakh and Syria, further destabilizing an already unsettled region.”

Protesters at the rally called on the regimes to release jailed journalist and political prisoners,

stop their denial of the Armenian Genocide, end the illegal economic blockade of Armenia and Artsakh, and stop their export of violence. Fifteen personal bodyguards of Turkish President Erdogan are under indictment for their attacks on peaceful protesters in Washington, D.C., in May.

“To deflect attention from these egregious actions, and from the rampant corruption in their countries, both Azerbaijan and Turkey have engaged in ‘caviar diplomacy’ to influence Western democracies, investing millions of dollars to have them look the other way,” continued Mesrobian.

A recent investigative report produced by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project and other groups has uncovered close to $3 billion used by Azerbaijan in an apparent money laundering and bribery campaign waged throughout Europe. Turkey has used similar tactics, and has spent millions on lobbying and PR firms in the U.S. and Europe.

Below is video from the protest (Video: ANCA-ER)

Related links:

The Armenian Weekly. ‘Rally for Freedom’ Against Erdogan and Aliyev’s Dictatorships Takes Place in New York

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Aliyev, Erdogan, Rally for Freedom

Turkey president Erdogan gangs beating protesters on American soil again

September 22, 2017 By administrator

Violence erupted Thursday as Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan delivered a speech in New York City.

Erdoğan was addressing the Turkish American National Steering Committee (TASC) when a few members of the audience began yelling at the president.

Also, the protesters carried signs that read “You are a terrorist” in English.

And one of these protesters yelled at the president, “You’re a terrorist! Get out of my country!”

Subsequently, men in black suits pushed toward the protesters.

As the protesters were forcibly removed from the room, one of the men escorted out was seen being punched in the face, BuzzFeed informed.

Erdoğan supporters attacked the protesters and initiated a brawl.

The US Department of State, however, noted that it has no information yet on whether the Turkish president’s bodyguards were involved in this incident.

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: Erdogan, gangs beating protesters, NY

Where can ex-Erdoganists go?

September 20, 2017 By administrator

Author: Pinar Tremblay
Posted September 20, 2017

For the last couple of years, it has become almost impossible, even for avid Justice and Development Party (AKP) supporters, to talk about Turkey without exclusively focusing on the almighty Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Erdogan rules without any challenge. From high school entrance exams to laser hair removal, all issues are decided exclusively at the palace. Whether one uses the label “one-man rule” as praise or criticism, there are no checks left on Erdogan, whose words promptly become the law of the land.

For a long time, Erdogan critics were hopeful that senior AKP members may be able to check the president, but as Erdogan’s powers expanded, the number of influential founding members of the AKP still active in policy decreased. One way or another they were all removed, and none proved himself to be a force to be reckoned with. There is only one exception — Abdullatif Sener, a founding member of the AKP and deputy prime minister for five years, who left the party in 2007 on his own will.

Former Erdogan allies who have been dismissed are called Erdogan’s X-Men, a term coined by cheeky Ankara bureaucrats who are more in tune with Hollywood than their own culture. We should note that just like in X-Men movies, the term is gender neutral. So what happened to the dozens of Erdogan’s X-Men who helped him establish his one-man rule?

There are at least three categories where former AKP heavyweights wind up. First is the group of founding AKP members who have held crucial political posts, such as former President Abdullah Gul, former Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu and former Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc. Just before the end of their terms, these men suffered social media attacks from core-Erdogan supporters and all other critics who had to suffer these political figures’ meek decisions over the years. These founding AKP members were forced to hand over their posts. Even if none of the allegations stuck, their political reputations were destroyed. Erdogan rarely ever speaks ill of his former colleagues. As one savvy Ankara bureaucrat told Al-Monitor, “Why would he get blood on his hands when there are all those others who are eager to gorge on anger and jealousy? In-group fighting has reached a climax in Ankara, and whatever leaks out of this cauldron to the media angers Erdogan and his media team the most.”

These once-respected and power-holding men were stripped of their political clout; they lost the limelight as well as their legal shields. A seasoned journalist who works for the pro-government media told Al-Monitor, “They know well how one can go from the top of the political ladder to the middle, how their secrets can be revealed. They experienced what it means to be vulnerable. So they keep quiet for two reasons: one is the fear of prison, which is the No. 1 nightmare of almost all government employees as well as media members in Turkey now; second, the possibility of being part of the administration again. The glory along with all freebies is great, and Erdogan skillfully utilizes the carrot-stick policies.”

The second group, whose numbers are small, are those who failed to switch sides on time — that is, before the corruption scandals of Dec. 17 and 25, 2013. For example, prominent Islamist Ali Bulac was one of the most respected Erdogan advisers since the early 1990s when Erdogan was the mayor of Istanbul. Bulac was writing for Zaman daily, just like Erdogan’s current press secretary, Ibrahim Kalin. However, unlike Kalin, Bulac did not stop writing after the corruption scandal and continued criticizing the government’s failing Syria policies. Today, Bulac is on trial for being a member of the Gulen movement, but not many Islamists are convinced he was ever a member. However, Bulac symbolizes a small yet crucial group of Erdogan’s X-Men. His current condition in prison signals to all others that there will be no mercy for those who dare to cross Erdogan’s red lines. It is not easy for current Erdoganists to resign or raise criticism because jail is a real and imminent threat now.

The last category of Erdogan’s X-Men is the most visible. The men now serve in alternative media outlets. One of the most prominent of these figures, Akif Beki, was Erdogan’s outspoken press secretary from June 2005 to January 2009. Beki is known as a secular journalist. After leaving his post, he became a columnist for Turkey’s most prestigious Dogan media outlet papers, Radikal, then Hurriyet dailies. On Aug. 8, Beki was fired from Hurriyet. However, as with X-Men of this category, he did not go out of the public eye. Rather, third category X-Men are pushed out to the margins of the pro-AKP media. Beki joined Karar daily and on Sept. 12 posted a piece explaining how he arrived at Karar. Beki’s words were moderately critical of the government. He was simply asking for freedom of the press. This is quite intriguing given the fact that Beki should assume a significant portion of the blame for the lamentable working conditions of the media today, as he was single-handedly responsible for arbitrarily revoking the accreditation of several journalists while he was press secretary. When he was in a position of power, there were several other complaints about Beki, such as allowing only pro-AKP journalists on travel programs, avoiding reporters’ calls, name calling and targeting critical journalists. Several seasoned Ankara reporters, most of whom are unemployed today, told Al-Monitor that Beki not only set the tone but also the precedent to current discriminatory policies and helped design a relentless cheerleading squad for Erdogan. Now Beki has become a victim of this establishment.

Most of the columnists of Karar daily are the former big shots of the pro-AKP media, such as Elif Cakir, who was dismissed from the daily Star after the notorious Kabatas lies — where unsustainable allegations were made about Gezi protesters violently attacking a young headscarved mother and baby.

Karar is one of the last places of refuge for Erdogan’s X-Men in the media. Hakan Albayrak, a lifelong Islamist who was one of the participants on the Mavi Marmara flotilla and the co-founder of Yeni Safak daily, a pro-Erdogan Islamist daily, joined Karar on March 2016 as a protest to “horrible attacks” on his fellow colleagues. Albayrak has openly complained that due to the internal strife, X-Men are now left to fend for themselves. He acknowledges that pro-AKP media outlets would rather have them disappear from the public eye. Indeed, Albayrak and others have tried to establish other newspapers prior to Karar but failed. For now, Karar and other marginal pro-AKP media provide some sort of government criticism and a good degree of encrypted complaints about their former colleagues, rather than directly about Erdogan. Still, according to Albayrak, they have been targeted as pro-Davutoglu or pro-Gul. However, when you read the paper and the columns regularly, you see that even in their alleged criticism, there is a significant amount of applause for Erdogan. Even out of the spotlight, these X-Men produce “light opposition” and “Erdogan-approved criticism of Erdogan” to the public. In Ankara circles, it is also referred to as fake opposition.

Just like in any other one-man rule, Erdogan does not allow any deputy to rise above him or even get positive attention for too long. Anyone that is gaining significant political approval is fast discredited then dismissed. Yet Erdogan never publicly scolds the X-Men; instead, he allows for internal competition to bring the rising stars down.

Now the crucial question is what does the real opposition do? Mostly opposition spends their time discussing whether they should be accepting X-Men into their ranks. But frankly, the real question is if the palace opens its doors to X-Men, how many of them would come back running?

Pinar Tremblay is a columnist for Al-Monitor’s Turkey Pulse and a visiting scholar of political science at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. She is a columnist for Turkish news outlet T24. Her articles have appeared in Time, New America, Hurriyet Daily News, Today’s Zaman, Star and Salom. On Twitter: @pinartremblay

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, ex-man

Orhan Pamuk: Erdogan’s party is increasingly getting authoritarian

September 2, 2017 By administrator

Nobel laureate, writer Orhan Pamuk said Erdogan’s party is increasingly getting authoritarian after the failed military coup last year.

Speaking to CNN , Pamuk said the opposition should work stronger, and 49% of Turkey’s population are saying “no” to Erdogan.

The famous writer said liberal values are embedded, and Turkey’s problem is not lack of liberals.

“There is an intense fight, polarization in Turkey,” he emphasized.

Asked whether he worries about himself, Pamuk said: “I worry about everyone, but it is not a personal thing. There is less area for free speech, but I am optimistic. Erdogan’s party votes are going down, and opposition may fight back.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, orhan pamuk, Party

Germany: Angela Merkel’s party lawmaker proposes freezing foreign assets of Erdogan’s family

August 25, 2017 By administrator

Freezing foreign assets belonging to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s family may be an option for Berlin as tensions between the two countries continues to grow, Roderich Kiesewetter, a politician from the German Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and spokesman of the Bundestag’s Committee on Foreign Affairs, stated, according to Sputnik Agency.

The politician noted in the interview that such a measure should be the product of a balanced decision of the European Union as a whole, and one that would work in the long-term.

“For example, I think that it is possible that we freeze the foreign assets of Edogan’s clan… We are freezing the assets of Russian oligarchs, but we do nothing in relation to Turkey,” Kiesewetter told, as quoted by the source.

The agency reminds, that last week, Erdogan called Merkel-led CDU, the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and the Greens party “enemies of Turkey” and urged ethnic Turks to vote against them in the September 24 election. In response, the German government said that it expected other states to abstain from interfering in its internal affairs.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, freezing, Germany

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