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How did Erdoğan become a billionaire only real job he had sold snacks?

October 26, 2016 By administrator

erdogan-the-billionerCan Any Journalist in Turkey ask these Twelve questions:

Freedom of the press has been one of the chief casualties of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s rule. He has confiscated newspapers, sued their editors, and imprisoned journalists. Reporters Without Frontiers ranks Turkey’s press freedom 151st in the world out of 180, below Vladimir Putin’s Russia. In the forthcoming year, as Erdoğan’s state of emergency and purge continue, Turkey’s ranking will likely fall further, perhaps even below the Islamic Republic of Iran.

With Turkish print, radio, and television journalism on life-support, what are questions that journalists discuss behind-the-scenes but on which they are not allowed to report?

1. How did Erdoğan become a billionaire?

Erdoğan was born to a relatively poor family in Rize, along the Black Sea. His father was in the coast guard and worked at sea. Erdoğan at one point even sold snacks on the street to make extra cash. He graduated from a religious school in 1973, and immediately embarked on a political career, eventually becoming first mayor of Istanbul and, after a brief stint in prison for religious incitement, prime minister and now president. So here’s the question: How did a man like Erdoğan become a billionaire several times over?

Turks have a pretty good idea: Erdoğan faced 13 corruption probes as a result of his time as mayor; parliamentary immunity meant these were never resolved. The US Embassy reported that Erdoğan had at least eight Swiss bank accounts. He explained some wealth as the result of wedding gifts for his son. Tape recordings — genuine but leaked illegally — show him discussing how to liquidate perhaps a billion dollars in cash. Erdoğan used his power over the courts to quash the case and arrest prosecutors and judges who sought to pursue it. Similar questions about mysterious gains might be asked about his son Bilal (and what exactly happened to Bilal in Italy?) as well as Burak, whose whereabouts are a mystery, Any journalist living in Turkey who seeks to dig into the sources of Erdoğan and his family members’ wealth, however, would find themselves behind bars for decades to come.

2. Where is Erdoğan’s university diploma?

Erdoğan’s official biography says he received a degree in 1981 from the Department of Economic and Commercial Sciences at Marmara University. Here’s the problem: No such department has ever existed at Marmara University. In 1982, the university opened a Faculty of Economic and Administrative Sciences, but there is no record of Erdoğan ever attending it. A four year degree is a prerequisite for the presidency. If Erdoğan lied about having a degree, then can he remain as president? Of course, that assume rule-of-law still matters in Turkey. Cengiz Çandar, an Erdoğan apologist-turned-critic, has more here.

3. Is there another story behind the coup attempt?

The July 15 coup attempt, which Erdoğan called “a gift from God,” remains Turkey’s biggest news story of the year.  Within hours, Erdoğan accused followers of Fethullah Gülen, an Islamic thinker with whom he had found common cause until 2013, with organizing the attempted coup. Some followers of Gülen were among those that took part but the Turkish government has yet to present evidence formally to US authorities pointing to Gülen’s complicity.

There are many questions that point to others’ culpability. Many senior military officials involved were not followers of Gülen; indeed, some were far closer to the ruling party. Nor has Erdoğan himself come clean about his whereabouts between 5 pm and 1:30 am the day of the coup. Indeed, it seems Erdoğan knew about the attempt in advance and may even have encouraged it in order to provide an excuse to crackdown. In a normal country, this would be the subject of press inquiry; in Turkey, journalists just take Erdoğan at his word.

Other coup-related issues that the Turkish press is forbidden to investigate involve who was responsible for the deaths of civilians on the evening of the coup. There is anecdotal evidence that many civilians killed were shot seemingly at random by a special unit not under the command of the ordinary military structure. Here, many questions remain about the actions of the SADAT International Defense Consulting company, which some Turks reported before the coup attempt had been allegedly training a secret army to serve Erdoğan alone, a sort of Turkish equivalent of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. Erdoğan’s subsequent appointment of Adnan Tanriverdi, the head of SADAT, to be his military counsel only adds to the questions. Tanriverdi was dismissed by the Turkish General Staff during the 1997 soft coup and seems bent on revenge against the secular order.

4. If there is a FETO, is there also an ETO?

It’s one thing to oppose Fethullah Gülen and resent his movement; it’s another thing to call them a terrorist group on the scale of the Islamic State or Al Qaeda. Erdoğan renaming the Hizmet movement as the Fethullahist Terror Organization (FETO) is simply silly. For journalists to go along with it is unprofessional. But, let’s assume for a moment that the terror definition is valid. Erdoğan justifies the designation in the fact that FETO members bare allegiance to Gülen and have formed a patronage network for their own benefit and power. If that’s the case, then how is that different from the followers of Erdoğan? If it I permissible to talk about FETO as a terror group, would it be equally acceptable to refer to ETO (Erdoganist Terror Organization)? If not, is there a double standard or political filter through which all Turkish reporting must go?

5. If Gülen is a terrorist, why did Erdoğan work with him before 2013?

When it comes to network and religious philosophy, there is little difference between pre-2013 Gülen and post-2013 Gülen. Nor is there a difference between pre- and post-2013 Erdoğan. The only thing that differs between now and then was political alliance. Erdoğan insists that Gülen is a master terrorist. If so, and as Gülen is the same man now as he was in the first decade of Erdoğan’s rule, why did Erdoğan ally so closely to him?

6. Why is it okay to report on PKK attacks but not on the Islamic State?

Turkey faces challenges from both the PKK insurgency, leftist terror groups like the Revolutionary People’s Liberation Party/Front (DHKP-C), and Islamist terror groups like the Islamic State. Each has staged attacks inside Turkey. Here’s the thing: When the PKK or fringe Kurdish groups attack, it often dominates the headlines in Turkey for days as the investigation continues, authorities name suspects, etc. The same holds true for the DHKP-C which attacked the US Embassy in Ankara back in 2013. But when the Islamic State has attacked, the Turkish government has put an embargo on reports about the investigation. Is there a reason why the Turkish government seeks to suppress word of Islamist terror but allow reports of Kurdish terror to dominate the headlines?

7. Why did Turkish intelligence help the Nusra Front? And Islamic State?

Along the same lines, evidence is overwhelming that both the Nusra Front, an Al Qaeda affiliate in Syria, and the Islamic State itself have received arms, support, and equipment from authorities in Turkey. When journalists broke the story—and provided photographic evidence—Erdoğan’s response was to arrest the editor of the newspaper which published the scoop. Likewise, when Turkish soldiers stopped an arms shipment into Syria, Erdoğan ordered the soldiers’ arrest rather than the smugglers. Censoring a story doesn’t make it false; it only raises more questions.

8. Was a Turkish death squad behind the Paris assassinations?

In 2013, an assassination executed three Kurdish activists in their office in Paris. All three were PKK members. While the United States and Turkey designate the PKK to be a terror group, Turkey was involved in high profile peace talks with the PKK at the time. The French captured Omer Guney, a 32-year-old Turk who had arrived in France at age 9. Telephone intercepts after the murders show him calling back to handlers in Turkey’s intelligence agency raising the question, did Turkey conduct assassinations of dissidents in the capital of a fellow NATO member?

 9. Why did Erdoğan appoint his son-in-law to be oil minister?

Berat Albayrak, Erdoğan’s 37-year-old son-in-law, became Turkey’s energy minister on November 24, 2015. Was he the best qualified? Or were other factors at play? Given Erdoğan’s penchant for negotiating energy deals with leaders like Russian President Vladimir Putin and de facto Kurdish Regional President Masoud Barzani without civil servants in the room, was Albayrak’s appointment a way to arrange kickbacks and keep them in the family? Or as Erdoğan purges former allies from leadership positions in his political party in fist of paranoid rage, is he grooming family members to take their positions? Could Albayrak be a prime minister-in-waiting? Will Turkey become a hereditary republic like Syria is and like former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak sought?

10. Can we talk about Erdoğan’s associations?

Erdoğan keeps curious company. Friends of Erdoğan might receive the red carpet back in Turkey, but for most other people, they are simply “foes.” First, there was Yasin al-Qadi, a Saudi businessman whom the US Treasury Department designated until 2014 for alleged ties to Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. In July 2006, at a time when even the United Nations’ designation of al-Qadi still applied, Erdoğan declared, “I know Mr. Qadi. I believe in him as I believe in myself. For Mr. Qadi to associate with a terrorist organization, or support one, is impossible.” Putting aside the debate over al-Qadi, perhaps it is worthwhile to know how Erdoğan first got to know him and the nature of their relationship?  That goes double given the association of Erdoğan’s son with al-Qadi while the sanctions still applied. That’s just the tip of the iceberg, however.

Gulbuddin Hekmatyar is among Afghanistan’s worst actors. He gained fame during the initial Mujahedin struggle as the only Afghan warlord who never won a battle against the Soviets. Instead, he would always just attack whichever Afghan competitor was on top. It was Hekmatyar that started the civil war in 1992 after the Soviet withdrawal. In more recent years, he has allied himself with the Taliban, Al Qaeda, and Erdoğan (pictured here with the warlord is his youth). How did Erdoğan meet and come to know Hekmatyar, whom Turkey has since designated a terrorist.

There’s also, of course, Khalid Meshaal — Hamas’ most militant leader, Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, and personal business deals with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Erdoğan, in short, seems to have a set of friends radically different than those of a normal NATO leader. When did they begin? How did such friendships develop? Is the relationship one of politics, business, or both?

11. What deal have you struck with Putin?

A year ago, Russia-Turkey relations were at their lowest point since the Cold War but after an August meeting, the two leaders decided to bury the hatchet. There followed a pipeline deal and talks of the Turkish purchase of a Russian missile system. Was there anything more? Did Erdoğan discuss a possible basing agreement with Russia, for example, in Mersin? While it might sound farfetched, did Putin ever broach placing tactical Russian nuclear arms in Turkey? On a more personal level, does Erdoğan have any money in Russian banks? Are those assets personal or state? Has Russia made access to them part of its leverage in its own deal-making with Erdoğan?

12. What explains the court’s 2008 refusal to close the AKP?

In 2008, Turkey’s constitutional court considered penalties against Erdoğan’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) that might have resulted in the party’s dissolution but, ultimately, a last minute switch by one justice meant the AKP remained in place. Many Turks talk about how a businessman, long hounded by Erdoğan, wired money into that justice’s account just prior to the vote. What really happened that day? Did money change hands? If so, why? And did Erdoğan subsequently stop Turkish authorities from questioning that businessman’s past actions?

Asking questions is not the same as answering them. But a healthy democracy requires a healthy press. It reflects poorly on Turkey’s press freedom that such important issues touching on corruption, security, and economy are placed off-limits. Certainly, if there’s nothing to hide, why shouldn’t Turkish journalists be allowed to investigate these questions and more?

Source: https://www.aei.org/publication/twelve-questions-turkeys-journalists-cant-ask/

Filed Under: News Tagged With: billioner, did, Erdogan, how, Turkey

Turkish President Erdogan invited to Armenian Genocide concert “aghet” in Turkey

October 24, 2016 By administrator

erdogan-invited-aghetTurkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been invited to attend a concert commemorating the centennial of the Armenian Genocide, Ermenihaber.am reports.

Dresdner Sinfoniker will perform “Aghet”, a production commemorating the Armenian Genocide, in at the German Consulate in Istanbul, Turkey on November 13.

Besides Erdogan, Prime Minister Binali Yildirim, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu and Minister of Culture Nabi Avci have also been invited to the event.

According to Turkey-based Armenian newspaper Agos, the invitation sent to Erdogan says the concert seeks to establish cooperation among artists of the three countries.

Also, the invitation said, the event is organized with the support of the German Foreign Ministry and the European Union.

The orchestra said on April 23 that Turkey attempted to pressure it and the EU to keep the term genocide out of the same concert it ended up playing on April 30 to mark the 100th anniversary of the Genocide.

The controversy then centered on texts that were sung or spoken during the show in the eastern German city of Dresden, as well as the event’s programme, which used the word.

Director of the Dresdner Sinfoniker orchestra Markus Rindt said the concert matters to Germany a lot as the country “bears its own share of responsibility for the massacres.”

letter-to-erdoganGerman Foreign Ministry’s support

It reads the invitation letter dated October 21 Agos contact:

“Mr. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan,

You German-Turkish-Armenian Friendship Society is pleased to invite you to the opening and concert events and we hope to see you in our midst.

“Aghetti-Requiem” November 13th hour of the conclusion of our extensive concert tour with 19: 00 in Istanbul Consulate General in Kaisersaaal We want to celebrate with the support of the European Union and the German Foreign Ministry.

Dresden Symphony Orchestra will hold a concert for the participation of Turkish and Armenian guests. Ulvi Cemal Erkin’s String Quartet in the program next Quartet Cenk Erbiner the viola-duo, Vacha Sharafyans sürgit Gloria Viola, Duduk and String Quintet and Marc Sinan electric guitar in yello-Blue-Red String Quartet place armor. Www.aghet.e you can visit our website for more detailed information.

German-Turkish-Armenian friendship group of artists from three countries regularly bring together it aims to establish cooperation through art. These issues are not common to get in cooperation with both the Turkish and Armenian history and to share their influence today, and we would like to address the idea of freedom and artistic freedom peculiar to itself.

The common belief that dialogue contributed to good tomorrow, we would like to express that we will be very happy to see us.

 We are glad if you give us information about your attendance status until November 5, 2016. “
Related links:

Էրդողանը հրավիրվել է ցեղասպանությանը նվիրված համերգին. Ermenihaber.am

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Erdogan, Germany, invitation, Turkish

Erdogan Vows to Tackle Turkey’s Enemies Abroad Evoking Ottoman Past,

October 20, 2016 By administrator

erdogan-expention-map

Erdogan Ottoman imperialist ambitions map

ANKARA, ISTANBUL (Reuters)—Smarting over exclusion from an Iraqi-led offensive against Islamic State in Mosul and Kurdish militia gains in Syria, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned on Wednesday Turkey “will not wait until the blade is against our bone” but could act alone in rooting out enemies.

In a speech at his palace, Erdogan conjured up an image of Turkey constrained by foreign powers who “aim to make us forget our Ottoman and Selcuk history,” when Turkey’s forefathers held territory stretching across central Asia and the Middle East.

“From now on we will not wait for problems to come knocking on our door, we will not wait until the blade is against our bone and skin, we will not wait for terrorist organizations to come and attack us,” he told hundreds of “muhtars,” local administrators generally loyal to the government.

“Whoever supports the divisive terrorist organization, we will dig up their roots,” he said, referring to Kurdish PKK militants who have waged a three-decade insurgency against Turkey and have bases in northern Iraq and affiliates in Syria.

“Let them go wherever until we find and destroy them. I am saying this very clearly: they will not have a single place to find peace abroad.”

Erdogan has struck an increasingly belligerent tone in his speeches in recent days, frustrated that NATO member Turkey has not been more involved in the U.S.-backed assault on Mosul, and angered by Washington’s support for Kurdish militia fighters battling Islamic State in Syria.

He is riding a wave of patriotism since a coup attempt failed to oust him in July, his message of a strong Turkey playing well with his fervent supporters.

Ankara has been locked in a row with Iraq over the presence of Turkish troops at the Bashiqa camp near Mosul, as well as over who should take part in the offensive in the largely Sunni Muslim city, once part of the Ottoman empire and still seen by Turkey as firmly within its sphere of influence.

Erdogan has warned of sectarian bloodshed if the Iraqi army relies on Shi’ite militia fighters.

He said agreement had been reached with the U.S. military on Turkish jets joining the Mosul operation, although Washington has said it is up to the Iraqi government on who takes part.

“They thought they could keep us out of Mosul by bothering us with the PKK and Daesh (Islamic State) … They think they can shape our future with the hands of terrorist organizations,” he said. “We know that the terrorists’ weapons will blow up in their hands soon.”

Turkey has felt increasingly powerless to control events across its borders as the U.S.-led coalition focuses on fighting Islamic State in Syria rather than on removing Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, the root cause of the war in Ankara’s view.

It has been particularly angered by U.S. support for Kurdish militia fighters in Syria. Washington views the Kurdish YPG as useful allies in the fight against the jihadists, but Turkey sees them as a hostile force and an extension of the PKK.

“We know this business in this region. You are foreigners here. You do not know,” Erdogan said, to loud applause, in a speech on Tuesday to mark the opening of the academic year.

While criticizing the West, the Turkish leader has restored ties with Moscow in recent weeks, vowing to seek common ground on Syria after a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin last week, despite Moscow’s backing of Assad.

Erdogan said he discussed with Putin by phone an agreement on Tuesday night on removing from Aleppo the group formally known as the Nusra Front, and now called Jabhat Fatah al Sham. He gave no details.

Erdogan has made repeated references in his speeches this week to the term “Misak-i Milli” or National Pact, referring to decisions made by the Ottoman parliament in 1920 setting out the borders of the Ottoman Empire.

He often laments the concessions made by Turkish leaders after World War One, with the signing of the Treaty of Lausanne that brought modern Turkey into being in 1923. Pro-government media this week published maps depicting Ottoman borders encompassing an area including Mosul.

He warned of efforts to “restructure the region” and said Turkey would not sit by.

“I’m warning the terrorist organizations, the sectarian fanatic Baghdad government, and the Assad government that kills its own people: you are on the wrong path. The fire you are trying to start will burn you more than us,” Erdogan said.

“We are not obliged to abide by the role anyone has set for us in that sense. We have started carrying out our own plan.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: enemies, Erdogan, Iraq, ottoman, Syria

Istanbul: Garo Paylan, Turkish MP Files Criminal Complaint Against Erdogan

October 19, 2016 By administrator

Garo Paylan

Garo Paylan

ISTANBUL— Garo Paylan, Turkish MP, filed a criminal complaint against Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday concerning his disregard of anti-Armenian chants shouted during his speech in Trabzon on October 15. Paylan directed the complaint to the Istanbul Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office underlining that Erdogan violated Article 216 of the Turkish Penal Law which bans “inciting hatred and hostility among peoples and denigration.”

Paylan’s complaint, translated by Turkey-based Armenian newspaper Agos, can be read below.

“On October 15, there was a rally in Trabzon, where President Erdoğan gave a speech. The audience, which is claimed to be AKP members, repeatedly shouted ‘Armenian bastards cannot discourage us.’ The president, ministers and members of organization committee didn’t do anything to prevent people from shouting that slogan. This slogan, apart from the fact that it insults Armenian people who have been living on these lands for centuries, is considered as hate speech under the international laws to which Turkey is a party and the practices of ECHR. Unfortunately, such expressions about Armenian people are nothing new. It is self-evident that hate speech has the power of leading to public indignation and constitutes a danger to safety of life and property of Armenian citizens, for this fact has been a part of the rulings of national and international judicial authorities. Especially the silence of the president, who is supposed to treat equally to all citizens, increases the power of hate discourse and facilitates the targeting of Armenians. In addition, by constituting an obstacle to the practice of living together peacefully, this slogan incited hatred and hostility against a section of the population on the basis of their racial difference and denigrated Armenian people.”

On Monday, Paylan posted on his official Twitter account footage of Erdogan, Turkish Minister of Interior Suleyman Soylu and Minister of Forestry and Water Affairs Veysel Eroglu as witnesses of the incident.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ankara: Thousands protest against Erdogan government in Ankara, Erdogan, Garo Paylan, Turkish mp

Turkey’s despotic ruler Erdogan supporters chant anti-Armenian slogan at rally in Turkey

October 17, 2016 By administrator

erdogan-speachAt a rally organized by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Trabzon, participants chanted offensive slogans addressed to Armenians, Ermenihaber.am reports

At the event, Erdogan was talking about dying with dignity, instead of “dying like a woman.”

The attendees cheered his remarks and went on to chant “Armenian bastards can’t scare us.” Footage showed Erdogan smiling instead of trying to stop the racist remarks.

Following the incident, Armenian MP from the Turkish parliament Garo Paylan pledged to file a lawsuit with the court.

Related links:

Էրդողանի կողմնակիցները հայերին ուղղված հայհոյախառն կարգախոս են վանկարկել (հայ բիճեր). Ermenihaber.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: anti-Armenian, Erdogan, slogan, supporters

Erdogan Terrorism on Media Turkey’s post-coup crackdown sparks democracy fears

October 9, 2016 By administrator

erdogan-terrorismA dozen police officers, joined by officials from Turkey‘s treasury and the county’s broadcasting watchdog, marched into the pro-Kurdish IMC-TV television station, sealed off its control rooms and forced the channel off the air during a live program on democracy, the Associated Press reports.

The station had anticipated the raid ever since the government, using powers it acquired by declaring a state of emergency in the wake of the July 15 coup attempt, last week ordered IMC-TV and 22 other broadcasters to shut down.

The bold act of censorship nonetheless stunned staff members Tuesday in the channel’s studio.

“Long live hell for the oppressors!” IMC-TV coordinating editor Eyup Burc shouted during the live broadcast. “We stand against coups and we stand against those who use coups to carry out their own coup.”

As Turkey prepares to extend by another three months the state of emergency it imposed after July’s failed military coup, critics fear President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is using the uprising as an excuse to silence his detractors.

The government says it needs more time to eradicate a network linked to U.S.-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, which the government accuses of orchestrating the attempted coup. But Turkey already has used the emergency powers to carry out an unprecedented purge of people suspected of links to the cleric and has extended the crackdown to go after Kurdish and left-leaning media outlets.

Comments Erdogan made this month suggesting the state of emergency could last as long as a year have reinforced concerns about the president’s aims. Kemal Kilicdaroglu, the leader of the main opposition Republican People’s Party, has accused the government of leading a “counter-coup.”

The state of emergency allows the government to rule by decree with limited parliamentary involvement. Some 32,000 people allegedly connected to the coup have been arrested, while tens of thousands of teachers, soldiers, police officers, judges and prosecutors have been dismissed or suspended from government jobs for suspected links to Gulen, who denies any involvement in the coup attempt.

Hundreds of schools and foundations run by the movement, which the government has listed as a terror organization, have been shut down or taken over. Media outlets once owned by Gulen have been closed down while prominent journalists they employed have been arrested.

Authorities more recently have moved against pro-Kurdish and leftist groups, using a government decree to dismiss 11,000 left-leaning teachers and to force off the air television and radio stations accused of acting as mouthpieces for the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK.

Among them was a children’s television station broadcasting cartoons in the Kurdish language.

“Fears that the government would make opportunistic use of the state of emergency to silence critics who have nothing to do with the July 15 coup attempt have come true,” said Emma Sinclair-Webb, the Turkey director for Human Rights Watch.

More than 100 journalists have been arrested since the state of emergency was declared and thousands lost their jobs or had press credentials canceled by the government, according to the Journalists’ Association of Turkey. Human Rights Watch said the clamp down on broadcasters “effectively ends critical television news reporting in Turkey.”

The suppression of critical voices has not been limited to news organizations.

Novelist Asli Erdogan, who wrote for the Ozgur Gundem daily newspaper, was arrested on charges of membership in an armed terror organization. Also rounded up was singer Atilla Tas, who had acquired a large social media following for his humorous criticisms of Erdogan and the government.

“What the uniformed coup plotters could not achieve on July 15, (the government) has achieved by extending the state of emergency,” Republican People’s Party legislator and spokeswoman Selin Sayek Boke said. “They usurped the parliament’s most basic powers of enacting laws on behalf of the people.”

IMC-TV, which promotes Kurdish and other minority issues, also was ordered shut down for alleged links to the PKK. Like the Gulen movement, the Kurdistan Workers’ Party is outlawed as a terrorist organization by the Turkish government.

The station, which rejects the accusation, already was removed earlier this year from Turkey’s largest satellite platform for allegedly engaging in “terrorist propaganda.” It was operating through another satellite and via the internet before this week’s raid.

“The state of emergency allows them to make these accusations without any proof and without taking any one to court,” IMC-TV News Director Hamza Aktan, who was in the station’s control room at the time of the raid, told The Associated Press. “Channels they do not like and who do not follow their line are easily being disposed of.”

Nebi Mis, the political research director at the pro-government Foundation for Political, Economic and Social Research think tank in Ankara, defended the purges.

“Those who carried out the July 15 coup not only infringed on human rights, but also on the people’s right to life. A policy of full purification is necessary,” Mis said.

Silencing Kurdish media outlets also was appropriate since the state of emergency encompasses other outlawed organizations, he said. Yet authorities may have “gone overboard” in some cases by going after media outlets that criticize the government, Mis said.

Erdogan and other officials acknowledge that some innocent people have been caught up in the upheaval. The government has promised to set up centers to process claims of unfair dismissals.

Related links:

AP. Turkish post-coup crackdown sparks democracy fears

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, media, terrorism

Erdogan Fake Coup Atrocity News Update

October 5, 2016 By administrator

540 soldiers from Turkish naval, air forces dismissed over alleged Gülen links

Some 540 soldiers from the naval and air forces command have been temporarily dismissed over their suspected links to U.S.-based preacher Fethullah Gülen and his network, who is accused of orchestrating a failed coup in July, the Defense Ministry said.
Some 427 of the soldiers were from the air forces while the other 113 were from the naval forces.
Some 368 of those temporarily dismissed were officers.
A total of 3,699 military personnel have been dismissed from the army, according to the ministry.

66 more judges, prosecutors dismissed in coup attempt probe

Turkey’s Supreme Board of Judges and Prosecutors (HSYK) dismissed 66 more judges and prosecutors on Oct. 5 over their links to the movement of Fethullah Gülen, the U.S.-based Islamic preacher who is seen as the main suspect behind the July 15 coup attempt.

The total number of dismissed judges and prosecutors increased to 3,456 with the latest dismissals as part of an investigation into the attempted takeover.

The previously sacked judges included Rüstem Eryılmaz, the former head of the case into the killing of Armenian-Turkish journalistHrant Dink in 2007, and Ömer Diken, the head of the former “Balyoz” (Sledgehammer) coup plot case.

Mehmet Ali Pekgüzel, the prosecutor in the Ergenekon coup plot case, was also dismissed.

The government says Gülen’s followers spent years infiltrating institutions with the goal of overthrowing the state.

255 companies seized so far in Turkey’s post-coup attempt measures: TMSF

A total of 255 companies have been seized by the Saving Deposit Insurance Fund (TMSF) so far in the Turkish government’s post-coup attempt measures, TMSF President Şakir Ercan Gül has said.

“Some 255 companies have been seized so far,” said Gül in an interview on private broadcaster BloombergHT, Reuters reported.

He said the TMSF is responsible for running seized companies in the most efficient way but stressed that the process “has not been easy.”

Many companies have been appointed trustee panels or directly transferred to the TMSF over suspected links to the movement of U.S.-based Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen, believed to be behind the failed coup attempt.

Row erupts between Nigeria, Turkey over Gülenists: Report

A row has reportedly erupted between Nigeria and Turkey over the followers of U.S.-based Islamic preacher Fethullah Gülen, who is believed to have orchestrated the attempted July 15 failed coup.

According to the Nigerian government, Turkey arrested or detained a total of 52 Nigerian students receiving education in Istanbul “as a retaliatory measure” due to their suspected links to the Gülenist movement after Abuja showed unwillingness to shut down Gülen-linked schools.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: coup, Erdogan, Update

Germany: Böhmermann speaks out after dropped investigation heavily criticized the Erdogan. in video statement and song

October 5, 2016 By administrator

bohmerman-dropped-chargesGerman comedian Jan Böhermann has defended his now infamous “defamatory poem” as a joke in his first statement since the investigation against him was dropped. He also heavily criticized the Turkish government.

In his first statement following German prosecutors dropping charges against him, comedian Jan Böhmermann addressed the international outrage and subsequent investigation following his raunchy poem about Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

“It is now officially established, at least provisionally, that this was a joke at heart,” Böhmermann said seated behind a desk in a video uploaded to YouTube. “[The joke] was tasteless for some, while others at that time found it just right.”

He thanked the German public broadcaster ZDF, which hosts his show “Neo Magazine Royale,” for supporting him during the investigation. as well as sardonically praising the Mainz prosecutor for “watching the complete … episode.”

Prosecutors on Tuesday dropped the case against Böhmermann, citing among other reasons, the obviously satirical and exaggerated nature of the poem.

Böhmermann also took aim at the Turkish government in his statement, noting that “compared to what critical journalists, satirists, or opposition members faced at that time and even now, all this fuss about the ‘Böhmermann Affair’ is another big, sad joke.”

He also jabbed at German politicians for the investigation, saying: “If a joke triggers a state crisis, it is not the problem of the joke, but of the state.”

His German-language video statement ended with Böhmermann singing Monty Python’s “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life” in English. Accompanied by a guitarist, Böhmermann whistled and sang “freedom” as he slowly danced off screen.

Böhmermann’s poem was in response to Turkey summoning the German ambassador over a less lewd song criticizing Erdogan on another satirical show. Ahead of delivering the poem on March 31, Böhmermann said on air that Erdogan clearly couldn’t differentiate between fair criticism and genuine libelous insult – saying this poem would serve as a case study demonstrating the difference.

Erdogan was at the time using a law forbidding insults against the president within Turkey to press more than 2,000 cases against people – although after July’s coup attempt he pledged a mass amnesty for those cases.

Probable appeal

Although prosecutors dropped the charges, the Böhmermann case may not be over yet.

“The president has given his lawyer in Germany the authority to appeal the prosecutors’ decision,” a politician with Erdogan’s AKP party, Mustafa Yeneroglu, told the German daily “Bild” newspaper on Wednesday.

Erdogan’s Munich-based lawyer Michael-Hubertus von Sprenger confirmed to the German dpa news agency that an appeal would be filed within the next 14 days.

The case led to international debates about freedom of speech and calls within Germany for an archaic law, Paragraph 103, about insulting foreign heads of state to be abolished. Germany’s houses of parliament are working on abolishing the law at present. Meanwhile, opposition and coalition parties alike have put pressure on German Chancellor Angela Merkel and her government to accelerate the process.

“Lese majeste [offending foreign heads of state] is a relic from the last century,” senior Social Democrat Thomas Oppermann said on Wednesday. Therefore the law should be abolished soon, Oppermann urged, saying the current 2018 timetable was not good enough. This sentiment was echoed by the Green party’s federal parliamentary group leader Anton Hofreiter in an interview with the German newspaper the “Saarbrücker Zeitung.” He said Merkel could not let the matter be swept under the carpet.

rs/msh (AFP, dpa)

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Germany, Jan Böhermann

Erdogan’s anti-Armenian insult condemned in CoE report

October 5, 2016 By administrator

erdogan-rasistThe Council of Europe’s human rights body European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) has reported its concern about increasing hate speech and violence against religious, sexual, and ethnic minority groups in Turkey, indicating that the usage of hate speech by senior representatives of the state was a major concern.  

“ECRI is highly concerned about the fact that hate speech is expressed increasingly by officials and other public figures, including senior representatives of the state and some members of the opposition,” said the report released by ECRI on Oct 4, Hurriyet Daily News reports.

Referring to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s televised statement in August 2014, “They have said I am Georgian […] they have said even uglier things – they have called me – pardon my language – Armenian, but I am a Turk,” the report follows with several recommendations.

“ECRI strongly recommends that officials and political leaders at all levels stop using hate speech. The parliament and the government should adopt codes of conduct prohibiting hate speech and the authorities should encourage political parties to do likewise,” it said.
Examining the current situation in terms of legal provisions and reflecting the implementation process of the existent legal provisions and instruments in Turkey, ECRI indicated that the negative impact of hate speech damages social cohesion and underlined the problem of impunity regarding hate crimes due to the fact that there is no strong official reaction to such rhetoric.

“There is even reason to conclude that hate speech legislation is used to silence vulnerable groups,” the report said, indicating that disciplinary measures and verdicts against law enforcement officers remained limited and many alleged hate crimes were concluded without adequate investigation and sentencing.

Referring to data transmitted by Turkish officials, ECRI underlined that “658 cases were prosecuted in 2014 (compared with 535 cases in 2013 and 497 in 2012) and 202 received sentences (compared with 334 cases in 2013 and 158 in 2012).”

ECRI also emphasized that hate speech was widely used by public figures and intellectuals and in media coverage. Referring to the Hrant Dink Foundation’s annual reports, ECRI reported that hate speech in Turkish print media had substantially increased in recent years. According to the report, the number of hate speech items recorded in the last four reports rose from 141 to 313. The report concluded that the most frequent arenas for hate speech were ethnic origin (46.98 percent), religion (20.92 percent), national identity (13.2 percent), sexual orientation (5 percent), social status (4.69 percent) and sexual identity (2.87 percent).

Discussing how public hate speech has deepened existing divisions and damaged social cohesion, ECRI referred to new research showing that 70 percent of respondents had negative views and attitudes toward Jews and Armenians. Some 39.1 percent had similarly negative attitudes toward Arabs, while another 35 percent had similar distaste for Europeans.

In response to ECRI recommendations, Turkey issued an answer to CoE officials that was included in the report. Indicating that the Law on a Turkish Human Rights and Equality Institution was adopted by the Grand National Assembly of Turkey, Ankara said: “The law provides a comprehensive legal framework for the prohibition of discrimination on the grounds of gender, race, color, language, religion, faith, philosophical and political views, ethnic origin, sect, wealth, birth, civil status, condition of health, disability and age. The ground ethnic origin is included explicitly in the law.”

In addition Turkey indicated that, “all racist and homo/transphobic incidents are throughly investigated by police and prosecution authorities. Within the scope of the related legislation, the police forces, without making any discrimination among citizens, are responsible for making a thorough, diligent and swift investigation and referring to judicial authorities.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: coe, condemned, Erdogan, Turkey

Iraq rejects Erdogan comments on Turkey’s participation in Mosul battle

October 4, 2016 By administrator

Source: Xinhua   2016-10-03 20:19:34

BAGHDAD, Oct. 3 (Xinhua) — The Iraqi Foreign Ministry on Monday rejected recent comments by the Turkish president over Ankara’s willingness to join in the imminent battle to flush out Islamic State (IS) militants from their last major stronghold in Mosul.

“The Iraqi Foreign Ministry rejects the repeated comments made by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan about the battle to liberate Mosul,” a ministry spokesman said in a statement.

Such comments “represent a blatant interference in Iraqi internal affairs and a violation of principles in bilateral relations and good neighborliness,” the spokesman said in the online statement.

Ankara has ignored Baghdad’s repeated calls for withdrawing Turkish troops deployed on Iraqi territories, he added.

The Iraqi statement came after Erdogan’s comments on Saturday during a parliamentary session, in which Turkish legislators voted for an extension of the mandate of Turkish forces in Syria and Iraq for one more year.

The mandate, given to the Turkish armed forces in 2014, was last extended for one year in September 2015.

Erdogan said Mosul could be freed from IS militants but warned that Ankara had to be involved in any operation and be included in the decision-making process.

“Turkey cannot be left off the table. The others don’t have such a border (with Iraq),” he said. “They may want us to stay as spectators but that decision is also going to be made here.”

The deployment of hundreds of Turkish troops in northern Iraq, however, has caused a row between Turkey and Iraq as Baghdad repeatedly said that the Turkish forces had entered Iraqi territories without the knowledge of the Iraqi government, which viewed their presence as a violation of the country’s sovereignty.

However, the Turkish government said that withdrawing Turkish troops from Iraq is out of the question and that the Turkish soldiers are in Iraq as part of an international mission to train and equip Iraqi forces fighting the IS group.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Iraq, Mosul

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