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Erdogan’s Threat to Open Borders Prompts EU to Devise Greek Islands Plan

May 10, 2016 By administrator

1033302314The EU is considering alternatives to the migrant deal it struck with the Turkish government, one of which is to use Greek islands as reception centers, the German newspaper Bild reported.

The islands of the Aegean may become temporary reception centers for migrants if the 6 billion euro ($6.8 billion) deal with Turkey falls through; in that case, the EU will send the money to Athens instead, German newspaper Bild reported on Tuesday.

EU officials are making contingency plans because of the increasing likelihood that Turkey will not fulfil the conditions of its migrant deal, which was struck in November following negotiations between former Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu and the EU Council. 

The deal contains 72 requirements that Ankara must meet in order to receive 6 billion euros in financial aid, a speeding up of the EU accession process, and visa-free travel in the Schengen zone for Turkish citizens. In return, the EU wants Turkey to control its borders and prevent illegal migration to Europe.

On Friday, the day after Prime Minister Davutoglu left the government, reportedly due to a disagreement with President Erdogan’s policies, the President made a speech in which he stated “we will go our way, you go yours,” and publicly rejected the request to reform Turkey’s anti-terror laws.

An EU minister told Bild on Sunday that as a result of apprehension about Turkey’s willingness to adhere to the agreement and Erdogan’s threats to open Turkey’s border with Europe, contingency preparations are being made to find another resolution, one of which involves using Greek islands as migrant reception centers.

In this case, asylum seekers would have their claims processed on the islands, and those who are refused asylum will be deported back to their home country.

The six billion euros promised to Turkey (100 million of which has been disbursed), to pay for the housing of asylum seekers would therefore go to Athens instead, and ferries to the mainland from the islands would be suspended, Bild reported.

Karl-Georg Wellmann of Angela Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union political party commented that controlling the borders of the EU must be the main priority.

“In any case we have to take proper precautions: protecting the EU’s borders and handling asylum cases locally on the islands, not on the mainland, and deporting those who are not refugees,” the politician told Bild.

Source: sputniknews.com

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Erdogan, EU, open border

Who’s Really Calling the Shots? ‘EU Will Do Whatever Erdogan Tells It to’

May 7, 2016 By administrator

1038250965Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has lashed out at the EU for telling Ankara to change its terror laws if it wants a visa-free regime. “We will go our way, you go yours,” he said on Friday in a televised speech, stressing that Turkey was under a terrorist threat.

Professor of political science at the University of Utah Hakan Yavuz told Radio Sputnik that the EU leadership will be unable to change Ankara’s policy. He noted that both Brussels and Turkey had acted unethically.

“Davutoglu was picked and made advisor, then foreign minister and then prime minster by Erdogan and this time he fired him as well. Davutoglu never had local power and whatever power he did have it depended on Erdogan.”

“The president felt threatened or he felt that Davutoglu might challenge his authority because Turkey is not a presidential system, it is a parliamentary system and Erdogan wants to be a supreme leader of the county. He wants to be the supreme president and run every aspect of Turkish politics,” Yavuz said.

The analyst mentioned that in his opinion Turkey is facing a constitutional crisis.

Politicians from Germany’s ruling coalition also voiced their concerns over Davutoglu’s decision to resign. They said that Davutoglu’s departure will pave the way for the country’s president to rule unchecked.

“In my opinion the European Union will do whatever Erdogan tells them to do. The EU is in no position to dictate anything to Erdogan given the political situation over the last two years. I don’t consider Davutoglu more liberal. I think there was a difference between Erdogan and Davutoglu in terms of how they wanted to implement their vision over domestic and foreign policy, but seeing Davutoglu’s articles and publications I would consider him to be more ideological, more Islamist than Erdogan himself,” Yavuz said.

The analyst further spoke about the relations between Erdogan and the EU. According to him, as long as Merkel supports Erdogan, the EU will not change or suggest any policy change to Erdogan.

“I don’t think that EU is more ethical than Erdogan. These are politicians and each one of them tries to remain in power.”

The analyst further spoke about Turkey’s budding relationship with Saudi Arabia and the recent visit by Prince Salman to Turkey.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Erdogan, EU, Tells It to', Turkey, Will Do Whatever

Turkey: The GodFather of ISIS Davutoglu in power Struggle with Erdogan Could Resign

May 4, 2016 By administrator

Davutoglu Erdogan Power Struggle.

Davutoglu Erdogan Power Struggle.

Despite efforts to present a unified front, tensions between Turkey’s President Erdogan and Prime Minister Davutoglu could soon reach a boiling point, and result in the latter’s resignation.

Fourteen years ago, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan founded the Justice and Development Party (AKP). Legally, Erdogan can not serve as party head while serving as president, and he personally chose Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu to replace him as the party’s chief.

But mounting evidence suggests that Davutoglu is tired of being second-in-command, and Erdogan is none too thrilled about an underling challenging his authority.

The Erdogan administration is currently pushing to abandon the country’s secular constitution, in favor of one that would cement broader powers for the president. Given Erdogan’s imprisonment of academics and journalists, his new sovereignty would likely be used to further Ankara’s clampdown on free speech.

This is one of the issues with which Davutoglu has tried to assert himself. But in his thirst for influence, the prime minister has pursued his own troubling interests. According to Soner Cagaptay of the Washington Institute, Davutoglu is the mastermind behind Turkey’s confused Syria policy.

“This was a foreign policy that was meant to make Turkey a regional star, not only shape the outcome of the Syrian war,” Cagaptay said.

Last week, Erdogan launched his own power grab, when the AKP’s executive committee – a body in which the president still maintains influence – voted to remove the prime minister’s authority to appoint local leaders.

“This decision will weaken Davutoglu’s power over the party,” said one official familiar with the decision, speaking on condition of anonymity. “Davutoglu’s job will not be easy after this.”

On Wednesday evening, both men held an unscheduled meeting behind closed doors. While some experts considered the possibility that Davutoglu would deliver his resignation, no public announcement was made. Other reports suggest that the prime minister may step down at the end of the month.

“While Erdogan and Davutoglu may appear keen to dispel any notions that divisions are emerging between them, the writing on the wall shows that a rift is in fact developing on a number of levels, and it is just a matter of time before this erupts in earnest,” Semih Idiz wrote for Hurriyet Daily News.

If the prime minister does, in fact, resign, he will likely be replaced by an Erdogan loyalist.

“Erdogan is intent on fully controlling both the executive but also the political agenda of the country and he can only do that if he has this degree of control,” said former Turkish diplomat Sinan Ulgen.

Despite these clear signs of trouble, the AKP has done its best to downplay the recent decision to remove Davutoglu’s appointing power.

“This authority has been taken back by the MKYK [AKP’s executive committee] so that issues concerning the party can be discussed intensively and in more detail,” party spokesman Omer Celik told reporters last Friday.

“It is not right to consider this change as a very radical move.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Davutoglu, Erdogan, power, struggle, Turkey

Turkey: A Dutch journalist arrested for insulting Erdogan

April 25, 2016 By administrator

Dutch journalistAnkara, April 24, 2016 (AFP) – A Dutch journalist of Turkish origin, Ebru Umar, was detained for several hours by police after being arrested in the night from Saturday to Sunday at his home in Kusadasi (western Turkey) for insulting Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, ‘she said on its Twitter account.

The journalist said she was “free but forbidden to leave the country” Turkish.

Ebru Umar, known feminist and atheist, said she had been taken from the bed Saturday night at her home in Kusadasi, a small resort in western Turkey.

“Two men knocked on my door and told me that I should go with them, because of two tweets,” she told Dutch broadcaster NOS. She spent the night at the police station “to discuss politics and the situation in Turkey,” she added.

Umar, aged 45, was then released, but she confirmed that she could leave the country, and should represent the police in a few days.

She said she should have left for the Netherlands on Sunday, but she could therefore leave the country immediately. Dutch Foreign Minister Bert Koenders said Sunday be “relieved” by his release.

He added that he had contacted his Turkish counterpart Mevlut Cavusoglu, to express his “regret” about the case.

“A country that is a candidate for accession to the European Union should continue to promote freedom of the press and freedom of expression,” he insisted.

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte also telephoned his counterpart Ahmet Davuoglu to express concern.

The Turkish authorities interviewed by AFP did not wish to comment.

Ebru Umar had recently written a very critical review of Turkey’s strong man in the Dutch newspaper Metro.

In this article, it cited in particular in support of its accusations against Erdogan, an email sent by the Turkish Consulate General in Rotterdam to Turks living in this region asking them to report any insult expressed on social networks to against the head of the Turkish state. This email was generated controversy. The consulate had subsequently spoken of a “misunderstanding”.

Rutte said he was “surprised” by this approach “strange”, demanding explanations from Ankara.

The trial for insult to Erdogan have multiplied since his election to the State of the head in August 2014, a sign, according to critics, an authoritarian drift.

Nearly 2,000 legal proceedings have been launched in Turkey for both artists and journalists as individuals.

Sanctions imposed for this offense is limited in most cases to prison sentences, but a woman was sentenced Jan. 20 to eleven months in prison for an obscene gesture against Erdogan during a demonstration on March 2014.

Monday, April 25, 2016,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Dutch, Erdogan, insult, Journalist, Turkey

German state seeks to scrap lese majeste law even faster #Böhmermann

April 21, 2016 By administrator

0,,19193592_303,00Politicians in Germany are preparing a motion which might protect German satirist Böhmermann, after Ankara filed a defamation suit against him. Meanwhile,

The state of North Rhine-Westphalia is seeking an initiative to scrap the German lese majeste law faster than currently planned, the state’s justice minister, Thomas Kutschaty, told the German daily “Rheinische Post.”

The law, which forbids defamation of foreign heads of state, is in the center of the widely publicized scandal surrounding comedian Jan Böhmermann and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Erdogan’s lawsuit against Böhmermann has sparked a fierce debate on freedom of speech in Germany, and put pressure on the federal government to change the law. According to Chancellor Angela Merkel, however, this would not happen before 2018.

State lawmakers poised to decide

The upper chamber of German parliament might solve the issue much sooner, according to North Rhine-Westphalia’s minister Kutschaty.

“I want to bring forth a motion aimed at immediate scrapping of lese majeste law before the chamber,” he told the Wednesday edtion of “Rheinische Post.”

“Then, they would not be able to convict [Jan] Böhmermann,” he added.

The lawmakers might discuss the initiative as soon as mid-May, according to state officials from North Rhine-Westphalia, where Böhmermann also resides.

In Germany, the upper house of the parliament consists of members from all 16 German states, often with different political parties in charge from region to region. Several other states had indicated their support, according to Kutschaty.

If the law is changed or scrapped before the court decision, the judges would be legally obliged to follow the milder regulation.

Also on Wednesday, the Dutch “Telegraaf” newspaper reported that the cabinet in the Hague was mulling over a legal move to scrap a similar law in the Netherlands.

‘Nothing to whine about’

Violators of the current German law can face a maximum sentence of three years in prison.

Also, according to the regulations, the German government needs to approve defamation lawsuits before the investigation starts. Berlin’s decision to give the green light in Böhmerman’s case has prompted accusations against Chancellor Merkel, with government critics claiming she surrendered freedom of speech to Ankara.

German comedian Dieter Nuhr, however, publicly backed the government’s position stating there was “nothing to whine about” when it comes to the investigation against Böhmerman.

“A certain Mr. Böhmermann has insulted the Turkish president in a poem,” he wrote in the article for the German “Tagesspiegel” on Wednesday. “There might be good reasons to insult [Erdogan], but defamation is forbidden by law. And that applies to the Turkish president, because our laws apply to everybody. This, among other things, is the difference between us and Turkey. We have the rule of law.”

According to Nuhr, “everybody can sue everybody” in Germany, even Nazis, terrorists and other people who may not believe in the rule of law themselves.

Thus, Berlin was right to approve the investigation, Nuhr wrote, adding that “not everything is allowed in satire.”

“In addition, the lese majeste law … should be scrapped. This is also a good idea. Until then – it applies. That is how we do it when it comes to laws,” he added.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Böhmermann, Erdogan, Germany, lese majeste, scrap

London magazine offers cash prize in ‘President Erdogan Offensive Poetry Competition’

April 20, 2016 By administrator

Erdogan satire WOne thousand British pounds are on the line in a competition designed to personally insult Turkish President Erdogan. A German comedian is facing prosecution over a satirical TV spot that caused Erdogan to take offense.

The British magazine “The Spectator” launched a contest on Monday that will reward the person who writes what it deems to be the best “filthy and insulting as possible” poem about Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan with 1,000 pounds (1,266 euros, $1,440).

The lewd example provided by the creator of the contest, Douglas Murray, is in limerick form. While the magazine says “almost everything insulting that is worth saying can usually be included within the five lines of that beautiful and delicate form,” it says it will not exclude other forms of poetry.

German late-night television host Jan Böhmermann recited a poem on public television that called Erdogan a “pervert” and “zoophile” who has sex with goats, represses Kurds and watches child pornography.

Turkey responded by requesting that Böhmermann face criminal prosecution. German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said the poem was “deliberately offensive” and that she would allow Turkey’s request for prosecution to continue. In Germany, it is against the law to insult a foreign head of state, although Markel has admitted it is time for the law to be repealed. Böhmermann has since been put under police protection as the charges are examined.

“The fact such a trial could even be contemplated demonstrates that Germany is becoming little more than a satrapy of Erdogan’s,” Murray writes in “The Spectator.”

He adds “I’m a free-born British man, and we don’t live under the blasphemy laws of such despots” before announcing the poetry contest.

Initially, no prize was offered, but the online story was amended to announce that a reader “who shares The Spectator’s belief in the freedom of speech” had offered the prize of 1,000 pounds. In outlining the selection criteria, Murray writes “limericks will be excluded from consideration from the top prize if they are (a) not obscene or (b) non-defamatory” and encourages sexual jabs such as those in Böhmermann’s poem.

Debate in Germany over Böhmermann’s case has centered on where satire ends and deliberate insults begin in the context of a free press.

The magazine’s website claims it is “the oldest continuously published magazine in the English language.” Despite existing since 1828, the site reads, “The Spectator’s taste for controversy remains undiminished.”

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: competition, Erdogan, offensive, poetry

British writer Douglas Murray starts ‘offensive poetry competition’ about Turkey’s Erdoğan

April 19, 2016 By administrator

Murry Erdogan satireBritish author and journalist Douglas Murray announced the start of an “offensive poetry competition” about Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on April 18, amid the ongoing “insult” row between a German comedian and the president.

Murray, who writes for the weekly Spectator magazine, penned the first poem in the competition, which is titled “The President Erdoğan Offensive Poetry Competition.”

The winning poem will be announced on June 23, though Murray said there would be no prize for the winner because he could not find a sponsor for the competition.

The news comes after German comedian Jan Böhmermann recited a sexually crude satirical poem about Erdoğan on his “Neo Magazin Royale” show on German public broadcaster ZDF on March 31, unleashing a bitter row about freedom of speech issues.

Erdoğan filed a legal complaint against Böhmermann over the poem on April 12, which was followed by Ankara’s request to seek his prosecution.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel announced on April 15 that she had accepted the Turkish request for the prosecution of Böhmermann, who could be convicted under the rarely-enforced section 103 of the Germam criminal code on insulting organs or representatives of foreign states.

Meanwhile, Böhmermann has announced via his official Facebook page that he has decided to suspend his own TV show.

April/19/2016

Source: hurriyetdailynews

Filed Under: News Tagged With: british writer, competition, Erdogan, offensive, poetry

Erdogan’s Ottoman Ambitions Lead to Ties With Islamists – French Lawmaker

April 15, 2016 By administrator

1037999695Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Ottoman ambitions to spread his influence across parts of Europe and Syria have forced Ankara into dangerous alliances with Islamists, a member of the French legislative defense commission told Sputnik Friday.

MOSCOW (Sputnik), Svetlana Alexandrova – On Thursday, Russian President Vladimir Putin said during the Direct Line Q&A session that the Turkish government is fighting extremists in the country less than it is cooperating with such groups.

“Mr. Erdogan is playing a very dangerous game trying to recreate the Ottoman Empire across parts of Europe and Syria for this purpose Mr. Erdogan is trying to secure a wide range of partners among Islamists and build connections with the Wahhabi regime of Saudi Arabia,” Nicolas Dhuicq said.

The lawmaker noted that Saudi Arabia’s King Salman visits Ankara these days as a personal guest of the Turkish President “who is an Islamist himself.”

According to Dhuicq, Erdogan’s plan includes attempts “to inhabit the border and some Syrian villages of the north of the country with Turkic-speaking people, trading oil with Iraqi Kurds and using its military might on [the Kurdistan Workers’ Party] PKK’s rebels and the Syrian Kurds.”

© SPUTNIK/

Sputnik Turkey ‘Blocked for Providing Alternative, Objective Information’

Tensions between Ankara and Turkey’s Kurdish population escalated in July 2015 as fighting between the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), a pro-independence organization considered to be a terrorist group by Ankara, and the Turkish army resumed.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan alleges over 5,000 Kurdish insurgents have been killed in the campaign since mid-December, a figure that pro-Kurdish officials contend includes hundreds of civilians.

The Ottoman Empire preceded modern Turkey. It encompassed most of present-day Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Lebanon, among other territories, including in Europe.

Source: sputniknews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ambitions, Erdogan, islamist, ottoman, Saudi Arabia

Turkey riots In Istanbul against Erdogan visit

April 12, 2016 By administrator

Besiktas-fans-light-flares-outside-the-Vodafone-Arena-the-new-stThe stadium Besiktas Istanbul is a political issue. The fans of the club are considered leftist. That Erdogan their Arena initiates, ends in chaos. For him was even rescheduled.

n Istanbul, the police has taken on Monday night with tear gas and water cannons against thousands of fans of the force as a left football club Besiktas. This had gathered for the first home game in front of the initiated just the day before new club stadium.

As an AFP photographer reported, ran a lot of fans in black and white club jerseys before the riot in search of protection of other pelted police with bottles.

Source: welt.de

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: against, Erdogan, İstanbul, riots I, Turkey, visit

Germany: Prosecuting Böhmermann satire for dictator Erdogan could ‘cost Merkel the chancellery’

April 11, 2016 By administrator

0,,19178912_303,00(DW)Turkey is asking Germany to prosecute a satirist who made fun of its president. No matter how Merkel decides, experts say she can’t win. She’ll either offend an important diplomatic partner or alienate German supporters.

Jan Böhmermann has probably never received this much attention in his entire life. The German comedian is at the center of a controversy surrounding the question of what qualifies as satire and how far the limits of free speech stretch.

On Monday, the German government announced it would look into Turkey’s request to prosecute Böhmermann for a taunting poem the satirist presented in his weekly TV show, “Neo Magazine Royale.” In it, Böhmermann called Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan a “zoophile,” accusing him of sleeping with goats and beating up girls, Christians and Kurds.

In his show, the comedian said that the poem he was about to read would be illegal and that he wanted to show what satire is and isn’t allowed to do in Germany. The law in question prohibits insulting foreign heads of state. One of its particularities is that the German government, and not the state prosecutor, has to decide whether to take up criminal proceedings.

‘Lose-lose situation for Merkel’

“I find it problematic that the government, which is not part of the judiciary, has to make this decision,” political scientist and journalist Frank Überall told DW. “Government politicians are stuck in this intricate diplomatic web and decisions like this one have no place in that.”

The diplomatic spat between Turkey and Germany comes at an especially inopportune time. For Chancellor Angela Merkel, Turkey is an important partner in the refugee crisis. The EU and Erdogan’s government agreed on a deal in March that sees Turkey taking back refugees that entered the EU illegally via Greece. In return for Turkey’s help, the European Union will restart talks with the country about joining the EU.

Critics of the deal had already complained that by entering the agreement, Merkel would make herself too dependent on Erdogan, a man whose regime has recently made news by shutting down newspapers and arresting government-critical journalists.

Even foreign politicians have entered the discussion. Former Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis has proclaimed his support for Böhmermann.

Now Erdogan is putting Merkel on the spot.

“It’s a lose-lose situation for Merkel,” Alexander Kissler, media researcher and journalist with political magazine “Cicero,” told DW. “She either loses face with Turkey or she loses face domestically if she agrees to prosecute Böhmermann.”

Fateful phone call

German broadcaster ZDF, the channel where “Neo Magazine Royal” airs, has deleted the poem from its online media center. Merkel tried to calm the waters, too, by calling Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on Sunday. That information was released publicly, including her quote that the poem was “deliberately offensive.”

“That call was a big mistake, especially making it public,” Kissler said. Her “attempt to tame Turkey” failed and everyone could see it.

On Monday, Merkel’s spokesman said the government would take a few days to look into the issue before deciding whether Böhmermann should be prosecuted. Kissler sees this statement as a diplomatic gesture, but says that eventually, Merkel’s government will have to deny Turkey’s request. “Anything else could cost Merkel the chancellory,” he said.

An overwhelming majority of social media users in Germany supports Böhmermann, so Merkel would indeed face domestic outrage should she agree to criminal proceedings. Twitter user Gräfin Kerssenbrock, for example, called the German government’s stalling a “complete failure.”

Read more: DW.com

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Böhmermann, Erdogan, Germany, prosecuting, satire, Turkey

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