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Erdogan destroyed 2,700 homes in Kurdish towns to create Construction project for Erdogan construction companies

April 9, 2016 By administrator

Terrorist erdoganJustice and Development Party (AKP) government has initiated plans to demolish and rebuild a total of 2,700 houses in the Cizre district of southeastern Şırnak province after 78 days of anti-terror operations against the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) severely damaged residential areas.

The project, estimated to cost some 4 billion Turkish liras ($1.3 billion), sparked criticism among a group of residents who demand increased transparency.

The district governorate in Cizre sent a notification to locals, asking that they vacate their houses immediately, in order to initiate efforts to demolish and rebuild the district’s damaged houses as part of an urban transformation project.

“Technical personnel from the Ministry of Environment and Urban Planning determined buildings with severe damage and are under risk of collapse,” the statement said. “Heavily damaged buildings that have a risk of collapse will be demolished in line with relevant laws as they pose a threat to life,” it added, asking residents to vacate their houses immediately.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: destruction, Erdogan, home, Kurd, Turkey

Erdogan Seeks Revenge in Nagorno-Karabakh “Become victim of the crisis between Moscow and Ankara”

April 5, 2016 By administrator

aph_nagorno_karabakh_oc_by_draconicnosferatu-d2yyr8vOriginally appeared at

Komsomolskay Pravda. Translated by Julia Rakhmetova and Rhod Mackenzie

Over the years the author has been a prominent member of the Russian MSM and is an influential political columnist

A serious escalation of the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh risks tuning into a large scale conflict, for the first time since it ended in 1994. Both sides are members of the Commonwealth of Independent States and maintain good relations with Russia, including military and technical. However, Armenia is also a member of the Collective Security Treaty Organization and Euro-Asian Economic Union (EurAsEC)  but Azerbaijan is not. There is a Russian military base in Armenia close to the Turkish border.

Both sides accuse each other of starting the conflict. But there is another consequence to provoking escalation: after Turkey shot down a Russian Su-24 over Syria a few months ago, relations between the two countries deteriorated – unexpectedly it seemed. The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict became a victim of the crisis in relations between Moscow and Ankara.

Even before the plane was shot down, the latter didn’t appreciate the State Duma passing a law recognizing the genocide of Armenians in 1915 (and Putin’s visit to Yerevan on the hundredth anniversary of this tragedy).

Relations between Armenia and Turkey also deteriorated over this incident. Adopting a “macho style”, Turkey has been violating the Armenian border more frequently, and as if on command, there was a sharp increase in the number of violations on the demarcation line between Azerbaijan and Armenia near Karabakh. Since 2014 there has been a steady increase in the number of incidents. This was “after the Crimea” when the work of the OSCE Minsk Group on Karabakh (which includes Russia and the USA) deteriorated.  

Azerbaijan in turn spent huge amounts of money rearming during the year of high oil prices (its military budget is several times larger than Armenia’s) and made clear that it wasn’t going to wait forever for the Minsk group to come up with a solution. If they failed to solve the conflict peacefully, it would use military force. Last fall, high ranking Turkish politicians made a series of sharp statements saying that Turkey would “do its best” to help friendly Azerbaijan liberate its land.

Turkish Prime Minister Davoutoglu made his first such statement two days after shooting down the Russian plane in Syria. The same statements were made during the meeting of Erdogan and Azeri President Ilham Aliyev, with a lot of pan-Turkish statements from Erdogan. Turkey has many military advisors in the Azerbaijan army, and its policy can be considered as pay-back for Moscow’s actions in Syria, in particular for supporting the Syrian Kurds.

There is another factor strengthening political position of Ilham Aliyev. When he was in Washington at the summit on nuclear security, he met with Vice President Biden, who told him Azerbaijan was strategically important for America, confirming its support for Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity, including Karabakh.   

Relations between the two countries is far better than in the 1990’s, when Baku was under American sanctions. Azerbaijan is a member of the Western coalition in Afghanistan, and American investments in Azerbaijan exceed $10 billion.

The US wants the country to become an important player in the “Southern Gas Corridor” to Europe, bypassing Russia. There is already an oil corridor, the Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan pipeline through Turkey. One would think that America doesn’t need a new large Karabakh war that would ruin plans for any ‘corridors’. The only country that needs a war is Turkey, as it plays its own game in the region without considering its principal ally, NATO.  

Still, there are reasons to hope that the high level relationships between Moscow, Baku and Yerevan as well as the experience working with Washington on Syria will at least allow the conflict to be refrozen if not resolved, before it’s too late.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Erdogan, Karabakh, revenge, Russia

Erdogan’s Son Blocks Access to Websites Detailing His Criminal Connections

April 1, 2016 By administrator

1035105629In complying with a request made by the Turkish president’s son, Ankara blocked websites detailing alleged criminal connections between him and a businessman recently arrested in the United States.

Turkey blocked 21 news websites detailing the US criminal case related to Bilal Erdogan, son of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

On March 22, Turkish national Reza Zarrab was arrested in the United States for fraud, money laundering and evading sanctions against Iran. Zarrab was previously implicated in a 2013 Turkish corruption scandal, which was tied to Bilal Erdogan, who was tied to the indictment though a connected businessman, Sıtkı Ayan.

The websites, including those of the newspapers Haberdar and Cumhuriyet were blocked, but no warning or court order was given prior to the block. It was only after the websites were blocked that officials sent notes to Haberdar.

Reza Zarrab to soon face American justice in a Manhattan courtroom. @SDNYnews https://t.co/5S3c1oaWVO

— US Attorney Bharara (@USAttyBharara) March 22, 2016

Along with information about the connections between Bilal Edogan and the criminal case, newspapers cited fragments of a leaked wiretaps of a conversation between Bilal and Recep Tayyip Erdogan, made during the 2013 anti-corruption operation.

Source: sputniknews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Criminal, Erdogan, record, son, website

GERMANY Scolded by Turkey, a German TV rebroadcasts his satire on Erdogan (video)

April 1, 2016 By administrator

arton123985-480x250The German television channel NDR rebroadcast, in protest, a satirical song about the Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan denounced by Ankara, Berlin and scratched for his reaction as too soft after the convening of the German ambassador.

“Maybe that Erdogan did not understand the song? This is why the are back and with subtitles in Turkish! “Shouted the presenter of the program” Extra 3 “on the public channel broadcast in the north, Christian Ehring Wednesday night.

The German Ambassador in Ankara, Martin Erdmann, was summoned to the Turkish Foreign Ministry after the premiere of the song “Erdowie, Erdowo, Erdogan” NDR on March 17 and denouncing leader of the authoritarian excesses of Turkish state.

The chain had strongly protested when the German Foreign Ministry was quick to respond.

The German authorities expected Wednesday to formally celebrate the freedom of the press and of opinion were “not negotiable”. The spokesman of the German government, Christiane Wirtz, had assured “see no more reason to talk” with Turkey, adding that the issue “belongs to the German media landscape,” a presentation perspective to the Turkish authorities .

But does the German media were not satisfied with that answer. The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung expressed in an editorial of his irritation to see Berlin react “late”.

Chancellor Angela Merkel is seen as the main initiator of a controversial plan between the EU and Turkey to try to stop the flow of migrants, and has increased in recent months signs of goodwill towards Ankara despite the authoritarian excesses of its president.

The host of “Extra 3” has also not fail to emphasize the retention of the German government in its reaction. “If he (Erdogan, ed) wants to hear criticism, he must listen ‘Extra 3”, has he said on the air. “But if he does not want criticism, rather it should meet the Chancellor.”

The European Commission has also strongly rebuked Ankara.

Friday, April 1 2016
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, german, rebroadcasts, satire, tv

Armenians, Greeks and Kurds stage protest in Washington against Turkey’s Erdoğan

April 1, 2016 By administrator

Stop turkish agresionA diverse group of Armenians, Kurds, Greeks, Cypriots, Yezidis, human rights groups, and even various opposition Turkish political factions protested outside Brookings Institution in Washington D.C., where Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan was delivering a lecture, reported the Armenian National Committee of America.

The picketers held banners calling out Turkey’s ongoing Armenian Genocide denial, crackdown on the country’s Kurdish community, and support for ISIS forces in Syria. Among the protesters’ chants was: “Long live Kurdistan; long live Armenia.”

Pro-Turkish counter-protesters wearing “We love Erdogan” T-shirts and holding “We Heart Erdogan” signs, however, chanted their praise for the Turkish president.

Erdoğan security personnel were seen attacking protesters and needed to be subdued by the police. At least one Turkish reporter was pushed and another forced to the ground and beaten by Erdoğan’s security team. Another reporter was forced out of Brookings Institution venue, prior to Erdoğan’s arrival.

 

This is Terrorist State of #Turkey Showcasing #Erdogan Terrorism in the Street of #Washington. pic.twitter.com/CU9hvRgvYy

— Wally Sarkeesian (@gagrulenet) April 1, 2016

#Washington, Wherever #Erdogan go terrorism go with him, his security guard terrorized Washington.. pic.twitter.com/6Z9kAlJcBE

— Wally Sarkeesian (@gagrulenet) March 31, 2016

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenian, Erdogan, Greek, Kurd, Protest, Washington

Washington: Demonstrations ‘Out of Control’ Outside Erdogan Speech in DC

March 31, 2016 By administrator

1037213765As Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was set to deliver a speech at the Brookings Institution in Washington DC, protests erupted, resulting in violence.

As demonstrators gathered in the US capital to protest Erdogan’s authoritarian policies, Turkish security personnel reportedly kicked one protestor, a woman was thrown to the sidewalk, and one journalist was physically removed from the site.

Gathered on the sidewalks, protesters chanted “Erdogan, terrorist.”

“The situation is a bit out of control,” a US Secret Service agent told Foreign Policy.

https://twitter.com/BrianNReeves/status/715603884073361408

Protest at Erdogan's arrival pic.twitter.com/3kOA6P2ALv

— Brian Reeves (@BrianNReeves) March 31, 2016

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: demonstrators, Erdogan, Washington

Assad says Erdogan’s army fighting in Syria

March 31, 2016 By administrator

56fd2163c3618872368b4585The army of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is currently fighting in Syria, but the country is ready to respond to the aggression, Syrian President Bashar Assad said in an exclusive interview with Sputnik.

Turkey, as well as Saudi Arabia, have “crossed all possible red lines, possibly from the first weeks of the Syrian war,” Assad said.

“Today, the war against Erdogan and against Saudi Arabia is a war against terrorists. The Turkish army, which is not even Turkish, is Erdogan’s army that is fighting today in Syria,” he added.

Everything that Ankara and Riyadh “have done from the very beginning can be considered aggression. Aggression in a political sense or in a military sense – providing terrorists with arms – or direct aggression with the use of artillery, and other military violations,” he stressed

Erdogan is directly supporting the terrorists as “he allows them to move into Turkish territory, to carry out maneuvers with tanks,” the Syrian president said.

“This concerns not only individuals, he finances them [terrorists] through Saudi Arabia and Qatar, and through Turkey itself, of course,” he said.

According to Assad, his Turkish counterpart “trades oil that has been stolen by IS (Islamic State, Daesh), at the same time carrying out artillery attacks against the Syrian army – when it moves close – in order to help the terrorists.”

According to the President, countermeasures to Turkey’s aggressive actions must first of all take place within Syrian territory.

Successful strikes against terrorists in the country will lead to the failure of policies pursued by Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, he added.

“They are terrorists and when we attack these terrorists in Syria, this leads to Erdogan’s direct defeat,” Assad said.

However, Assad stressed that there was no dispute between the peoples of Syria and Turkey.

The relations between the two countries will be “good” if Erdogan stops interfering in Syrian affairs, he explained.

During the interview, Assad also expressed readiness to call an early presidential election in Syria if the people desire one.

“This depends on the Syrian people’s stance, on whether there is a popular will to hold early presidential elections. If there is such a will, this is not a problem for me. It is natural to respond to the will of the people and not to that of certain opposition forces,” he said.

“The president cannot work without the people’s support,” the Syrian leader added.

If the election takes place, every Syrian citizen, including those who left because of war, should be able to take part in the voting, he said.

“This issue concerns every Syrian citizen because every citizen votes for the president,” Assad stressed.

Assad also recalled his surprise visit to Moscow last autumn, which came less than two weeks after Russia began its bombing campaign against the terrorists in Syria on September 30, 2015.

“That visit was made under special circumstances,” he said, adding that no documents were signed during his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The talks in the Russian capital mainly revolved around two issues: “Firstly, the military operation, which had begun at the time, and as a consequence, the need to strike a blow at terrorism. Secondly, we focused on how we could use the military operation to support the political process,” the Syrian president told Sputnik.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Army, assad, Erdogan, Turkey

Germany Opinion: Erdogan The laughing stock of Ankara “3,240,527” Viewer

March 30, 2016 By administrator

0,,19148795_303,00(DW) President Erdogan made a fool of himself by summoning the German ambassador over a satirical video. Now, German diplomats are doing all they can to protect him from further embarrassment, says Matthias Bölinger. .

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is a man who knows many enemies. As he sees it, he is in a never-ending battle against every imaginable kind of conspiracy: a preacher in the USA who is pursuing a master plan to bring about his downfall, insubordinate journalists, state prosecutors with hidden agendas, and nefarious foreign powers. The list of those who supposedly desire to do ill to his country is long. Now, the president must tolerate yet another apparent attack on his honor.

Laughing about someone we are dependent upon

The satirical television show Extra 3, from North German Broadcaster NDR, recently dared to poke fun at the Turkish ruler in a video clip. Set to the melody of German pop star Nena’s 1984 hit “Irgendwie, irgendwo, irgendwann” (Somehow, somewhere, sometime), the “Boss from the Bosporus” is satirically serenaded with lyrics referring to democratic abuses in Turkey: “A journalist that writes/something he doesn’t like/will end up in prison over night.” Or another, exclaiming that women have the same right to be beaten by police as men. The lyrics are accompanied by film footage of female demonstrators being clubbed to the ground with truncheons on Intenational Women’s Day. The president, it seems, was not amused. H already summoned the German ambassador to complain about the video last week.

Berlin is in a difficult spot. For it is undeniable that Europe and especially Germany are dependent – or better, have made themselves dependent – on Turkey’s help in the refugee crisis. At exactly the same time that the Turkish government is losing its grip of the reins in the Middle East, they have now been handed an enormous lever by Europe. Thus, the country has instigated the resumption of EU accession talks, despite the fact that it has done away with any semblance of democratic values at home. “Be charming, for he has you in his hand,” as is sung in the Extra 3 video. The accompanying image: Angela Merkel shaking hands with the self-satisfied president.

Humorless Erdogan displays his insecurity

The foreign ministry in Berlin has confirmed that the German ambassador met with Erdogan to discuss the Extra 3 video. At the meeting Germany’s representative made clear that freedom of the press and freedom of expression must be protected. Erdogan can only further damage his own image with such pettiness. A man that elevates a joke to the level of an affair of state shows a lack of self-confidence more than anything else. Moreover, he is directing an amount of attention to the video that it otherwise would never have had.

In his attempt to end the mockery, Erdogan is showing himself to be utterly ridiculous. German diplomacy will never be able to protect him from his own vanity.

Have something to say? Add your comments below. The thread to this editorial closes in 24 hours.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ankara, Erdogan, laughing, Stock

Turkish ministers accuse Twitter of plotting against Erdoğan

March 30, 2016 By administrator

AA photo

AA photo

(.hurriyetdailynews) Senior government officials have slammed Twitter, claiming it “censored” a hashtag created for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan by removing #WeLoveErdogan from its top trending tweets.

“I’m asking Twitter officials: Who instructed you to remove the #WeLoveErdogan hashtag? Was it a country, a person, a terrorist organization, or someone else?” Justice Minister Bekir Bozdağ told reporters on March 30.

“I’m just curious: Is using the message ‘We love Erdoğan’ against Twitter’s principles? Why would a message expressing people’s love bother Twitter?” he added.

“I am of the opinion that this is one part of a global operation conducted against our president,” Bozdağ also said.

Supporters of President Erdoğan have created a viral Twitter hashtag #WeLoveErdogan to rally around the Turkish leader as he makes a highly sensitive visit to the United States at a time when he faces growing criticism over freedom of expression.

“Our president Mr @RT_Erdogan was greeted with great enthusiasm by US citizens and our compatriots,” tweeted Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, who is accompanying Erdoğan on his visit to Washington, adding the hashtag “#WeLoveErdogan.”

Other users posted pictures of Erdoğan kissing children or famous moments from his career and life, including scoring a goal with a canny chip in a televised 2014 exhibition football match.

Ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) deputy Mehmet Babaoğlu posted a picture of Erdoğan’s 2009 walk-out from the World Economic Forum in Davos after a row with then Israeli President Shimon Peres.
“That’s why #WeLoveErdogan,” he said.

But the campaign hit immediate controversy with Erdogan supporters accusing Twitter of censorship by deliberately removing the hashtag from its top trending tweets.

Ankara mayor accuses Gülen group

In an extraordinary broadside of over 40 tweets posted on his Turkish and English accounts, Ankara Mayor Melih Gökçek said Twitter had deliberately taken it down.

“This hashtag #WeLoveErdogan got TT ranking worldwide … But then it was censored unbelievably,” said Gökçek, accusing supporters of Erdoğan’s friend-turned-foe, the U.S.-based Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen, of being behind its removal.

However, other users expressed skepticism, suggesting that rather than censoring the hashtag Twitter may have removed it for being generated by fake accounts and automated bots, or simply as a normal outcome of its complex algorithm for determining top trends.

There was no immediate comment from the social network.

The Twitter campaign comes as Erdoğan visits the United States amid signs that U.S. President Barack Obama is trying to keep his distance from the Turkish leader.

Foreign criticism is also multiplying over the issue of freedom of expression and freedom of the media. In the latest row, Turkey summoned the German ambassador in Ankara to demand that Germany take down a satirical TV song lampooning Erdoğan.

Until last year, Erdoğan was seen as hostile to Twitter, boasting that he does not “tweet or schmeet” and overseeing blockages of social networks.

But in 2015 he sent his first tweet from his own account @RT_Erdogan and now regularly uses Twitter.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, plotting, Turkish ministers, Twitter

TURKEY The Erdowie song Erdowo Erdogan creates tension between Ankara and Berlin

March 30, 2016 By administrator

arton123863-480x270Ankara, (AFP): The wrath of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan about a satirical song on German television has led to a skirmish between Ankara and Berlin on freedom of expression, did on Tuesday Turkish and German diplomatic sources.

The case began with the release of 17 March mocking title “Erdowie, Erdowo, Erdogan,” produced by public regional broadcaster NDR, which displeased the head of the Turkish state as to cause the convening by Ankara German Ambassador to Turkey, Martin Erdmann.

Erdmann was requested “last week” to go to the Turkish Foreign Ministry “to express our protest about this issue that we condemn and we asked to stop its spread,” said AFP a Turkish diplomatic source who requested anonymity. According to the German Foreign Ministry, Martin Erdmann has “made it clear” on Tuesday and “a few days ago,” “the rule of law, independence of justice and the protection of fundamental freedoms, including freedom of the press and opinion, “must be” protected jointly “by the two countries.

#Turkey #Germany Song: Erdowie, Erdowo, Erdogan, See full version #RT_Erdogan https://t.co/p7x8cjaQud pic.twitter.com/VFGDxBjgIF

— Wally Sarkeesian (@gagrulenet) March 30, 2016

“In recent weeks already, the Ambassador Erdmann stressed to the Turkish Foreign Ministry that political satire over in Germany the freedom of press and opinion”, and can as such be subject to a “government action”, is continued in the ministry. NDR chain has in turn protested Tuesday against the Turkish decision. “What the Turkish government clearly active diplomatically because of the show + Extra 3+ is not compatible with our concept of freedom of the press and opinion,” railed the editor of NDR Andreas Cichowicz, quoted by the German news agency DPA. Satirical song about two minutes to Erdogan, produced by NDR for the show “Extra 3” broadcast by ARD public television, is especially addressing the violations of press freedom committed by the Islamic-conservative president. It also criticizes the Pharaonic expenses incurred for the construction of a luxurious palace near the Turkish capital, Ankara.

“He leads a lavish lifestyle, the boaster of the Bosphorus, a journalist who writes does not please Mr. Erdogan is found the next day behind bars,” quips the offending song. Erdogan in power since 2002, first as prime minister and president since 2014, is accused of authoritarianism by its detractors. He strongly criticized these days the presence Friday from Western diplomats, including those of Germany and France in particular, to the trial of two opposition journalists in Istanbul.

In the aftermath, Ankara protested Monday from several European countries from the comments posted on social networks diplomats present at the trial against the editor of the daily Cumhuriyet, Can Dündar and his bureau chief in Ankara Erdem Gül. The two journalists charged with espionage, risk life imprisonment for an article questioning the Turkish regime in deliveries of arms to Islamist rebels in Syria, in January 2014.

The German government has in turn been criticized by German media for controversial agreement completed between the EU and Turkey, and strongly supported by Chancellor Angela Merkel. The media accused Berlin of granting too many concessions to Ankara.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia rift over trade deal fuels EU-Russia tension, Erdogan, song, tension, Turkey

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