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Erdoğan supporters attack Hürriyet daily HQs with stones over alleged misquotation

September 6, 2015 By administrator

The door of the Hürriyet building was damaged in an attack on Sunday night. (Photo: hurriyet.com.tr)

The door of the Hürriyet building was damaged in an attack on Sunday night. (Photo: hurriyet.com.tr)

Supporters of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan attacked the building of the Hürriyet daily with stones on Sunday night, accusing the daily of misquoting the president in a report.
A group of 150 people which chanted slogans supporting the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) and Erdoğan attempted to enter the building. After private guards failed to disperse the group, police intervened.

The attack followed a Twitter campaign organized by pro-government trolls and columnists who called on people to protest the daily after it reported on a televised speech of Erdoğan. During the speech, while commenting on the recent unrest in the country, Erdoğan said the situation would be different if people had given a single party 400 deputies and the power to establish government on its own. His statement came as many soldiers were killed in a fresh ambush by the terrorist Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in Dağlıca.
“Dağlıca comment from Erdoğan, These would not have happened if 400 deputies were given,” Hürriyet tweeted. The editors of the daily deleted the tweet after reactions. Pro-government circles claimed that Erdoğan did not made a reference to the Dağlıca attack yet his statement was a response to a question on claims that politicians’ harsh statements and his earlier statements indirectly calling for 400 deputies for the ruling party ahead of the elections lie behind recent environment of clash and terror incidents.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: attack, Erdogan, hurriyet daily, supporter

INTERVIEW: West misread AKP and Erdoğan, legitimized crude power grab

August 30, 2015 By administrator

By William Armstrong,

n_87678_1Author Toni Alaranta argues in his new book that international opinion failed to understand Turkey’s domestic dynamics after 2002, legitimizing authoritarianism in the search for a ‘moderate Muslim democracy’

Around 10 years ago, the Justice and Development Party (AKP) and President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan were at the height of their international reputation. Praised almost universally abroad, they were seen as bringing about a democratic transformation in Turkey. Such has been the decline since then, those days are sometimes hard to remember.

How this perception took root is the subject of a stimulating new title by Toni Alaranta of the Finnish Institute of International Affairs, reviewed in HDN earlier this week. The book argues that international conditions combined with Turkey’s internal politics to legitimize a crude power grab dressed up in the language of liberalization and human rights.

Alaranta spoke to the Hürriyet Daily News about his book and where the situation could be headed now that the AKP may be losing its 13-year electoral dominance.

Your book looks at the dramatic changes in Turkey’s international identity over the past couple of decades. What prompted you to look into this issue?

I had previously concentrated more on domestic issues and the various expressions of Kemalism in recent decades. But it is quite obvious that the AKP became, through its electoral hegemony, a very dominant force.

It was already clear some years ago that one needed to look much more critically at the powerful interpretations of Turkey’s political history that had basically created a very widespread expectation that the AKP would democratize Turkey. In my view, those interpretations had become an obstacle to scrutinizing the AKP experience. So in a sense the starting point was a very common one for any scholar writing a book: I thought the existing literature was handicapped.

At one point you write: “Irrespective of what we think about Turkey’s potentiality to become a world power, the assertion that it would be such with the ‘Muslim’ label now sounds completely natural to many of us.” But you argue in the book that this is actually a very recent international conception of Turkey’s state identity. Could you explain a little?

I think it’s very important to keep in mind that we are talking about a recent phenomenon. The fact that, as the saying goes, “99 percent of the Turkish population is Muslim,” has produced over the last decade an idea that Turkey is a “naturally” Muslim nation, and that its actions as a sovereign state in the international field have something crucial to do with its population’s Islamic faith. This has become a very widespread idea.

My argument is that these bold claims about Turkey being a “Muslim” nation and state are very recent developments. It’s true that Turkey’s national identity has had explicitly “Islamic” content since the 1980s.

But it is only during the AKP era that Turkey has declared itself as being the protector of a specifically Muslim cause in the international field across the globe. This is a very radical departure from the previous era, when Turkey wanted itself to be seen as a modern nation state taking its place in what it thought was a universal civilization characterized by cultural modernity. For the previous political elite, the idea of being seen specifically as a “Muslim” power would have been astonishing and even insulting. Because the Kemalist foreign policy tradition saw religious identification as something anachronistic, defining a past world.

So in this sense, the idea of Turkey as a state actor being a “Muslim power” is an AKP invention. But there are some elements in the current international order – and especially in the way we now speak about international relations – where we can observe these kinds of essentializing, particularistic religious-cultural demands. They have been legitimized over the last two decades. The talk about the “Alliance of Civilizations,” for example, or the idea of Turkey being able to function as some kind of bridge between Western and Islamic “civilizations,” all signal this new way of talking. I think it’s important to emphasize that this is actually a recent phenomenon.

You refer to two specific events: The end of the Cold War, and the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terror attacks. In your opinion, these events opened up space for Turkey in the international arena?

The main point is the interlinking of domestic changes in Turkey with the international reality emerging after the Cold War. The end of the Soviet bloc and the ever-expanding horizons of global free-market capitalism created an expectation that opening up economies would drive onwards liberal democratic regimes everywhere. There was a lot of talk about the end of political ideologies. In intellectual terms this was the period – especially during the 1990s – when Western academia became convinced that the period of classical modernity was irreversibly over and we were living in some kind of “post” world – post-modern, post-ideological, post-enlightenment, post-rationalist.

This all coincided with domestic changes inside Turkey. During the Turgut Özal era in the 1980s there was a strong neoliberal restructuring of Turkey’s economy. There was a strange combination of market liberalism with a conservative social atmosphere, which was actually similar to what had taken place during the Thatcher and Reagan era in the Western world. In this situation, Turkey’s political elite was able to have a new orientation. As the fear of Soviet aggression decreased there was a widespread new discourse that enabled political leaders to look beyond the nation-state paradigm.

Particularly after 9/11 there was what you call a “structural demand” for the “moderate Muslim democracy” label. For 10 years Turkey was the poster boy of this demand. Why did this happen? Was it a conscious decision by the AKP to cultivate this label?

The 9/11 terror attacks suddenly seemed to discredit all the previous talk of post-ideological politics. People began to think of the world as essentially defined by a struggle between large-scale civilizational entities:

Samuel Huntington’s famous “Clash of Civilizations” thesis, or at least how it was understood. At this time, when there was this perceived antagonism between the so-called Western world and the so-called Islamic world, there emerged an idea that the West had this long-term NATO ally Turkey that could function as a kind of balancer or bridge between antagonistic entities.

At the same time, Turkey’s EU candidacy was given a boost with the declaration of its official candidate status in 1999 and negotiations starting in 2005. So there was a huge expectation both in U.S. and EU circles that Turkey was more or less destined to become a role model, a liberal democracy ruled by Muslim conservatives who had allegedly managed to move beyond the political Islamist position and were now embracing democratic pluralist values.

I believe that the leading cadres of the AKP realized this situation and saw it as an opportunity – they used the “bridge” metaphor themselves. But in my opinion all the reforms of the AKP’s first term were very much instrumental. Their purpose was to delegitimize their political opponents and to consolidate the AKP in power. So I would definitely say that the EU and the U.S. should look in the mirror and take at least some responsibility for the legitimization of the AKP within this liberal democratic discourse.

The idea that the AKP was “post-Islamist” became widespread throughout the 2000s. Many people thought of it as a technocratic party that was only interested in modernizing Turkey’s economy, rather than pursuing a religious-identity agenda. How did this perception take root and why was it, in your opinion, mistaken?

The aforementioned events in the international arena were preceded by a very long debate in Turkey regarding to the so-called “Second Republic” [İkinci Cumhuriyet]. This debate was reproduced by influential liberal intellectuals, who claimed that the Kemalist project and ideology had very early on hijacked Turkey’s modernization process, and that the Kemalist ideology had become, with its secular nationalist discourse, the main obstacle to Turkey’s democratization. In this situation, the AKP was seen as a reformist inheritor of the Milli Görüş [National View] movement, Turkey’s main strand of political Islam.

This is a well-known story but the problem is that the story is full of inconsistencies and half-baked arguments. The liberals obviously thought they had domesticated a party of political Islam to their own agenda, but the AKP had obviously embarked on a very different project – one that can be called an Islamic-conservative state project. Its most essential elements, in my view, are that the AKP has tried to create a kind of social-political order where it is impossible to criticize the AKP from a liberal and secular position. It’s very difficult for any opposition parties to rise against the AKP because they have been so delegitimized. This is done by claiming that all troubles in Turkey emanate from the Kemalist tutelary regime, which according to this narrative ruled Turkey from 1923 to 2002. The “real nation” of pious conservative Muslims are said to have been marginalized throughout the republican decades – only liberated by the alleged liberal-democratic-conservative AKP. This narrative is a pure myth that is very skillfully used and propagated by the AKP cadres.

So we had the liberals saying they found a partner for their reform agenda and AKP cadres even today saying they have liberated Turkey from the tutelage regime. The reason why the AKP was able to get backing from the liberals was based on this widespread idea that the Islamic-conservative constituency would enforce the retreat of the state, which was dominated by a monolithic, almost petrified Kemalist elite. This was a crude simplification, a distortion of the past century of Turkey’s political history.

Even if the idea of the “secular elite” is crude and incomplete, was it not still a problematic reality that developed its own vested interests and established itself in untouchable power structures in Turkey?

Of course it was problematic. I would say that the state has been problematic in Turkey – my problem is with this definition of it as a “Kemalist state.” Kemalism represents a kind of radical modernizing perspective, and I would talk about the Kemalist state in Turkey only during the one-party era [1923-1950] of the Republican People’s Party [CHP]. After then, I think we have seen in Turkey a nationalist-conservative state, though of course there were groups within the bureaucracy and the army who afterwards used these Kemalist slogans in their own agenda.

There is a hint of truth in the Islamic-conservative narrative that the previous state elite did look down upon other people, especially conservative Muslims. My point is that this is not something unique to Turkey. This is how modernizers and urban elites have behaved in all European states.

Where I do agree with the criticism is in terms of the ethnic definition of Turkishness, where I think the Kemalists committed a terrible sin. They should have seen by the 1960s that it is not possible to define nations through such a strong ethnic definition. During the 1960s, the Kemalist circles had become left-wing oriented, so they should have made a deal with progressive Kurds to come up with a different idea. In that sense, regarding the Kurdish issue, I think the Kemalist tradition has been a tremendous burden to Turkey.

Turkey at the moment is in the midst of a big shift, ahead of yet another election. The populist political Islam of the AKP has for 13 years been predicated on the idea that it is the majority, the “authentic” representative of the nation. Now that the AKP has lost its parliamentary majority, and may not get it back, what does that mean for the inherently majoritarian AKP project?

That’s a very difficult question. At the moment it is not the PKK or the ethno-nationalist Kurdish movement that threatens the AKP project; it is the HDP, the Kurdish party’s ability to emerge as a kind of liberal democratic movement. This demonstrates that even the Kurds are not the kind of monolithic, Islamic-conservative constituency that the AKP imagines the whole of Turkey to be.

There is obviously a very brutal power struggle going on in Turkey at the moment. To go back to the earlier point, there was a widespread expectation that political inclusion and economic development would moderate the political Islamists, but we are now witnessing a very significant – even historic – course of events. If the AKP is unable to get back its absolute majority, we will come to the question of whether the political Islamists will hand over power.

On the other hand, we are only now starting to see just how strong the ideological layer of the party is. If a parliamentary majority does not back this political Islamist movement it will be an interesting moment:

Either the political Islamists will have to step aside, or it will be proven that the very widespread idea of political inclusion of these groups to make them more democratic has been a failure.

August/29/2015

Published on: hurriyetdailynews

Filed Under: Articles, Interviews Tagged With: crude power, Erdogan, grab, legitimized, Turkey, west

Davutoglu is the pan-Islamism Architect , however Erdogan is just a barking doge

August 28, 2015 By administrator

davutoglu-ErdoganDavutoglu: He crystallized these ideas in the book ‘Strategic Depth,’ in 2001, a year before the Justice and Development Party, or A.K.P., came to power. In the book, he defined Turkey as a nation that does not study history, but writes it — a nation that is not at the periphery of the West, but at the center of Islamic civilization … Mr. Davutoglu saw himself as a grand theorist at the helm of his country as it navigated what he called the ‘river of history.’ He and his country were not mere pawns in world politics, but the players who moved the pieces.

But, ironically, he bases his pan-Islamist vision on the political theories that were used to legitimize Western imperial expansion prior to 1945. While purporting to offer Turkey a new foreign policy for the 21st century, his magnum opus draws on the outdated concepts of geopolitical thinkers like the American Alfred Thayer Mahan, the Briton Halford Mackinder and the German Karl Haushofer, who popularized the term “Lebensraum,” or living space, a phrase most famously employed by Germany during the 1920s and 1930s to emphasize the need to expand its borders.

According to Mr. Davutoglu, the nation states established after the breakup of the Ottoman Empire are artificial creations and Turkey must now carve out its own Lebensraum — a phrase he uses unapologetically. Doing so would bring about the cultural and economic integration of the Islamic world, which Turkey would eventually lead. Turkey must either establish economic hegemony over the Caucasus, the Balkans and the Middle East, or remain a conflict-riven nation-state that risks falling apart.

After becoming Turkey’s foreign minister from 2009, Davutoğlu had the opportunity to put these ideas into practice – with disastrous results:

As foreign minister, Mr. Davutoglu fervently believed that the Arab Spring had finally provided Turkey with a historic opportunity to put these ideas into practice. He predicted that the overthrown dictatorships would be replaced with Islamic regimes, thus creating a regional ‘Muslim Brotherhood belt’ under Turkey’s leadership.

William ARMSTRONG

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Architect, Davutoglu, Erdogan, pan-Islamism, Turkey

Erdogan sues visually impaired journalist for second time

August 25, 2015 By administrator

Journalist Cüneyt Arat (L) and the President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan (R). (Photo: Cihan)

Journalist Cüneyt Arat (L) and the President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan (R). (Photo: Cihan)

Cüneyt Arat, an Adana-based visually impaired journalist, tweeted on Monday that he has been sued for the second time by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan for having allegedly insulted him.

In June, Arat shared a photo of a court document notifying him that he had been sued by Erdoğan. “I’m not at all sorry to be sued by you, @rt_erdogan. You are suing a disabled person the age of your grandchildren,” Arat tweeted. He later shared a photo of himself with Erdoğan, and wrote: “Once you loved me, you praised me. Now you are suing me.”

According to Monday’s tweets, Arat is charged with insulting the president, and may face up to four years in prison. He stated that he has been asked to attend hearings on Dec. 21 and Oct. 14 for the first and second cases, respectively.

Arat also claimed that senior officials from the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) offered by phone to “make him rich” if he publicly apologized to Erdoğan. He said he refused, and will continue to be a voice for people with disabilities.

Denying that he has ever insulted Erdoğan, either on Twitter or in his reporting, Arat argued that he has the right to criticize a president who is constitutionally bound, and who has publicly vowed, to be politically impartial, but who instead organized rallies to support the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) before the June 7 general election.

Journalists and public figures who are critical of Erdoğan and the AK Party have been targeted by police and prosecutors with the same charge, which is widely considered to be a new method of intimidating political opponents.

Dozens, including journalists Sedef Kabaş, Hidayet Karaca and Mehmet Baransu, as well as high school students, activists and even Merve Büyüksaraç, a former Miss Turkey, have been prosecuted for having allegedly insulted Erdoğan on social media platforms such as Twitter and Facebook.

In April, the international advocacy group Human Rights Watch (HRW) called on Turkey to end prosecutions for insulting public officials, criticizing the increasing number of criminal cases, some filed against minors, in the country.

Source: Zaman

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Journalist, sues

Turkey: Snap elections a farce, Erdoğan allegedly to secure authority through chaos “Fuat Avni”

August 21, 2015 By administrator

Fuat AvniOnline government whistleblower Fuat Avni alleges that President Erdoğan and his inner circle are working behind the scenes to bring the entire system under the presidency, thus rendering upcoming parliamentary snap elections a farce, and is sowing chaos in the southeast to justify doing so.

Having revealed many of the Justice and Development Party’s (AK Party) top secret plans, government whistleblower and Twitter phenomenon Fuat Avni has been a thorn in the side of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his inner circle for nearly two years now.

According to the latest series of tweets by Avni posted Wednesday evening, President Erdoğan aims to consolidate his absolute grip on power in order to solve the chaos he himself has been sowing in southeast Turkey.

The whistleblower alleges that former Interior Minister Efkan Ala, one of Erdoğan’s most trusted lieutenants, has been stoking civil war in Turkey’s predominantly Kurdish east and southeastern regions.

“With the civil war that will develop soon, the president will suspend the administration and declare his sole authority,” alleges Avni.

He added that the upcoming snap election, which Erdoğan announced on Friday would take place on November 1st, was a farce: “Erdoğan and his inner circle are working to bring the entire system and its institutions under the presidential palace. After that, elections will simply be a formality.”

Pointing out that Erdoğan’s earlier comments calling for eastern Turkey ‘to be wiped clean’ was “spine-chilling,” Avni adds that Efkan Ala has ordered that “anyone can be killed for Erdoğan’s longevity.” Though, while Ala has given instructions to kill as many police officers as needed, he has warned against endangering military personnel unnecessarily.

Towards this end he is working with the Turkish National Intelligence Agency’s (MİT) plants in the Group of Communities in Kurdistan (KCK), getting them to perpetrate acts of violence against security personnel. He even claims two senior officials of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) are in direct contact with MİT Chief Hakan Fidan.

According to Avni, Erdoğan’s plan is to sow enough chaos in the east that voting in the upcoming snap election itself becomes impossible, thus securing the AK Party’s victory in the polls.

Meanwhile civilians are being targeted by clandestine ‘deep state’ actors. “Erdoğan is completely overtaken with bloodlust,” Avni adds, “He gets excited when he sees files on civilian casualties in the reports being delivered to the presidential palace.”

Avni also notes that some officials in the region feeling guilty about what is going on wish to resign, though Ala has ordered MİT to monitor any official who wishes to leave their post. “New officials will be appointed in their place, dark types who have sworn to spill blood,” he added.

Meanwhile, in order to keep the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) from engaging in urban violence until he has secured the east, Erdoğan is bending to all of ISIL’s demands. “The authorities conducted operations against ISIL for show, but all the people detained have already been released,” said Avni, adding that Ankara has also increased the delivery of supplies to the terrorist organization.

Additionally Deputy Prime Minister Yalçın Akdoğan, another one of Erdoğan’s close lieutenants, will be taking over as Prime Minister from Ahmet Davutoğlu after an insurrection within the AK Party orchestrated by Erdoğan’s inner circle.

Source: BGN

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Election, Erdogan, farce, Turkey

Turkish President Erdogan announces snap general election

August 21, 2015 By administrator

_72961632_pmerdoganTurkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has called a fresh election after Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu failed to form a coalition. The snap parliamentary polls are expected to be held in early November.

President Erdogan made the widely expected announcement in a statement broadcast on Turkish television on Friday.

“We will take our country to elections,” the president said, adding that he planned to meet with the speaker of parliament on Monday to make the necessary arrangements. “God willing, Turkey will hold elections again on November 1.”

The date had been suggested by Turkey’s electoral commission on Thursday, but cannot officially be made until this coming Sunday, when the deadline for forming a coalition following the June 7 general election expires.

Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP) won that election, but lost its overall majority in parliament for the first time since it first came to power in 2002.

Failed coalition talks

Davutoglu, who succeeded Erdogan as prime minister after he became president, tried unsuccessfully to form a coalition government, holding talks first with the Republican People’s Party (CHP), which came in third in the June election, and later with the third placed Nationalist Movement Party (MHP).

The prime minister, who set the stage for the snap elections by handing back his mandate to form a government to the president earlier this week, is expected to be tasked with forming an interim administration.

Erdogan could have used his presidential powers to give the leader of the CHP the opportunity to form a government, but elected to call the snap polls instead. Observers say Erdogan, who wants to change the constitution to strengthen the role of the president, is banking on his AKP recovering its parliamentary majority in the November election.

The polls come as the the Turkish military is involved in an air campaign both against Kurdish Workers’ Party (PKK) and “Islamic State” militants.

pfd/kms (dpa, AFP, AP, Reuters)

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, general election, Turkey

How Erdogan humiliated Syrian people Turn them into refugees in the street of 10 Turkish cities

August 17, 2015 By administrator

DHA photo

DHA photo

ISTANBUL

The number of Syrian refugees in 10 cities across Turkey now rivals the population of local residents and even outnumbers it in one city, a senior Turkish official has told the Hürriyet Daily News.

“In at least 10 cities, the number of Syrian refugees now constitutes a sizable portion of the city,” the official said during a meeting with a small group of journalists on Aug. 15.

The official specifically referred to the town of Kilis in the southeast near Turkey’s border with Syria, which he described as a “Syrian city” in terms of population. “The local population is 108,000 and the number of refugees is 110,000,” he said.

A relatively small portion of the Syrian refugees in Turkey are in 25 camps across 10 cities. The remainder tries to make a living in cities, many in very harsh conditions.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, refugees, Syrian, Turkey

Erol Özkoray,: Erdogan folder for the Hague Tribunal for war crimes and genocide ready

August 17, 2015 By administrator

By Erol Özkoray,

arton115154-480x481At a time of talks to form a coalition government, how to read the results of the recent parliamentary elections in Turkey on June 7? First, the Islamists who are the masters of lies and concealment lost peoples of Turkey and no longer want the President Erdogan. Second, voters have avoided the final step accuracy to move to an Islamic state. The Islamist Erdogan will therefore not have a free hand to finalize its “new Turkey” which is simply a Sunni dictatorship, a kind of presidential regime based on Islamofascism. But today these two capital messages are not heard nor understood by the politicians, except the Peoples Democratic Party (HDP) Selahattin Demirtas including its president was the star amount of politics in Turkey. Indeed the original pro Kurdish party, became a national leftist sprayed the electoral barrier of around 10%, unique in the world, reaching 13% with 6,000,000 votes and thus preventing the absolute majority Islamist party, AKP. This result shows that the peoples of Turkey therefore want to keep the Republic and secularism are the two capitals value to build a future democracy. This also relieves the Europeans and Americans, for the safe, politically, militarily and economically, the country is part of the West. Turkish voters have therefore avoided the nightmare scenario at the last moment.

But former Prime Minister Davutoglu Islamist asked to form the new government by President Erdogan does not hear as well: He wants to build a coalition government without discussing the case with his boss Erdogan that violates the constitution in a systematic way. Indeed, the personalization of power, the application of the uniqueness of power that is the confirmation of a dictatorship and the corruption giant Erdogan deserve a kind of “legal confidence” at national level. Whereas at international level the dirty war that led to Syria by providing financial support and weapons to the terrorists of the Islamic State thereby committing a war crime, crime against humanity that he committed when the revolt of Gezi in May-June 2013 against its own people and genocide that resulted in Kobanî against the Kurds and the Yezidis in Iraq and Syria are normally open for him, the way the International Criminal Court The Hague. As Milosevic elsewhere who had committed the same crimes. His record is quite thick and depending on the political situation the United States could consider hanging him before an international tribunal. Already, Prime Minister Enver Müslim Kobanî said he prepares Erdogan folder for the Hague Tribunal for war crimes and genocide. The arrogance, mitomanie, ignorance and narcissism are leap Erdogan Western leaders who no longer support the personality cult of Sunni dictator who dreamed of becoming the caliph of the Muslim world.

Erdogan has lost the majority in Parliament thus causing the lapse of his presidential powers under the Constitution, thus only one chance to break the political deadlock where it is cornered: Induce early elections to regain the majority. The other two opposition parties, the Kemalist Republican People’s Party (CHP) and the ultra nationalist party the Nationalist Action Party (MHP) could facilitate this path. Their respective leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu and Bahçeli fail Devlet understand the main message of the voters: Get rid Erdogan definitely. But it must never be forgotten truth a valid election for all countries: The political trends do not change before minimum eight months and provided that voters are testing the parties concerned in their exercise to the government. So to reverse the result for future Erdogan early elections could put in projecting large scale evil scenes causing a war against Syria and / or provocations against the Kurdish people for entammer civil war. The carnage that the deep state has committed Suruç on the Syrian border using the Islamic State where 32 young people from their support for the reconstruction of Ayn al-Arab, were killed in a major example. Playing with fire in sum in order to recover the nationalist votes it lost Vait on 7 June My senarios these could turn against him the advantage disorienting. Turkish voters have shown they are not fooled.

Under the patronage of Islamist Erdogan thus have two routes they systematically use: Lies and violence. Thus, they will do everything not to leave power. But how far? Europe must see in all these scenarios confiscation of power that has no legitimacy because it violated the social contract based on a secular republic, to found an Islamic state based on Sharia law. Thus these Islamofascists does not represent the country. The Islamists therefore not be confused with Turkey, they’re an alien force. This Islamism is a political means at the service of an internationalist idea of ​​Sunnism which in no way reflects the aspirations of a people loving démocatie, secularism and universal values. We are therefore faced with a totally alien to this country, which is in fact a reflection of the Muslim Brotherhood.

In this context the opposition party with Islamist coalisera lose everything because the voters have voted for these parties to get rid Erdogan definitely. A probable coalition of Islamists with the ultra nationalist MHP will be a disastrous choice for the country, but on the other hand the company’s dynamics are present to conduct a radical democratic resistance: the Turks republican and secular Europeans, Kurds and Alevis whose values ​​are based on the equality of men and women. The ésprit Gezi, ie to keep the revolt gained démocatiques, rights and secularism are omnipresent. The beginning of the end for the Islamists is already entammé. The final disposal policy will take time, but it will happen because the internal dynamics exist. In due time, the people are politically mature enough to implement it.

Erol Özkoray

Monday, August 17, 2015,
Ara © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Erdogan, hague, tribunal

Turkey Extortion and other crimes against the Erdogan regime opponents

August 16, 2015 By administrator

arton115148-431x480According to the Facebook page of the Alevis, the child depicted in the photo, was reportedly “killed in the bombing of the Turkish Army in Iraqi Kurdistan when co.

In early August, signed Charlie Duplan, special envoy to release when co, it reports that Zagros Hiwa, PKK spokesman in Iraqi Kurdistan, Ankara accuses of having killed nine civilians unconnected with his organization. “There were no PKK member in these houses. We are refugees in the heights of the mountain, never in villages. It’s been years that it’s like that, the Turks know very well “

A Varto / Mush (Turkey), the source said this week, Turkish police have shot dead a woman, suspected of belonging to the PKK, and would have exposed his body on the floor in the undressing.

Sunday, August 16, 2015,
Jean Eckian © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Extortion, Turkey

‘Erdogan, Obama in collusion against Syria’ #BoycottTurkishProduct

July 31, 2015 By administrator

The AFP photo shows Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (L) and US President Barack Obama meeting on the sidelines of a NATO summit in 2014.

The AFP photo shows Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (L) and US President Barack Obama meeting on the sidelines of a NATO summit in 2014.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and US President Barack Obama have colluded to take advantage of the recent terrorist attacks in Turkey and carry out a regime change plot against Damascus, says an analyst.

According to an article written by Mike Whitney and published on Eurasia Review, the US president “seems to have realized that his Takfiri proxy-warriors aren’t ruthless enough to remove Assad, so he’s decided to team up with Sultan Erdogan instead.”

Turkey has been one of the countries accused of supporting the militants operating against the government in Syria since early 2011.

Erdogan claimed on October 1, 2014 that Turkey will fight ISIL and other “terrorist” groups in the region, but that Ankara will not relent in its determination to work for the removal of President Assad.

“Obama has… thrown his lot with Erdogan, because the Pentagon bigshots finally realize they’re going to need boots on the ground if they want regime change in Syria,” Whitney wrote in his article.

‘Spin and propaganda’

Kurdish forces have been fighting the Takfiri ISIL terrorist group in Syria and Iraq.

Whitney said Erdogan has “launched a war against the Kurds.”

“The media’s view of events–that Turkey has joined the fight against ISIS–is mostly spin and propaganda,” he said, adding, “The fact that the Kurds had been gaining ground against ISIS (ISIL) in areas along the Turkish border, worried political leaders in Ankara that an independent Kurdish state could be emerging.”

Whitney also pointed to the relationship between Washington and the People’s Protection Units (YPG), which, he said, has been the subject of the US administration’s shift in policy.

‘Using a terrorist attack as an excuse’

In the so-called fight against the Takfiri ISIL terrorists in Iraq and Syria, he said, the YPG and the PKK “have been Washington’s most effective weapon.” The Obama administration, however, “has sold out the Kurds in order to strengthen ties with Turkey and gain access to Turkey’s Incirlik Air Base.”

The Turkish government on July 29 gave formal approval for the United States to use the base in southern Turkey for conducting attacks against purported ISIL positions in Syria.

The green light came in the wake of the July 20 bomb attack in Turkey’s southern town of Suruc, located on the Turkish border with Syria and close to Kobani, a Kurdish town in Syria that experienced days of battle between ISIL and Kurds earlier this year.

‘Who doesn’t know what they are after?’

“All the while,” Whitney said, “the media has been portraying this ruthless assault on a de facto US ally (Kurds), as a war on ISIS. It is not a war on ISIS. It is the manipulation of a terrorist attack to advance the belligerent geopolitical agenda of Turkish and US elites.”

He said Washington wanted Ankara “to do the heavy lifting while the US provides logistical support and air cover” against the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

“That’s the basic gameplan. Naturally, the media can’t explain what’s really going on or it would blow Obama’s cover. But who doesn’t know that this whole campaign is aimed at removing Assad?” he said.

Source: presstv.com

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: collusion, Erdogan, Obama, Syria

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