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Erdogan’s Syria policy aimed at deceiving Turks: Ex-Syrian offical

July 2, 2015 By administrator

Mission Rescue ISIS(Presstv) Ankara’s potential military intervention in Syria will be nothing but a “silly political trick” by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who is trying to act strong after he suffered a defeat in parliamentary elections, a former Syrian official tells Press TV.

In an exclusive interview with Press TV, George Jabbour, an adivsor to former Syrian President Hafez al-Assad, reacted to reports of Ankara’s plans for the deployment of army forces to the border with Syria, saying the idea of intervening in Syria was devised by Erdogan to “deceive” the Turkish people that he is still powerful.

“Erdogan would like to say that he continues to feel strong although he was … almost defeated in the elections,” George Jabbour said.

Erdogan’s plan for a possible military intervention in neighboring Syria is “just to show the Turkish people that he is still strong and able to pursue his policies. But, I think that these policies are not supported by the Turkish government. It is a silly political trick,” Jabbour said.

Last month, general elections were held in Turkey, with Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) failing to obtain an absolute majority in parliament for the first time since coming to power in 2002.

On June 28, reports by Turkish media suggested that the Turkish government has ordered the army to deploy forces to the border areas in a bid to prevent significant gains by Kurdish forces fighting against the ISIL terrorists there.

The reports came two days after the Turkish president accused Syrian Kurds of trying to establish a state in the crisis-hit country’s north, saying Ankara will leave no stone unturned to prevent such an establishment near its borders.

Elsewhere in his remarks, the analyst further emphasized that any potential military intervention in Syria would be in violation of international law as such a move needs to be approved by the United Nations Security Council (UNSC).

Touching on latest reports suggesting that the Turkish military is deploying tanks to the common border with Syria to create a “military buffer zone” there, the analyst added, “There is no possibility of establishing a buffer zone in Syria, this is totally illusive, there would be no buffer zone in Syria.”

The planned buffer zone reportedly stretches 110 kilometers (68 miles) long and 28 kilometers (17 miles) wide between the southern Turkish towns of Karkamis and Oncupinar.

The Syrian crisis, which broke out in March 2011, has left more than 230,000 people dead and millions displaced.

Turkey, an outspoken critic of the Syrian government, has time and again been accused of supporting the militants fighting against the Damascus government.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: deceiving, Erdogan, Syria, Turkey

Erdoğan vows to prevent Kurdish state in northern Syria, as Iran warns Turkey

June 27, 2015 By administrator

By Sevil Erkuş – ANKARA

Erdogan-BarazaniPresident Recep Tayyip Erdoğan vowed to prevent the establishment of a Kurdish state in northern Syria, while Iran warned Turkey over military intervention into its neighbor.

“I am addressing the whole world: We will never allow a state to be formed in northern Syria, south of our border,” Erdoğan said at a Ramadan event organized by Turkish Red Crescent in Istanbul  late June 26.

“We will keep up with our struggle whatever the cost is. They are trying to complete an operation to change the demographics of the region. We will not condone,” he said.

Turkey’s pro-government media outlets have recently been claiming that Syrian Kurdish fighters who fought ISIL engaged in “ethnic cleansing” targeting Syrian Turkmens.

Erdoğan criticized those who supported the “#TerroristTurkey” hashtag on Twitter after the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) launched on June 25 its second offensive to capture Kobane, a Kurdish town near Syria’s border with Turkey.

“If you have honor and pride, how can you label a country as terrorist although it hosts people who fled Kobane?” Erdoğan asked, before slamming accusations that Ankara supported ISIL as “slander.”

The president also accused the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and its Syrian affiliate PYD of preventing Turkey to help more to the people of Kobane.

“I strongly condemn the efforts to corner Turkey,” he said, claiming that ISIL, the PKK and the Syrian regime were “aligned” to undermine Ankara.

The PYD’s armed wing, the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), expelled ISIL fighters from Kobane on June 27 and took back full control of the town on the Turkish border, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said.

Turkey’s government wants more active military action to support the Free Syrian Army (FSA) against the regime, Kurdish and jihadist forces in Syrian territory, but the military is reluctant to do so, playing for time as the country heads for a new coalition government, official sources told the Hürriyet Daily News.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Kurdish state, No

Erdogan ‘Bogus Muslims’ exposed for ‘fake it ’til you make it’ attitude

June 24, 2015 By administrator

By Pinar Tremblay, Al Monitor
AKP parliamentarian Rifat Sait appears on the left with a beard while his wife wears a headscarf. (photo by Twitter/@Enginish)

AKP parliamentarian Rifat Sait appears on the left with a beard while his wife wears a headscarf.
(photo by Twitter/@Enginish)

Two photos of former Justice and Development Party (AKP) parliamentarian Rifat Sait and his wife appeared in Turkish newspapers June 10. In one image, the politician has a healthy, pious beard, and his wife wears a headscarf. In the other, more recent photo, Sait is clean shaven and wears a tie, while his wife is no longer covered. Publication of the photos has raised the issue of “bogus Muslims” and loss of faith in the AKP.

Reports have alleged that once Sait understood he would not be elected on the AKP ticket, he and his wife reverted to their secular selves. Sait issued a press release June 14 stating, “My wife and I made the hajj in September 2014, and after that she decided to become a hijabi [cover her hair], and I did not trim my beard. Then I decided to trim my beard going back to my job at the parliament. My wife, under her own will, decided to remove her headscarf. Our choices have nothing to do with the election.”

The comments in various newspapers and on social media found readers less than convinced by Sait’s statement. There have been too many cases in which people suddenly exhibit a change of heart and become observant Muslims soon after they receive status rewards, fame or lucrative incomes. When the award is no longer available, they quietly return to their secular lifestyles.

News of the Saits’ changed appearance was initially reported primarily by opposition media, but after Rifat issued his statement, it made pro-AKP media headlines along with harsh criticism of opposition media, accusing them of slander and distorting reality. The reporting generated a surprising backlash from pro-AKP readers. The pro-AKP Islamist daily Yeni Akit wrote, “Sozcu, an opposition secular daily, got it wrong again.” Here are some examples of reader comments:

  • “We lost [the June 7 election] because of defending these kind of people. Stop defending them.”
  • “So we are told she took on the hijab to go to hajj. Here is one of the mistakes of the AKP. It is filled with people who do not know Islam. As if our religion says cover your head when you go to do your hajj duty, then take it off. Grow a beard, and shave it after hajj. If it were not for [President Recep Tayyip] Erdogan, the party would be nothing. Erdogan’s soul balances all this mess.”
  • “Sozcu is not wrong. What kind of preaching and practice is this?”
  • “Hijab is a must. There is no wiggle room”

Another pro-AKP news outlet, Haber 7, proclaimed, “Here is the true story of those two photos.” The reader comments were similar to those Yeni Akit generated:

  • “Cover, remove! What is this, a machine? You are a politician brother, you have to be more vigilant.”
  • “It is clear that they tried to look devout for other people’s approval, not for God. I suggest some religion classes.”
  • “People who work for the AKP’s mission are less than the fingers on a hand. The main goal of others is to become rich.”
  • “Why are you defending these people?”

The comments of pious readers were much harsher than those of secularists.

The June 7 election results have led to serious soul searching among AKP cadres, with devout Muslims losing confidence in the AKP’s sincerity. A scholar of Islam who works in a government institute spoke to Al-Monitor on condition of anonymity, for fear of losing his job. He said, “These sort of bogus Muslims hurt the pious people’s image in the society. Fifteen years ago, when one said, ‘She is an observant Muslim,’ people would at least assume she was trustworthy. Now the whole society questions if we are sincere or just faking it for financial and other benefits.

“Also, we see real devout Muslims who have lost their business ethics. Corruption has become so widespread that it is the norm. Devout Muslims who are becoming extremely rich in a few years consider it normal, nothing to be ashamed of or even to conceal. They believe it is their right. It is a painful process to watch for us. Everyone knows that these government employees could not afford flats or cars of such luxury without corrupt dealings, but no one even reacts. It is all out in the open. For those sham Muslims who find displays of religious symbols a route to financial gain, it is normal to revert to their true origins, as they are not believers. I suspect the AKP hype will still last a while, as long as they are able to distribute rewards to supporters.”

Indeed, several Islamist pundits have spoken out against the loss of Islamic values as the number of supposedly devout Muslims increases in Turkey. Also, theologians, such as professor Hayri Kirbasoglu, have publicly spoken out, criticizing AKP elites who use religion to praise Erdogan and practically elevate him to the level of a caliph. Kirbasoglu said, “In the last decade, we observed a deep erosion of Islamic values and these people act in such a way just for personal gain. The bitter joke is that the five pillars of Islam are now reduced to three in Turkey: political career, money and fame. These three have evolved in a way to erode the core values of Islamists.”

Zeynep Bozdas, foreign relations adviser for Huda-Par, the pro-Kurdish Islamist party, told Al-Monitor, “The values of some people change to match the values of the government. Those who were struggling to prove they are secular are now displaying images to convince others that they are devout Muslims. They alter their wardrobe and home decor, recite Arabic words, even pretend to pray and attend religious meetings. We want to believe people are truly devout, so no one wants to criticize religious beliefs, but then when you see their masquerade for political or financial benefit, one cannot help but feel distraught. The AKP lost a lot of trust because they awarded people whose masks were exposed just like Egemen Bagis.”

Bagis, a former EU minister whose name surfaced in the December 2013 corruption probe, allegedly had a phone conversation with a journalist mocking Quranic verses. Bagis is now an Erdogan adviser at the White Palace.

Umit Kivanc, a political pundit and documentary producer, believes that fake Muslims should be worrisome for everyone. Kivanc told Al-Monitor, “The assumptions we had about religion and morality proved to be wrong. We witnessed legalization and normalization of corruption and lawlessness together. There has of course been corruption in Turkey before, but religion was traditionally seen as the last pure area. Now that is no longer the case.”

There are plenty of cases of bogus Muslims in the media and arts whose careers profited from their becoming an observant Muslim, at least in the public arena. The AKP’s rewarding for these sudden commitments to religious values and Erdogan’s cult of personality have generated strong distrust among both pious and secular segments of society.

When the actress Angelina Jolie met with Erdogan in Mardin province June 20, an Islamist commentator, Zeynep Belgeli, tweeted, “Keep this woman away from our president. She may fall in love with him. He is handsome.” When reminded that Jolie is married, Belgeli replied, “Is Brad Pitt even charismatic? He is like a wet cat in the rain.” It seems fake it ’til you make it is still the norm for those hoping to climb the ladder of wealth and status in Turkey.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Bogus Muslims, Erdogan, Turkey

Erdoğan’s through Turkish sculptor Aksoy 56 month in Jail. for Building statue symbolizing goodwill between Armenia & Turkey

June 22, 2015 By administrator

Mehmet Aksoy, the sculptor

Mehmet Aksoy, the sculptor

Mehmet Aksoy, the sculptor who was awarded TRY 10,000 (USD 3,750) in damages by a court in March after President Erdoğan had his sculpture torn down, is now on trial for 4 years, 8 months in prison over insulting Erdoğan after having described the money he was paid as ‘dirty money.’

Asked on what he would be spending the TRY 10,000 (USD 3,750) in damages he was to be paid by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan during an interview, sculptor Mehmet Aksoy responded: “I would never make a sculpture with dirty money.”

In retaliation to Aksoy’s comment, Erdoğan has filed a criminal complaint against the sculptor on the grounds that he insulted the president. The indictment prepared by the Press Crimes Bureau states that Aksoy implied that the president’s earnings were illegitimate and demands a prison sentence of up to 4 years, 8 months for the sculptor.

In his defense testimony, Aksoy claimed that the point of his statement had not been to insult the president, “Throughout my professional career I have sculpted nearly 10 tons of stone. What I do is very labor-intensive. My words were not meant to insult the president. I meant that this money just fell in my lap and was not money earned through any toil and sweat.”

In March a court had awarded Aksoy TRY 10,000 (USD 3,750) in damages for an insult case he had launched against President Erdoğan demanding TRY 100,000. The court had found Erdoğan guilty of insulting the sculptor Mehmet Aksoy over an incident in 2011 when the president called Aksoy’s statue symbolizing goodwill between Turkey and Armenia a “monstrosity.”

The comments by Erdoğan, then prime minister, came during a visit to the northeastern city of Kars. “They put a monstrosity there, next to the tomb of [scholar] Hasan Harakani,” Erdoğan had said during his January 2011 visit, “It is impossible to think that such a thing should exist next to a true work of art.”

Former Culture and Tourism Minister Ertuğrul Günay had defended Erdoğan at the time, saying that the prime minister had not used monstrosity in reference to the statue, which Erdoğan denied, “No, I meant it in reference to the statue.”

Erdoğan went on to express his hope that the mayor of Kars, also hailing from the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), would “do what is necessary” before the prime minister’s next visit. The statue was taken down on June 14, 2011 by the Kars Municipality.

Sculptor Aksoy strongly criticized Erdoğan’s comments, saying his work carried a message of peace and friendship, and filed a lawsuit against Erdoğan for his insult to the statue.

In an unorthodox move last year, the Turkish Language Association (TDK), the official governing body of the Turkish language, declared that the word “monstrosity” (ucube) was not an insult and did not have negative connotations.

Report  BGNNews.com | Istanbul

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: akosy, Armenia, Erdogan, jail, sculptor

Erdoagn-Davutoglu Mosul Like Invasion in play for Northern Syria

June 22, 2015 By administrator

Erdogan-davutoglu-invasion

Why Davutoglu desparately wanting to Form Government with MHP party?

Erdogan and Davutoglu are in second emergency security meetings possibly planing another false Flag operation invasion of northern Syria just like they did Mosul invasion, which they put ISIS as a buffer zone in between (Iraq) Baghdad and (Kurdistan) Erbil force both Kurd and Arab to capitulate the two oil pipeline going through Turkey this time they will play Turkmen CARD just like the way they used before the invasion of northern Cyprus in 1974.
They will intensify the propaganda that the kurd’s are ethnically cleansing the Turkmen. this time they will put Islamic State between Assad and Kurd (YPG) they will also mobilize Arab groups including ISIL and al-Qaeda and Turkish Secret army called (FSA) which is mostly are Turkmen from central Asia use them to create a buffer zone.
Davutoglu will offer anything and everything possible to MHP to form coalition government with (AKP) because MHP’s Animosity of Kurd (HDP)

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Invasion, Kurd, Mosul

Turkey Erdoğan views PYD as threat, prefers ISIL control in northern Syria

June 15, 2015 By administrator

Kurdish People’s Protection Units fighters gather at the eastern entrances of the town of Tel Abyad, (Photo: Reuters)

Kurdish People’s Protection Units fighters gather at the eastern entrances of the town of Tel Abyad,
(Photo: Reuters)

Rattled by new flux of refugees fleeing the raging war between the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) and the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in the northern Syrian city of Tel Abyad near the border, Turkey’s leader expressed concern over the YPG takeover of the town, implying that he would rather prefer ISIL control over the strategic border city.

The ISIL and YPG, the armed wing of the Democratic Union Party (PYD), are vying for control over Tel Abyad in an episode in the long struggle for supremacy in northern Syria. Backed by air forces from the global anti-ISIL coalition, the YPG recently made swift gains and pushed back radical militants after a withering months-long siege of the Kurdish city of Kobani, which proved to be a turn in the tide against ISIL. Turkey had to absorb more than 150,000 civilians during ferocious battles in and around Kobani in late 2014. Report Zaman

A similar fierce showdown is in the air, this time in Tel Abyad, a key border town just opposite of Akçakale, a Turkish border town in the southeastern province of Şanlıurfa. Barbed fences and a wall divide the two towns.

The YPG advance toward Tel Abyad prompted a new mass exodus of refugees, sparking a humanitarian crisis across the border. The town is of strategic importance to the militant group, which regards as its only gateway and supply line through the border with Turkey.

Losing Tel Abyad, some 80 kilometers north of the ISIL stronghold of Raqqa, would deprive the group of a direct route to bring in new foreign militants or supplies. The Kurdish advance, coming under the cover of intense US-led coalition airstrikes in the area, also would link their two fronts and put even more pressure on Raqqa as Iraqi forces struggle to contain the group in their country. Reports on Monday suggested that the YPG totally encircled the town.

A Today’s Zaman reporter in Akçakale said the ISIL militants began to withdraw to Raqqa to prepare for the next round of the battle, which will probably take place in or around Raqqa, the provincial capital of ISIL. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which tracks the conflict, said there were only around 150 Islamic State fighters in Tel Abyad.

Already battered by endless waves of refugees, Turkey allowed more than 3,000 refugees who were fleeing the fighting in Tel Abyad to enter the country, reversing its earlier decision of closing its borders to new refugees.

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, in a reflection of the widely-held opinion of Justice and Development Party (AK Party) senior figures, views the looming battle from a different angle. Ankara sees the YPG as the Syrian arm of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), an outlawed militia that has fought a 30-year insurgency against the Turkish state to establish regional autonomy in southeast Turkey. The PKK is listed as a terrorist organization by the US, Turkey and EU.

Erdoğan spoke to reporters from pro-government media outlets during his return from Azerbaijan and addressed the steep challenges Turkey faces across the Turkish-Syrian border.

Offering a bleak assessment of the security situation in northern Syria, the president, however, appeared uneasy about the ascendant YPG, which has systematically rooted out ISIL groups from towns and villages as part of a steady campaign since January when it defeated the militant group in Kobani.

Erdoğan portrayed the YPG’s ascendancy on the battleground as a threat to Turkish national interests, accusing the Kurdish militia of deliberately targeting the indigenous Arab and Turkmen population in northern Syria.

The Turkish president said the US-led coalition fighting ISIL militants in Syria was bombing Arabs and Turkmens near Turkey’s border.

“On our border, in Tel Abyad, the West, which is conducting aerial bombings against Arabs and Turkmens, is unfortunately putting terrorist members of the PYD and PKK in their place,” Erdogan said.

Last week, he accused the West of backing “Kurdish terrorists” in northern Syria. The YPG has emerged as the main military partner for the US-led campaign against ISIL in Syria. Erdoğan’s views reflect a concern over the revival of probable separatist sentiment among Turkey’s Kurdish community, which closely follows YPG movements in Syria.

Erdoğan’s refusal to help the besieged Kurds in Kobani fight ISIL touched off nationwide protests in Turkey on Oct. 6-7, 2014, leading to the death of more than 40 people in street clashes. The AK Party government, sources close to the party say, does not want to see a Kurdish enclave in northern Syria that could control Turkey’s border and thus transport routes to Arab Syria.

The president’s comments came at a time when the Cumhuriyet and the Birgün newspapers ran news stories involving video and photo footage that appeared to be evidence of the AK Party government’s links to ISIL in northern Syria. In one incident, the National Intelligence Organization (MİT), transported ISIL militants on buses through the Akçakale border gate as reinforcements in the fight against Kurdish forces.

Rebels accuse Kurds of deliberately displacing Arabs

More than a dozen Syrian rebel groups on Monday accused the country’s main Kurdish militia of deliberately displacing thousands of Arabs and Turkmens as it pushes deeper into ISIL strongholds in northern Syria.

The Kurdish advance has caused the displacement of 18,000 people who fled to Turkey in the past two weeks. On Monday, up to 3,000 more refugees arrived at the Akçakale border crossing, according to the state-run Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (TRT). An Associated Press photographer saw large numbers of people at the border and thick smoke billowing across as US-led coalition aircraft targeted ISIL militants in Tel Abyad.

The accusation, which was not backed by evidence of ethnic- or sectarian-related killings, threatened to escalate tensions between ethnic Arabs and Kurds as the Kurdish fighters conquer more territory in northern Syria.

Since the beginning of the year, the YPG have wrested back more than 500 mostly Kurdish and Christian towns in northeastern Syria, as well as strategic mountains seized earlier by ISIL. They have recently pushed into Raqqa province, an ISIL stronghold where Tel Abyad is located.

“YPG forces … have implemented a new sectarian and ethnic cleansing campaign against Sunni Arabs and Turkmen under the cover of coalition airstrikes which have included bombardment, terrorizing civilians and forcing them to flee their villages,” the statement issued by rebel and militant groups said. The YPG, however, denies these claims.

Rami Abdulrahman, who runs the the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said the people who had fled into Turkey were escaping fighting and there was no systematic effort to force people out.

He said also said there were no Turkmen in the area, stating, “There are violations [referring to acts of abuse] by individuals from the YPG, but not in a systematic way.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, ISIL, threat, Turkey, ypd

Erdogan seriously disturbed and fears fall of Syria’s Tell Abyad will closed Turkish supply line to ISIS

June 14, 2015 By administrator

By Fehim Taştekin,
Syrian refugees from Tel Abyad wait on the Turkish-Syrian border

Syrian refugees from Tel Abyad wait on the Turkish-Syrian border

Ankara appears to be seriously disturbed by joint operations of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) and Burkan al-Firat forces made up of Arab opposition elements from the Raqqa region, backed by US air support, to oust Islamic State (IS) forces from Tell Abyad in Syria.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan claimed Kurds are being settled in areas abandoned by Arabs and Turkmens during the aerial bombing by the Western coalition. In September and October 2014, when IS was besieging Kobani, Erdogan’s declaration — sounding like he was delivering good news — that ‘‘Kobani is about to fall” infuriated Kurds. This may help explain his total loss of Kurdish regions in the June 7 elections. Now the question being asked is why Erdogan seems to be so concerned about the possible IS loss of Tell Abyad?

The Tell Abyad border crossing, directly opposite Turkey’s town of Akcakale, was entrusted on Sept. 19, 2012, to a coalition of Jabhat al-Nusra, Ahrar al-Sham, Burkan al-Firat and Liwa al-Tawhid Brigades. That decision had two objectives:  report al Monitor

  1. To distance Syrian regime forces from the border and to create a buffer zone for the opposition forces to operate freely.
  2. To hinder the Kurds’ autonomy movement in the Syrian areas Kurds control and to sever the link between the Kurdish cantons of Kobani and Jazeera in what the Kurds call Rojava (Western Kurdistan).

At that time, there were some clashes between the Islamist forces that had taken over Tell Abyad and the Kurdish Front, which at that time was part of the Free Syrian Army (FSA).

According to information provided by Kurdish sources to Al-Monitor, after a lull in clashes the operation to cleanse the area of Kurds began July 19, 2013, with warning calls from mosque minarets for the Kurds to leave Tell Abyad or be punished. Of 25,000 people in Tell Abyad, which was Arabized by the Baath regime in 1963, about 12,000 were Kurds. Kurds who lived in the Tell Abyad town center and in 18 villages in its vicinity had to emigrate to the Kobani and Jazeera areas as well as to Turkey and Iraq. Those who didn’t paid a high price. Every single Kurdish house was raided until Aug. 5, 2013. Seventy adult males were killed, and about 400 women and children were abducted. It is not known what happened to them. While the international community, not wanting to hamper the revolution, seemed not much concerned with crimes against humanity by Syrian opposition forces, the issue was put on the UN Security Council agenda by Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, who asked for a condemnation.

The leadership in Tell Abyad changed hands after some elements of Jabhat al-Nusra joined IS. In January 2014, what is now IS eliminated its former partners in a bloody operation and took full control of Tell Abyad.

The YPG, which succeeded in getting IS out of Kobani, cleaned up the front between Sirrin and Ain Issa and launched a double-pronged operation against Tell Abyad. YPG forces from Kobani attacked from the west and those in Serekaniye from east.

The YPG’s combat objective was to push IS out of Tell Abyad to put an end to their attacks on Kobani and Jazeera cantons. After recapturing 20 villages in 15 days, the YPG surrounded the town of Suluk.

In the first days of the clashes, some of the civilians escaping from Tell Abyad who massed at the Turkish border were allowed to cross to Akcakale, but those who tried to escape the June 13 YPG operation against Suluk were left to the mercy of IS.

Those who were not allowed to cross the border by Turkish soldiers were rounded up by IS and herded back to Tell Abyad.

Erdogan’s anger with the operation to oust IS from the region became evident when he said: “The West, which is hitting Arabs and Turkmens of Tell Abyad from the air, is sadly settling the PYD [Democratic Union Party] and PKK [Kurdistan Workers Party) terror organizations in their places.”

Meanwhile, Jabhat Suwar’s Tell Abyad chief, Omer Dede, accused the YPG of threatening the Turkmens by declaring, “Leave your villages or we will burn them down.”

YPG spokesman Redur Halil told Al-Monitor, “There is no such threat. We issued a call saying Daesh [IS] should be prevented from using civilians as live shields. We said, ‘Come to Kobani and Jazeera cantons. We will help you. After the war is over, you can go back to your homes.’ Nobody can interpret our call as ethnic cleansing. Most of the villages are already abandoned because of clashes.” Halil added that the YPG was being extra careful to avoid civilian casualties while advancing toward Tell Abyad.

The president of the Syrian Turkmen Assembly, Abdurrahman Mustafa, told Al Monitor there were no Kurds in Hammam Turkmen, where Turkmens of Tell Abyad lived and a limited number of Turkmen refugees had come to the border to escape IS threats, air raids and clashes. Turkmens who took refuge in Kilis were escaping from the clashes between IS and the Islamic Front.

Syrian Kurdish journalist Barzani Izo, who is in the area of the clashes, said Turkmen villages are not controlled by the YPG. He added: “The YPG could not even get the Kurds who had left the region earlier to return to their own homes. Where are they going to find Kurds to settle in Turkmen homes? There is not a single example to prove this allegation.”

Erdogan’s anger is obviously based on the loss of the de facto buffer zone that had severed contiguous links between Rojava cantons and the arrival of elements he perceives as enemies to the Turkish border. Ankara wasn’t upset when this buffer zone was captured by what is now IS in 2013.

For IS, Tell Abyad and Carablus are vital links between IS headquarters at Raqqa and the Turkish border. Although the border is officially closed, traffic over it has not stopped. IS sends its casualties to hospitals in Turkey through this gate. Akcakale is also the key transit point for foreign militants to reach IS in Iraq and Syria. Those fighters have been getting their first IS training at Suluk.

When the Army of Conquest led by al-Qaeda-affiliated Jabhat al-Nusra and Ahrar al-Sham captured Idlib and Jisr al-Shughur with the weapons they received via Turkey, IS returned to the Syrian front with weapons they captured from the Iraqi army at Ramadi and occupied historical Palmyra while launching attacks at the Bab al-Salam crossing to Turkey to expand its logistics connection between Turkey and Aleppo. IS first captured Soran west of the Euphrates River and then moved toward Maree. These were the developments that compelled Turkmens to head to the Turkish border.

As for the importance of Tell Abyad, known as Gre Spi to the Kurds, IS has been able to harass Jazeera and Kobani cantons from its Tell Abyad base. Also, for the Kurds who abandoned Tell Abyad in 2012 to return, IS domination must end. Rojava officials also think that given Turkey’s stiff border regulations, they may get supplies needed for the reconstruction of Kobani via a corridor that will be opened to Jazeera canton bordering Iraq.

President Barack Obama has made reference to IS boosting its strength with thousands of fighters coming to Syria via Turkey while Turkish officials “haven’t fully ramped up the capacity they need” to prevent such movements, signaling continued Turkish involvement with dangerous groups, this time at Tell Abyad, following Kobani.

Because of its misguided regional ambitions and policies colored by a phobia of Kurds, Turkey is now placed in a position of abandoning civilians to the mercy of IS.

Fehim Taştekin is a columnist and chief editor of foreign news at the Turkish newspaper Radikal, based in Istanbul. He is the host of a fortnightly program called “Dogu Divanı” on IMC TV. He is an analyst specializing in Turkish foreign policy

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Erdogan, ISIS, Syria, Tell Abyad

Turkish Dictator Erdogan blasts West for destabilizing Syria by supporting Kurdish ‘terrorists’

June 13, 2015 By administrator

turkey-kurds-isis-syria.siTurkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has accused the West of destabilizing Syria by supporting Kurdish “terrorist groups,” while bombing Arabs and Turkmens.

The impassioned remarks were made in Erdogan’s first appearance since the general election. He called on all political parties to act “responsibly” in forming a coalition government, after his Justice and Development Party (AKP) lost its parliamentary majority at the polls on June 7.

“The West, which has shot Arabs and Turkmens, is unfortunately placing the PYD (the political wing of the YPG) and PKK in lieu of them,” Erdogan said in a speech at the Ankara chamber of commerce.

The Kurds have a strong presence in Syria, Iraq and Turkey and have proved a formidable enemy to Islamic State (IS), earning international backing for standing up to extremists.

On the other hand, the ethnic group has been historically locked in a fierce struggle of wills with Turkey over its status as a nation.

Meanwhile the Kurdish-linked People’s Democratic Party (HDP) has for the first time managed to get into the Turkish parliament.

This is a difficult situation for Erdogan, who is a US ally on the one hand, but has been showing very negative attitudes toward the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) forces, which the US has been trying to aid in the fight against IS.

The Turkish leader is uncomfortable with the military gains made by the Kurds in Syria, alleging their links to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), whom he’s called “terrorists” on multiple occasions, and who have been fighting the Turkish government in an insurgency lasting more than 37 years.

While delivering the remark, Erdogan has used the opportunity to again strike at the perceived ineffectiveness of the US-led air-strike campaign against IS terrorists.

On Thursday Turkey said it was taking measures to limit the influx of Syrian refugees whose numbers soared recently due to fighting between Kurdish forces and jihadists.

Over the last week, 7,000 refugees had fled to Turkey and another 6,600 had joined them since Wednesday, a Turkish official told AFP.

“Turkey will not accept entries onto its territory from Syria except in case of a humanitarian tragedy,” Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus said after visiting the Akcakale border crossing on Wednesday.

Kurtulmus also reaffirmed Ankara’s anger against EU nation’s which have accepted only a small portion of Syrian refugees as opposed to Turkey which has taken over 1.8 million Syrian refuges since the start of the conflict in 2011.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, ISIL, Kurd, Syria, Turkey

Turkey the price of a coalition with the AKP “shielding Erdogan corruption and illegal acts”

June 10, 2015 By administrator

EMRE USLU

EMRE USLU

By EMRE USLU,

Coalition is the main discussion in Ankara now. Politicians talk about coalition options among political parties; but in fact, there are not many choices. The Justice and Development Party (AKP) must be a part of the coalition options.

As I noted before the elections, the AKP has to stay in power. Most recently, Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arınç noted this. The AKP has to remain in power because otherwise, they will be prosecuted over their corruption and illegal acts. The AKP will lose by 10 percent in the next elections if one corruption file — that does not have to the Dec. 17 file, even the file on the expenses of the Ak Saray would be sufficient — is reopened. Once this is done, there will be no trace of this party. Many deputies will resign because serving in such a corrupt party would mean the end of a political career. Thus, the AKP has to remain in power. So this means that the AKP will not allow others to form a coalition government which does not include the AKP. They will try hard to be part of a government. Therefore, I think that all coalition options which do not include the AKP are not realistic.
When it comes to a coalition with the AKP:
The AKP will use the coalition partner as a shield to cover up all its corruption and illegal actions over the last 13 years. For this reason, forming a coalition government with the AKP is a gravely flawed decision.
A party which will make a coalition with the AKP actually endorses the following:
1- It means that it endorses the bribe money Iranian businessman Reza Zarrab gave the ministers
2- It endorses the money stashed in shoe boxes, steel safes and others
3- It endorses the TL 700,000 watch of former Economy Minister Zafer Çağlayan
4- It endorses former Interior Minister Efkan Ala, who violated the Constitution to arrest journalists
5- It endorses former EU Affairs Minister Egemen Bağış, who mocked verses of Quran
6- It endorses the luxury car of the president of the religious affairs directorate
7- It endorses the violation of the Constitution by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who did not act impartially during the election campaign
8- It endorses all the waste and unnecessary expenses at the AK Saray, the TL 1,000 glasses, marble imported from Italy, trees from Germany and private stud farm
9- It endorses the ultra lux apartments in Şehrizar Condominiums
10- The money whose source cannot be identified
11- Illegal villas in Urla
12- Pressure upon journalists
13- Arrest and intimidation of journalists
14- Blackmailing businessmen
15- Money in a pool used for pro-government media outlets
16- It endorses the legality of the vessels of Bilal and Burak Erdoğan
17- It endorses the fleets of ships of former minister Binali Yıldırım’s sons as legitimate
18- It accepts that the railway tender bids are transparent and there was no corruption in that process
19- It endorses the insults published in the pro-government media outlets
20- The illegal order in pro-government media
21- The nepotism in the AKP
22- The money transferred to the Foundation of Youth and Education in Turkey (TÜRGEV), the buildings and funds illegally transferred to this foundation
23- Erdoğan’s illegal acts gain attractive lands
24- It endorses the destruction of all values and the skyline of İstanbul
25- Cursing and humiliating the nation
26- Kicking the miners in Soma
27- Killing Berkin Elvan and then booing his mother
28- Police violence in Gezi
29- TOMA and its tenders
30- The arrest of the police officers who went after corruption
31- The arrest of judges for their decisions
32- Trucks transporting weapons to the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL)
33- Weapons transported to ISIL and al-Qaeda
34- Prosecution of the prosecutors who stopped ISIL trucks
35- Oslo talks

A party which forms a coalition with the AKP will endorse these and many other illegalities that cannot be mentioned here due to space constraints. If a party takes such a huge risk, it should at least ask for critical ministries in the government. If this is done, then it will be able to tell its supporters that it will be able to become very influential in the government. It should prosecute at least some of the items I cited above. Otherwise, that party will lose serious support in the next election because the AKP support base already endorses these illegalities and they vote for this party despite them.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: coalition, corruption, Erdogan, shielding, Turkey

Turks mock their leader: Where did Erdogan disappear after elections?

June 10, 2015 By administrator

Erdogan-avoids-publicAfter parliamentary elections President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan avoids public appearances.

Erdogan avoided traditional speech and addressed his compatriots with a written statement. His absence was mocked by Internet users. They all offer different versions of Erdogan’s whereabouts.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, mock, Turks

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