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The Telegraph: Turkey is no friend of Europe – her behaviour is blackmail & extortion

March 9, 2016 By administrator

Turkish extortionBelow is an article posted by The Telegraph 

Haggling in a Turkish bazaar is not an experience most Westerners enjoy at the best of times. But it becomes especially unpleasant when you discover that, having agreed a price, you then become a victim of blatant extortion. That is certainly how EU leaders must be feeling after their bruising encounter with Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu to find a workable solution to the refugee crisis that is threatening mainland Europe.

Writing on these pages on Tuesday, William Hague, our former foreign secretary, revealed the high regard in which he held Mr Davutoglu during his four-year tenure at King Charles Street. And it is easy to understand why the Turkish politician became the object of Mr Hague’s admiration when you look at the way he has run rings around his EU opposite numbers.

Not so long ago it was the case that, in terms of the EU’s relations with Turkey, it was Brussels that held all the trump cards. Numerous initiatives undertaken by Ankara to join the EU were hindered by the demands of Brussels – from resolving the long-standing dispute over Cyprus to improving Turkey’s woeful human rights record.

Now, thanks to the migration crisis, the tables have turned dramatically, so that it is Ankara, not Brussels, that finds itself holding all the aces, a drastic change in circumstance the Turks are determined to exploit for their own advantage.

The most graphic illustration of Turkey’s new assertiveness emerged in Brussels in the early hours of Monday morning after Mr Davutoglu had invited German Chancellor Angela Merkel to dinner at the Turkish Embassy, ostensibly to discuss the terms of the refugee deal negotiated over several weeks by EU President Donald Tusk. Instead Turkey’s prime minister presented her with a completely new set of demands that read more like a ransom note than a bargaining position.

In return for agreeing to the repatriation of migrants being shipped to Greece by Turkish people-smuggling gangs – the so-called “one in, one out” deal – Turkey is demanding an extra three billion euros added to the three billion euros the EU has already pledged. In addition, Ankara wants full-scale visa liberalisation for Turkish citizens visiting the EU by June, an acceleration of Turkey’s application for EU membership and a pledge to resettle in Europe many of the Syrian refugees Turkey agrees to take in.

Such is the EU’s desperation to fix the migrant crisis that it now has little option other than to accede to Ankara’s demands. But if the Turks think that by indulging in blackmail this will somehow help to improve their relations with Europe, they should think again.

For a start, the suggestion that Turkey still remains interested in joining the EU can only be described as a bad joke. Just a few days before Mr Davutoglu’s démarche to Mrs Merkel in Brussels, Turkish riot police were busy raiding the offices of Turkey’s main anti-government newspaper, Zaman, arresting its senior journalists and firing tear gas at demonstrators. This is not the conduct of a country that is serious about joining an organisation like the EU, where the protection of all human rights – including press freedom – is pursued with obsessive zeal.

Moreover, the increasingly pro-Islamist agenda being pursued by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has placed him on a far more worrying collision course with his European neighbours.

Mr Erdogan likes to claim that, with an estimated three million Syrian refugees already seeking sanctuary in Turkey, his country cannot cope with the influx. But he is conveniently overlooking the fact that Turkey would not be in this position if its government had prevented jihadists from freely crossing its borders to travel to the war zones in Syria and Iraq. Indeed, it has been suggested that Ankara, which supports the overthrow of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, has links with Islamic State (Isil) militants fighting across the border in Syria.

Furthermore, when British counter-terrorism officials warn, as they did earlier this week, that Britain today finds itself at risk from “enormous and spectacular” terrorist attacks, this is in large part due to Turkey’s disinclination to monitor the hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees crossing its border. Many of the returning jihadists who now pose a threat to our security have made their way to the UK courtesy of Turkey’s unpoliced migrant routes.

If Turkey were really serious about forging a closer relationship with Europe, then it would be more proactive in monitoring those from Isil and other Islamist-inspired terror groups that seek to do us harm.
For the moment the EU might be desperate to keep the Turks onside as it tackles the worst migration crisis in living memory. But in the long term we should take the view that, so long as Turkey remains under its present leadership, it would be foolhardy to regard her as an ally in whom we can place our trust.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: blackmail, EU, Extortion, Turkey

Europe the cash cow of Turkey: Smelling EU fear, Turkey moves in for $6.6bn extortion

March 8, 2016 By administrator

Turkey-eu extorionWhen the Ankara government carried out a brutal media crackdown at the weekend and then saw minimal Western protest as a result, President Erdogan knew he had the upper-hand – to leverage the refugee crisis.

It seems more than strange that, only three days before a high-profile summit was to take place between European Union leaders and Turkey on Europe’s refugee crisis, the Ankara authorities carried out an audacious assault on democratic rights.

The violent police seizure of Turkey’s biggest opposition newspaper, Zaman, and its immediate cowing into a tame pro-government publication represents the most brazen authoritarian move to date by the ruling AK party of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Turkish opposition politicians denounced the full-frontal assault on independent media as tantamount to a coup d’état by Erdogan.

But the Western response to the draconian display of state power was more muted than ever. There was hardly any Western media coverage of the Zaman seizure. Both Washington and the EU merely issued perfunctory statements of “concern,” and breathlessly urged Ankara to respect “free speech” and “core European values.”

In recent months, Erdogan has been locking up journalists and closing critical media outlets. Under his increasingly autocratic rule, the Ankara authorities have prosecuted thousands of citizens who have “insulted” the president through social media.

More gravely, Erdogan has ordered a bloody wave of repression against ethnic Kurds in the country’s southeast, with disturbing reports of mass killings by Turkish troops. Turkish military have also been shelling across the border at Kurdish positions in Syria for several weeks now.

It is not as if EU leaders are oblivious to Erdogan’s rogue conduct. An EU report issued in November highlighted the growing repression of human rights. But still Erdogan continued his autocratic power-grab anyway. And the full-scale assault on an opposition news media outlet at the weekend is arguably his most flagrant move yet. The timing suggests it was a gambit to test EU resolve.

In other words, Erdogan knew from the Western silence and empty platitudes that there would be no repercussions for his repressive gambit. And why was that? Because, as Erdogan is all too aware, the EU is on its knees to gain his cooperation on ending the refugee crisis assailing its very foundations. That, in turn, meant that he could send his prime minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, to Brussels to extract whopping concessions.

Significantly, at the last minute before the Brussels summit opened on Monday, Turkey’s premier Davutoglu pulled out “some new ideas.” One of those “new ideas” was that Ankara was no longer requesting $3.3 billion in EU aid, as it had done four months previously. Ankara was now demanding double the money.

Davutoglu hinted at the upper-hand when he arrived in Brussels, saying: “The whole future of Europe is on the table.” And he also let it be known that Turkey was talking more than just refugees, adding that Ankara expected “a new era in Turkey-EU relations.” 

The upshot of negotiations in Brussels this week is that Turkey is to receive a 100 percent increase in promised financial aid from the European Union – to $6.6 billion – supposedly for accommodating Syrian refugees on its territory.

Ankara also wrung a promise from Euroland that its 75 million citizens could avail of visa-free travel by as early as June this year; and, perhaps the biggest prize of all, Turkey got a commitment from Brussels to speed up its long-delayed accession to the European Union.

A Financial Times report hinted at the delicate balancing act: “EU leaders tread carefully over Turkey’s media crackdown,” adding: “Leaders careful not to jeopardize deal with Ankara on migration.” 

In theory, the EU has been spared the nightmare scenario of thousands of refugees crossing on a daily basis from Turkey into Greece and thence further north. The uncontrolled migration over the past year was threatening the very existence of the 28-nation EU, with member states publicly bickering over closed borders and perceived unfair burdens.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: EU, Extortion, Turkey

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

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