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GERMANY Comedian January Böhmermann asks Erdogan to recognize Armenian Genocide

May 17, 2016 By administrator

arton126374-480x292“Pervert, lousy and bestiality”: this is how the moderator of ZDF, Jan Böhmermann, described Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in his talk show “Neo Magazin Royal” and today is it to be prosecuted for “insulting a representative of a foreign State” (art. 103 of the criminal code), an offense punishable by three years in prison and described by some crime of “treason”.

Asked by the German news weekly Die Zeit and Policy Analysis (Time) that appeared Thursday, May 12 on a possible meeting with Erdogan over a cup of tea in January Böhmermann replied: “If he releases all detained journalists and opposition, constantly seeking to resolve the Kurdish issue militarily, and admit openly and publicly the genocide of the Turks against the Armenians during the First World War. “

Tuesday, May 17, 2016,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, comedian, Erdogan, Germany, January Böhmermann, recognize

Germany: Bundestag motion on Armenia ‘genocide’ set to infuriate Erdogan – The Financial Times

May 16, 2016 By administrator

German parlementGermany’s parliament is pressing ahead with a motion condemning the Armenian massacres by the Ottoman Turks during the first world war as a “genocide”, in a move that will probably infuriate Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkish president, and threaten the fragile EU-Turkey deal on refugees.

The vote, scheduled for June 2, comes amid a diplomatic scandal over a German comedian’s obscene anti-Erdogan poem and growing concerns in the EU about a central element in the refugee deal — the planned visa-free travel accord for Turks in the Schengen zone.

The motion could further complicate the intensive efforts of Angela Merkel, German Chancellor, to placate Erdogan and persuade him to drop threats to scrap the refugee accord out of anger at what he sees as EU-based disrespect for Turkey.

Ms Merkel could meet the Turkish leader again as soon as next weekend, when she is visiting Istanbul for a UN conference on emergency aid.

The Bundestag has been discussing a possible genocide motion on the Armenian massacres since well before last year’s 100th anniversary of the killings, in which up to 1.5m Armenians died. But even after a passionate parliamentary debate in April 2015, Ms Merkel’s government resisted efforts led by the opposition Green party to hold a formal vote.

Even before the refugee crisis, Ms Merkel was concerned about the potential damage to German-Turkish relations and to the feelings of nearly 4m people of Turkish origin living in Germany.

However, the government decided last year it could no longer hold the line in the face of some politicians in the ruling conservative-social democrat coalition breaking ranks and a wave of explicit genocide declarations coming from elsewhere, including the Pope.

After negotiations with the Green party, party managers of the CDU/CSU and SPD have agreed to back a genocide motion. This means it is almost certain to be passed.

While the text has yet to be published, the agenda item already makes the intentions clear: “In remembrance and commemoration of the genocide of the Armenians and other Christian minorities in the Ottoman Empire 101 years ago.”

The long delay in the vote means it comes at an even more awkward time than a year ago. However, Cem Özdemir, the Turkish-origin co-leader of the Greens, told Bild am Sonntag newspaper: “It can well be that there will be anger in Ankara. But the Bundestag is not letting itself be blackmailed by a despot like Mr Erdogan.”

Many MPs are already furious that Ms Merkel permitted prosecutors last month to pursue a criminal case against Jan Böhmermann, a television comedian who read out a poem accusing Mr Erdogan of having sex with animals, and “kicking Kurds and beating up Christians while watching child porn”.

German political leaders have also expressed reservations about the visa-free travel plan, insisting Turkey must first fulfil tough conditions, including reforming its anti-terror laws. Mr Erdogan has threatened to reopen Turkey’s borders for refugees heading for Greece if he does not get an early travel deal.

Horst Seehofer, CSU leader and Ms Merkel’s most important domestic political critic, warned this weekend in the Welt newspaper that it was “dangerous” for Germany to be so despondent on Turkey. Frank-Walter Steinmeier, the foreign minister from the SPD, also told Tagesspiegel newspaper that it was up to Turkey to meet the conditions for visa-free travel. “Turkey knows what needs to be done,” he said.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenia-genocide, Bundestag, Erdogan, Germany, infuriate

German politicians say Merkel left EU exposed to Turkish blackmail

May 15, 2016 By administrator

Cigndc-VEAAS029By Michelle Martin

BERLIN, May 15 (Reuters) – German politicians accused Chancellor Angela Merkel at the weekend of making Europe overly dependent on Turkey in the migrant crisis, leaving the bloc vulnerable to blackmail by President Tayyip Erdogan.

Turkey, refusing to bow to European Union demands to rein in its broad anti-terror laws, said on Friday talks on a deal to provide visa-free travel in return for stopping illegal migrants reaching the EU had reached an impasse and the bloc must find a “new formula” to salvage the agreement.

Merkel, whose popularity has suffered due to her liberal migrant policy that saw Germany take in more than one million migrants last year, had spearheaded EU efforts to secure the deal, signed in March.

While the numbers of migrants have dropped sharply this year, Merkel continues to attract criticism from her conservative allies in Bavaria as well as the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD).

“I’m not against talks with Turkey but I think it’s dangerous to become so dependent on Ankara,” said Horst Seehofer, leader of the Christian Social Union (CSU), the Bavarian sister party to Merkel’s Christian Democrats (CDU).

Seehofer told Welt am Sonntag (WamS) that the deal with Turkey had helped boost support for AfD, which is currently polling at up to 15 percent.

Sahra Wagenknecht of the opposition far-left Linke party told the same newspaper Merkel had essentially negotiated the deal without involving her European partners.

“The chancellor is therefore responsible for Europe having become vulnerable to being blackmailed by the authoritarian Turkish regime and for Erdogan feeling noticeably strengthened to crush human rights underfoot,” she said.

Cem Oezdemir, co-leader of the Greens party and the son of Turkish immigrants, also told WamS the deal had put Europe at risk of being blackmailed and said Merkel was largely to blame.

While the EU is desperate for the deal to succeed, it also insists that Turkey meet 72 criteria, including anti-terror laws which it says Turkey uses to stifle dissent. Ankara says it needs sweeping legislation to fight Kurdish insurgents and Islamic State.

Merkel is due to attend the World Humanitarian Summit in Istanbul on May 23 and there are plans for bilateral talks with other leaders in attendance, her spokesman said on Friday.

Members of the Social Democrats (SPD), Merkel’s junior coalition partner, also expressed concern.

Carsten Schneider told WamS Merkel had made Erdogan the key to her refugee policy and if he stopped cooperating, “the extent of Germany’s isolation in Europe will become clear again”, while Thorsten Schaefer-Guembel said Merkel should not “kowtow” to Erdogan.

But SPD Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier told Tagesspiegel newspaper Turkey was still the key country for migration to Europe, adding: “We need to cooperate to some extent if we want to avoid the circumstances we had last year.”

Merkel has drawn heavy criticism for allowing German prosecutors to pursue a case against a German comedian at the Turkish leader’s behest. The comic had recited a sexually crude poem about Erdogan. (Reporting by Michelle Martin; Editing by Clelia Oziel)

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: blackmail, EU, Germany, Merkel, politicians, Turkish

Germany: 1 killed, 3 injured: Man reportedly shouts ‘Allah is great,’ stabs people at train station nr Munich

May 10, 2016 By administrator

je20160510_grafing12b_image_512x288_3At least one man has been killed and three injured after a knife-wielding German man reportedly shouting “Allahu Akbar” attacked people at Grafing train station near the city of Munich. The attack might have an Islamist motive, officials said.

Apart from “Allahu Akbar” the man was heard shouting “unbelievers,” Das Bild newspaper reported, citing local witnesses.

The prosecutor has confirmed the death of a 50-year-old man. He added that “two people are badly wounded, one is in critical condition.” The three injured are aged 58, 43 and 55.

The “assailant made remarks at the scene of the crime that indicate a political motive – apparently an Islamist one,” Ken Heidenreich, spokesman for the prosecutor’s office, told AFP. “We are still determining what the exact remarks were.”

The interior minister of the state of Bavaria, Joachim Herrmann, confirmed that the perpetrator was a German national, without providing details on the incident.

“When it comes to revealing more about their background, or whether mental illness or drug addiction played a role, these are things that require further clarification. I think we will make further announcements on this later in the day.”

The attacker is reportedly from the city of Hesse in central Germany. He doesn’t have a migrant background, the ARD broadcaster said.

Bayerischer Rundfunk identified the attacker as Paul H., a young man with mental health problems. ARD cited sources claiming he was also a drug addict.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: 1 killed, 3 injure, Allah is greatd, Germany

Alternative für Deutschland Calls for Ban on Islam in Germany

May 1, 2016 By administrator

1030988919German far-right party Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) approved an election manifesto that states that Islam is “not compatible” with the German constitution and calls for a ban on religious attributes.

AfD, the far-right party that scores a considerable 14% of nation-wide support, is present in half of Germany’s regional state assemblies. While it is still not represented in the German federal parliament, it poses a challenge to Angela Merkel’s CDU in the upcoming 2017 elections.

This Sunday, May 1st, the congress of 2,000 party delegates approved the election manifesto that, among other things, states that Islam is not compatible with the German constitution and that minarets and burqas should be banned completely.

According to Hans-Thomas Tillschneider, an AfD politician from the state of Saxony-Anhalt, “Islam is foreign to [Germans] and for that reason it cannot invoke the principle of religious freedom to the same degree as Christianity.”

This is a stark contrast to Angela Merkel‘s stance that freedom of religion is universally guaranteed by the German constitution and that Islam is welcome in the country.

Tillschneider’s statement received loud and vocal support, as such sentiments are apparently shared by the majority of the party members. While the idea of a softer approach has been proposed on the congress (Ernst-August Roettger proposed a “dialogue with local Muslim communities”), it was almost unanimously rejected.

The party that was founded three years ago had its popularity boosted by the recent migrant flow to Europe. According to statistics, Muslims make about 5% of the German population (about 4 million people). AfD is being criticized for its far-right anti-immigrant policy, with some officials have compared its attitude towards Muslims to that of Adolf Hitler’s towards Jews — a particularly popular accusation in Germany, that has been attributed to Chancellor Merkel herself.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ban, für Deutschland, Germany, GERMANY 1915 Genocide - Armenian show in Hamburg, Islam

Germany -Turkey Airbase expention WW1 replica readying WW3 €65 million Tornado jets

April 25, 2016 By administrator

German Tornado jets are pictured on the ground at the air base in Incirlik, Turkey, January 21, 2016. © Tobias Schwarz / Reuters

German Tornado jets are pictured on the ground at the air base in Incirlik, Turkey, January 21, 2016. © Tobias Schwarz / Reuters

German Air Force is reportedly to have its own section at the Turkish Incirlik Air Base, which is already used by American warplanes to attack targets in Syria. The planned project will cost €65 million and is to be finished by summer 2017, Der Spiegel reports.

The air base is located in southern Turkey east of Adana close to the Mediterranean coast. Ankara allowed the US to use it for its Syrian campaign against Islamic State on the condition that it would not be used to support America’s Kurdish allies, whom the Turks see as a threat. Saudi Arabia has a presence at Incirlik as well.

The base international club welcomed Germany as its new member in December 2015, when the European country started flying reconnaissance missions as part of the US-led coalition. According to a report published Monday by Spiegel Online, the presence may soon become permanent.

The Bundeswehr is investing about €65 million to build accommodation for the permanent deployment of around 400 German soldiers, a fully equipped command and control post and facilities for a full wing of Tornado fighter-jets and an Airbus tanker, the report said.

Most of the project is expected to be completed by summer 2017 although, since access to the facility is limited to only authorized Turkish construction companies, the deadline may shift. Germany is still negotiating with Turkey on an agreement for permanent deployment of troops. NATO member Turkey currently hosts 200 German soldiers and officers on rotational basis.

The German magazine notes that the investment may prove quite long-term. In 2002, Germany signed an agreement with Uzbekistan to use a base near the city of Termez. The base was used to provide logistical support for German and NATO effort in neighboring Afghanistan.

The Termez Air Base was kept in use for 14 years and was only closed in December last year

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: airbase, expention, Germany, Turkey

GERMANY Armenian Genocide: A German orchestra denounces the Turkish pressure on a show

April 24, 2016 By administrator

arton125281-480x360Berlin (AFP) – A German orchestra music on Saturday accused the Turkish authorities to put pressure on him and the European Union, to prevent the term “genocide” is used as part of a concert he gave about the massacre of Armenians in 1915.

“This is an attack on freedom of expression,” said the director of the Dresden orchestra (East), Dresdner Sinfoniker, Markus Rindt.

According to him, the Embassy of Turkey to the European Union asked the European Commission in Brussels to remove a subsidy of 200,000 euros given to the orchestra for this project, arguing that the show uses the term “genocide” – Ankara rejects that – to qualify the massacres there a century.

The European Commission maintained the subsidy but invited the orchestra to “soften” the texts of the show by no longer mentioning genocide and removed any mention of the concert on its web page, said the director of the orchestra. “We find this all very questionable,” he told AFP.

A spokesman for the Commission in Brussels acknowledged the withdrawal. “Due to concerns raised about the terms used to describe the project, the Commission has temporarily removed from its website to discuss a new formulation with the project sponsor,” said she told AFP.

The show was mounted to mark the centenary of the massacre of Armenians in 1915 and wants a reconciliation project.

It combines several musical selections played by an orchestra displaying Turkish and Armenian musicians. The controversy concerns the texts sung by the choir or played on stage, as well as the formulation of the program that speaks explicitly of genocide (www.aghet.eu). The name of the production, “Aghet” is also used to speak Armenian massacres of 1915.

It was shown in November 2015, first in Berlin, without causing tub.

Sunday, April 24, 2016,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, denounces, german, Germany, Orchestra, pressure, Turkish

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

April 21, 2016 By administrator

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

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

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

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

State lawmakers poised to decide

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

‘Nothing to whine about’

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Germany: Islam incompatible with the Constitution, the AFD creates controversy

April 19, 2016 By administrator

0,,18883254_303,00In its new party platform, the AfD is exploiting the widespread fear of Islam and paints a simplified picture of a threatening religion. Muslim organizations and political parties in Germany are outraged.

If it were up to the Alternative for Germany (AfD), minarets and fully covered Muslim women would be prohibited in Germany. Even the muezzin call, which is hardly ever heard in the country anyway, would also be banned. “Islam does not belong to Germany,” is stated as one of the main proposals for a new AfD platform. AfD deputy leader Beatrix von Storch goes further and says, “Islam is a political ideology that is not compatible with the German constitution.”

In an interview with the German newspaper “Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung,” von Storch and the second AfD deputy leader, Alexander Gauland, outlined the party platform. Gauland, who is also the head of the party in the German state of Brandenburg, stressed the fact that Islam is a “foreign body” in the Federal Republic of Germany. He added that Islam is “always associated intellectually with the takeover of a state.”

The party platform draft will be voted on at the end of April at the party convention in Stuttgart. The two-and-half pages state that a parallel society with Sharia judges is not acceptable and also, that Koran schools should close and Islamic organizations should not be allowed to have the same rights as other churches.

Conformist or threatening?

In an interview with German public broadcaster, DLF, the chairman of the Rhineland-Palatinate AfD, Uwe Junge, said that he shares this view. “Islam is a political religion. It does not have the restraint that we usually expect of a religion, i.e., that it should stay out of politics.” According to Junge, the party is not against all Muslims. Those who “have earned their place in our society by adapting and integrating” are not included. But there is also another Islam, which in Junge’s view is against everything that constitutes a free, basic democratic order: That Islam is intolerant, against the freedom of expression and rejects the equality of men and women.

The other political parties are alarmed. Parties campaigning against religions are a new development, explained the CDU politician Armin Laschet in the newspaper “Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung.” “That would divide our country,” he warned. Green Party politician Konstantin von Notz said the AfD is deliberately trying to divide society and seeking votes by presenting Islam as a bogeyman.

The AFD was successful in the recent elections, especially because it criticized the federal government’s stance on the refugee issue. Concerned about the influx of some 1.5 million refugees, many voters marked their X next to AfD, which advocates clsoing the borders to refugees. In the state elections that took place in March, the party won 15 percent of the vote in Baden-Württemberg and nearly 13 percent in Rhineland-Palatinate. It even achieved the second best result in Saxony-Anhalt at 24 percent.

The Palatinate AfD leader Junge denies the allegations that the party has chosen Islam as its main topic because the euro crisis and the refugees are dominating the headlines less and less. “Islam is a constant topic, which we have of course discussed with regard to the refugee crisis,” says Junge. AfD representatives had already spoken out during the anti-Islam demonstrations held by “Patriotic Europeans against the Islamization of the West” (Pegida) from 2014 on.

Exploiting societal prejudices

The chairman of the Central Council of Muslims in Germany, Aiman Mazyek, says that the issue already exists. “It is not as though this party has just created Islamophobia; it is riding on a wave which already exists in our society anyway,” says Mazyek.

Source: dw.com

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Germany, incompatible with' Constitution, Islam

Book: Germany and the Ottoman Empire, 1914-1918 Ulrich Trumpener

April 13, 2016 By administrator

j3157Questioning whether the Germans were actually as influential or dominant in the Ottoman empire as most standard works suggest, the author attacks the myths surrounding Turkey’s role in the war.

Originally published in 1968.

The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These paperback editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.

Paperback | 2015 | $56.50 | £42.95 | ISBN: 9780691622750

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Filed Under: Articles, Books Tagged With: 1914-1918, book, Germany, ottoman empire

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