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Germany: Prosecuting Böhmermann satire for dictator Erdogan could ‘cost Merkel the chancellery’

April 11, 2016 By administrator

0,,19178912_303,00(DW)Turkey is asking Germany to prosecute a satirist who made fun of its president. No matter how Merkel decides, experts say she can’t win. She’ll either offend an important diplomatic partner or alienate German supporters.

Jan Böhmermann has probably never received this much attention in his entire life. The German comedian is at the center of a controversy surrounding the question of what qualifies as satire and how far the limits of free speech stretch.

On Monday, the German government announced it would look into Turkey’s request to prosecute Böhmermann for a taunting poem the satirist presented in his weekly TV show, “Neo Magazine Royale.” In it, Böhmermann called Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan a “zoophile,” accusing him of sleeping with goats and beating up girls, Christians and Kurds.

In his show, the comedian said that the poem he was about to read would be illegal and that he wanted to show what satire is and isn’t allowed to do in Germany. The law in question prohibits insulting foreign heads of state. One of its particularities is that the German government, and not the state prosecutor, has to decide whether to take up criminal proceedings.

‘Lose-lose situation for Merkel’

“I find it problematic that the government, which is not part of the judiciary, has to make this decision,” political scientist and journalist Frank Überall told DW. “Government politicians are stuck in this intricate diplomatic web and decisions like this one have no place in that.”

The diplomatic spat between Turkey and Germany comes at an especially inopportune time. For Chancellor Angela Merkel, Turkey is an important partner in the refugee crisis. The EU and Erdogan’s government agreed on a deal in March that sees Turkey taking back refugees that entered the EU illegally via Greece. In return for Turkey’s help, the European Union will restart talks with the country about joining the EU.

Critics of the deal had already complained that by entering the agreement, Merkel would make herself too dependent on Erdogan, a man whose regime has recently made news by shutting down newspapers and arresting government-critical journalists.

Even foreign politicians have entered the discussion. Former Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis has proclaimed his support for Böhmermann.

Now Erdogan is putting Merkel on the spot.

“It’s a lose-lose situation for Merkel,” Alexander Kissler, media researcher and journalist with political magazine “Cicero,” told DW. “She either loses face with Turkey or she loses face domestically if she agrees to prosecute Böhmermann.”

Fateful phone call

German broadcaster ZDF, the channel where “Neo Magazine Royal” airs, has deleted the poem from its online media center. Merkel tried to calm the waters, too, by calling Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on Sunday. That information was released publicly, including her quote that the poem was “deliberately offensive.”

“That call was a big mistake, especially making it public,” Kissler said. Her “attempt to tame Turkey” failed and everyone could see it.

On Monday, Merkel’s spokesman said the government would take a few days to look into the issue before deciding whether Böhmermann should be prosecuted. Kissler sees this statement as a diplomatic gesture, but says that eventually, Merkel’s government will have to deny Turkey’s request. “Anything else could cost Merkel the chancellory,” he said.

An overwhelming majority of social media users in Germany supports Böhmermann, so Merkel would indeed face domestic outrage should she agree to criminal proceedings. Twitter user Gräfin Kerssenbrock, for example, called the German government’s stalling a “complete failure.”

Read more: DW.com

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Böhmermann, Erdogan, Germany, prosecuting, satire, Turkey

Germany: Hundreds pro-Erdogan & pro-Kurdish demonstrators clash across Germany

April 11, 2016 By administrator

570b12d5c36188f72e8b45d5(RT) German riot police used pepper spray and batons to subdue violent clashes that broke out as pro-Kurdish activists confronted participants in rallies supporting the Turkish government as they marched through several major cities on Saturday.

Demonstrations were held in Cologne, Nurnberg, Frankfurt, Stuttgart, and several minor German cities in response to the recent terror attacks in Ankara and Istanbul. They were organized under the motto “March of Peace for Turkey and the EU” by “AYTK” (European New Turks Committee). The Kurdistan Freedom Hawks (TAK) and Kurdistan Workers Party’s (PKK), a militant splinter group, have claimed responsibility for some of the major terrorist bombings in Turkey that have recently killed dozens.

The activists were waving Turkish national banners as some shouted “Allah Akbar.” 

Hundreds of Kurds and German left party members staged counter-demonstrations, accusing the anti-PKK protesters of having ties with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s nationalist ruling party, AKP, which has been clamping down on Kurdish populations in the southeast of Turkey through military force.

Cologne police detained 24 members of the two opposing groups as they threw firecrackers and bottles at each other and law enforcement, injuring at least five officers, DPA reports. The number of pro-Kurdish activists was estimated at 250, while several hundred demonstrators participated in the pro-Erdogan rally, far short of the announced target of 5,000.

https://youtu.be/hgQ5qFmjzAs

The protests in Stuttgart also took a violent turn, as rocks and firecrackers were hurled at police. Twelve officers and five activists were reported injured in the showdown.

In Hamburg, about 1,250 Kurdish and German activists demonstrated alongside some 200 Turks, Hamburger Abendblatt newspaper reports. The pro-Kurdish counter-demonstrators marched to the Turkish consulate under the slogan “For Tolerance and International Anti-fascism” to protest the “fascism” towards Kurds shown by Erdogan’s government.

READ MORE: German embassy, consulate close in Turkey over terror threat

Some 2,500 people heeded a call from AYTK to gather at Jakobplatz square in Nurnberg, while the number of counter-demonstrators amounted to 300. As local police succeeded in separating the rival crowds, no major incidents were reported, according to BR24 news site.

Heavy police presence ensured the peaceful nature of the rallies held in Munich, Hannover, Bremen, and Bielefeld.

PKK, which is banned in Turkey, has about 14,000 supporters in Germany, according to Der Tagesspiegel.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Clashes, Germany, Kurd, Turk

Terrorist State of Turkey Probe opened against German TV presenter for allegedly ‘insulting’ Erdoğan

April 7, 2016 By administrator

n_97469_1BERLIN

A probe has been launched in Germany against a presenter on the ZDF TV station who allegedly “insulted” Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in one of his recent programs, state-run Anadolu Agency reported on April 6.  

Germany’s Mainz prosecutor’s office opened a probe against presenter Jan Böhmermann for allegedly “insulting foreign state representatives and institutions,” said Mainz chief prosecutor Andrea Keller. 

Keller said around 20 people had filed criminal complaints against Böhmermann and that these complaints, along with any future complaints, would be brought together under the probe.    

He also said the German Justice Ministry had been informed, in order to clarify whether Turkey or its president had also filed a criminal complaint. 

Prosecution spokesman Gerd Deutschler said on April 6 that Böhmermann’s program material could amount to “a violation of section 103 of the [German] criminal code: insulting organs or representatives of foreign states,” according to German broadcaster Deutsche Welle. 

German government spokesperson Steffen Seibert last week said German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu discussed the issue during a recent phone conversation. He said both officials considered the related part of the show as “intentionally insulting.”

Böhmermann’s satirical program was removed from broadcast after he read out a poem allegedly “insulting” Erdoğan. 

April/07/2016

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Germany, satire, Turkey, tv

Armenia president and German chancellor discuss Karabakh

April 6, 2016 By administrator

default69President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan on Wednesday held a meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin.

During a media conference following the meeting German Chancellor said they had discussed the issues of concern and first of all the situation in Karabakh.

President Sargsyan briefed German Chancellor on the situation. Merkel, in turn, said Germany, as a country presiding over OSCE, feels responsibility for the speediest resolution of the conflict and return to the negotiating table.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenia, Germany, Karabakh

Armenia president leaves for Germany

April 5, 2016 By administrator

default6President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan will conduct an official visit to the Federal Republic of Germany on April 6-7.

In the framework of the visit, the President of Armenia will meet with the highest leadership of Germany – President Joachim Gauck, Chancellor Angela Merkel, President of Bundestag Norbert Lammert, Minister of Foreign Affairs, OSCE Chairman-in-Office Frank-Walter Steinmeier, president’s press office said in a statement.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenia, Germany, leaves, president

Germany: Soghomon Tehlirian to be Commemorated in Berlin

April 1, 2016 By administrator

3f73faa420f84ae8a3fdef4ddad0eb67BERLIN (ArmRadio)–It was on March 15, 1921 that Armenian avenger Soghomon Tehlirian assassinated Talaat Pasha, one of the masterminds of the Armenian Genocide.

On April 2, 120th anniversary of Tehlirian’s birth, representatives of the Armenian community will gather on Hardenbergstraße in Berlin, the site where Talaat was assassinated, to hold an event in memory of Tehlirian

Tehlirian shadowed Talaat as he left his house on Hardenbergstraße on the morning of March 15, 1921. He crossed the street to view him from the opposite sidewalk, then crossed it once more to walk past him to confirm his identity. He then turned around and pointed his gun to shoot him in the nape of the neck.

Talaat was felled with a single 9mm parabellum round from a Luger P08 pistol. The assassination took place in broad daylight and led to Tehlirian’s immediate arrest by German police.

“I killed him, but I am not a murderer,” Tehlirian said of himself.

After a two-day trial, Tehlirian was found not guilty by the German court, and freed. He eventually moved to the United States and lived out his years in San Francisco.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Berlin, commemorated, Germany, Soghomon, Tehlirian

Germany: to Erdogan satire ‘Press freedom is non-negotiable’ amid diplomatic row over

March 30, 2016 By administrator

A protester in Berlin holding a sign that says: "Press freedom is a fundamental right"

A protester in Berlin holding a sign that says: “Press freedom is a fundamental right”

Germany has defended its stance on freedom of expression after its ambassador to Turkey was summoned. The song “Erdowie, Erdowo, Erdogan” laments the Turkish president’s crackdown on the press.

Responding to questions concerning Turkey’s summoning of a German diplomat last week, a government spokeswoman on Wednesday said German-Turkish relations would not impact the nation’s stance on freedom of expression.

“(It has been) made clear that despite all the interests Germany and Turkey share, the view on press freedom, freedom of expression is non-negotiable for us,” said deputy government spokeswoman Christiane Wirtz during a press conference.

The statement comes after German news outlet “Spiegel Online” published a report that the Turkish foreign ministry summoned German Ambassador Martin Erdmann on March 22 to complain about a satirical song aired on public broadcaster NDR’s “Extra 3” program.

The song’s music video, titled “Erdowie, Erdowo, Erdogan,” shows images of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan juxtaposed with footage of police beating protesters.

The lyrics lambast Turkey’s crackdown on the press, stating: “A journalist that writes something that doesn’t suit Erdogan is in jail tomorrow.”

#Turkey really wants this #Erdogan satire video made by a German TV station taken down. https://t.co/koXEvhheOB #erdoganfilme

— Carl Nasman (@CarlNasman) March 29, 2016

Turkey has come under increased scrutiny for its crackdown on the press, with Reporters Without Borders (RSF) ranking it 149 out of 180 countries on its 2015 Press Freedom Index.

“The rule of law, the independence of the justice system and the protection of basic freedoms, including freedom of the press and speech are important commodities that we must all protect together,” Germany’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Tuesday confirming their ambassador to Turkey had been summoned.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan satire, Germany, non-negotiable, press freedom

Germany: Turkish visa free & Billion euro extortion hit Merkel political earthquake

March 14, 2016 By administrator

DW Press review: ‘Nightmare for the CDU’ in German state elections,

Merkel defeatHere in Germany, reporters called it a “black election Sunday,” with one commentator smelling a “whiff of Weimar” in the AfD’s successes. But what did the international press have to say about Sunday’s state elections?

Spanish daily El Pais described Sunday’s election results as a “political earthquake” in Germany, “which has an influence on numerous parties.” El Pais singled out the Social Democrats, in particular, calling it an “enormous humiliation” for Germany’s second party to slide towards just 10 percent of the vote in Saxony-Anhalt in the east and Baden-Württemberg in the southwest.

Many international outlets focused, however, on the losses incurred by Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats. Le Figaro’s Berlin correspondent Nicolas Barotte described the results as a “nightmare” for the CDU and party leader Merkel. “One sole topic dominated the campaign,” Barotte wrote, “the refugee crisis.” Discussing the right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) and its huge hauls in all three states, he concluded: “This populist party’s anti-immigration, anti-establishment campaign worked.”

Similarly, British paper The Times said that Merkel “was given a bloody nose by voters” flocking to the right-wing, euroskeptic AfD “in a backlash against her generous refugee policy during its first test at the ballot box.”

The Daily Mail found yet clearer terms with which to describe the outcome, calling it the electorate’s “crushing verdict on open-door migration.” Political correspondent Jack Doyle wrote that the AfD had “surged in popularity following Mrs Merkel’s decision to roll out the red carpet for more than a million migrants.”

The Guardian’s correspondent, Philip Oltermann, noted that Frauke Petry’s “right-wing upstarts appeared to have benefited from an increased voter turnout across the country,” explaining how the AfD won more support from first-time voters than it did from disillusioned Christian Democrats. In France, Le Monde spotted the same trend, writing that “yesterday’s non-voters have become today’s AfD voters.”

‘Scrambling politics’ in Germany

The Wall Street Journal’s story noted how the AfD’s 24-percent haul in Saxony-Anhalt comfortably exceeded pollsters’ predictions, with Anton Troianovski positing that “the migration crisis is scrambling politics in Europe’s largest economy.”

“The results laid bare the extent to which the migration crisis has polarized German society,” Troianovski wrote. “Left-of-center proponents of a welcoming refugee policy also recorded wins Sunday, even as Ms. Merkel’s conservatives suffered,” pointing to the successes of Winfried Kretschmann, the Greens’ charismatic state premier in Baden-Württemberg, and Social Democrat Malu Dreyer in Rhineland-Palatinate.

Swiss daily Blick told its German-speaking readers that “Germany is torn,” calling the ballots a twin vote of no-confidence – both in terms of refugee policy and grand coalition government more generally. It noted how the historic fear of the CDU and especially its Bavarian CSU sister party had come to pass – that a party had established itself to the right of Germany’s conservatives.

“For the first time, in the shape of the AfD, a party to the right of the Union has won a lasting foothold, and now sits in eight out of 16 state parliaments. In Saxony-Anhalt the party achieved a real first: it claimed more than 20 percent of the vote and became the second largest power,” Blick’s Iris Mayer wrote.

The Neue Zürcher Zeitung similarly saw a “warning shot towards Berlin” and next year’s federal elections in Sunday’s results, calling them a “clear signal of [voter] dissatisfaction.” The paper says the established parties have two political responses open to them: either to recognize “that the majority of the voters for the fast-climbers [the AfD] are not merely a bunch of grubby racists, extremists and simpletons, who are best ignored” or, alternatively, to launch into “an indignant outcry in the media and politics about the threat from the ‘right-wing-populist’ AfD.” The second scenario, Peter Rasonyi writes, seems the most likely reaction, “but it’s not too late to reconsider.”

Filed Under: News Tagged With: earthquake, Germany, Merkel, political

Tale of 2 Zamans: Turkey’s opposition paper vows to keep printing in Germany after govt crackdown

March 8, 2016 By administrator

zaman takeoverTurkey’s top-selling opposition newspaper, Zaman, which has been “forcibly taken over” by the Turkish government, will continue publishing as an independent daily in Germany, editor-in-chief of Zaman Almanya (Zaman Germany) has vowed.

Speaking to Reuters TV, Zaman Almanya’s editor-in-chief, Sueleyman Bag, said the current print version of Zaman in Turkey “has nothing to do with Zaman there because it has been forcibly taken over by the state.”

“We will print an independent newspaper. We still have not addressed the question of how we do that. This is a new challenge for us,” Bag said. Zaman Almanya’s print edition in Germany, which is home to a large Turkish community, has 14,300 subscribers.

On Monday, the paper contrasted its coverage with that of Zaman’s Turkish edition, currently under government-imposed management, by revealing a black front page bearing the headline: “The constitution is suspended.” The lead story in the online edition described how protests against Zaman’s takeover were violently dispersed in Istanbul. It featured a photo of a female protester with a bloodied face. Zaman Almanya also posted stories condemning President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s crackdown on freedom of speech and criticizing European countries for their “silence” in the face of human rights violations in Turkey.

Meanwhile, there was no trace of criticism in Sunday’s Turkish print edition of Zaman. Instead, the paper featured articles supporting Ankara, as well as a story about a project to build a new bridge across Istanbul’s Bosphorus Strait and reports on the funerals of “martyrs” killed during a military operation against Kurds in southeastern Turkey.

Turkish authorities took control of Zaman on Friday by appointing new trustees for the Feza Media Group, which includes the paper. Police also raided Zaman’s offices to enforce a Turkish court order demanding that the media outlet be brought under government authority. The newspaper’s editor-in-chief, Abdulhamit Bilici, was quickly fired thereafter.

Turkish police also employed tear gas, water cannon, and rubber bullets to disperse crowds of hundreds of Zaman supporters protesting what they see as a government seizure of the paper’s headquarters in Istanbul.

Human rights groups and some European officials criticized the Turkish government, characterizing the move as a violation of press freedom. 

“He who wants to join the European Union must support freedom of expression, freedom of the press and must tolerate criticism,” said German Green Party chief Cem Oezdemir, who is a descendant of Turkish migrants.

“We are monitoring this with concern. We must discuss with Turkey their interpretation and understanding of civil rights and liberties,” German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier told journalists on Monday.

Ankara dismissed all of the accusations, however, claiming that its actions were aimed at investigating illicit financing of what it describes as a “Gulenist terror group.” Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu had already described Zaman’s activities as “an operation targeting a legitimate government that came to power with popular support,” referring to the paper’s affiliation with the now US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, a fierce critic of President Erdogan who was put on a “most-wanted terrorist list” by the Turkey’s government.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Germany, tale of two Zaman, Turkey

GERMANY Armenian Genocide: A funny handshake Bundestag

February 28, 2016 By administrator

arton122603-480x271The debate in the Bundestag on the proposal of the Greens on the Armenian genocide did take place Thursday afternoon, however, because the future EU-Turkey summit on refugees no vote was taken but the governing parties have promised that a vote will take place shortly.

The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung spoke yesterday the episode in an article entitled “a hard handshake in difficult times.”

The newspaper says “see a handshake between the opposition and the government is very rare in a plenary session of the Bundestag. Sometimes these handshakes represent a change of power – as was the case when Chancellor Helmut Schmidt SPD was ousted by a vote of no confidence and approached the winner Helmut Kohl and he silently shook hands firmly . This happened once in Bonn. Now, in Berlin, there was a special moment between Volker Kauder, head of the group of the Union in power, and Cem Özdemir, head of the Green Party in opposition. The handshake of the two did not take place as part of a transfer of power – it appeared a promising future. “

To log all stakeholders in the debate in the Bundestag have qualified the massacre of Armenians in 1915 as genocide and an agreement was reached for a joint resolution to be adopted “before the summer”.

The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung said “during the debate in plenary on Thursday experienced parliamentarians later said they felt a mixture of pride and enthusiasm, something they had not seen in twenty years as deputy”.

Summarizing the trade paper said “Cem Özdemir finally got up, walked to Kauder, expressed its conditions, Kauder nodded several times, then the two men while looking seriously exchanged a long handshake. The resolution was withdrawn. A small sensation, this debate is not ritualized brawl, but in a struggle to find the best solution. “

The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung concludes that a person was “amused” by this gesture of brotherhood and Kauders Özdemir. “Angela Merkel fears a harsh reaction of the Turks.”

Sunday, February 28, 2016,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: A funny, armenian genocide, Bundestag, Germany, handshake

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