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Germany: Armenia massacre: Too much regard for Turkey?

February 26, 2016 By administrator

Armenian Genocide, Germany

Armenian Genocide, Germany

The timing is provocative: Just two weeks before the EU-Turkey summit, the Green Party is putting before parliament a resolution which describes the massacre of the Armenian people 100 years ago as genocide.

For the governing coalition, the timing of the Greens’ resolution couldn’t be worse. Because of the refugee crisis, the government is trying to avoid being too hard on Turkey and referring to the mass murder of Armenians a century ago as “genocide.”

The government is under pressure to noticeably reduce the number of refugees coming to Germany. In Chancellor Angela Merkel’s strategy, Turkey has a special role as the most significant transit country for migrants.

On March 7, important negotiations with Ankara at the EU-Turkey summit are set to take place. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is considered to be an irritable negotiating partner and Germany does not want to get his back up.

According to Armenian accounts, some 1.5 million members of the Armenian minority community were killed between April 1915 and 1917 at the hands of their Ottoman rulers in what is present-day Turkey. For its part, Turkey maintains that between 300,000 and 500,000 Armenians were killed, and that just as many Turks died during the same period. Ankara speaks of an atmosphere of civil war and famine. To this day, the Turkish government reacts with hostility whenever the term genocide is used to describe the killings.

Everyone on the same page

The governing coalition takes the same view on the issue as the Greens. At a parliamentary debate in April 2015, parliamentarians were unanimous in their opinion that the massacre of the Armenian people a century ago was genocide. German President Joachim Gauck and Bundestag President Norbert Lammert both used the term to describe the killings.

But what was missing was the passing of a parliamentary resolution that included the term “genocide.” In October, the CDU/CSU, SPD, and the Green Party finally agreed on its adoption. But the resolution was brought before parliament as being solely from the Greens. The draft text says that the fate of the murdered Armenians “stands as an example of the mass extermination, ethnic cleansing, expulsion, and even genocide that has so terribly marked the history of the 20th century.” The text also refers to the “uniqueness of the Holocaust” as well as the “inglorious role of the German Reich” in the massacre of the Armenian people.

Criticism from the Greens

Green Party leader Cem Özdemir has accused the governing coalition of deferring too much to Turkey and pulling back from the common resolution.

“The resolution consciously stops short of asking the federal government to recognize the genocide in order not to make a big deal of this now,” Özdemir told DW. “You could have easily said, well it’s the parliament, it’s not the government.”

CDU member of parliament Christoph Bergner clearly stated his opinion during the debate in April. “I really doubt that we can present ourselves in a convincing way and take a clear position in this discussion if we shy away from using the term ‘genocide’,” Bergner said. Despite this, he’s against the Greens’ resolution. “Our objections refer to the process, not the content,” Bergner told DW. “When you’re in negotiations with a partner, you try not to burden those negotiations,” he said with regard to Turkey. He accuses the Greens of using the genocide issue for a partisan maneuver.

‘There is never going to be a right time’

The right resolution at the wrong time? Özdemir rejects that idea. “There’s never going to be a right time for this issue. It’s been the wrong time for a hundred years now. It’s just an excuse.”

Even though it’s likely that the resolution from the Greens will fail, Bergner says that doesn’t mean the discussion about the Armenian genocide is over. “I hope that we’ll find a better time during this coalition to agree on a formulation.”

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Germany, Massacre, Turkey

Germany: BUNDESTAG The Greens party accuse the ruling coalition to abandon genocide recognition

February 25, 2016 By administrator

arton122563-355x200The resolution in favor of the recognition of the Armenian Genocide proposed by the German Greens, which had the support of other forces of the ruling coalition could not be presented to the Bundestag votes. The leader of the Green Party, Cem Özdemir denounced the attitude of the leadership of the ruling parties that to please Turkey, on the grounds of the refugee crisis, refused to take the port of this proposal to be shared .

The Greens had negotiated with other parties technical writing of this resolution. But the defection of the leadership of the ruling parties steals for now any chance of getting a majority. “Making recognition of the Armenian genocide hostage to the issue of refugees is a wrong policy,” said Özdemir. With the vote on this resolution, members of the coalition had the opportunity to say clearly what he thinks of what happened. “We know there are many coalition members who do not share the attitude of their group leader,” said Özdemir.

Thursday, February 25, 2016,
Ara © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Bundestag, Genocide, Germany

Armenian Genocide exhibition items vandalized in Germany

February 18, 2016 By administrator

f56c5a2a4b816e_56c5a2a4b81a5.thumb

Photo by: German-Armenian Society

Unknown individuals in Germany have vandalized items of an Armenian Genocide exhibition.
In a statement on Wednesday, the German-Armenian Society (Deutsch-Armenische Gesellschaft) says that the assault was committed on January 20.
The items were on display at a college in the town of Aachen which hosted the exhibition “1915-2015: Armenian Architecture and Genocide”.  It was arranged as part of an exhibition series entitled “Fatherland”.
The police have been on the incident.
The Society’s president, Raffi Kantian, described the recent assault as exceptional, noting that the exhibition had been held successfully without incidents in different cities and town across Germany.
The Society says it is still critical of a protest note released earlier by two Aachen-based groups which expressed the Turkish authorities’ position and blamed the Society of being biased. “But the vandalism by unknown individuals is totally unacceptable; it is a disservice to those groups’ objectives,” reads the statement.

 

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, exhibition, Germany, vandalized

GERMANY Berlin demand in Kurdistan to better control the weapons he has delivered to him

January 23, 2016 By administrator

PashmargaThe German Foreign Ministry on Friday urged the government of the autonomous region of Kurdistan to ensure that weapons supplied by Germany go well with Kurdish fighters against Islamic State Group (EI).

The regional public broadcasters WDR and NDR reported that stamped Bundeswehr weapons, such as G3 assault rifles and pistols, were on sale in markets in northern Iraq. According to the Süddeutsche Zeitung, these weapons could in particular have been sold by former peshmerga fighters who have well funded “their flight to Europe.” “We have requested the representative of the regional government (Iraqi Kurdistan) to come to the Foreign Ministry,” said Martin Schäfer, spokesman of the Ministry, told a regular government news conference. “We expect that the government of Kurdistan and the leaders among the Peshmerga work immediately and consistently about these accusations,” he has said, adding, “such practices if they are confirmed must cease immediately and totally.”

After a long and heated debate, Germany had finally decided in August 2014 to militarily equip Kurdish fighters so they can defend themselves against EI.

Saturday, January 23, 2016,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Germany, Kurdistan, weapon

Germany MFA: We will take part in settlement of Karabakh conflict

January 14, 2016 By administrator

German FMGermany assumes the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) Chairmanship in tough times, the country’s Foreign Minister said, according to TASS news agency of Russia.

“I’m confident that right now we need the OSCE as a platform for dialogue and confidence building,” Frank-Walter Steinmeier stressed in a statement. “If we want to achieve peace in the OSCE area, we should join efforts.”

According to the Minister, Germany aims to enhance the OSCE’s capabilities in terms of conflict settlement.

“Also, we are going to take part in the process of settlement of conflicts in Nagorno Karabakh, Transnistria and the South Caucasus, at the same time triggering the OSCE missions in those locations,” Steinmeier went on to say.

On January 1, the OSCE Chairmanship passed from Serbia to Germany.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Germany, Karabakh

Experts fear intelligence gathered by German jets may be used by Turkey against the Kurds

January 10, 2016 By administrator

German-Tornado-jet-photo-ReutersBERLIN,— German Tornado jets have flown their first reconnaissance mission over territory held by the “Islamic State.” Security experts fear that the intelligence gathered may be used by Turkey against the Kurds.

German Tornado reconnaissance jets flew for the first time on Friday in a mission against the extremist militia group calling itself “Islamic State” (IS) on Friday.
Two planes flew from NATO’s airbase in Incirlik, Turkey, and landed once again without problems almost three hours later.

“They have carried out their mission,” said a spokesman for the German military.

The German jets will not be used for bombing missions, but rather for reconnaissance over IS-occupied areas of Syria and Iraq. Four Tornado jets have already been stationed at the Turkish air base since Tuesday, with two more German planes expected to arrive by mid January.

The aircraft can take photographs and infrared images – which can be transmitted to ground stations in real time – both at night and in poor weather conditions.

On Monday, over 100 pilots, technicians, ground crew and reconnaissance specialists from the German air force deployed from Hamburg to the Incirlik base for the start of their mission.

Information for ‘possible targets’

Germany’s emerging role in the international anti-IS coalition has been viewed with criticism and praise. But German military officials insist that the missions are strictly non-aggressive in nature.

“The reconnaissance objectives are intended to serve in the fight against IS. Of course, they also serve as possible targets for further operations,” said a German military spokesman.

Another security expert – who wished to remain unnamed – described the missions more bluntly: “We are not doing any land surveying. It’s all about ‘targeting,’ even if one doesn’t like to hear that. We provide target data for others so that they drop something on [that area],” he said.

The same security expert expressed concerns that the intelligence data, could be used against by Turkey against Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) strongholds in Iraqi Kurdistan and Turkish Kurdistan, the Kurdish region in southeastern Turkey. As a coalition and NATO partner, Turkey will have access to the reconnaissance data gathered by the German Tornados.

The PKK took up arms in 1984 against the Turkish state, which still denies the constitutional existence of Kurds, to push for greater autonomy for the Kurdish minority who make up around 22.5 million of the country’s 78-million population, in Turkish Kurdistan. The conflict has left tens of thousands dead.

A large Turkey’s Kurdish community openly sympathise with PKK rebels.

“[Information] which is of use, is fed into the Anti-IS coalition database … There is no reason why Turkey should not see certain images,” said the German military spokesman. However, he stressed: “The targets are not the Kurds, but rather, IS.”

Reconnaissance Tornado jets were also used by the German military in Afghanistan from 2007 to 2010.

Source: eKurd

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Germany, Kurd, reconnaissance, Turkey

Should Germany stop exporting arms to Saudi Arabia?

January 5, 2016 By administrator

Arm salesDespite official condemnation of Saudi Arabia’s executions, many wonder why Germany doesn’t take action against the kingdom. Critics think arms exports to the country should have been stopped a long time ago.

Many countries have condemned Saudi Arabia’s execution of Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr together with three other Shiites and 43 alleged members of al Qaeda .

The Saudi embassy in Tehran was even attacked by protesters, and in response, countries including Bahrain and the UAE backed Riyadh by bringing their diplomats back from Tehran.

Germany, France and other world powers have urged Saudi Arabia and Iran to engage in dialogue – but many wonder if words are enough. Even as Western powers like Germany condemn Saudi Arabia’s policies, they continue to export arms to the country, and thus benefit from its conflicts, critics claim.

Germany’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Martin Schäfer said at a news conference that Germany opposes the death penalty, but added that he is “unaware of any government plans to impose sanctions for this reason.”

In the first half of 2015 alone, Germany approved a number of arms exports to the Gulf region, despite concerns about conflicts and human rights violations. Among the exports approved were 15 patrol boats for Saudi Arabia.

The latest report showed that the value of Germany’s arms sales, the world’s fourth-biggest arms exporter, was 3.5 billion euros ($4 billion) in the first six months of 2015 – compared to 2.2 billion euros in the first half of 2014.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Germany, sales, Saudi Arabia arm

‘Stop Erdogan’s state terror against Kurds!’ Hundreds gather for pro-Kurdish rally in Berlin (VIDEO)

January 3, 2016 By administrator

400 Kurdish people have taken to the streets of the German capital

400 Kurdish people have taken to the streets of the German capital

At least 400 people have taken to the streets of the German capital to voice their protests against the policy of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan toward Kurds.

The demonstrators were holding banners reading, “Stop Erdogan’s state terror against Kurds!” and “Stop the war against the Kurdish people!” as they marched through central Berlin.

Some of the banners compared Erdogan’s party AKP (Justice and Development Party) to the Islamic State terrorist group.

The rally took place the day when the Turkish General Staff announced that nearly 300 Kurdish rebels, members of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), were killed in raids conducted by the Turkish military in three districts in southeast Turkey.

Ankara has been conducting military operations in southeast Turkey since the summer. Tensions have been mounting for months as security forces have been battling Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) militants after a ceasefire collapsed in July.

Since then Turkey’s southeast has seen armored vehicles patrolling the streets, locals experiencing severe economic hardship and civilians killed. Dozens of Kurdish militants have been killed in the operations.

The PKK, which was founded in 1978, has been fighting the Turkish state since 1984 for Kurdish self-determination. Kurds make up between 10 percent and 25 percent of Turkey’s population. The organization is considered as a terrorist group by Turkey, the US and NATO.

https://youtu.be/UN9sYxLcTyg

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Germany, Kurd, Protest, Turkey

‘Europe Turns a Blind Eye’ To Erdogan’s Praise of Nazi Germany

January 2, 2016 By administrator

1032601334Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s praise of Adolf Hitler’s Germany, which he cited as an example of effective centralized government, was ignored by a Europe Union more concerned with negotiations surrounding refugees, French politicians said.

European politicians have preferred to “turn a blind eye” to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s praise of Adolf Hitler’s leadership of Germany, French legislator Thierry Mariani wrote on Twitter.

Erdogan told reporters on Friday, that Nazi Germany under Adolf Hitler was an “example” of an effective form of government. Erdogan’s office later issued a convoluted statement which attempted to explain that Erdogan meant to say the exact opposite. Erdogan cited Nazi Germany as an example of a system which had a unitary system of government and a strong executive, like the one he wants for himself.

Erdogan cite l'Allemagne d'Hitler en exemple! Mais l'Europe ferme les yeux préférant négocier avec lui… #Lâcheté https://t.co/b3mCVWmo1O

— Thierry MARIANI (@ThierryMARIANI) January 2, 2016

“Erdogan cites Hitler’s Germany as an example! But Europe turns a blind eye, preferring to negotiate with him…”

Another legislator member of the Nicolas Sarkozy-led Republicans party, Valerie Boyer, echoed Mariani’s concerns:

Erdogan faisant l'éloge d'Adolf Hitler, je demande au #Gouvernement de clarifier sa position sur la #Turquie pic.twitter.com/yDvN6MS2NW

— Valérie Boyer (@valerieboyer13) January 1, 2016

“Erdogan uses Nazi Germany as an example. Is Turkey’s entry into the EU still timely?”

A senator from France’s upper house of the legislature also questioned recent moves by the European commission to open a new chapter in Turkey’s EU membership process amid negotiations on refugee trafficking:

“Erdogan wants to strengthen his powers as President in Turkey, he cites Hitler in Nazi Germany! And Europe is negotiating membership?”

Turkey and the European Union opened a chapter on the country’s membership in the organization on December 14, amid negotiation on the migrant deal.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Germany, Nazi, Praise

Germany deploy more troops & AWACS planes to it’s WW1 Ally Turkey against Russia

December 27, 2015 By administrator

0,,16703722_303,00(DW)  report The German military is preparing to send more troops to support NATO member state Turkey, bordering Syria. But it is unclear exactly how many soldiers might have to join the mission.

Germany’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of Defense informed the lower house of parliament, the Bundestag, that several of NATO’s Airborne Early Warning and Control planes (AWACS) would temporarily be moved from Germany to the central Turkish city of Konya.

“Since Germany provides 30 percent of all personnel, our armed forces will clearly also be affected by the move,” a spokesman for the Ministry of Defense said. However, it was unclear how many German soldiers exactly would be affected by the move.

The decision came after Turkey in November shot down a Russian jet fighter allegedly entering its air space while on a combat mission to neighboring Syria; the deployment of NATO’s AWACS planes is intended to stabilize the air space over Turkey and to avoid further shoot-downs of planes, as the diplomatic spat between the two nations that ensued threatened regional stability.

No need to go through parliament

The memo also pointed out that the Bundestag was not required to sign off the operation as this was not part of a combat mission. It specified that the self-declared “Islamic State” (IS) did not have any known air defenses of its own and that there were no indications that other parties involved in the conflict, such as Syria and Russia, would use their air force against NATO member Turkey. Some German parliamentarians have, however, demanded further explanations for the motivation behind the move.

The multinational crew aboard an AWACS plane is normally made up of 16 military personnel. With Germany providing roughly a third of the service members involved in the mission, the final number of Germans affected will depend on the number of planes agreed to be sent to the region.

A spokesman for Germany’s Ministry of Defense said that NATO was still in the “operational planning stages” and did not have any such details to divulge. The NATO plan also involves the strengthening of maritime defenses, which are also to be supplied by Germany as well as Denmark.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Germany, troops, Turkey

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