Gagrule.net

Gagrule.net News, Views, Interviews worldwide

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • GagruleLive
  • Armenia profile

Istanbul the most dangerous city for visitors, Serbian Red Star fan stabbed to death in Istanbul

November 22, 2014 By administrator

n_74668_1The body of the killed Serbian basketball fan is taken to the Forensics Institute. DHA photo

A supporter of the Serbian basketball club Red Star was stabbed and killed on Nov. 21 in Istanbul in front of the venue where a Turkish Airlines Euroleague game between Galatasaray Liv Hospital and the visiting side was being played.

The Serbian club claimed in a written statement that the 25-year-old Marko Ivkovic was killed by Galatasaray hooligans, while the Istanbul police said the killing was the result of a fight between Red Star’s supporters.

Serbian Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic voiced “outrage over the monstrous murder,” a government statement said on Nov. 22.

Serbia demands that the perpetrator be urgently “found, arrested and most severely punished,” it added.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: İstanbul, Killed, red-star, Serbian, stabbed

More than 1,000 killed in battle for Syria’s Kobane: Monitor

November 9, 2014 By administrator

BEIRUT – Agence France-Presse

n_74067_1Smoke rises after an airstrike from US-led coalition against ISIL militants in the Syrian town of Kobane, Nov. 8. AFP Photo / Aris Messinis

More than 1,000 people, mostly jihadists, have been killed in Kobane since the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) launched an offensive on the Syrian town nearly two months ago, a monitor said Nov. 9.

ISIL jihadists, who proclaimed a “caliphate” in June straddling territory captured in Iraq and Syria, launched their offensive for the town – also known as Ain al-Arab – in mid-September.

“At least 1,013 people have been killed in fighting in Ain al-Arab from the beginning of the offensive till last night,” said Syrian Observatory for Human Rights director Rami Abdel Rahman.

Militants from the Sunni extremist ISIL group accounted for 609 of those killed in the Kurdish town on the Turkish border, he said.

Another 363 of those killed were members of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), 16 were Kurdish volunteers, and one was a Syrian Arab fighter who had joined the ranks of the Kurds.

There were 24 civilians among the dead, said the director of the Britain-based group which relies on a network of sources on the ground for its information.

The toll for jihadists excludes those killed in U.S.-led strikes on ISIL.

Syrian Kurdish forces have been battling to repel ISIL militants from Kobane since September 16.

The fighters from the town have been joined by Syrian rebels who have fought both President Bashar al-Assad’s regime and ISIL, as well as by Iraqi Kurd peshmerga forces.

November/09/2014

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: jihadist, Killed, kobani

US air strike on Islamic State convoy killed leader’s key aide

November 9, 2014 By administrator

Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-BaghdadiUS unable to confirm if Isis leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi among casualties, amid warning that Isis leadership would regenerate

A key aide to the leader of Islamic State (Isis) was killed in a US strike on a convoy near the Iraqi city of Mosul that destroyed 10 vehicles carrying a number of the group’s top militants.

Abdul Rahman al-Athaee, also known as Abu Saja, is known to have died in the attack on Friday. A key aide to the Isis leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, he travelled frequently with the group’s top leadership.

Colonel Patrick Ryder, a spokesman at US central command, said on Saturday: “I can confirm that coalition aircraft did conduct a series of air strikes yesterday evening [Friday] in Iraq against what was assessed to be a gathering of Isil [Isis] leaders near Mosul. We cannot confirm if Isil leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was among those present.”

Iraqi officials were also unable to confirm whether Baghdadi was among the 50 casualties. Isis did not immediately issue any statement on the strikes.

The news came as Britain’s chief of the defence staff, General Sir Nick Houghton, warned on Sunday that the Isis leadership would regenerate itself even if Baghdadi had been killed.

In a sign that the UK believed there was a strong chance Baghdadi died in the air strikes, Houghton spoke of “potential death” as he said it would take some days for the US to confirm whether the Isis leader was alive or not.

Speaking on the Andrew Marr Show on BBC1, the general said: “I can’t absolutely confirm that al-Baghdadi has died. Even the Americans themselves are not yet in a position to do that. Probably it will take some days to have absolute confirmation.”

But Houghton warned that Isis would fight back if its leader had been killed. He said: “What I wouldn’t want to do is rush to the sense that the potential death of one of their totemic leaders is going to create some strategic reverse within Isis. They will regenerate leadership … because of the current potential attractiveness of this warped ideology. Unless we get the political dimension of the strategy in place then Isis has the potential to keep regenerating and certainly regenerating its leaders.

“In Iraq what is needed is government of national unity, inclusive government, so that all the ethnic dimensions of Iraq are combined. This is where the [Nouri] al-Maliki government got it horribly wrong.”

He added that it was important Maliki administration had been removed and that the Haider al-Abadi government – “which, in its early days is promising to be inclusive” – had support.

Baghdadi, who was said to keep a low profile even among his own armed supporters, made a rare public appearance at a mosque in Mosul in July in which he declared himself the leader of the new caliphate.

A US-led coalition has been launching air strikes on Isis militants and facilities in Iraq and Syria for months as part of an effort to give Iraqi forces the time and space to mount a more effective offensive.

The Pentagon announced on Friday that 1,500 additional US troops would boost the 1,600 military advisers that were already in Iraq to assist the country’s army.

Barack Obama also plans to request $5.6bn (£3.5bn) from Congress, including $1.6bn to be used to train and arm Iraqi forces.

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: islamic state, Killed, leader, US

Turkish troops kill Kurdish activist at Kobane border “Kader Ortakaya”

November 8, 2014 By administrator

By Alexander Whitcomb

77977Image1Kader Ortakaya, a 28 year old graduate student in Istanbul, was killed Thursday by Turkish forces on the Syrian border. Photo: Aso Viyan

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region – Turkish military killed a Kurdish activist after she crossed into Syria in an attempt to reach the besieged border town of Kobane, local witnesses said. Report Rudaw

Twenty-eight year old Kader Ortakaya was shot in the head on Thursday when she a dozen other activists rushed across the Turkish border into Kobane.  Her body was taken to a hospital inside the city.

The activists were able to cross because border police were distracted by a shootout between Turkish troops and armed Syrian Kurds on the other side of the border.

A group of artists belonging to the ‘Initiative for Free Art’ had formed a human chain near the border, and Ferhat Tunç, a prominent Zaza-Kurdish musician from Turkey, was giving an interview on television when violence began.

Turkish military fired tear gas on the crowd, who had been shouting slogans and flashing victory signs representing support for the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) and their affiliate in Syria, the Democratic Unity Party (PYD). The PKK is considered a terrorist group in Turkey, where it has conducted a three decade long insurrection against the government, which has a long history of violently suppressing Kurdish rights.

Witnesses report that the military then began to fire live ammunition on the crowd, at which point PYD supporters on the other side of the border returned fire. Several activists then crossed into Syria, at which point Kader Ortakaya was killed.

Ortakaya was a member of the Collective Freedom Platform, a PKK-linked group, and a graduate student at Marmara University in Istanbul.  She had been at the protests in Gezi Park last year, and had been monitoring the Mürşitpınar crossing and other areas on the Syrian-Turkish border for over three weeks.

The group of activists she was with had been watching closely for instances of cooperation between Turkey and the Islamic State (ISIS), as well as for ways to support the PYD’s militia—the People’s Protection Units (YPG)—and as many as 500 citizens who remain in the city.

The PKK-linked Firat News Agency wrote that she was “deliberately” targeted by Turkish military, which had been silent about the event.

Meanwhile Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga and Free Syrian Army forces have helped the local YPG fighters slowly reverse ISIS gains in the city.

“The situation is getting better,” says Ahmad Gardi, the Peshmerga commander on the ground in Kobane. “New weapons have arrived, and we will get more whenever they are needed. We will not leave until the city is wiped clean of ISIS.”

Gardi added that no Peshmerga had yet been killed, and that they have destroyed a number of ISIS tanks and artillery.

Polat Jan, a spokesperson for the YPG, told Rudaw that 250 YPG fighter have been killed since the siege began over seven weeks ago, but that the “existence of Peshmarga in Kobane changed the balance of power. We are advancing towards ISIS positions, and now the majority of the city is under our control.”

The majority of fighting has been in ISIS-controlled areas of east Kobane in recent days. A US-led coalition airstrike 25km east of the city on Thursday led some of the city’s defenders to believe ISIS had evacuated a number of troops, but the concentration of the estimated 3,000-4,000 ISIS militants around Kobane remains unclear.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: activist, Killed, Kurd, turkish troops

Gunmen kill 3 Turkish soldiers in Kurdish town

October 25, 2014 By administrator

TURKISH-SLODIERS-KIlledUnidentified gunmen have reportedly killed three Turkish soldiers in the volatile southeast of the country.

The incident happened on Saturday in the Kurdish town of Yuksekova in Hakkari Province, bordering Iraq and Iran, according to Turkey’s semi-official Anatolia news agency.

The soldiers were shot to death from behind as they were visiting the town in plain clothes to buy electrical supplies for the military post where they served.

The soldiers were taken to the hospital but succumbed to their injuries.

The assailants escaped the scene of the attack, but a security operation is underway to arrest them.

No group has so far claimed responsibility for the attack, but Turkish officials say militants from the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), who have carried out similar attacks in the past, are the prime suspects.

The attack comes as Kurds in Turkey are angry at the government for preventing them from crossing into neighboring Syria to join the fight against ISIL terrorists in the Syrian Kurdish town of Kobani.

Ankara also refuses to intervene along its border with Syria where ISIL militants have besieged Kobani.

Turkish media reported on October 14 that the military had launched airstrikes on two PKK bases in the Daglica area in Hakkari Province.

The strikes reportedly followed three days of PKK shelling on a military outpost in the Kurdish-majority province near the Iraqi border.

The PKK has been fighting for an autonomous Kurdish region in southeastern Turkey since the 1980s. The conflict has left more than 40,000 people dead.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Killed, soldiers, Turkey

Turkey 3 Kurdish PKK killed amid fears of increased attacks by PKK and ISIL

October 24, 2014 By administrator

195409_newsdetailThree Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) members were killed on Thursday by security forces after they set a power plant on fire, as concerns about Turkey being targeted by the PKK and the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) have grown following a series of murders in the east. Report TodayZaman

The National Police Department has reportedly issued a warning against the possibility of further terrorist attacks amid consecutive murders that have occupied the political agenda since early October, when protests over the border town of Kobani claimed more than 40 lives in Turkey. Meanwhile, the PKK has intensified its attacks both on security forces and military outposts.

Bingöl Deputy Police Chief Atıf Şahin and police officer Hüseyin Hatipoğlu were killed by gunfire from terrorists on Oct. 9, while Bingöl Police Chief Atalay Ülker was severely injured in the assault and hospitalized. Four of the alleged assailants were killed in clashes after the attack, Interior Minister Efkan Ala announced. However, there are serious unsolved points in the incident, as the PKK has argued that the four individuals were not members of the terrorist group, prompting questions about the attack and its perpetrators.

However, claims of negligence regarding the deaths have appeared in the media, as a court rejected the police’s request for a search of the city following intelligence that a group of terrorists had entered the city to target the police force.

According to the media reports, the intelligence reports received by the National Police Department revealed that extremist groups are preparing for more intensified assaults on big cities and are targeting prominent figures in society, such as prosecutors, judges, police chiefs, lawyers and members of civil society.

The same intelligence report also warned that ISIL cells have decided to stage suicide bombings in seven Turkish provinces, and all police units in the country have been notified in case the possible attacks take place.

Sedat Laçiner, a professor of international relations and the rector of Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart University (ÇOMÜ), told Today’s Zaman that assaults with bomb-laden vehicles and suicide bombings are expected in the upcoming days because of the current atmosphere, in which coordination between the government and police force has been severely damaged since the government started conducting operations into the police force. “The operations and investigations into the police, as well as [massive] reassignments, have created a vulnerable security [situation] for Turkey, since the newly appointed members of the police do not have enough experience in the fields of intelligence and terrorism, which are crucial [with regard] to hampering terrorist activities in the country,” he added.

Since a major corruption scandal implicating then-Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s family and inner circle went on public on Dec. 17, the government has been carrying out sweeping operations into the police force by accusing some members of plotting against the government, which is considered a move to evade the corruption accusations.

3 PKK killed after attack on power plant

 

Despite the fact that government-led meetings with the PKK’s imprisoned leader, Abdullah Öcalan, and other Kurdish political actors are continuing to try and solve the country’s long-decades Kurdish problem, three members of the PKK were killed after they raided a hydroelectric power plant and clashed with gendarmes in the eastern province of Kars on Thursday evening.

Four PKK members staged an attack at a hydroelectric power plant in Kağızman, a district of Kars province. A clash erupted between them and district gendarmes that had arrived at the plant. The four individuals refused to surrender and opened fire at the gendarmes while attempting to flee by a car. The gendarmerie killed three terrorists and launched an operation in order to capture the fourth.

It was reported that four AK-47s and many hand grenades were discovered in the car used by the PKK members.

The PKK is designated as a terrorist organization by the US, European Union and Turkey.

ISIL abducts Syrian opposition commander and son

 

Confirming claims that ISIL is becoming more active in Turkish territory, 15 ISIL militants last week were reported to have abducted an opposition commander, referred to as Hasan M., along with his son, after crossing into Turkey from Syria in the border city of Şanlıurfa.

The Taraf daily reported that the commander and his son were rescued.

As Turkey is now discussing the issue of whether it is the correct move to supply arms to Kurdish peshmerga elements fighting against ISIL in Syrian town of Kobani in the wake of the US having air-dropped weaponry for the militants, ISIL has intensified its activities in Turkish soil, especially in the country’s Southeast.

According to the news report, 15 ISIL militants abducted Hasan M., a commander with the Free Syrian Army (FSA) fighting against Syria’s Bashar al-Assad regime, and his son, but the hostages were rescued while injured following an operation into the militants in Şanlıurfa’s Akçakale district.

Lawyer Tanay attacked with gun

 

In another incident, former Contemporary Jurists’ Association (ÇHD) İstanbul branch head Taylan Tanay was attacked by three unidentified armed people suspected of belonging to the far-left terrorist Revolutionary People’s Liberation Party/Front (DHKP/C) in the Avcılar district of İstanbul on Wednesday night. Tanay sought refuge in a supermarket to escape after they shot at him.

The police suspected that the DHKP/C terrorist organization was behind the attack since Tanay is reportedly listed on a blacklist of the organization. The police have launched an investigation into the attack.

Meanwhile, the People’s Democratic Party (HDP) asked the government on Thursday to establish a parliamentary investigation commission related to the Bingöl assault, but the proposal was rejected by ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) deputies in Parliament. The HDP claimed that the Bingöl attack is a mysterious, provocative incident.

The main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) also gave support to the HDP’s proposal, arguing that four people who have no links to the Bingöl incident were executed after the attack, and accused the government of trying to cover up the incident, accusing deep state elements nested in the state of being behind the assassination.

KCK scouts police officers’ homes

 

Members of the outlawed Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK) are reported to be preparing to assassinate a number of intelligence and terror chiefs and officers in the police force, and have scouted the aforementioned polices officers’ homes for the planned murders.

Media reports have argued that a list of police officers who were removed from their posts following Dec. 17 was handed over to KCK militants to be assassinated.

Since Kobani, consecutive murders mar country’s agenda

A series of killings that started in October during the Kobani protests has gained momentum with a new wave of unsolved murders in Turkey’s East, a region that became known in the 1990s for assassinations allegedly by agents of the deep state.

Within just the last two weeks, four people have been murdered in various eastern and southeastern provinces, and an Iranian journalist, Serene Shim, was killed on Saturday in a highly suspicious car accident the day after she complained that the Turkish government had accused her of being an agent collecting intelligence for a foreign country.

In the latest incident, Salih Tekinalp, a former mayor of Şanlıurfa’s Suruç district, and his son Sinan Tekinalp, were shot and killed in their car by unidentified assailants on Sunday.

Also, a shop owner in the city of Van, Muhammed Latif Şener, (66), was shot in the head on Saturday by unidentified persons while heading home. The Patriotic Revolutionist Youth Movement (YDG-H) — an affiliate of the PKK — is accused of being behind the murder.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Killed, PKK, Turkey

Armenian businessman killed in Mexico

October 22, 2014 By administrator

Ensenada1An Armenian businessman was killed in Ensenada, Mexico.

When he had left a restaurant and approached his car, the killers approached and shot him.

According to the police, the victim was Hayk Rushayan, 38, who was originally from Armenia and was granted Mexican citizenship.

Minutes before his death, Rushayan was withdrawing money from a bank for his business, Ensenada.net reported.

According to investigation, the thieves followed and shot him, and Rushayan died on the spot.

The attackers fled the scene on a car with American license plates, but some time thereafter, they left the vehicle behind and fled in an unknown direction.

The police are searching for the killers.

Hayk Rushayan had a waste paper recycling plant in Ensenada, in the Valle Dorado region.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, businessman, Killed

URGENT: Press TV Correspondent Accused of Spying Killed in Turkey

October 19, 2014 By administrator

Press TV Correspondent KilledTEHRAN (FNA)- Press TV correspondent in Turkey Serena Shim, who was accused earlier this month by the Turkish Intelligence Ministry of spying – probably due to her coverage of Ankara’s stance on ISIL atrocities in the Syrian Kurdish town of Kobani and the recent protests in Turkey – was killed in a car accident on Sunday.

The late Shim was in a passenger car with some other journalists and reporters when the incident took place. The latest reports said another passenger has also been badly hurt in the car accident.

Press TV said Shim has been killed near Turkey-Syria border. Shim was killed in car accident as she was returning from report scene, the English-language TV channel said.

As heavy clashes rage on in and around Kobani, the Ankara government is preventing some journalists from reporting the developments on the ground in the border region.

Press TV correspondent Serena Shim said on Friday that Ankara has accused her of spying probably due to some of the stories she has covered about Turkey’s stance on the ISIL terrorists in Kobani and its surroundings.

Shim said she was among the few journalists obtaining stories of militants infiltrating into Syria through the Turkish border, adding that she had received images from militants crossing the Turkish border into Syria in World Food Organization and other NGOs’ trucks.

“I think it’s definitely because of the reporting about Syria,” Shim said, pointing to her reports about “the so-called Free Syrian Army going in [Syria] and catching these Takfiri militants and getting their passport stamps and getting first-hand information that they were actually inside while Turkey was still hiding this.”

The Turkish government alleges that “I am spying and that I am working with the Turkish opposition but it’s only logical that I would speak with the Turkish opposition just the same way I would speak with other parties … because that’s my job,” she added.

She flatly rejected accusations against her, saying she was “surprised” at this accusation “because I have nothing to hide and I have never done anything aside my job.”

Kobani and its surroundings have been under attack since mid-September, with the ISIL militants capturing dozens of nearby Kurdish villages.

Turkey has been accused of backing ISIL militants in Syria.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: correspondent, Killed, presstv, Turkey

Turkish jihadist killed during anti-ISIL air strikes in Syria

September 24, 2014 By administrator

193063_newsdetailÜmit Yaşar Toprak, who left his family in Bursa province and went to Syria two months ago to join the terrorist organization al-Nusra Front and fight against the Syrian regime, was killed in the first round of air strikes conducted against Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) fighters in Syria by the United States and its Arab allies on Tuesday. Todayzaman

According to media reports, Toprak, who went by a codename of Ebu Yusuf el Turki, left his wife and five children in Bursa to join the al-Qaeda-affiliated terrorist group in Syria about two months ago. The reports, which say Toprak was a high-ranking commander in a unit of al-Nusra, claim that he died early on Wednesday.

His family refused to comment on his alleged death.

Toprak also fought during the war in Afghanistan and was one of seven people detained by the Bursa police in April 2004 on suspicions of planning to assassinate then-US President George W. Bush during the president’s visit to İstanbul to attend a NATO summit. According to media reports, the seven detainees were members of the al-Qaeda-linked Ansar al-Islam terrorist organization, and they were planning to carry out a suicide bomb attack against Bush. Toprak’s brother was also among the seven detainees, media reports said.

The brother was arrested, but Toprak was released pending trial and then acquitted by the court. Speaking to a private Doğan news agency reporter, Toprak said at the time, “We hated and cursed the offensive policies of US and Israel.”

The US and its Arab allies bombed Syria on Tuesday, killing scores of ISIL fighters and members of a separate al-Qaeda-linked group, opening a new front against militants by joining a three-year-old civil war.

US Central Command said on Tuesday that Bahrain, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates participated in or supported the strikes against ISIL targets around the eastern cities of Raqqa, Deir al-Zor, Al-Hasakah and Al-Bukamal.

” A mix of fighters, bombers, remotely piloted aircraft and Tomahawk Land Attack Missiles conducted 14 strikes against ISIL targets. …The targets included ISIL fighters, training compounds, headquarters and command and control facilities, storage facilities, a finance center, supply trucks and armed vehicles,” US Central Command said in a news release.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: jihadist, Killed, Turkish

Famous Russia celebrities’ attorney is killed

September 14, 2014 By administrator

16378Tatyana Akimtseva, the attorney of Russia’s celebrities such as singers Alla Pugacheva, Philipp Kirkorov and Kristina Orbakaitė, was killed Friday evening in the Russian capital city.

The dead bodies of Akimtseva, 59, and her driver were found in Downtown Moscow, inside her car.

The attorney had earlier confessed to have been threatened, Starhit reported.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: attorney, Killed, Russia

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 13
  • 14
  • 15
  • 16
  • 17
  • Next Page »

Support Gagrule.net

Subscribe Free News & Update

Search

GagruleLive with Harut Sassounian

Can activist run a Government?

Wally Sarkeesian Interview Onnik Dinkjian and son

https://youtu.be/BiI8_TJzHEM

Khachic Moradian

https://youtu.be/-NkIYpCAIII
https://youtu.be/9_Xi7FA3tGQ
https://youtu.be/Arg8gAhcIb0
https://youtu.be/zzh-WpjGltY





gagrulenet Twitter-Timeline

Tweets by @gagrulenet

Archives

Books

Recent Posts

  • Pashinyan Government Pays U.S. Public Relations Firm To Attack the Armenian Apostolic Church
  • Breaking News: Armenian Former Defense Minister Arshak Karapetyan Pashinyan is agent
  • November 9: The Black Day of Armenia — How Artsakh Was Signed Away
  • @MorenoOcampo1, former Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, issued a Call to Action for Armenians worldwide.
  • Medieval Software. Modern Hardware. Our Politics Is Stuck in the Past.

Recent Comments

  • Baron Kisheranotz on Pashinyan’s Betrayal Dressed as Peace
  • Baron Kisheranotz on Trusting Turks or Azerbaijanis is itself a betrayal of the Armenian nation.
  • Stepan on A Nation in Peril: Anything Armenian pashinyan Dismantling
  • Stepan on Draft Letter to Armenian Legal Scholars / Armenian Bar Association
  • administrator on Turkish Agent Pashinyan will not attend the meeting of the CIS Council of Heads of State

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in