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Did Turkey’s MIT assassinated Press TV reporter Serena Shim? (Video)

October 20, 2014 By administrator

Serena-Shimpresstv A political analyst has termed the suspicious death of Press TV’s correspondent in Turkey, Serena Shim, as an act of “assassination” by the government of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. 

“The reality is that our sister Serena was assassinated by Erdogan’s regime,” Shabir Hassan Ali, a political analyst from London, said in an interview with Press TV on Sunday night, adding, “Serena was hounded in a fashion by Turkish intelligence.”

The analyst further said that she was “assassinated” because “she gave the truth about what this regime in Turkey, that has been oppressing its people, that has been oppressing the Kurdish population and that is actively working to support…this terrorist organization known as the ISIL” is doing.

The analyst further called the killing of Maya Nasser, another Press TV correspondent, in Syria an act of “assassination” by terrorist groups.

In 2012, Nasser was shot in the neck and the chest by a foreign-backed sniper in the Syrian capital Damascus.

Shim, an American citizen of Lebanese origin, was killed on Sunday as she was in Turkey to cover the ongoing war in the strategic Syrian town of Kobani.

She was going back to her hotel from a report scene in the Turkish city of Suruç when the car carrying her collided with a heavy vehicle. The identity and whereabouts of the truck driver remain unknown.

Shim covered reports for Press TV in Lebanon, Iraq, and Ukraine.

On Friday, she told Press TV that the Turkish intelligence agency had 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, adding that she feared being arrested.

Shim 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 the ISIL militants in Syria.

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: assassination, Serena Shim, Turkey

US-Lebanese reporter dies in Turkey, Iranian TV calls accident ‘suspicious’

October 20, 2014 By administrator

n_73214_1Lebanese-American reporter Serena Shim, 30, was married with two children.

A Lebanese-American reporter has been killed in a car crash near Turkey’s border with Syria, in what the state-owned Iranian TV station she worked for described as a “suspicious” accident.

Serena Shim, a 30-year-old U.S. citizen of Lebanese origin, was killed on Oct. 19 while she was returning to her hotel from the scene in the city of Suruç in Turkey’s Şanlıurfa province when the car her team had rented collided with a heavy vehicle.

Shim, who had been covering the battle for Kobane for Press TV in Lebanon, Iraq and Ukraine, was killed, while cameraman Judy Irish was injured in the crash. The driver of the concrete mixer that hit the reporter’s car has been arrested, although his identity has not been released, according to Doğan News Agency. Turkey’s semi-official Anadolu Agency reported that Shim had arrived in Suruç last week.

On Oct. 17, Shim told Press TV that the Turkish intelligence agency had accused her of spying “probably due to some of the stories she had covered about Turkey’s stance on the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant [ISIL] militants in Kobane” across the border from Suruç, adding that she feared being arrested. She also claimed that she had received images of militants crossing the Turkish border into Syria in World Food Organization and other NGOs trucks.

İzzettin Küçük, governor of Şanlıurfa, denied Press TV’s claims, describing the allegations as “completely baseless.” After stressing that a detailed explanation about Shim’s death would be made after the investigation is concluded, Küçük said the claims were “attempts to put Turkey in a difficult situation.”

October/20/2014

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: dies, Iran, reporter, suspicious, Turkey

Turkish history textbooks for primary school, Denial to the school by Taner Akcam

October 20, 2014 By administrator

Taner Akcam-Schools-Turkey

Taner Akcam

I had the opportunity to analyze the new history textbooks for primary school, middle school and high school. I limited my review everything about the Armenian question, but I really invite other journalists or researchers to do likewise on everything related to other Christians, Jews and Alevis. This would be very useful. In a context where the AKP to lay the foundations for a “new Turkey” campaign slogan of President Erdogan, it was interesting to see what the designers thought the Armenians of this “new Turkey.” We learn a lot in those history books about how these “visionaries” intend shape new generations. The message is very clear: it is to educate young people as part of a complotiste vision of society and the world, like the theories developed by the Ergenekon network [Turkish mafia network].

It is thus explained to young students in their final year of primary school that Turkey faces three major threats. The Armenian issue is presented as the first of these threats, then comes terrorism and finally the Christian missionaries, who pose a serious threat to national security! You read that right. The designers of the new Turkey share with the supporters of Ergenekon network an idea of ​​threats to the nation that led to the murder of Hrant Dink [intellectual Istanbul Armenian killed in 2007] and that of three Christian missionaries in Malatya the same year [they had been slain; their alleged killers were released this year]. That is what these “innovators” want to pass on to our children. Armenians are portrayed in these books as separatist manipulated by foreign powers who attack the Turks and Muslims who are desperate to impose their lie about the genocide. Nothing new in that speech, which is only a repetition of the arguments of the most famous Turkish denialists.

“Events Armenian” .. An important place is given to the genocide, designated as the “Armenian events of 1915” in the history book for middle school handbook. It repeats all the cliches about “Armenians collaborated with the Russians,” the Armenian organizations “who fomented uprisings in Anatolia” and did not hesitate to “kill those of their compatriots who did not want to follow up. “ Armenians, “who were ordered to kill their Turkish neighbors took advantage of the absence of men gone to the front to attack the defenseless Turkish villages and massacring the population there, sparing the children.” According to these books, they do not stay there and “hit the Ottoman army in the back by sabotaging their supply lines, destroying roads and bridges.” “By spying on behalf of Russia and causing unrest in the cities, they also facilitated the occupation [of eastern Anatolia] Russia.” When you read these sentences, we must have in mind that, even if they are not very numerous, there are still Armenians in Turkey and that their children will also have to read such allegations to school [including the Armenian community schools] ! You can still read this manual a thesis about which we do not know whether to laugh or cry, that “the deportation of Armenians was organized to ensure their safety.” But who then threatened? The Armenians of course, that “thus killing all of them who refused to participate in the uprising.” On the figures, these books evoke 300,000 Armenians died “because of war and disease,” while Armenians “massacred 600,000 Turks and 500,000 others forced to leave their homes” … And do s’ Is it here that in 1915 [the date of the Armenian genocide]. What we can conclude is that, to embody a paradise, it seems necessary to first define hell. Those who claim to have a vision [the AKP] and feel the need to define the type of enemy that would prevent the implementation of this vision. It must therefore be noted in reading these books, that Armenians are enemies of the “new Turkey.”

- Taner Akcam

Posted on September 17

- Taraf (excerpts) Istanbul

Monday, October 20, 2014,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: denial, Schools, text books, Turkey

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

Turkey, New pro-Kurdish party established in Diyarbakır

October 19, 2014 By administrator

195001_newsdetailA new pro-Kurdish party was announced in the southeastern province of Diyarbakır on Sunday.

The party is known by the initials of its Kurdish name, Partiya Azadiya Kurdistan (Kurdistan Freedom Party). Kurdish politician Mustafa Özçelik was elected chairman of PAK, which pursues the establishment of a Kurdish state as a goal.

“Just like Halabja and Anfal laid the foundation of Iraqi Kurdistan, the Shingal and Kobani massacres will historically be the beginning of the union of Kurds and Kurdistan, and of [Kurdistan] becoming a state,” Özçelik was quoted as saying by the private Cihan news agency during a gathering at a Diyarbakır hotel, the hall of which was draped with Kurdish flags.

The establishment of PAK, he said, is the culmination of the work of a platform which was established in Diyarbakır a year ago for the purpose of founding a “Kurdistani party.”

“Today, the state accepts the existence of Kurds. President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan even uttered the word Kurdistan, even though this was on the occasion of a visit to Turkey by [Iraqi Kurdish leader] Mr. Massoud Barzani,” Özçelik said. “As an acknowledgement of this fact, some changes are being made concerning language, education and cultural rights. These are certainly important. It is in the interests of all of us that the policies of denial have receded, albeit to a certain extent.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: KFP, Kurd, Mustafa Özçelik, Turkey

Turkey-ISIL tie no longer hidden: Syria deputy FM

October 19, 2014 By administrator

382818_Syria-MiqdadSyria’s deputy foreign minister says Turkey is responsible for the acts of terror that the ISIL Takfiri militants commit in Iraq and Syria. Reported presstv

“Turkey is not a part of the solution, but a basic part of the problem,” Faisal Miqdad was quoted as saying in an article published on Lebanon’s al-Binaa newspaper on Saturday.

“The relationship between the Turkish regime and the ISIS (ISIL) terrorists is no longer hidden,” he added.

Miqdad also commented on Turkey’s failure in a third round of run-off voting for the second of the two Western seats on the UN Security Council.

“Turkey’s failure to have support of UN states to gain a non-permanent seat on Security Council last Thursday is a clear expression of the world’s rejection of the Turkish policies against Syria and Iraq and its ally with the ISIS terrorist organization.”

Turkey has been accused of backing ISIL in Syria. The Turkish government continues to block the supply of military equipment and reinforcements for Kurdish fighters defending Syria’s strategic border town of Kobani against the terrorists.

Ankara prevents Turkish Kurds from crossing the border into Kobani to join the Kurds in the battle for the town.

“The friends of Turkey, particularly the US administration and its security bodies and the European and Arab colleagues of (Turkish President) Erdogan and (Prime Minister) Davutoglu became convinced that it is impossible to continue supporting the Turkish leadership’s involvement in backing terrorism, including the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) terrorist organization and other branches of al-Qaeda terrorist organization,” the Syrian official argued.

ISIL has added further reinforcements to its ranks in an effort to break the resistance of Kurdish fighters.

So

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: ISIL, Syria, tie, Turkey

UN vote confirms Turkey’s waning influence

October 19, 2014 By administrator

By Semih Idiz Columnist for al-monitor

Turkey's President Erdogan speaks during the U.N. Security Council meeting in New YorkTurkey failed on Oct. 16 to win the coveted nonpermanent seat at the UN Security Council that it hoped would reinforce its influence in regional affairs, which has seriously dwindled in recent years. The result is a disappointment for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, who hoped for a victory at the United Nations to counter claims that their policies have left Turkey isolated internationally.

Turkey was racing with Spain and New Zealand for the two nonpermanent seats open to the “Western European and Other States Group” for the years 2015-16. New Zealand got elected with 145 votes, gaining the required two-thirds of the vote in the first round.

The race between Turkey and Spain continued until Turkey lost in the third round when its support dropped down to 60 votes — down from 109 in the first round and 73 in the second. Spain’s vote went up to 132 in the final count.

Despite the odds against Turkey, Foreign Minister Ahmet Cavusoglu sounded optimistic the day before the voting, during an expensive reception held by the Turkish delegation in the famous Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York City to lobby for Ankara’s Security Council bid.

“Everyone is aware of the role Turkey plays in international organizations and at the UN,“ he said. “We think all our nice efforts will, with the grace of God, be reflected on to the ballot box tomorrow. Of course, this is a vote and all kinds of results may come out. But we believe, God permitting, that we will get the result of the work we put in.”

This optimism is seen to have been misplaced. The result of the secret ballot held in the UN General Assembly was in stark contrast with the result obtained in 2008 when Turkey got a record 151 votes out of 193 and was elected to Security Council in the first round of voting for 2009-10.

At that time Ankara’s prestige was high, not just among Islamic countries, but also Asian, African and even Caribbean countries that hoped to have an influential voice at the Security Council through Turkey.

The result of the voting this time has also raised questions about the logic behind Turkey’s applying for the Security Council membership only two years after it held this membership. Diplomats have been pointing out for some time that it is unlikely for a country to win a seat in the Security Council so soon after having held it before.

This point was also underlined for Al-Monitor by retired Ambassador Volkan Vural, who was Turkey’s permanent representative at the UN in 1998-2000, and who is currently a member of the board of directors of TUSIAD, the influential Turkish Industry and Business Association.

“Applying for Security Council membership so soon after having held it before was hardly a clever move. Our chance of winning was a million to one, particularly when Turkey’s popularity in the world is so low,” Vural said.

Asked if Ankara might still have had a chance of winning if its international influence was high, given that countries in the highly volatile Middle East could do with such a voice in the Security Council at such a critical time, Vural said this was highly unlikely, given historic precedent.

This brings up the obvious question: Why did Turkey apply for this membership when seasoned diplomats who know how the UN system works were aware that the chances of winning were so slim?

“This overconfidence by the government has no logical explanation. Perhaps they expected support from the Middle East, some Arab and European countries, and particularly African countries, but that support was obviously not there,” Vural said, questioning the government’s diplomatic capabilities

Pointing to the current war in Turkey between the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) and the Islamist Gulen movement, headed by the Pennsylvania-based Turkish preacher Fethullah Gulen, Vural made an interesting point with regard to support for Turkey from African countries. “The Fethullah group has a strong presence in Africa with its schools, companies and trade network,” Vural said. ”The government worked through this group in the past to canvass support for Turkey. The fight between the government and this group is also likely to have had a negative influence on support from African governments.”

He added that it was unlikely that Turkey would get support from the Middle East, given the current the state of ties with regional countries, particularly with Egypt. “It is not possible to get support from the Arab world if your ties with the most important Arab country are so bad,” he said.

Pointing to the lukewarm ties Turkey has with Gulf states, which are angered by Ankara’s support for the Muslim Brotherhood and its vitriolic attacks against Egypt and its president, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, Vural said it should be considered a success that Turkey even got the support it did in the first round of voting in the UN General Assembly.

Diplomats and foreign policy observers point out that 2010 was the turning point when Turkey’s international prestige started plummeting. This also corresponds to Davutoglu’s Foreign Ministry from May 2009 through August 2014, after which he became prime minister to replace Erdogan, who was elected president.

Davutoglu’s overambitious plans to make Turkey the key player in the Middle East and the Balkans had resulted in charges of neo-Ottomanism being leveled against him. This accusation continues to come up in the Middle East today in countries that are unhappy with Turkey’s policies in Egypt and Syria, as well as its support for the Muslim Brotherhood and Hamas, which are loathed by the region’s established order.

Many in the region also look on Turkey today as a country that has inflamed sectarian divisions along the Sunni-Shiite divide, and has backed radical Sunni groups such as Jabhat al-Nusra and the Islamic State.

Other reasons cited for Turkey’s loss of international prestige include the worsening state of democracy and human rights in the country since the brutal reaction by the authorities to the Gezi Park protesters in 2013, which got wide international coverage, and the rolling back of reforms that had been enacted by Turkey for its EU membership application.

The official statement by the Foreign Ministry after Turkey won Security Council membership in 2008 underlined, among other things, Ankara’s commitment to peaceful settlements of regional disputes, and its determination to play the role of facilitator to this end, as well as contributing to dialogue between faiths.

Despite these commitments, Turkey today has hardly any diplomatic ties left with Israel and Egypt, and very little dialogue with regional countries like Iran, Saudi Arabia and Jordan on establishing regional stability. Meanwhile, Erdogan’s continual criticism of the UN over Syria and Gaza, and efforts to spearhead what appears to be a futile campaign to reform the Security Council and reduce the influence of the permanent members, also appears to have brought little support for Turkey.

Cavusoglu told reporters in New York after Turkey’s failed attempt to gain a seat at the Security Council that some countries were unhappy over Turkey’s independent foreign policy. “There may be those who are disturbed by our principled stance,” Cavusoglu said, adding that time would prove Turkey correct.

“We will not abandon this stance for the sake of votes. We will continue to be the voice and conscience of countries that expect this from us,” he said, trying to put a brave face on a glaring diplomatic failure that will no doubt be also used politically in Turkey against the AKP government.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Turkey, UN, Vote, waning

Turkey on the edge

October 18, 2014 By administrator

By Alexis Papachelas

Turkey’s much-hyped “zero-problems” foreign policy has turned out to be a flop as the country finds itself facing a number of open fronts. That ambitious dogma was masterminded by newly installed Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu during his tenure at the country’s Foreign Ministry. Davutoglu now has to deal with the fallout from his own policy.

Turkey’s relationship with Washington has become fragile, if not explosive. No one really knows what happened exactly, or when, but there is clearly a great deal of mistrust separating the Obama-Biden team from the Erdogan-Davutoglu duo. Even experts on Turkish-US relations are uncertain about the causes behind the damage.

Meanwhile, the once-strategic relationship between Turkey and Israel has also been shaken. Many observers say the rupture between the former allies in the region runs deep – so deep in fact that even a neo-Kemalist administration would find it hard to mend. The reason here, some commentators have suggested, is that Turkey provided crucial information to Iran that seriously compromised Israeli interests.

The Turks also made the wrong move in the case of Egypt, which put them at odds with the government in Cairo. The Egyptian establishment has always been skeptical of Ankara’s assertiveness in the region anyway.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: edge, on, Turkey

Turkish prosecutors drop corruption investigation that had rocked the government

October 18, 2014 By administrator

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — Turkish prosecutors dropped a bribery and corruption investigation that forced four government ministers to step down earlier in the year, drawing criticism on Saturday from an international graft watchdog which said the case should have been followed through to counter allegations that powerful politicians are able to act with impunity.

Prosecutors in Istanbul ruled Friday that there were no grounds for legal action against 53 suspects, including the sons of two former government ministers and a prominent Iranian businessman, who were suspected of bribery and corruption in a case that shook the country in December, the state-run Anadolu Agency reported. A separate investigation, involving President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s son, was similarly dismissed in September.

The corruption watchdog, Transparency International, slammed the prosecutors’ decision to drop the case saying the move “calls into question the rule of law in Turkey.”

‘These are serious allegations and Turkish people need to see that there is a transparent judicial process that shows there is no impunity for people in power,” said Oya Ozarslan who heads Transparency International in Turkey. “The failure to complete the case is a bad signal for the fight against corruption.”

The government had rejected the corruption allegations, insisting the probes against Erdogan’s allies and son were orchestrated by followers of an influential U.S.-based Muslim cleric in a bid to topple the government.

Erdogan’s government immediately moved to replace prosecutors and police investigating the probe and dozens of police officers have been detained across Turkey on suspicion of illegal wiretaps.

Erdogan, who was prime minister at the time, won local elections in March and presidential elections in August despite the corruption allegations.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: bribery, corruption, dropped, Turkey

Turkey, True journalism fights for survival under AKP gov’t

October 18, 2014 By administrator

194868_newsdetailVeteran Turkish journalists who have lost their jobs for basically trying to perform their profession have said they did not experience as much government pressure and intervention during the turbulent coup times of the past as they have under the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government today. Report by Today Zaman

As it stood, Turkey is not a country with a brilliant record on freedom of the press but developments in the country, particularly starting with the Gezi Park protests of 2013 and continuing with a graft probe on Dec. 17 in which senior government members were implicated, have culminated in heavy government scrutiny over the media.

Prominent journalists such as Nazlı Ilıcak, Yavuz Baydar, Mehmet Altan and many others were sacked either because they criticized the government, they called on the government to shed light on the graft allegations, they published content which the government did not like or because they did not criticize the faith-based Hizmet movement against which the government has launched a battle since last year.

The government accuses Hizmet of masterminding the graft investigation and claims that Hizmet’s followers have established a “parallel structure” or “parallel state” within the state, an allegation Hizmet strongly denies. The AK Party government, which has launched a crackdown on Hizmet-affiliated institutions and organizations, also called for a boycott of the group’s media outlets. President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who was the prime minister until his election to the top state post in August, has repeatedly called on people not to buy the group’s papers.

Other journalists like pro-government Sabah daily’s Yasemin Taşkın lost their jobs for other reasons. Taşkın was sacked because her husband, an Italian, conducted an interview with Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen, who inspired the Hizmet movement, for an Italian daily.

Recordings of phone conversations between Erdoğan and some media figures which were posted online following the graft investigation clearly show how Erdoğan resorts to either carrots or sticks to make journalists toe the line. Critical journalists were sacked from their jobs or faced criminal cases and media bosses were intimidated by tax fines upon Erdoğan’s direct orders while others who praised the government’s every act were being commended and reportedly received huge salaries.

Concerns over the deterioration of freedom of the press in Turkey have been raised by various international organizations such as the Human Rights Watch (HRW), Reporters Without Borders (RSF), US-based watchdog Freedom House and the EU. Freedom House downgraded Turkey from “Partly Free” to “Not Free” in its “Freedom of the Press 2014” report in May.

In its annual progress report released early this month, the EU also highlighted its worries about freedom of the press in Turkey, noting that pressure on the press in Turkey leads to widespread self-censorship, reflecting a restrictive approach to freedom of expression. The government has so far opted to shrug off the reports of these organizations, with former Foreign Minister and current Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu even saying that if journalists can safely return to their homes, this is because of freedom of the press in Turkey.

President of Turkish Journalists Syndicate Uğur Güç: It has never been revealed this clearly before

 

We are living in an era when people in the opposition are actually losing their jobs. We’ve experienced this in the past, but once Gezi occurred, the whole situation became even worse. We have all sorts of examples before us; people who have been fired for the tweets they made, people forced out of jobs because of opposition expressed over Twitter.

The goal driving all this is ultimately to get journalists under control, allowing the government to control the media. It’s never been this clear and out in the open before. In the wake of the 1990s, journalists would be given encouragement, and some media bosses would even change their publication policies accordingly. But the media world, even then, never experienced pressure so extreme as it does today. The point at which we have arrived is one where either the prime minister passes on the message of what he wants, or actually makes the phone call himself and has someone fired. Not only this, but once a journalist has been fired, there’s a record on that person, and he or she can no longer find work anywhere else either.

Mehmet Altan: Even including the Sept. 12 regime, there’s never been this much pressure

 

This whole period began with AK Party İstanbul bureau head Aziz Babuşcu saying, “We’ve parted paths with the liberals.” There has never been this much pressure on the media, not even during the Sept. 12 regime. Some 51 percent of Turkish people are not regularly connected to the internet. They learn of events and the news only from the television and sometimes the newspapers. And so, when the media is turned into a one-sided affair, what you are really controlling is the democratic right to obtain information. And so, when you have such a large faction of people without access to the internet, you can create the conditions you wish. You can bring about the substructure for a sort of fascism by destroying freedom of thought and expression. And when you prevent people from being properly informed, what you are really doing is damaging the essence of democracy.

During the Feb. 28 process, the pious and the conservatives of this country suffered much from this same sort of pressure we see today. But now a different group of people have taken over the helm, and an even worse tableau is being displayed for us to see. And of course, there is the whole situation with the pooled media. Gathering money in a fund to buy media — newspapers in particular — is a constitutional crime. Even during the times of the Sept. 12 regime, there were no newspapers that were forced into bankruptcy. But now we are seeing newspapers being directly taken over by those in power. This whole process began three years ago and we see it continuing today.

Nazlı Ilıcak: I lost my job because people were afraid I would ask, ‘How will our ministers account for what they have done?’

 
I began to criticize the government more and more intensely after 2011. I guess we could look at the Gezi events as a real cornerstone in all of this. I was regularly getting warnings from the heads of the newspaper… But when the whole Dec. 17 bribery and corruption situation emerged, everything changed. In fact, on the very first day, I said, “Hey, Tayyip Erdoğan is not involved with these guys.” When I heard the names of the four government ministers implicated in all of this, I thought to myself, “Tayyip Erdoğan will come out now and talk about the independence of justice, saying, ‘You see? You said that the justice system was tied to us, but look at how our ministers are accounting for what they have done’.” This is how I guessed he would behave. But one day later, publicly, the prime minister said, “The parallel state set a trap for us.” Of course, right at that moment I realized that he was trying to hide something, and I wrote a column about this, criticizing it. That column never made its way into the paper, and right after that, I got a call from the newspaper’s editorial board, basically saying “We can no longer work with you.” I have no idea whether a phone call from on high was made to the newspaper about my no longer working there, but the owner of the newspaper was the older brother of the prime minister’s son-in-law. There was probably not even any need for a phone call; these people have telepathic means of communication!

Murat Aksoy lost his job when he criticized the AK Party on his TV program

 
“I said that the AK Party needed to investigate all the corruption, and they terminated my job,” says Murat Aksoy, who worked on CNN Türk’s “5N1K” program, and who lost his job for openly expressed criticism of the AK Party. Here is how Aksoy describes his parting of the ways with the newspaper he worked for, the Yeni Şafak daily. “Prior to Gezi, I wrote about the negative reactions I got from conservatives about AK Party projects involving youth. I wrote about the missed opportunities right before Gezi; I wrote about how the AK Party was not successfully representing the majority of society. When Gezi happened, these criticisms hit a peak. In a post-Dec. 17 column, I wrote something like, “All these steps are being taken so that the AK Party can protect itself.” And this is the summation of what I said on a television program after the Dec. 25 operation, the second one of its kind. I said something like: “This is a state crisis. What the AK Party needs to do is follow up on this.” The next day, I wrote a column, but was told they wouldn’t be using it. Then I went on a break, and when I returned, I was told I no longer had a job there.”
 

Husband’s interview with Gülen causes Rome correspondent for Sabah newspaper to lose her job

 
The Rome correspondent for the Sabah newspaper, Yasemin Taşkın, wound up losing her job because of an interview with Fethullah Gülen that her husband did for an Italian newspaper. Taşkın said, “They punished my husband through me.” She goes on: “There was no problem between the newspaper and me. My husband is also a journalist. He is both a Vatican expert as well as a Turkey expert. Like any foreign correspondent would, my husband tried to get an interview with one of the important names in all the events taking place here. And in doing so, he definitely never thought any harm would come to my career or me. At least, ordinarily, no one would expect such a thing. So he went ahead and did the interview, and the day it came out, our foreign news head sent me an email, embarrassed, saying that the newspaper’s editorial board had decided to bring an end to our working relationship. In the email, our foreign news head was careful to stress that he did not know the reason behind this decision, and that no one had told him anything. But whoever had called him had mentioned the interview that my husband had done with Gülen as the reason. It was said, “It would have been better if Marco had not done that interview.”

Professor Özsoy: Never has there been such disgrace in the history of the Turkish press

 
After the Dec. 17 corruption investigation operation, I spoke with the newspaper’s general publications director. He said to me, “You are one of my most widely read writers; if there is a problem, we’ll stand behind you.” But then, on Dec. 30, I was one of the first journalists to lose his job. It is, of course, not difficult to guess that the will behind this was something above and beyond the actual directors of my newspaper. There was nothing in particular that pointed to this at the time, but a person can guess. I even made some jokes at the time about whether it was the prime minister or his aide Yalçın Akdoğan who had made the call with the orders. These days, simply not criticizing the Gülen group [the Hizmet movement] is enough to get you thrown out of a job. Unfortunately, this era of shamefulness has truly begun.”

Süleyman Yaşar fired for not writing what they wanted

 

Economist Süleyman Yaşar, who refused to write negative things about certain people and organizations which he was ordered to by those directing the Sabah newspaper, also lost his job. Yaşar had been known as the journalist who kept former Prime Minister Erdoğan from signing off on an agreement with the IMF. In the wake of the Dec. 17 operation, the Sabah newspaper asked Yaşar to write negative stories about certain names and organizations in Turkey. As an academic writer, Yaşar made it clear to the newspaper’s directorship that he would only write stories based on hard facts, underscoring that he was, first and foremost, an economist. Before the March elections this year, he was told by those in charge of Sabah: “The parallel structure wants to bring down the country’s economy. This needs to be shown in numbers so that readers can see this.” Recalling the situation, Yaşar says: “I am an economist and they were simply trying to give me material. But what I do is to analyze real data. I cannot write stories that aim to undermine others.”
 

Yavuz Baydar: We are experiencing a situation never seen before in Turkish press history

 
In the Turkey of 2014, court cases and prison sentences have been replaced by the trend of firings from jobs in a sort of sly turn of events that leads to no one taking the blame, with the ball being thrown by the ruling party to media bosses, and then tossed back again to Ankara. It has spread throughout the system and whatever editorial independence is even left is slowly draining away. To put it another way, the very DNA of our media is being destroyed before our very eyes. And fear is the main reason behind the growing pattern of auto-censorship and editorial dependence we see everywhere.
 

Derya Sazak: They told me to throw out Can Dündar. When I refused, they said I would then have to go

 
It all began with the “İmralı journals.” That day, I received a phone call from the [former] prime minister’s head political consultant, Yalçın Akdoğan. Speaking sharply, he said: “You are sabotaging our peace process, how is this possible? You will have to account for your actions.” His words were nothing if not full of threats. I told him that, to the contrary, the process was being normalized but he kept on insisting, “No, this is sabotage.” The next day, Milliyet owner Erdoğan Demirören was really panicked. He made me feel the full weight of the pressure on Milliyet from the government. In fact, he told me, “Do you know, I cried for the first time in my life.”

Before March 30, I had no idea that that the crying episode was directly related to a telephone call that had taken place between him and former Prime Minister Erdoğan. That phone call, which was broadcasted from a recording, was made by Demirören to the prime minister to soften him a little. How embarrassing in the name of journalism though! Just think: your newspaper signs off on such big success, with headlines that make it into all the big news sources, the Internet and on TV and radio. And in the middle of such journalistic success, the owner of your paper calls the ruling party head to apologize, saying: “Just give me half an hour. I’ll find out who’s responsible for all this, fire them and then get back to you on this.”

And the prime minister mentions my name directly in connection with what he asserts is “dishonorable journalism,” then asking Demirören, “How do you even employ people like this?!” In short, he says, “Fire these folks.” The story that brought everything to an end for me was the İmralı journals. It was the beginning of the end for me.

In the wake of Gezi, they told me to fire Can Dündar. I didn’t agree, and so they told me I would be fired. We had already lost writer Hasan Cemal because of the İmralı story and I didn’t want to pave the way for a second blow to the paper, so I agreed to leave. The bosses in charge of the paper were quite relieved to hear this, telling me, “Well, the government was forcing us to make you go anyway.” They told me this quite openly.

 

The prime minister makes his target clear, Hasan Cemal loses his job

 

After the big news story about the İmralı minutes, Milliyet newspaper journalist Hasan Cemal wrote a column celebrating the reporter who had broken this important story. Later, on March 2, Cemal addressed his words to those critical of the decision to publish the İmralı minutes. He wrote: “Turning out a newspaper is one thing, and directing a country is another thing entirely. No one should get these jobs confused. No one should try to intervene in other people’s jobs.”

In a speech made that same day in Balıkesir, Prime Minister Erdoğan made sharp and direct reference to Cemal’s column, making it clear how displeased he was with this kind of journalism. It was later revealed that following this speech by the prime minister, the owner of the Milliyet newspaper, Erdoğan Demirören, had called the then-editorial director of the paper, Derya Sazak, to relay this displeasure from Ankara. The next column to be penned by Hasan Cemal was never even published by Milliyet.

Can Dündar fired for writing columns that might ‘disturb’ the prime minister

 

Can Dündar is yet another journalist to lose his job as a result of ruffled political feathers. He was first warned about “writing too sharply” by his paper’s owners. Then he was forced to take a break from his work. After some series pieces on the Gezi protests and Egypt, Milliyet owner Erdoğan Demirören called him to tell him he had lost his job. Dündar notes, “I actually miss the sort of censorship from theSept. 12 era.” He goes on to say: “It was said to me, ‘We do not wish to see stories that will displease the prime minister in this paper. Everything displeases them, and after they are displeased, they go after us’.” Speaking at the Turkish-German Literature Festival in the German city of Essen, Dündar said: “If you are known, as a writer, as being someone who writes things that upset the prime minister, it then becomes more difficult to find work in other places, because of the fear that you will do the same thing again. In the meantime, those who write obediently are given great privileges, those who don’t find themselves in all sorts of trouble.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: AKP, journalism, Turkey

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