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Turkey’s Erdogan instructs to open border with Armenia?

July 4, 2014 By administrator

July 4, 2014 – 14:17 AMT

180484Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is readying another move to normalize ties with Armenia, Taraf opposition paper suggests.

The presidential candidate, who earlier extended condolences to the descendants of the Armenian Genocide victims ahead of the April 24 commemoration day, allegedly instructed to open the border with Armenia.

The official is said to have ordered preparatory works to launch Alijan checkpoint scheduled to start services in September. The step is expected to promote rapprochement with Armenia and help normalize relations with the U.S., the paper said.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenia, border, Turkey

Turkey: The collapse of Davutoğlu’s Neo-Ottomanism-Pan-Islamist foreign policy

June 30, 2014 By administrator

BEHLÜL ÖZKAN

Neo-Ottomanism has been a prominent issue in Turkish foreign policy debates over the past decade. However, contrary to the claims of certain journalists in the West and in Turkey, Ahmet Davutoğlu does not espouse n_68144_4a doctrine of neo-Ottomanism. Ottomanism emerged in the second half of the 19th century, aimed at preserving the Ottoman Empire by two methods: First, by Westernizing the country and becoming part of Europe; second, by abolishing the dominant status of Muslims as a “millet system,” thus integrating non-Muslim communities into the state, and preventing the emergence of nationalist movements. Davutoğlu opposes both Ottomanism’s tendency toward Westernization and its removal of the privileged position enjoyed by the Islamic identity. Stressing the failure of Ottomanism to prevent the fall of the Ottoman Empire, Davutoğlu idealizes and seeks to emulate the Islamism of the era of Abdülhamid II. In Davutoğlu’s view, just as the Islamism of Abdülhamid’s era forestalled the disintegration of the Ottoman Empire, it is likewise the only ideology that will make Turkey a leader in the Middle East in the post-Cold War period.

Davutoğlu believes that the end of the Cold War also marked the end of a hiatus that began with the Ottomans’ withdrawal from the Middle East in 1918. In his view, this change represents a historic opportunity for Turkey to take up a leadership role in the Middle East. Turkey should put aside its “dream” of becoming part of Europe, and redefine its own identity in Islamic terms. As early as the 1990s, Davutoğlu wrote that the authoritarian regimes headed by Bashar al-Assad, Saddam Hussein, Muammar Gaddafi, and Hosni Mubarak would not survive. Ankara needed to wait until circumstances favored the ascendancy of Islamist parties and movements over Arab nationalism in the Middle East, and then act when the time was right. Davutoğlu decided to seize this historic opportunity in the wake of the Arab Spring of 2011. The rise to power of the Ennahda in Tunisia and the ascendancy of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and Syria were to be the historic developments making Turkey the global power that Davutoğlu has dreamed of.

However, as recent events have shown, things have not gone as Davutoğlu expected: Libya is in chaos, a military junta is in power in Egypt, and Syria is experiencing a civil war in which hundreds of thousands have died. There are two important reasons why Davutoğlu’s predictions have not come true, and why Turkish foreign policy during the Arab Spring has been unsuccessful, to say the least. The first is the fact that Davutoğlu’s Pan-Islamist foreign policy is ideologically ill-suited to the realities of today’s Middle East. The Islamism practiced under Abdülhamid II was a defensive reaction aimed at averting the disintegration of the Ottoman Empire; Davutoğlu’s Pan-Islamist foreign policy, on the other hand, is based on principles of expansionism, seeking to create a new political order in the Middle East under the hegemony of Turkey. Moreover, in the pursuit of this aim, proponents of Pan-Islamism assume that it will be possible to wipe out movements like secular Arab nationalism and socialism in one stroke, and set the Middle Eastern clock back to 1914.

The second serious problem with Davutoğlu’s foreign policy strategy stems from the theoretical underpinnings of Strategic Depth. Theories that sought to legitimize Western imperial expansion prior to 1945 are taken as a reference point in this book, and in Davutoğlu’s foreign policy in general. In laying out a strategy for Turkey’s future hegemony over the Middle East, the Balkans, and the Caucasus, Davutoğlu refers to proponents of British colonialism such as Mackinder, as well as strategists of American and German expansionism such as Mahan and Haushofer. In a sense, Davutoğlu bases his Pan-Islamic ideology on theories of Western imperialism. One should note that terms such as “Lebensraum” and the “Hinterland,” which are frequently employed in Strategic Depth, were also repeatedly used by Haushofer, the architect of German expansionism in the 1920s and 30s, and the notion of a “central state” was inspired by the concept of the Mittellage, which exerted a great influence on German foreign policy during the same period. While it may be packaged together with concepts such as the “foundational actor” or a “proactive foreign policy,” Davutoğlu’s foreign policy is a synthesis of Pan-Islamic ideology with archaic, long-outdated Western expansionist theories.

The foreign policy of the Republican era steered clear of adventurism and partisanship; it succeeded, even if only to a limited extent, in upholding Turkey’s position of respect. However, Davutoğlu regards this as insufficient. He has claimed that if Turkey insists on remaining on the level of a nation-state – within its national borders – in its foreign policy, it will be erased from history. Either Turkey will become a regional leader and a global power, or it will disappear entirely. According to Davutoğlu, the Middle East is an indispensable Lebensraum for Turkey, which has no choice but to dominate the region.

Although Davutoğlu claims to have a local’s knowledge of Cairo and Damascus, under his aegis Turkey has lost its way, so to speak, in Egypt and Syria. With its partisan foreign policy, which takes no heed of the historical experience of the Turkish Republic, the Davutoğlu era represents a serious break with the past. The latest crisis at the consulate in Mosul shows that this era has now come to an end.

June/23/2014

Source: hurriyet daily news

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Neo-Ottomanism, Turkey

Every 20 years Turkey shows it’s ugly face “massacre” Sivas massacre remembered through new documentary

June 29, 2014 By administrator

Emrah Güler

It will be 21 years on July 2 since a group of fundamentalist Muslims torched a hotel in Sivas, burning 35 people alive, including artists, writers and musicians. On its anniversary, you can watch ‘Menekşe’den Önce’ (Before Menekşe)

n_68428_1The documentary ‘Menekşeden Önce’ follows the lives of the survivors and those who lost loved ones through the eyes of a young girl born into a tragedy.

“Time?” asks the woman, her voice bemused and heart-broken at the same time. “It doesn’t heal anything. It hurts more with each passing day.” The woman is a living testament to one of the most horrific, shameful and heart-breaking days modern Turkey has experienced. She is the mother of the two youngest victims that were among the 35 people who were burnt alive by fundamentalist Muslims in the central Anatolian city of Sivas on July 2, 1993.

The Sivas massacre, or the Madımak massacre (referring to the name of the torched hotel), has become a symbol of some of the darkest moments that humanity can endure. From the planning of the attack, including the involvement of the police and some politicians, to the controversial trial, then the case going back and forth with it eventually being dropped in 2012 due to charges against the suspects exceeding the statute of limitations.

The woman’s painful remarks are captured in a feature documentary that looks at that fateful day through the eyes of those who lost members of their family and friends, as well as the survivors. “Menekşe’den Önce” (Before Menekşe) of 2012 is a communal project, that was started by journalist and writer Soner Yalçın. Yalçın was arrested and charged for being linked to the alleged terrorist organization Ergenekon in Feb. 2011 while filming. The film was completed by Yalçın’s friends: Halide Didem, Elif Ilgaz, Zeynep Altıok, Tuğçe Tatari, Ebru Köktürk, Elif Yıldız, Melda Onur, Canan Kaftancıoğlu and Tuğba Ezeroğlu.

the Hurriyet Daily News reports.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: hotel, Massacare, Turkey

Turkey Anti-capitalist Muslims hold iftar in Taksim again under tight police surveillance

June 29, 2014 By administrator

The activist group anti-capitalist Muslims have repeated last years’ experience by organizing for the second time a fast-breaking dinner in Istanbul’s central İstiklal Avenue near the Taksim Square for the first day of Ramadan on June 28, the Hurriyet Daily News reports. 

Anti-ca[italistTension arose when police refused at first to let the group, of over 1,000 people, to form trail tables on the pedestrian avenue despite the lack of incidents during similar events held last year.

After negotiations police eventually allowed the participants to set their iftar tables with just enough time before the muezzin’s call, but they nevertheless formed a security cordon along the avenue.

The participants brought their own food and shared with one another while breaking fast in line with the group’s concept of “Yeryüzü Sofraları” (Earth Tables), which stresses modesty and conviviality while eating on the floor in a public area.

“This is a table for the poor and for the people. When we told the police that we were going to set our tables [on İstiklal Avenue], he showed us a restaurant. But we are here precisely because we don’t want to break our fast [at tables belonging to rich restaurants],” said Melek Bilgili, one of the activists attending the event.

“We break our fast with bread, cheese and olives that everybody has brought. This is the meaning of the earth table,” she added.

The group peacefully dispersed after the iftar. Anti-capitalist Muslims came into the spotlight during the Gezi demonstrations last year by fully embracing the protests.

The first iftar on İstiklal came when tension was at its peak following repeated crackdowns on protesters and the brutal evacuation of the park at the end of last June.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: anti-capitalist, Taksin, Turkey

Turkey FM Davutoğlu sues writer, seeks to block book publication

June 28, 2014 By administrator

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu (Photo: Today’s Zaman)

KAMİL ARLI / ISTANBUL

Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu has filed charges against Zaman newspaper writer Ali Bulaç demanding the publication of Bulaç’s book be halted. Davutoğlu has accused the writer of falsely attributing a quote to him that he did not make.

Davutoğlu is also suing Bulaç for TL 10,000 in compensation for emotional damages over Bulaç’s book, which is entitled “Politics and Religion.” In his petition, Davutoğlu demanded either a halt to the book’s publication or the redaction of the parts in which he is quoted.

The statement in question was published by a number of newspapers and websites on Jan. 11, 2014, including the pro-government newspapers Sabah, Takvim and Star. Other newspapers, such as Hürriyet and Taraf, also published the same quote.

Bulaç, a sociologist and a theologian, questioned why Davutoğlu is perceived as an intellectual academic rather than a political diplomat: “I find it odd that, as an intellectual, he is seeking to halt the publication of the book or censor its words. This wasn’t something I expected. I have never been sued over any of my books before.” Bulaç said, however, that he has previously appeared in court on charges relating to thought crimes. “I have been tried 11 times for my opinions.”

Cemal Araalan, a lawyer for Davutoğlu, submitted a petition on June 29 on behalf of his client to the Ankara Court of Law on the grounds that Bulaç’s latest book includes statements attributed to Davutoğlu that the foreign minister did not uttered. Davutoğlu is quoted in the book as saying: “We have a state tradition. That’s how it was in the Ottoman Empire. Even one’s children would be sacrificed for the state. Today, it is impossible for us to accept a structure that might damage the state. We will not allow the state to be overtaken.” His lawyer claims the statement does not belong to Davutoğlu.

Bulaç’s book, “Politics and Religion,” focuses on systems that cannot serve as political models for Islam. The author also investigates the relationship between religion and the state in the modern era, as well as the nature of politics. Many political ideologies including democracy, totalitarianism, nationalism and liberalism are discussed in the book within the context of modernity.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ali Bulaç, Davutoglu, Turkey

Egypt’s Sisi visits Sudan after Africa ’terrorism’ warning

June 28, 2014 By administrator

KHARTOUM – AFP

Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir (L) shakes hands with Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi (R) before Sisi departures the Khartoum International Airport in Khartoum June 27, 2014. REUTERS/Mohamed n_68406_1Nureldin Abdallah

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi landed in Islamist neighbour Sudan on Friday for a lightning visit, which an analyst said would attempt to shore up a regional alliance against Islamic “terrorism”.

An AFP photographer at Khartoum airport confirmed the Egyptian leader’s plane had touched down and said Sisi, wearing a dark suit and sunglasses, left about two hours later.

The official SUNA news agency said Sisi was “on a short visit” for talks with President Omar al-Bashir.

“The two presidents held talks at the Guest House on bilateral relations and issues of mutual concern,” SUNA said.

About 300 Islamists protested the visit outside a downtown Khartoum mosque, a witness said.

Sisi arrived a day after he told the African Union summit in Equatorial Guinea the continent must reinforce cooperation to face a “plague” of cross-border terrorist groups.

He took a similar message to Algeria on Wednesday during his first foreign trip since his election in May.

“Egypt, the Gulf countries and now Algeria — Egypt is trying to build a regional alliance to fight Islamic terrorism,” University of Khartoum political scientist Safwat Fanous told AFP.

“So they would like to see Sudan as part of this alliance in order to isolate Qatar and Turkey, who are… the main supporters of the (Muslim) Brotherhood Movement.”

Egypt jointly ruled Sudan with Britain until 1956.

Sisi, while he was still army chief, toppled Islamist president Mohamed Morsi last July. Sisi then won the May presidential poll by a landslide after crushing the opposition.

Egypt designated Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood movement a terrorist organisation in December and its members have been subjected to a crackdown which has left more than 1,400 people dead and at least 15,000 jailed.

Saudi Arabia also declared the Brotherhood a “terrorist” organisation, and it is banned in many Gulf countries.

Before his ouster, Morsi visited Sudan in a visit which President Bashir’s office hailed as “historic”.

Bashir’s 25-year-old regime relies on a base of support which is essentially the same as the Muslim Brotherhood, although it does not use that name.

Sudan is close to regionally-isolated Qatar, which was accused of backing groups like the Brotherhood.

Qatar’s emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani, visited Sudan in April and pledged $1 billion (730 million euros) to help boost cash-strapped Khartoum’s hard currency reserves.

But Khartoum’s ties to Doha do not preclude its rejecting advances from Sisi, Fanous said.

“In politics there are no permanent friends, nor permanent enemies,” he said. “I think it all depends on who will benefit the regime better.”

Sudan has a debt of more than $40 billion, much of it in arrears, and has been under American sanctions since 1997.

Adding to the country’s isolation, diplomatic and other sources said in March that major European and Saudi banks had stopped dealing with Sudan.

The country has been plagued by inflation, a declining currency and lack of reserves since South Sudan separated three years ago with most of Sudan’s oil production.

Egypt’s political turmoil that began with the ouster of longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak in 2011 has had a ruinous effect on its economy, although Gulf states have pledged billions in support for Cairo since Morsi’s ouster.

Sisi, however, is unlikely to have any financial aid to offer Sudan.

“But he may mediate between Sudan on the one side, and the West and the Gulf countries on the other side,” to ease economic pressures on Khartoum, he said.

On another issue, Fanous said Sisi likely wants Sudan’s help to mediate a dispute with Ethiopia over the Grand Renaissance dam under construction in that country.

Egypt has expressed particular fears that the dam project could diminish the supply of Nile River water on which it is almost entirely dependent.

June/28/2014

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Egypt, Sisi, Turkey

Christians in Turkey ‘fearful’ after knife-wielding men terrorize Istanbul church

June 27, 2014 By administrator

Fırat ALKAÇ – ISTANBUL

n_68399_1A recent attack against a church in Istanbul has raised the fears of the Christian community in Turkey, a leading member of the country’s Syriac community said in a statement on June 27.

The statement from Doğan Yıldırım was prompted after a group of eight unidentified men recently entered a Latin Catholic Church in Istanbul’s Yeşilköy neighborhood during a baptism ceremony, allegedly harassing the congregation.

“I approached the group after they left the church, but they insulted me. One of them swung a knife towards me before I stepped back,” said Yıldırım, an aide at the Yeşilköy church.

The total population of Turkey’s Orthodox Syriac is around 15,000, most of whom live in Istanbul.

Yıldırım added that this was not the first attack that has occurred recently. “A group of three or four people entered the church in May when there was no one around, and scattered burning candles everywhere. People intervened after they noticed the smoke,” he said.

Kenan Gürdal, the vice president of the Beyoğlu Syriac Meryem Ana Church Foundation, said the congregation was “disturbed” by the attacks.

“Less people have been attending mass since the latest attacks,” Gürdal noted. “They fear coming to the church.”

June/27/2014

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Syriac, Turkey

Families say 163 Turkish citizens have joined ISIL

June 27, 2014 By administrator

Fevzi KIZILKOYUN ANKARA

This image posted on a militant website on June 14, 2014 appears to show militants from the al-Qaida-inspired Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) leading away captured Iraqi soldiers dressed in plain clothes n_68372_1after taking over a base in Tikrit, Iraq. AP Photo

The families of 163 Turkish citizens have recently applied to the security forces, reporting that their relatives have joined the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) to fight in Syria.

According to the latest Turkish intelligence reports, there are currently around 600-700 Turks in ISIL. Reports claiming that around 3,000 Turkish citizens have joined ISIL militias have been rejected by the Turkish government.

Those reported missing by their families joined the battle after training in ISIL camps on the Syrian side, reports stated.

Seven Turks fighting with ISIL in Syria have died so far and six others have been wounded and are being treated in hospital, according to sources.

There have been reports that ISIL has set up armored training camps near the border with Turkey as the first stops for people attempting to join ISIL. These camps are also reportedly run by Turkish citizens,

Security measures have recently been intensified along the border against illegal crossings, and thousands of European jihadists were recently blacklisted by Turkey.

Ankara has long championed robust support for Syria’s fragmented opposition, but the growing influence of al-Qaeda-affiliated groups in the war-torn country has left it open to accusations that it is backing radical Islamists.

June/27/2014

source: hurriyetdailynews

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: ISIL, Turkey

Armenia wary of Turkey’s role after the incident at the border of Nakhichevan

June 27, 2014 By administrator

Some new elements have appeared in the issue of Karabakh and Yerevan officials have acknowledged. In particular, they talked about the attempts of direct involvement of Turkey in the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict arton100630-480x320and the ability to recognize the independence of Nagorno-Karabakh in case of an escalation of the conflict. Apparently, these two trends are related.

On June 5, an incident was reported at the border between Armenia and Nakhichevan, an Azerbaijani enclave which is confined to the southwest of Armenia and, unlike Azerbaijan this “territory” has a short border with Turkey. Two Armenian soldiers were killed in the incident. In this respect, the Armenian Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian made two remarkable statements. He stated that if she continued escalation would have serious serious consequences for Azerbaijan and stated bluntly that there are units in the Turkish army separated from Nakhichevan. In support, information was posted on the latest Turkish-Azerbaijani joint military exercises.

The same day, commenting on the incident, Deputy Foreign Minister of Armenia Shavarsh Kocharian said that if climbing did not stop there would be only one way – the recognition of independence of Karabakh. “In my opinion, the pursuit of such a policy, openly racist, militaristic, I could tell a medieval policy could still lead to the recognition of the Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh by the international community. Because there is no other way in this situation, “he said.

In an interview with RFE / RL, Head of the Centre for Regional Studies Richard Giragosian said the French President François Hollande and the OSCE Chairman-in-Office Didier Burkhalter have introduced new proposals in the negotiations on Karabakh. In particular, according Giragosian, the issue is the creation of mechanisms to investigate the incidents and the return of Nagorno-Karabakh in the negotiation process. Shavarsh Kocharian stated that the border provocations were the response of Azerbaijan to these proposals.

Turkey has never hidden his interest in the victory of Azerbaijan in the Karabakh conflict, in addition, since 1993, Turkey has kept the border with Armenia closed, cutting off Yerevan major regional projects. Turkey has not made any secret of the fact that it supports the modernization of the Azerbaijani army. However, the direct involvement of Turkey in the conflict, and not in the territory of Karabakh, but Armenia itself, can become an opportunity for Armenia to seek the help of international blocs. Armenia can either turn to the Organization of the Collective Security Treaty, a defense pact led by Russia which she is a member, or call in NATO, of which Turkey is a member.

It should be noted that British and American military experts group advising Armenia on its second Strategic defense was in Yerevan these jours. it.

By Naira Hayrumyan

ArmeniaNow

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Karabakh, Turkey

The U.S. House of Representatives adopted a measure for the restoration of Christian churches in Turkey

June 26, 2014 By administrator

This morning, the Foreign Affairs Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives has passed a measure binding Turkey to honor its international obligations and return property confiscated Christian church and to fully respect the rights of arton101152-480x360Christians to practice their faith.

She asks, in essence, the immediate opening of the Greek Orthodox Church of the Theological School of Halki, founded in 1844 (Halki Island).

The amended version of the RH4347 was adopted by vote despite a last-minute campaign led by pro-Turkish lobbyists.

Thursday, June 26, 2014,
Jean Eckian © armenews.com

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Christian Churches, Turkey

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