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Protesters mark May Day from Hong Kong to Paris, Only Turkey and Cambodia saw violence in the streets

May 2, 2014 By administrator

ISTANBUL – Agence France-Presse
n_65824_1People walk through Red Square with flags and banners during a rally in Moscow May 1, 2014. REUTERS Photo
Only Turkey and Cambodia saw violence in the streets on May Day, as millions around the world marked International Labour Day peacefully.

About 100,000 workers paraded on Moscow’s iconic Red Square for the first time since the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union as the annexation of Crimea triggered a surge of patriotism.

Protesters were also out in force in European countries including France, Italy and Greece, marching against unemployment and austerity policies. Across Asia, workers took to the streets demanding better working conditions and salary hikes.
The most impressive May Day turnout was in Russia, where a huge column of demonstrators waving Russian flags and balloons marched through Moscow’s iconic square near the Kremlin and voiced their support for President Vladimir Putin and his hardline stance on the Ukraine crisis.

“Putin is right”, “Proud of the country” and “Let’s support decisions of our president” read the banners carried by the smiling demonstrators, a colourful spectacle harking back to Soviet times.

May Day was a key date in the Soviet calendar, but in recent years, the annual demonstrations have been relegated to a city highway.

Trade union leaders said about two million people had turned up for May Day rallies across Russia.

The tone was markedly different in Greece where thousands marched in the countries two main cities of Athens and Salonika against an austerity drive following a disastrous debt crisis that led to mass lay-offs.

In Italy’s Turin, scuffles broke out between police and hundreds of protesters.

Activists lobbed smoke bombs at police, who charged demonstrators in the northern industrial city, which has been badly hit by a painful two-year recession.

Thousands marched in France with the biggest rallies in Paris and other major cities such as Bordeaux and Toulouse targeting the Socialist government’s budget cuts to rein in the deficit.

Rallies also took place across Asia, including in Hong Kong, Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur, Singapore and Taipei.

In Cambodia, security forces armed with sticks and batons forcibly dispersed dozens of May Day protesters near Phnom Penh’s Freedom Park, according to an AFP photographer. Several people were beaten.

In Indonesia, protestors carrying portraits of leftist idols such as Che Guevara, Fidel Castro and the country’s first president Sukarno, marched to the state palace in Jakarta.

Some sang and danced as others carried a three-metre-long toy octopus wearing a red hat with the words “Capitalist Octopus, Sucking the Blood of Workers.”

More than 1,000 protesters gathered in Hong Kong’s landmark Victoria Park to walk towards the government headquarters waving colourful flags and placards, while singing a Chinese version of “Do You Hear the People Sing?” from the musical Les Miserables, while calling for better working conditions and wages.

Domestic helper rights concern groups, which made up a large portion of the rally, wore masks with a picture of Erwiana Sulistyaningsih, an Indonesian maid who was allegedly abused by her employer for months, while shouting: “We are workers, we are not slaves”.

About 20,000 people rallied in Kuala Lumpur against price hikes implemented by Malaysia’s long-ruling government, which already is under domestic and international scrutiny over its handling of the passenger jet that disappeared on March 8.

More than 10,000 workers marched to the labour ministry in Taiwan’s capital Taipei demanding wage hikes and a ban on companies hiring cheap temporary or part-time workers.

In Singapore, a protest organised by critics of the government’s immigration policy drew around 400 protestors chanting slogans calling for the long-ruling People’s Action Party to step down.
May/01/2014

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Cambodia, May Day, Turkey, Violence

How did Turkey export $1.2 billion worth gold to Switzerland?

May 1, 2014 By administrator

ISTANBUL – Reuters

Turkey’s trade deficit in March has shrunk by 30 percent thanks to strong export performance, while rising gold exports to Switzerland standed out. REUTERS photo

n_65810_1A surge in gold exports to Switzerland narrowed Turkey’s trade deficit more sharply than expected in March, with the gap falling by a third to $5.195 billion, data showed on Wednesday.

The deficit was narrower than the $6.05 billion forecast in a Reuters poll and down from $7.437 billion in the same month of the previous year, data from the Turkish Statistics Institute showed.

The trade gap was reined in by $1.275 billion in gold exports to Switzerland, out of a total $1.36 billion in exports to the country, making it Turkey’s biggest trade destination last month.

Turkish gold exports to Switzerland in the first quarter as a whole amounted to $2 billion, up from just $102,912 a year earlier.

Turkey has in the past imported large amounts of gold to transfer to Iran. Trade withIran boomed in 2012 when Ankara was paying for its natural gas and oil imports with Turkish lira, and Iranians were using those deposits held in Turkish bank accounts to buy gold.

But the trade tailed off last year as U.S. sanctions imposed on Tehran were tightened. One official in the gold sector said this could explain the surge in exports to Switzerland.

“Turkey imported a huge amount of gold in the past period to be transferred to Iran,” the official said.

“But when this channel was closed, a portion of this stock could have been sent to Switzerland to be turned into cash in anticipation of gold prices falling.”

Overall Turkish exports rose 12.4 percent to $14.748 billion in March, while imports fell 3 percent to $19.943 billion, the statistics institute data showed.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Gold, Switzerland, Turkey

Police use water cannons, tear gas and rubber bullets in Istanbul’s tense May Day

May 1, 2014 By administrator

Turkish police fired tear gas, water cannon and rubber pellets to stop May Day demonstrators trying to access the city’s iconic Taksim Square. REUTERS Photo

14.53: CHP deputy Mahmut Tanal has claimed that police officers fired real bullets in Istanbul. “Those are real bullets, are you aware of that? Using real bullets against the people is a huge crime. What’s necessary should immediately be done,” Tanal said via his Twitter account, linking to a picture of two bullets that were found in the Beşiktaşdistrict.

tanal1Istanbul is set for a difficult May Day, with the Istanbul Governor’s Office warning that Taksim Square will not be opened for Labor Day demonstrations even as unions insist on their right to gather at the iconic square.

The governor’s office cited intelligence reports indicating that “illegal terrorist groups” would resort to violence against security forces as a reason for blocking Taksim Square, as well as many roads located around the central square.

Unions, including the Confederation of Progressive Trade Unions (DİSK) and the Confederation of Public Sector Trade Unions (KESK), have marched to Taksim defying the ban trying to break the police barricades. They say the government’s measures are incompatible with previous rulings from the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) ensuring freedom of assembly.

Besides Istanbul, May Day demonstrations are planned by activists in more than 30 provinces of Turkey, including the capital Ankara.

Here are the live updates:

18.00: The Istanbul Governor’s Office has stated that 142 demonstrators have been detained and 90 people, 19 of whom are police officers, were injured and treated in hospital during May Day clashes in the city. Twenty-three people are still being treated, the statement added. The numbers provided by the governor’s office did not take into account those who have been treated outside of hospitals.

image-117.10: A woman in Ankara has braved police by standing in front of a water cannon truck (TOMA), refusing to let it proceed on its way. The woman, wearing a distinctive bag, did not move despite officers warning that they would resort to firing water if she did not let them pass. She finally sat on the track, holding her ID in her hands, as police fired pressurized water.

14.53: CHP deputy Mahmut Tanal has claimed that police officers fired real bullets in Istanbul. “Those are real bullets, are you aware of that? Using real bullets against the people is a huge crime. What’s necessary should immediately be done,” Tanal said via his Twitter account, linking to a picture of two bullets that were found in the Beşiktaşdistrict.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: May Day, Turkey

US terror report: Turkey used for transit by radical groups in Syria

May 1, 2014 By administrator

WASHINGTON

184332_newsdetailRebel fighters walk along a street in the Armenian Christian town of Kasab March 31, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

The US State Department has said in its annual global terrorism report that Turkey was often used as a transit country in 2013 for foreign fighters seeking to join al-Qaeda and its affiliates in Syria.

Released in Washington on Wednesday, “Country Reports on Terrorism 2013,” said: “Largely because of the ongoing conflict in Syria, Turkey has voiced increasing concern about terrorist groups currently near its border. These groups include al-Qa’ida in Iraq/Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant [ISIL] and al-Nusrah Front. Turkey was often used as a transit country for foreign fighters wishing to join these and other groups in Syria.”

The report said that terrorist violence in 2013 was fueled by sectarian motivations, marking a worrisome trend, in particular in Syria, Lebanon and Pakistan, where victims of violence were primarily among civilian populations. Thousands of extremist fighters entered Syria during the year. Among them, a large percentage were reportedly motivated by a sectarian view of the conflict and a desire to protect the Sunni Muslim community from the Alawite-dominated regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad regime.

The State Department report underlined that the key terrorism trend in 2013 developed in Syria, which continues to be a major battleground for terrorism on both sides of the conflict and remains a key area of longer-term concern. It said thousands of foreign fighters traveled to Syria to join the fight against the Assad regime — with some joining violent extremist groups — while Iran, Hezbollah and other Shiite militias provided a broad range of critical support to the regime.

The report added that some of the thousands of fighters from around the world who are traveling to Syria to do battle against the Assad regime — particularly from the Middle East, North Africa, Central Asia and Eastern and Western Europe — are joining violent extremist groups, including the al-Nusra Front and ISIL. A number of key partner governments are becoming increasingly concerned that individuals with violent extremist ties and battlefield experience will return to their home countries or elsewhere to commit acts of terrorism, it said, adding that the scale of this problem has raised concerns about the creation of a new generation of globally committed terrorists, similar to what resulted from the influx of violent extremists to Afghanistan in the 1980s.

A major challenge to Europe, the report highlighted, was the increasing travel of European citizens — mostly young men — to and from Syria seeking to join forces opposing the Assad regime. The report argued that these “foreign fighters” sparked increasing concerns, and actions to address them, by European countries worried about the growing number of their citizens traveling to battlefields and possibly returning radicalized.

In 2013, the report said, Turkey continued to face significant internal terrorist threats and has taken strong action in response. Increased activity by the Revolutionary People’s Liberation Party/Front (DHKP/C), a terrorist Marxist-Leninist group with anti-US and anti-NATO views that seeks the violent overthrow of the Turkish state, threatened the security of both US and Turkish interests. A number of attacks occurred, including a suicide bombing of the US Embassy in February 2013 that killed the bomber and a Turkish guard and injured a visiting Turkish journalist.

In its annual global terrorism report the State Department describes as prominent among terrorist groups in Turkey the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK). According to the report, the PKK has spoken more often about autonomy within a Turkish state that guarantees Kurdish cultural and linguistic rights. Following three decades of conflict with the PKK terrorist organization, the government and PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan began talks in late 2012 for a peace process. The PKK called for a cease-fire in March, which both sides largely observed, apart from small-scale PKK attacks in late 2013.

The report pointed out that approximately 20 terrorist attacks occurred in Turkey in 2013. It said the ones that garnered the most attention were: Feb. 1, a DHKP/C suicide attack against the US Embassy in Ankara; Feb. 11, a car bomb at the Bab al-Hawa border crossing between Turkey and Syria that killed 13 people; March 19, a DHKP/C-coordinated hand grenade attacks on the Ministry of Justice and on the headquarters of the ruling party; May 11, a twin car bombings in Reyhanlı that killed at least 53 people — the deadliest terrorist attack in Turkey’s modern history — and Sept. 20, a DHKP/C attack at the National Police Department headquarters and police guesthouse with light anti-tank weapons (LAWs).

According to the report, the State Department continued to provide counterterrorism assistance to the Turkish national police that focused on institutionalizing advanced skills into Turkey’s law enforcement infrastructure and included training in terrorist interdiction and crisis management. It said Turkey increased its cooperation with European countries regarding the status of members of the DHKP/C and also worked closely with European, North African and Middle Eastern countries to prohibit the travel of potential foreign fighters planning to pass through Turkey to Syria, although it remains a transit route for these fighters.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Turkey, US terror report

Turkey: The little son of Djemal Pasha, Djemal Hassan in the list of “100 heroes Press” Reporters Without Borders

April 30, 2014 By administrator

arton99485-478x309He apologized to Armenians before the Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan

Hassan Djemal, columnist Turkish site T24 and grand-son of Djemal Pasha, one of the executors of the Armenian Genocide, included in the 2014 list of “100 heroes Press” established by the Association of Reporters Without Borders (RSF ). According to them, when Hassan Djemal was editor and columnist for the Turkish newspaper Milliyet, he was the target of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. In addition in 2012 the book Hassan Djemal on the Armenian genocide was one of the bestsellers in Turkey. Recall that Hassan Djemal went in 2008 in Armenia, the Armenian Genocide memorial in Yerevan and apologized to Armenians for the genocide committed by Turkey in 1915. He dedicated his book “1915 Armenian Genocide” on memory of Hrant Dink.

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, Hassan Djemal, Turkey

Golden Loophole: How an alleged Turkish crime ring helped Iran

April 29, 2014 By administrator

Reuters’ special report by Hümeyra Pamuk, Steve Stecklow, Babak Dehghanpisheh and Can Sezer.

In this city’s Grand Bazaar, sellers along labyrinthine passageways hawk carpets, jewelry and souvenir knick-knacks to tourists.

Golden Loophole CrimeTurkish police believe that until recently, the area around the market also sat at the center of an audacious, multi-billion-dollar scheme involving bribery and suspect food shipments to Iran.

To date, no one has been charged. But a recently leaked police report – which contains allegations of payments to top Turkish government officials including cash stuffed into shoeboxes – has added fuel to a growing corruption scandal that has shaken the highest levels of Turkey’s political establishment.

A review by Reuters of the report’s 299 pages, as well as interviews with currency and precious metals dealers, offer colorful new details of how what police call a “crime organization” allegedly helped Iran exploit a loophole in the West’s sanctions regime that for a time allowed the Islamic Republic to purchase gold with oil and gas revenues.

While the gold trade was then legal, the police report alleges the purported crime network bribed officials in part so it could maintain control of the lucrative business.

Then, when the West last July prohibited the gold trade as a sanctions violation, the police report alleges the network concocted records of shipments of food at preposterous volumes and prices to continue giving Iran access to foreign currency.

The police report – which includes transcripts of wiretapped conversations and surveillance photographs – was prepared for prosecutors. Reuters confirmed its authenticity with Ekrem Aydıner, the current chief prosecutor in charge of the case.

Turkey’s Prime Minister, Tayyip Erdoğan, has called the police investigation a foreign-orchestrated plot without legal merit. In recent months, Turkey’s judiciary removed several prosecutors from the case. That has raised questions about whether Turkish law enforcement authorities will continue to pursue it. Aydıner said the matter remains under active investigation.

In many ways the plot described in the police report resembles a made-for-TV crime series: A cop who is thought to have tipped off tax authorities finds himself transferred to a distant outpost by the Black Sea, a plane that arrives from Ghana carrying 1.5 metric tons of gold with no clear owner, and millions of dollars in payoffs to various officials to block rivals and gain valuable favors such as fast-track Turkish citizenship for members of the purported crime network and their families.

The report presents a wealthy young businessman of Iranian descent named Reza Zarrab as the ringleader. Zarrab grew up in Turkey, holds citizenship, resides in a manor on the Bosphorus and goes by the Turkish name Rıza Sarraf. He is well known on Istanbul’s celebrity circuit, and is married to Turkish pop star Ebru Gündeş, who is a judge on a popular television talent show. Following her husband’s detention in December – he was released from jail two months later without being charged – she tearfully told viewers, “God willing, I hope these dark days will pass quickly.”

When Reuters reporters recently visited his residence, they were greeted by about a half-dozen security guards who said he was out of town. His attorney, Seyda Yıldırım, later declined to comment.

In an interview published on April 19 with Sabah, a Turkish newspaper, Zarrab said, “The trade I do is completely legal.” He later said in an interview on Turkish television that he had helped to reduce the country’s current account deficit.

Gold rush

The police report states that its investigation found evidence of bribery, fraud and gold smuggling. Although not central to the police investigation, the West’s economic sanctions on Iran provide the backdrop of the alleged scheme.

As financial sanctions tightened in 2012, both Turkey and Iran had pressing needs: Turkey required oil and gas for its fast-growing economy, while Iran desperately needed hard currency to pay for new automobiles and other foreign imports.

Under the sanctions – imposed by Washington and Brussels to contain Iran’s nuclear ambitions – Turkey was permitted to purchase oil and gas from its neighbor. But it was required to pay in Turkish lira, a currency that is of limited value for buying goods on international markets. All payments were to be deposited in an Iranian bank account at Turkey’s state-controlled Halkbank.

In 2012, Turkey purchased from Iran more than $10 billion worth of oil and gas, according to Reuters’ calculations based on data from Turkey’s energy market regulation board and Turkish officials.

One commodity that Iran was permitted to purchase with its money was gold. A veritable Turkish gold rush ensued with bullion shipped to Iran in everything from couriers’ rucksacks to airplane cargo holds.

Turkish gold exports to Iran exploded from one metric tons in 2011 to 125.8 metric tons in 2012, worth $6.5 billion, according to the Turkish statistical institute. Another 85 metric tons, worth $4.6 billion, were exported that year to the United Arab Emirates, a known transshipment point to Iran.

The police report alleges that Zarrab and a network of companies he controlled were running much of the gold trade with Iran, sometimes via Dubai. “It is understood that, to overcome sanctions and move money to Iran, Rıza Sarraf used Turkey as a stepping stone,” the report states.

To keep the business running smoothly, the report alleges, Zarrab’s network paid bribes to Zafer Çağlayan, Turkey’s economy minister; Muammer Güler, the interior minister; Egemen Bağış, the European Union Affairs minister; and Suleyman Aslan, Halkbank’s chief executive.

All three ministers, who have since either resigned or been dropped from the cabinet, have denied wrongdoing; none have been charged. Çağlayan declined to comment; Güler could not be reached for comment. Lawyers for Bağış and Aslan did not return calls seeking comment.

Halkbank has denied violating any domestic or international laws. A spokesperson declined to answer questions but did say the bank is not under any investigation by Turkey’s police or judiciary.

According to the police report, many of the payoffs were allegedly picked up in a building on a row of jewelry dealers near the Grand Bazaar. Police also tracked the shipment of a Swiss watch the network allegedly gave to Çağlayan, the economy minister, that cost about $340,000. Bağış, the EU Affairs minister, at one point allegedly received $500,000 cash delivered in a chocolate box, along with a silver plate. In an intercepted phone conversation about the plate, the report quotes Zarrab as telling an associate, “Don’t make it too expensive.”

The report alleges that Aslan, the former head of Halkbank, and Çağlayan received a percentage of the Iranian money transfers, resulting in bribes that totaled tens of millions of dollars. In December, police raided Aslan’s house and seized $4.5 million stuffed in shoeboxes, according to local media reports. Aslan told police the cash was a charitable donation from various businessmen to build an Islamic school, the media reports said.

The police report alleges the bribes bought the network perks such as reduced commissions from Halkbank for money transfers, authorization to drive along highway emergency lanes and assistance in preventing rivals from participating in the lucrative trade. One Istanbul gold and currency trader told Reuters, “I went to the bank about 18 months ago and tried to open an account, saying I wanted to sell goods to Iran and that I was going to pay via Halkbank. But they did not let me. There has been unfair competition in terms of using this bank.”

The bribes also secured the network police protection, the report alleges. Suspecting at one point that a local police officer had initiated a tax audit of some of Zarrab’s companies, the interior minister arranged to have the officer transferred to Zonguldak, a Black Sea coastal town about 200 miles east of Istanbul, the report alleges. According to the report, a wiretap allegedly picked up Güler telling Zarrab that “we have sent him into exile.”

The network also allegedly received special assistance when, in January 2013, a plane carrying 1.5 metric tons of gold bullion arrived at Istanbul’s Ataturk airport from Ghana without proper paperwork. The report cites wiretapped phone calls between Zarrab and Çağlayan’s office allegedly showing that Çağlayan intervened at Zarrab’s request to prevent customs officers from seizing the shipment. The cargo was held up for days, but ultimately released.

The circumstances surrounding the Ghanaian gold shipment remain murky. An Iranian billionaire businessman named Babak Zanjani, who is accused by the United States and European Union of violating sanctions on Iranian oil, recently posted a statement on the website of his company, Sorinet Group, stating he was the original purchaser of the gold from Ghana. “This type of trade was completely legal,” he wrote.

Yet Zanjani boasted last year in an interview with Aseman, an Iranian magazine, of violating sanctions. “This is my work – sanctions-busting operations,” he was quoted as saying. He is in jail in Tehran on charges of owing the government more than $2.7 billion from oil sales; he denies any wrongdoing.

In the website posting, Zanjani said he had met Zarrab “a few times” but that they had not done any business together. Zarrab said in the television interview earlier this month he had met Zanjani twice, but “I am neither friends nor partners with him.”

Fake food

Washington closed the gold loophole last July. In the television interview, Zarrab said he stopped trading gold and “shifted to food and medicine,” which were still permitted. In a four-month period, he said, that trade totaled about $1.6 billion.

But the police report alleges that some of the food shipments never actually took place, but consisted of counterfeit invoices submitted to Halkbank that should have raised plenty of red flags at the bank.

The documentation included bills of lading that purportedly showed that cargoes “of 150,000 metric tons were being carried in vessels with a capacity of 5,000 tons,” the report alleges.

In another case, the report includes an alleged copy of an invoice for a shipment to Iran of about five metric tons of raw brown sugar. The cost? A whopping $250 a pound, more than a hundred times the market rate.

The report also quotes from a wiretapped conversation with Zarrab in which an associate allegedly tells him about the food shipment records, “The documents we are giving are wrong. I mean, they are documents that do not exist in reality.”

Following their investigation, the police staged a series of raids and detained dozens of suspects in December. Later that month, one of the prosecutors on the probe was removed from the case. He accused police of refusing to comply with his orders to detain even more suspects. “Suspects have been allowed to take precautions, flee and tamper with the evidence,” the prosecutor, Muammer Akkaş, said in a statement to Turkish media. Reached by Reuters this month, he declined to comment.

Aydıner, the new chief prosecutor on the case, said the detentions were just a precaution and that no suspects have been formally charged. “Of course, they are still under investigation,” he said.

Shortly after the December raids, two of the ministers who allegedly accepted bribes – Economy Minister Çağlayan and Interior Minister Güler – resigned; Bağış, the EU Affairs minister, was replaced in a cabinet reshuffle.

Aslan, the chief executive of Halkbank, left his job in February. He was recently named to the board of directors of a larger, state-owned bank.

As part of a preliminary deal struck in November between Western powers and Iran, Tehran promised to scale back its nuclear development program in exchange for the suspension of certain economic sanctions. The deal, which took effect in January and is to last until July, includes allowing Iran to resume some gold trading.

But there’s no evidence that Turkey is benefiting. Some Istanbul traders say they are too jittery to sell gold to Iran. Gold exports have plummeted.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Golden Loophole, Iran, Turkey

Genocide recognition vain without reparation – Armenian historian

April 29, 2014 By administrator

The recognition of the Armenian Genocide will have no value without condemnation and reparation, an Armenian historian has said, commenting on the issue in the light of the Armenia-Turkey reconcilation.

Armenian historian“Today’s Turkish leadership is all the time making attempts to find a roundabout way to mislead [the public] from the main problem which is the reparation. We need a legal way to pursue all the matters as was the case with the Holocaust,” Ashot Melkonyan told a debate organized at the Armenian Center for National and International Studies.

The historian stressed the importance of drastically changing the Armenian tactics on the issue to focus more attention on condemnation and reparation rather than recognition per se.

As for the Armenia-Turkey protocols, Melkonyan said he has fears that a Turkish decision decision to ratify them one day may cause Armenia to follow suit. Meantime he noted that he has observed positive changes in the Armenian authorities’ attitude towards the issue.

“I am not enthusiastic about the Turkish intellectuals’ idea to recognize the Armenia Genocide. They are encouraging, but there are dangerous moments there,” he said, adding that the Turkish denialism which continues to date is a proof that the country remains the Ottoman Empire’s successor.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, reparation, Turkey

Turkish PM’s Armenian statement unimaginable just 20 years ago

April 28, 2014 By administrator

ISTANBUL – Hürriyet Daily News
Barçın Yinançbarcin.yinanc@hurriyet.com.tr

n_65642_1The Turkish government’s message of condolence talking about the “shared pain” stemming from the mass killings of Armenians in 1915 is a watershed development that would have been unimaginable in years past, according to former Envoy Ömer Lütem.

“You could not imagine this, let’s say five years ago … 10 years ago, never; 20 years ago, it was unimaginable. There has been a change in the Turkish official position,” he said.

What is your evaluation of the statement?

It is related to the moral side of the Armenian question. First of all, it did not seem to have something related to politics. The moral side or the sentimental side is very important because Armenians really fell some pain.  It could look bizarre, because these events happened a century ago, but as they were repeated every day to them, there is the impression as if they happened recently. So the moral side is extremely important when you say we present our condolences; that we are sharing your pain.  I think it will have an influence on Armenians, but what will result from the political point, that remains to be seen. The militant ones won’t be influenced.  But the silent majority, the majority of the people who are not vocal, but they will be impressed. 

Does it mean that it is the first time the Turkish government has shown empathy with the pain you are talking about.

That empathy was expressed with strong words; it was never said like that before. The foreign minister said something similar, but the tone was softer

Is it the first time Turkey recognized April 24th as a remembrance day?


That is correct; before there was an effort not to notice it, but it was there. Yet officially … I don’t know. They did not put emphasis on recognizing April 24 as the Remembrance Day.

But is it an official recognition that something terrible happened in the past?

They did not put it that way. What is not emphasized is not what happened, but the pain that exists; they are not the same thing.

But after all pain is a consequence of an event; so that is not defined then?

That’s right. I think they did not say that something has happened on purpose. They tried to underline the human aspect of what happened.

What is the importance of the statement?

It is a very important turning point. Though it concerns the humanitarian aspect, it is first time that there has been a display of real empathy towards the Armenians. I have been dealing with the Armenian question for the past 30 years; I have not seen something similar: it is going directly to the people, to their pain, to the people suffering and trying to understand this and presenting condolences; you could not imagine this, let’s say 5 years ago … 10 years ago, never; 20 years ago, it was unimaginable. There is a change in the Turkish official position.

Why do you think it has taken so long?

I think that this government, from the beginning, tried to solve this question. Instead of fighting, arguing with the Armenians, they have been trying to find other ways.  One of the very important elements on the subject was the proposal about the creation of a historical commission.  Before, it was always Armenians saying something, and Turks saying ‘this is not right.’ The government tried another way, but they have not been successful until now.

With the centennial of 1915 approaching, I think the government had the idea to make something that would withdraw the people’s attention, especially the Armenians. I think this is the main cause.

So the Armenians will think their decades-long efforts of recognition are paying off.

Most of them will think that their efforts to convince that what happened is genocide are paying off; but the text of the PM’s message does not give this impression at all.  The message says from the moral point of view, yes we understand your pain, but it did not say anything that can be interpreted as recognition of genocide

But do you think it was a positive step?


Yes, it is, but I don’t know whether it will be well received or not. But this kind of move takes a rather long time to be accepted; you cannot expect a result in a few days’ time. The government of Armenia did not say much. Most probably they are consulting each other and some countries first, like Russia for instance.

How do you think the Turkish public received it?

In general it was well received. The main opposition party was not against; this is important.  The MHP [Nationalist Movement Party] was against it and that is expected.  The Kurdish party opted to support the Armenian view about three years ago anyway and the AK Party represents above half of the population. I can say that there is not much of strong opposition to that message except from the MHP.

Do you think there is an evolution in the Turkish society’s approach to the issue?

In the beginning, Turkish society was not very much against the Armenians.  First of all people, say they don’t know about the 1915 events. They became angry about these kinds of allegations; they took it as a personal offense. In time, they separated allegations and Armenians in the street. ‘I like my Armenian neighbor,’ they say, ‘but Turks would never commit genocide.’ But the message contains nothing controversial.

Do you think that the strong mandate Erdoğan received from the elections made it easier for him to take this step?

Without having such a big majority, no government would dare take this step.

You said previously that Turkish people were not aware of what happened to the Armenians; so do you think there is now awareness due to Armenians’ genocide recognition efforts?

Armenian terrorism is the main reason for the awareness. They began to shoot Turkish diplomats. And Turkish people were shocked and started asking questions.

What should be done as far as the next steps are concerned
?

Turkey has made a great effort; normally, Armenians should respond. And then if there is a positive reaction, then additional steps could come. But if I were in the government, I would rather wait for the reaction from the Armenians, especially in Armenia.

Who is Ömer Lütem ?
Born in Istanbul in 1933, Ömer Lütem graduated from the Faculty of Political Sciences, University of Ankara in 1957 and became carrier diplomat the same year. His most important posts have been:

Turkish Consul General at Cologne, Germany (1975-1979) Director General of Intelligence and Research of the Foreign Ministry (1981-1983), Ambassador of Turkey to Bulgaria (1983-1989), Deputy Undersecretary of the Foreign Ministry (1989-1992), Ambassador of Turkey to the Vatican (1992-1995), Permanent Representative of Turkey to UNESCO (1995-1997). In 1998 he retired.

He was previously Director of the Institute for Armenian Research of the Center for Eurasian Strategic Studies (ASAM), 2000-2008 and 2009-2012 Director of the Center for Eurasian Studies (AVIM). He has been advisor of the center since 2013.

Lütem is the editor of the Review of Armenian Studies, Ermeni Araştırmaları (Armenian Studies) and Uluslararası Suçlar ve Tarih (International Crimes and History).

His works include: Türkiye Bulgaristan İlişkileri, 1983-1989 (Turkish-Bulgarian Relations 1983-1989) (ASAM-Ankara 2000); Balkan Diplomasisi (Balkan Diplomacy) (Co-Editor) (ASAM-Ankara 2001); Ermeni Sorunu El Kitabı (Handbook of the Armenian Question) (co-author) (ASAM- TEİMK, Ankara 2003), Armenian Terror (ASAM- Ankara, 2007), Armenian Question: Basic Knowledge and Documentation (AVIM- Ankara 2009).

Filed Under: Articles, Interviews Tagged With: armenian genocide, intervew, Turkey

Germany’s Gauck: Turkey’s condolences to Armenians ‘a new page’

April 28, 2014 By administrator

ANKARA

Germany’s President Joachim Gauck addresses the media at the Presidential Palace in Ankara April 28, 2014. REUTERS Photo

n_65683_1While urging Turkey to be bolder in its attempt to face its history, German President Joachim Gauck has backed Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s extension of condolences to the grandchildren of Armenians killed in World War I by Ottoman soldiers. 

“In my opinion, the expression of a new style by a conservative politician like Mr. Prime Minister is a new page. This sounds very interesting, familiar and right to me,” Gauck said on April 28 in response to a question at a joint press conference following talks with his Turkish counterpart, Abdullah Gül.

“Can a self-confident society question itself and feel honored with its past or can it implement a symbolic peace-making policy? That’s why I believe no censorship should be applied when choosing words here,” Gauck said in remarks translated from Germanto Turkish through an interpreter.

In a statement issued on April 23, the eve of the 99th anniversary of the contested cause of the deaths, Erdoğan unexpectedly described the events of 1915 as “inhumane,” using more conciliatory language than has often been the case for Turkish leaders. 

For his part, Gül said on many occasions in the past that he had described what was lived during that era as “common grievances,” and called Erdoğan’s statement “extremely appropriate and right.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: armenian genocide, Germany’s Gauck, Turkey

PKK kidnaps two officers, wounds nine others in east Turkey

April 28, 2014 By administrator

April 27, 2014, Sunday/ 19:35:49/ TODAYSZAMAN .COM/ ISTANBUL

184139_newsdetailThe Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) kidnapped two specialist sergeants in eastern Turkey on Saturday and wounded nine members of the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK) in a southeastern province on Sunday.

The kidnapping took place when a group of terrorist PKK supporters blocked a road heading to the southeastern province of Diyarbakır on Saturday in protest of the construction of a gendarmerie outpost. With the blockade, the armed group, which took part in the protest along with civilians, caused a traffic backup as a long line of 90-100 vehicles formed.

While checking the IDs of passengers on a bus, the armed group noticed two unarmed sergeants who were heading to Diyarbakır. The armed group forcefully abducted the two officers, prompting the Turkish military to launch an operation in the area to secure their release.

In another incident, the Turkish military said in a statement on Saturday, a group of PKK terrorists opened fire from the Iraqi side of the border on a military unit positioned in a mountainous area in rural parts of Şemdinli, a district of the southeastern province of Hakkari. The security forces returned fire at the PKK group, which fled the area. A military attack helicopter and a reconnaissance plane were sent to the area.

This is the not the first time the PKK or groups affiliated with the terrorist organization have kidnapped civilians or soldiers in the region, highlighting the fragile nature of the ongoing settlement process aimed at ending the decades-old Kurdish dispute and armed conflict.

The PKK declared a cease-fire last year, but halted the withdrawal of its forces from Turkey months later. The halting of the withdrawal has drawn the “peace talks” between the Turkish state and the terrorist group to the brink of deadlock. The PKK’s reckless activities throughout the region are fueling fears of a revival of clashes.

Tensions ensued on Sunday in Diyarbakır’s Lice district when PKK-affiliated protesters again rallied against the construction of the gendarmerie outpost. Clashes broke out between protesters and security forces, leaving nine soldiers wounded when a stun grenade thrown by a protester exploded.

The wounded soldiers were immediately rushed to a nearby hospital. The soldiers are not in critical condition.

Also on Sunday, the parents and relatives of 15 high school students launched a sit-in protest in Diyarbakır, claiming that the students had been kidnapped by the PKK.
 
According to news reports, members of the terrorist group took the students on a picnic on April 23 but the students have not returned to their homes since then. Erol Böçkün, the father of 15-year-old M.S.B., said that he has no idea where his son is. “They may have killed my son. How can they kidnap a 15-year-old boy to recruit [him to the PKK]?” he asked.

Böçkün also claimed that some pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy (BDP) officials spoke to PKK members to persuade them to allow the kidnapped boys to return to their families, but the terrorist group refused to comply.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: PKK, Turkey

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