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The Most Powerful Lobbyist in Trump’s Washington Hint: It’s not Corey Lewandowski.

April 2, 2018 By administrator

new lobbyists Ballard

new lobbyists Ballard

M. Scott Mahaseky/POLITICO,

When Brian Ballard signed the lease last year for an office on the second floor of the Homer Building, a downtown Washington edifice that’s home to a number of lobbying firms, he promised himself he would stay in the space for five years. He lasted one. In February, his firm, Ballard Partners, moved into a bigger office on the fourth floor to accommodate the new lobbyists Ballard has hired since the election of one of his former clients, President Donald Trump.

Not all of Ballard’s foreign clients are as sympathetic. Ballard signed a contract with the Turkish government worth $125,000 a month on May 11, days before Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s security guards beat up peaceful protesters outside Turkey’s embassy, according to a Justice Department filing. Another filing shows Ballard met several times with administration officials on Turkey’s behalf, including Sean Cairncross, a senior adviser to the White House chief of staff, and Matt Mowers, a State Department official who worked on Trump’s campaign.

At the firm’s first staff meeting in the new offices, Ballard and five of his Washington lobbyists sat in new leather chairs around a small conference table, with Ballard at the head. Robert Wexler, a former Democratic congressman from Florida whom Ballard hired last year, phoned in from Paris with an update on the firm’s work for the Turkish government. Jamie Rubin, a former assistant secretary of state in the Clinton administration, called from Brussels and updated Ballard on a meeting he’d had with Moise Katumbi, an exiled opposition leader from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, who’s a client.

“You’ll be happy to hear that we signed the Maldives today,” Syl Lukis, another Ballard lobbyist, told Rubin.

“Let’s fire away quickly on Kosovo and Turkey,” Ballard said. (The government of Kosovo is another Ballard client.)

Other Ballard lobbyists gave updates on their meetings with Trump administration officials and other work on behalf of the dozens of clients they represent in Washington, including Amazon, Dish Network, Uber, Pernod Ricard (the makers of Jameson whiskey and Absolut vodka) and Trulieve (a Florida-based medical marijuana company). Rebecca Benn, a former congressional staffer Ballard hired last year, updated Ballard and another lobbyist, Susie Wiles, on a meeting she’d set up for a client. “They were very, very happy — thank you, Susie — for the meeting at the White House last week,” Benn said. “It went very, very well.”

Ballard is a veteran Florida lobbyist who’s been in Washington for barely a year — the blink of an eye in an industry in which many of the top practitioners have spent decades inside the Beltway. But Ballard is closer to the president than perhaps any other lobbyist in town. He’s parlayed that relationship into a booming business helping clients get their way with the Trump administration — and his clients and even some of his rivals say his firm has a better grasp of what’s going on in the West Wing than almost anyone else on K Street. Ballard was one of the top fundraisers in the country for Trump’s campaign and continues to raise millions for his reelection campaign. Wiles, one of his top lieutenants, ran Trump’s campaign in Florida and delivered the nation’s biggest swing state to the president.

Ballard’s relationship with Trump has helped him solve a lucrative puzzle that has frustrated more established players. For all of the president’s “drain the swamp” rhetoric, the new administration has given corporate America and its lobbyists the opportunity to revive dreams of tax cuts, regulatory rollbacks and rule changes that were mothballed during the Obama administration. But Trump also presents a challenge for the influence business — a White House in which key positions at least initially were as likely to be staffed by Trump loyalists as by old Washington hands with ties to K Street. Ballard has helped to bridge the gap. He’s a Trump-friendly out-of-towner who can connect with the establishment — he is a close ally of Senator Marco Rubio as well as Charlie Crist, the former centrist Republican governor of Florida who is now a Democratic congressman — and make corporate clients comfortable.

Ballard isn’t the only person in Trump’s orbit who decided to try his or her luck in Washington. Campaign veterans from Corey Lewandowski, Trump’s fired-but-never-forgotten campaign manager, on down have flocked to “the swamp” to lobby the administration — or, in Lewandowski’s case, to offer clients a glimpse into Trump’s thought process without actually registering to lobby. But Ballard appears to have landed the biggest fish. He has signed more than 60 clients since setting up shop in Washington after Trump’s inauguration, including blue-chip companies like American Airlines and Sprint. Those clients paid Ballard nearly $10 million last year for help navigating Trump’s first year in office. (Those numbers don’t include the $3.1 million the firm says it brought in representing foreign clients such as Turkey and the Dominican Republic.)

“He’s the only guy that’s done it,” said Robert Stryk, a lobbyist who runs in the same circles as some former Trump campaign hands and moved to Washington himself after the election. (Stryk’s company, SPG, bills itself as a “private diplomacy” firm rather than a traditional lobbying shop.)

Lobbyists at some of Washington’s established firms are quick to praise Ballard, but they also wonder how long his success can last, given the unique nature of the Trump administration. There are risks to building a shop around one principal’s relationships. The now-defunct firms of Ed Gillespie, who was one of Washington’s most powerful lobbyists during George W. Bush’s administration, or Tony Podesta, who thrived under Barack Obama, might be regarded as cautionary tales. “Brian is building a strong Washington office, but the question is what happens when the circus leaves town,” one Republican lobbyist with close ties of his own to the administration told me.

Unlike Lewandowski, who hasn’t been able to resist boasting about his relationship with Trump as he hustles for clients, Ballard has taken pains to avoid the appearance of cashing in on his relationship with the president. He refuses to speak on the record about how often he talks with the president. But his clients say he’s been able to figure out how the Trump administration works in a way no one else has. For now, at least, it’s working for him.

***

Trump called Ballard in the days before he announced he would run for president. The two men have known each other for nearly 30 years. Ballard met Trump after picking up a copy of “The Art of the Deal” in the 1980s. He read the book and was so struck by it that he wrote Trump a letter telling him how much he’d enjoyed it. “I loved the idea of 15-minute meetings,” Ballard told me years later. “That’s one of the things in the book that still stands out to me.” He later told the Orlando Sentinel that he didn’t believe in meetings that lasted any longer. Trump wrote “this beautiful letter” back, Ballard says, and they kept in touch.

Ballard ended up working on and off as Trump’s Florida lobbyist, helping the Trump Organization negotiate state and local government when issues came up with Trump’s Doral golf club. A decade before Trump announced his presidential run, Ballard helped orchestrate a fundraiser in 2005 at Trump Tower in Manhattan for Crist’s campaign for Florida governor. “A friend told me about his record,” Trump told the St. Petersburg Times at the time, referring to Crist. “I checked him out. I met him, I liked him, and I said I could help.”

Ballard, like most of Florida’s Republican establishment, backed Jeb Bush in the primary, but when Trump called he offered to do what he could for his client. In September, as it became clear that Trump’s lead in the polls wasn’t going away, Ballard dispatched Wiles to New York to meet with Trump. Wiles was named the Trump campaign’s Florida co-chairwoman a few weeks later.

It took months for Ballard himself to come around to Trump. He jumped ship first to Rubio’s campaign and signed on with Trump only once it was clear he would be the Republican nominee. But once he was in, Ballard proved a valuable asset. Florida is home to lots of of wealthy Republican donors, and Ballard knew most of them after raising money for John McCain and Mitt Romney’s presidential campaigns. Trump named Ballard his Florida finance chairman, and Ballard raised millions for his campaign. He spoke with Trump often and traveled on the campaign plane with him. The effort also put him in close touch with Reince Priebus, the Republican National Committee chairman who would be tapped as White House chief of staff, and Steven Mnuchin, the campaign’s finance chairman, who’s now treasury secretary. Trump spent more time in Florida in the general election than in any other state. And “whenever we did an event in Florida I was there,” Ballard said.

Ballard watched the election returns come in with Lukis at an apartment he keeps in Manhattan. They didn’t know whether Trump would win — although Wiles later said she was confident he would pull it off — but they hoped he’d at least carry Florida. When it became clear Trump would become president, they high-fived and walked over to the victory party. The calls from clients started the next day. “To say they were freaking out is absolutely maybe even an understatement,” Wiles said.

Some Trump campaign hands almost immediately began trying to figure out whether they would be working in the new administration or lobbying it. Ballard, who was raising money for the inaugural committee, moved more slowly, waiting to open his Washington office until after the inauguration. (His firm began representing a half dozen federal clients before Trump took office, according to disclosure filings, but Ballard says he didn’t do any lobbying until later). Within three months of the inauguration, though, Ballard had signed two dozen clients, not just Amazon and American Airlines, but also Prudential and the GEO Group, a private prison operator.

Read More:https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2018/04/02/most-powerful-lobbyist-in-trump-washington-217759?cid=apn

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: lobbyists Ballard, Turkey

Turkish police arrests 33 suspects include 10 on-duty soldiers over affiliation to Gulen network

March 27, 2018 By administrator

Turkish police forces have arrested 32 people on suspicion of affiliation to a movement led by US-based opposition cleric Fethullah Gulen, whom the Ankara government accuses of having masterminded the failed July 2016 coup attempt against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Security officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said police arrested 16 people over using ByLock, an encrypted messaging application that was allegedly used by Gulen’s supporters for communication, on Monday.

Ten on-duty soldiers were arrested in the central city of Kirshehir. Six suspects were also detained in the northern province of Tokat as part of an investigation against members of the terror group.

Meanwhile, Turkish prosecutors issued arrest warrants for 56 people linked to the Gulen movement on Monday.

During the botched putsch, a faction of the Turkish military declared that it had seized control of the country and the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was no more in charge. The attempt was, however, suppressed a few hours later.

Ankara has since accused Gulen of having orchestrated the coup. The opposition figure is also accused of being behind a long-running campaign to topple the government via infiltrating the country’s institutions, particularly the army, police and the judiciary.

Additionally, the Ankara government has outlawed his movement, and has branded it as the Fethullah Terrorist Organization (FETO).

Gulen has denounced the “despicable putsch” and reiterated that he had no role in it.

“Accusations against me related to the coup attempt are baseless and politically-motivated slanders,” he said in a statement.

The 76-year-old cleric has also called on Ankara to end its “witch hunt” of his followers, a move he said is aimed at “weeding out anyone it deems disloyal to President Erdogan and his regime.”

Turkish officials have frequently called on their US counterparts to extradite Gulen, but their demands have not been taken heed of.

Turkey, which remains in a state of emergency since the coup, has been engaged in suppressing the media and opposition groups suspected to have played a role in the failed coup.

Tens of thousands of people have been arrested in Turkey on suspicion of having links to Gulen and the failed coup. More than 110,000 others, including military staff, civil servants and journalists have been sacked or suspended from work over the same accusations.

The international community and rights groups have been highly critical of the Turkish president over the massive dismissals and the crackdown.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Arrest, on-duty soldiers, Turkey

Egyptian parliamentary committee calls for Arab unity against Turkey

March 26, 2018 By administrator

Gamal Essam El-Din

The Egyptian parliament’s Arab Affairs committee has urged the Arab world to adopt a united stance against what it called aggressive Turkish policies, according to Gamal Essam el-Din writing in Egyptian paper Ahram .

“Turkey’s dictator Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s criminal military adventures in Syria and Iraq represent a grave violation of international law and an aggression against the sovereignty of the lands of the two countries,” said the committee, which likened recent Turkish military activity along its southern borders to the First World War’s Armenian Genocide.

The committee also criticised the failure of the United States and Russia to respond more strongly to Turkey, suggesting this showed both countries had made secret deals with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan which involve turning a blind eye to what it said were war crimes.

Human rights groups and the United Nations were likewise targeted by the committee for failing to respond robustly enough to Turkish military operations in Syria and Iraq.

The statement concluded by expressing the hope that, “the friendly Turkish people will revolt against dictator Erdoğan, as well as the country’s corrupt political leadership, because they know that Erdoğan’s military adventures and follies will bring a lot of havoc to them and their lives in the long run.”

Relations between Egypt and Turkey have deteriorated since the violent overthrow and imprisonment of former Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi in a 2013 coup, led by current President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. Morsi, and his now banned Muslim Brotherhood movement, have a similar ideological outlook to that of Erdoğan.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Egyptian parliamentary, Turkey

Iraqi Army arrives in Sinjar, no evidence of Turkish incursion Yet

March 25, 2018 By administrator

Iraqi Army arrives in Sinjar

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region – The Iraqi Army was deployed to the Yezidi town of Sinjar on Sunday to provide security alongside the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK)-affiliated Shingal Protection Units. Hours earlier, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced the start of his own Shingal operation.

“Today PKK guerillas have fully withdrawn from the town. The area is empty of PKK guerilla presence. Only the Iraqi Army and the Shingal Protection Units, numbering one thousand individuals, are in the area,” Khudeda Juke, commissioner of Snune, told Rudaw.

The commissioner, affiliated with the Iranian backed Hashed al-Shabi paramilitaries, said the PKK has been withdrawing since its umbrella group, the KCK, announced its fighters were leaving on March 23.

Further Iraqi Army forces are expected to move in soon to take over positions previously manned by the PKK on the Iraq-Syria border.

The commissioner said there is no evidence of any movements by the Turkish military. This is despite Turkish President Erdogan telling AK Party supporters in Trabzon on Sunday that the operation to clear the PKK from Shingal has already started.

Turkey’s ambassador to Iraq, Fatih Yildiz, seemed to directly contradict Erdogan on Sunday night.

Responding to a question on Twitter, Yildiz said: “I would like to let you know that there is no military operation being executed on the part of Turkey currently against the presence of PKK in Shingal.”

The Iraqi Defense Ministry spokesperson earlier announced that the Iraqi Army will not stand by in the face of any foreign intervention.

The Turkish military has taken control of the Kurdish city of Afrin in northwestern Syria. The Turkish president has vowed to extend the operation all the way to Qandil, the PKK’s mountainous headquarters in the Kurdistan Region.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Iraq, Sinjar, Turkey

EU leaders blast Turkey for ‘illegal actions’ in Mediterranean

March 23, 2018 By administrator

EU leaders blast Turkey

EU leaders blast Turkey

European leaders on March 22 strongly condemned Turkey’s “illegal actions” toward Greece and Cyprus in a blistering denunciation that could upend an EU-Turkish summit in Bulgaria on March 26, Hurriyet Daily News reports.

The statement by the 28 European Union member states meeting in Brussels comes after Turkey’s arrest of two Greek soldiers, and its promise to prevent the internationally-recognized Greek Cypriot government from exploring for oil and gas.

“The European Council strongly condemns Turkey’s continued illegal actions in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Aegean Sea and underlines its full solidarity with Cyprus and Greece,” the statement said.

The bloc “calls on Turkey to cease these actions and respect the sovereign rights of Cyprus to explore and exploit its natural resources in accordance with EU and international law.

The statement urged Turkey to normalize relations with Cyprus, divided since 1974 when Turkish troops entered and stayed in the northern third of the island in response to a Greek military junta-sponsored coup.

A standoff over exploiting energy resources in the region risks further complicating stalled efforts to reunify Cyprus after UN-backed talks collapsed last year.

In recent weeks Turkish warships blocked an Italian drillship from exploring for gas in the east Mediterranean island’s waters.

The leaders also expressed “grave concern over the continued detention of EU citizens in Turkey, including two Greek soldiers” and called for these issues to be resolved through dialogue with the EU member states.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: blast, EU leaders, Turkey

Human Right Watch (HRW) reveals Turkey’s ‘mass deportation’ of Syrians

March 23, 2018 By administrator

Syrian refugee trying to send an infant over a broken border fence into Turkey.

Syrian refugee trying to send an infant over a broken border fence into Turkey.

Human Right Watch (HRW) says Turkish forces routinely stop and send back groups comprising hundreds or thousands of displaced Syrians, opening fire on them on many occasions.

In a Thursday report, the New York-based body said the pattern was being witnessed since at least last December. The externally-displaced Syrians are then forced to return to the violence-ravaged province of Idlib, which holds large concentrations of Takfiri terrorists, it said.

As many as 1.3 million other Syrians are already stranded in the northwestern Syrian province.

The organization said Turkey had started preventing Syrian asylum seekers from even legally crossing its border since at least mid-2015.

The report was based on interviews with 21 Syrians, who had recounted how the forces would repeatedly block their entry into Turkey.

Another 35 Syrians told the HRW that they would not try to escape Idlib for fear of being shot by the border guards.

Nine Syrians interviewed described a total of 10 shooting incidents between last September and this March, in which, they said, 14 people were killed and 18 others injured.

EU complicity

The HRW said Turkey’s anti-refugee measures “has been reinforced by a controversial EU-Turkey March 2016 migration agreement to curb refugee and migration flows to the European Union.”

It urged the EU to “instead be working with Turkey to keep its borders open to refugees, providing financial support for Turkey’s refugee efforts, and sharing responsibility by stepping up resettlement of refugees from Turkey.”

The report, however, hailed Turkey for hosting over 3.5 million Syrian refugees, according to the UN refugee agency, saying, “Turkey deserves credit and support for its generosity.”

Filed Under: News Tagged With: hrw, Syrian Refugee, Turkey

Turkey’s Erdogan warns Europeans ‘will not walk safely on the streets’

March 22, 2018 By administrator

Erdogan warns Europeans 'will not walk safely on the streets

Erdogan warns Europeans ‘will not walk safely on the streets

It comes after German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned war of rhetoric must stop.

Samuel Osborne,

Europeans across the world will not be able to walk the streets safely if they keep up their current attitude towards Turkey, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has warned.

Turkey has been mired in a diplomatic row with Germany and the Netherlands after they banned Turkish officials from campaigning in support of an April referendum on boosting the Turkish President’s powers.

“If Europe continues this way, no European in any part of the world can walk safely on the streets,” Mr Erdogan told journalists in Ankara.

He added: “We, as Turkey, call on Europe to respect human rights and democracy.”

Turkish government officials are still participating in events for expatriate Turks across Europe, but are not campaigning for the referendum, the Turkish deputy prime minister has said.

Numan Kurtulmus said the row had helped Turks in Europe better understand the constitutional changes proposed in the referendum.

He said the “footsteps of neo-Nazism and extreme racism” were being heard in Europe.

Germany’s new President, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, used his first speech in the role to accuse Mr Erdogan of jeopardising everything Turkey has achieved in recent years.

“The way we look [at Turkey] is characterised by worry, that everything that has been built up over years and decades is collapsing,” Mr Steinmeier said.

“President Erdogan, you are jeopardising everything that you, with others, have built,” he said, adding he would welcome “credible signs” to ease the situation.

Nato member Turkey has repeatedly accused Germany of using Nazi tactics and has caused anger by detaining German-Turkish journalist Deniz Yucel.

“End the unspeakable Nazi comparisons,” Mr Steinmeier added. “Do not cut the ties to those people who want partnership with Turkey. Respect the rule of law and the freedom of media and journalists. And release Deniz Yucel.”

Mr Erdogan has previously branded the Netherlands “Nazi remnants” and accused Germany of “fascist actions”.

He has said his country may review its ties with Europe after the referendum, which he hopes will give him sweeping new powers, and has described Europe as “fascist and cruel”, saying it resembles the pre-Second World War era.

European leaders have made repeated calls for Turkish officials to avoid Nazi comparisons and the head of the Central Council of Jews in Germany accused Mr Erdogan of disrespecting the memory of the victims of the Holocaust.

“The comparisons between today’s Federal Republic of Germany and National Socialism, which we have heard in recent days, are not only insulting and absolutely false – they also relativise the Nazis’ rule of terror,” Josef Schuster said.

“The comparison is monstrous and denigrates the suffering of the victims of the Shoah.”

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said Turkey should stop Nazi comparisons “with no ifs or buts”.

The controversy deepened last week when a Turkish pro-government newspaper depicted Ms Merkel as Adolf Hitler on its front page, branding her “Mrs Hitler”.

The right-wing tabloid accused the German chancellor of attempting to lead a fascist movement against Turkey.

It came days after Germany’s biggest-selling newspaper Bild attacked Mr Erdogan for threatening the stability of Europe through his “lust for power”.

“Bild tells the truth to Erdogan’s face – you are not a democrat! You are hurting your country! You are not welcome here!” the German newspaper said.

Turkish hackers also spread Nazi accusations across high profile Twitter accounts, posting pro-Erdogan messages from accounts including Amnesty International, BBC North America and Forbes.

While tensions between Turkey and Europe have boiled over in recent weeks, acrimony over Turkey’s belief some European countries are harbouring suspected terrorists has festered for years.

Europe has questioned whether fugitives would get a fair trial in Turkey and said free speech laws and other rights protect many dissidents.

A Turkish official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told the Associated Press that Turkey will ask the Netherlands to extradite a Turkish leftist militant.

Mr Erdogan criticised Germany for allowing a weekend rally of Kurds, some of whom expressed support for a jailed rebel leader in Turkey.

In January, Turkey condemned a Greek court ruling granting asylum to eight Turkish military servicemen allegedly involved in a failed coup to oust Mr Erdogan last year.

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/turkey-erdogan-germany-netherlands-warning-europeans-not-walk-safely-a7642941.html

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Erdogan, Europeans, Turkey, warns

The consolidation Daily newspaper “Hurriyet” CNN Turk. now under Erdogan control

March 22, 2018 By administrator

Reporters Without Borders: ‘A dark day for press freedom’ in Turkey

A company with close ties to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has bought the daily newspaper “Hurriyet” and TV station CNN Turk. The consolidation is “a deep cut,” says Reporters Without Borders’ Christian Mihr.

DW: What does the sale of the Dogan Group mean for freedom of the press in Turkey?

Christian Mihr: It is a turning point for Turkey’s media landscape. The Dogan Group, which counted Turkey’s largest daily newspaper Hurriyet and the television channel CNN Turk among its holdings, stood for independent journalism.

Of course journalists at those outlets were constantly confronted with censorship and also self-censorship that stopped them before they crossed any red lines. Nevertheless, we saw the Dogan Group as an independent commercial media conglomerate.

The sale represents a deep cut, above all, because the last remaining independent newspapers, like Cumhuriyet, Evrensel and BirGun have a pathetically low combined circulation of about 45,000 in daily sales — the Dogan Group had far greater reach.

More than anything, I fear the worst because the Dogan Group was not bought by just any company but rather by the Demiroren Group, which has close ties to the government.

Does that spell the end for freedom of the press?

I hesitate to declare freedom of the press dead in Turkey simply because there are a lot of colleagues there who stand up for it and try to live and work by its principles each and every day.

When I say that, I am thinking of our colleagues at Cumhuriyet, Evrensel and BirGun, as well as those at independent online sites like Diken and Bianet. We have to encourage them all, nevertheless, it is still a dark day for freedom of the press.

Let’s talk about the group that bought Dogan. What do you expect from the Demiroren Holding?

I’m always open to surprises, but I actually expect reporting will be much like it is at other media outlets with close ties to the Turkish government. That means it will be very uncritical when covering current events in Turkey, as well as being wholly uncritical in reports about the government and its policies. That includes stories like Turkey’s current incursion into Afrin, and the dramatic human rights situation and mass incarcerations happening at home.

On Reporters Without Borders’ current World Press Freedom Index Turkey is ranked 155 out of 180 countries. What will happen now?

That is indeed a pretty low ranking. We will publish our new Press Freedom Index in late April, and I fear the takeover will not do much to improve the situation. Two years ago we published a Media Ownership Monitor report on Turkey in which we took a very close look at media ownership structures there. Even then we saw clear evidence of very problematic connections between economic interests and media policies in the country.

Christian Mihr is the executive director of Reporters Without Borders Germany.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: media, Turkey

#Egypt condemns #Turkey’s ‘occupation’ of #Afrin 353,935 people have died 19,800 children are among the dead

March 20, 2018 By administrator

CAIRO – 19 March 2018: Egypt on Monday condemned Turkey’s “occupation” of northern Syria’s city of Afrin and the human rights violations carried out by Turkish troops in the city.

The Egyptian Foreign Ministry said in a statement that the Turkish military operation has violated civilians’ rights and forced them to flee the city.

On Sunday, Turkish forces and their Syrian rebel allies swept into Afrin, taking control of the town’s center after Kurdish YPG forces pulled out, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said.

Continuous violations of Syria’s sovereignty is “unacceptable”, the statement read, adding that such violations complicate the political situation, foil current conflict settlement efforts, and worsen the humanitarian crisis in the country.

The statement also reaffirmed Egypt’s support of a political solution in Syria, which would preserve the unity of the Syrian state and institutions.

On January 24, Egyptian Foreign Ministry Sameh Shoukry and then-U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson stressed on the importance of coordinating efforts to support a political solution agreed upon by all parties to the crisis, said Foreign Ministry spokesman Ahmed Abu Zeid.

Shoukry stressed the importance of supporting the aspirations of Syria’s people, protecting its national unity and preserving its institutions. He asserted Egypt’s efforts to defuse the crisis in Syria, especially the international resolutions in Geneva under U.N. auspices.

Turkey slammed a motion approved by the European Parliament on March 15 that calls for a halt to Ankara’s military offensive in the Afrin region, saying it demonstrated “clear support” for militants.

On January 20, Turkey launched the “Operation Olive Branch” military operation in Afrin to clear the city from the Syrian-Kurdish YPG militia that Turkey considers terrorists.

Hundreds of residents were seen fleeing the city of Afrin, with the Observatory reporting that more than 2,000 arrived in an area controlled by pro-regime forces.

Hundreds more were on the road, it said, after Turkish forces and their allies arrived to within less than two kilometers (one mile) of the city on March 10, sparking fears it could be besieged.

Syria’s conflict broke out in March 2011 with peaceful protests against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, but a regime crackdown paved the way for a full-fledged war.

At least 353,935 people have died since, including more than 106,000 civilians, the Observatory said in March, providing a new overall death toll for the conflict. More than 19,800 children are among the dead, it said.

Source: https://www.egypttoday.com/Article/2/45677/Egypt-condemns-Turkey%E2%80%99s-%E2%80%98occupation%E2%80%99-of-Afrin

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Afrin, Egypt, Invasion, Turkey

Kurdish Afrin Falls to Turkey Turkish Government Official: “Europe Will be Muslim”

March 19, 2018 By administrator

Pictured: Thousands of supporters of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan rally, waving Turkish flags, in Cologne, Germany, July 31, 2016. (Photo by Sascha Steinbach/Getty Images)

Pictured: Thousands of supporters of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan rally, waving Turkish flags, in Cologne, Germany, July 31, 2016. (Photo by Sascha Steinbach/Getty Images)

by Uzay Bulut,

  • Turkey Islamized northern Cyprus through a military invasion in 1974. To Islamize the much more powerful European continent, however, Turkey has been promoting demographic, rather than military, jihad.
  • “The places where you work and live are your homelands and new countries now… Drive the best cars. Live in the most beautiful houses. Make five children — not just three. For you are the future of Europe.” — Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, 2017.

Yesterday, while many Europeans are still pilloried for viewing mass migration from Muslim-majority countries as a threat to Western culture — and are still accused of “xenophobia,” “Islamophobia” and “fear-mongering” — the city of Afrin, in the Kurdish area of Syria, fell to Turkey.

At the same time, a prominent Turkish government official has been openly and proudly declaring that the demography of Europe is changing in favor of Muslims.

MP Alparslan Kavaklıoğlu, a member of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) and the head of the parliament’s Security and Intelligence Commission, recently stated:

“The fortune and wealth of the world is moving from the West to the East. Europe is going through a time that is out of the ordinary. Its population is declining and aging. It has a very old population. So, people coming from outside get the jobs there. But Europe has this problem. All of the newcomers are Muslim. From Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Iran, Syria, and Turkey. Those who come from these places are Muslim. It is now at such a level that the most popular name in Brussels, Belgium is Mohammed. The second most popular name is Melih [Malih] and the third one is Ayşe [Aisha].”

According to Kavaklıoğlu, if this trend continues,

“the Muslim population will outnumber the Christian population in Europe. This… has increased the nationalistic, xenophobic and anti-Islam rhetoric there. Hence, marginal, small parties have started to get large numbers of votes… But there is no remedy for it. Europe will be Muslim. We will be effective there, Allah willing. I am sure of that.”

Kavaklıoğlu is not the first Turkish official to stress the importance of population growth. In 2009, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who was prime minister at the time, called on the public to have at least three children per family. The greater our numbers, he said, “the stronger we will be.” Since then, Erdoğan has been trying to encourage Turkish nationals to multiply. In 2013, he reiterated his plea:

“We need a young and dynamic population… Right now, the West is in trouble. But we do not want to put Turkey in the same trouble. I am calling on my country through mothers: Do not take this sensitivity of ours lightly. We need to make this widespread, in waves. We need to make this happen. The [value] of this cannot be measured with money or any other physical wealth.”

In 2017, Erdoğan called on Turks residing in Europe to have even more children:

“The places where you work and live are your homelands and new countries now. Lay a tight claim to those places. Open more businesses and enroll your children in better schools. Live with your families in better neighborhoods. Drive the best cars. Live in the most beautiful houses. Make five children — not just three. For you are the future of Europe.”

Erdoğan is now also saying the same thing to Turks in Cyprus. During a recent meeting with the prime minister and deputy prime minister of the “Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus” (recognized only by Turkey), Erdoğan reportedly said, “Economic growth happens in parallel with population growth. The population of Greek Cypriots is more than one million. Just make your own population grow.”

Turkey already largely Islamized and Turkified northern Cyprus through a military invasion in 1974. The Turkish military terrorized the indigenous Greek Cypriots, causing them to flee to the south. The Turkish government then imported thousands of illegal settlers from Turkey to northern Cyprus, to change the demographic structure of the illegally occupied territories. To Islamize the much more powerful European continent, however, Turkey has been promoting demographic, rather than military, jihad. This attempt by Ankara to guarantee that Muslims outnumber Christians globally has been accompanied by the erection of mosques – “from Europe to Africa, from the Balkans to the Central Asia” — by Turkey’s government-funded Diyanet(Religious Affairs General Directorate).

Whose assessments, then, are liberal Europeans to believe regarding unfettered immigration? Those who consider the mass influx from Muslim countries a threat to liberty and security, or the honest planners and perpetrators of demographic replacement and Islamization?

One only needs to look at Afrin, Cyprus and the appalling human rights recordof Muslim-majority societies.

Uzay Bulut is a Turkish journalist born and raised in Turkey. She is presently based in Washington D.C.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: falls, Kurdish Afrin, Turkey

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