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Turkey now in full control of NATO, Two more Turks appointed to key NATO posts.”World got more Dangerous”

December 13, 2015 By administrator

Turkish NATOBRUSSELS,

At a time when the 28-member alliance is in bid to counter unprecedented security challenges both at home and abroad, two senior Turkish diplomats are being appointed to key posts at NATO.

Ambassador Tacan İldem, currently serving as the permanent representative of Turkey to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), is expected to be shortly appointed as NATO’s Assistant Secretary General for Public Diplomacy, while international career diplomat Burcu San, has already been appointed as the director of the Operations Division of NATO’s International Secretariat.

İldem, 59, is a career diplomat who entered the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Turkey in 1978. He started his career by working as second secretary at the NATO Department at the headquarters in the capital city of Ankara. In 1981, İldem served as second and later first secretary in the Turkish Delegation to NATO in Brussels.

From 2006 to 2009, İldem served as permanent representative of Turkey to NATO. After holding post of director- general for international security affairs at the headquarters from 2009, he was appointed to his current post as the permanent representative of Turkey to OSCE in June 2011.

As the head of Public Diplomacy Division, which plays a key role in conveying the alliance’s strategic and political messages to opinion formers and to the public in general, İldem will report directly to NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg and advise Stoltenberg on public diplomacy issues as a member of the secretary-general’s senior management team.

As for San, 45, who worked in separate units of NATO in the past, she was already working at the Operations Division before being appointed as the director.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: appointed, more, NATO, Turks

Vote result 89% TURKS 11% GERMANS invented Genocide

November 11, 2015 By administrator

Tanasi Kociras Commented: Turks “invented” Germans inspired.

Screen Shot 2015-11-10 at 12.35.12 PM

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Genocide, germans, invented, result, Turks, Vote

Which nation FIRST Invented GENOCIDE TURKS or GERMANS Please VOTE

November 9, 2015 By administrator

Which nation FIRST Invented #genocide TURKS or GERMANS Please VOTE

— Wally Sarkeesian (@gagrulenet) November 9, 2015

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Genocide, germans, invented, Turks

Azat Ordukhanyan: In Germany Turks hinder events dedicated to Armenian Genocide

November 1, 2015 By administrator

Turks-hunder-1In Germany Turks prevent events, including presentations of books dedicated to the 1915 Armenian Genocide, from taking place, Chairman of the Armenian Academic Society of Germany Azat Ordukhanyan said at a press conference in Yerevan today.

“Presentations of books dedicated to the Armenian Genocide are usually held at the Central Library of Bochum. Recently we were going to organize a presentation of the collection of Paryur Sevak’s poems translated into German, but the library director told us he was tired of arguments between Armenians and Turks so he would not allow us to organize presentations of Armenian Genocide-themed books,” Ordukhanyan said.

He noted at the same time that descendants of Armenian Genocide survivors united to set up an organization in Germany to help each other, achieve recognition of all genocides, and make their political demands.

“This organization will certainly make itself known,” he added.

Ordukanyan said that a collection of Paruyr Sevak’s poems translated into German will be published soon in connection with the Armenian Genocide Centennial

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Genocide, Germany, hinder, Turks

Japan: 12 injured as Turks, Kurds scuffle outside Ankara mission in Japan

October 25, 2015 By administrator

5939851d-5e50-4daa-9673-11f767cbf6e4At least 12 people have been wounded in clashes that erupted among Turkish nationals outside Ankara’s embassy in Japan, where they were standing in line to vote in snap parliamentary elections.

Footage of the incident showed police interrupting the scuffles between Turks and Kurds in front of the diplomatic mission in the Japanese capital city of Tokyo on Sunday.

Two police officers were among those injured in the confrontations, Tokyo Broadcasting System Television reported, adding that the cause of Sunday’s clashes was unclear.

“I was attacked by Turks all of a sudden while I was in a car with my friends,” said a Kurdish man, whose shirt had been torn off.

Quoting a Turkish voter, Japan’s Jiji Press also said that the scuffles broke out after Kurds tried to display the flag of a pro-Kurdish party.

Some 3,600 Turkish citizens are reportedly residing in Japan.

The snap parliamentary elections in Turkey are scheduled to be held on November 1, but the overseas voting began on October 8 in different countries.

All overseas ballot papers will be counted alongside domestic votes after polls close across Turkey in the evening of November 1.

Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) won three general elections in 2002, 2007 and 2011. However, the AKP was stripped of its overall majority in the June 7 elections and failed in coalition talks with main opposition factions.

The snap polls come amid the Turkish army’s military campaign against members of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which voided a shaky 2013 ceasefire between the two sides.

The PKK has been fighting for an autonomous Kurdish region inside Turkey since the 1980s. The conflict has left tens of thousands of people dead.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Japan, Kurd, scuffle, Turks, Vote

Turkey: Most Turks hold negative view of Erdogan: Poll

October 21, 2015 By administrator

A graph statistically depicting the views of respondents in a Pew poll on whether Erdogan is a suitable individual for leading the country

A graph statistically depicting the views of respondents in a Pew poll on whether Erdogan is a suitable individual for leading the country

Only 39% of Turks have a favorable view of Turkish Presiden Recep Tayyip Erdogan and over half (51%) of the Turkish people hold a negative view of the president, the results of a recent poll show.

The results of the poll, which was conducted by Pew Research Center from April to May and released on October 15, show that Erdogan’s popularity is falling.

This comes as, last year, 51% of Turks had a positive view of Erdogan; and in 2013, he had the support of 62% of the people.

The findings of the survey indicate that Erdogan’s supporters were mainly Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) followers (87% favorable), Turks aged 50 and older (54%), lower-educated Turks (53%) and Muslim Turks who pray 5 times per day or more (71%).

This comes as a survey, conducted by pollster Gezici between October 3 and 4, indicated that the AKP is unlikely to win enough votes needed to form a single-party government in the country’s upcoming snap elections. The survey of 4,864 people, the results of which were released on October 15, showed that public support for the AKP, founded by Erdogan, currently stands at 40.8 percent.

The figure shows little change compared to the 40.9 support percent the party received in the elections on June 7, when it failed to form a government after 13 years of unrivaled ruling. Two months later, November 1 was set as the date for the snap votes in the wake of a failure in coalition talks between the AKP and main opposition factions.

Strong leader or strong democracy

The latest Pew poll also studied Turkish people’s preference between a strong leader or a strong democracy.

The results revealed that as much as 56 % of the participants in the study favored a democratic form of government and 36 % percent of them believed that Turkey should have a strong leader.

Iraqi, Syrian refugees

The poll also surveyed Turkish people’s view on the inflow of Iraqi and Syrian refugees into Turkey.

It was discovered that a vast majority of Turks (80 %) opposed the entry of refugees from the neighboring countries into Turkey and only 8 % of the participants in the poll favored the inflow of the refugees.

The violence caused by the Takfiri Daesh terrorist group in Iraq and Syria, which is backed by certain western and regional countries, including Saudi Arabia and Turkey, has forced millions of people in the two crisis-hit countries to leave their homeland.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Negative, poll, Turks

Espionage trial involving Turks in Germany reveals alleged money transfers

September 18, 2015 By administrator

Muhammed Taha Gergerlioğlu sits in front of the regional appeal court in Koblenz, Germany on Sept. 9. (Photo: Reuters)

Muhammed Taha Gergerlioğlu sits in front of the regional appeal court in Koblenz, Germany on Sept. 9. (Photo: Reuters)

Three suspects of Turkish origin have been charged with espionage in an indictment prepared by the German attorney-general that includes wiretapped phone conversations revealing transfers of huge sums of money and claims of Germany being the true enemy of Turkey.

In the third hearing of the suspects’ trial, provincial Police Chief Steffan Blasius testified that a suspect and former aide of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Muhammed Taha Gergerlioğlu, 59, frequently communicated with German national Göksel Güler, also a suspect in the case, and many others, some of whom remain unidentified.

Blasius said the police prepared 3,300 pages of transcripts from more than 20,000 wiretapped phone and Internet communications. Police only mentioned the headings of the transcripts in court, without going into detail. Blasius read headings such as “Ismail al-Buti, 500 million USD,” “Swiss Bank, power of attorney, 500 million USD” and “To be given to RTE [Erdoğan]” in the Koblenz High Court.

Last year, the leader of the Turkish main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, claimed Erdoğan has eight Swiss bank accounts. He called on the president to prove otherwise, but Erdoğan has never responded.

During the trial of the suspects, the third of whom is Turkish national Ahmet Duran Y. and all of whom were arrested in Germany in December on suspicion of espionage, the court rejected the defense’s attempt to have the indictment thrown out because of ongoing cooperation over terrorism between the two countries.

In May, the attorney-general filed charges against the trio, accusing them of spying on behalf of Turkey’s National Intelligence Organization (MİT).

Blasius stated that Güler had acted as a sort of personal secretary for Gergerlioğlu, organizing his itinerary and picking him up from the airport when he came to Germany. He said the two originally spoke over the phone, but later switched to written communication, often using messaging software, including Skype, Viber, Tango and WhatsApp.

Among the headings of transcribed messages were “Recep Tayyip Erdoğan will reach [out to] 7 billion people and bring justice to the world” and “Arab media launched a campaign against TR [Turkey], all except Al Jazeera.”

‘Germany real enemy of Turkey’

A message Gergerlioğlu sent to an unidentified person on Aug. 18, 2014, stated, “Germans are our real enemies,” “These [Germans] are true enemies of Islam” and “Germans did not take it well that THY [Turkish Airlines] outperformed Lufthansa.”

Blasius said many messages included comments about Fethullah Gülen, who lives in self-imposed exile in the US and who has inspired a civil society movement in his name. One message even noted that the Israeli ambassador had attended an event organized by the Gülen movement.

Gülen, who is internationally acclaimed for his promotion of interfaith dialogue, tolerance and education, served as a spiritual leader and imam before moving to the US in 1999. He became a target of Erdoğan and the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government following the eruption of a graft scandal that implicated Erdoğan’s inner circle in late 2013.

Erdoğan has accused the Gülen movement of operating a “parallel structure” of supporters in the judiciary and the police force who initiated the graft probes, while the movement denies the charge.

Turkish spies are said to have been ordered to spy on Erdoğan’s opponents in Germany, including members of the Kurdish minority, the faith-based Gülen movement and other Turkish nationals critical of the Turkish leadership.

According to court documents, the three were charged with tracking and spying on Turkish and Kurdish dissidents who would be detained upon returning to Turkey. Blasius said police had recovered many photographs from the communications, including some of demonstrations by the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in Bielefeld and Mannheim.

The suspects allegedly profiled Alevi groups in particular. One message was titled “Regarding a PKK and Alevi rally in Koln: German intelligence is supporting atheist Alevis and secular Kurds against Turkey with lots of money. They are swimming in a pool of money. German anarchists are supporting this rally as well.”

Gergerlioğlu also organized a social group, called the “New İstanbul Civilization (YİM),” on WhatsApp, with more than 50 participants, who exchanged information and photos. In his messages, Gergerlioğlu talked about setting up a wide intelligence network, stressing that all information exchanged within the group would be assessed by MİT. He said: “MİT infiltrated the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant [ISIL]. Foreign intelligence exposed that. The PKK is arming. Don’t worry; they will use it against ISIL.”

Gergerlioğlu was reportedly sent by MİT head Hakan Fidan with a fund of 25,000 euros to launch a consulting firm for German-Turkish companies in the city of Bad Dürkheim with Güler in 2011.

The indictment states that the suspects were engaged in acts of espionage for MİT. Ahmet Duran Y. and Güler were charged with collecting information about dissidents opposing Erdoğan in Germany under the leadership of Gergerlioğlu. They face a prison sentence of up to five years, according to German law.

The second witness to testify on Thursday was Police Chief Martin Müller of the Mainz Criminal Bureau. He said he examined the iPhone seized from Gergerlioğlu and found more than 300 documents in the phone’s memory. Among them were passport photographs belonging to British, Syrian, Iranian and Kazakhstani citizens, a list of names from various groups, including al-Qaeda, documents of arms trades between Israel and İstanbul, as well as various official letters and notifications addressed to and from Turkish prosecutors’ offices, governors, and members of the police force and gendarmerie.

Source: ZAMAN

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, espionage, Germany, Gulen, MIT, money transfer, Muhammed Taha Gergerlioğlu, Turkey, Turks

WATCH: Migrant Turks AND Kurds Battle on Frankfort Streets, German army called in

September 11, 2015 By administrator

turks-kurd-battleAt least five arrests were made in Frankfurt on Thursday night after a march by supporters of Turkish nationalism descended into bloody violence when they clashed with rival Kurd separatists.

Video of the riot has emerged on the same day Germany announced it will place 4,000 soldiers on standby over the weekend to help with a new wave of up to 40,000 refugees arriving in the country.

Police said The Thursday event was billed as a “solidarity march commemorating fallen Turkish soldiers”. According to  FR Online to it was organised by the “Federation of Turkish young people” which campaigns on behalf of Turkey. The fracas involved a group of around 380 participant and started at the city’s main railway station at 18.30.

Soon after the Turkish supporters set off there were attacks by immigrant Kurd counter-demonstrators who used sticks, bottles and stones to attack marchers. One taxi driver reportedly had his car damaged in the brawl.

Police confirmed the counter-demonstrators were of Kurdish origin and quickly withdrew.

More than 40,000 people have died since the PKK (Kurdistan Workers’ Party) launched its armed campaign in 1984 calling for an independent Kurdish state within Turkey.
Now immigrants from both sides of that battle are carrying their fight onto the streets of Frankfurt.

Meanwhile, Germany will mobilise 4,000 soldiers in the next 48-hours to help with the entry of up to 40,000 refugees in the country, Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen said on Friday.

She told Der Spiegel that she was placing the troops on alert with the expectation they could be asked to do more than just welcome the immigrant arrivals.

“The country can be sure that the Bundeswehr [German army] will be supporting” efforts to care for refugees, Von der Leyen said, adding that the army could do yet more if called upon.

“We are spreading these 4,000 soldiers across the country and they will intervene if the federal states [which are responsible for the initial uptake of refugees] request it,” a Defence Ministry spokesman told The Local.

“They will provide a helping hand, for example to set up a refugee camp, to help with organization, provide buses and drivers, other types of transport, medical services and equipment, anything of that kind.”

Record numbers of people from the Middle East and sub-Saharan Africa continue to pour into Europe, with around 7,600 entering Macedonia in the last 12 hours.

Source: breitbart.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: battale, frankfort, Germany, Kurd, Turks

Ermenilerin, Rumların, Kürtlerin çocukları mıyız? Turkish writer says there is no real Turk, mixed with Greeks, Kurds and Armenians

August 6, 2015 By administrator

ermenilerin-rumlarin-kurtlerin-ortak-miyizErdoğan’ın sözleriyle başlayan tartışma devam ediyor. Ahmet Altan da bugün Erdoğan’ın sözleri üzerinden ‘Ecdat’ başlıklı bir köşe yazısı kaleme aldı. Osmanlı’ya ilişkin ayrıntılara yer verdi. ‘Özbeöz Türk müyüz yoksa Türklerle Anadolu’da o zamanlarda yaşayan Bizanslıların, Ermenilerin, Rumların, Kürtlerin ortak çocukları mıyız. Sahip olduğunuz tarihin zenginliğiyle övünün, palavralarla övünmekten daha iyidir.’ dedi.

TIMETURK / Haber Merkezi
İşte Altan’ın o yazısı..
Kabul edelim ki biz Türkler pek bir şey “icat” edemeyiz ama iyi uydururuz.

Belki en palavracıları en yukarılara çıkarmamızın nedeni de budur, belki de siyaseti de bir uydurma yarışması sanıyoruz.

En iyi uydurduğumuz şeylerin arasında herhalde “tarih” güzide bir yer tutar.

“Ecdadımız” palavraları kabul edeyim ki ben en çok sevdiklerim arasındadır.

Bizim “ecdadımız” dediğimiz halifelerimiz efendilerimizin, o “attan inmeyen” padişahlarımızın hemen hemen hepsinin dedesinin Hıristiyan olduğunu hatta bir kısmının da papaz olduğunu biliyorsunuz değil mi?

Aranızdan bir kişinin, Başbakan da dâhil, Kanunî’nin dedesinin adını bilmediğine eminim.

II. Bayezid diye öyle öyle bilgiç bilgiç gülümsemeyin, o babasının babası, annesinin babası kimdi?

Peki, halife efendilerimizin sarayı Topkapı’nın bahçesinde neden bir kilise var?

Peki, bizim ecdadımız dediğimiz Osmanlı’dan önceki atalarımız kimler?

Osmanlı kim peki?

Osmanlı’nın Kayı Aşireti’nden çıktığını biliyorsunuz diyelim, Kayı Aşireti hakkında ne biliyorsunuz?

Çok fazla bir bilginiz olamaz çünkü tarihte de çok fazla bir bilgi yok, Kayı Aşireti’nin varlığı bile kuşkulu.

Biraz daha geriye gidelim.

Osmanlı 1299’da kuruldu, Türkler Anadolu’ya 1071’de geldi.

Alparslan’la birlikte Anadolu’ya kaç Türk geldi?

“Türkler kim” sorusunu atlayıp başka soruya geçelim.

Bugün “Türk” olduğunu söylediğimiz 70 milyon insan Alparslan’la birlikte gelen “Türklerin” özbeöz çocukları mı?

Yoksa biz o gelen Türklerle Anadolu’da o zamanlarda yaşayan Bizanslıların, Ermenilerin, Rumların, Kürtlerin ortak çocukları mıyız?

Nasıl oluyor da “ecdadımız” sadece Türkler ve Müslümanlar oluyor o zaman?

Ecdadımız arasında Bizanslılar yok mu?

“Kahpe Bizans” demek neden ecdadımıza hakaret sayılmıyor?

Çünkü tarihi uyduruyoruz.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Greek, Kurd, Turks

Over half of Turks fear retirement financial difficulties: Poll

July 9, 2015 By administrator

ret.thumbOver half of Turkish people believe that they will face economic problems after they retire, so most have planned to keep working, according to a survey by AvivaSA and its partner Aviva in 12 countries, the Hurriyet Daily News reports.

Some 12,500 people participated in the “Consumers’ Saving Tendencies” survey in the United States, China, Indonesia, France, Britain, Ireland, Spain, Italy, Canada, Poland, Singapore and Turkey.

Around 55 percent of Turkish people are concerned about their potential financial difficulties in retirement, according to the study. However, Polish residents are the most concerned with their post-retirement future, with 58 percent.

Some 50 percent of Turkish people believe they will need to work after they retire, according to the study, which was made in cooperation with the Ipsos research firm.

“A total of 5.5 million people have recently enrolled in the private pension system, creating around 42 billion Turkish Liras worth of funds in Turkey… Between 2011 and 2051, an additional 91 billion euros of savings must be made to meet the financial demands of the retired people. Each Turkish person must make an additional 2,400 euros of savings annually to reach this amount. In Turkey, where the saving ratio is very low, the state contribution of 25 percent to the private pension system for each pensioner is of great importance,” said AvivaSA Retirement and Insurance CEO Meral Eredenk Kurdaş at a press meeting announcing the survey results on July 9.

People say they have financial difficulties mainly in two countries: Turkey and Poland. One in three people is not happy with his or her financial opportunities in these countries, according to the study.

Some 23 percent of Turkish people said they suffer from financial difficulties, with 31 percent saying they are “fine” and 46 percent saying “they can barely afford their lifestyles.”

The study also showed that around 49 percent of Turkish people do not want to borrow money for fear of being indebted. Turkish people are the most concerned group about this issue, followed by Indonesians with 48 percent and Poland with 37 percent.

Some 41 percent of Turkish people also said they “could not pay their bills on time nowadays,” the highest out of all the countries polled. Ireland and Indonesia follow Turkey with 21 percent.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: fear retirement, Turks

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