Category: Cyprus/TRNC

  • PKK WEB SIDE: Joint Declaration: Enough with this Turkey!

    PKK WEB SIDE: Joint Declaration: Enough with this Turkey!

    Joint Declaration: Enough with this Turkey!

    On the occasion of the Dersim Conference held at European Parliament on November 13, 2008, five Brussels organisations belonging to different communities coming out from Turkey issued the following joint declaration:

    For three millennium, Anatolia has been the homeland or have passed through it countless people. It is a land where coexisted and coexist today Armenians, Assyrians, Greeks, Arabs, Kurds, Turks, Jews, Zazas, as well as a number of other minorities such as Lazes, Circassians, Pomaks, Yörüks, and others. Certain of these people and the majority have adopted the Apostolic Christianity, others have converted to Roman Catholicism or Orthodoxy, some became Nestorians or Chaldeans; while others turned Sunni Muslims, Shiites or Alevi Muslims; and still others remained Yezidis or Mazdeists or kept their shamanic beliefs.

    This coexistence naturally led to disputes – sometime very violent – but it led also and above all to a cultural closeness and to an ethnic intermingling which challenge all ideologies that are based on racial or linguistic purity: today, the overwhelming majority of Turkey’s inhabitants are of mixed origins.

    However, the Ottoman Empire and then after it the Kemalist republic have artificially reshaped the land’s multy-ethnic identity by reducing the dominated people into slavery, by denying their identity, and then by promoting the doctrine of the Turkish “race” as the “essential being”. This fascist like thinking has led the authorities perpetrate abominable mass murders such as:

    • The Armenian and Assyro-Chaldean Genocide (1915-1916)
    • The Koçkiri massacre of Kurds, Alevis and Kizilbachs (1919-1921)
    • The brutal expulsion of Greeks (1923-1924)
    • Massacres of Kurds and Assyrians after the revolt of Sheikh Said (1925-1928)
    • The Dersim Massacre of Kurds, Alevis and Kizilbachs (1935-1938)
    • The iniquitous laws and the deportations of Armenians, Jews and Greeks (1942)
    • Pogroms of lstanbul and Izmir against Greeks, Armenians and Jews (1955)
    • War against Kurds (since 1984)


    It has to be recalled, that since its creation, the Kemalist republic targets and represses all political opponents to the regime, whatever their ethnic origin, including Turkish democrats.

    Lastly, the ultranationalist and genocide denial policies of Ankara utilise the Turkish immigrants in the European countries and with the complicity of certain local European political leaders incite them to hatred towards the Armenian, Assyrian and Kurdish communities.

    Facing this ideology to hate and its bloody consequences, the peoples of Anatolia:

    • Rebuke the idea of any racial of religious supremacy and reaffirm their indefectible attachment to the individual fundamental rights of all the Turkish citizens as well as to the collective rights of the people living in this State;
    • Reject the fiction of a monolithic Turkey as extolled by the Turkish State and, on the contrary, call upon the State to pride on the ethnic wealth and diversity of the Anatolian people;
    • Ask again the Turkish State to rehabilitate itself in rehabilitating the victims of its past exactions, in committing itself on the path of the political recognition of these exactions and in giving an end to their denial or glorification;
    • Proclaim their conviction that the incapacity of Turkey to progress on the path of democracy, as well as the state of economical and social backwardness of its eastern provinces are closely linked to the war conducted by this State towards its own citizens;
    • Reaffirm their commitment to keep on the political struggle so that Turkey recognize, denounce and disassociate from its past and present crimes; to transform it into a democratic State which would respect its minorities as its various political forces, united in their diversity.


    Association of the Democrat Armenians of Belgium
    Associations of the Assyrians of Belgium
    Kurdish Institute of Brussels
    European Armenian Federation
    Info-Turk Foundation

    PKK WEB SITESINDEN DIGERALINTILAR

    Intellectuals Launch A Campaign To Apologize Armenians

    “My conscience does not accept the insensitivity showed to and the denial of the ‘Great Catastrophe’ that the Ottoman Armenians were subjected to in 1915. I reject this injustice and for my share, I empathize with the feelings and pain of my Armenian brothers, I apologize them.”

    This is the text of the campaign that was introduced by Journalist Ali Bayramoğlu, professors Baskın Oran and Ahmet İnsel and Dr. Cengiz Aktar, with the support of some the other academicians. The text will be opened for signature in the internet for one year, starting on the new years day.

    Aktar told Tülay Şubatlı of daily Vatan why they were apologizing:

    “We are apologizing for not being able to discuss, not talk openly about  this topic for such a long time, nearly one hundred years.”

    Aktar described the purpose of the campaign as such:

    “What happened to the Armenians is not well-known; people are forced to forget it, and the subject  is highly provocative. The Turks have heard this mostly from their elders, their grandfathers. But, the subject has not become an objective historical narrative. Therefore, today many people in Turkey, with all the good intentions, think that nothing happened to the Armenians .”

    “The official history has been saying that this incident happened through secondary, not very important, and even mutual massacres; they push the idea that it was an ordinary incident explainable by the conditions of the First World War. However, unfortunately, the facts are very different. Perhaps there is only one fact and it is that the Kurds and Turks are still here, but the Armenians are not. The subject of this campaign is the individuals. This is a voice coming from the individual’s conscience. Those who want to apologize can apologize, and those who do not should not.” (BIA, December 5, 2008)

    Nationalists react to intellectuals’ courageous apology

    Turkey’s nationalists have been incensed about a group of Turkish intellectuals who recently apologized publicly for the “great disaster Ottoman Armenians suffered in 1915” in a country where even discussing Armenian claims of genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire can be cause for arrest.

    The reaction to a petition initiated by a group of intellectuals, led by popular professors Baskın Oran and Ahmet İnsel and journalists Ali Bayramoğlu and Cengiz Aktar, personally apologizing for the forced deportation of Armenians from their homes in the Turkish heartland in 1915, has shown yet again how courageous one must be to publicly announce his or her unorthodox opinions in Turkey, particularly if those opinions contradict the official ideology.

    In a phone interview with Today’s Zaman, Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) deputy for Erzurum Zeki Ertugay accused the signatories of being in “a state of hysteria.” He stressed that it was not Armenians who suffered at the hand of Ottoman Turks, but Turks who were assaulted by Armenians. “Erzurum suffered most from that cruelty.

    Every house has memories of people butchered by Armenians. I regard apologizing to the Armenians as an insult to the Turkish nation. People who call themselves intellectuals have not even been enlightened about their own history. A stain of shame like genocide has never taken place in the history of the Turkish nation. If there is somebody who needs to apologize, it is the Armenians and the Western states that provoked the Armenians against the Turks by promising them a state of their own.”

    Behiç Çelik, a MHP deputy from Mersin, was equally enraged. “It is impossible to refer to these people as intellectuals. The so-called intellectuals trying to apologize to Armenians do not know the past. They don’t know history. There has never been any genocide in the history of the Turkish nation. Apologizing even for the deportation is not acceptable, because deportations have been carried out by many nations, not just Turkey. The US relocated Native Americans, Russia deported the Kazaks and the Crimean Tatars. Their intellectuals never apologized to anybody.”

    Ultranationalist media outlets and pundits were also furious. The Yeni Çağ (New Age) daily referred to the petition as a “campaign to smear Turkey.” Yusuf Halaçoğlu, a well-known ultranationalist who formerly headed the Turkish Historical Society (TTK), said the real target here was connected to Turkey’s new foreign policy initiative, started in early September with President Abdullah Gül and Foreign Minister Ali Babacan visiting Yerevan for a soccer match between the national teams of Turkey and Armenia. “The aim here is to foment public opinion to be able to take that earlier initiative to the next level,” Halaçoğlu said.

    He said only 22,000 people died before 1915, the year of the forced deportation. “Will they apologize for those, too? Or will the Armenians announce with whom they cooperated when the Ottoman Empire was fighting world powers? Are they going to publicly announce how many Armenians were part of the French and Russian armies at the time? Armenians, as people who cooperated with the enemy in their own countries, have lost this war. This is the state of affairs as it stands today,” he said.

    Historian Cemalettin Taşkıran was quoted in nationalist newspapers as saying, “This is the biggest betrayal that could be shown to our forefathers.” Taşkıran said the campaign was set up to hurt the unity of the Turkish nation and to prepare the way for Turkey’s eventual recognition of Armenian claims of genocide.

    The intellectuals’ group is calling on other people to sign the petition posted online, which reads as follows: “I cannot conscientiously accept the indifference to the great disaster that Ottoman Armenians suffered in 1915, and its denial. I reject this injustice and, acting of my own will, I share the feelings and pains of my Armenian brothers and sisters, and I apologize to them.”

    The organizers of the campaign have underlined that first they will collect signatures from intellectuals and they will then open a secure Web site to collect signatures.

    The Armenian population that was in Turkey before the establishment of Turkish Republic was forced to emigrate in 1915, and, according to some, the conditions of this expulsion are the basis of Armenian claims of genocide. (Zaman, E.BARIŞ ALTINTAŞ, ERCAN YAVUZ, 6 December 2008)

  • Christofias: “Turkey cannot join EU until troops out – Cyprus”

    Christofias: “Turkey cannot join EU until troops out – Cyprus”

    Thu Feb 5, 2009 2:15pm GMT

    NICOSIA, Feb 5 (Reuters) – Cypriot President Demetris Christofias said on Thursday that Turkey would not be able to join the European Union as long as it kept troops stationed in northern Cyprus.

    “It’s not possible for Turkey to be accepted as a member of the union while continuing the occupation of Cyprus,” he told reporters. (Reporting by Michele Kambas; editing by Elizabeth Piper)

    Source:  Reuters, Feb 5, 2009

  • Temper tantrums

    Temper tantrums

    Temper tantrums

    Feb 5th 2009 | ANKARA
    From The Economist print edition

    A dramatic Davos walkout raises new questions about Recep Tayyip Erdogan

    WAS it premeditated? Or did Turkey’s prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, lose control? Mr Erdogan’s walkout from a debate with Israel’s president, Shimon Peres, in Davos has made him the most talked about Turkish leader since Kemal Ataturk. His audience of financiers and policy wonks was stunned. But Muslims worldwide cheered as Mr Erdogan scolded Mr Peres over Israel’s war in Gaza. “When it comes to killing, you know very well how to kill. I know well how you hit and kill children on beaches,” thundered a crimson-faced Mr Erdogan.

    The incident has led to new debate over Turkey’s strategic alliance with Israel, whether an increasingly erratic Mr Erdogan is fit to lead Turkey at all and, if so, in what direction: east or west? There is no question of Turkey walking away from NATO or the European Union, or scrapping military ties with Israel and America. Mr Erdogan’s critics say his outburst was a ploy to please voters. If so, it worked: his approval ratings have shot up. Polls suggest that 80% of Turks support Mr Erdogan’s actions. His mildly Islamist Justice and Development party will reap dividends in municipal elections on March 29th.

    Mr Erdogan’s defiance has also helped to assuage his people’s long-running feelings of humiliation and inferiority, which date back as far as the Ottoman defeat in the first world war. Many insist that Mr Erdogan’s reaction was spontaneous and utterly sincere. Turkey has assumed “moral leadership” based on Western values, opined Cengiz Candar, a liberal commentator. Mindful of the public mood, Turkey’s secular opposition leader, Deniz Baykal, grudgingly declared that his rival had done the right thing.

    Not everybody agrees, however. Mr Erdogan’s behaviour makes it less likely that Turkey can successfully mediate between Israel and Syria. His call to Barack Obama to “redefine” what terrorist means has been seen as an appeal to remove the label from Hamas. Although European and American reaction has been muted, in private officials are unhappy. “What [the Davos spat] does leave in Europe is the feeling that Mr Erdogan is unpredictable,” says a European diplomat. Mr Obama is highly unlikely now to pay Turkey an early visit.

    Mr Erdogan’s temper tantrums are not new. But they used to be reserved for his critics at home. The Davos affair, says another foreign diplomat, is further evidence of “Mr Erdogan’s conviction that the West needs Turkey more than Turkey needs it.” It is of a piece with Mr Erdogan’s threat to back out of the much-touted Nabucco pipeline to carry gas from the Caspian Sea to Europe via Turkey. In Brussels recently Mr Erdogan said that, if there were no progress on the energy chapter of Turkey’s EU accession talks then “we would of course review our position”. Meanwhile, Turkey sided with Saudi Arabia and the Vatican in opposing a UN statement suggested by the EU to call for the global decriminalisation of homosexuality.

    Mr Erdogan’s supporters argue that EU foot-dragging on Turkey’s membership bid explains why Turkey is now seeking new friends in the Middle East and beyond. Its growing regional clout is another reason why the EU should embrace Turkey. But the reverse is also true. It is because it is the sole Muslim country that is at once secular, democratic and allied with the West that Turkey commands such respect in the rest of the world. Growing numbers of Arab investors have flocked to Turkey, “because we see it as part of Europe, not the Middle East,” says an Arab banker in Istanbul.

    To retain its allure, Turkey will need to swallow its pride and make further concessions on Cyprus. The EU may suspend membership talks altogether unless Turkey meets a December 2009 deadline to open its ports to Greek-Cypriots. The hope is that Egemen Bagis, who was chosen as Turkey’s official EU negotiator in January, will remind Mr Erdogan that, at least in these talks, it is Turkey that is the supplicant not the other way round.

    Source:  Economist, Feb 5th 2009

  • Cyprus Dimension of Turkish Foreign Policy

    Cyprus Dimension of Turkish Foreign Policy

    Cyprus that is located in Eastern Mediterranean has a great strategic importance for European countries as much as other North Africa and Middle East have. Sovereign states made big wars especially to keep the artery of commerce under control and the island was occupied by so many forces throughout the history. (more…)

  • Turkey and Europe: The Decisive Year Ahead

    Turkey and Europe: The Decisive Year Ahead

    INTERNATIONAL CRISIS GROUP – NEW REPORT

     

    Istanbul/Brussels, 15 December 2008: Turkey is entering a critical year when its already fading goal of European Union membership may be put on hold indefinitely.

    Turkey and Europe: The Decisive Year Ahead,* the latest International Crisis Group report, says both Turkey and EU member states need to recall how much they have to gain from each other and quickly reverse a downward spiral that is otherwise likely to produce a breakdown in negotiations and new tension in the Mediterranean.

    “There was extraordinary progress in Turkey between 2000-2004 on convergence with EU laws and standards”, says Hugh Pope, Crisis Group’s Project Director for Turkey and Cyprus. “But since then, national reform has slowed to a crawl. At the same time, leaders in some EU countries, including France and Germany, have shown opposition to Turkish membership in unprecedented ways”.

    The danger of a breakdown will be especially great if there is no Cyprus settlement in 2009. Some member states could seize on the issue to suspend membership negotiations, especially if Turkey does not open its ports to Cypriot vessels by the fall. If negotiations are suspended, it will be nearly impossible to find the unanimity needed to restart them.

    Global rankings show that Turkey is seriously underperforming in terms of development, rights, transparency and democracy. EU-driven reforms have stalled, due to anger that Brussels accepted Cyprus as a member in 2004 even though it was the Greek Cypriots who rejected the UN plan for reunification of the island; domestic political crises; institutional resistance to change; and the reluctance of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the ruling AKP and main opposition parties to take political risks to move forward. Nothing much can now be expected at least until after the March 2009 local elections. A crucial “National Program” to adopt EU laws – the reform roadmap – is stalled in the cabinet.

    The setbacks come just as Turkey’s initiatives to encourage openness and calm regional tensions are showing how much it can advance EU foreign policy goals. Ankara has helped de-escalate crises over Iran’s nuclear policy and Lebanon; mediated Syria-Israel talks; and opened new contacts with Armenia and cooperation with Iraqi Kurds. It is also supporting promising talks on Cyprus, where, if all sides push for an agreement, a 2009 settlement is possible.

    The dangers to Turkey of lost momentum are evident: feeble reform, new Kurdish tension, political polarisation and the risk of losing the anchor of this decade’s economic miracle.

    “The cost to Europe would also be great”, says Sabine Freizer, Crisis Group’s Europe Program Director. “Less easy access to big, fast-growing markets, likely new tensions over Cyprus and the loss of leverage that partnership with Turkey offers to help stabilise the Middle East, strengthen EU energy security and reach out to the Muslim world”.


    Contacts: Andrew Stroehlein (Brussels) +32 (0) 2 541 1635
    Kimberly Abbott (Washington) +1 202 785 1601
    To contact Crisis Group media please click here
    *Read the full Crisis Group report on our website:

    The International Crisis Group (Crisis Group) is an independent, non-profit, non-governmental organisation covering some 60 crisis-affected countries and territories across four continents, working through field-based analysis and high-level advocacy to prevent and resolve deadly conflict.

  • Journalist of Turkish origin, under protection after menaces

    Journalist of Turkish origin, under protection after menaces

     

    OFFICE-TKG

       

    Belcikada neler oluyor? Asagida gelen Türkce ve Ingilizce e-postalari dikkatlere sakince okumak amaci ile sunuyoruz. Asagida yazi ‚dogrular ile yanlislarin birbirine karistirildigi’ va amaci karalama ve camaura cekme girisimi olan bir propaganda calismasi olabilri. Dogru ise cok üzücü bir gelisme ile karsi, karsiyayiz. Asgidaki yazi Türkce ve Ingilizce AB ülkelerinin her tarafina yollandigini tahmin ediyoruz!

     


    Von: inci@tugsavul.be [mailto:inci@tugsavul.be]
    Gesendet: Freitag, 12. Dezember 2008 09:22

    Betreff: Türk gazeteci Dogan Özgüden Belçika’da tehditlere karsi koruma altina alindi

    Belga Ajansı’nın haberi

    Türk Gazeteci Doğan Özgüden

    Belçika’da tehditlere karşı koruma altına alındı

    11.12.08 – 19.38 (BELGA) –  Bağımsız internet sitesi İnfo-Türk’ün yöneticisi Türk kökenli gazeteci Doğan Özgüden’in, kendisine yönelen tehditler karşısında Belçika otoritelerince koruma altına alındığı perşembe günü açıklandı.

    Özgüden, Brüksel’deki Türkiye Büyükelçiliği’ndeki bir tören sırasında Türkiye Milli Savunma Bakanı Vecdi Gönül’ün Rumların ve Ermenilerin Türkiye’den tehcir edilmesi politikasını övdüğünü İnfo-Türk’te duyurmuştu. Yine İnfo-Türk’e göre, aynı tören sırasında Büyükelçi Fuat Tanlay’ın kendisi de Türk bayrağını öven kin dolu bir şiir okumuştu: “Sana benim gözümle bakmayanın mezarını kazacağım. Seni selamlamadan uçan kuşun yuvasını bozacağım.”

    Söz konusu kişilere yönelik eleştiriler üzerine Beltürk başta olmak üzere hükümet yanlısı birçok sitede, İnfo-Türk’e karşı, genel yayın yönetmeni Doğan Özgüden’in linçedilmesini teşvike kadar varan bir kampanya açıldığını belirten Ecolo Senatörü Josy Dubié, kendisinin korunması için özel önlemler alınıp alınmadığı konusunda İçişleri Bakanı Patrick Dewael’e perşembe günü Senato’da soru yöneltti.

    Dewael’e vekaleten soruyu yanıtlayan Devlet Sekreteri Jean-Marc Délizée, şu açıklamayı yaptı: “Özgüden’in dosyası, tehdide maruz şahsiyetlerin, kamu görevlilerinin ve bireylerin korunmasına ilişkin Başsavcılar Kurulu Genelgesi uyarınca Genel Kriz Merkezi Yönetimi’ne iletilmiştir. Ancak teslim etmek gerekir ki, Özgüden’le ilgili olarak alınan koruma önlemlerinin neler olduğunun açıklanması kendisinin güvenliği açısından mümkün değildir.”

    Senatör Dubié bakanın bu açıklamasıyla gazetecinin koruma altına alındığı güvencesi verilmiş olduğunu umduğunu söyledi. Délizée de, senatörü, “Bunu teyid ediyoruz,” diye yanıtladı.

    Doğan Özgüden, ayrıca, kendisine karşı şiddet ve linç kışkırtması yapanlar aleyhine Kraliyet Savcılığı’na bir şikayet dosyası iletmiş bulunuyor.

    ______________________

    INFO-TURK

    Tel: (32-2) 215 35 76

    Fax: (32-2) 215 58 60

     


    Von: inci@tugsavul.be [mailto:inci@tugsavul.be]
    Gesendet: Freitag, 12. Dezember 2008 11:08

    Betreff: Turkish journalist Dogan Özgüden under protection after menaces

    Flash Belga:

    Dogan Özgüden, Journalist of Turkish origin,

    under protection after menaces

    11.12.08 – 19:38 –  (Belga) -A Belgian journalist of Turkish origin, Dogan Özgüden, who edits the independent internet site “Info-Türk”, has been taken under protection by Belgian authorities after the menaces against his integrity, announced on Thursday.

    Mr. Özgüden had recently echoed a ceremony at the Turkish Embassy during which Turkish National Defense Minister Vecdi Gönül, according to Info-Türk, praised the policy of deportation of Greeks and Armenians from Turkey. Again according to Info-Türk, during the ceremony, Turkish Ambassador Fuat Tanlay himself read a poem praising the Turkish flag and full of hatred: “I dig the grave of those who do not watch you with my eyes. I ruin  the nest of birds which fly without greeting you.”

    Following this information calling into question these authorities, many pro-government sites, of which Beltürk, have launched against Info-Türk a campaign going up to incitement to lynching its chief editor, Dogan Özgüden, according to Senator Josy Dubié who questioned on Thursday Interior Minister Patrick Dewael if particular measures were taken for this journalist’s protection.

    “The file of Mr. Özgüden has been transmitted to the Crisis Center General Directory within the frame of the circular letter (…) of the Board of General Prosecutors by the Appeal Courts concerning the protection of personalities, public servants and private persons under menace”, said at the Senate the State Secretary Jean-Marc Délizée who replaced Mr. Dewael. “You should understand however that for the interest of Mr. Özgüden’s security, it is not possible to communicate possible measures of protection that were taken as regards him,” he added.

    Senator Dubié said he hopes that the minister’s reply means that the concerned has been placed under protection. “I confirm it,” said Mr. Délizée in answer.

    Dogan Özgüden has also put a complaint to the Royal Prosecutor against the instigators to violence and lynching.

    ______________________

    INFO-TURK

    Tel: (32-2) 215 35 76

    Fax: (32-2) 215 58 60