Category: Turkey

  • Hot, Flat, and Crowded

    Hot, Flat, and Crowded

    In June 2004, I was visiting London with my daughter Orly, and one evening we went to see the play Billy Elliot at a theater near Victoria Station. During intermission, I was standing up, stretching my legs in the aisle next to my seat, when a stranger approached and asked me, “Are you Mr. Friedman?” When I nodded yes, he introduced himself: “My name is Emad Tinawi. I am a Syrian-American working for Booz Allen,” the consulting firm. Tinawi said that while he disagreed with some of the columns I had written, particularly on the Middle East, there was one column he especially liked and still kept.

     

    “Which one?” I asked with great curiosity.

    “The one called ‘Where Birds Don’t Fly,’” he said. For a moment, I was stumped. I remembered writing that headline, but I couldn’t remember the column or the dateline. Then he reminded me: It was about the new—post-9/11—U.S. consulate in Istanbul, Turkey. For years, the U.S. consulate in Istanbul was headquartered in the Palazzo Corpi, a grand and distinctive old building in the heart of the city’s bustling business district, jammed between the bazaars, the domed mosques, and the jumble of Ottoman and modern architecture. Built in 1882, and bought by the U.S. government twenty-five years later, Palazzo Corpi was bordered on three sides by narrow streets and was thoroughly wove

    ‘Hot, Flat, and Crowded’ – WSJ.com

  • The Wrestling Camels of Turkey

    The Wrestling Camels of Turkey

    The west coast of Turkey has a tradition of camel wrestling, which pits champion beasts from local villages against each other in a dusty stadium. But it tends to be as comic as it is exciting, since camels aren’t natural-born fighters.

    They may not wear an elastic singlet or an athletic supporter, and they may have no talent for a full nelson. But camels can wrestle. Disbelievers are invited to visit the Aegean coast of Turkey in the winter, where villages and towns hold camel wrestling matches every weekend.

    Brawling Beasts of Burden: The Wrestling Camels of Turkey – SPIEGEL ONLINE – News – International

  • Explore Howard: Rick Steves' Europe: Istanbul

    Explore Howard: Rick Steves' Europe: Istanbul

    Staring into a TV camera, I say, “Istanbul is one of the world’s great cities, period. For thousands of years, this point, where East meets West, has been the crossroads of civilizations. Few places on earth have seen more history than this sprawling metropolis on the Bosphorus.”

    It’s the last day of a week devoted to producing a TV show on Istanbul and we need a grand spot for the show’s opening. We had a reasonable vista from the Galata Bridge, but it showed just charming old fishermen and tour boats. I want to somehow capture both the historic crossroads and the contemporary might of this city.

    So far, the site selection has just led to frustrations. Mentally scanning all possible angles, it hits me: We need what filmmakers call a “high-wide,” a wide-angle, almost aerial shot. I want to show the freighter-filled Bosphorus and its Golden Horn inlet, the teeming Galata Bridge with lumbering commuter ferries churning up the port, and a huge mosque in the foreground.

    Explore Howard: Rick Steves’ Europe: Istanbul

  • Markets Media Online – Driven by Content

    Markets Media Online – Driven by Content

    CA Cheuvreux announces the opening of a subsidiary in Istanbul, which has already begun operations with an execution offer.

    CA Cheuvreux is building up a team with expertise in the region that will eventually comprise 15 professionals in the coming months, including 5 analysts, 3 sales people, 1 economist and 2 sales traders. The team will be managed by Attila Kadikoy, and the research activity will be headed by Can Yurtcan, who is due to arrive on 15 September. Mr Kadikoy and Mr Yurtcan both previously held executive positions with Turkish brokers in Istanbul. CA Cheuvreux’s ambition is to rank in the Top 5 in the region for research and execution.

    Markets Media Online – Driven by Content.

  • Saga Airlines Orders Two Boeing Next-Generation 737-800s – MarketWatch

    Saga Airlines Orders Two Boeing Next-Generation 737-800s – MarketWatch

    LONDON, Sept 04, 2008 /PRNewswire-FirstCall via COMTEX/ — The Boeing Company

    BA 63.03, -3.04, -4.6%) and Saga Airlines today announced that the Istanbul-based airline has ordered two Boeing 737-800s with Blended Winglets. Saga Airlines has also secured two purchase rights for the same model. This order is valued at $149 million at current list prices.

    “We currently have four Boeing airplanes in our fleet and we decided to expand our fleet and made our first new airplane deal with Boeing,” said Saga Airlines Chairman Abdulkadir Kolot during the signing ceremony. “We are very happy with the agreement we made with Boeing for two firm, two optional 737-800s. We are thrilled to contribute to the fast growth of the Turkish aviation industry.”

    Saga Airlines Orders Two Boeing Next-Generation 737-800s – MarketWatch.

  • Weekend Break in Istanbul

    Weekend Break in Istanbul

    The grand city of Istanbul is steeped in history with a unique georgraphical positioning that places it half in Asia and half in Europe. It is one of the world’s largest cities and is at the centre of Turkey’s finance and rich culture.

    It’s one of the easiest cities to access from Bulgaria, but relations between the two countries haven’t always been as easy. For almost 500 years Bulgaria was held under Ottoman rule, in which Turkish forces attempted to force the religion of Islam onto the stoically Christian Orthodox nationals. Bulgaria eventually freed itself from the rule and reclaimed much of the land seized by the Ottomans.

    Quest Bulgaria Property Magazine – Weekend Break in Istanbul.