Category: Turkey

  • PM Erdogan reminds reforms at conference

    PM Erdogan reminds reforms at conference

    PM Erdogan reminds reforms at conference


    Thursday, June 26, 2008
    Istanbul – Anatolia News Agency

    For the past five-and-a-half years Turkey has been going through a fundamental transformation, said Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, speaking yesterday at the 16th The Economist Roundtable Meeting in Istanbul.

    “We have taken steps of historic importance in democracy. In economy, we have been implementing reforms no one dared to for the past 10 years,” he said at the meeting. As a result of these reforms, Turkey has become the world’s 17th and Europe’s sixth largest economy, he said.

    The country’s annual exports rose from $36 billion to $121 billion since 2002, Erdoğan said. Inflation, on the other hand, dropped to single-digit figures from 30 percent since then, he added.

    The prime minister also said Turkey does not need the International Monetary Fund as far as “monetary relations” are concerned. Replying to a question posed by Güler Sabancı, chairman of the board of directors at Sabancı Holding, Erdoğan reminded Turkey has $10 billion of debt to the IMF, a figure which stood at $23.5 billion less than six years ago. Still, he accepted the importance of the global body on “accreditation and negotiations.”

    Commenting on the current account deficit, which is expected to reach $50 billion by the end of the year, the prime minister said the reason for the gap is the boom in energy prices. “Especially, the rapid rise in natural gas prices have been pressuring electricity prices. As we saw this is unavoidable, we increased the price of electricity and also believed in the necessity to implement an automatic pricing mechanism,” he said.

  • GE selects Turkey to be its healthcare base

    GE selects Turkey to be its healthcare base

    GE selects Turkey to be its healthcare base


    Saturday, June 14, 2008
    Istanbul – Anatolia News Agency

    General Electric Company, or GE, a subsidiary of GE Healthcare, which is worth $17 billion, has moved its international operations base to Turkey, it was announced Friday.

    GE Healthcare decided to combine the Eastern and Asian markets, or EAGM, into a single “International Diagnostic Imaging” operation. As it gathers its units located in Central Asia, Middle East, Africa, Russia and Commonwealth of Independent States, or CIS, under the GE EAGM title, the company will start managing its operations from Istanbul, officials from GE Healthcare and Turkey’s Investment Support and Promotion Agency, told members of the press during a joint meeting held Friday.

    Focusing mainly on the equipment and service markets, GE EAGM is aiming to accelerate GE’s growth in equipment and services markets in the region. The EAGM region, which accounted for more than $600 million in revenue in 2007, is expected to double the figure to $1.2 billion by 2010, thanks to the new structuring. GE appointed Richard di Benedetto as the chairman and chief executive officer of GE Healthcare International’s EAGM region.

    GE Healthcare, which is a leader in the development of a new paradigm of patient care, focuses on medical imaging and information technologies, medical diagnostics, patient monitoring systems, disease research, drug discovery and biopharmaceutical manufacturing technologies.

    United Kingdom-based GE Healthcare is the first GE business segment headquartered outside the United States.

     

  • Turkey to become Coca Cola hub

    Turkey to become Coca Cola hub

    Istanbul – Turkish Daily News
    The world’s largest beverage company Coca Cola has decided to manage a significant proportion of its global operations from Turkey by moving one of its centers to the country, daily Vatan reported Friday. The top executives of Coca Cola Turkey were informed Thursday that Coca Cola is planning to move its Eastern Europe, Russia, Middle Asia, Caucasus, Middle East and all-Africa center to Turkey, the newspaper said. The global player is expected to manage almost two fifths of its global operations from Turkey.
    Approximately three weeks ago, Alpaslan Korkmaz, head of the Investment Support and Promotion Agency, which was established to attract foreign investment to Turkey, had announced that one of the world’s top 50 companies would move its center, which has a turnover of $17 billion, to Turkey. However, the name of the company was kept secret. Immidiately following after Korkmaz’s statement, Vatan had announced that the aforementioned giant was Coca Cola. With the new development, approximately 30 top-level executives working at Coca Cola Company’s Europe operations in Paris and London will relocate to Istanbul. “I cannot reveal the name; however, I guess we will be able to announce the company’s name on June 13,” Korkmaz had previously said. This development is crucial for the country, “because it will enable Turkish executives to gain experience in the sector and qualify them to work in various units of the company,” he said. Muhtar Kent, a Turkish businessman, has been president and chief executive officer of Coca Cola since December 2007.
     

     

  • Turkey’s ‘Legitimization’ of Sexual Violence Sparks Anger

    Turkey’s ‘Legitimization’ of Sexual Violence Sparks Anger

    bianet.org 

    Women React To The Religious Directives On “Sexual Life”

    The Director of Religious Affairs puts some directives about sexual life on its internet site. The women find them discriminating. They say people take them seriously and therefore they need to be careful in what they say about women.

    Bia news servıce
    28-05-2008

    Nilüfer ZENGIN

    Kızbeş Aydın, the head of Çiğle Evka2 Women’s Culture House Association (ÇEKEV), Zozan Özgökçe from Van Women’s Association and Ayşegül Kanat, a feminist from Adana, are upset at the information about sexual life located at the internet site of the Director of the Religious Affairs. The religious directives found on the internet site say the following:

    “The women communicating with strange men should speak in a manner that will not arouse suspicion in one’s heart and in such seriousness and dignity that they will not let the opposite party misunderstand them, that they should not show their ornaments and figure and that they should cover in a fine manner; and that these are the orders. His highness the Prophet Mohammed did not think kindly of women who put on perfumes outside their homes and go strolling and saw this as immoral behavior.”

    “Male violence is legitimized”
    We asked women about the speech of the Director of the Religious Affairs regarding the woman, sexuality and “morality”…

    Kızbeş Aydın, the head of Çiğle Evka2 Women’s Culture House Association:

    “The Director of the Religious Affairs is not an institution authorized to give opinions on matters involving religious affairs. Therefore, I do not find these explanations appropriate. These explanations work directly towards deepening the sexual inequality and they become part of the discrimination directed at women.”

    “These explanations provide the groundwork for the violence against women, they legitimize it, and they justify the implementation of violence with excuses such as “she has perfume” or “she dressed up provocatively” .

    “Both men and women take into consideration”
    Zozan Özgökçe from Van Women’s Association:

    “These kinds of explanations are obstacles, preventing things from changing. Both men and women take into consideration what the Director of the Religious Affairs say. Yesterday 81 müftis, religious officials knowledgeable in Muslim law, met in Van in eastern Turkey. Their words are taken very seriously. Therefore, they need to be about universal stuff.

    Unfortunately, the men are one of the factors that we are backward. In Van a woman had gotten a divorce, but his husband was not divorcing her through religious procedure. We went to a mufti and he said how he could interfere in someone else’s chastity, that is, sexual morality [and one’s honor in most cases]. Some people see muftis as solution providers.”

    “You know men give their seats to women in the buses. In Van, the women do not sit on these seats right a way, waiting for man’s warmth on the seat to go away. This is certainly scary. This has nothing to do with humanity, nor religion. In Van, we come across comments like ‘let us go ask Müfti’ a lot.”

    “Neighborhood pressure is increasing” 
    Ayşegül Kanat, a feminist from Adana:

    “There should be such an institution as the Director of the Religious Affairs, but if Turkey is defined as a mosaic [of different cultures] then all the religions must be represented in this institution; the atheist as well.”

    “These explanations are very dangerous. People start seeing them as scientifically proven information and they create pressure on us [the women]. The Religious Affairs is at a very influential position. Their comments are accepted without discussions and this increases the neighborhood pressure.”(NZ/ GG/TB)

  • Ban Ki-moon voices concern over Turkish air attacks against Iraq

    Ban Ki-moon voices concern over Turkish air attacks against Iraq

    United Nations

    17 December 2007 – Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has expressed concern over yesterdays ^Turkish air strikes into northern Iraq and reports of possible civilian casualties, as well as continued attacks by the armed group^ PKK.

    In response to a question about the air attacks, United Nations spokesperson Marie Okabe told reporters that the Secretary-General is concerned that ^Turkey has launched air strikes into northern Iraq yesterday, and that there have been reports of possible civilian casualties, while also noting that thus far, there is no independent confirmation of developments on the ground.

    At the same time she said that Mr. Ban was concerned at the continued intrusion of^ PKK elements carrying out terrorist attacks in ^Turkey from northern Iraq. He appeals to the Governments of Iraq and Turkey to work together to prevent these kinds of attacks from continuing, she added.

    ======
    Dit bericht komt van het  interactief Nederlands persbureau van Nieuwsbank op  Internet-adres  Voor meer informatie over, stopzetting of aanpassing van uw abonnement, schrijf admin@nieuwsbank.nl of bel  030-2881286.
    N\I\E\U\W\S\bank          interactief Nederlands persbureau.

  • Next Coke CEO is a son of privilege

    Next Coke CEO is a son of privilege


    The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
    Published on: 06/22/08

    Next Coke CEO is a son of privilege with a feel for average consumers.

    Muhtar Kent will take the reins of Coke on July 1

    ISTANBUL — He is a son of privilege, educated at elite private schools in Turkey and universities in England. He is named after his great uncle, Turkey’s first ambassador to Washington. His father was also an ambassador who never appeared in public without a necktie, carried a walking stick and collected Greek antiquities. Read the full story…