Category: World

  • 6 National Anthems That Will Make You Tremble With Fear

    6 National Anthems That Will Make You Tremble With Fear

    #3.

    Turkey – “İstiklal Marşı/Independence March”

    Another anthem, another fight for independence. Noting that Turkish fighters were having a fair amount of success defending themselves against European invaders, it was decided that a motivational song to spur them onto victory and celebrate their inevitable success was in order. Basically, Independence March was the Super Bowl Shuffle of its day.

    turkeyThe lyrics focus mainly on how unbelievably awesome it would be to die for your country. We would prefer to, you know, defend our country while at the same time remaining alive. But that’s why we write dick jokes and not national anthems.

    Most Awesomely Violent Lyrics

    “I’m like the roaring flood; powerful and independent, I’ll tear apart mountains, exceed the heavens and still gush out!”

    “Render your chest as armor and your body as trench!”

    “For only then, shall my fatigued tombstone, if there is one, prostrate a thousand times in ecstasy, and tears of fiery blood shall flow out of my every wound, and my lifeless body shall gush out from the earth like an eternal spirit.”

    Whatever. Their landscape still looks like a bunch of dick mountains.

    Did They Live Up To It?

    Damn right they did. In order to gain their independence, they had to convince the Allied Forces of World War I to abandon the Treaty of Sevres. The Allied Forces. That’s a lot of power to deal with. But convince them they did…by force.

    via 6 National Anthems That Will Make You Tremble With Fear | Cracked.com.

  • Turkey: Modern Assertiveness in a Globalized World

    Turkey: Modern Assertiveness in a Globalized World

    Ari Katz

    Turkey is a predominantly Sunni Muslim, ethnically Turkish country with a Kurdish minority. Its role in several ongoing geopolitical sagas, its increasingly public Islamic conservatism, and its newly assertive nature has positioned Turkey squarely on the international stage.

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    Historical Background

    After a brutal war for independence from Western WWI victors, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk led a group of military officers who successfully instituted secular and western reforms, including the restriction of Islam in the public sphere. Heralded as exemplary, “Kemalism” drove Turkey’s destiny to become a successful, liberal and modern power.

    Following World War II, Turkey moved forward as a largely secular, constitutional parliamentary republic that became increasingly allied and integrated with the Western geopolitical framework.

    Coups and the subsequent splintered political landscape led to the ascendancy of the socially conservative, fiscally liberal Justice and Development Party (AKP) led by the current Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The AKP, elected in 2002, has presided over fiscal growth, a push to join the European Union (EU), and an institutional social conservatism.

    Domestic Politics

    Turkey has leaned more conservative in recent years, but maintains a relatively stable political atmosphere with healthy civic participation. The success of the reigning AKP, with Erdogan at the helm, has sparked fears of a developing Islamist shift. Although this conservatism appeals to elements of the Turkish population, for others, it runs counter to ostensibly important secular norms and curbs on Islam in the public sphere. Whether this Islamist characterization is true, Erdogan rejects the label to avoid the associated stigma from both external and internal actors.

    Aside from the AKP, two other major political parties are acting in Turkey: the center-left leaning Republican People’s Party and the right-wing Nationalist Movement Party. The former espouses a populist, secular ideology in the tradition of Ataturk, while the latter has a nationalist Pan-Turkic agenda.

    A third organization, the Kurdistan Worker’s Party (PKK), is a militant, leftist revolutionary organization that claims to represent the interests of the ethnic Kurdish population in Turkey. The PKK is banned in Turkey and has been designated as a terrorist group, but it continues a sporadic armed insurrection against the Turkish government in its quest for increased Kurdish minority rights and the eventual establishment of a separate Kurdish state.

    Foreign Politics and Geopolitical Significance

    Turkey has become an increasingly strong, assertive regional power that has shown some foreign policy independence from the US strategic framework, while still remaining a key American/NATO ally in the Region. In this respect, Turkish military power is burgeoning on the heels of an evolving modernization program, and its participation in the US F-35 Stealth Fighter Program could dramatically alter power dynamics with its neighbors.

    Turkey is also experiencing a recent surge in soft-power. Its recent rebukes and strained dealings with Israel over the Palestinian issue have earned it admiration across the Middle East and North Africa region (MENA). Synergizing with this, Turkey also propagates a populist image by claiming support for popular uprisings in the Arab world. The flagship aspect of this policy has been the public criticism of Syrian President Bashar al Assad and limited logistical support of the Syrian rebels in the current uprising.

    With regards to Tehran, historically closer ties have given way to recent tension both over Ankara’s negative disposition towards Iran’s ally in Damascus, and its participation in the NATO antiballistic missile system. This cooperation with the NATO program is a manifestation of Turkey’s increasing desire – seen also in its bid to join the EU – for increased integration with the West, especially Europe. Far from assured, however, this quest for EU membership is challenged by European fears of an ostensible Turkish Islamic resurgence under Erdogan along with an indecisiveness stemming from recent internal EU political and economic upheaval.

    A burgeoning power at the crossroads of the West and Asia and the nexus of many critical international issues, Turkey will continue to play a key role in regional and global politics. It is a critical broker among internal MENA actors and ultimately between the West and the East.

    via Turkey: Modern Assertiveness in a Globalized World | Fair Observer°.

  • Turkish court hearing in Duchess of York secret filming case

    Turkish court hearing in Duchess of York secret filming case

    Turkish court hearing in Duchess of York secret filming case

    Duchess of York Sarah Ferguson The Duchess of York wore a wig and headscarf as a disguise during filming
    Duchess of York Sarah Ferguson The Duchess of York wore a wig and headscarf as a disguise during filming

    A hearing has taken place in Turkey in a court case in which the Duchess of York has been accused over the secret filming of orphans for a documentary.

    Sarah Ferguson is being defended by a Turkish legal team but has declined to go to Ankara for the trial.

    She is accused of violating the privacy of children during the filming for ITV.

    The duchess has previously apologised for any offence, but says she stands by the 2008 documentary’s conclusion that ill-treatment was taking place.

    If found guilty, she could be sentenced to more than 20 years in prison.

    BBC correspondent Jonathan Head says the duchess has made it clear she will not return to Turkey and British officials have insisted there is no possibility of her being extradited.

    Tied to beds

    Posing as an aid worker, the duchess accompanied a television crew into a state orphanage in Ankara.

    Scenes were recorded of alleged ill-treatment, including emaciated children tied to their beds and left in cots all day.

    Princess Eugenie and the Duchess of York The Duchess said she ‘went as a mum’ to the orphanage

    She visited a second institution in Istanbul with her daughter Princess Eugenie, who said conditions endured by the children there had “opened her eyes.”

    The documentary – which also included footage of children filmed in Romania – was broadcast on ITV1’s Tonight programme in Britain in November 2008.

    It provoked an angry reaction from Turkish politicians, who accused the duchess of being involved in a campaign to tarnish their country’s reputation.

    Human rights record

    BBC presenter Chris Rogers, who was part of the ITV programme team in 2008, said they knew it was against Turkish law to film in secret, but that the public “needed to know.”

    Speaking earlier this year, Mr Rogers, who is also charged with invasion of privacy, said there was “a strong public interest argument for us to do this” because Turkey might join the EU soon.

    Mr Rogers said Turkey has been told it must improve its human rights record, before it can become a full member of the European Union.

    When charges were first laid in January, the duchess said she had gone purely as a mother, and was “happy with courage to stand by the film.”

    The trial could last for several months.

    via BBC News – Turkish court hearing in Duchess of York secret filming case.

  • FM Davutoglu to Receive “Leader of 21st Century” Award

    FM Davutoglu to Receive “Leader of 21st Century” Award

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu will be in Bosnia-Herzegovina on May 3 and 4.

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    Turkey’s Embassy in Sarajevo announced Monday that Davutoglu will arrive in Sarajevo on May 3 and hold talks in Sarajevo on May 4.

    The International League of Humanists, an organization comprised of Bosnian, Serbian and Croatian intellectuals and based in Sarajevo, will present Davutoglu the “Leader of 21st Century” award on May 4.

    Speaking to the Anadolu Agency (AA), Secretary General of the League Zdravko Surlan said that Davutoglu deserved the award for his contributions to development of relations between the Balkan countries.

    The award we are about to present is in a way of expression of “thank you” to Mr. Davutoglu for his contributions to the dialogue culture, peace and stability in the Balkans, Surlan indicated.

    Among the recipients of the “Leader of 21st Century” award in the past were Pope John Paul II who visited Sarajevo after the war and former President of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Juan Antonio Samaranch who passed away in 2010.

    AA

  • Oztarsu: US relations with Turkey are at a critical juncture

    Oztarsu: US relations with Turkey are at a critical juncture

    obama gwordUS President Barack Obama will not use the word “genocide” when describing the alleged Armenian genocide during his annual Armenian Remembrance Day speech on April 24, 2012, Turkish political analysts have claimed. Specialists in Caucasian and US politics say it would not be timely for Obama to undermine Turkey’s stance on the issue, given the rising importance of Turkey’s partnership with the US in handling political crises in the Middle East. (more…)

  • ATAA, FTAA Protest the Poor Taste in Biomen Shampoo Commercial

    ATAA, FTAA Protest the Poor Taste in Biomen Shampoo Commercial

    The presidents of FTAA, Ali Cinar, and ATAA, Ergun Kirlikovali, protested the poor taste in a shampoo commercial by a Turkish company, Biomen, using Hitler in a light-hearted manner. The voice-over on one of Hitler’s speeches, addressing male population, said:  “Just like you are not wearing women’s clothes, you shall not use women’s shampoo.  Now there is a shampoo for men only:  Biomen!”  

     “While it is obvious that the company is trying to sell product, not hurt feelings, the unfortunate choice of a mass murderer as a spokesperson in the commercial was in terribly poor taste.  It was insensitive and inappropriate.” commented president Cinar of FTAA.

    There some cases where monetary considerations give way to moral values.  I see this case as one of them. I strongly urge the company to discontinue this commercial and issue an apology to all Jews who lost 6 million of their loved ones.” added president Kirlikovali of ATAA.

    Hitler’li Şampuan reklamına Türk toplumundan tepki
    USASabah, March 28,  2012