Category: Australia

  • Turkey holds int’l ceremony for Canakkale Battles 96th anniversary

    Turkey holds int’l ceremony for Canakkale Battles 96th anniversary

    mehteran

    “Canakkale Battles”, also known as “The Gallipoli Campaign”, took place at Gelibolu peninsula in Turkey from April 1915 to January 1916, during the First World War.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said that Canakkale in northwestern Turkey was the place where the first heartbeats of the Republic of Turkey were heard.

    An international ceremony took place in Gelibolu Peninsula in the northwestern province of Canakkale to mark the 96th anniversary of the Canakkale Battles.

    Wreaths were laid at the Monument of Martyrs on behalf of Turkey, Australia, New Zealand, Bangladesh, France, Canada, Germany, India, Ireland, Pakistan and the United Kingdom.

    Davutoglu said at the ceremony, “this battle which claimed lives of our grandfathers, has laid foundation of sound friendly ties between Turkish, Australian and New Zealander peoples. We think that Canakkale was the place where the first heartbeats of the Republic of Turkey were heard. Modern Republic of Turkey has risen from the ashes of an empire thanks to courage and determination of young soldiers who sacrificed their lives to defend their country.”

    “Canakkale Battles”, also known as “The Gallipoli Campaign”, took place at Gelibolu peninsula in Turkey from April 1915 to January 1916, during the First World War.

    A joint British and French operation was mounted to capture the Ottoman capital of Istanbul and secure a sea route to Russia. Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) formed the backbone of a 200,000-man British-led army that landed at Gelibolu. The attempt failed, with heavy casualties on both sides. The campaign resonated profoundly among all nations involved.

    Nearly 1 million soldiers fought in the trench warfare at Gelibolu. The allies recorded 55,000 killed in fighting with 10,000 missing and 21,000 dead of disease. Turkish casualties were estimated at around 250,000.

    The battle is considered as a defining moment in the history of the Turkish people. The struggle laid the grounds for the Turkish War of Independence and the foundation of the Republic of Turkey eight years later under Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, himself a commander at Gelibolu.

    AA

    via Turkey holds int’l ceremony for Canakkale Battles 96th anniversary | Diplomacy | World Bulletin.

  • In Turkey, surveyors map a WWI battlefield

    In Turkey, surveyors map a WWI battlefield

    By: CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA 04/23/11 4:39 AM
    Associated Press
    anzac
    By: AP Photo
    FILE This 2010 file photo shows a boundary marker which defines the area of the ANZAC Battlefield according to the Treaty of Lausanne, in Gallipoli, western Turkey. The World War I battlefield of the Gallipoli campaign, where throngs gather each April to remember the fallen, is a place of lore, an echo of ancient warfare on the same soil. Now researchers are mapping dugouts, trenches and tunnels in the most extensive archaeological survey of a site whose slaughter helped forge the identity of y

    The World War I battlefield of the Gallipoli campaign, where throngs gather each April to remember the fallen, is a place of lore, an echo of ancient warfare that took place on the same soil. Now researchers are mapping dugouts, trenches and tunnels in the most extensive archaeological survey of a site whose slaughter helped forge the identity of young nations.

    Armed with old maps and GPS technology, the experts from Turkey, Australia and New Zealand have so far discovered rusted food cans, unused bullets and their shell casings, and fragments of shrapnel, Ottoman-era bricks with Greek lettering, ceramic rum flagons of Allied soldiers and glass shards of beer bottles on the Turkish side. They announced early findings ahead of annual commemorations on the rugged peninsula on Sunday and Monday.

    The chief aim is to gain a detailed layout of a battlefield whose desperate trench warfare, with enemy lines just a few dozen meters (yards) apart in some places, has been recounted in films, books and ballads, acquiring a legendary aura in the culture of its combatants.

    “It will hasten a broader understanding of what went on at Gallipoli,” Richard Reid, a researcher and author of the book “Gallipoli 1915” said of the government-funded investigation. “It will help us as nations that are always interested in trying to preserve what heritage we have.”

    There is heightened interest in the battle, especially among Turks who are showing more pride in their past, buoyed by economic and diplomatic advances after decades of internal strife. Australia and New Zealand mark the occasion with a national holiday on Monday, holding dawn services and closing off downtown areas for marches of veterans of all conflicts.

    Before dawn on April 25, 1915, an Allied expedition under British command landed at Gallipoli on the Aegean Sea in a bid to reach Istanbul and open a sea route to Russia, an ally whose troops were wilting on the eastern front. But Ottoman armies, allied with Germany, dug in and forced their adversaries to withdraw after a nine-month campaign.

    About 44,000 Allied soldiers died, and at least twice as many perished on the Turkish side. Hundreds of thousands more were wounded or suffered debilitating fever, diarrhea and dysentery.

    For Turkey, the terrible losses are central to the staunch nationalism that underpins its regional ambitions today, and the battle made a hero out of an Ottoman army officer who led Turkey to independence in 1923. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk imposed a secular vision that gave the state authority over Islam, a legacy that dominates the divisive politics of modern Turkey.

    “I am not ordering you to attack. I am ordering you to die,” the steely commander is said to have told a regiment that was eventually wiped out. “In the time which passes until we die, other troops and commanders can take our place.”

    During the battle one night, local lore says, the light of a star and the crescent moon shone on the blood-soaked ground, forming the design of what became Turkey’s red and white national flag.

    In recent years, some of Turkey’s founding “myths” have been undercut, among them the idea of a tight-knit Turkish identity that ignored the existence of ethnic Kurds and other minorities, said Kerem Oktem, author of “Angry Nation: Turkey since 1989,” a book about the country’s erratic transition from military to democratic rule.

    “Gallipoli remains “one of the important, overarching, big, symbolic moments,” he said.

    For that reason, Oktem said, neither the current Islam-based government nor secular nationalists who oppose it want to “devalue or challenge” the idea that Gallipoli was a glorious victory, despite debate about its military significance.

    Australia and New Zealand regard Gallipoli with equal reverence, noting the bravery and loyalty of soldiers whose British commanders considered troops from the former colonies to be untested and of poorer quality. It forged a self-image of determination, irreverence and “mateship” that is referred to as the Anzac spirit, after the Australia and New Zealand Army Corps.

    The fighting happened near the mouth of the Dardanelles strait, part of a conduit between the Mediterranean Sea and the Black Sea. The Turkish military occupied the strategic site until 1973, when it became a national park. Memorials and cemeteries at the site discouraged thoughts of potentially disruptive fieldwork.

    The new study does not involve excavation, instead using satellite-based technology to map battle positions over gullies, dense vegetation and limestone cliffs.

    “Forestation had changed the natural geography of the battlefield, even of trenches and pits,” said Mithat Atabay, a history professor at Canakkale Onsekiz Mart University and one of five Turks on the 14-member team. In 1994, he said, “a huge part of the forest burnt down, and the zone suffered further damage.”

    In October, the researchers mapped four kilometers (2.5 miles) of trenches, many of them barely visible, at locations including Johnston’s Jolly and Quinn’s Post, names bestowed by Allied troops. They inspected Turkish positions known as Kirmizi Sirt, or Red Ridge.

    “The war on the surface was only one element of the struggle,” the team said in a report. “A constant underground battle developed; tunneling became a major preoccupation on both sides of the line, for both offensive and defensive reasons.”

    Mapping data is entered in a digital database that can be compared with information from other sources, including maps used in the 1915 landings and Ottoman-era documents. Fieldwork resumes in September, and is expected to continue, with the help of ground-penetrating radar and aerial photographs, until the campaign centenary in 2015.

    Charles Bean, an Australian journalist who covered the conflict and surveyed the battlefield just after the war, wrote about the grudging respect that was said to have developed between the underdog enemies. In an early 1916 dispatch, he recalled a memorial built by an Australian.

    It was, he wrote, “a little wooden cross found in the scrub, just two splinters of biscuit box tacked together, with the inscription ‘Here lies a Turk.’ The poor soul would probably turn in his grave if his ghost could see that rough cross above him. But he need not worry. It was put there in all sincerity.”

    The remains of the ancient city of Troy lie near the Gallipoli peninsula. Alexander the Great led an army through the region. So did Persian emperor Xerxes I. The Greek historian Herodotus referred to the place in his chronicles.

    “The Allies were really the last, I suppose, military expedition to try to take this particular strip of land,” said Chris Mackie, a classics professor at La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia, and one of the Gallipoli surveyors. “But there were plenty before them.”

    Read more at the Washington Examiner:
  • Rioters torch Australia asylum seeker detention centre

    Rioters torch Australia asylum seeker detention centre

     

    Sidney Riots

    Detainees at an Australian immigration detention centre in Sydney have rioted and burnt down nine buildings.

    Rioters at Villawood detention centre threw roof tiles and other objects at firefighters, preventing them from putting out the blazes.

    The riot started with a rooftop protest from two detainees and spread to involve 100 people late on Wednesday.

    Protests at Australia’s detention centres have become more frequent as the number of asylum seekers has risen.

    Immigration Department spokesman Sandi Logan said no injuries had been reported at Villawood.

    Riot police had to be called in to restore order after the centre’s unarmed guards retreated in the face of the riot.

    “It took some time for the firefighters to be able to gain entry,” he said

    “They had had roof tiles and other pieces of furniture being hurled at them by some of the detainees, so it was impossible for them to extinguish the blaze.

    “But with the riot squad protection they were able to do that.”

    A large gas cylinder exploded and a kitchen, laundry, medical facility and a computer centre were destroyed.

    Immigration Minister Chris Bowen said many of those involved in the riot had had applications for asylum rejected.

    “These are people, in many instances, who are not happy that they have not been accepted as refugees,” he said.

    Villawood detention centre holds both irregular maritime arrivals – people arriving in Australia by boat to seek asylum – and people already on the Australian mainland who have violated their visas or had them cancelled.

    Mental health warning

    In recent months there have been a number of violent riots, suicides and self-harm attempts at Australian detention centres, says the BBC’s Nick Bryant in Sydney.

    Detainees at Villawood have complained of lengthy waits to have their asylum claims heard

    There have been complaints from detainees about overcrowding and the length of time it takes to process their applications, our correspondent says.

    An increase in the number of asylum seekers arriving by boat – mainly from Sri Lanka, Afghanistan and Iraq – has led to overcrowding at Christmas Island and other detention centres.

    There was another riot at Christmas Island last month following a breakout.

    Last year, rights group Amnesty International warned that the mental health of some of the asylum seekers held on Christmas Island was deteriorating because of uncertainty over their situation and the conditions in which they were being held.

    The Australian government has recently announced the provision of more than 1,900 new beds for asylum seekers to ease crowding in detention centres.

    Four hundred beds will be available in Pontville, southern Tasmania, within a month and another 1,500-bed facility at Wickham Point, Darwin, will open in mid-2011.

     

    AUSTRALIA ASYLUM STATISTICS

    • Irregular maritime arrivals (IMAs) in 2010: 134 boats carrying 6,535 people
    • IMAs up to 19 April 2011: 16 boats carrying 921people
    • As of 20 April 4,552 IMAs detained on the mainland, 1,748 on Christmas Island
    • Currently 392 detainees in Villawood of whom 172are IMAs

    Source: Australian Department of Immigration

     

    BBC

  • [Australian] PM orders review of spy bodies

    [Australian] PM orders review of spy bodies

    australia flagDylan Welch

    December 24, 2010

    THE ballooning powers and funding of Australia’s spy agencies will be investigated for the first time in six years, with Prime Minister Julia Gillard announcing an independent review of their role.
    The review will run in the first half of next year and follows a boom decade for intelligence, with Australia’s six spy agencies enjoying ever-greater powers and funding.
    ”The review will ensure Australia continues to have a well-co-ordinated, appropriately resourced and adaptable intelligence system that supports our national interests,” Ms Gillard said.
    The agencies’ growth has been accompanied by criticism that they have grown too fast, and that the powers of the parliamentary and statutory intelligence watchdogs have not been able to keep up.
    The six Australian intelligence agencies are: the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO); the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS); the Office of National Assessments (ONA); and the three Defence intelligence agencies.
    In recent years ASIO has become the country’s wiretap hub, and its budget appropriations have grown by 535 per cent – from $69 million to $438 million annually – since 2001. Over the same period ASIS and ONA have experienced growth rates of 344 per cent and 443 per cent, respectively.
    A spokeswoman for Ms Gillard yesterday said the review was not designed to put the brakes on the spy agencies’ funding.
    ”The aim of the review is to ensure that our intelligence agencies are working effectively together – it is not aimed at identifying reductions in resourcing,” she said.
    The review is the result of a recommendation in the 2004 Flood review of the intelligence agencies, which found they should be independently examined every five to seven years.
    It will be headed by the former secretary of the Attorney-General’s Department, Robert Cornall, and an ethicist and theologian from Melbourne university, Associate Professor Rufus Black.
    Staff will interview the ministers for defence and foreign affairs, Stephen Smith and Kevin Rudd, as well as the Attorney-General, Robert McClelland, and the heads of all six agencies.

    http://www.theage.com.au/national/pm-orders-review-of-spy-bodies-20101223-196l8.html, December 24, 20

  • 2nd Australian Film Festival in Turkey comes to İstanbul

    2nd Australian Film Festival in Turkey comes to İstanbul

    28 November 2010, Sunday / KLAUS JURGENS , İSTANBUL 0 1 0 0

    As part of an ever increasing number of cultural events hosted by the Australian Embassy, the 2nd Australian Film Festival in Turkey is going to be held under the overarching theme of “Australia: Coming of Age Stories.”

    Introduced by the embassy as “Australian cinema comes to İstanbul,” the program will screen 11 award-winning movies in total between Dec. 2 and Dec. 12. Demand for tickets is expected to be high.

    In 2009 the embassy held the first and very successful edition of this festival in Ankara but decided that in 2010 İstanbul moviegoers should also benefit from exposure to cinema from Down Under (as Australia is often affectionately referred to). As a further example of the embassy’s manifold local activities, the Cer Modern museum — located in the Turkish capital — more recently opened an exhibition by much acclaimed Australian artist Lynda Edridge.

    The film festival is being presented in cooperation with Screen Australia and İstanbul Modern, where it will be held. On the first night, Australian Ambassador to Turkey Peter Doyle will officially open the festival and attend a VIP screening of “Beautiful Kate,” a film nominated in 10 categories in the Australian Film Industry 2009 awards, including best picture.

    “Beautiful Kate” is set in the Australian outback and, according to writer and director Rachel Ward, is a “gothic love story.” Rolling Stone magazine calls it “a tale of empathy, forgiveness and redemption.”

    Previously, Doyle had told Today’s Zaman in Ankara that his country had the distinction of producing the world’s first full-length feature film, “The Story of the Kelly Gang,” in 1906. Fast-forward a century later and Australia is often referred to as Asia-Pacific’s Hollywood, besides having successfully competed in the international film marketplace.

    Whereas international audiences often began to appreciate Australian cinema by watching classics such as “Picnic at Hanging Rock” or “The Last Wave,” signature films directed by Peter Weir, over the last decades the country’s ever growing film industry has won many accolades and is now widely recognized for its numerous talented actors, directors and technicians, including world famous screen stars Nicole Kidman, Cate Blanchett and Naomi Watts.

    Ten more films are on show during the festival and they are: “The Boys,” “Head On 19,” “Japanese Story,” “The Black Balloon,” “Kiss or Kill,” “Romulus, My Father,” “Somersault,” “The Sum of Us,” “The Tracker” and “Two Hands.”

    Tickets for all screenings can be obtained directly from İstanbul Modern at TL 12 for adults and TL 6 concession, including the benefit of free access to the entire museum. It should be noted that access to both the museum and the festival is free of charge on Thursdays. For the complete festival program, please refer to the İstanbul Modern website at www.istanbulmodern.org, or call the museum at 0 (212) 334 73 00.

  • Turkish ambassador responds to Professor Tatz

    Turkish ambassador responds to Professor Tatz

    Oguz OzgeOguz Ozge

    What really happened to Armenians living under the Ottoman Empire in 1915, during the First World War is a matter of controversy. Armenian diaspora claims that the events of 1915 come within the realms of “genocide”, whereas Turks argue that in no way can those events be considered as such. Until the events of 1915 are legally determined by a competent international court under the 1948 UN Convention on Genocide or the Armenians and Turks come to a reconciliation over the controversy, the issue will remain a contentious one.

    In a recent National Times article Professor Colin Tatz apparently sides with the Armenian diaspora against Turkey as far as the events of 1915 are concerned. I do not intend responding to all the spurious arguments by Professor Tatz except for getting one important fact right. Professor Tatz’s claim that “some 26 nation states and more than 50 regional governments, including NSW and South Australia, ‘formally recognise’ the Turkish attempts to annihilate . . .” is misleading. It is a fact that 21 national parliaments and some regional assemblies have so far adopted resolutions favouring the Armenian arguments. The resolutions by legislative bodies are of a political nature and not binding on the governments. Consequently the claim of “formal recognition” by national states is not true and no single government has so far done so. Under what circumstances of wheeling and dealing those resolutions are passed in parliaments need not be elaborated here.
    We are convinced that the events of 1915 are not a matter for legislators to consider because we take “genocide” very seriously. That is why we believe that historians from Turkey, Armenia and third countries should come together to ascertain the facts.
    Last but not least, I wish to point out that in the past few years new claims have emerged whereby Greeks and Assyrians were also included in the list of victims by the Ottoman Empire. The scope of the so-called “genocide” list has now been further extended so as to cover the Christian population living under the Ottoman Empire. As an extension of that line of thinking it would have been misleading to exclude Anzac soldiers from such list, if the Christians had fallen victim to the so-called “genocide”. That is why a number of persons have very recently started alleging that Anzac prisoners of war were subjected to ill-treatment in camps around Gallipoli. We should not let those ill-founded arguments damage the long relationship that has been forged between Australia and Turkey out of adversity in Gallipoli.
    Oguz Ozge is the Turkish Ambassador to Australia.
    https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/turkish-ambassador-responds-to-professor-tatz-20101116-17ux1.html, November 16, 2010