Category: Asia and Pacific

  • CITIZENS OF UKRAINE, CZECH REPUBLIC, TURKEY, AND THE USA WERE FIGHTING ON GEORGIA’S SIDE

    CITIZENS OF UKRAINE, CZECH REPUBLIC, TURKEY, AND THE USA WERE FIGHTING ON GEORGIA’S SIDE

    Investigation Committee working on a Nuremberg Trial for Saakashvili
    Author: Dmitri Steshin
    Source: Komsomolskaya Pravda, No. 193, December 24, 2008, p. 4
    [The interim results of an investigation into the Georgian Army’s
    crimes in South Ossetia have been released by the Investigation
    Committee at the Prosecutor General’s Office of the Russian
    Federation. The question of establishing a special judicial body
    for the events in South Ossetia will be considered.]
    Russian investigators report on the Georgian Army’s crimes in South Ossetia

         The interim results of an investigation into the Georgian
    Army’s crimes in South Ossetia were released on December 23 by the
    Investigation Committee at the Prosecutor General’s Office of the
    Russian Federation.
         A team of investigators and experts from the Russian
    Prosecutor General’s Office spent about a week touring Tskhinvali
    and its outskirts. They questioned local residents and prisoners
    of war, and participated in exhuming the bodies of Ossetians who
    were killed and buried in their own yards. They recorded
    outrageous cases such as an incident where soldiers opened fire on
    a car carrying women and children. The investigators then spent
    almost four months processing the materials they had gathered.
         The results of this investiation were released to the public
    on December 23 in the form of a White Book. But many materials
    still remain “off screen” – destined for the court-room. This was
    confirmed at a press conference by Investigation Committee
    Director Alexander Bastrykin: “After the investigation is
    complete, the question of establishing a special judicial body for
    the events in South Ossetia will be considered. After the
    investigation, all materials will be handed over to the Foreign
    Ministry of the Russian Federation. The Ministry will present them
    to the international community. Documents have already been found
    proving that Georgia started preparations for its act of
    aggression as far back as 2005.”
         The investigation revealed some sensational news. There has
    been a great deal of speculation about foreigners participating in
    the attack on South Ossetia. Now these rumors have been confirmed:
    in the village of Achebeli, investigators found photographs, note-
    pads, uniforms, and insignia from a Ukrainian nationalist
    organization, UNA-UNSO.
         They also established that an “international” diversionary
    group participated in the storming of Tskhinvali. It included
    citizens of Turkey, the United States, and the Czech Republic.
         The White Book will soon be translated into English.
         Translated by InterContact

  • Hulusi Kilic: “Turkey will always support Azerbaijan”

    Hulusi Kilic: “Turkey will always support Azerbaijan”

     

     

    Baku. Lachin Sultanova–APA. Turkey’s ambassador to Azerbaijan Hulusi Kilic held a press conference resuming 2008. The ambassador called it very important year from the view of development of Turkey-Azerbaijan relationship, APA reports. The diplomat said the two countries had perfect political relations embodied ten meetings at the level of presidents and prime ministers and 30 ministerial visits this year. Speaking about the economic relations Kilic said trade turnover between the two countries reached 2.5 million dollars. He reminded about the successful cooperation between Turkey and Azerbaijan in the transnational oil and gas projects and said Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway would be opened in 2010 which would lay a road from China to London.

    The diplomat said outgoing year was a year of jubilees for both Azerbaijan and Turkey. This year was a year of 90th anniversary of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic and its parliament and army, 85th anniversary of Republic of Turkey, 90th anniversary of establishing of the Caucasian Islamic Army and its arrival in Azerbaijan and liberation of Baku. The ambassador said the Ottoman Empire, living its final days, sent eight thousand troops to Azerbaijan and more than 1200 Turkish soldiers died in the battles for Azerbaijan.

    Kilic said Turkey wanted a soonest solution to the Nagorno karabakh conflict and would always support Azerbaijan in this issue. Touching on the campaign of apology to Armenians, the ambassador said the Turkish nation did nothing to apologize and would not apologize to anyone. He said those who joined the campaign were wrong.

     

  • Activities of the Civilitas Foundation

    Activities of the Civilitas Foundation

    This year has seen an unusual amount of activity between Turkey and Armenia. At Civilitas, we’ve contributed to the efforts of those who want to improve relations. A group of big-name Turkish journalists came to meet with Mr. Vartan Oskanian in September.

    In November, Salpi Ghazarian, Civilitas Director, participated in a confernce held at the European Parliament in Brussels, on the Armenian Legacy in Turkey. Salpi, who has been active in genocide recognition issues and documentation projects for many years, characterized this new period in Armenian-Turkish relations as one where Armenians must demonstrate the dignity and capacity to hear what is being said in Turkey as part of the public outcry following Hrant Dink’s murder nearly two years ago.

    In December, a group of filmmakers came to Civilitas to consult on various project ideas. They were followed by various journalists and civil society leaders including Osman Koker, editor and publisher, and Osman Kavala, head of Anadou Kultur, have also come to discuss with Salpi Ghazarian the possibilities of joint projects as part of  the Civilitas Council on International Relations. Several are in the works.

    All this came about in the midst of a vigorous debate in Turkey sparked by a public apology campaign. We embrace the Turkish intellectuals who have given voice to their conscience and embarked on the difficult and courageous process of apologizing for a century of pain and suffering that remains a part of the Armenian experience in Turkey and around the world.

      

    The Civilitas Foundation

    One Northern Avenue, Suite 30,

    Yerevan, Armenia
    info@civilitasfoundation.org

    Tel./Fax: (+374 10) 500 119

  • Diary reveals Turkish soldiers cared for Korean orphans in war

    Diary reveals Turkish soldiers cared for Korean orphans in war

    Written by www.daily.pk
    Sunday, 21 December 2008 00:27

    Haydar Karakurt, a young man from Kayseri, voluntarily joined the first brigade going to the Korean War in 1950. He returned as a war veteran and with a diary. He had recorded what he saw and experienced day by day in the Korean War. In the diary, he wrote about a school in Suwon opened by Turkish soldiers for children orphaned during the war. And he made a request of his son Burak: “This school should not be forgotten after I die.”
    Burak, who grew up with the Korean War memories of his father, received the diary from him as a present shortly before he died in 2003. Burak Karakurt, who works as a lawyer, soon began to conduct research in Turkey and South Korea. Following leads from the diary, he interviewed 133 Turkish veterans of the Korean War and wrote the book “Kore’de Türk Kahramanları” (Turkish Heroes in Korea), published in 2005.

    These days, Burak Karakurt has been working on another project related to the school established by the Turkish soldiers in Suwon, 30 kilometers south of Seoul. He spoke with some of the surviving orphans who were educated at the school and found that they would like to have the school rebuilt. They hope the year 2009 celebrations marking the 60th year of Turkish-South Korean relations will present an opportunity to make this wish come true.

    Turkey in the Korean War

    Although Turkey maintained a neutral stance during World War II, it was under pressure at the beginning of the 1950s from the Soviet Union, especially regarding the control of the Turkish straits and land claims in the east of Turkey.

    Following the Soviet Union’s involvement in the Far East, Korea was divided into North and South. Then the North Korean Army invaded the South on June 25, 1950. So the United States partnered with the United Nations, and 22 nations agreed to send either troops or medical units to help South Korea. On the other side, communist allied Chinese forces intervened on behalf of North Korea. So as each side was supported by external forces, the conflict turned out to be an extension of the Cold War in the Far East.

    Sixteen countries responded to the UN resolution by sending troops to stop the invasion of South Korea. One of the first major participants to send a brigade was Turkey, which committed nearly 5,500 troops. They arrived in Pusan in mid-October from the eastern Mediterranean port of İskenderun. Most of the enlisted men were from the small towns and villages of eastern Turkey. They remained in Korea until midsummer 1954.

    The 1st Turkish Brigade, commanded by Brig. Gen. Tahsin Yazıcı, was a regimental combat team with three infantry battalions, along with supporting artillery and engineers. It was the only brigade-sized UN unit permanently attached to the US 25th Infantry Division throughout the war.

    Initially, the Turkish Brigade assisted in protecting the supply lines of UN forces, which were advancing toward North Korea. However, it was the battles of Kunuri and Kumyanjangni that earned the Turkish Brigade a reputation and the praise of UN forces. And because of their heroic actions and sacrifices in these battles, a monument was erected in Seoul in the memory of the Turkish soldiers who fought in Korea.

    In total, four Turkish brigades went into battle in Korea. In the end, 741 Turkish soldiers died and 2,147 were wounded. In addition, 234 Turkish soldiers were taken as prisoners of war and 175 were unaccounted for. Turkey, which lost about 10 percent of its soldiers in Korea, passed a law giving the title of “veteran” to all Turkish soldiers who fought in Korea from Sept. 25, 1950 to July 27, 1953. Even after the armistice, Turkey maintained troops in Korea as part of the peacekeeping force. Turkish troops won honors from the US Congress and the South Korean president for their successful defense during the Battle of Kunuri.

    Internationally, joining the Western alliance against the Soviets paid off for Turkey. In 1952 Turkey was accepted into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), which was established in 1949.

    Turkish education in school behind war front

    Suwon was hugely affected by the war, in which many Korean children were orphaned. Turkish soldiers first put the children together in a tent at Turkish headquarters to keep them safe and healthy. Then, as the number of orphaned children surpassed 100, they reconstructed a destroyed building to use as a school and orphanage. They called it the Ankara School and Orphanage. Turkish officers and Korean teachers worked at the school. A young South Korean became the headmaster.

    Children were given Turkish lessons and could sing the Turkish national anthem. Classes were taught in Turkish, English and Korean. In order to keep the orphaned children as happy as possible under the circumstances of war, they were not burdened with a heavy load of homework. Music and physical education classes were given more importance.

    School supplies reaching Suwon from Ankara made the students happy and the teachers more effective. A piano and other musical instruments were played at the school to contribute to the psychological well-being of the children. Monthly special performances by the children made both the Turkish soldiers and children cheerful. Children looked forward to the return of the soldiers, who were father figures for them, from the front.

    Gen. Mehmet Nuri Yamut, the chief of general staff at the time, visited the orphanage-school in Suwon and had his picture taken with the children and teachers in front of the school.

    Following the cease-fire in 1953, the school remained open, but as the Turkish troops withdrew, it was closed. Then children were placed in various orphanages depending on their age.

    Currently, about 30 students of the Ankara School and Orphanage in Suwon are alive. Burak Karakurt, sponsored by Korean Airlines and the Society of Social and Economic Solidarity with Pacific Countries, visited South Korea twice to bring those people together. He managed to meet with seven of them who are in their late 60s and recorded their memories. They said they would like to meet the families of the Turkish soldiers who embraced them years ago.

    One of them is Cha Yang Cha “We were so small, only about 5 years old. The Turkish soldiers who came to Korea to fight in the war embraced us. They became our mothers and fathers. The name ‘Turkey’ fills my heart with peace,” she said.

    She also said she has never forgotten the days she spent at the Turkish school.

    Another survivor, Lee Hak Chang, said he cannot find words to express his feelings of gratitude toward Turks:

    “When I hear the word ‘Turkey,’ I remember two things. One is the Turkish soldiers who embraced us, and the other is a distant cousin. Turks are my relatives. When I close my eyes, I often see the Turkish soldiers. We lived our childhood with the Turkish soldiers. ‘Turkey’ often reminds me of the Turkish soldiers who gave us food, cuddled us and educated us.”

    His eyes full of tears like the others, Lee Sang Chin reiterated those feelings, saying that he can never forget Turkey. “To our children, we always tell about the Turkish soldiers and Turkey.”

    Kim He Te pointed out that the Turkish troops prevented civilian massacres in Korea. “They were so good, and they never retreated. If they had retreated in Kunuri, many civilians could have died. The Turks saved us. If I live today, this is because of Turks. I could easily give my life for the Turks.”

    Turkish soldiers did not forget Korean orphans

    Upon his return to the Turkish capital, Gen. Yazıcı talked about the orphanage-school:

    “I want to point out that there is a school there our flag flies over, and the name of that school is the Ankara School. It has 118 students. There are two hours of Turkish lessons a week. Our brigade supplies the needs of that school. The students have learned five of our marches so far.”

    Korean War veteran Mehmet Soylu also said they were very happy to help the orphans. He said he was responsible for transporting food to the school. “When we approached the school, the children were so warm toward us. And we were so happy to help them.”

    In his diary, Haydar Karakurt wrote about the school along with his other war memories. He wrote that many Turkish soldiers showed great affection toward the children, putting them in the place of their loved ones in Turkey.

    Korean children would greet them in Turkish, said Metin Özcan, another war veteran. He also said he would like to meet with them again. “I wish there was an opportunity to see them again.”

    Reiterating similar sentiments, veteran Er Rıfat Karamürsel said the soldiers enjoyed attending the performances of the schoolchildren. “I cried whenever they sang our national anthem. I wish I could meet and see them again.”

    60th year of bilateral relations to be celebrated

    Since Turkey and South Korea will celebrate the 60th year of relations between the two countries, next year could provide that opportunity for the grown Korean students of the Ankara School and their benefactors, the Korean War veterans. The Korean survivors said they would also like to see the school revived, at least by giving its name to an existing school.

    For his part, Burak Karakurt works tirelessly to make those wishes come true, at the same time fulfilling the dreams of his father.

  • MP from CHP: “Will the apologizers to Armenians call on them to apologize to Azerbaijan for Khojali genocide?”

    MP from CHP: “Will the apologizers to Armenians call on them to apologize to Azerbaijan for Khojali genocide?”

     
     

    Istanbul. Mais Alizadeh –APA. “Such initiative is a great disrespect to the Turkish people. Apologizing to Armenians for 1915 events is the inviting Turkey to recognize this calumny.

    Such campaigns aim to conceal Armenian occupation policy”, said deputy chairman of the Turkey’s Republican People’s Party (CHP) Onur Oymen reacting to the campaign started by a group of persons in Turkey for apologizing to Armenians, APA Turkish bureau reports.

    Oymen said Armenia kept 20 percent of Azerbaijani lands under the occupation for more than 15 years. Oymen called the Khojali genocide committed by Armenians against Azerbaijani people in 1992 as a tragedy of the century.
    “Do those, who proposed to apologize to Armenians for 1915 events which has no relation to the genocide, see occupation of 20 percent of Azerbaijani lands by Armenians and the genocide committed by them in Khojali?”

    The member of the parliament from CHP said if Armenians saw one per cent of pressure, which Turkey faced to open borders with Armenia, they would be withdrawn from the Azerbaijani lands. “The world doesn’t put pressure on the Armenians. Despite numerous statements by the international organizations, the Armenians didn’t withdraw even from a village of Azerbaijan. Will those, who invited our community to apologize to Armenians, demand the Armenians to withdraw from Azerbaijani lands? Will they call on the Armenians to apologize to Azerbaijan for Khojali genocide? It is very interesting for me”.

  • Nazim Ibrahimov: “Azerbaijani Diaspora organizations in different countries coordinate their actions with the Turkish Diaspora”

    Nazim Ibrahimov: “Azerbaijani Diaspora organizations in different countries coordinate their actions with the Turkish Diaspora”

    Azerbaijani Diaspora intensified its activity in recent years and the process is still underway, said Nazim Ibrahimov, Chairman of the State Committee for Work with Diaspora, APA reports.

     
     

    He said Azerbaijani Diaspora organizations in different countries were already providing activity coordinated with the Turkish Diaspora, preparing plans of joint events and working together.

    “Today the Azerbaijani Diaspora is working in close cooperation with the Turkish, Jewish and other Diasporas abroad. I consider our activity will be extended in the next years and will give its results. The Azerbaijani Diaspora went into the attack already”.

    The committee chairman emphasized that the World Azerbaijanis Solidarity Charter focused at the meeting of the World Azerbaijanis Coordination Council in Baku today will promote the strengthening and uniting of the Diaspora’s activity and forces abroad.

    /APA/

    URL: http://www.today.az/news/society/49677.html