Category: Germany

With an estimated number of at least 2.1 million Turks in Germany, they form the largest ethnic minority. The vast majority are found in what used to be West Germany. Berlin, Frankfurt,Hamburg, Rhine-Ruhr (Cologne, Duisburg and Dortmund) have large Turkish communities. The state with the largest Turkish population is North Rhine-Westphalia.

  • German airline fined for violating antitrust laws

    German airline fined for violating antitrust laws

    BERLIN

    condor flugzeugGermany’s antitrust agency says it has fined a subsidiary of Thomas Cook AG euro1.2 million (1.6 million) for illegally coordinating prices of flights between Germany and Turkey.

    The Federal Cartel Office said Tuesday airline Condor GmbH was fined for price coordination with its counterpart SunExpress in 2009 on routes simultaneously operated by the two companies.

    It says the two airlines agreed SunExpress would not offer flights from Germany to Turkey for less than euro99, and tickets were meant not to be more than euro10 cheaper than Condor’s.

    The office said the investigation was triggered by SunExpress, a joint venture of Deutsche Lufthansa AG and Turkish Airlines, which was not fined according to the agency’s leniency program.

    Source: Business Week

  • Stuttgart 21: Symbol for the “arrogance of power?”

    Stuttgart 21: Symbol for the “arrogance of power?”

    stuttgart 21The latest of several protests in Stuttgart against the German city’s multi-billion euro renovation scheme has again attracted thousands of people.

    It was largely peaceful but late in the evening 27 demonstrators were arrested, accused of blocking a road.

    The project “Stuttgart 21” aims to turn the main rail terminus into an underground through-station. It would enable the city to become an international transport hub. Stuttgart would join one of Europe’s major high-speed rail routes, linking Paris, Strasbourg and Munich, and on to Vienna, Bratislava and Budapest.

    Talks failed to halt early demolition work to part of the station.

    Critics challenge the cost which has soared from the original estimate of around four billion euros. They also want more debate on traffic issues and alternative solutions.

    The scheme’s supporters argue it would transform Stuttgart into “the new heart of Europe”, attracting thousand of jobs.

    But the row is threatening to fuel more widespread dissent. Some opponents see it as a deal cut by business leaders and politicians and flying in the face of public opinion.

    In the words of one local academic, Stuttgart 21 has become a symbol for the “arrogance of power”.

    Euro News

  • Turkish classical pianist wins top prize in Germany

    Turkish classical pianist wins top prize in Germany

    Elif Sahin
    Turkish pianist Elif Şahin

    German-based young Turkish classical pianist Elif Şahin and her counterpart won the top prize at this year’s Hugo Wolf International Competition for Lied in Germany, news agencies reported this week.

    The duo made up of Şahin and soprano Annelie Sophie Müller came in first among the 12 finalists in the 2010 competition’s finals, held from Sept. 14 to 19 at the State College of Music and Performing Arts in Stuttgart.

    Şahin and Müller, who are both studying at the Stuttgart State College of Music, were selected for the finals from among 114 entrants in this year’s competition, whose jury was chaired by famous German mezzo-soprano Brigitte Fassbaender, the Anatolia news agency reported.

    Austrian soprano Birgid Steinberger, Dutch bass-baritone Robert Holl, Swiss baritone Kurt Widmer and pianists Wolfram Rieger from Germany and Graham Johnson from Britain were the other members of the judging panel.

    The Şahin-Muller pair won a cash prize of 20,000 euros and was invited to give a concert at the Stuttgart-based International Hugo Wolf Academy, which is organizing the competition.

    Held every three years, the Hugo Wolf International Competition for the Art of Lied is dedicated to a different composer in each edition. This year’s competition was dedicated to Robert Schumann, Hugo Wolf and Gustav Mahler, all of whom have an anniversary in 2010.

    The competition is aimed at “discovering and promoting young Lied artists — singers and pianists — as well as arousing the interest of a new audience into Lied as an art form,” as the organizers put it on the academy’s website, www.hugo-wolf-akademie.de.

    , 24 September 2010

  • INTERCULTURAL CHESS TOURNAMENT

    INTERCULTURAL CHESS TOURNAMENT

    eu council for edlIntercultural Rapid Chess Tournament, organized from the 10 year old, turkish originated, multicultural chess club “”SATRANÇ CLUB 2000”. Slogan: “We all play in one language / Wir spielen eine Sprache / Biz ayni dilden oynuyoruz”. The tournament will be played during the Intercultural Week in Cologne, Germany. Please find all details here:

    https://www.turkishnews.com/de/content/2010/08/22/interkulturelles-schachturnier/ or www.satranc.de.vu

    Organizer: Intercultural Chess Club “SATRANÇ CLUB 2000”

    Event type: Competition/Tournament

    Date: 26/09/2010 – 26/09/2010

    Venue: City Hotel Köln am Neumarkt, Clemensstr. 8, 50676 Cologne

    Countries: Germany, Turkey

    Planned media coverage: Newspapers, chess magazines, chess TV, Internet

    Target Groups:

    Adults (in general)
    Business and commerce
    Children
    General public
    Media
    Members of migrant communities / Speakers of minority or regional language(s)
    Parents
    Participants in adult education programmes
    Policy deciders/politicians at national, regional or local level
    Pupils
    Researchers
    Students
    Tourism
    Young people (in general)

    Scope: Local

    Contact Address
    Mr. Güven Manay
    00491799425521
    gmanay@gmx.de

  • Turkey, with help from Germany, to become ‘submarine manufacturer’

    Turkey, with help from Germany, to become ‘submarine manufacturer’

    Special to World Tribune

    INTELLIGENCE BRIEFING

    ANKARA — Turkey has launched a project to produce an advanced naval submarine.

    Turkey’s Defense Ministry and Navy have been working with Germany in the coproduction of four electric-diesel submarines. The coproduction effort has taken place with Germany’s ThyssenKrupp for the Type 214 submarine.

    “This is a huge project that will make Turkey into a submarine manufacturer,” an official said.

    The submarine project was expected to cost about $2.5 billion. Officials said the first platform could be delivered to the Navy in 2015.

    The Navy has been building three of the submarines in Turkey. Officials said Turkey would also help design electronic subsystems for the underwater platforms.

    Turkey has been engaged in several major naval projects. One called for the assembly of up to 11 small frigates in a project estimated at $2 billion.

    http://www.worldtribune.com/worldtribune/WTARC/2010/me_turkey0873_09_08.asp. September 8, 2010

  • Merkel honours Danish Muhammad cartoonist Westergaard

    Merkel honours Danish Muhammad cartoonist Westergaard

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel has defended Danish cartoonist Kurt Westergaard, whose cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad caused anger in 2006.

    A depiction of Muhammad’s turban as a fused bomb sparked global outrage when it was published in Denmark.

    Kurt Westergaard (left) with Chancellor Merkel and German politician Joachim Gauck (centre)

    Presenting him with a press freedom award, Mrs Merkel said Mr Westergaard was entitled to draw his caricatures.

    “Europe is a place where a cartoonist is allowed to draw something like this,” she said.

    “We are talking here about the freedom of opinion and the freedom of the press,” Ms Merkel said at the ceremony in the German city of Potsdam.

    The offending cartoon – which led to a groundswell of Muslim anger in many countries around the world – was one of 12 first published by Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten in 2005.

    ‘Place of freedom’

    Mrs Merkel, who grew up in communist East Germany, added that German people clearly remembered the implications of a lack of freedom and should therefore cherish it.

    “It’s about whether in a Western society with its values he [Mr Westergaard] is allowed to publish his Muhammad cartoons, or not. Is he allowed to do it? Yes he is,” Ms Merkel said.

    She described Europe as a place that respects and values the freedom of belief and religion.

    Dozens of people died in violence that broke out in early 2006, months after Jyllands-Posten published the cartoons showing Muhammad in a variety of humorous or satirical situations. Muslims regard the depiction of the prophet as blasphemy.

    The M100 media prize committee praised Kurt Westergaard for what it said was his “courage” to defend democratic values despite threats of violence and death.

    Security was tight at Sanssouci palace in Potsdam where the cartoonist told reporters: “Maybe they will try to kill me and maybe they will have success, but they cannot kill the cartoon.”

    Speaking at the award ceremony Ms Merkel also described as “abhorrent” a plan by US pastor Terry Jones to burn copies of the Koran on Saturday, the ninth anniversary of the 11 September terror attacks.

    She said she found the idea disrespectful and “simply wrong”.

    ‘Risky decision’

    A police sniper near Sanssouci palace in Potsdam, 8 September 2010

    Mrs Merkel’s decision to speak at the event about press freedom has caused some surprise in Germany.

    One newspaper said she was taking “a huge risk”.

    Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung said that the effect of having a photograph taken with Kurt Westergaard was incalculable, describing it as “probably be the most explosive appointment of her chancellorship so far”.

    Germany’s Central Muslim Council (ZMD) criticised Ms Merkel for attending the award ceremony.

    A ZMD spokesman, Aiman Mazyek, told public broadcaster Deutschlandradio that the Chancellor was honouring someone “who in our eyes kicked our prophet, and therefore kicked all Muslims”.

    He said giving Mr Westergaard the prize in a “highly charged and heated time” was “highly problematic”.

    In recent weeks Germany has seen a highly charged debate over immigration, partly set off by the publication of a book by a board member of the German central bank, Thilo Sarrazin.

    In the book Mr Sarrazin, who is also a member of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) attacked what he describes as a failure of Muslims living in the Germany to integrate.

    BBC