Category: Non-EU Countries

  • Turkish president in Britain for EU bid support

    Turkish president in Britain for EU bid support

    Turkish president in Britain for EU bid support

    (AFP) – 23 hours ago

    gul

    ISTANBUL — Turkish President Abdullah Gul headed to Britain on Sunday for a three-day state visit aimed at seeking support from the Turkey’s ally in its bid to join the EU.

    “I will underline the importance of England’s continued support in making sure negotiations are not blocked by artifical political obstacles,” Gul told journalists in Turkey before flying off to London.

    Ankara opened membership negotiations with the EU in 2005 but progress has been slow, in part due to opposition from Germany and France.

    Gul said in comments published in Britain’s Sunday Telegraph that his country is still keen to join the bloc even as the eurozone crisis spreads.

    One of the key sticking points to entry is Cyprus, which has been divided since 1974 when Turkish troops invaded and its northern third in response to an Athens-engineered coup in Nicosia aimed at union with Greece.

    Ankara refuses to recognise the internationally recognised Greek-Cypriot government and UN-sponsored talks aimed at reunifying the eastern Mediterranean island have so far been in vain.

    Greek-Cypriot aeroplanes and boats arriving at Turkish entry points are routinely blocked, despite agreements with the EU to allow them access.

    Turkey has threatened to freeze diplomatic relations with the EU when Cyprus takes on the rotating EU presidency for six months in July 2012 if there is no reunification deal.

    “I am going to ask England, which is part of the Cypriot question as a guarantor country, to use all its weight to push for a solution,” said Gul.

    During his visit, Gul will meet British Prime Minister David Cameron, Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg and opposition Labour leader Ed Miliband, as well as several members of the royal family.

    It is the first state visit to Britain by a Turkish president for 23 years.

    via AFP: Turkish president in Britain for EU bid support.

  • Britain in secret talks with Syrian rebels

    Britain in secret talks with Syrian rebels

    Britain + Syrian RebelsBritain has formally opened talks with the Syrian opposition movement as international pressure continues to mount against the beleaguered regime of President Bashar al-Assad.

    Frances Guy, a former ambassador to Lebanon, met members of the exiled opposition in Paris yesterday. The Foreign Secretary, William Hague, is to meet members of the Syrian opposition in London next week when they will also hold talks with senior officials in Downing Street.

    Although the UK, along with other Western states like France – which appealed to the United Nations yesterday to impose tougher sanctions – has been in informal contact with the opposition for the last three months, the progression of the working relationship opens up the prospect of the rebels eventually being recognised as the country’s representatives and supplanting the Assad regime.

    The West’s Libyan mission started in a similar fashion with the country’s revolutionaries, but senior diplomatic sources warned against drawing parallels. “This is not about recognition of them as the government – that is not the case,” said a senior diplomatic source. “The difference with the Libyan situation was that the Libyan National Transitional Council controlled swathes of the country. We are asking the Syrian opposition to present a coherent set of policies and organise themselves.” The Syrian National Council and the National Co-ordination Committee for Democratic Change are among the groups whose leaders have been involved in the talks.

    The development comes as France said that it, too, was ready to work with the Syrian opposition, maintaining that it is too late for the Assad regime to save itself by carrying out reforms.

    Opposition from the veto-wielding members Russia and China has largely prevented the UN’s Security Council from responding to Assad’s crackdown on an eight-month uprising against his rule. But, following talks yesterday in Turkey, the French Foreign Minister Alain Juppé said the situation was “no longer sustainable” and that the UN must act.

    “It is not normal that the Security Council has not made any decision so far,” Mr Juppé told reporters. “I hope those blocking any resolution will be aware of the reality of the situation.”

    Turkey also called for action, with its Foreign Minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, saying more must be done to stop the “massacre”.

    As international pressure on Syria builds, Damascus made a tentative gesture to the Arab League, agreeing in principle to allow observers to enter the country for the first time to oversee the implementation of a peace plan to end the bloodshed.

    But there were few signs yesterday that the violence was abating following reports that at least 12 civilians, including two children, were killed when security forces fired on protesters following Friday prayers.

    Syria’s apparent concession came after the Arab League suspended Syria and gave it until the end of this week to implement a peace plan that calls for the regime to withdraw its forces from towns and end the violence. Hundreds of people have been killed since Syria accepted, and then largely ignored, the peace plan three weeks ago.

    Syrian officials were yesterday quoted as saying that they would accept foreign observers in the country, but that they had outlined their reservations to the Arab League. The body, which has threatened Damascus with sanctions, said it was studying the suggestions.

    But Mr Juppé expressed scepticism that Syria was ready to stop the violence. “We believe the regime was not willing to implement a reform programme and now it is too late,” he said.

    The UN estimates that at least 3,500 people have been killed since the government began its crackdown against an anti-regime uprising in March. Assad’s regime has accused foreign-backed “armed terrorist gangs” of killing 1,000 of its security personnel.

    The soaring death toll has pushed some to demand the international community put greater pressure on the embattled regime. In what could be a preliminary push towards sanctions, Germany, France and Britain are planning to ask the UN General Assembly to adopt a non-binding resolution condemning the violence in Syria.

    The European Union has already imposed sanctions on Syria, but Russia, a close ally of Syria, and China have blocked any wider international measures under a UN umbrella.

    Some protesters have responded to the regime’s crackdown by taking up arms to defend themselves. In the past week, the Syrian Free Army, a rebel force formed in July from military defectors, has mounted deadly attacks on regime targets, including the air force’s intelligence directorate. The attacks are the most potent fightback so far, and have exacerbated fears that the country is sliding towards armed insurrection.

    www.independent.co.uk, 19 NOVEMBER 2011

  • Race Row: Blatter Urged To Quit As Fifa Boss

    Race Row: Blatter Urged To Quit As Fifa Boss

    BlatterFifa president Sepp Blatter is facing calls to step down after he said racist incidents in football matches could be settled with a handshake at the end of the game.

    Gordon Taylor, head of the Professional Footballers’ Association, told Sky News the comments were “disgraceful”.

    “He has presided over a lot of issues that just haven’t been good enough,” he said. “If he’s going to be the leader of world football then I’m not going to be a follower.

    “I believe you can be kicked about, of course you have banter, but when that becomes racist, when that is prefaced with the colour of your skin, it is not acceptable.”

    Les Ferdinand – the older cousin of footballing brothers Anton and Rio – told Sky Sports News it was “about time we stopped hearing from him (Blatter)”.

    Asked if he believed the head of world football should now go, he said: “I certainly do.

    “Like a lot of these people, they don’t understand racism. It’s never happened to them so they’re making comments on a subject they know nothing about.”

    In two interviews, Mr Blatter appeared to make light of racial abuse between players during matches.

    “There is no racism. There is maybe one of the players towards another, he has a word or a gesture which is not the correct one, but also the one who is affected by that, he should say that this is a game,” he said.

    “We are in a game, and at the end of the game we shake hands, and this can happen, because we have worked so hard against racism and discrimination.”

    He later issued a statement on Fifa’s website claiming he had been “misunderstood”.

    Mr Blatter said: “What I wanted to express is that, as football players, during a match, you have ‘battles’ with your opponents, and sometimes things are done which are wrong.

    “Having said that, I want to stress again that I do not want to diminish the dimension of the problem of racism in society and in sport.

    “I am committed to fighting this plague and kicking it out of football.”

    The comments came as the FA charged Liverpool player Luis Suarez with racially abusing Manchester United’s Patrice Evra.

    The FA is also investigating claims that England captain John Terry racially abused QPR player Anton Ferdinand. Terry denies the allegation.

    Anton’s brother, Manchester United defender Rio Ferdinand described Mr Blatter’s comments as “condescending” in remarks posted on Twitter.

    He tweeted: “If fans shout racist chants but shake our hands is that OK?

    “I feel stupid for thinking that football was taking a leading role against racism…..it seems it was just on mute for a while.”

    The England player was also critical of Fifa’s attempts to clarify Mr Blatter’s comments with a statement on their website underneath a picture of the Fifa president with South African minister Tokyo Sexwale.

    Mr Ferdinand wrote: “Fifa clear up the blatter comments with a pic of him posing with a black man…I need the hand covering eyes symbol!!”

     

    Shaking hands doesn’t resonate with the zero-tolerance approach we encourage and certainly wouldn’t resonate with the victim of the abuse.

    Anti-racism campaign Kick It Out

    The Fifa boss replied directly to the footballer saying: “The ‘black man’ as you call him has a name: Tokyo Sexwale. He has done tremendous work against racism and apartheid in Africa.”

    The remarks have received widespread condemnation in the British media but little attention in newspapers elsewhere in Europe.

    The FA-backed anti-racism groupKick It Out was scathing about Mr Blatter’s remarks, accusing the Fifa president of being “worryingly out of touch”.

    It said: “Shaking hands doesn’t resonate with the zero-tolerance approach we encourage and certainly wouldn’t resonate with the victim of the abuse.”

    Mr Blatter recently won a fourth term as Fifa president, despite allegations of corruption among delegates.

    Times sports writer Matthew Syed told Sky News: “It’s an astonishing intervention from Blatter.

    “He has a track record of coming out with very ill-judged comments, we’ve seen it before with women’s clothing in football, gay rights in Qatar.

    “And this is a really characteristic gaffe by somebody who many people who support football around the world cannot understand is in the position that he is.”

    Ladbrokes have now slashed the odds of Mr Blatter being out of his current job by the New Year to 2/1.

    Sky

    Ferdinand terry

  • UK Foreign Minister Hague to ‘draw torture claims line’

    UK Foreign Minister Hague to ‘draw torture claims line’

    HagueForeign Secretary William Hague is to stress the Government’s commitment to “drawing a line” under the alleged involvement of Britain’s intelligence agencies in the torture of terror suspects held overseas.

    In a rare speech on the use of secret intelligence, Mr Hague will praise the agencies as “vital assets” which protect lives and make a “critical contribution” to safeguarding UK national interests.

    He will, however, acknowledge that Britain’s reputation had been damaged by a series of claims that MI5 and MI6 officers had been complicit in the extraordinary rendition of terror suspects leading to their detention and torture overseas.

    “The very making of these allegations undermined Britain’s standing in the world as a country that upholds international law and abhors torture,” he will say, according to advance extracts of his speech.

    “As a Government we understand how important it is that we not only uphold our values and international law, but that we are seen to do so.”

    Mr Hague will point to the establishment of the detainee inquiry under Sir Peter Gibson and the recent green paper proposals to enable the greater use of secret intelligence material in court cases as evidence of the Government’s commitment to tackle the issue.

    “We are confident that taken together these changes represent the most comprehensive effort yet to address the complex issues thrown up by the need to protect our security in the 21st century, and to do so in a way that upholds our values and begins to restore public confidence,” he will say.

    “So this will be our Government’s approach: drawing a line under the past, creating the right legislative framework so that the interests of national security and justice are reconciled, and drawing on the talents and capabilities of the intelligence agencies to support foreign policy and our national security.”

    Both approaches have been controversial. Lawyers representing detainees have said they will boycott the Gibson inquiry complaining the hearings will largely be secret and it will not seek evidence from other countries involved.

    The green paper has been criticised by human rights groups who have warned that it will lead to greater secrecy in the justice system, making it more difficult to hold the authorities to account for alleged abuses.

     

    Press Association 

  • Gang ‘yelled racist abuse as Stephen Lawrence was knifed’

    Gang ‘yelled racist abuse as Stephen Lawrence was knifed’

    stephen lawrenceThe mother of Stephen Lawrence today listened intently to a graphic account of her son’s murder 18 years ago by five white youths who shouted racist abuse as they stabbed him.

    The 18-year-old A-level student was “swallowed up” by the sheer weight of numbers in an unprovoked attack and forced to the ground.

    He had been waiting for a bus in Eltham with his friend Duwayne Brooks. Prosecutor Mark Ellison told the Old Bailey the attackers were “a group of like-minded young white men who acted together… reacting as one on seeing two black men”.

    He said: “The one that did not manage to run away was forced down and stabbed twice to the torso. The only discernible reason was the colour of his skin.”

    The group “shared the same racial animosity”. Stephen’s mother Doreen was in court as the jury was told he staggered 220 yards after being stabbed before collapsing from loss of blood.

    Gary Dobson, 36, and David Norris, 35, both of south London, plead not guilty to the murder in April 1993.

    The case against them is based on new forensic evidence, the court was told. Mr Ellison said Duwayne managed to escape, shouting “get up and run, Steve”. But Mr Ellison said: “Stephen Lawrence did not manage to get away. The group quickly surrounded him.”

    Duwayne told police he heard one of the gang shout “what, what, n****r” as they launched their attack.

    Mr Ellison said: “A racist comment was the precursor to a totally unprovoked rushing at them. The group response showed that they had the same racial animosity and motivation and that racist violence of this kind might be the result when they all joined in the attack on the uttering of that racist comment.”

    Mrs Lawrence sat with son Stuart close to the dock. Stephen’s father, Neville, left court seconds before Mr Ellison started to address the jury but returned later. Mr Ellison said the attack happened on a Thursday night, as the two teenagers were waiting in Well Hall Road, Eltham, to catch a bus home to Woolwich.

    “There was trouble with the buses that night and after waiting for a while at the stop where others were also waiting the two of them walked towards the Well Hall roundabout to see if any buses were coming,” said the QC.

    “As they reached the area just beyond the junction with Dickson Road, they turned around and started back towards the bus stop.

    “By the time they had reached the zebra crossing there was a group of about five white youths crossing over the Well Hall Road towards them.

    “One of the group was heard by Duwayne Brooks to say ‘what, what, n****r’ at the same time the whole group suddenly began to rush towards them.

    “A woman at the bus stop also heard something being said by someone in the group but could not make out what it was. Duwayne Brooks turned to Stephen Lawrence and told him to run but the group caught up at the junction of Dickson Road.”

    The court heard that even though Duwayne was only a little way ahead of Stephen he managed to escape but Stephen was caught.

    Stephen managed to run about 220 yards after he was stabbed. Mr Ellison said: “Although as we know by now he was mortally wounded, Stephen Lawrence was able to run some way up Well Hall Road and join Duwayne Brooks.

    “He couldn’t, however, keep up with Duwayne Brooks and having run what was later measured to be around 220 yards or metres from where he was stabbed, he collapsed on the pavement … never to get up again.” Mr Ellison told the court that the group who attacked him had acted “as one”.

    He said: “This group, we allege, looking at the eyewitness evidence, had acted essentially as one.

    “The stab wounds were inflicted and then they had decamped as one up Dickson Road.”

    Mr Brooks called 999 from a call box before trying to get help from passers by. A couple who were walking and an off-duty police officer driving with his wife stopped to try to help.

    But by that point Stephen was showing no signs of life and he died later in hospital from loss of blood.

    Mr Ellison said that none of the eyewitness had been able to identify the attackers but now there was new scientific evidence which came to light as a result of a cold case review that started in 2007.

    Earlier the judge had warned the jury that they should ignore anything they may have seen on last week’s TV drama The Jury.

    “That is not real life and how we work in this court, please adhere to the instructions I have given you and I am sure you are all people of sound common sense and fairness and you will understand fully the instructions I have given to you,” said the judge.

    He has banned the 12 jurors from doing any research or inquiries on the internet into the case.

    Mr Lawrence and his ex-wife sat feet from the accused as the jury of eight men and four women was sworn in. Only one of the jurors was black.

    The case continues.

     

    London Evening Standard

  • Liverpool FC agrees deal with Turkish Tourism

    Liverpool FC agrees deal with Turkish Tourism

    Liverpool fc

    Liverpool Football Club has announced a new two-year partnership with Turkish Tourism.

    The deal, the first of its kind in the UK for the tourism body, includes advertising rights and other benefits.

    The club’s managing director Ian Ayre said: “Turkey is a great country and we all have fantastic memories of our European Cup win in Istanbul in 2005.

    “Through this partnership the club can provide Turkish Tourism with significant brand visibility and access to our supporter base to help raise awareness of their tourism opportunities.”

    Tolga Tuyluoglu, director of the Turkish Culture and Tourism Office in London, said: “I am delighted that Turkey will be an official partner to such a historic club. I am sure that all Liverpool fans will have positive associations with Turkey already, following their dramatic Champions League win in Istanbul back in 2005. We hope to build on this to create a dynamic partnership.

    “The city of Liverpool is known for its music and culture; its world-class galleries, museums and landmarks, which of course provides a body of shared values for us to work with. Over one quarter of those taking package-holidays to Turkey do so from the North West of England so this area is very important to Turkey. Of course, the fact that Liverpool FC plays in red and white is a bonus too!”

    The deal was unveiled at the World Travel Market in London.

     How Do