Category: Europe

  • Putin focusing on relations with Turkey

    Putin focusing on relations with Turkey

    Former Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow on May 8, 2008.
    (UPI Photo/Anatoli Zhdanov)
    MOSCOW, July 19 (UPI) — Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin spoke with his Turkish counterpart Saturday in an effort to improve relations between the two nations, a spokesman says.Government spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Putin focused on economic and trade relations while speaking with Turkish Prime Minster Recep Tayyip Erdogan, ITAR-TASS reported.
    The two prime ministers also discussed a group of young Russian travelers who endured a litany of problems during a visit to Turkey.
    Erdogan assured Putin a Turkish official was en route to the Turkish city of Antayla to assist the young travelers with any difficulties.

    Peskov told ITAR-TASS that Putin wants Russian Minister of Sports, Tourism and Youth Policy Vitaly Mutko to play a more active role in Russian tourism to ensure such international travel problems do not occur in the future.

    Source: United Press International, July 19, 2008

  • Norway’s Nazi offspring claim compensation

    Norway’s Nazi offspring claim compensation

    From
    March 8, 2007

    In a landmark case, a group of Norwegian war children whose mothers were deliberately impregnated by German soldiers as part of a Nazi plan to build a blond-haired blue-eyed race, are today demanding a payout from Oslo for the suffering and discrimination it has caused them.

    The applicants — numbering 154, plus four Swedes and a German — claim that the Norwegian Government was guilty of failing to protect them from the Nazis’ Lebensborn scheme during the German invasion of Norway in the Second World War between 1940 and 1945. They also claim the state institutionally discriminated against the children of Nazi soldiers for years afterwards.

    Up to 12,000 children with a Norwegian mother and German father were born under the scheme, meaning Fountain of Life, which was founded by Heinrich Himmler, the SS chief, in 1935.

    Norway was the jewel of Himmler’s programme and, if today’s cases at the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) are successful, they are expected to lead to a flurry of complaints from other Nazi children in the country as well as children of German troops from neighbouring Sweden, which was also part of the scheme.

    “We want it to be recognised that the Government of Norway violated the rights of these people, and we are asking for financial damages,” Randi Hagen Spydevold, a lawyer for the group, said.

    The application was lodged with the ECHR after Oslo’s City Court in 2003 rejected a case by seven of the applicants because their claims came too long after a statutory time limit.

    Norwegian courts have always ruled against any compensation claimants in the past, saying the country’s government cannot be held responsible for failing to sufficiently protect the Lebensborn children before 1953, when it signed the European Convention on Human Rights — however, the group of claimants argues that the ill-treatment continued long afterwards.

    “They claim the violations are continuing in the sense that they are still reminded in negative terms of their origin and value,” the ECHR said in a statement.

    The court said that many mothers of war children claimed they had been marginalised, had difficulties in obtaining employment, and their children were often adopted or placed in foster homes or institutions for their own protection.

    Many Norwegian war children, meanwhile, were deprived of their original names and identity, subjected to discrimination, harassment and ill-treatment and left with psychological problems and registered disabled at an early age, the statement adds.

    The cases include that of a woman who was regularly locked up when she was a child, sometimes with a dog chain, by her foster father, and had a swastika marked with a nail on her forehead when aged nine or 10.

    One man, Paul Hansen, claims he was placed in psychiatric institutions until 1965 without his mental health ever having been assessed, while another, Karl Otto Zinken, said he was placed in a school for mentally disabled children where he was raped by two men.

    In an attempt to settle the dispute, the Norwegian Government in 2002 offered to pay the children 200,000 kroner (now worth £16,700), provided they could prove that they had suffered sufficient discrimination. However, the group is now demanding £34,000 per person, and up to four times as much for those who suffered the most.

    The ECHR will hear the group’s arguments today before deciding whether the case is admissible. A decision could take several months.

    One of the world’s most famous Nazi children is Anni-Frid Lyngstad, the brunette member of the pop group Abba, who was one of thousands of Swedish children known to have been born to a German soldier.

    In Sweden the youngsters were often referred to as Tyskerbarnas, or German children, and Ms Lyngstad has spoken in the past of being persecuted and isolated in her own country.

    It is a shame that these children have received no compensation and are discrminated against by their own countrymen. Countries need to admit their wrong doing and begin to make compensation instead of trying to continue the coverup.

    Kay Merrill, Baltimore , United States/Maryland

    I think piggy Kruger needs to brush up on his WW2 History and show some humanity and compassion for his fellow men – two things neither Hitler or Stalin were capable of. Holding the children begotten by this eugenics experiment responisble for the actionsof their fathers is despicable and barbaric . They are as much victims as the thousands of childern murdered by lethal injection through the Nazi’s Euthanasia programme for the disabled and mentally ill.

    island monkey, Shropshire, England

    I never cease to be amazed at how adults blame children for the sins of their parents. The Norwegian state and society should be ashamed for not protecting these children. Their only crime was to be born.

    Finn Olav, Drammen, Norway

    If Hitlerism had succeeded, and these Nazi-fathered children had grown up holding authority in the German empire, would they have been as bestially cruel as their fathers and leaders?. We can only thank God, and Stalin, and Churchill, and all the millions of decent men and women who stood up against fascism, that we never had to find out.

    Piggy Kruger, Bridgwater, UK

    If Hitlerism had not been destroyed, largely through Russian efforts, and these Nazi- fathered children had held the whip, would they have been as beastly as their fathers and leaders?. We can only thank God, and Joseph Stalin, and Sir Winston,and Roosevelt, that we never had to find out.

    Piggy Kruger, Bridgwater, UK

  • Envoy Blair cancels visit to Gaza

    Envoy Blair cancels visit to Gaza

    From: Tolga Cakir <[email protected]>

    To: Haluk Demirbag

    Tony Blair is focusing on economic
    issues as Middle East envoy

    The international Middle East envoy, Tony Blair, has cancelled a planned visit to the Gaza Strip.

    A spokesman said that the visit had to be postponed because of a specific security threat.

    He would have been the most highly ranked international diplomat to visit the strip since the militant movement Hamas took control there in 2007.

    He was due to meet UN officials to discuss humanitarian work in the strip and visit a water treatment plant.

    He had not been expected to meet any representatives from Hamas.

    The international community does not recognise the Hamas government in Gaza.

    The European Union, the United States and Israel consider Hamas to be a terrorist organisation.

    The movement seized control of Gaza in June 2007 from Fatah forces loyal to the Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.

    The former British prime minister was appointed as Middle East envoy in the same month by the Quartet – the US, the EU, the UN and Russia.

    Mr Blair was asked to focus on economic issues with the aim of bolstering the chances of a peace deal this year.

    Source: BBC, 15 July 2008

  • Call for papers from SAM, The Center for Strategic Research of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs

    Call for papers from SAM, The Center for Strategic Research of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs

    From: [email protected]

    CALL FOR PAPER

    SAM, The Center for Strategic Research of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Turkey, invites foreign and Turkish academicians to submit manuscripts of their original paper (which haven’t been published anywhere before) for possible publication in “Perceptions: Journal of International Affairs”, Vol. XIII Number 3 Autumn 2008.

    Topic: Any subject related to international political relations, regional issues, security and defense matters.

    A note for interested contributors and a declaration form are enclosed herewith.

    An honorarium will be paid for each article published in the Quarterly.

    Due Date: 31 October 2008

    For further information write to:

    Center for Strategic Research
    Kircicegi Sok. 8/3, 06700 GOP/Ankara, Turkey
    Tel.:+90 312 446 04 35 – 436 58 12
    Fax: +90 312 445 05 84
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Web: www.sam.gov.tr

    >> Notes for Contributors

    >> Declaration Form

  • Turkish hacker group “AyYildiz Team” threatens Europe

    Turkish hacker group “AyYildiz Team” threatens Europe

    Turkish hacker group “AyYildiz Team” threatens Europe

    [ 14 Jul 2008 18:24  ]

    Brussels –APA. A Turkish hacker group by name of AyYildiz Team made Europe anxious.

    According to APA, German Focus magazine published an article titled “Turkish network attacks European Union” and said that nationalist Turkish hackers tried to hijack the computer system of the European Commission and to get secret information. The magazine referring to the Commission’s secret report said that on June 13 AyYildiz Team entered to the closed section of EU foreign policy and security commissioner Xavier Solana’s web-site, which contains secret documents, and loaded own program codes there. However the hackers couldn’t get secret information and had to stop virtual attack because experts of the European Commission continually update the Solana’s page. It was noted in the report that it is possible to determine the hacker’s place, but it needs in the assistance of Turkish government.
    AyYildiz Team is regularly hijacking the web-sites close to PKK terrorist organization. The nationalist hackers are not partial to the attacks against Turkish people in the different countries. For example after the burning of Turkish houses in Germany, they attacked Internet pages of several German banks and companies and placed their message there.

  • Turkish Identity Formation and Political Mobilization in Western Europe and North America

    Turkish Identity Formation and Political Mobilization in Western Europe and North America

    From: Gokce Yurdakul <[email protected]>
    List Editor: Mark Stein <[email protected]>
    Editor’s Subject: H-TURK: Call for papers for a special issue in Turkish Studies [G Yurdakul]
    Author’s Subject: H-TURK: Call for papers for a special issue in Turkish Studies [G Yurdakul]
    Date Written: Mon, 14 Jul 2008 09:47:20 -0400
    Date Posted: Mon, 14 Jul 2008 09:47:20 -0400
    CALL FOR PAPERS FOR A SPECIAL ISSUE IN TURKISH STUDIES (to appear in June
    2009)
    
    We would like to invite papers for a special issue in Turkish Studies
    journal on Turkish Identity Formation and Political Mobilization in Western
    Europe and
    North America. We are specifically interested in original articles that
    focus on Turkish immigrant associations and their participation in politics
    in
    FRANCE, BELGIUM, and in the UNITED KINGDOM.  Articles that contain primary
    data will be preferred. If you would like to submit your article to this
    special
    issue, please contact: Dr. Sebnem Koser Akcapar at [email protected] and
    Dr. Gokce Yurdakul at [email protected] (special issue guest
    editors).
    Please note that all articles will be peer-reviewed. The submission date is
    July 30, 2008.  This special issue is currently in preparation and has the
    following articles:
    Turkish organisations in Europe: how national contexts provide different
    avenues for    participation? Pontus Odmalm   //  Divided We Stand?: Turks
    and Turkish associations in the United States, Sebnem Koser Akcapar //
    Immigrant associations in Canada: Included, accommodated or excluded? Saime
    Ozcurumez// Islam, conflicts and immigrant integration in Germany: The cases
    of Diyanet
    Isleri and Milli Gorus, Gokce Yurdakul // Organizing for access? The
    political mobilization of Turks in Amsterdam, Laure Michon and Floris
    Vermeulen //
    "The light of the Alevi fire was lit in Germany and then spread to Turkey":
    The debate about
    the relationship between Alevism and Islam, Esra Ozyurek //
    Towards a success story? Turkish immigrant organisations in Norway, Jon
    Rogstad, // The Gulen Movement in Ireland: Civil society engagements of a
    Turkish religio-cultural community, Jonathan Lacey.
    
    Best regards,
    Gokce Yurdakul
    Post-doctoral Fellow
    Freie Universitaet Berlin Program for Advanced German and European Studies