Category: Middle East

  • Turkey, Iran to Unite in Joint University?

    Turkey, Iran to Unite in Joint University?

    Iran has announced plans for a joint university with Turkey to expand scientific and technological cooperation.

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    Iran has announced plans for a joint university with Turkey to expand scientific and technological cooperation, according to a statement issued by Tehran.

    Arsalan Qorbani, Iran’s Deputy Minister of Science, Research and Technology, announced Monday the two nations would set up parallel university branches in Iran’s city of Tabriz, and the Turkish city of Wan.

    But the plan, established in a joint Memorandum of Understanding signed by representatives of the two countries, has yet to be confirmed by the Turkish and Iranian governments.

    “We hope that Iran and Turkey’s joint university will be established in the next six months,” Qorbani told the FARS news agency. He added that Iran intends to draw upon the resources of other Iranian universities to advance the joint effort with Turkey.

    Former Iranian Health Minister Marziyeh Vahid Dastijerdi emphasized during a visit to Ankara two years ago that Iran had a special interest in fostering projects that involved mutual cooperation with Turkey.

    Mutual pacts between Tehran and Ankara go back as far as 2009, when the two countries signed an agreement to share advances in telecommunications technology.

    Tags: Iran ,Ankara ,Anti-Semitism (Campus) ,Tehran ,joint venture

    via Turkey, Iran to Unite in Joint University? – Middle East – News – Israel National News.

  • An FSA terrorist group goes missing way back from Turkey

    An FSA terrorist group goes missing way back from Turkey

    The most important developments in Syria during last 24 hours indicate that a prominent member of Free Syrian Army has been missing, and FSA members have been clashing with each other in Aleppo.

    An-FSA-terrorist-group-goes-missing-way-back-from-TurkeyInformed sources had it that Yusuf Afash, brother to Ahmad Afash, FSA leader has lost along with his terrorist group members in their way back from Turkey in Qatma border village.

    They have reportedly exported stolen goods from Aleppo factories to Turkey. FSA has announced Al-Nusra Front as responsible for the event.

    Defected Syrian Army Colonel defects to Turkey

    Also these sources had it that Syrian Army defected Colonel Amin Amin, popularly known as Abu Mohammed, who headed attack on the Meng Military Airport, has defected to Turkey after verbal clash with the leader of the group. After his defection, Amin’s followers engaged in a fight with the leader.

    Leader of Al Tohid brigades killed in southern Daraa

    Syrian Army units have killed Ismail Mahmoud al-Masri, also known as Abu Sariyya, leader of Tohid Flag brigades during a fierce fight in southern Daraa. His group’s members have been reportedly killed.

    via An FSA terrorist group goes missing way back from Turkey.

  • Erdogan: “The Image of the Jews Is No Different from that of the Nazis”

    Erdogan: “The Image of the Jews Is No Different from that of the Nazis”

    by Samuel Westrop

    February 11, 2013 at 5:00 am

    Now that we know that Turkey’s Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, uttered anti-Semitic comments similar to those made by Egypt’s President Mohamed Morsi, will the media do its best to avoid reporting those, too?

    In November 1998, the Institute for Jewish Policy Research released its annual report on current trends in anti-Semitism across the world. In the section for Turkey, the journal quoted the then-mayor of Istanbul, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, in June 1997, at a meeting organized by the municipality to celebrate the city’s conquest by the Ottoman Turks, remarking: “The Jews have begun to crush the Muslims of Palestine, in the name of Zionism,” the mayor said, “Today, the image of the Jews is no different from that of the Nazis.”

    Erdogan later became, and still is, the Prime Minister of Turkey, a man whom President Obama describes as a personal friend, in a country that is a member of NATO, and head of a government that is regarded as moderate, and, as the London Times recently reflected, an example of how Islamism and democracy do not have to be mutually exclusive.

    Birikim, a Turkish socialist culture magazine, also attributes the quote to Erdogan. A search through Western newspaper records, however, shows no mention at all of these comments.

    That remark is not the only example of Erdogan’s hostility in this regard. Turkish newspaper Yeni Safak has reported Erdogan commenting that the media does not fully report Israel’s “murder of innocent children” because the “world’s media is under the control of Israel, and this needs to be emphasised.”

    In 2009 another Turkish newspaper, Taraf, reported that Erdogan, while attending the opening of a university, stated, “wherever Jews settle, they make money. They are not property owners, as being tenants suits them best. On the other hand, whatever we have or do not have, we will invest in our houses.”

    In early January, when the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) produced a video of Morsi describing Zionists as “the descendants of apes and pigs,” it took almost two weeks and a barrage of criticism for a leading newspaper, the New York Times, finally to report the comments. The eventual action led to worldwide denunciation of Morsi’s remarks and even a condemnatory statement from the White House. Now that we know that Erdogan, Prime Minister of a country considered to be a leading ally of the West, made comments similar to Morsi’s, will the media do its best to avoid reporting those, too?

    via Erdogan: “The Image of the Jews Is No Different from that of the Nazis” :: Gatestone Institute.

  • Syria crisis: ‘Powerful’ minibus explosion kills 13

    Syria crisis: ‘Powerful’ minibus explosion kills 13

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    The blast happened near the Cilvegozu border post, one of the main crossing points for Syrian refugees into Turkey

    A minibus exploded on the Syria-Turkey border, killing at least 10 Syrians and three Turkish nationals, Turkish officials have said.

    It is not yet known what caused the blast, which wounded dozens more.

    Meanwhile, rebels have reportedly seized control of Syria’s largest hydro-electric dam, in what would be a strategic loss to the government.

    Activists and opposition groups said fighters were guarding the dam’s entrances and exits in Raqa province.

    Reports said the dam on the Euphrates River in the country’s north was still operational.

    Syrian President Bashar al-Assad reiterated on Monday that he would not step down, “no matter how pressures are building up”, state-run Sana news agency reports.

    “Syria will remain the beating heart of the Arab world and will not give up its principles despite the intensifying pressure and diversifying plots not only targeting Syria, but all Arabs,” he is quoted as saying by Sana.

    Scene of clashes

    Monday’s explosion happened in the area of the Cilvegozu customs post on the Turkish side of the border, in the southern province of Hatay.

    It is one of the main crossing points for Syrian refugees into Turkey.

    The Syrian-registered minibus blew up only metres away from the Turkish border gate, where scores of civilians and humanitarian workers were congregated, Turkish deputy prime minister Bulent Arinc said.

    “It was a powerful explosion. But whether this was a vehicle laden with explosives or another type of explosion, I think, at the latest, will become clear tomorrow,” he said.

    “All possibilities are on the table, including political motives.”

    Turkey’s interior, justice and customs ministers were due to fly to the area to be briefed on the incident.

    The crossing, which lies opposite the Syrian border post of Bab al-Hawa, has been the scene of clashes in recent months. Rebels fighting to overthrow Syrian President Bashar al-Assad captured Bab al-Hawa in July.

    The latest incident comes after continued violence across the country left some 77 people dead on Sunday, AFP news agency quoted opposition activists as saying.

    The Local Coordination Committees said clashes had broken out in the al-Afif neighbourhood of Damascus, near the the presidential complex.

    Information from inside Syria is almost impossible to verify because of the heavy restrictions placed on international journalists there.

    The fighting in Syria has killed at least 60,000 people, the UN says.

    Dam ‘taken’

    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based activists group, said Islamist fighters now controlled the Tabqa dam. The facility provides much of the electricity to the city of Aleppo.

    Rebels launched an offensive in Aleppo in July, but since then the city has been divided between fighters and government forces, with neither side apparently able to push the other out.

    “The rebels took control of the dam, which is still in operation. They are guarding both entrances but have forbidden the fighters from staying inside for fear the regime will bomb it,” SOHR director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.

    The SOHR said Islamist fighters also took over three districts in the neighbouring town of Tabqa, where employees of the dam and their families live.

    The SOHR is one of the most prominent organisations documenting and reporting incidents and casualties in the Syrian conflict. The group says its reports are impartial, though its information cannot be independently verified.

    Moaz al-Khatib (file photo) Moaz al-Khatib’s offer of talks was criticised within his own movement

    ‘A Syrian opposition leader meanwhile has criticised the government for not taking up his offer of peace talks.

    Moaz al-Khatib, of the Syrian National Coalition, said the regime’s response sent a “very negative” message to the world.

    In a statement on his Facebook page, Mr Khatib said the government had “lost a chance to engage in a dialogue” to end the two-year conflict.

    Last month, Mr Khatib said the Syrian National Coalition – an alliance of opposition groups – would meet Syrian officials, so long as Syria freed 160,000 political prisoners.

    His overture, which has the backing of the US, was criticised by many of his coalition colleagues, who reject discussions while President Assad and his inner circle remain in power.

    On Friday, Syrian Information Minister Omran al-Zohbi said the government was prepared to hold talks with the opposition without preconditions.

    “We are serious about the question of dialogue,” Mr Zohbi said on state television. [But] When you speak of dialogue, it means dialogue without conditions, which excludes no-one.”

    via BBC News – Syria crisis: ‘Powerful’ minibus explosion kills 13.

  • Arabs, Turkey Want to Control Serekaniye for Strategic Advantage, Kurdish Leader Says

    Arabs, Turkey Want to Control Serekaniye for Strategic Advantage, Kurdish Leader Says

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    Fighters of the Farouq brigade in Serekaniye. Photo: PYD.

    ERBIL, Kurdistan Region – The close proximity of the Syrian city of Serekaniye (Ras al-Ain) to the Turkish border is the reason behind ongoing violent clashes there between the Arab and Kurdish opposition to the Damascus regime, says Salih Muslim, the leader of the Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD).

    The Kurdish opposition in Syria and the predominantly Arab Free Syrian Army (FSA), the main force fighting to oust President Bashar al-Assad’s regime, has been on the same side in its quest to topple the regime. But recently, fighting erupted in Serekaniye between the FSA and PYD-affiliated Popular Protection Committee (YPG), with the Kurds accusing Turkey of fueling an Arab-Kurdish war.

    “Serekaniye is the Arab fighters’ door to Turkey and logistical support,” says Muslim. “If they control Serekaniye they will easily control Derik. As matter fact if they control Serekaniye they can control as far as Hassaka,” Muslim says.

    He explains that Serekaniye has a strategic location, and controlling it would give the Arabs more leverage over the Kurds, because the Arabs can separate Kobani and Afreen from Jazeera. Muslim claims that Arab control over this region will impede traffic and communications between Kurds in the two geographically separate regions.

    “There is no communication, there is fighting in this area. When the fight is over, the communications and relations will restore to their ordinary situation,” Muslim says. ”The Arab fighters are trying to eliminate communications and relations completely, and place Jazeera under their control,” he claims.

    Muslim adds that upon discovering that they could not implement their plan through the FSA Turkish forces joined up with tribal leader Nawaf Basheer, who was appointed head of the Jazeera and Furat Liberation Front.

    “They (Turkish forces) have allocated $200 million for this force,” Muslim says.

    According to Muslim, “Basheer is after money. His tribe does not support him. Those who fight for him, they fight for money.”

    In the past, Arab fighters have publicly claimed that the PYD receives orders from Turkey, saying that if it and the YPG comply with Turkish demands to stay away from the border from Serekaniye to Derik, then both would have to withdraw from these towns.

    “Their plan is to disarm the Kurds, “Muslim says. “This is something different from the Syrian revolution, it does not serve the Syrian revolution. This is a Turkish demand to eliminate the Kurds.”

    But Muslim believes that the fight in Serekaniye has brought the Kurdish factions closer together.

    “It’s no longer a revolution for freedom and democracy. What’s happening today is a fight for power and distribution of power,” he told Rudaw.

    Thus far, Muslim claims, eight members of the YPG have been killed, while the death toll within forces loyal to Turkey is estimated in the hundreds.

    via Rudaw.net – English – Arabs, Turkey Want to Control Serekaniye for Strategic Advantage, Kurdish Leader Says.

  • Live stream; Iran Islamic Revolution anniversary ceremony

    People around the world could watch the live stream broadcast of anniversary ceremony of Islamic Revolution in Iran.
    According to MNA, this the 34rd anniversary of Islamic Revolution in Iran which will be broadcast, live stream via internet. These ceremonies will start simultaneously in Tehran and all other cities around Iran at 9:00 AM. The participant will end the ceremony by reading a resolution.

    To view the live stream broadcast of these ceremonies, please go to:

    Operation Argo: The Movie