Category: Middle East & Africa

  • Iran’s Embassy protests unfortunate TV program aired in Turkey

    Iran’s Embassy protests unfortunate TV program aired in Turkey

    The Iranian Embassy in Ankara, Turkey (file photo)

    fathi20130302074513680The Iranian Embassy in Ankara has protested against the broadcast of a program by Turkey’s BTV channel that contains material about the internal affairs of the Islamic Republic.

    In a protest letter sent to the BTV manager on Friday, the Iranian Embassy protested against Guncel program’s unfortunate choice of incorrect remarks about Iranian officials and the internal affairs of the country.

    Raising ‘baseless and false’ issues about the developments in Iran is merely aimed at distorting the public opinion of the Turkish people about the Iranian nation, the letter added.

    Iranian people have proved loyalty to the Islamic Revolution through their high turnout in demonstrations marking the victory of the revolution over the past years, the Iranian Embassy stated, apparently referring to the content of the BTV program.

    The letter also expressed hope that BTV would work to portray realities and strengthen the friendship between the Turkish people and the Iranian nation.

    SF/HSN/MA

    via PressTV – Iran’s Embassy protests unfortunate TV program aired in Turkey.

  • Accession to EU could undermine Turkey’s sovereignty: Iran MP

    Accession to EU could undermine Turkey’s sovereignty: Iran MP

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    Turkey entered formal membership talks with the European Union in 2005.

    An Iranian lawmaker says Turkey should honor its own sovereignty and be aware about the ramifications of adopting submissive policies aimed at laying the groundwork for its accession to the European Union.

    Mansour Haqiqatpour, a member of Iran’s Majlis Committee on National Security and Foreign Policy, said on Friday, “Turkey must not trade its sovereignty for membership in the European Union.”

    The Iranian lawmaker made the comment in reference to recent remarks by German Chancellor Angela Merkel about Turkey’s accession to the EU.

    In her last week visit to Turkey, Merkel called for resumption of negotiations for Ankara’s accession to the EU despite objections both within the German ruling party and in other European countries against Turkey’s membership.

    “Turkey must find its own indigenous model of development and it should not appeal for the West’s help for attaining progress, because that undermines the dignity of the Turkish nation,” Haqiqatpour said.

    “For years, the Turkish government has gone to any lengths by adopting numerous initiatives, applying constant changes to its economic laws and trying to adapt itself to the liberal-democracy culture.”

    “When the Europeans witness Turkey’s passion for accession to the EU, they easily impose any kind of law on the country which ensures the West’s interests and inflicts damage to the Turkish economy and culture,” the Iranian lawmaker pointed out.

    He alluded to the exacerbating economic crisis across the EU, including in Greece, Spain, Portugal and Italy and said, “By witnessing the conditions of these countries, Turkey must conclude that membership in this bankrupt union will worsen the country’s condition instead of improving it.”

    An opinion poll conducted by the Turkish Bosforo University between December 15 and 17, 2012, showed that 59 percent of the people in Turkey do not agree with its membership in the EU.

    A similar opinion poll conducted in 2003 showed that 73 percent of the Turkish people welcomed the membership and only 27 percent of the respondents rejected the bid.

    Turkey, which straddles Asia and Europe, entered formal membership talks with the European Union in 2005, but reluctance among some EU states on the matter has slowed the process to a near standstill.

    ASH/HSN/MA

    via PressTV – Accession to EU could undermine Turkey’s sovereignty: Iran MP.

  • Turkey Hails Iran’s Envoy for Strong, Constructive Activities

    Turkey Hails Iran’s Envoy for Strong, Constructive Activities

    Turkey Hails Iran’s Envoy for Strong, Constructive Activities

    A0871466TEHRAN (FNA)- Mayor of Turkey’s Northwestern city of Istanbul Kadir Topbas praised the activities of Iranian Consul-General in Istanbul Mahmoud Heidari, and called for the expansion of bilateral ties between the two friendly countries in all arenas.

    The issue was raised in the farewell ceremony of Herdari at the end of his diplomatic tenure in Istanbul as Iran’s consul-general on Friday.

    During the meeting, Topbas appreciated outgoing Iranian diplomat’s efforts to strengthen bilateral ties between two Muslim nations, and hoped for expansion of mutual cooperation between the two states.

    Iran and Turkey have in recent years increased their cooperation in all the various fields of economy, security, trade, education, energy and culture.

    Turkey’s crude imports from Iran leapt in March to 1.17 million tons, rejecting the speculations that Ankara has bowed to US pressures to curb oil trades with Tehran.

    The data was announced by Turkey’s census institute. The center reported that the country’s oil imports from Iran have hit a record in the 8 months before March.

    This is while the Turkish government had earlier promised the US that it would implement a maximum 20% decrease in oil imports from Iran to cooperate with Washington in imposing unilateral sanctions against Tehran.

    Meantime, Turkey’s Energy Minister Taner Yildiz had earlier said that Ankara is resolved to continue oil imports from Iran despite the sanctions imposed on Iranian oil by the US and the European Union.

    The Turkish minister said in February that his country is only committed to the decisions made by the United Nations in this regard.

    The two sides have exchanged several politico-economic delegations during the last few months.

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul in a meeting with Iranian Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani in February underlined the need for the removal of obstacles to the further expansion of bilateral economic ties with Iran in a bid to boost trade cooperation between the two countries.

    “The level of economic and trade cooperation between the two countries does not suit the age-old ties of the two nations and we should remove the obstacles to the development of mutual cooperation between Iran and Turkey,” Gul said at the time.

    via Fars News Agency :: Turkey Hails Iran’s Envoy for Strong, Constructive Activities.

  • Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan under fire for Zionism remarks

    Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan under fire for Zionism remarks

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan Photo: AP

    By Robert Tait, Jerusalem4:05PM GMT 01 Mar 2013

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    The comment, made at a United Nations conference to promote religious tolerance, earned a rebuke from Israel, the United Nations and the US, overshadowing a visit by John Kerry, the secretary of state, in Ankara for talks with Mr Erdogan on Syria.

    Speaking to the global forum of the Alliance of Civilisations in Vienna on Wednesday, Mr Erdogan said: “As is the case for Zionism, anti-Semitism and fascism, it is inevitable that Islamophobia be considered a crime against humanity.”

    Mr Kerry said he found the remarks “objectionable”.

    “We not only disagree with it, but we find it objectionable,” he said, during a joint press conference with Ahmet Davutoglu, his Turkish counterpart. “I raised the speech with the foreign minister and I will raise it with the prime minister.”

    A senior US official travelling with Mr Kerry’s party condemned the remark as “offensive” and said Turkish officials would be left in no doubt about Washington’s annoyance.

    “This was particularly offensive, frankly, to call Zionism a crime against humanity … It does have a corrosive effect (on relations),” the official said. “I am sure the secretary will be very clear about how dismayed we were to hear it.”

    “The Turkey-Israel relationship is frozen. We want to see a normalisation … not just for the sake of the two countries but for

    the sake of the region and, frankly, for the symbolism,”

    The Obama administration has sought to maintain close ties with Turkey — a majority Muslim country that is also a NATO ally — despite its deteriorating relationship with Israel partly because of its potential ability to be a broker in the civil war in Syria.

    Mr Erdogan’s remark had earlier been denounced by the White House and by Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, who called it “a dark and mendacious statement the likes of which we thought had passed from the world”.

    Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary general, who was present during Mr Erdogan’s speech and heard it on simultaneous translation, said it breached the spirit of the Alliance of Civilisations, which was formed in 2005 — with Turkey as a co-sponsor – to promote east-west understanding and combat extremism.

    “The Secretary-General believes it is unfortunate that such hurtful and divisive comments were uttered at a meeting being held under the theme of responsible leadership,” a statement from his office said.

    “If the comment about Zionism was interpreted correctly, then it was not only wrong but contradicts the very principles on which the Alliance of Civilizations is based.”

    Mr Ban had earlier come under attack from UN Watch, a Geneva-based group proclaiming affiliations to the US Jewish community, for failing to criticise Mr Erdogan’s speech immediately after it was made.

    Pro-Zionist groups frequently complain that the UN is biased against Israel — pointing to a 1975 resolution equating Zionism with racism.

    The resolution was revoked in 1991 after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

    Relations between Israel and Turkey — once close allies — have been strained since 2010, when nine Turkish activists were killed after Israeli commandoes stormed a flotilla heading for the Gaza Strip. Mr Netanyahu has resisted Turkish pressure to apologise and pay compensation.

    Ties between the two nations were recently said to be undergoing a quiet revival, encouraged by the US, amid reports that Israel had resumed selling armament equipment to Turkey.

    Mr Erdogan, a former Islamist, has sharply criticised Israel in the past, although he has refrained from attacks on Zionism. In 2009 he stormed out of a debate with the Israeli president, Shimon Peres, at the World Economic Forum in Davos, after telling him “you Israelis know how to kill”.

    via Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan under fire for Zionism remarks – Telegraph.

  • Syrian opposition postpones Istanbul meeting meant to choose prime minister

    Syrian opposition postpones Istanbul meeting meant to choose prime minister

    The main Western-backed Syrian opposition group has postponed an upcoming meeting in Turkey where it was to choose a prime minister for a transitional government in rebel-held areas.

    Free Syrian Army fighters from the Knights of the North brigade move to reconnaissance a Syrian army forces base of al-Karmid, at Jabal al-Zaweya, in Idlib province, Syria, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013. Syrian...   (Associated Press)
    Free Syrian Army fighters from the Knights of the North brigade move to reconnaissance a Syrian army forces base of al-Karmid, at Jabal al-Zaweya, in Idlib province, Syria, Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013. Syrian… (Associated Press)

    The Syrian National Coalition said in a statement posted on its Facebook page Thursday that the March 2 conference in Istanbul was canceled for “logistical reasons.” It said it would announce a new date as soon as possible.

    The opposition umbrella group has struggled to agree on the leadership of a transitional administration since the Coalition was formed late last year. The group has met on previous occasions to select an interim prime minister, but has failed to reach a compromise.

    The announcement comes despite a U.S. pledge to provide an additional $60 million in assistance to the opposition.

    via Syrian opposition postpones Istanbul meeting meant to choose prime minister – 2/28/2013 9:01:46 AM | Newser.

  • This Is Simply Our Home

    This Is Simply Our Home

    Syriac Orthodox Christians in Turkey

    ”This Is Simply Our Home”

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    In recent years, around 60-100 Syriac Orthodox families have returned from central Europe to Turkey. Encouraged by changes in the political atmosphere, the minority nonetheless faces a host of problems, from the expropriation of land belonging to a monastery, to a ban on special schools and kindergartens, and also a lack of places of worship in Istanbul. By Ekrem Eddy Güzeldere

    A sign in Aramaic at the side of the road defiantly bids visitors “Welcome to Kafro” next to the official Turkish sign on which the village is called “Elbeğendi”. Here, some 15 kilometres south of Midyat, live 17 Syriac Orthodox families. There are no shops in the village, but there is a café that allegedly serves the only decent pizza in the area.

    “German is the lingua franca amongst the children in the village,” says the pizza maker in flawless German, which he learned while living close to Stuttgart. All of the families here have returned to Kafro after living in Germany and Switzerland, some of them for decades.

    Among them is also the muhtar, the elected village chief, Aziz Demir, who lived with his family in Zurich and near St. Gallen. “Even if our lives there as Christians were very pleasant, something was still missing,” he says on the terrace of his house, where he lives with his wife, from a neighbouring village, and their youngest son, Josef, who attends secondary school in Midyat. With a sweeping gesture beyond the newly landscaped garden out onto the plain, he says “This is simply our home.”

    Urgent need of restoration

    The Demirs and the other 16 families all live in new houses, because the buildings of the old village, within site of the new developments, were for the most part destroyed in the clashes between the army and the PKK. As was the old church, which is in urgent need of restoration but still awaits the necessary permits.

    Land dispute with the Turkish government and Kurdish village leaders: The Mor Gabrial is the oldest surviving Christian monastery in the world. There have been claims that the monastery was built on the grounds of a previous mosque – regardless of the fact that the monastery was founded over 170 tears prior to the birth of MohammedThe inhabitants of Kafro have therefore erected a small chapel with the help of the “Evangelical-Lutheran Church in Württemberg”, as the sign next to the entrance indicates. Services only take place here once in a month, however, as the village does not have its own priest. From the roof of the old church, Demir points out the surrounding villages from east to west: “One is Christian, one Arabic, one Kurdish, one Yazidi and then another one Christian: Enhil (in Turkish Yemişli), where Tuma Çelik comes from.”

    Çelik already moved with his family to Istanbul as a ten-year old, in 1974, and then emigrated to Switzerland in 1985. There, he became an activist fighting for the interests of the Syriac Orthodox church. He wrote for Aramaic magazines and was one of the founders of “Suroyo TV”, which broadcasts in Aramaic from Sweden. He has been living again mostly in Tur Abdin since 2010.

    Legal proceedings against Mor Gabriel

    Last summer, he founded the first Turkish-Aramaic monthly magazine, Sabro (Hope), which is published by volunteers in Midyat. Also last summer, he launched a website called “We have grown up in this world together”, devoted primarily to the legal proceedings against the region’s oldest monastery, Mor Gabriel.

    The Syriac Orthodox Church claims to derive its origin from one of the first Christian communities. It uses Syriac, a dialect of Aramaic spoken by Jesus Christ and his Apostles, as its official and liturgical language. Pictured: Altar in the Curch of KafroMor Gabriel was founded in 397. 1,611 years later, a complaint was filed by the surrounding villages alleging that the monastery was illegally occupying land, some of it even located inside the monastery walls and for which the monastery has paid property taxes regularly since 1937. Nevertheless, the courts have been handing down decisions against the monastery since 2008 and have granted around 28 hectares of its land to the Turkish forest ministry; the last judgement was passed in July 2012.

    Now the only hope is to take the case before the European Court of Human Rights. Erol Dora, the first Syriac Orthodox member of the Turkish parliament, who was elected for the Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) in Mardin in 2011 and previously worked as a lawyer for minority foundations, commented: “We as the BDP and as the Assyrian people will do all we can to support the monastery at the international level, because we believe that in this trial we have justice on our side.”

    Just one of many problems

    For Çelik, however, Mor Gabriel is but one problem among many: “This is just a small drop in the ocean. Assyrians lived mainly in rural areas, where the land registry system was the least active. That’s why so many churches, monasteries and community buildings are not even registered.”

    In Switzerland, he became an activist fighting for the interests of the Syriac Orthodox church: Tuma ÇelikToday, the great majority of the Syriac Orthodox faithful lives in Istanbul. Sait Susin, chairman of the Syriac Orthodox Foundation in Istanbul, estimates that about 17,000 of the approximately 20,000 members live in Istanbul. Currently, there is only a single Syriac Orthodox church there, in the trendy district of Beyoglu, which was built in 1844 for the around 40-50 families living in the city at that time. The community, most of whose members now live in Bakirköy, close to Atatürk Airport, therefore also uses Catholic churches for services.

    In addition, the foundation has been submitting applications for years to build a new church, for which it needs land to be assigned to it by the municipal administration. Last year, the city made two “immoral offers” of land confiscated from Catholic and Greek Orthodox communities. The Syriac Orthodox leaders therefore rejected the offers for the time being. Should the plot in question be returned to the Catholic Church, however, they would be prepared to try to reach an agreement with the Catholic priests to erect a new church next to the Catholic cemetery.

    “You are not a minority”

    But that is not the only problem confronting the Istanbul community. Outside of Tur Abdin, only a minority of its members are fluent in Aramaic. Çelik estimates that “around 3,000 people in Istanbul speak the language, but only about 200 can also read and write it.” The foundation had therefore submitted a request to open a kindergarten with instruction in Aramaic. The response of the ministry of education was: “You are not a minority; therefore you cannot teach your children a foreign language.”

    Although Syriac Orthodox Christians are clearly not Muslims and thus should be able to benefit from the minority rights stipulated in the Lausanne Treaty of 1923, the Turkish State has granted these rights thus far only to Greeks, Armenians and Jews, with numerous infringements.

    An adjustment of Turkish laws to European minority rights standards, long overdue, would not only solve the problem of the kindergarten, but would also create a modern frame of reference for all the other issues. Nothing revolutionary, just equal rights for all.

    Ekrem Eddy Güzeldere

    © Qantara.de 2013

    Translated from the German by Jennifer Taylor

    Editor: Lewis Gropp/Qantara.de