Category: USA

Turkey could be America’s most important regional ally, above Iraq, even above Israel, if both sides manage the relationship correctly.

  • The Morning Line, 2/15 (Live from Istanbul, Turkey)

    The Morning Line, 2/15 (Live from Istanbul, Turkey)

    Good Morning, well, early evening, here from sunny Istanbul, Turkey, Mobsters!

    Doc must be really at the end of his pinch hitter list, as he has sent the Mobster Bat Signal International all the way to the Middle East. I have recently been hired as TML’s Istanbul correspondent for all things Turkey, Steve Yung.

    I don’t know if I necessarily consider myself at full Mobster status, as I have never even commented on a TML column before. But, I am a loyal reader and sent Doc an email last week to comment on something he had written. All of the sudden, I was signed to a 10 day contract and here I am. My qualifications are strong, though, as I was born and raised for 37 years on the west side of Cincinnati. In fact, I may have even rubbed elbows with Westsider Nick Corey and his wife, as they were classmates of mine way back when. Don’t know if you all can handle 2 out of 3 weeks with a westsider slant, but here we go….

    Actually, the reason I took pen to paper…..err, fingers to keyboard……was to comment to Doc on something he had mentioned several times in THIS SPACE. It was something along the lines of moving away, chucking it all, and starting over in someplace new. I offer my case study….

    As mentioned, I was born and raised in Cincy all my life. Met a wonderful woman who has dual citizenship to Turkey and the U.S. My family all lived in Cincy, hers in Turkey. She let it be known that a move to Turkey (at least for a little while) was on the table as a life choice.

    Fast forward…..as we ended up married and 2 and a half years ago, all the planets aligned and we up and left the comforts of Cincinnati and moved to Istanbul. It was and has been both liberating and terrifying. I knew about 10 words of the language when I came, but found quickly that if you learn common phrases like ‘Thank you’, ‘Please’, and ‘Excuse me’ it makes your life sooooooooooo much easier. I always felt as though Americans viewed foreign language as a hassle or unnecessary as opposed to an advantage or something to be valued.

    Anyway, I know, like Doc admitted, most people’s knowledge of Turkey is limited to what they saw on the OG film Midnight Express. The recent NY mother and U.S. Embassy bombing notwithstanding, I have always felt very safe here. Of course, you have to be smart about things just like anywhere and I don’t go around flaunting my American-ness, but nor do I hide it. I can’t/don’t really watch the news, and that is a blessing and a curse. However, I did not receive one political phone call this autumn requesting my vote on anything….which was nice.

    Keeping up with Cincinnati sports from here is difficult, since most prime time events (7:00 games) come on in real time here at about 2 in the morning with the 7 hour time difference. Thank goodness for Thursday afternoon baseball, which comes on right in prime time here. And the Turks could care less about football. Check that, they care a lot about FUTBOL. The Super Bowl was aired here, but not that big of a deal, and I caught it on a rerun the next morning.

    As with many countries in Europe and Asia, I feel as though nationalism is tremendously high, especially when it comes to sports. All national games are aired (soccer, basketball, volleyball, etc.) and support is high. I don’t know if it has to do with the close geography of European countries, but they take their national pride very seriously. American pride surfaces every 4 years or so when gold medals are on the line. Other than that, ehhhh……

    Another curiosity that I noticed when attending both matches for Fenerbahce and Galatasary (the 2 most storied) futbol teams here in town…..They have a separate visitors’ section for opposing fans that is secured off, has a separate entrance for those fans, covered in netting and reinforced by security guards to make sure there is no trouble amongst fans. In extreme situations, opposing fans are not allowed into the visiting stadium for fear of problems and fights. Can you imagine the Bengals refusing to allow Stillers fans into the yard during a Cincy/Pburgh game? Or Cardinals fans being turned away during a weekend roadie to the Queen City because, well, we ‘just don’t want any trouble….’ Towns would be lit ablaze……

    Onto the local scene……

    As noted, it is somewhat difficult to keep up with the scene in Cincinnati from the distance. But, still, I offer my tidbits…..

    As many of you, I am tremendously optimistic about the local Mudville Nine. I think they made the right upgrades in mostly the right positions. I don’t know if the budget allows for the extension of David Dewitt Bailey Jr., but that would be something I would like to see for the right price. A minor concern for the Club (and probably very minor) is what happens in the second years of guys like SuperToddLifeSaverFrazier and Z. Cozart?

    Many are drooling over the possibilities, but part of the idea of rookie success is that no one knows the strengths and weaknesses of said hitters. I hope those guys are as smart as we think they are and continue to adjust, because everyone now will adjust to them as THE BOOK has gotten around. That’s why it’s such a joy to watch Joey MVP work…..from day to day, at bat to at bat, and even pitch to pitch. You can see him, always adjusting. On the flip side, that was what was so frustrating about watching Andrew Stubbs over the past few seasons, is his seeming unwillingness to adjust to anything.

    The whole S. Rolen thing seemed like an unintentional intentional walk, didn’t it??? No one wanted to throw anything close to the plate, so they let him walk….on purpose or not…..

    On to the MEN…..

    I hope Mikey Thinwallet realizes enough to know that the recent run of success has to do with the contributions of the younger players that they’ve done a good job of drafting and developing. Reward some of that effort by re-signing some of the core guys like M. Johnson and extending Geno PRONTO. While developing younger guys is nice, I’m sure it’s a struggle to acclimate and rely on guys with zero or one year of experience rather than ones that know your system already. And as for Red…..I believe he just needs to improve his accuracy.

    It was mostly what he built his reputation on at TCU. I think with a little better accuracy, guys like Mo Sanu and Marvin Jones are capable of being the 2 and 3 WRs. Of course, I wouldn’t mind seeing Dwayne Bowe or Mike Wallace on the other side of AJ WhoCatchesEverythingInTheZipCode, but do you have faith that something like that will happen? Me, neither. P. Harvin….shrug….

    Let the Madness descend…..

    Being a Miami grad, and that we are relevant in sports about once every decade and a half, I have to live the Madness through others…..I am not necessarily a UC or XU fan, but I don’t loathe either and cheer for their successes. I think UC’s success in the toooonamint depends entirely on matchups. If they draw some teams that are similar to them (guard oriented, lack of big men, slower paced) then they can play with them and advance. But, if they get a poor draw, even against a, ahem, mid-major (I hate that term) they could just as easily be done in round 1.

    As for X, I don’t know if people really appreciate the job that C.Mack has done this year. It might be the best done there EVER. To UNEXPECTEDLY lose your top 2 returning players and still be in the hunt in the A-10 is amazing. I know, I know, he let M. Lyons go, etc. etc., but you’ve gotta believe that Mack was counting on him and D. Wells to be back this season. That affects how he recruits, his rotations, and on down the line…..I don’t know if they’ll make the dance, but it would be one of the more improbable stories of the year.

    And, hey, X fans, remember go ol’ Romain Sato??? He’s hoopin’ it up for a local team here in Istanbul this winter. Just in case, you know, you’re in the neighborhood…..

    Speaking of Miami (shameless plug), the TML pinch hitter says check out Miami Ice Hockey, if you can score a ticket. Affordable, family friendly and worth the drive. What Coach Enrico Blasi has done there is amazing. In not exactly a ‘hotbed’ for hockey and what is considered a ‘southern climate’, I believe they’re ranked #3 in the nation this week. And while you’re in Oxford, stuff a bagel in your face from Bagel and Deli Shop in Uptown. You won’t regret it……just be ready to Jump Around. You’ll know when…..;)

    TODAY’S ESSENTIAL QUESTION:  San Diego Chicken or Philly Phanatic?  GO.

    Hope most of you Mobsters aren’t bleary eyed from rolling off the sofa this morning, since, you know, it’s the day after V-Day…..please tell me you got the Mrs (or Mr.). some chocolate or flowers or some dinner. S/he deserves THAT much….

    Enough? Yeah, I’m tired of myself too……

    Thanks Doc for the opportunity!

    Have a great weekend everybody!
    TUNE O’ THE DAY……Grab your Valentine, get goofy and bounce around the room…..

    If I was John and you were Yoko, I would gladly give up music genius.

    Just to have you as my very own, personal Venus…..

  • Turkey builds closer oil links with Kurds, angering US

    Turkey builds closer oil links with Kurds, angering US

    ISTANBUL // Turkey is pushing ahead with plans to extend economic cooperation with Iraq’s Kurdistan region, brushing aside warnings from the United States that this approach could lead to the disintegration of the Iraqi state.

    Related

    A Syrian rebel fires shots in the air as mourners carry the body of Mohammed Hafar, 20, during his funeral in the northern Syrian town of Azaz on October 29, 2012. Mohammed Hafar and his brother were killed during clashes between Kurdish militiamen and Free Syrian Army fighters near the village of Al-Kastal close to the border with Turkey, amid rising communal tensions. AFP PHOTO/PHILIPPE DESMAZES *** Local Caption *** 778087-01-08.jpg

    ■ Kurds talk of intervention in Syria, raising danger of escalation

    ■ Kurd-Turkish clashes feared along Syrian border

    Comment Kurdish killings in Paris will not derail Ankara-PKK peace

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    Iraq’s Kurdish region had become so important to Turkey, economically and politically, that Ankara was willing to risk tensions with the US, its most important ally, said Celalettin Yavuz, an analyst at a think tank in the Turkish capital.

    Taner Yildiz, Turkey’s energy minister, yesterday said that oil imports from northern Iraq to Turkey by truck had resumed after a pause of several weeks for technical reasons.

    He said Turkey was determined to sell refined-oil products to Iraqi Kurdistan, the state-run Amnadolu news agency reported.

    Oil exports from northern Iraq to Turkey have angered the central-Iraqi government. It said the trade was illegal, which Ankara denies.

    Mr Yildiz stressed that Turkey was also buying oil from southern Iraq, because doing otherwise would be “discrimination”.

    US officials are concerned that Turkey’s strained ties with Baghdad could have implications for the rest of the region.

    The Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) in northern Iraq said last week it planned to press ahead with building an oil-export pipeline to Turkey. “We want to have an oil pipeline to ourselves,” said Ashti Hawrami, the Iraqi Kurdish minister for natural resources.

    Crude from the Kurdistan region used to be shipped to world markets through a Baghdad-controlled pipeline to Turkey, but exports via that channel dried up in December, from a peak of around 200,000 barrels per day (bpd), due to a row with Baghdad over payments.

    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish prime minister, said his country was not obliged to wait for a new agreement between the central Iraqi government and the KRG over oil exploration and export rights, even though Washington wanted Ankara to be cautious.

    “Our economic relations are getting broader, despite everything, including America,” Mr Erdogan said last week, referring to the KRG.

    Mr Erdogan, who has been careful to develop close relations with the US, freely acknowledged tensions with Washington over the issue.

    “America says: ‘What you are doing is wrong,’” Mr Erdogan said. “We are saying: ‘No, Iraq’s constitution allows it.’”

    The present constitution, drawn up after the US-led invasion in 2003, gave Iraqi Kurds the right to more than 18 per cent of the country’s oil reserves, he added.

    Mr Erdogan’s remarks followed a public warning by Francis Ricciardone, the US ambassador to Ankara. Speaking on February 5, he said a failure by Turkey and the central Iraqi government to deepen their cooperation would be dangerous for the whole region.

    “There could be more violent conflict in Iraq and the forces of disintegration within Iraq could be emboldened,” he said.

    Mr Yavuz, the deputy director of the Turkish Centre of International Relations and Strategic Analysis, said the KRG was a priority for Turkey despite US concerns.

    On the political front, Ankara was trying to secure the support of the KRG for efforts to end the Kurdish conflict in Turkey, he added.

    The Turkish intelligence service had been negotiating with Abdullah Ocalan, the jailed leader of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, a rebel group that has been fighting Ankara since 1984.

    “The KRG is indispensable for Turkey,” Mr Yavuz said.

    That outlook collides with US interests in the region. “The USA wants to secure the Gulf and keep Iran out,” he added.

    He said Iraq was drifting towards Iran, despite the US launching the 2003 invasion that had toppled Saddam Hussein, claimed the lives of several thousand US soldiers, cost trillions of dollars and battered America’s image in the region.

    “So one may ask: why did they go into Iraq in the first place?” said Mr Tavuz. “This is what makes the US concerned. By turning away from Turkey, Iraq is turning away from the West and towards Iran.”

    About 90 per cent of Turkish exports to Iraq went to the Kurdish region, he said. KRG oil and gas could help to reduce Turkey’s dependence on energy imports from Iran and Russia.

    The oil-exports row has also heightened existing tensions between Mr Erdogan’s government and Iraq’s prime minister, Nouri Al Maliki.

    Turkey has accused Mr Al Maliki, a Shiite, of trying to centralise power in his hands, while Mr Al Maliki has said predominantly Sunni Turkey was meddling in Iraq’s internal affairs and was a “hostile state”.

    tseibert@thenational.ae

    * With additional reporting by Reuters

    via Turkey builds closer oil links with Kurds, angering US – The National.

  • ‘Even if it were true, I would marry her all over again’: Husband of New York mother killed in Turkey says that claims she had an affair ‘doesn’t change anything’

    ‘Even if it were true, I would marry her all over again’: Husband of New York mother killed in Turkey says that claims she had an affair ‘doesn’t change anything’

    Sarai Sierra’nın Kocası : “Doğru bile olsa onunla tekrar evlenirdim”

    ‘Even if it were true, I would marry her all over again’: Husband of New York mother killed in Turkey says that claims she had an affair ‘doesn’t change anything’

    • Sarai Sierra, 33, was killed by a fatal blow to the head during trip to Istanbul
    • The mother-of-two’s body was found on February 2 – she had not spoken to her husband since January 14
    • According to sources who saw the forensic report, she also had extensive trauma to her torso and right hip, bruises on her legs and a chin wound
    • Turkish police told MailOnline they have only made public five per cent of what they know about her murder

    By Laura Wells In Istanbul, Rachel Quigley and Meghan Keneally

    PUBLISHED: 03:55 GMT, 12 February 2013 | UPDATED: 09:14 GMT, 12 February 2013

     

    Sarai Sierra stayed with an Instagram friend when she went to Amsterdam during her tripSarai Sierra stayed with an Instagram friend when she went to Amsterdam during her trip

    The grieving husband of Sarai Sierra said that the reports that she flew to Turkey and had multiple affairs while abroad do not change his view on the murder for him.

    ‘Even it were true, it wouldn’t matter to me, I would marry her all over again,’ Steven Sierra said.

    The mother-of-two from Staten Island reportedly met up with at least two men during her trip abroad, including one Dutch national who she connected with via Instagram and a Turkish man who claims he had sex with her on the night before she died.

    ‘I’m not reading anything at all. I’m not. It’s too overwhelming,’ Mr Sierra told local station PIX11.

    Mr Sierra maintains that even though he posted messages on Instagram talking about the need to work for a marriage and condemning infidelity, he remains confident that his wife was faithful to him during her trip.

    Her parents said that the wake will be held on Thursday- Valentine’s Day- and visitors are welcome.

    ‘Stop by on Thursday. It’s open,’ Dennis Jimenez told reporters.

    Mr Sierra said that he is happy with the ongoing Turkish investigation into his wife’s murder, and said that he even spoke to a number of the suspects himself.

    More than 50 of those in question have given police DNA samples, which will likely limit the pool of suspects.

    Faithful: Steven Sierra says that he does not believe the reports that his wife had affairs while abroadFaithful: Steven Sierra says that he does not believe the reports that his wife had affairs while abroad

    Though authorities will not have results for two weeks, they have managed to narrow it down to a small group of Sarai Sierra’s internet contacts as well as the homeless people who were at the scene when her body was found.

    Suspect: A Turkish man named Taylan (pictured) claims he had sex with the murdered mother the night before she was found deadSuspect: A Turkish man named Taylan (pictured) claims he had sex with the murdered mother the night before she was found dead

    One person who is believed to be talking to investigators is Ammer Reduron, who Sarai connected with on Instagram in the months before her trip and stayed with while she was in Amsterdam.

    Little is known about the 31-year-old Dutch national, but last year he posted on a site similar to Craigslist that he lives in an immigrant ghetto in Amsterdam called Zuidoost.

    Though his Facebook page lists that he works for Cisco Systems, the company’s international headquarters told MailOnline there was no information for him in the company directory.

    Last week, Reduron claimed he was not a suspect and admitted Sarai stayed with him when she went to Amsterdam on a side trip – also saying her husband Steven knew this and was OK with it as the two were friends.

    ‘Taking care of her,’ he said last week. ‘Meaning showing my city and being a good friend to her. She had a wonderful time here.’

    On his Facebook, the 31-year-old ‘checked in’ at Amsterdam airport on January 15, which is purportedly when he went to pick up Sarai.

    On January 23 – ten days before her body was found, Sarai’s sister Christina Jiminez became Facebook friends with him.

    Suspect: One person who is believed to be talking to investigators is Ammer Reduron who Sarai connected with on Instagram in the months before her trip and stayed with while she was in AmsterdamSuspect: One person who is believed to be talking to investigators is Ammer Reduron who Sarai connected with on Instagram in the months before her trip and stayed with while she was in Amsterdam

    Aware that he is under the intense scrutiny of both the FBI and the media, he denounced them both on his Instagram site, alongside a picture of two toy pigs placed in an assimilated sex position.

    ‘Media writes, goes home, gets paid, pay bills and don’t give a sh*t only about some juicy stories with no real or fact checked stories. Police should do their work. If you fart on the planet the FBI is on yo [sic] ass with some satellite sh*t.’

    Police however, are giving little away as to what they have uncovered in the investigation.

    An insider close to the case told the Mail a police manager told him Turkish officials have only made public five per cent of what they know about the murder case.

    Mystery has surrounded the death of the 33-year-old since her body was found at a run-down area of Istanbul on February 2. She failed to make the flight back to New York on January 22.

    A lifelong friend of Sarai’s – who did not want to be identified – spoke exclusively to MailOnline about the rumors which have plagued her death since it was reported in the media.

    The pair grew up in the same Silver Lake neighborhood of Staten Island, where she still resides, as do Sarai’s husband and children and her parents, Betzaida and Dennis Jimenez.

    Her friend lashed out at media reports the mother-of-two was having an affair with a man referred to as Taylan K but said she was surprised someone as cautious as Sarai would stay with men she did not know.

    ‘A certain level of respect regardless of whatever the story is should be granted.,’ she told MailOnline. ‘The only truths to that are internal and that’s where they should be.

    ‘I don’t know what to believe when it comes to the people she came into contact with. From recent reports and typical chatter, it seems she and her husband were going through their own rocky period. It happens.

    ‘Is it hard to believe she may have been at a point in her life she was moving on or looking for adventure? No, I can’t say that. Can I say any of that that with certainty? No.’

    Murdered: The body of Sarai, right, was found in Istanbul last week; her husband Steven (left) posted a series of cryptic messages online about cheating and relationships
    Murdered: The body of Sarai, right, was found in Istanbul last week; her husband Steven (left) posted a series of cryptic messages online about cheating and relationships

    Murdered: The body of Sarai, right, was found in Istanbul last week; her husband Steven (left) posted a series of cryptic messages online about cheating and relationships

    Confusion: Steven Sierra left cryptic messages online about relationships and cheatingConfusion: Steven Sierra left cryptic messages online about relationships and cheating

    Troubled? On the day that his wife left for her solo trip to Istanbul, Mr Sierra posted this messageTroubled? On the day that his wife left for her solo trip to Istanbul, Mr Sierra posted this message

    It was reported yesterday by MailOnline that her husband Steven posted a series of cryptic online messages about cheating and bad relationships in the weeks prior to her death.

    Steven Sierra wrote on Instagram on December 28 last year: ‘Don’t cheat in relationship, if you are not happy then just leave.

    ‘A real relationship is where you can tell each other everything & anything. No secrets, no lies.’

    On the day that Sarai left for her solo trip to Turkey on January 7, her husband wrote on Instagram: ‘Good relationship [sic] don’t just happen. They take time, patience and two people who truly want to be together.

    On January 17, he added to his account: ‘People are to be LOVED. Things are to be USED. The reason why the world is in chaos is because THINGS are being LOVED and PEOPLE are being used.’

    The friend – who has been following the case closely – expressed shock at the risky behavior of her life-long friend and that she would stay with Ammer Reduron in Amsterdam despite meeting him online just a few months ago.

    ‘It doesn’t really speak to how we were raised, she said. ‘But, like I said before, we grow, we change, we evolve. I would never imagine her being so trusting.

    ‘It does surprise me as a woman because my personal feeling is you should always be weary and on your guard. Not just in another country, but always.

    ‘There are people I’ve known for years online…I would never imagine meeting with any one of them alone.

    ‘Also, trusting an area you barely know? People you don’t know? Not scrapping one of the “side trips” to upgrade your lodgings to a safer neighborhood…Like I said, WAY too many to name.’

    She did however, recognize that some of these risky decisions may come from a certain naivety on Sarai’s part.

    ‘I don’t think you can get enough information on the climate or culture from a few online searches, if anything, you’re going to get the rosy-colored pictures painted,’ she said.

    ‘From what I’ve read and seen [of Istanbul], the climate there for women is pretty unstable. And as someone who always looks to understand and educate themselves, there are areas where it behooves you to understand the bias’ that are felt towards a woman’s presentation…the way they dress, the way they look, if you can see their hair, if there is skin exposed, are you walking alone.’

    Apartment complex: A lifelong friend of Sarai's who lives in the same neighborhood as her in Staten Island, pictured, spoke exclusively to MailOnline about the rumors which have plagued her death since it was reported in the mediaApartment complex: A lifelong friend of Sarai’s who lives in the same neighborhood as her in Staten Island, pictured, spoke exclusively to MailOnline about the rumors which have plagued her death since it was reported in the media

     

    But she remembers that even in their idyllic childhood, Sarai had a rebellious streak in her and was always extremely adventurous, as other friends have attested to in previous interviews.

    Yet her parents taught her to be careful: ‘In our little community, we ALL looked out for each other. No one went anywhere alone. We weren’t really allowed away from the block, and when we did, it was always as a group. Our parents were strict in that way.

    ‘Our parents knew each other and each was like a surrogate to each of the kids in the neighborhood. We were all constantly together. Sleep overs, BBQ’s, Trick or treating, Church…You name it.

    ‘Sarai had a great family, very religious, very close knit. They raised her to be herself and to be true to who she was. To love God, her family and see the value in everything. To be a good and humble person.’

    Asked what she thinks happened to her close friend, she said: ‘Truth be told, it could be very likely these men [Sarai met online] were not involved in what happened to her.

    ‘I don’t think it was a woman either, I also don’t think it was a sex crime. My guess, is she was meant to be humiliated. Especially with the ‘leaks’. The guile in some of it.

    ‘ But I think what’s important to remember above all else is she was a mother, a sister, a daughter, an aunt and a wife.

    ‘What I remember most is her large eyes. They stick out to me the most in my memory. Big, bright and beautiful. I’d like to thank her for all the memories we had as children. I’ll hold them in my heart until the end of my days.’

    Steven Sierra said in a interview withHurriyet last Sunday that he had not been in conversation with his wife since January 14.

    The grieving father told the paper: ‘At the beginning we were talking on Skype. I was following the photos she put on Instagram. But times didn’t match because of the time difference. I was working when she is at the hotel [her flat]. The last time I heard from her was 14th of Jan. The next day she called home and spoke to the kids, I was at work that time.’

    Emotional: Steven Sierra posted this message in the days before his wife was supposed to return homeEmotional: Steven Sierra posted this message in the days before his wife was supposed to return home

    The emotional and public declaration came five days before Mrs Sierra was scheduled to board a plane back to U.S. She never showed up for the flight. The young mother’s body was found next to the city walls on February 2.

    The messages were revealed after it came to light that her husband alerted her alleged lover that Sarai was missing on the day she failed to return home.

    Sarai Sierra’s husband frantically messaged the Turkish man since accused of having sex with her in a desperate plea for his help in finding her after she failed to return to New York, the New York Daily News reports.

    The man identified as Taylan K told police that Steven Sierra logged onto one of his wife’s online accounts on January 22, the day she went missing, and discovered the pair’s recent communication.

    Taylan ‘said that he hadn’t seen Sarai and the last time they met was on Sunday,’ his lawyer, Ozkan Polat, told the Daily News of that conversation.

    ‘And then he sent the husband copies of the earlier chats.’

    Mr Sierra asked Taylan to contact local authorities in a bid to help find the 33-year-old mother of his two children allegedly unknowing that the man had had sex with her in a bar’s bathroom only the night before according to several local reports.

    This latest twist comes amid new claims that the mother told the landlord of her rented apartment that she was unmarried in the days before her death

    Investigations: Turkish police searched Sarai Sierra's room and her travel bag, pictured. Authorities are trying to piece together the last moments of the American woman's life. Sierra was found dead during a solo trip to IstanbulInvestigations: Turkish police searched Sarai Sierra’s room and her travel bag, pictured. Authorities are trying to piece together the last moments of the American woman’s life. Sierra was found dead during a solo trip to Istanbul

    Rest in peaceRest in peace: The coffin carrying the body of Sarai Stevens arrived in Staten Island from Istanbul on Thursday

    SorrowSorrow: The family are preparing for her burial under the intense glare of the media

    Turkish authorities are now busy piecing together who Sarai of Staten Island met before her murder while suspecting she was possibly killed by a professional, the local Hurriyet newspaper reports.

    Taylan K’s attorney claims that the man had ‘no emotional relationship’ with the woman though they had met twice before her death while planning to meet a third time the day she went missing.

    Yigit Yetmez, owner of the flat in the down-and-out neighborhood of Tarlabasi, told Hurriyet that Sarai had told him she was ‘bekâr’ meaning ‘single’ or ‘a bachelorette.’

    Taylan K has denied claims of having had sex with the slain woman, insisting they were just friends who met up for a cup of tea twice.

    The woman was said to have met the man on Instagram a few months ago before her trip to Turkey and then met up with him several times while she was there.

    Various Turkish media reports claimed they had sex in a bar restroom the night before she was murdered but that was the last time he had seen her.

    Police said he was not a suspect.

    Taylan’s lawyer, Ozkan Polat, said that his client denies the claims, calling them ‘wholly untrue’.

    He insists the pair had ‘no emotional relationship’ and had met for a cup of tea as friends, adding that his client comes from a ‘good family and completed a master’s program abroad…He’s very demoralized’.

    Heartbroken: Steven Sierra, right, has revealed how he is struggling with the loss of his wife, Sarai, who was found murdered in Istanbul last Saturday Heartbroken: Steven Sierra, right, has revealed how he is struggling with the loss of his wife, Sarai, who was found murdered in Istanbul last Saturday

    These claims came on Friday, one day after the body of Sarai arrived at her home in Staten Island.

    Her devastated husband Steven and two children, aged nine and 11, are preparing for her wake and funeral on February 15.

    It was also revealed that two women, and three foreign nationals including an Iranian, are among the 40 people being interrogated over the murder.

    Turkish police took DNA samples from 22 people – none of which matched the crime scene – and are questioning a number of others.

    They said there is a possibility Sarai fought against her attacker and left traces of the killer on her skin or under her fingernails.

    As well as being bludgeoned over the head, she had extensive trauma to her torso, her right hip area and bruises on her arms, suggesting a struggle.

    Istanbul authorities say the area where the mother-of-two was murdered is a known rape black spot in a run down part of the city.

    A Swedish tourist was raped at knife point in the same place in January 2007, and in March 2010 a Japanese girl suffered a chillingly similar attack to Sarai’s murder when she was beaten about the head with a rock and raped, according to Turkish daily newspaper Takvim.

    Grief: Steven refused to talk about the claims leaked to the media by Turkish police about her liaisons with a man named Taylan KGrief: Steven refused to talk about the claims leaked to the media by Turkish police about her liaisons with a man named Taylan K

    Another 24-year-old Turkish girl was attacked at knife point at the same spot but managed to fight off her attacker and flee to safety.

    Since those attacks, Turkish police have installed extra lighting and CCTV in the area in a clearly-failed attempt to make it safer.

    Taylan K has denied wrongdoing and said the two met on January 10 for the first time in Istanbul but he did not see her again until January 20 when she wrote to him: ‘I want to see you.’

    The next day he missed two messages from her in the morning and when he tried to call, her phone was off.

    Ozkan Polat, an attorney for Taylan, told the New York Daily Newsthat his client and Sarai made plans to meet again – near the Galata Bridge in Istanbul before her death. But she never showed up.

    State Prosecutor Huseyin Kaplan said Taylan is not being considered as a suspect and authorities aren’t concerned about their alleged affair.

    ‘We’re not interested in whether she had a sexual relationship,’ Kaplan told the Daily News. ‘What’s important for us is who killed her.’

    It was also reported today that police are questioning a rug dealer and hostel owner in the area where Sarai’s body was found after checking her phone and Gmail records, and have taken DNA records.

    Meanwhile, Sarai’s family are preparing for her funeral under the intense scrutiny of the media.

    Looking exhausted and with dark rings under his eyes, husband Steven Sierra, revealed the heart-wrenching moment when he informed the couple’s young sons of their mother’s tragic death.

    The devastated husband, 40, told their sons, aged nine and 11, that ‘mommy got hurt and she died’.

    Early mid-life crisis: Neighbours have said that Sarai may have decided to take her adventure because she married so youngEarly mid-life crisis: Neighbours have said that Sarai may have decided to take her adventure because she married so young

    He told reporters outside the funeral home: ‘They were distraught, very emotional, but I had to be honest with them.’

    Steven, who flew from Turkey late on Wednesday night after helping local police, had refused to let anyone else tell their sons what had happened until he returned to the U.S.

    The family will gather on February 15 at Christian Pentecostal Church, where Sarai and Steven had met, for the woman’s funeral.

    Her wake will take place on Valentine’s Day – which would have been the couple’s 15th wedding anniversary.

    The grieving husband added that he had been too overwhelmed with grief to read media coverage of the murder.

    Steven was referring to reports published in Turkish newspapers this week that Sarai was seen with a second mystery man twice before her death – including the day she was supposed to fly home on January 21.

    Police are also investigating whether she was involved with any criminal activity while in Turkey after she was seen with ‘a criminal element’.

    Investigators said the 33-year-old was last spotted on surveillance tape wearing a coat and carrying a handbag, which were not found with her body, Turkish media reported.

    It was also said that she was not wearing pants at the time and they were found ripped nearby, though police said there were no obvious signs of sexual assault.

    Friends told MailOnline that the beautiful woman appeared nervous in the weeks leading up to her solo trip to Istanbul.

    Heading home: A casket carrying the remains of Sierra is prepared to be loaded onto a flight at the Ataturk Airport in Istanbul, Turkey on Wednesday evening ahead of its flight to the U.S. on ThursdayHeading home: A casket carrying the remains of Sierra is prepared to be loaded onto a flight at the Ataturk Airport in Istanbul, Turkey on Wednesday evening ahead of its flight to the U.S. on Thursday

     

    Final journey: It is loaded onto a plane bound for New York at the Ataturk Airport on Thursday morningFinal journey: It is loaded onto a plane bound for New York at the Ataturk Airport on Thursday morning

    Preparation: Her casket is carried through Beyoglu in Istanbul on WednesdayPreparation: Her casket is carried through Beyoglu in Istanbul on Wednesday

    ‘Sarai had never been abroad before and she seemed more scared than excited when I last saw her,’ said a neighbor at the smart apartment block where Sarai lived with her husband Steve and their sons, aged nine and 11. 

    When she first talked of going to Europe three months ago her eyes were alight with excitement. But as the time neared she seemed very nervous.

    ‘I’m not surprised really – I told her even experienced travelers worry. But I did say she was brave to go alone.’

    Another neighbor, Juan Perez, said Sarai appeared to be devoted to her family. ‘She and Steve were together for ever. They married when she was 19. The boys were the light of their lives.

    Claims: Turkey's Vatan newspaper reported that Taylan had sex with the married mother of twoClaims: Turkey’s Vatan newspaper reported that Taylan had sex with the married mother of two

    ‘I was surprised when she said she was flying to Istanbul. It didn’t seem to be the sort of place most young women would want to go alone.

    But when I asked if she was sure, she nodded. She did seem nervous.’

    Other neighbors in the seven-story block, which overlooks Silver Lake and is a few minutes walk from the local golf club and an ice skating rink, speculated that Sarai could be having an early midlife crisis because she married and had her sons so young.

    ‘Did she want adventure? Yes she did,’ said one elderly woman. ‘But I really was surprised she was vacationing without her family. Istanbul is an exotic, expensive place.’

    Sarai, who filed for bankruptcy on 2005, had been unemployed for several years but recently got a part time job at a chiropractor’s office.

    Her 40-year-old husband is a New York City bus driver. He drives an old Safari mini bus and neighbors said money appeared tight. Sarai usually walked everywhere with the boys.

    Her parents Dennis and Betzaida Jimenez, who also declared bankruptcy in 2005, live a five-minute drive away and often babysat while Sarai took time off from motherhood to go into Manhattan to take photographs.

    She told her family she wanted to pursue her dream of taking pictures in Turkey – yet her only equipment was an iPad and Droid phone. Both items were missing when Sarai’s body was found but the murderer did not take her wedding ring or other jewellery.

    Meanwhile, a witness has told Istanbul police that he saw Sierra speaking to a different man outside the city’s Sultanahmet Mosque on January 11, just days after she arrived in the country.

    Street art: Sierra's husband said his wife had always been interested in graffiti, and it is possibly that she came to the walls to take pictures of the tags Scene: Her body was found stashed in this cave in the low-income district of Sarayburnu on Saturday

    Theory: Police say she may have been murdered somewhere else and her body was then dumpedTheory: Police say she may have been murdered somewhere else and her body was then dumped

     

    He handed her a card and as she left the mosque, she took a walk with him and four or five other men, the witness claimed, Turkish newspaper Milliyet reported.

    Sierra flew to Amsterdam on January 15 and to Munich the next day, returning to Istanbul on January 19.

    The witness said he then saw Sierra talking with the same man on January 21 at Topkapi Palace – the day she was due to fly home, but she never boarded the flight.

    Sierra’s body was found stashed by Istanbul’s ancient city walls on Saturday, more than a week after she failed to catch her flight home.

    Police said she died from a blunt force trauma.

    Struggle: Sarai's mother Betsy Jimenez sobs during a news conference at a friend's home on MondayStruggle: Sarai’s mother Betsy Jimenez sobs during a news conference at a friend’s home on Monday

     

     

    Loss: Magdalena Rodriguez had planned to travel with Sierra, but dropped out due to financial reasonsLoss: Magdalena Rodriguez had planned to travel with Sierra, but dropped out due to financial reasons

    RETRACING SARAI SIERRA’S STEPS

    January 7 Sarai Sierra left the U.S. for Istanbul

    January 15 Sierra traveled to Amsterdam, and later Munich

    January 19 Sierra returned to Istanbul

    January 20 Owner of house she was staying at claims to have last seen her; CCTV footage shows her walking through shopping mall

    January 21 Mother was scheduled to board plane back to U.S.

    Sierra’s family say they last heard from her

    Contact with ‘Taylan’ shows she planned to meet him on Galata Bridge

    January 22 Sierra’s plane landed in Newark, New Jersey, without her

    January 28 Husband and brother fly out to Turkey to assist with the search

    January 30 A Skype call was placed on her American cell phone

    January 31 Sierra’s cell phone was activated again

    February 2 Her body is found by the ancient city walls

    She was found with a head wound and a blanket near her body and still had her earrings and a bracelet on, as well as her wedding ring.

    According to sources who read the forensic report, the young mother also had extensive trauma to her torso, right hip area, bruises on her legs and a large chin wound.

    To pay for her funeral, her family began selling some of her images online on Tuesday and soon had enough to cover her expenses.

    Sarai was believed to have finished a course in photography just before she made the trip to Istanbul, which she said was to take pictures of the city and its ancient ruins.

    ‘Sarai’s passion for photography and love for capturing the beauty we see in culture, architecture and scenery was her reason for traveling to Istanbul,’ her brother, David Jimenez, wrote on the site.

    He added on Friday: ‘Thank you for all the support in purchasing Sarai’s pictures. Quick update, all expenses for Sarai’s funeral have been paid for!

    ‘From here on out any picture of hers that you purchase will NOT be going towards her funeral. All funds will be going to her children. Thank you for your support. David.’

    ‘I’m heartbroken,’ Mr Sierra told the New York Daily News, earlier this week. ‘This is something you never want to imagine, and it’s something I’d never want anyone to experience.

    ‘You have so many plans, so many dreams with the person you deeply love.

    ‘You look forward to many years together and there are so many things you haven’t fulfilled with that person, and now those won’t be fulfilled.’

    Tryst: She reportedly met the man, identified as 'Taylan', when he commented on her Instagram pageTryst: She reportedly met the man, identified as ‘Taylan’, when he commented on her Instagram page

    Stunning: Sierra's family have put her photos, pictured, up for sale to cover her funeral expensesStunning: Sierra’s family have put her photos, pictured, up for sale to cover her funeral expenses

    Her mother, Betsy Jimenez, told the Today show: ‘It was such a shock when we heard. She was supposed to come back and she didn’t.

    ‘Her little boys do not know, their father will talk to them once he gets back. We will all be present for this.

    ‘It was the first time she was going overseas after getting into photography college.

    ‘She wanted to go there and take pictures of bridges and the history of the city.’

    She was in regular contact with friends and relatives, and had told them she would visit Galata Bridge, which spans Istanbul’s Golden Horn waterway, to take photos.

    CBS News reported that shortly after Sierra’s body was discovered, a woman came forward and told police she had seen a white car parked near the city walls as she was driving there ‘Tuesday night’, Anadolu also reported.

    The eyewitness said a man was trying to remove ‘something’ from the car, at which point she caught a glimpse of a hand.

    Turkish police released security camera footage showing the missing mother at a mall near her hostel hours before she disappeared.

    Sierra can be seen eating lunch and walking through the mall on January 20 – a day before she was supposed to catch a flight back home.

    Her family last heard from her on January 21, when she was supposed to start her journey home, but she never checked into her flight.

    Last images: Sarai Sierra, a New York mother missing in Turkey, is seen on CCTV before she disappearedLast images: Sarai Sierra, a New York mother missing in Turkey, is seen on CCTV before she disappeared

    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2277329/Sarai-Sierra-Husband-New-York-mother-killed-Turkey-says-reports-traveled-affair-dont-change-anything.html#ixzz2KnNVNOmb
    Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

  • Turkey’s $5 Billion Smart-Grid Plan Seen Boosting Ties With U.S.

    Turkey’s $5 Billion Smart-Grid Plan Seen Boosting Ties With U.S.

    By Ercan Ersoy – Feb 11, 2013 4:43 PM GMT+0100

    Turkey will spend $5 billion on smart power grids by 2015 to boost network efficiency, allowing North American companies to expand, the U.S. government said.

    The U.S. sees “substantial opportunities for closer cooperation between the Turkish government and energy companies and U.S. companies that provide smart-grid technologies,” according to a statement from the consulate in Istanbul, which will hold a conference in the city tomorrow on grid investments.

    Turkey, forecasting annual power-demand growth of 6.3 percent in the next two decades, has already lured investors including General Electric Co. as its energy industry expands. The country is bucking the trend of most emerging European nations, where retail electricity use trails growth in incomes.

    The jump in demand increases the need for smart grids, which allow power generators and users to monitor consumption and reduce costs by saving energy in transmission. Turkey is seeking to boost efficiency of supply after demand grew 5.1 percent last year, while generation expanded only 4.2 percent, according to data from Turkish Electricity Transmission Co.

    “If the utilities want to take advantage of this, the accurate metering and billing that smart grids can provide will be vital,” said Chris Rogers, a utilities analyst for Bloomberg Industries in London. “As Turkey becomes richer, more air- conditioning, solar power and electric vehicles will be bought, which also need smart grids to function properly.”

    Smart meters installed across Europe will increase by an average 18 percent a year through 2020, peaking in 2018, according to projections from Bloomberg Industries. GE, Germany’s Siemens AG and Denmark’s Vestas Wind Systems A/S are among providers of power-generation equipment in Turkey, where the government is selling off operating rights for distribution grids to boost investment and reduce debt.

    via Turkey’s $5 Billion Smart-Grid Plan Seen Boosting Ties With U.S. – Bloomberg.

  • Turkey’s Rapidly Changing Landscape Photographed by George Georgiou

    Turkey’s Rapidly Changing Landscape Photographed by George Georgiou

    Turkey’s Rapidly Changing Landscape Photographed by George Georgiou

    by Alison Zavos on February 11, 2013 · 0 comments

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    Turkey is a strategically important nation, poised geographically and symbolically between Europe and Asia. But the tensions at the heart of Turkey are becoming increasingly severe. A struggle is taking place between modernity and tradition, secularism and Islamism, democracy and repression—often in unlikely and contradictory combinations.

    My work seeks to address and question the concept of East and West and the process of modernization, urbanization, and national identity that is happening against a rising tide of nationalism and religion. I have chosen to represent the changes by focusing on the quiet everyday life that most people in Turkey experience.—George Georgiou

    British photographer George Georgiou lived in Turkey for four and a half years, witnessing the rapid changes taking place in landscape, cities, town centers, housing, and infrastructure. He discovered that many Turkish cities were becoming carbon copies of each other. Fault Lines: Turkey/East/West opens at Jackson Fine Art in Atlanta on February 22, 2013.

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  • Obama eyes ‘real progress’ in Turkey peace talks

    Obama eyes ‘real progress’ in Turkey peace talks

    US President Barack Obama speaks at the Armed Forces Farewell Tribute in honor of Defense Secretary Leon Panetta at Joint Base Myer-Henderson in Washington February 8, 2013. – Reuters

    bara_02102013

     

    US President Barack Obama said he believes Turkey’s efforts to try to resolve the three-decade conflict with Kurdish rebels will lead to “real progress,” according to remarks published in a Turkish newspaper on Sunday.

    “I applaud Prime Minister (Recep Tayyip) Erdogan’s efforts to seek a peaceful resolution to a struggle that has caused so much pain and sorrow,” he told the Milliyet newspaper, referring to negotiations launched last year between Ankara and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

    “I believe that the proactive measures that the Turkish government is undertaking can lead to real progress,” he said, according to a copy of Obama’s comments in English provided by the newspaper.

    Turkish secret services resumed peace talks with jailed PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan late last year, aiming to disarm the rebels who use bases in Iraq as a springboard to launch attacks on government security forces in the Kurdish majority southeast.

    The PKK, which took up arms in its campaign for autonomy in the southeast in 1984, is branded a terrorist group by Turkey and its Western allies. More than 40,000 people, mostly Kurds, have died since the conflict began.

    “A peaceful resolution will not only improve the lives of millions of citizens living in the violence-torn regions of southeast Turkey it will mean more security and prosperity for people across Turkey for generations to come,” Obama wrote in response to questions from Milliyet.

    He said the United States will continue to support Turkey in its “desire to close this terrible chapter and begin a new chapter of peace and security”.

    Both countries are members of NATO and the United States has for several years supported Ankara in its fight against the PKK on Iraqi soil.

    Local media reports say the rebels could lay down their arms in the first half of this year, but this has been denied by some PKK officials.

    The PKK has declared several ceasefires in the past but they collapsed amid clashes between Turkish security forces and rebels.

    via Obama eyes ‘real progress’ in Turkey peace talks – Khaleej Times.