Category: Regions

  • Conference for establishing Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic-Speaking Countries signs an agreement

    Conference for establishing Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic-Speaking Countries signs an agreement

    The idea of establishing Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic-Speaking Countries was initiated by President of Kazakhstan PNursultan Nazarbayev in 1996.

     

    Agreement has been signed on establishment of Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic-Speaking Countries in the “Conference of Speakers of Parliaments of Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic-speaking countries”, the Chairman of Turkey- Azerbaijan parliamentary group of friendship Mustafa Kabakchi has phoned from Istanbul.

    The aim of the PACE type Assembly is creation of the mechanism of inter-parliamentary relations and strengthening of interrelations, rapprochement of political views, exchange of experience, realization of joint projects. The agreement was signed by the Speaker of Turkish Parliament Koksan Toptan, Speaker of Azerbaijani Milli Majlis (Parliament) Ogtay Asadov, Speaker of Parliament of Kyrgyzstan Aytibay Tagaev, and the Vice-president of the Senate of Kazakhstan Mohammed Kopeev.

    The members of parliamentary friendship group Turkey-Uzbekistan, Turkey-Turkmenistan as well as heads of diplomatic corpses of Turkic- speaking countries accredited in Turkey have also participated in the signing ceremony.

    “Conference of Speakers of parliaments of Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic-speaking countries” started its work early Friday morning. President of Turkey Abdullah Gul addressing the event said he supported establishment of Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic-Speaking Countries and underlined the significance of it. President Gul also added that creation of Council of Aksakkals (Elders) is being planned.

    Remind that, the first session at level of Vice-speakers of the Turkic-speaking countries was on February 21-22, 2008 in Antalya. The session passed a decision on creation of inter-parliamentary council of Turkic-speaking countries. Creation of the mechanism of inter-parliamentary relations and strengthening of interrelations, rapprochement of political views, an exchange of experience, and realization of joint projects was the purpose of establishment of the council to include a number of parliaments of Turkic-speaking countries.

  • Istanbul hosts meeting for establishing Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic-Speaking Countries

    Istanbul hosts meeting for establishing Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic-Speaking Countries

     
     

    [ 21 Nov 2008 14:11 ]
    Baku. Elbrus Seyfullayev – APA. Meeting in connection with establishing Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic-Speaking Countries is being held in Istanbul, Turkey.

    Azerbaijani Consul General to Turkey Seyyad Aran told APA that the first part of the discussions had finished. Speaker of Turkish Parliament Koksan Toptan made speech in the first part of the meeting and noted the necessity of establishing such an organization. Turkish President Abdullah Gul addressing the event said he supported establishment of Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic-Speaking Countries and underlined that the realization of the historical wish was of great importance.

    Following this, Speaker of Azerbaijani Parliament Ogtay Asadov, head of Azerbaijan-Turkey Interparliamentary Friendship group Nizami Jafarov and others also addressed the meeting.

    Seyyad Aran said the document on establishing Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic-Speaking Countries would be signed at the end of the meeting.

    The Consul General said the delegations of Azerbaijan, Turkey, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan were attending the meeting.
    “The participants wished Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan to join these countries,” he said.

  • Turkey-based magazine writes “Chirpinirdi Gara deniz” is Armenian song

    Turkey-based magazine writes “Chirpinirdi Gara deniz” is Armenian song

     

     
     

    [ 21 Nov 2008 18:00 ]
    Ankara – APA. Turkey-based monthly “Yeni aktuel” magazine wrote that the music of “Chirpinirdi Gara deniz” belonged to Armenian ashug Sayat Nova, APA reports.

    The magazine writes that Sayat Nova, who lived in the 18th century, devoted this song to his kamancha. Nationalists in Turkey changed the words of the song in 1960. The magazine also claims that “Memleketim” song, which became popular with Ayten Alpman’s performance, after Turkish Army entered Cyprus Island to save Turks in 1974, was Jewish song.

    The words of “Chirpinirdi Gara deniz” were written by Azerbaijani poet Ahmad Javad and music by outstanding composer Uzeyir Hajibayli. Ahmad Javad wrote the poem after Ottoman army under the leadership of Nuru pasha liberated Baku.

    “Yeni aktuel” magazine belongs to Turkuaz Media Group. Calik Holding holds 75% of the shares in the Media Group. Media Group also includes ATV TV channel, Sabah newspaper and other newspaper and magazines.

  • Uzbek History Textbook Denounces Soviet Totalitarianism But Downplays Popular Movements in Uzbekistan

    Uzbek History Textbook Denounces Soviet Totalitarianism But Downplays Popular Movements in Uzbekistan

    Paul Goble

    Kuressaare, November 21 – A history textbook prepared for tenth graders in Uzbekistan on the Soviet period denounces communist totalitarianism in sweeping terms, but it downplays popular movements that have struggled for democracy in that Central Asian country in recent years and ignores many events that the current Tashkent regime finds inconvenient.
    Because most people “conceive the history of their country as [they] are told about it in school,” Mariya Yanovskaya says in an article posted on the Ferghana.ru portal, history as presented in school texts is one of the most sensitive political issues in many countries, including all the post-Soviet states (www.ferghana.ru/article.php?id=5959).
    Recently, there have been intense discussions over new texts in the Russian Federation which portray Stalin’s terror as an appropriate modernization technique and school books in Ukraine that argue the 1932-33 famine was a genocide that Moscow launched against the Ukrainian people.
    Because the media inside Uzbekistan is more tightly controlled than in either of those countries, this history textbook is unlikely to provoke similar debates. But that makes Yanovskaya’s review especially important because it provides important insights into what the next generation of Uzbeks is likely to think about their past and hence their future.
    The book opens with the following declaration: “Dear Students! The textbook which you are holding in your hands covers the most complex and contradictory period of the history of the Fatherland, a period of heavy losses, tragic events and also of heroic struggle for freedom and independence, a period of victories and defeats and of self-sacrificing labor of our people.”
    Then, Yanovskaya says, the book stresses that the Uzbeks not only resisted but hated Soviet power from the beginning. It denounces the Bolshevik destruction of the Kokand autonomy, pointing out that the Bolsheviks and their Red Army allies killed more than 100,000 people in that city alone.
    “The basic part of the indigenous population did not recognize the Bolsheviks or the Soviet system,” the text says, in large measure because that system pursued “a colonialist policy,” sought to destroy religion, and acted in other ways to denigrate the dignity of the people of Uzbekistan.
    The Uzbeks and the other peoples of Central Asia struggled for many years in a movement that the Soviets dismissively call “the basmachi movement” but which the people there referred as “the freeman’s movement,” the textbook continues in increasingly emotional terms.
    And the book points out that “the totalitarian regime destroyed not only thousands of fighters who sacrificed themselves for the interests of the people but also tens of thousands of innocent victims. Soviet power throughout the ensuing years continued to conduct a repressive policy which brought the population much grief and suffering.”
    In other passages, the new textbook talked about Stalinist crimes “against whole peoples” during and after World War II, a reference to the deportation of nationalities which it calls “unforgivable criminal acts.” The book talks about the brutal transformation of Uzbek society and the Uzbek economy by Moscow and its agents.
    Yanovskaya says that she “would like to read such lines” in a textbook prepared by Moscow historians for schools in the Russian Federation, but her comments throughout the review make it clear that she doesn’t have that chance now and does not expect to have it anytime soon.
    But as the Uzbek textbook deals with more recent events, she says, it falls far short of what she would like to see in three respects. First, it utterly fails to explain how the Soviet Union in fact brought some real benefits to the people there, benefits that led them to vote overwhelmingly for the preservation of the USSR.
    “About that referendum,” she writes, “there is not a word in the textbook,” although “like a red thread” throughout this period it specifies that “the dream of independence never left the minds and hearts of advanced people. … In the heart of the people never were extinguished a striving for independence and dreams about the freedom of the Fatherland.”
    And it suggests in her words “that when Islam Abduganiyevich Karimov came to power, the dreams were realized. The country is now happy, independent and proceeding in giant steps toward a bright future, which is being build under the leadership … [and Yanovskaya says she almost wrote “ ‘the communist party.’”
    Second, the textbook specifically criticizes those national movements which sought democracy rather than the solidification of the Karimov regime. “One of the main errors of the ‘Birlik’ movement,” the textbook insists, “consisted in its lack of understanding of the true interests of our people.”
    Its activists “involved themselves with the organization of meetings and demonstrations thus putting psychological pressure on local leaders and searching for errors and shortcomings in the activity of the government and local organs of power. Therefore, the movement could not capture the support of the broad strata of the population.”
    And as for the Erk Party, the textbook simply says that it “did not have a precise program for the construction of a new society,” the kind of language and attitude about opponents that was such a prominent feature of Soviet textbooks and that continues to inform, albeit with new targets, the textbooks of Uzbekistan and other post-Soviet states.
    And third, and again like Soviet textbooks, the Uzbek history text simply ignores many inconvenient events or describes them in such generalized terms that only those who already know something about the history of the republic could possibly understand as references to these events.
    Thus, there is not a single word about the destructive earthquake in Tashkent in April 1966, nor is there any real information about the conflicts with the Meskhetian Turks or with the Kyrgyz in the late 1980s or about “the modernizing, developing and innovative role” of Moscow and the Soviet system in the development of Uzbekistan.
    In short, she suggests, the children of Uzbekistan are getting a Soviet-style version of reality, albeit one in which the things Moscow took pride in are denounced and the things Moscow denounced are praised, a pattern that does no more to promote independent thought than did the one in the Soviet textbooks. But that of course is almost certainly the point.

    http://windowoneurasia.blogspot.com/2008/11/window-on-eurasia-uzbek-history.html

  • Philippe de Villiers: even recognition of Armenian Genocide won’t open EU door for Turkey

    Philippe de Villiers: even recognition of Armenian Genocide won’t open EU door for Turkey

    18.11.2008 15:03 GMT+04:00 Print version Send to mail In Russian In Armenian

    /PanARMENIAN. Net/ Turkey will never be a member of the European Union, head of Movement for France (MPF) Philippe de Villiers told a PanARMENIAN. Net reporter.

    “First, this country is in Asia geographically. Second, this country is far from European culture, faith and human rights. Furthermore, accession of Turkey will mean Turkish majority in the European Parliament. We will never accept it,” he said.

    Even recognition of the Armenian Genocide won’t open the EU door for Turkey, according to him.

    “Turkey must acknowledge the Armenian Genocide. It’s a moral duty but not a condition for accession to the European Union. Armenia, with similar moral values, is closer to Europe than Turkey,” Mr. de Villiers said, adding that 80 per cent of French oppose Turkey’s bid for the EU.

    Philippe de Villiers: Baku should understand that Karabakh Armenians have right to live and develop in their native land

    Haberin turkcesi : http://cumhuriyet. com.tr/?im= yhs&kid=8&hn=17912
    18.11.2008 15:38 GMT+04:00 Print version Send to mail In Russian In Armenian

    /PanARMENIAN. Net/ France holds presidency in the EU and our task is to press for recognition of the Armenian Genocide and put an end to Genocide denial in state structures head of Movement for France (MPF) Philippe de Villiers told a PanARMENIAN. Net reporter.

    “It’s essential to stop Armenia’s isolation and open its border with Turkey,” he said.

    Another important trend in Mr. de Villiers’ policy is support of Nagorno Karabakh’s independence. “We should make Azerbaijan understand that Karabakh Armenians have the right to live and develop in their native land,” he said, adding that the French Co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group has a similar stand on the issue.

    The people of Nagorno Karabakh should be guaranteed a secure life, Berdand Fassier said in Yerevan yesterday. “Presently, security [still jeopardized by Baku] is guaranteed by the Armenian armed forces and the defense army of Nagorno Karabakh,” he said.

  • 2025: The End of US Dominance

    2025: The End of US Dominance

    • US intelligence: ‘We can no longer call shots alone’
    • European Union will be ‘hobbled giant’ by 2025
    • Triumph of western democracy not certain

    The country Obama inherits, the report warns, will no longer be able to 'call the shots' alone in an increasingly multipolar world.

    The United States‘ leading intelligence organisation has warned that the world is entering an increasingly unstable and unpredictable period in which the advance of western-style democracy is no longer assured, and some states are in danger of being “taken over and run by criminal networks”.

    The global trends review, produced by the National Intelligence Council (NIC) every four years, represents sobering reading in Barack Obama‘s intray as he prepares to take office in January. The country he inherits, the report warns, will no longer be able to “call the shots” alone, as its power over an increasingly multipolar world begins to wane.

    Looking ahead to 2025, the NIC (which coordinates analysis from all the US intelligence agencies), foresees a fragmented world, where conflict over scarce resources is on the rise, poorly contained by “ramshackle” international institutions, while nuclear proliferation, particularly in the Middle East, and even nuclear conflict grow more likely.

    “Global Trends 2025: A World Transformed” warns that the spread of western democratic capitalism cannot be taken for granted, as it was by George Bush and America’s neoconservatives.

    “No single outcome seems preordained: the Western model of economic liberalism, democracy and secularism, for example, which many assumed to be inevitable, may lose its lustre – at least in the medium term,” the report warns.

    It adds: “Today wealth is moving not just from West to East but is concentrating more under state control,” giving the examples of China and Russia.

    “In the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis, the state’s role in the economy may be gaining more appeal throughout the world.”

    At the same time, the US will become “less dominant” in the world – no longer the unrivalled superpower it has been since the end of the Cold War, but a “first among equals” in a more fluid and evenly balanced world, making the unilateralism of the Bush era no longer tenable.

    The report predicts that over the next two decades “the multiplicity of influential actors and distrust of vast power means less room for the US to call the shots without the support of strong partnerships.”

    It is a conclusion that meshes with president elect Obama’s stated preference for multilateralism, but the NIC findings suggest that as the years go by it could be harder for Washington to put together “coalitions of the willing” to pursue its agenda.

    International organisations, like the UN, seem ill-prepared to fill the vacuum left by receding American power, at a time of multiple potential crises driven by climate change the increasing scarcity of resources like oil, food and water. Those institutions “appear incapable of rising to the challenges without concerted efforts from their leaders” it says.

    In an unusually graphic illustration of a possible future, the report presents an imaginary “presidential diary entry” from October 1, 2020, that recounts a devastating hurricane, fuelled by global warming, hitting New York in the middle of the UN’s annual general assembly.

    “I guess we had it coming, but it was a rude shock,” the unnamed president writes. “Some of the scenes were like the stuff from the World War II newsreels, only this time it was not Europe but Manhattan. Those images of the US aircraft carriers and transport ships evacuating thousands in the wake of the flooding still stick in my mind.”

    As he flies off for an improvised UN reception on board an aircraft carrier, the imaginary future president admits: “The cumulation of disasters, permafrost melting, lower agricultural yields, growing health problems, and the like are taking a terrible toll, much greater than we anticipated 20 years ago.”

    The last time the NIC published its quadrennial glimpse into the future was December 2004. President Bush had just been re-elected and was preparing his triumphal second inauguration that was to mark the high-water mark for neoconservatism. That report matched the mood of the times.

    It was called Mapping the Global Future, and looked forward as far as 2020 when it projected “continued US dominance, positing that most major powers have forsaken the idea of balancing the US”.

    That confidence is entirely lacking from this far more sober assessment. Also gone is the belief that oil and gas supplies “in the ground” were “sufficient to meet global demand”. The new report views a transition to cleaner fuels as inevitable. It is just the speed that is in question.

    The NIC believes it is most likely that technology will lag behind the depletion of oil and gas reserves. A sudden transition, however, will bring problems of its own, creating instability in the Gulf and Russia.

    While emerging economies like China, India and Brazil are likely to grow in influence at America’s expense, the same cannot be said of the European Union. The NIC appears relatively certain the EU will be “losing clout” by 2025. Internal bickering and a “democracy gap” separating Brussels from European voters will leave the EU “a hobbled giant”, unable to translate its economic clout into global influence.

    Disaster diary

    An imaginary diary entry written by a future US president, produced to illustrate a climate-change disaster:

    Those images of US aircraft carriers evacuating thousands in the wake of flooding stick in my mind. Why must the hurricane season coincide with the UN general assembly in New York?

    It’s bad enough that this had to happen; it was doubly embarrassing that half the world’s leaders were here to witness it. I guess the problem is we had counted on this not happening, at least not yet.

    • Read the full National Intelligence Council global trends review (pdf)

     

    Guardian