Tag: Geert Wilders

  • Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul Criticizes Geert Wilders

    Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul Criticizes Geert Wilders

    Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul is arriving this week in The Netherlands for a three day visit in commemoration of 400 years of relations between the two countries.

    Geert WildersToday he sent a message to the Hon. Geert Wilders of the Freedom Party (the PVV) junior member of the ruling Dutch coalition. The message: Wilders is an “extreme voice’. Notwithstanding that remark, Gul was still prepared to shake Wilders’ hand if an encounter occurred during his ceremonial visit to Holland. A Radio Netherlands news article, “Turkish President Calls Wilders an Islamophobe” citing an interview with Gul in De Telegraafnewspaper noted his concerns about Wilders:

    President Gül said, “Mr. Wilders represents an extreme voice, which feeds radicals.”

    He continued, saying because of Wilders “a negative us-against-them climate is developing in the whole of Europe, which is laying the foundation for ethnic religious discrimination.”

    Wilders has according to the Radio Netherlands report indicated months ago that Gul was not welcome in the Netherlands, despite the fact that the Dutch government had issued an invitation.

    Perhaps that was because the Justice and Development Party (AKP) government of which Gul is a leader would not accept a delegation of Dutch parliamentarians that included Wilders in 2010. As the Radio Netherlands article noted:

    At the time, a Turkish spokesperson said that Wilders was “such a fascist that besides in Turkey, he would not be welcome in other European capitals.”

    Wilders if anything is not fearful of Islam, as Gül’s remarks in the de Telegraaf interview imply. Wilders is not against Muslims, but rather against the Islamic doctrine that denies basic civil and human rights to women, those who leave the faith by personal choice and denigrates unbelievers, such as Jews, Christians, Hindus and Buddhists. Moreover, Wilders is a proponent of a US style First Amendment for The Netherlands and the EU that upholds the right to criticize any religion under the doctrine of free speech. Turkey and the other 56 members of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation are a virtual Caliphate seeking to impose Blasphemy laws on the Westunder the guise of allegedly combating intolerance of religions to silence any criticism of Islamic doctrine and totalitarian Shariah.

    Gul has been frequently cited as a prominent Turkish adherent to the doctrine of billionaire ex-patriate Sheikh Muhammed Fehtuleh Gulen,a resident in the US, who some hold as “the world’s most dangerous Islamist.” Gulen has created an international educational indoctrination system which propounds the return of Turkish hegemony in a rising Caliphate. A new Caliphate to replace the one that ended with the demise of the Ottoman Empire and creation of the modern secular Republic of Turkey under Kemal Ataturk in 1923. A secular republic that President Gul and PM Recep Erdogan of the ruling AKP party rejected. Instead the AKP leaders are most emphatic that Turkey should be ruled by Islamic doctrine. After all Erdogan has beenquoted saying: “there is no moderate or immoderate Islam, Islam is Islam”.

    As Wilders noted in response to today’s De Telegraaf interview with Gul:

    . . . that President Gül’s comments do not bother him. “Turkish humor: Christian-teaser, Kurd-basher, Hamas-friend and Islamist Gül complaining about tolerance.”

    via Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul Criticizes Geert Wilders | Red County.

  • Wilders Wants Turkey Out of NATO

    Wilders Wants Turkey Out of NATO

    by sheikyermami on December 27, 2011

    Islamic Turkey should have never been in NATO to begin with.

    im geert wilders copy2

    Reports out of Turkey cite government sources that say that Turkey is pulling out of NATO and withdrawing its application for E.U. member status. In September the U.S. cancelled all further sales of replacement parts for Turkish Military Jets such as the F16. Turkey has been calling for moderation dealing with Iran’s nuclear program but has protested a U.S. led effort to establish an independent Kurdistan.

    Ankara accused of ‘abandoning’ Israel and France by Dutch Freedom Party.

    J’Post- BERLIN – The Dutch Freedom Party, the Netherlands’s third largest political party, urged the Foreign Affairs and Defense Ministries last week to reconsider Turkey’s continued membership in NATO.

    Geert Wilders, head of the party, and its Mideast expert, deputy Wim Kortenoeven, accused Turkey of abandoning its allies – Israel earlier this year, and now France.

    via Wilders Wants Turkey Out of NATO — Winds Of Jihad By SheikYerMami.

  • In Norway, a trigger for discourse

    In Norway, a trigger for discourse

    There was a deafening silence at the dinner party in Istanbul’s trendy Cihanger district last Friday night. The half dozen guests abruptly stopped talking when a new guest arrived and announced what had happened in Norway. The first question asked hinted at the fear that filled the room: “Was it a Muslim?”

    Geert Wilders: Academics studying Islamic radicalization warn that the success of the extreme right in Europe is a bad sign of things to come  Robin Utrecht/Pool/AP
    Geert Wilders: Academics studying Islamic radicalization warn that the success of the extreme right in Europe is a bad sign of things to come Robin Utrecht/Pool/AP

    Geert Wilders: Academics studying Islamic radicalization warn that the success of the extreme right in Europe is a bad sign of things to come

    Robin Utrecht/Pool/AP

    At the time, the answer was still unknown. But, according to the messenger, this was what all the newspaper reports were saying: A bomb had gone off in the heart of Oslo and, said the “experts,” the likely culprits were Islamic extremists. “But is there any proof?” another guest asked. There was none, of course, and this fact ignited an intense debate over media responsibility, Islamophobia and the future of Islam in Europe.

    A day later, when it emerged that the suspect in the attack was a not a Muslim, my Turkish friends and colleagues breathed a collective sigh of relief. But solace turned to anger at the Western media for initially speculating on jihadist motivations for attacking Norway. That their speculation was wrong is little consolation to Muslims in Turkey. The damage is done, they say. The dark heart of the West is revealed: If there’s a violent attack, the West seems reflexively prepared to blame it on those crazy Muslims.

    Linking acts of terrorism with Islam has become trope to the 21st-century journalistic tragedians. But there’s a larger narrative. The emerging portrait of Anders Behring Breivik, the man in custody for carrying out both the bombing and the shooting rampage at a youth camp, reveals a man deeply immersed in hate. Writings found at his home and posted on the Internet are a profile of a violent psyche awaiting a trigger to act.

    Those triggers are plentiful in Europe these days. The alarming pace at which Islamic and Christian right-wing verbal clashes have escalated has set the stage for the violent fringe to justify their murderous outbursts. And the rhetoric has reached dizzying heights. Geert Wilders, the Dutch politician recently acquitted on charges of inciting hatred, is warning that a “tsunami of Islamification” is threatening the Netherlands. One of his party’s key demands – one that Mr. Breivik has voiced – is an end to immigration, particularly Islamic immigration. He goes so far as to propose that Dutch Muslims who don’t “assimilate” be stripped of their citizenship and thrown out of the country.

    European Muslims have confessed their growing frustration with politicians such as Mr. Wilders, as well as their fears that the confrontational atmosphere will lead to more violence. Academics studying Islamic radicalization also warn that the success of the extreme right in Europe is a bad sign of things to come.

    “It’s a self-propelled spiral into confrontation and violence,” Markha Valenta, a researcher in history at the University of Amsterdam, told me. “Study after study shows that violent extremism – Christian or Islamic – begins with words and the environment words create. In Europe, the discourse between Muslims and non-Muslims has shifted into a dark place. We need to quickly reverse that trend or face the consequences.”

    Norway’s response to Friday’s events is a first step. Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg’s promise to use the aftermath as motivation to promote “more democracy, more openness, and more humanity” sends the right message: Extremists can’t hijack the discourse. Muslims will have to play their part: It’s incumbent on them to reach out to Europe’s moderate majority, share in their suffering, and confront the violent fringe with a united front.

    Adnan Khan is a writer and photographer based in Islamabad.

    via In Norway, a trigger for discourse – The Globe and Mail.

  • Dutch MPs cancel trip to Turkey

    Dutch MPs cancel trip to Turkey

    The planned visit of a parliamentary delegation to Turkey has been cancelled.

    Photo: Freedom Party leader Geert Wilders (ANP)
    Photo: Freedom Party leader Geert Wilders (ANP)

    The MPs have unanimously decided to cancel the visit after the Turkish government said it would not meet with any of the delegates because of the presence of Freedom Party leader Geert Wilders among them.

    Labour Party MP and delegation leader Harm Evert Waalkens expressed regret that the trip to Turkey was cancelled, but said parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee had acted on the principle of support for a fellow MP’s freedom of speech.

    Geert Wilders is highly controversial in Turkey because of his inflammatory statements on Islam. He said he had wanted to travel to Turkey to explain in person why he believes the country cannot join the European Union.
    The Turkish government has expressed surprise and regret at the news of the cancelled visit. Ankara says it never said Mr Wilders was not welcome, just simply that it would not roll out the red carpet for him.

    Source:  www.rnw.nl, 2 December 2009