Tag: Istanbul

  • Erbakan launches election campaign in Istanbul’s Eyüp district

    Erbakan launches election campaign in Istanbul’s Eyüp district

    ISTANBUL – Hürriyet Daily News

    Eighty-four-year-old Erbakan launches the party’s electoral campaign in Istanbul’s conservative Eyüp district. DAILY NEWS photo, Hasan ALTINIŞIK

    The Saadet (Felicity) Party will make Turkey a leading country in the world and will work for the “happiness of all humanity.” This was the Saadet Party’s motto on Friday, when they launched their electoral campaign for next year’s general elections in Turkey.

    “We will come [to power] to establish a new world [order],” said Necmettin Erbakan, Saadet’s founder and present leader, during his speech in Istanbul’s Eyüp district, where he has launched all his past electoral campaigns. Erbakan was reinstated as the party’s leader at Saadet’s extraordinary congress last month. “We will roll our sleeves up for more than six months to bring our [victory] back,” Erbakan said, adding that happiness and welfare could not be gained with “imitated visions [referring to the ruling AKP’s vision], by neglect or denial of Islam, by borrowing money and applying interest-rate policies.”

    Hundreds of Saadet supporters, including considerable crowds of women, gathered in front of the Eyüp mosque to support the launch of Saadet’s electoral campaign by its historic leader. Turkish delight was distributed by women, and people carried placards reading, “Leading country, Turkey,” “We are not like the others, we are one and unique,” “The third rise begins: Felicity, abundance, welfare, plentitude is coming” and “A new world [order].”

    We cannot bring “felicity” without a new, just world, Erbakan said, adding that Turkey had to rely on its own forces rather than on membership in the European Union for progress and development. Erbakan is the founder of the “milli görüş” – Turkish for “national view” – movement, under which Turkey would develop reliance on its own labor and economic power by conserving its own values and history.

    “We will bring back the pool system,” Erbakan said, referring to a system for managing public finances and expenditures. He also promised that he would increase the economic welfare of the Turkish people by banning interest rates, regarded a sin in Islam, and by increasing wages and retirement pensions as well.

    Erbakan’s call for “independence from the Western world” and for a world-leading Turkey standing on its own two feet seems to be favored by many Saadet supporters who talked to the Daily News after the meeting Friday.

    “I support Erbakan as he strives for justice, for the “national view” case,” Nazmiye Turan, a 34-year-old Saadet supporter, told the Daily News in a Friday interview after Erbakan’s speech. “Our case is not only for the Muslims, but for the entire world. As our motto says, ‘A [leading] Turkey for the entire world,’” she added.

    “Erbakan is a world leader,” said 45-year-old Saadet supporter Emine Çalaz, adding that she believed he would make Turkey better off once in power.

    Erbakan will bring freedom of expression and religion, according to Büşra Gece, 18, a student who had come to support Saadet. She told the Daily News. “He will bring freedom for Muslims not only in Turkey, but all over the world.”

    “We will become stronger not by compromising with Europe but by standing up on our own,” said Kamil Erdinç, a 63-year-old retiree, referring to Erbakan’s anti-EU calls. “The interest rates will be removed if Saadet comes to power,” he said, adding he did not have any expectations for himself from the party but believed it would make the country better off.

  • İstanbul as seen by Turkish, French photojournalists

    İstanbul as seen by Turkish, French photojournalists

    Today the French Cultural Center in İstanbul’s Taksim Square starts hosting a photo exhibition by İstanbul-based photojournalists from the Anatolia news agency and Agence France-Presse (AFP).

    “Fotomuhabirlerin Gözüyle İstanbul” (İstanbul As Seen by Photojournalists), put together on the occasion of the 90th anniversary of the Anatolia news agency, is a collection that looks at the İstanbul of the 2000s from many different viewpoints — from arts to sports events and from social life to politics. The collection will remain on display until Jan. 15, 2011.

  • Japanese firm moves six plants to Istanbul

    Japanese firm moves six plants to Istanbul

    A Japanese company has decided to move six plants from Belgium to Istanbul, attracted by the recent economic growth and business-friendly environment in Turkey, Turkish Trade Minister Zafer Çağlayan said at a recent meeting.

    Japanese group Mayekawa, one of the world’s leading cooling systems manufacturers in the food, dairy, marine, oil and gas sectors are planning to set up new plants in Turkey because of the great investment potential in Turkey, Çağlayan said at a Turkish- Japanese Business Council meeting Thursday.

    He called on other Japanese investors to follow suit, saying manufacturing in Turkey is “much more affordable and profitable” compared to Europe.

    “Mayekawa MGT has decided to invest in one of the industrial zones in Istanbul,” said Cemal Yılmaz, general manager of Frigo Mekanik A.Ş, a Turkish Mayekawa retailer.

    The company is preparing to shift all its operations to Turkey to manufacture freezing and compression technologies in Turkey, rather than Belgium. Mayekawa is considered one of the largest oil-flooded screw compressor manufacturers in the world and currently maintains operations in Tokyo, Los Angeles and Brussels.

    Due to the low cost of production and labor in Turkey the company decided to leave Belgium and direct its new investments to Istanbul, Yılmaz said, although he did not disclose the amount the company planned to invest. “Frigo will remain the primary retailer of Mayekawa products in Turkey,” he said.

    Mayekawa Director Tetsuro Shigeoka, CEO Toshio Yagitani, General Manager Shinichi Itou held private talks with Çağlayan to discuss the details and conditions of the Istanbul investment.

    Mayekawa currently operates manufacturing facilities in Japan, Belgium, the United States, Brazil, Mexico and South Korea.

  • Istanbul Hosting News Agencies Meetings, Starts with OANA

    Istanbul Hosting News Agencies Meetings, Starts with OANA

    Istanbul -The Turkish capital is hosting meetings of news agencies, on the sidelines of its activities celebrating its choice as 2010 European Capital of Culture, organized by Anadolu News Agency.

    Anadolu Oana

    The first of the meetings, which last till November 27, was of the Executive Board of the Organization of Asia-Pacific News Agencies, OANA, where discussions touch on means of and possibilities for improving quality of product of news agencies.

    This meeting would be officially inaugurated by State Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc Friday, and Anadolu Chairman Hilmi Bengi is to address the attendees.

    In cooperation with French News Agency AFP, Anadolu is to open a joint photo exhibition under the theme “Istanbul in Photo Reporters’ Perspectives”, hosted at the French Consulate General.

    The exhibition comes as the agency marks the 90th anniversary of its foundation.

    QNA

    The Peninsula

  • Istanbul welcomes Pink Floyd Ballet

    Istanbul welcomes Pink Floyd Ballet

    Italian La Scala Theater’s Pink Floyd Ballet, which was created by choreographer Roland Petit in the 1960s following his daughter’s requests, has arrived in Istabul for the first time. The first performance is Thursday night at the Istanbul Congress Center and there will be four more performances until Sunday, featuring 13 Pink Floyd songs.

    Pink Floyd

    Istanbul is hosting Italy’s La Scala Theater’s Pink Floyd Ballet this weekend as part of the world-renowned show’s first trip to Turkey.

    The ballet troupe makes its first performance Thursday night and will have four more performances Friday, Saturday and two on Sunday.

    The ballet was produced in the mid-1960s by choreographer Roland Petit at his daughter’s request to make a ballet on Pink Floyd songs. Her request seemed impossible to him at first but later on Petit thought that it might be possible and produced the ballet.

    “My daughter was then 12 years old,” Petit recently told daily Hürriyet. “One day she made me listen to Pink Floyd and asked me to produce a ballet show on its music. I told her that it was a dream but she insisted. I liked Pink Floyd but it seemed a very extreme idea to merge modern rock music with ballet composition. It was so bizarre that we could not even imagine the reaction of audiences. But we had a very big success.”

    The ballet premiered in 1972 and has been traveling the world since then. Eight of the shows were joined by Pink Floyd. La Scala Theater obtained the rights for the show in 2009.

    The show has been staged hundreds times around the world from Paris to Tokyo although it acquired even more high-cultural legitimacy when it moved to La Scala in 2009.

    When creating the ballet, Petit attended one of the concerts of the band in London in order to talk to its members face to face and tell them his idea.

    “There were 9,000 over-excited people in the concert. It made me very excited that this mass of young people, who used to listen to Pink Floyd like crazy, would see a ballet performance accompanied by this music,” he said. “We talked to Pink Floyd members after the concert and they were very excited, too. They proposed playing live on the stage [for the ballet].”

    The show in Istanbul will not feature Pink Floyd live on stage but the audience will still witness a spectacular lighting and dance show.

    13 songs to be performed

    The ballet show has been changed twice, in 1991 and 2004, during which new songs were added to the show, while the lighting shows also underwent some alterations.

    There will be 13 songs in the show in Turkey, including “Run Like Hell,” “Money,” “Is There Anybody Out There?” “Nobody Home,” “Hey You,” “One Of These Days,” “Careful With That Axe,” “Eugene,” “When You’re In,” “Obscured by Clouds,” “The Great Gig in the Sky” and “Echoes,” which will be performed twice.

    The show will be on stage Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. while the two Sunday showings will come before audiences at 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. Ticket prices range between 57 and 415 Turkish Liras.

    Inaugurated in August 1778, La Scala Theater (Teatro Alla Scala) in Milan is recognized as one of the leading opera and ballet theaters in the world.

    At the same time, the theater’s ballet company is also recognized as one of the most prestigious companies throughout the world and has featured leading dancers, including Alessandra Ferri, Roberto Bolle and Carla Fracci, at various times in the past.

    Hürriyet

  • Topbas: Turkey To Become One Of The Strongest Countries Of The World Soon

    Topbas: Turkey To Become One Of The Strongest Countries Of The World Soon

    231110 topbasIstanbul Mayor Kadir Topbas said on Tuesday that he believed that Turkey would become one of the strongest countries of the world soon.

    “We are achieving this as the whole nation,” Topbas said at Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport in his return from Mexico where he attended 3rd World Congress of the United Cities and Local Governments (UCLG) of the United Nations.

    Kadir Topbas, Metropolitan Mayor of Istanbul, was earlier elected president of UCLG.

    Topbas said UCLG was the most important local management union of the world which administered more than half of the world population.

    Thousands of local administrations from 136 of 192 UN countries are members of UCLG.

    UCLG World Congress, which convened in Mexico, elected Topbas as UCLG president for 2010-2013 term.

    Topbas was the sole candidate after Lisbon Mayor Antonio Costa withdrew.

    Mayors and local authority representatives from around the world embarked on a new era of international cooperation with the launching in Paris 2-5 May, 2004 of a new body called United Cities and Local Governments.

    AA