Tag: Istanbul

  • ERDOĞAN: TURKEY’S “MARGINAL” MAN

    ERDOĞAN: TURKEY’S “MARGINAL” MAN

    erd cairo
    Erdoğan is desperate and finished as a political leader. He has that inappropriate smirk-sneer on his increasingly sullen face. His credibility is finished. His judgment has been horrific and criminal. His tragic flaw has been fully revealed during his weeklong death spiral. From his beginning ten years ago, he has been surrounded by flatterers and outright nincompoops. I heard his “key advisor” on Aljazeera Saturday. He constantly argued with the interviewer then lied about not using pepper gas when the live feed from Istanbul clearly showed the canisters bombarding  Taksim Square during the police retreat. There are many more examples. Erdoğan has attracted lamentably low quality people. Deliberately of course, to feed his capaciously overwhelming ego. In Turkish, such a yes-man or yes-woman is called a “dal kavuk” literally a diving turban. It was coined to describe the palace toadies of the sultan who scraped and bowed  to him while securing their wavering turbans on their heads.
    Erdoğan’s stumble-tongued advisers protected him from ever confronting the real impact of his behavior, actions and words. Instead of polishing him, they allowed him to cultivate his tough –guy image. But in the real world he came across as just another street thug. a made-in-America puppet with no capacity to moderate his behavior. He was always unable to act appropriately in public, scowling, sneering, spewing his stoop-shouldered, pugnacious vitriol. Every day he grew more distorted and weird and last week he became just another jerk with lots of power and not a trace of humanity. And now even the dead have wised up to him.

     

    And so he has crashed, still in full arrogant-mode, unaware of himself as a disaster. His now famous rant-week was tantamount to a political psychotic break, and maybe more. What he does now is what he knows: to threaten and name-call. The enormous throngs opposed to his fascist rule are “marginal groups.” They are “looters” and “plunderers.” Actually, he and his henchmen and henchwomen are exactly that, looters and plunderers, and are well on their way to being marginalized. Erdoğan is what he has been all along, a one-trick pony, an undereducated ruffian who betrayed his nation for favor, fame and fortune. He sits in the middle of his own demise like the Turkish youth sit in the gas-drenched, blood-soaked streets gasping from pepper gas, bloody, bruised, beaten by his nazi robo-cops. But the kids get up. But Erdoğan, like an idiot yelling at the moon, rants about building more mosques, bridges, canals, all irrelevant monuments to his own deluded magnificence. He is deaf and blind to reality.

    The man has nothing except money. And that will kill him. His divisiveness and abysmally poor judgment have destroyed any notion of gaining a presidency of anything. His Middle East ambitions, bizarre from the outset are finished. The USA effectively dumped him and his manically dangerous foreign minister Davutoğlu three weeks ago when Kerry announced intentions for a Syrian peace conference. So for Erdoğan, no more White House smiley-face visits. No more USA boondoggles with his hundred businessmen friends in tow all working their deals. No more Syria invective. Assad has prevailed, kicking his butt in the world arena, making him and Turkey look like buffoons and criminals both. And the monstrously ludicrous Ergenekon fiasco will soon collapse.

    He’s a beaten man, this Erdoğan. He exhibits the eccentric end-game behavior of Mubarak with the vicious police violence, gang attacks and claims of foreign influences. Strange isn’t it that the man imposed and supported by foreign powers on the Turkish nation now fingers as enemies his former staunch allies? But then remember what he did to former friends Gaddafi and Asad? Physically he looks beaten, ashen-faced with the out of sync gestures of Richard Nixon during his own last, dark days. And his rage is at its peak at the worst, most visible times. Witness his awful press conference yesterday with the Reuters journalist.

    Now, with the entire world focused on Turkey, he stumbles, fumbles and stares down his audience like a street corner bully. He continues on his own obstinate journey and that’s why the violence from his gangster police worsens by the hour. The cops are his alter ego. And violence is what he knows hence they know. It’s the last hope of a desperate man to retain power and relevancy. He is worry-wracked man, this prime minister. He knows the jig is up with all the not so secret deals, bank accounts and CIA involvement. It’s a lot to handle even for a normal egomaniac. Erdoğan is either heading for a genuine psychotic break or a public statement or incident so humiliating to the Turkish Republic that he has no alternative but to give it up. Of course, I could be wrong. And if so, that’s when the real “fun” will begin. For what if the remnants of the so-called Turkish Army (the real army is in jail courtesy of Erdoğan) ) is called to reestablish order? Maybe it will take a lesson from the valorous resistance movement, screw up its courage and arrest Erdoğan for treason. It would certainly be an appropriate charge and the force used would surely be proportional. Both of these adjectives would have to be explained to the former prime minister and his former advisors. But I am sure they know what treason means. All will be revealed shortly.

    Cem  Ryan, Ph.D.

    Istanbul, 4 June 2013

     

    “My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings:

    Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!”

    Nothing beside remains. Round the decay

    Of that colossal wreck,  boundless and bare,

    The lone and level sands stretch far away.

    Percy Bysshe Shelley Ozymandias

  • 9 Popular (Mis)Conceptions About Istanbul

    9 Popular (Mis)Conceptions About Istanbul

    Leyla Giray

    Women on the Road: Empowering women to travel solo.

    Posted: 05/22/2013 12:57 pm
    Travel Tips , Turkey , Sarai Sierra Istanbul , Istanbul , Istanbul Travel , Istanbul Turkey ,Istanbul-Turkey , Travel News

    You can love it or hate it but Istanbul probably won’t leave you indifferent.

    It’s one of the most visited cities on earth and there are nearly as many opinions about it as there are visitors. It has been called everything: exotic, historic, unsafe (a claim buttressed by the death of photographer Sarai Sierra), food heaven, fundamentalist, a developing country, a mess, erotic or downright scary, all of them adjectives that stick to unexpected like glue.

    I carried many of these preconceptions with me on a recent visit and tested them against reality. Some were terribly accurate while others, instantly dismissable.

    Istanbul is crazy and disorganized.
    Yes and no. Try to cross a street and you’ll feel like you’re rushing across a noisy minefield with a blindfold. Traffic has rules only drivers understand and pedestrians require courage and daredevilry in equal proportions as they dart among cars which miss them by an inch or two. In many other ways Istanbul is supremely organized. Ride an escalator and pedestrians will stand obediently to the right, leaving the left lane free for those in a hurry. Ride the tram or subway and watch as commuters stand willingly aside while passengers get off. There’s less pushing and shoving than on public transport in orderly Geneva…

    Everyone eats meat on skewers.
    Um, no. First of all kebabs are not from Istanbul but from the Balkans or the Caucasus. You’ll find at least as many kebabs in London as you will on these streets. Most food is not skewered. You’ll recognize some Turkish food if you like Greek or Lebanese, things like hummus or dolma (dolmades in Greece). Turkey has an unsuspected wealth of regional cuisines, ranging from Caucasus and Black Sea cooking to Mediterranean or Middle Eastern. The city doesn’t have many foreign restaurants (American fast food excepted). They don’t need to: regional cuisines are varied enough to satisfy even the most jaded palate.

    Istanbul is dusty and poor.
    Perhaps a few years ago you could have said that and gotten away with it. No more. The dusty streets below Galata Bridge are slowly becoming gentrified, (and local inhabitants are being pushed out by rising rents). The goats that once trotted along the roads have been edged, along with their owners, out of town. There are poor Istanbullus — but there are poor New Yorkers and Londoners as well. Rural Turkey is far poorer but Istanbul is a thriving, cosmopolitan city with its rich, its poor and its middle classes, just like other world-class city its size.

    Istanbul is a hotbed of Muslim fundamentalism.
    There has definitely been an increase in religiosity and conservatism since the Islamic-leaning AK Party was elected in 2002. Many women wear headscarves now, almost unheard of a decade ago, but don’t be fooled. They’re not all suddenly devout. A headscarf also has political uses and plenty of women wear them to get ahead professionally. In an Islamic administration it goes without saying that playing the part will win a few brownie points.

    The city is full of rabid dogs.
    In some neighborhoods, especially those less less frequented by tourists, you will indeed find dozens of dogs — and cats — on the streets. Literally. They lie around in the middle of the road, somehow escaping grievous bodily harm as cars and buses weave around them. They are not rabid in the least, on the contrary. It seems the government pays for them to be spayed or castrated to prevent additional unwanted births. And the kind citizens of Istanbul do love their pets, leaving water and food out for them every night. In my neighborhood, nearly every doorway had a bowl of water and leftover food for the uninvited visitor.

    Istanbul is confusing and you’ll never find your way around.
    Yes, it is most definitely confusing. Not only is it a collection of villages, but getting from A to B usually involves a detour through C and D. The city lies over two continents, which can add to the confusion. However, public authorities have invested heavily in public transit, not least because the city is bidding for the 2020 Olympics and won’t have a chance unless it gets its transport together. It does seem to be working although there are gaps when you try to cross the entire city. To get downtown from my northern suburb involved taking a bus, a subway, a funicular and a tram. Complex, developing, but well-marked all the way and a single transport card makes paying a cinch.

    It’s dangerous, especially for women.
    The most cited example is the recent murder of Serai Sierra, the New York photographer found dead along the city’s ancient walls. Yes, she was brutally slain while traveling in the city. And she wasn’t the only one. A few other females have found death in Istanbul. But most haven’t. Domestic violence is sadly rising but non-domestic violence against foreign women is extremely rare. When it comes to general crime, Istanbul doesn’t even make it into the top 100 most dangerous cities in the world, nestled statistically between Victoria, Canada and Santiago de Chile. So yes, Istanbul can be dangerous. It is sad when tragedy happens but Istanbul isn’t more prone to violent crime than other large cities. In fact, far less so.

    The Grand Bazaar is a den of thieves and you could “almost” lose your life there.
    Urban legends abound about this 500-year old warren of merchant streets stuffed with an impossible array of goods from all corners of the Orient. Stories of muggings and robbery and even kidnappings have long titillated visitors who yearn to feel the shivers of ancient and exotic mysteries. Nothing could be further from the truth. The dim alleys have given way to brightly lit pedestrian walkways that would look at home in a suburban mall, if it weren’t for their unusual wares and open storefronts.

    Istanbul is dirt cheap.
    Not for everything, unfortunately. Some things are cheaper than in Western Europe, for example street food. But step into a patisserie or restaurant and you’ll easily spend what you would in any other southern European country. Public transport is definitely cheaper, as are leather goods and clothes. But cheaper does not mean you can blindly stuff your suitcases full of bargain-basement goods for resale back home.

    Istanbul left me wide-eyed with wonder, exhaustion, history and enchantment. Mostly it surprised me. I arrived with a set of expectations and left with most of them demolished. And that, to me, is exactly how travel is supposed to be.

    https://www.huffpost.com/entry/9-popular-misconceptions_b_3303559

  • Turkey accepts Tokyo’s apology on Istanbul’s Olympic bid

    Turkey accepts Tokyo’s apology on Istanbul’s Olympic bid

    ANKARA, May 1 (Xinhua) — Turkey’s sports minister has accepted the apology from the governor of Tokyo for criticizing Istanbul’s bid for the 2020 Olympics.

    Turkish Youth and Sports Minister Suat Kilic said on Wednesday “we now wish for a friendly competition between the candidate cities abiding by the criteria established by the International Olympic Committee.”

    Tokyo Governor Naoki Inose apologized Tuesday after he said “Islamic countries, the only thing they share in common is Allah and they are fighting with each other” in an interview by the New York Times.

    His controversial remarks soon prompted criticism in Turkey and the International Olympic Committee.

    Tokyo is competing with Istanbul and Madrid to hold the Olympics for a second time after becoming the first Asian city to host the Games in 1964. Istanbul is bidding for a fifth time after its previous campaigns were unsuccessful.

    The hosts for the 2020 Games will be decided at the next IOC Session in Argentina in September.

    Editor: yan

    via Turkey accepts Tokyo’s apology on Istanbul’s Olympic bid – Xinhua | English.news.cn.

  • Largest diabetes center of Europe to be established in Sile, Istanbul

    Largest diabetes center of Europe to be established in Sile, Istanbul

    Böyle gösterişli merkezler yerine şeker hastalığı ile mücadelenin en etkili yolu mahallelere kadar girip halka eğitim vermektir.

    Largest diabetes center of Europe to be established in Sile, Istanbul

    As part of the second evaluation meeting of the Stop Diabetes Campaign which was held at the Cankaya Presidential Palace on Wednesday, those who exert efforts on the issue were presented plaques in a ceremony which was attended by Secretary General of the Presidency Professor Mustafa Isen, Health Minister Mehmet Muezzinoglu, Diabetes Foundation Chairman Professor Temel Yilmaz, Mayor of the Sile district of Istanbul Can Tabakoglu and other officials.

    Tabakoglu made a statement on the issue, saying that foundations of the largest diabetes center of Europe to be established in Sile would be laid in upcoming days.

    “Sile has a promising future with regard to health tourism. We consider the center as a very important threshold in terms of health tourism, and it will become the largest diabetes center of our country and Europe offering a great many opportunities extending from the fight against diabetes, preventive measures, a pool and a social complex,” Tabakoglu said.

    The Diabetes Center will be established on an area of 50,250 square meters in Sile to consist of six blocks.

  • We are watching İstanbul being destroyed

    We are watching İstanbul being destroyed

    freak

    Fishermen in İstanbul watch a bridge under construction over the Golden Horn, seen as a major blow to İstanbul’s traditional silhouette, including Mimar Sinan’s magnum opus, the Süleymaniye Mosque. (Photo: Today’s Zaman, Usame Arı)

    We have recently learned that Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is disturbed by unplanned and improper non-eco-friendly urbanization. Over the weekend at the inauguration ceremony of an urban transformation project in İstanbul, he complained about people’s lack of engagement with nature due to these non-eco-friendly buildings infesting Turkey’s cities.

    “Can a generation that has a relationship with nature only through books and cartoons and sees nature only in documentaries have a healthy spiritual view of the world and the future?” Erdoğan rightfully asked.

    He also called on his minister for environment and urban planning as well as municipal mayors from his party to limit the construction of skyscrapers as much as possible and to create and preserve green spaces while urging them to pay attention to “aesthetics” while approving construction projects.

    An İstanbulite for 10 years, I agree with his every word but I should warn those who would mistakenly think that his Justice and Development Party (AK Party) has recently assumed power upon hearing his remarks. As was recently well said by Today’s Zaman blogger and journalist Sevgi Akarçeşme in an article, İstanbul’s historic silhouette has already been irreversibly and irreparably damaged, something in which the AK Party-run İstanbul municipality and the government, which has been ruling the country for more than 10 years, have a big share.

    Indeed, you do not have to be a prime minister to see what has happened to İstanbul, a city where history lies in every corner. Apart from skyscrapers popping up everywhere, mostly in front of a monumental mosque or nearby a shantytown, the city has been undergoing two major construction projects, both at the heart of the city and in contradiction to what Erdoğan calls for. One of them concerns the famous Taksim Square in İstanbul’s Beyoğlu district. The Taksim pedestrian project, which was approved by the government in February 2012, includes the construction of the replica of a historic military barracks in what is now Gezi Park, putting the leafy oasis that has characterized Turkey’s most high-profile public square for more than seven decades in danger and possibly severing “our relationship with nature.”

    The other project, which has already been more than halfway completed, is a major blow to İstanbul’s traditional silhouette. Unfortunately, when you attempt to look at the historic peninsula and Mimar Sinan’s magnum opus, the Süleymaniye Mosque, from Taksim, you now see a new bridge under construction over the Golden Horn, which is deservedly drawing much criticism in terms of zoning and aesthetics. While crossing over a bridge on the Golden Horn recently, I even turned my head to the other side so as not to see this “freak,” as Erdoğan once referred to a statue in eastern Turkey. The scenic view from my favorite café in Süleymaniye has already been destroyed.

    A third controversial project is also knocking on the door in spite of widespread public criticism, including among conservative circles: a huge mosque on Üsküdar’s highest hill, Çamlıca. The prime minister, however, has already made up his mind, leaving us no room for further comment.

    There are many other construction projects which distress not only me but also millions of people in this city. And you know what, we, İstanbulites, are just watching what is going on and do not have a say on such major “operations” in our city.

    Let me remind you of that the İstanbul Metropolitan Municipality (İBB) had an online poll in 2011, asking us which color the public transportation buses should be. That’s fine, but I would also expect them to ask our opinion on more major moves, such as turning the city’s heart upside down, erecting a “freak” over the Golden Horn or the aesthetics-lacking mosque soon to be built on Çamlıca Hill. May be they know that the result of these polls would not be “lilac” or another color this time.

  • Paul Brady: Why Istanbul Is The World’s Best Layover Destination

    Paul Brady: Why Istanbul Is The World’s Best Layover Destination

    If you believe the hype coming from Turkish Airlines, which now flies roughly 40 million passengers to 220 cities in 98 countries, Istanbul will soon become the world’s most connected and wonderful international hub, an axle around which global commerce and tourism will spin, as millions stop over for a night, a week or a year, enjoying the multitude of riches ancient and modern to be found in the metropolis of 15 million perched on the border between east and west.

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    While Dubai and Doha may both have something to say about global domination through airport supremacy, the fact remains that Istanbul has, in the past couple of years, become an ideal place for a layover, as airfares plunge thanks to competition, and connections proliferate. So it was that I decided to tack a two-day tour of Turkey’s largest city onto a quick springtime vacation in Venice.

    On first glance, my itinerary, New York east to Istanbul and back west to Venice, didn’t make much sense. The shockingly affordable round-trip airfare of about $750 — compared to nearly $1000 for a round-trip to only Venice — made the back-tracking much more reasonable. That Turkish has some of the best on-demand in-flight entertainment in the air made the 10-hour flight to Istanbul more bearable; the fact that I was headed to Venice was exciting enough to mentally shorten the 2.5-hour hop to Italy.

    After exploring the canals, calle and cupolas of Venice, it was on to Turkey, where I’d booked into the Marti Istanbul Hotel near Taksim Square. Compared to the basic pensione I’d booked in Italy, the Marti was palatial, which was the idea: Since it was my first visit to Istanbul and my Turkish is non-existent, I hoped to ensconce myself in a relatively luxurious hotel to which I could retreat after a day bazaar hopping and arguing with dishonest cabbies, the latter of which are far too plentiful in Istanbul. On the plus side, rooms at the Marti start around $200, which is far less than you’d pay for a comparable hotel in Western Europe or, for that matter, New York.

    With only 47 hours and 40 minutes to spend in the city, there wasn’t much time for anything but the highlights: The Hagia Sophia, the Blue Mosque, the Galata Bridge (and Galata Tower) and the Bazaars, both Spice and Grand. Distracted by frequent coffee, kebap and baklava breaks, I missed the chance to take what some have called the most beautiful commute in the world, the ferry ride to Asia.

    But that I didn’t get a chance to experience everything the city has to offer doesn’t worry me too much. Between Istanbul’s newly announced bid for the 2020 Olympic Games and Turkish Airlines’ continued expansion, I’ll probably be back to the Bosphorus soon — if only for a short layover.

    via Paul Brady: Why Istanbul Is The World’s Best Layover Destination.