Tag: Mavi Marmara

  • “ERDOGAN DE GAULLES”ÜN AYAK IZINDE”

    “ERDOGAN DE GAULLES”ÜN AYAK IZINDE”

    Büyük elcilik yapmis ve su anda da Israil”in dis siyasetinin akil hocaligini yapan Sayin Avi Primor”un

    “ERDOGAN DE GAULLES”ÜN IZINDE”

    basligini tasiyan yazisi, kraldan cok kralci kesilen irkci/seriatci iIsrail HÜKÜMETININ ve Türkiyedeki “taraftarlarini”
    cok kizdiracaga benziyor.

    Frankfurter Rundschau gazetesi Almanya”da sosyal demokratlara yakin bir gazetedir.

    iyi günler dileklerimle

    Refik Mor

    Avi Primor (Bild: FR)

    http://www.fr-online.de/in_und_ausland/politik/meinung/2753641_Erdogan-in-de-Gaulles-Fussstapfen.html

    Erdogan in de Gaulles Fußstapfen

    FRANKFURTER RUNDSCHAU
    20 Juni 2010
    Kolumne

    Weltweit stellt man sich verzweifelt die Frage, was Recep Tayyip Erdogan wohl möchte und wohin er die Türkei führen wird. Dies angesichts der Tatsache, dass Erdogan ein gläubiger Moslem ist und sich zunehmend mit den moslemischen Nachbarn verbündet.

    Bislang hat Erdogan aus der Türkei keine fundamentalistische Diktatur gemacht. Seit er das Amt des Ministerpräsidenten übernommen hat, ist die Türkei eher demokratischer geworden. Die Grundlagen der kemalistischen Republik bleiben bestehen, wobei die Möglichkeiten der Armee, sich in die Politik einzumischen, erheblich geschmälert wurden. Der Dialog mit den Minderheiten in der Türkei wird wahrgenommen, und Parlamentarismus, Meinungs- und Medienfreiheit wie auch der Status des Obersten Gerichtshofs bleiben unverändert erhalten.
    Mit den Nachbarn – den moslemischen Republiken der ehemaligen Sowjetunion, dem Irak, aber auch mit Syrien und vor allem mit dem Iran – haben sich die türkischen Beziehungen in Sachfragen sehr vertieft. Mit Israel gibt es Turbulenzen, und die Amerikaner sind verärgert, weil die Türkei im UN-Sicherheitsrat gegen das Iran-Sanktionenprogramm gestimmt hat.

    Es gibt den Präzedenzfall eines wichtigen Mitglieds der westlichen Allianz, das den Amerikanern ähnliche Sorgen bereitet hat. Das war Charles de Gaulle in den 1960er Jahren. Der französische Präsident hat damals Rotchina anerkannt, mit den Südamerikanern gegen die USA geflirtet und vor allem seine Bindung zur Nato gelockert. Er hat dennoch seine grundsätzliche und tiefsitzende, nicht zuletzt ideologische Verbindung zu den westlichen Demokratien nie infrage gestellt. Er wollte kein Vasall der Amerikaner, sondern ein ebenbürtiger Partner sein. Dazu brauchte er auch selbstständig geknüpfte Verbindungen zu der kommunistischen und der Dritten Welt. Damit wollte de Gaulle den Amerikanern gegenüber mehr Gewicht gewinnen. Die Beziehungen zu Israel hat er weitgehend parallel zu den Beziehungen zur arabischen Welt entwickelt und erst am Vorabend des Sechstagekriegs zugunsten der arabischen Länder gelockert.

    Auch Erdogan und seine Türkei bleiben grundsätzlich mit der westlichen Welt wie auch mit der Nato verbunden. Die Beziehungen zu ihren Nachbarn sollen – abgesehen von bilateralen Interessen – der Türkei zunehmend Selbstständigkeit und infolgedessen mehr Gewicht in ihren Beziehungen zum Westen verschaffen. Auch die Beziehungen zu Israel sind wichtig, vor allem, solange sie parallele Beziehungen zur arabischen Welt nicht behindern.

    Wegen der Verschlechterung der Friedenschancen zwischen Israel und den Palästinensern wie auch zwischen Israel und Syrien ist es seit ein paar Jahren für die Türkei jedoch zunehmend schwieriger geworden, die Politik der parallelen Beziehungen aufrechtzuerhalten. Das schlägt dann zugunsten der Beziehungen zur islamischen Welt aus. Bislang vermied Erdogan jedoch, die Grundlagen der gegenseitigen Interessen der beiden Länder zu schädigen. Das heißt, dass die Entwicklung eines Friedensprozesses zwischen Israel und seinen Nachbarn auch die Wiederherstellung guter türkisch-israelischer Beziehungen fördern könnte. Die Türkei ist also weder für den Westen noch für Israel verloren.

    Avi Primor ist Präsident der Israelischen Gesellschaft für Außenpolitik und war Botschafter Israels in Deutschland.

  • ADL, B’nai B’rith boycott Turkey meeting

    ADL, B’nai B’rith boycott Turkey meeting

    June 16, 2010

    WASHINGTON (JTA) — At least two Jewish groups are boycotting a meeting requested by Turkey’s ruling party.

    Top lawmakers and administration officials affiliated with the AKP Party were in Washington on Wednesday to meet with Obama administration officials and U.S. lawmakers. They added a meeting with Jewish organizational leaders, but at least two declined: the Anti-Defamation League and B’nai B’rith International.

    Other groups invited, including the American Israel Public Affairs Committee and the American Jewish Committee, did not return calls from JTA.

    Jewish groups are furious with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who heads the AKP, for his recent broadsides against Israel. These have increased since May 31, when Israeli commandos raided a Turkish-flagged aid ship aimed at breaching Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip. Nine Turkish passengers, including one Turkish American, died in violence after the Israelis boarded the ship, and seven Israeli troops were injured.

    In a speech last week, Erdogan likened the Star of David to a swastika. Abraham Foxman, the ADL’s national director, said he also was outraged that Turkey had withdrawn participation from a teachers’ conference in Israel on teaching the Holocaust.

    “That’s it, this has nothing to do with the boat, foreign policy,” Foxman told JTA, speaking of the teachers’ conference. “If they cancel that, why should I go?”

    Turkey’s government has relied traditionally on Jewish groups in Washington to help represent its interests.

    One pending matter of concern is a resolution under consideration in the U.S. House of Representatives that would recognize the Ottoman massacres of Armenians in 1915-16 as a genocide, as most historians already do.

  • Activists in Mavi Marmara talk

    Activists in Mavi Marmara talk

    mavimarmaraaktivistActivist in Mavi Marmara talk.


    Dehşet Anları – 1 / 2 @ Yahoo! Video

    Dehşet Anları – 2 / 2 @ Yahoo! Video
  • USA Undermines Democracy in Turkey:

    USA Undermines Democracy in Turkey:

    An article is attached for your review. I just visited Turkey and it is my report

    It’s Turkey Stupid, Not Israel

    by John Stanton

    hadronxyz [cioran123@yahoo.com]

    Turkey is vital to United States’ national security interests. No country in the region deserves America’s cooperation—at all levels–more than Turkey’s current government.  And no country is more ignorant of Turkish politics, culture and geographic importance than America.  As former ambassador James Holmes, Executive Director of the American Turkish Council stated, “There is a hole in America’s knowledge of Turkey.”

    But American-Turkish interests groups, like the American Turkish Council, seem content to stay silent even as many of their non-profit charters state that they exist, in part, to “educate the public.”

    “We are strictly about business and don’t defend the Obama administration or the current Turkish government. We are neutral and serve only our members interests,” said Holmes.

    Fair enough.

    But it is American and Turkish consumers that keep the Dollars and Lira flowing in their respective countries. Digging that hole of ignorance in America’s knowledge of Turkey deeper does not make sense. Nor does it seem productive to have the Turkish people read about how they have become part of a new axis of evil, a sort of nefarious Muslim black hole, because they take issue with Israel’s policies in the region.  This is nonsense that must end.

    Further, it is extraordinarily counterproductive to alienate a nation that is so focused on its youth.  Nearly 50 percent of Turkey’s population is under the age of 25 and they have the good fortune to be maturing at a time when Turkey is solidifying its democratic reforms. The USA’s system of government is still the model for them.  US leaders need not ruin that goodwill.

    Kimse Yok Mu (Is Anybody There?) is a Turkish aid group/NGO that works in 38 countries distributing food and constructing homes and schools for those subjected to war/natural disasters. It is a sort of Save the Children NGO. Recently they worked in Haiti helping earthquake victims there. They also manage to deliver aid by ground transport to Palestinians in Gaza. Metin Cetiner of Kimse Yok Mu said that the “Turkish people generally like Americans. “

    According to Dr. Akif Kirecci of Bilknet University, “Iran is the showcase issue for the Turkish people. How the United States acts with respect to Iran will determine whether the US will continue to be the beacon for the Turks or will destroy all US credibility in the region. Should the USA cause another war, this will incite hardliners all over the region. It would be devastating for us and everyone else.”

    A more optimistic sentiment was offered by Dr. Salih Memecan, Turkey’s famed cartoonist, who spent years in the USA due to the repressive military backed government that existed in Turkey the 1990’s. “Americans usually find the right message but it takes time.”

    Quality Media = Quality Democracy

    Deniz Ergurel, 25 years old, is the General Secretary for the newly formed New Media Association. It advocates “freedom of expression, ethical values, diversity and honesty in the media,” according to its promotional brochure.

    “We are focused on consolidating press freedoms but also we need to address ethical and educational issues in the field of journalism. We are working with the International Center for Journalists in this effort.”

    Ergurel believes that the “New Media”, namely the Internet and the social networking /instant news it provides, will rapidly come to define Turkish media. Even television there will be affected. “The future of TV is to broadcast yourself and your content to niche markets…a sort of narrow casting. We are pushing that.”

    Ergurel is closely watching the US media market as once mighty publications like the Washington Post and New York Times struggle to adapt to the Internet age and maintain readership. “There are lessons to be learned from their experience though we do not have the cumbersome infrastructure like many US media groups have.”

    But freedom of the press and other democratic reforms are not a “done deal” according to some Turkish academics, journalists and intellectuals.  It was just recently that groups like NMA could apply for non-profit status without government approval.  The AKP and its supporters are always looking over their shoulders for the Turkish military. The Turkish military and its nationalist supporters lurk in a murky place called The Deep State (TDS).  TDS designed Operation Sledgehammer–a plan to overthrow the current government through violent means.

    TDS, according to one Turkish commentator, “has older, Kemalist journalists who are not, or don’t want to, keep pace with the new generation of Turks or the AKP party. These people are our version of the neo-conservatives.

    Still, noted Turkish commentator Mustafa Akyolm said about media and democratic reforms in Turkey, “There is no turning back.”

    Stability and Peace

    Taha Ozhan, Director General of SETA, one of the most prestigious think tanks in Turkey, remarked recently that “Turkey should be viewed as part of an axis of stability and peace.”

    Looking at the record, Ozhan is largely correct.  The AKP government, led by Prime Minister Erdogan, President Gul and Foreign Minister Davutoğlu, has managed  to pull off some remarkable diplomatic successes, not the least of which was to convince (with Brazil’s help)  Iran’s leadership to commit to an agreement to resolve much of the dispute over its nuclear program.

    Contrary to the widely held view in the Western media and intellectual circles, Turkey does not want a nuclear armed Iran on its border. According to Kerim Balci of Zaman, “Turkey remembers its history and there was conflict between the Ottoman Turks and Persians. There is still some tension there.”

    The AKP government has also managed to form a Middle East Union (MEU) for free trade consisting of Turkey, Syria, Lebanon and Jordan. Free trade blocs are commonplace around the globe. For example, the MEU is similar to the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR). UNASUR has not been accused of turning against its neighbors to the north even though trade with UNASUR has increased dramatically with China and India.

    US and Turkish business leaders—and the political/military leaders they confer with—can’t be blind to the complex balancing act that AKP Prime Minister Erdogan and President Gul have in operation in their volatile region. They should be commended and supported, not raked over the coals.

    Turkey continues to be hammered ferociously by the Israeli government and its legion of American supporters in the US press, US Congress and White House over the Freedom Flotilla incident. It’s shameful that there is not a counterbalance in the USA to this vicious assault being waged in the mainstream press by the Israeli government’s lobbyists in AIPAC and JINSA.

    Further, military leaders, particularly CENTCOM commander General David Petraeus, hopefully understands that, in the end, US troops on the ground will be the ones to suffer from the lopsided support and free ride Israel receives from the USA.

    Crazy Aunt in the Room: Unstable Israel

    Clearly, Israel wants the AKP government out of power and a return to the Kemalist/Nationalist military backed government there, just as it wants Iran attacked by the USA. Many Americans in the White House, US Congress and in groups like the Iran Policy Committee seek the same outcomes. That Americans allow such meddling in US domestic and foreign affairs is unprecedented and dangerous.

    One Turkish academic said “The Cold War is still alive in the parliaments of the Middle East and the USA. The US president has to take the initiative to break out of this mode of thinking. Israel, primarily, is still functioning as a Cold War state. That type of thinking can’t be implemented today. Israel is out of touch with reality.  It is incorrect that  our Prime Minister and Foreign Minister make decisions based on religion. These decisions are made on a practical basis.” Israel’s neighboring states accept the fact that Israel is in the neighborhood to stay.  No one in Turkey doubts Israeli conventional military prowess. But there is the worry that Israel is becoming unstable and might turn to its nuclear arsenal in haste.

    “Israel is living in the Middle East but is intellectually it is living in Washington, DC,” said Ozhan of SETA. “Israel must decide whether it is still a project or wants to be a state.”

    According to one Turkish human rights activist, “The troubles between Israel and the Turkish government places us in a complex situation. Our government does not have a problem with Israel’s existence. We could have but did not oppose Israel’s membership in the OECD. Israel and Turkey are now in a vicious circle after their Gaza Cast Lead Operation and the Freedom Flotilla incident.  There is a war of nerves now between the two countries.  The Israeli lobby is clearly at work now behind the black propaganda against Turkey in the world’s media.  It seems lost that Turkey can be a great broker with Israel and Arab world.”

    Prime Minister Erdogan is criticized by his supporters for identifying too closely with the Palestinians and Hamas. But, according to his supporters in the press, academia and universities, the Israeli military operation against Gaza and then against the Freedom Flotilla “shook Erdogan to his core.” Erdogan believed that someone had to respond.

    According to Orhan Cengiz, President of the Human Rights Agenda Association, “It is not true that Turkey is moving Radical or East. This is a propaganda campaign by anti-Turkish elements in the region.”

    In fact, Turkey’s “no vote” against a new round of Iranian sanctions actually provides the Obama Administration with some room to continue back channel diplomacy with Iran and others in the region. Turkey is giving the USA a grand opening to change the balance of power in the region to its advantage without another conflict. Will the USA be smart enough to recognize this?

    Turkey Inside

    Despite seven years of reforms under AKP, Cengiz said, there are many prejudices that will take decades to eliminate.  “Homophobia, Islamophobia, the head scarf issue, Armenian genocide, religious persecution and the ‘Kurdish Question’ remain the major issues.  We need to accept that there is discrimination and confront it. But it is hard to do. Many in Turkey are fighting for rights for all.“

    The task of eliminating many of those prejudices is made more difficult because the former military backed government promoted the practice according to Cengiz. “The State encouraged discrimination in the past. And of course, now it is engrained in society and we are seeing hate crimes.”

    Cengiz, whose life was threatened within Turkey for defending Kurds in court, believes that “Indirect discrimination is so deep that people are not aware of it. If we do not confront discrimination aggressively then we will have very serious problems in the future.”

    “The open media is a new phenomenon for Turkish society. The clash of ideas and reporting on discrimination is good for Turkey. Exposing The Deep State made the Turkish people feel free, said Cengiz, “But a new government may come in and roll back changes.”

    With elections looming on the horizon, many in Turkey are asking if the internal reforms of the AKP and its foreign policy successes will hold and advance.  “Turkey is still in transition,” said one human rights leader. Democracy is not a done deal.  Institutions do not have a strong foothold in society yet. We need a new constitution [amendments to] but that is not a reality yet.  We need to have a solid, functioning federal, state and local system. Economic stability is critical to a democracy’s success. Our reserves are looking good at $100 billion (US) in reserves. But political stability is not a given.”

    And  the Culture?

    It’s an outdoor café setting in Istanbul, a city of 17 million people and a history as old as the world itself. It is a sunny afternoon and suddenly the call to prayers rings out from the many mosques in the city. Not a soul stops his/her daily routine. Women and men walk briskly to work with some pushing baby carriages along the sidewalks or across the streets. Some women have a scarf on their heads, many don’t.  Some in the café are drinking Turkish coffee or tea. Others are drinking Effes, the beer of choice in Turkey. Someone has a radio playing and it’s England’s Arctic Monkey’s, a hard rock band. U2 played Istanbul the night before. It is nice to have a seat in the café after visiting the Hagia Sophia with its mix of Muslim and Christian art and architecture displayed side by side. Next to the Sophia is the Sultan Ahmed Mosque also known as the blue mosque. A lifetime is wasted without a visit to these two structures.

    And there goes the Dominoes’ Pizza delivery dude on his scooter. Who knew Burger King had scooter delivery too? They weave in and out of the traffic and it is amazing they are not run over. Commuters in cars fight heavy traffic and the people on the buses and rail system have the same look of workers in every major city on the planet. Everyone seems to be smoking American cigarettes and reading a paper (a visit to a nearby bookstore reveals that Sponge Bob Square Pants and Dora are in Turkish too).

    John Stanton is a Virginia based writer specializing in national security matters. He recently visited Turkey and spent time in Istanbul and Ankara. Reach him at cioran123@yahoo.com

  • Gaza Freedom Flotilla — the new Freedom Riders

    Gaza Freedom Flotilla — the new Freedom Riders

    By Joyce Chediac
    Published Jun 16, 2010 4:37 PM

    The heroes and heroines of the Gaza Freedom Flotilla, so brutally attacked by Israeli commandos on May 31, have transformed the struggle to break the siege of Gaza and raised it to a higher level. They are the new Freedom Riders.

    Freedom Riders were Civil Rights activists who rode interstate buses into the southern United States 50 years ago to defy racist segregation practices. Like the Palestinians, the African-American population of the South lived under a separate, apartheid system, called “Jim Crow.”

    Merely because these Black and white activists traveled together, ate together and shared facilities together where it was forbidden, they were attacked, beaten and even murdered by racists. Their vehicles were firebombed while the local police looked away. Their willingness to risk their lives exposed the brutality of Jim Crow racism and inspired others, who were appalled by the violence against them.

    Freedom Riders transformed the Civil Rights Movement and marked a turning point in that struggle, which then grew throughout the South.

    When nine courageous Gaza Freedom Flotilla activists were killed and scores wounded by Israeli commandos on May 31 for merely trying to bring food, medicine and housing materials to the besieged people of Gaza, the world was horrified and outraged. The illusion that Israel had any legitimate case against the people or government of Gaza was shattered and Israeli brutality exposed before the world.

    More Freedom Flotillas are now on their way to Gaza, and the worldwide boycott, divestment and sanctions campaign against Israel is growing by leaps and bounds.

    Israeli investigation called ‘farce’

    Rejecting a United Nations call for an international inquiry into its murderous commando raid, on June 14 Israel’s cabinet approved an Israeli government-appointed commission to investigate its own attack on the aid ship. This “independent public commission” doesn’t seem very independent. Led by retired Israeli Supreme Court Justice Jacob Turkel, it will have two foreign observers, but only as non-voting members.

    Israel claims its commission would “examine the legality of Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza and whether the raid on the flotilla conformed with the rules of international law.” (New York Times, June 14)

    But Israel’s newspaper of record says that the Israeli government really seeks to investigate its victims. “The truth that Netanyahu wishes to bring out involves the identity of the flotilla’s organizers, its sources of funding and the knives and rods that were brought aboard,” the paper wrote. “He does not intend to probe the decision-making process that preceded the takeover of the ship and the shortcomings that were uncovered.” (Haaretz, June 13)

    Even Haaretz calls this investigation a “farce.”

    U.S. — A silent partner in Israeli commando raid

    Washington, it seems, is a participant in the farce. Just hours after Israel announced its “independent” investigation, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs “welcomed” it as “an important step forward.”

    Washington has criticized neither Israel’s commando attack nor its 36-month blockade of Gaza. U.S. officials have said as little as possible about the commando raid, while continuing to funnel funds to Tel Aviv. In fact, Washington’s huge economic and military support for Israel and its political cover for Tel Aviv make it accountable for Israeli actions and a silent partner in the deadly commando raid.

    While Washington may disagree with Israeli tactics, the Pentagon has its hands full with the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Israel remains the Pentagon’s most reliable ally to keep the oppressed Palestinians and other peoples in line in that oil-rich and strategic area. There are no splits on this in U.S. ruling circles.

    Recently Congress added $205 million to the $3 billion the U.S. already gives the Israeli military each year for a missile system. The additional sum was approved by a bipartisan vote of 401 legislators.

    Flotilla forces Egypt, Arab League response

    In addition to changing the character of struggle, the Freedom Flotilla is responsible for a chain of political events. On June 7, an Egyptian security official declared the blockade on Gaza a “failure” and opened Egypt’s border with Gaza “indefinitely.”

    Egypt is one of the most repressive regimes in the area and a colluder with Israel in the siege of Gaza. Egypt had previously placed every obstacle in the way of Viva Palestina delegations attempting to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza via Egypt’s border. This included physically attacking the delegations, threatening to strand them in the Sinai Desert, confiscating their material aid and deporting their leaders.

    Egypt has now opened the Gaza border out of fear of its own population, which has been inspired by the solidarity of the Freedom Flotilla and angered by the Israeli attack.

    And on June 13 Secretary General Amr Moussa of the Arab League toured Gaza for the first time since Hamas took control there. Moussa, the highest-ranking Arab diplomat to visit in three years, entered Gaza from Egypt through the newly opened border and immediately called for lifting the blockade.

    Where was the Arab League for the last three years? Until the Freedom Flotilla, the 22-member group did not speak out seriously against the siege.

    Surely the Arab countries, where the people feel so deeply the 60 years of Palestinian repression and the siege of Gaza, would be the logical place to organize flotillas to break the blockade. However, most Arab regimes are in the vest pocket of Wall Street and fear that any show of mass sentiment in their countries could result in their own overthrow. Flotillas from their countries would not be tolerated.

    Turkey’s contradictions

    Meanwhile, Turkey’s popularity among the peoples of the Middle East has skyrocketed following its denunciations of Israel’s tactics and because it let the flotilla organize from its shores and provided political support. Turkish flags and posters of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan have been prominent in demonstrations around the world protesting the Israeli commando attack.

    When Israel attacked a Turkish ship in the flotilla, eight of the flotilla participants killed by Israeli commandos were Turks and the ninth was a Turkish American. Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, who called for an international investigation, dismissed Israel’s proposed panel. He said “We have no trust at all that Israel … will conduct an impartial investigation.”

    There are contradictions here. Turkey, a key U.S. client, was one of the earliest regimes to recognize the Israeli state after it displaced Palestine. However, the Turkish government is strongly against the siege of Gaza and often speaks out against it.

    While this view reflects the strong feelings of the Turkish people and plays well for Turkey’s domestic audience, the Erdogan government is also seeking some international autonomy.

    U.S. wars in the Middle East have hurt the Turkish economy. Turkey has not been admitted to the European Union. So Turkey is striking out more on its own, politically and economically, wanting trade and better relations with Middle Eastern neighbors such as Iran and Syria, which Washington has branded “terrorist.”


    Articles copyright 1995-2010 Workers World. Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.

  • Israeli Commandos Execute American Citizen

    Israeli Commandos Execute American Citizen

    Israeli Commandos Execute American Citizen

    Video

    Israeli soldiers allegedly killing Furkan Dogan 19 years

    See also: American, 19, Among Gaza Flotilla Dead: Furkan Dogan Was Shot Five Times, Including Four Times in Head

    EXCLUSIVE: New Video Smuggled Out from Mavi Marmara of Israel’s Deadly Assault on Gaza Aid Flotilla
    By Democracy Now!

    In a Democracy Now! exclusive, we bring you a sneak preview of previously unseen raw footage from the Mavi Marmara that will be formally released at a press conference at the United Nations later in the day. The footage shows the mood and the activities onboard the Mavi Marmara in the time leading up to the attack, and the immediate reaction of the passengers during the attack. We are joined by filmmaker and activist Iara Lee, one of the few Americans on the Mavi Marmara ship. Her equipment was confiscated, but she managed to smuggle out an hour’s worth of footage.

    Video:

    Information Clearing House

    furkanmavimarmara