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	<title>Turkish Forum &#187; European Parliament</title>
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		<title>Reply to Baroness Shreela Flather</title>
		<link>http://www.turkishnews.com/en/content/2011/07/08/reply-to-baroness-shreela-flather/</link>
		<comments>http://www.turkishnews.com/en/content/2011/07/08/reply-to-baroness-shreela-flather/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 08 Jul 2011 05:11:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Haluk Demirbag</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Armenian Question]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Disinformation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[European Parliament]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Headlines]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Turkey]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baroness Shreela Flather]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[House of Lords]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Suzanne and Gregoire Krikorian]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Ataturk Society of the UK]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/?p=37422</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Re: your question and proposal to the House of Lords -16.06.2011 House of Lords London SW1 OPW 01/07/2011 Dear Baroness Shreela Flather, The Ataturk Society of the UK has been...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><a href="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/Chamcha-Girl-in-sari.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-37426" title="Chamcha-Girl-in-sari" src="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/Chamcha-Girl-in-sari.jpg" alt="" width="177" height="146" /></a>Re: your question and proposal to the House of Lords -16.06.2011</strong><br />
House of Lords<br />
London SW1 OPW</p>
<p>01/07/2011</p>
<p>Dear Baroness Shreela Flather,</p>
<p>The Ataturk Society of the UK has been astonished and dismayed to learn about<br />
your question and proposal regarding a possible timetable for the British<br />
Government to recognize the so called Armenian Genocide at the House of Lords on<br />
the 16th of June 2011. Whilst we appreciate your &#8220;right&#8221; to ask questions as a<br />
member of the House of Lords (not as an elected representative), we would like<br />
to bring the following facts to your attention regarding this matter.</p>
<p><strong>First of all can we remind you that there is no legal justification for such a</strong><br />
<strong>recognition unlike the Holocaust or Bosnian massacres.</strong></p>
<p>As a historical event, it is a fact that Suzanne and Gregoire Krikorian took<br />
their case to the European Court of Justice in 2003 in reference to the so called<br />
Armenian genocide, and demanded moral and material compensation. However, they<br />
lost this court case on the 17th December 2003 and were ordered to pay the court<br />
expenses of 30,000 Euro for unfounded charges.</p>
<p><strong>This issue began with the passing of an ill conceived resolution C-190 of the</strong><br />
<strong>European Parliament on 20th July 1987 that Turkey cannot become a member of EEC </strong><strong>unless she recognizes the so called Armenian Genocide!</strong></p>
<p>Twelve years later, in 1999, Turkish Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit was<br />
negotiating with the EEC regarding Turkish candidacy and when the discussions<br />
were strained, the Turkish P.M. was invited to Helsinki talks. The Helsinki<br />
European Council decision was to officially invite Turkey into the E.U. Since<br />
than Turkey has been a candidate member and has many agreements with the EU,<br />
going back to 1963 Ankara Association Agreement).</p>
<p>This invitation obviously did not go the way the Armenian Diaspora wanted and<br />
they opened a court case against:</p>
<p>*         the European Parliament<br />
*         the European Union Association Council<br />
*         the European Commission</p>
<p>at the European Court of Justice, with reference to the European Parliament&#8217;s<br />
resolution no. C-190, demanding that Turkey acknowledges so called Armenian<br />
Genocide before being offered membership status, otherwise EU&#8217;s contractual<br />
status would be impaired and therefore insisting on <strong>&#8220;Responsibility from the</strong><br />
<strong> European Union outside of it&#8217;s commitments and without any judicial</strong><br />
<strong> justification&#8221;.</strong></p>
<p>We would like to remind you that this court case was rejected by the First<br />
Division of the European Court of Justice on December 17, 2003 under decision<br />
number T-346/03, confirming that there is no legally accepted justification for<br />
so called &#8216;Armenian genocide&#8217;.</p>
<p>Still unsatisfied the Armenian Diaspora applied to the &#8220;Court of Appeals&#8221; for<br />
the repeal of the referred decision. This application was heard by the Fourth<br />
Division of the European Court of Justice at the session dated 17.04.2004. <strong>It</strong><br />
<strong> was rejected again under the clause No. C-18/04 and the Armenians were charged</strong><br />
<strong> to pay the court expenses of 30,000 Euros.</strong></p>
<p>Dear Baroness Flather, we would like to ask you to reconsider your question to<br />
the House of Lords in the light of the evidence presented above and before<br />
taking a stance against the decisions of the European Court of Justice which is<br />
an authorised Court set up to deal with these kind of cases and is officially<br />
recognized by the UK Parliament.</p>
<p>Turkish people have a right to request that you re-address the House of Lords<br />
regarding your question and put right the inaccuracies or injustices done to the<br />
Turkish Nation. We consider your action as biased and prejudiced, and also<br />
lacking in informed knowledge and the right facts of the matter.</p>
<p>Yours sincerely,<br />
<strong>Betula Nelson</strong><br />
Foreign Media Coordinator<br />
Ataturk Society UK<br />
London</p>
<p>Extracts from the European Court of Justice decision number T-346/03;<br />
Clause 25.<br />
Secondly, as regards the requirement that the applicants must have suffered<br />
actual and certain damage, the applicants clearly confined themselves in their<br />
application to relying in general terms on non-material damage caused to the<br />
Armenian community, without giving the least indication as to the nature or<br />
extent of the damage which they consider they had suffered individually.<br />
Therefore the applicants have supplied no information that would enable the<br />
Court to find that the applicants in fact suffered actual and certain damage<br />
themselves (see, to that effect, Case T-99/98 Hameico Stuttgart and Others v<br />
Council and Commission [2003] ECR II-2195, paragraphs 68 and 69).</p>
<p>Clause 21.<br />
As regards the alleged breach of fundamental rights (see paragraph 10 above), it<br />
is sufficient to note that the applicants merely claim that such a breach took<br />
place, without explaining how that follows from the conduct of the defendant<br />
institutions complained of in this case.</p>
<p>&#8211;</p>
<p>Original  reply in Turkish <a href="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/tr/content/2011/07/08/bayan-flathere-acik-mektup/" target="_blank">here by Refik Mor</a></p>
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		<title>European Parliament to call for new constitution in Turkey</title>
		<link>http://www.turkishnews.com/en/content/2010/12/08/european-parliament-to-call-for-new-constitution-in-turkey/</link>
		<comments>http://www.turkishnews.com/en/content/2010/12/08/european-parliament-to-call-for-new-constitution-in-turkey/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Dec 2010 01:36:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>aira</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[European Parliament]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Headlines]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/?p=28484</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The European Parliament is expected to reiterate its call on Turkey to adopt a new constitution to better protect human rights and freedoms in a draft resolution due to be...]]></description>
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<td colspan="2"><a href="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/european-parliament-turkey-progress.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-28485" src="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/european-parliament-turkey-progress.jpg" alt="" width="614" height="307" /></a></p>
<p><span>The European Parliament is expected to reiterate its call on Turkey to adopt a new constitution to better protect human rights and freedoms in a draft resolution due to be discussed at its Committee on Foreign Affairs this week.</span></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td colspan="2"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td colspan="2" valign="top"><span>The draft resolution penned by the European Parliament’s rapporteur on Turkey, Ria-Oomen Ruijten, welcomes the adoption of constitutional amendments in a referendum on Sept. 12 but underlines “the pressing need for an overall constitutional reform transforming Turkey into a full-fledged pluralistic democracy, with the protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms at its core.”</p>
<p>The resolution praises progress made in reforming the judiciary and on military-civilian democracy, urging “the parliament to become active in ensuring parliamentary oversight of security forces, including full oversight of the defense budget.”</p>
<p>In other areas, however, the document says difficulties persist, citing laws that continue to limit freedom of expression, deterioration of freedom of the press and a growing self-censorship in the Turkish media, and restrictions of Internet sites.</p>
<p>The draft resolution on Turkey will first be discussed at the Committee on Foreign Affairs on Thursday. A second debate at the same committee will take place in February and the document will be brought to the European Parliament in March, when it will be debated and voted on.</p>
<p>The constitutional changes pushed by the government include measures to further curb powers of the military and reform the judiciary. The EU, which Turkey aspires to join, has welcomed the amendments and called for more efforts for further changes. It is not clear, however, if any further reform can be carried out in a near future, given the upcoming parliamentary elections that are likely to take place in June.</p>
<p>The resolution expressed concern about “lack of readiness of government and opposition to work towards consensus on key reforms” and urges the government to strengthen “political plurality in State institutions by involving the opposition into responsibility for the modernization and democratization of the State and society” while also calling upon all opposition forces to constructively engage in the reform process.</p>
<p>It also regrets that the constitutional changes did not include any amendment on closure of political parties and urges the government to bring Turkish laws into line with EU standards. It calls for new reforms to reduce the election threshold which currently stands at 10 percent, and laments that no effort has been made to limit the immunity of parliamentarians for corruption-related offenses.</p>
<p>According to the document, the government also should do more to advance its Kurdish initiative, to prevent honor killings and to address problems of Alevis and non-Muslim communities, “notably concerning their ability to obtain legal personality, to open and operate houses of worship, train clergy and to solve property problems not tackled by the Law on Foundations.”</p>
<p>On terrorism, the resolution “strongly condemns the continuing terrorist violence by the PKK and other terrorist groups in Turkish soil” and says Turkey should intensify its cooperation with the EU.</p>
<p>On the ongoing Ergenekon investigation, which looks into a clandestine organization accused of plotting to incite a coup against the democratically elected government, the document says this and other investigations into coup plans “have to prove the strength and the proper and transparent functioning of Turkish democratic institutions” and expresses concern about “the excessively long pre-trial detention periods and stresses the need for effective judicial guarantees for all suspects.”</p>
<p>European Parliament deplores vote against Iran sanctions</p>
<p>The European Parliament resolution also notes Turkey’s increasingly active foreign policy &#8212; praising Turkish efforts in Afghanistan, the Balkans and calling for a Turkish role in efforts to foster dialogue in the Middle East &#8212; and calls on both the EU and the Turkish government to coordinate their foreign policy objectives.</p>
<p>Reflecting disagreements between Ankara Turkey and the West over how to deal with Iran’s nuclear program, the document urges the Turkish government “to fully support efforts of the international community to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons and deplores Turkey’s vote against the relevant UNSC resolution,” referring to Turkey’s vote in May against the imposition of new sanctions on Iran. Ankara says sanctions are counterproductive and calls for a negotiated settlement to an international dispute over Tehran’s nuclear program.</p>
<p>It also criticizes Turkey for its refusal to open its ports and airports to traffic from Greek Cyprus, regrets that NATO-EU cooperation is blocked by NATO member Turkey, and urges Ankara to withdraw a 1995 decision to declare any unilateral Greek move to extend its territorial waters in the Aegean as a “casus belli,” or a reason to declare war.</p>
<hr />
<p>MOTION FOR A RESOLUTION to wind up the debate on statements by the Council and the Commission pursuant to Rule 110(2) of the Rules of Procedure on Turkey&#8217;s 2010 progress report <strong>Ria Oomen-Ruijten, </strong>on behalf of the Committee on Foreign Affairs</p>
<h1>European Parliament draft resolution on Turkey&#8217;s progress report 2010</h1>
<p>The European Parliament,</p>
<p>–having regard to the Turkey 2010 Progress Report of the Commission (SEC(2010)1327),</p>
<p>–having regard to its previous resolutions of 27 September 2006 on Turkey&#8217;s progress towards accession , of 24 October 2007 on EU-Turkey relations , of 21 May 2008 on Turkey&#8217;s 2007 progress report , of 12 March 2009 on Turkey&#8217;s 2008 progress report , and of 10 February 2010 on Turkey&#8217;s 2009 progress report ,</p>
<p>–having regard to the Negotiating Framework for Turkey of 3 October 2005,</p>
<p>–having regard to Council Decision 2008/157/EC of 18 February 2008 on the principles, priorities and conditions contained in the Accession Partnership with the Republic of Turkey  (&#8220;the Accession Partnership&#8221;), as well as to the previous Council decisions on the Accession Partnership of 2001, 2003 and 2006,</p>
<p>–having regard to Rule 110 (2) of its Rules of Procedure,</p>
<p>A.whereas accession negotiations with Turkey were opened on 3 October 2005 after approval by the Council of the Negotiating Framework, and whereas the opening of those negotiations is the starting point for a long-lasting and open-ended process,</p>
<p>B.whereas Turkey has committed itself to reforms, good neighbourly relations and progressive alignment with the EU, and whereas these efforts should be viewed as an opportunity for Turkey itself to modernise,</p>
<p>C.whereas full compliance with all Copenhagen criteria and EU integration capacity, in accordance with the conclusions of December 2006 European Council meeting, remain the basis for accession to the EU, which is a community based on shared values,</p>
<p>D.whereas the Commission concluded that in 2010 Turkey has continued its political reform process, but that lack of dialogue and spirit of compromise between the main political parties has a negative impact on the relations between key political institutions and slows down work on political reforms,</p>
<p>E.whereas Turkey has still not implemented, for the fifth consecutive year, the provisions stemming from the EC-Turkey Association Agreement and the Additional Protocol thereto,</p>
<p>1.Commends Turkish citizens and civil society for their support for further democratisation of Turkey and their commitment to an open and pluralistic society;</p>
<p>2.Is concerned about the ongoing confrontation between the political parties and the lack of readiness of government and opposition to work towards consensus on key reforms; urges the government to enhance political plurality in State institutions by involving the opposition into responsibility for the modernisation and democratisation of the State and society; calls upon all opposition forces to constructively engage in the reform process;</p>
<p>3.Points to the crucial role of a system of checks and balances in the governance of a modern democratic State, which must be based on the principle of separation of powers and balance between the executive, the legislative and the judiciary, on respect of human rights and freedoms, and in particular the media freedom, and on a political culture truly reflecting the plurality of a democratic society;</p>
<p>4.Underlines the role of the Turkish Grand National Assembly as the institution which should crucially contribute to the strengthening of a system of checks and balances, and support, actively and constructively, on the basis of a cross-party commitment, the modernisation reforms, whilst ensuring the democratic scrutiny of government&#8217;s policies;</p>
<p>5.Welcomes the adoption of constitutional amendments and urges their proper implementation, fully respecting the ECHR standards; underlines however the pressing need for an overall constitutional reform transforming Turkey into a fully-fledged pluralistic democracy, with the protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms at its core; welcomes the declared readiness of the government as well as of the opposition to undertake such a reform, and calls upon the government to ensure that all political parties and civil society are closely involved in the whole constitutional process;</p>
<p>6.Welcomes a number of the government&#8217;s symbolic and goodwill gestures in the areas of religious freedoms, protection of minorities and cultural rights; insists however that systematic improvements are needed; in particular encourages the government to provide the democratic opening with a new impetus, and calls upon the opposition to constructively support and engage in this process;</p>
<h2>Fulfilling the Copenhagen criteria</h2>
<p>7.Is concerned about the deterioration of freedom of the press and the growing self-censorship within the Turkish media; underlines that independent press is crucial for a democratic society, and points in this context to the essential role of the judiciary to protect and enhance the freedom of the press, thereby guaranteeing the public space for a free debate and contributing to a proper functioning of the system of checks and  balances; recalls the need for a new media law to be adopted, addressing, inter-alia, the issues of independence, ownership and administrative control;</p>
<p>8.Regrets that a number of laws continue to limit freedom of expression; reiterates its previous calls to the government to finalise the review on the legal framework on freedom of expression and to bring it, without delay, in line with the ECHR and the ECtHR case law; regrets the repeatedly disproportionate closure of websites and asks the government to prepare amendments to the internet law (No. 5651) in order to make sure that it does not any more limit freedom of expression and restrict the right of citizens to access information;</p>
<p>9.Appreciates the progress made in reforming the judiciary and reiterates its view that judicial independence and impartiality are one of the keys to the functioning of a pluralistic democratic society; asks the government to implement the constitutional amendments adopted in this area in full respect with the separation of powers between the executive and judiciary branches, and in line with European standards;</p>
<p>10.Welcomes that the adopted constitutional amendments finally provide the basis for the establishment of an ombudsman institution and urges the government to prepare and the parliament to adopt the relevant law, allowing for an appointment based on a democratic procedure which would bring into this new office a broadly respected personality;</p>
<p>11.Commends the progress made on civil-military relations, and urges the parliament to become active in ensuring parliamentary oversight of security forces, including  full oversight of the defence budget;</p>
<p>12.Underlines that investigations of cases of alleged coup plans such as ERGENEKON have to prove the strength and the proper and transparent functioning of Turkish democratic institutions; is concerned about the excessively long pre-trial detention periods and stresses the need for effective judicial guarantees for all suspects;</p>
<p>13.Regrets that the recent reform of the constitution did not include amendments on the closure of political parties, and urges the government to bring the relevant legislation in line with European standards, pointing in particular to the relevant opinion of the Venice Commission;</p>
<p>14.Reiterates its calls from its previous resolutions for the electoral system to be reformed by reducing the threshold of 10%, thereby strengthening party pluralism and better reflecting the plurality of Turkish society; asks the government to tackle this issue as a priority in order to apply the reform ahead of 2011 parliamentary elections; encourages political parties to reinforce internal party democracy and to strengthen the accountability of elected members vis-à-vis their constituencies;</p>
<p>15.Regrets that no progress has been made in limiting the immunities of members of parliament concerning corruption-related offences, while at the same time there is concern about the adequate protection of expression of non-violent opinions in the parliament; calls therefore upon the government and the parliament to agree on an appropriate reform of the system of parliamentary immunities;</p>
<p>16.Takes note of Turkey&#8217;s current chairmanship of Council of Europe Committee of Ministers and encourages Turkey to reflect its commitment to the values of the Council of Europe by signing and ratifying the Framework Convention for the protection of national minorities and by ratifying all additional protocols to the ECHR;</p>
<p>17.Is disappointed that the ratification of the Optional Protocol to the UN Convention against torture has been pending since 2005 and urges the parliament to ratify it without any further delay;</p>
<p>18.Supports the ongoing dialogue of the government with religious communities, including the Alevis and the Christian communities, is however disappointed that no progress has been made with regard to the legal framework for the functioning of these communities, notably concerning their ability to obtain legal personality, to open and operate houses of worship, train clergy and to solve property problems not tackled by the Law on Foundations;</p>
<p>19.Calls therefore upon the government to systematically address these issues without any further delay by amending legislation and by ensuring its proper implementation at all levels of government, including the municipalities; points in this context also to the recommendations adopted by the Venice Commission in spring 2010 concerning the legal personality of religious communities and the ecclesiastical title &#8220;Ecumenical&#8221; of the Orthodox Patriarchate; reiterates its expectation that the government&#8217;s announcements concerning the re-opening of the Halki Greek Orthodox seminary are soon followed by concrete steps;</p>
<p>20.Strongly condemns the continuing terrorist violence by the PKK and other terrorist groups on Turkish soil; encourages Turkey to intensify its cooperation with the EU, notably its counter-terrorism coordinator and Europol, as well as with the EU Member States in the fight against terrorism;</p>
<p>21.Calls upon the government to revitalise its efforts in the framework of the democratic opening to comprehensively address the Kurdish issue, notably by ensuring a consistent interpretation of laws allowing for use of the Kurdish language in political and public life and in education, by amending anti-terror legislation in order to avoid abuse or extensive interpretation, by addressing efficiently the problems of persons displaced from their home regions as a consequence of, inter alia, the long conflict, and by improving further the socio-economic situation in the south-east;</p>
<p>22.Welcomes the strengthening of the legal framework guaranteeing women&#8217;s rights and gender equality through the constitutional package; urges the government, and the business and civil society, to take comprehensive measures tackling the poverty of women, increasing women&#8217;s social inclusion and participation in the labour market, such as actively supporting the access of girls to secondary education or providing child care facilities; furthermore, encourages the introduction of a system of reserved quotas in order to ensure a meaningful presence of women at all levels in business, the public sector and government; calls in particular upon the political parties to use the opportunity of the upcoming elections to strengthen women&#8217;s active engagement in politics;</p>
<p>23.Deeply deplores the increase in honour killings, and urges the government to step up its preventive efforts at all levels, in particular by obliging municipalities to provide sufficient shelters for women in danger, by effectively monitoring full compliance with this obligation, and by putting in place a system of follow-up assistance for women leaving the shelters; urges the judiciary to ensure that violence against women is consistently and consequently punished;</p>
<p>24.Believes that Turkey should pass legislation introducing civil or social service as an alternative to military service, based on free choice; asks the government to ensure full compliance with the ECtHR judgement Ülke vs. Turkey;</p>
<h2>Enhancing social cohesion and prosperity</h2>
<p>25.Commends the resilience of the Turkish economy vis-à-vis the global economic crisis; stresses that this economic revival is a unique opportunity to increase labour force participation and employment rates, which are still very low, barely reaching 50% only, and to set in motion a process of progressive social inclusion; points to the shared responsibility of the government and social partners, and encourages them to intensify cooperation in order to strengthen the anchors of a socially oriented market economy;</p>
<p>26.Notes the interdependence of the EU and the Turkish economies and points to its potential for enhancing prosperity in both, the EU and Turkey, as Turkey&#8217;s integration into the EU market advances;</p>
<p>27.Takes note of the improvements introduced by the constitutional amendments in the area of social dialogue, insists however that also here the key lies in proper implementation into the legal framework, which still needs to be brought in line with ILO standards; encourages all parties of the Economic and Social Council to strengthen their engagement and cooperation to advance this goal;</p>
<p>28.Reiterates the need to strengthen cohesion among Turkish regions and between rural and urban areas; points in this context to the particular role of education and to the need to tackle persisting large regional disparities as far as quality of education and enrolment rates are concerned;</p>
<p>29.Urges the government to fully consider the sustainability and environmental consequences of its plans on new water and energy infrastructure pursued under the South-East Anatolia project (GAP) which risk to destroy the environment and the unique landscape of many regions; in particular stresses the need to ensure that the draft law on nature protection and biodiversity is amended so as to fully respect European standards, and to clearly allocate the responsibility for nature protection within the executive;</p>
<h2>Building good neighbourly relations</h2>
<p>30.Calls on the Turkish Government to actively support the ongoing negotiations, to contribute in concrete terms to the comprehensive settlement of the Cyprus issue and to facilitate a suitable climate for negotiations by immediately starting to withdraw its forces from Cyprus; strongly urges the two communities in Cyprus to work intensively as asked for by the SG of the UN to capitalise on the progress already made in the negotiations in order to reach a sustainable solution, in line with the relevant UNSC resolutions and the principles on which the EU is founded, to the benefit of the Cypriot citizens, the EU and Turkey;</p>
<p>31.Encourages Turkey to intensify its support for the Committee on Missing Persons in Cyprus, in particular by facilitating its access to military zones in the north;</p>
<p>32.Urges Turkey to ratify the protocols with Armenia, to open the border with this neighbour, and to use its regional weight as one of the key powers in the Caucasus to enhance confidence building measures and to contribute to the solution of the frozen conflict around Nagorno Karabach;</p>
<p>33.Takes note of the intensified efforts between Turkey and Greece for improvement of their bilateral relations; regrets however that the casus belli declared by the Turkish Grand National Assembly towards Greece has still not been withdrawn;</p>
<p>34.Appreciates the deepening of relations between Turkey and Iraq, including its Kurdish regional government, and points in particular to Turkey&#8217;s contribution to the stabilisation of Iraq;</p>
<h2>Advancing EU-Turkey cooperation</h2>
<p>35.Deplores the fact that the Additional Protocol to the EC Turkey Association Agreement has still not been implemented by Turkey, which continues to affect the process of negotiations; calls on the government to fully implement it;</p>
<p>36.Takes note of the progress achieved by Turkey on the energy chapter and urges the Council once again to open negotiations on this chapter without any further delay; calls on  the Turkish government to step up its efforts in negotiations on joining the Energy Community Treaty; welcomes the ratification of the Nabucco Intergovernmental Agreement;</p>
<p>37.Welcomes the substantial progress that has been made towards finalising negotiations on an EU-Turkey readmission agreement, and calls upon the Turkish government to ensure that, until this agreement enters into force, existing bilateral agreements are fully implemented; underlines the importance of intensification of the cooperation between EU and Turkey on migration management and border controls, also given the large percentage of illegal immigrants entering the EU territory via Turkey; is of the view that once the readmission agreement enters into force, the Commission will prepare negotiations on a visa facilitation agreement, easing in particular the entry conditions of businesspeople and students travelling to the EU;</p>
<p>38.Takes note of Turkey&#8217;s increasingly active foreign policy, aimed at strengthening its role as regional player; urges the HR/VP to take this dimension in full consideration and engage with Turkey for the coordination of objectives and the proper valorisation of EU interests; calls upon the Turkish government to step up its foreign policy coordination with the EU;</p>
<p>39.Urges the Turkish government to fully support efforts of the international community to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, and deplores Turkey&#8217;s vote against the relevant UNSC resolution; is of the view that Turkey could contribute to the democratisation and the strengthening of human rights in Iran, whilst coordinating its efforts with the EU;</p>
<p>40.Believes that Turkey should play an important role in fostering dialogue in the Middle East Peace process, and calls upon Turkey to resume its constructive mediation and in particular to contribute to the strengthening of the Palestinian Authority;</p>
<p>41.Appreciates Turkey&#8217;s constructive engagement supporting the efforts of the transatlantic partners in Afghanistan and in the Balkans; regrets however that NATO-EU strategic cooperation beyond the &#8220;Berlin Plus&#8221; arrangements is blocked by Turkish objections;</p>
<p>42.Calls on the Turkish Government to sign and submit for ratification the Statute of the International Criminal Court, thus further increasing Turkey&#8217;s contribution to, and engagement in, the global multilateral system;</p>
<p>43.Instructs its President to forward this resolution to the Council, the Commission, the Secretary General of the Council of Europe, the President of the European Court of Human Rights, the governments and parliaments of the Member States and the Government and Parliament of the Republic of Turkey.</p>
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		<title>Greeks of Istanbul Celebration Held at European Parliament</title>
		<link>http://www.turkishnews.com/en/content/2010/12/08/greeks-of-istanbul-celebration-held-at-european-parliament/</link>
		<comments>http://www.turkishnews.com/en/content/2010/12/08/greeks-of-istanbul-celebration-held-at-european-parliament/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Dec 2010 00:50:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>aira</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Editors' Picks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[European Parliament]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Greeks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Greeks in Istanbul]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/?p=28439</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A celebration dedicated to the Greeks of Istanbul will take place next Wednesday at the European Parliament. The initiative was organized by Marilena Koppa of Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima and George Koumoutsakos...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/european_parliament-150x143.jpg"><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-28442" src="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/european_parliament-150x143.jpg" alt="" width="150" height="143" /></a>A celebration dedicated to the Greeks of Istanbul will take place next Wednesday at the European Parliament. The initiative was organized by Marilena Koppa of Panellinio Sosialistiko Kinima and George Koumoutsakos of Nea Dimokratia; both members of the European Parliament. Professors N. Alevizatos, G. Ktistakis and M. Athanasiadou, P. Markaris, writers and several representatives of Unions of Constantinopolitans are invited to speak at the event.</p>
<p>The event coincides with the presentation of the plan of Turkey’s progress report, carried out by Ria Oomen.  Oomen is a member of the European Parliament and this marks the 5th anniversary of the start of Turkey’s EU negotiations. Every year a little bit of progress is achieved, yet the problem concerning minorities’ rights has not be resolved; the Copenhagen Agreement can not be established yet.</p>
<p>via Greeks of Istanbul Celebration Held at European Parliament | Greek Reporter Europe.</p>
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		<title>DEAD HEADS by Cem Ryan</title>
		<link>http://www.turkishnews.com/en/content/2010/10/14/dead-heads/</link>
		<comments>http://www.turkishnews.com/en/content/2010/10/14/dead-heads/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Oct 2010 12:51:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cem ryan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[America]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/?p=23370</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It's now all the chi-chi fashion rage! The prurient fashion designing male politicians of both sides are again trying to determine what Turkish women should wear on their heads. ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center"><strong>DEAD HEADS: Headscarves, Turbans&#8230;Shrouds for the Living </strong> </p>
<p style="text-align: left">It&#8217;s now all the chi-chi fashion rage! The prurient fashion designing male politicians of both sides are again trying to determine what Turkish women should wear on their heads. And where, and when, too. The secular left offers the Iranian model with a dash of hair showing. The so-called pious, ruling party, convicted by the Turkish constitutional court of being the center of the anti-secular movement in the nation, argues in the craven words of democracy and freedom. Whether</p>
<div id="attachment_23383" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 160px"><a href="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/covered-women-Istanbul-not-Iran.gif"><img class="size-thumbnail wp-image-23383" src="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/covered-women-Istanbul-not-Iran-150x150.gif" alt="" width="150" height="150" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Üsküdar, Istanbul, November 2003</p></div>
<p style="text-align: left">it&#8217;s <em>abaya</em>, <em>chador</em>, <em>burqa</em>, <em>nigab</em>, <em>turban</em>, <em>hijab</em>, it&#8217;s all part of a women&#8217;s democratic fashion choice. And the prime minister himself has proclaimed the covering of women as a &#8220;political symbol.&#8221; In fact, it&#8217;s a symbol of stupidity and backwardness. It&#8217;s a political dialogue, at the expense of the dignity of Turkish women, intended to put them and keep them in a &#8220;living&#8221; <em>kefen</em> (burial shroud). It is a lifelong headlock—social, political, intellectual, physiological, and psychological—a death grip until they meet their literal end in the grave. </p>
<p>“Be sure of it!” challenged the jealous Othello, for he must be certain of his wife’s infidelity. “Give me the ocular proof,” he demanded of the treacherous Iago, taking him by the throat. And in this manner Desdemona would be condemned by her own version of a headscarf, her handkerchief, the ocular proof of her infidelity. Except it was false, planted evidence. But she was a woman so she died anyway. </p>
<p>The headscarf issue that so besets and divides Turkey is also “ocular proof.” But of what? National piety, that’s what. It had allowed America to call Turkey a “moderate Islamic nation.” It satisfied the American need for symbolic gestures, like the upright purple fingers of Iraqi voters signified democratic progress. For without such signs how could America, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, and their fellow Americans be sure of Turkey’s democratic moderate Islamic piety? And if you’re wondering how a backward-thinking political party like the AKP came to be the ruling party of the country of Atatürk, it’s because of AKP’s complete collaboration with America’s disastrous Middle East policy. And sadly, while President Obama earlier indicated differently, he too de facto continues the nonsensical Bush administration&#8217;s policy of Turkish moderate Islam. And the ruling party, the AKP, loves all of it, particularly the headscarf part. The prime minister also encourages women to open themselves to the idea of having at least three children. Ah such loving political concern by the prime minister for the most delicate areas of femininity. </p>
<p>It should come as no surprise to even a casual reader of the Koran that the Turkish headscarf issue has nothing to do with Islam. It is a tradition that was made-in-America, not Mecca, and certainly not in Turkey. The genuine tradition of wearing a headscarf arose from women field workers in rural areas for protection from extreme weather conditions. In other words, the headscarf came about from a physical necessity that had nothing to do with religion. This has been appropriated, more correctly, stolen, by religious-mongering politicians and converted into a bogus religious duty. In fact, it is an imperative that arises from imperialism and enslavement. </p>
<p>The historian Eric Hobsbawn explains this phenomenon in his book, The Invention of Tradition. (1) One example is especially relevant to today’s Turkey. Do you think that the Scottish kilt and its fabric-coded clans were part of some long cultural tradition in Scotland? Wrong! It was invented by the ruling power, England, to divide tribes into definable groups, thus to better control them. In like manner was the political turban invented by America for Turkish consumption by gullible women at the hands of scheming male politicians. Turkish women, wise up! It&#8217;s always the same old story with you! Don&#8217;t allow yourselves to be led by ignoramuses, no matter what political party they pretend to represent! </p>
<p>Consider this. Without the headscarf Turkish women look, for the most part, much the same as any western women. Don&#8217;t bother what’s in the head of Turkish women. For Turkish politicians, it’s what’s on it that counts. In their eyes, women are merely objects, with particular prurient focus on their hair. The admonition for women to cover their heads is made by men not by the Koran. </p>
<p>The American woman presented as some sort of authority by the Turkish Daily News article entitled “American seeking a democratic Turkey” (Feb. 2, 2008) said that, for her, the headscarf symbolizes that “I am a Muslim woman.” Covering is “mandatory” and an “obligation,” she said. This is nonsense. She was either misreading or not reading the Koran. Indeed, she was manufacturing her own tradition. One may wear whatever they want on their heads, whether a baseball cap or a lampshade. And one may justify doing so or not. But the justification for Turkish women to wear headscarves resides not in the Koran, but in their blind, thoughtless subservience to political men. One may make up one’s own rules about anything but there is no such rule in the Koran. “There must be some wisdom to it,” she insisted, demonstrating blind faith and little else. How sad a limitation for this woman who professes to be a “seeker.” </p>
<p>The Koran, a precisely worded text, contains no language requiring women to cover their heads. None whatsoever! It renders specific procedures about many things. For washing: “hands as far as the elbow&#8230; feet to the ankles.” In the desert? No water? Use “clean sand” (5.5). For apostates who preach against God: “have their hands and feet cut off on alternate sides” (5:31). Regarding food: don’t eat “strangled animals” (5.3) and “kill no game while on pilgrimage” (5:95). Of course, it does admonish all people as “children of Adam” to cover their shameful parts, but this is mythological derivative material from the Bible and the fall of man (7:25). And for all its enormous specificity, it never mentions women’s hair. There is much information in this fact. </p>
<p>In reality, the Koran is protective of women. Women should “draw their veils close round them” so they will not <a href="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/erminehayrun.jpg"></a>be molested (33:57)—by men of course, the same kind of men who now seek to enslave Turkish women. They should “cover their bosoms,” not display “their adornments except such as normally revealed” and not “stamp their feet when walking” (24:30). But there is nothing therein about wearing a headscarf in order to be a “Muslim woman.” This is a manmade myth, a sham, that is also dangerously stigmatizing of those women who don’t cover. Are they any less Islamic? And why should women bear the full signifying burden anyway? The answer is simple. First, because of the Turkish government’s complicity with America’s political project in the Middle East. Second, because men, particularly pious political men, said so in order to keep women in a subservient role. What a bad, sick joke on women! What a bad, sick joke that women play on themselves! </p>
<p>Of course, women can wear anything they choose. But they should know why they do so. And if they choose to wear a headscarf, they do so, not for Allah or Jahweh or Jesus or Mary or Mohammed, and certainly not for the Koran. They do so for politicians. And that&#8217;s just stupid. They should take great care not to end up like Desdemona, torn apart by the jealous, deceitful hands of their own personal and political Othellos. </p>
<p>Cem Ryan, Istanbul </p>
<p>(1) Hobsbawm, Eric. <em>The Invention of Tradition</em>.Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1992. (2)<em> Turkish Daily News</em>. American seeking a democratic Turkey. 2 February 2008. </p>
<p><span class="removed_link" title="http://cemryan.wordpress.com/">http://cemryan.wordpress.com/</span></p>
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		<title>DARKNESS MADE VISIBLE BY THE TURKISH ZOLA</title>
		<link>http://www.turkishnews.com/en/content/2010/10/01/darkness-made-visible-by-the-turkish-zola/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 01 Oct 2010 07:23:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cem ryan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Cem Ryan]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/?p=22785</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[On 29 September 2010, 108 years to the day after Zola’s death, the ongoing disaster called Turkey received yet another Pinochet-style shock in its struggle to retain its secularity.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center"><strong>DARKNESS MADE VISIBLE BY THE TURKISH ZOLA</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center"><em>A dungeon horrible, on all sides round,<br />
As one great furnace flamed; yet from those flames<br />
No light; but rather darkness visible<br />
Served only to discover sights of woe,<br />
Regions of sorrow, doleful shades, where peace<br />
And rest can never dwell, hope never comes<br />
That comes to all, but torture without end<br />
Still urges, and a fiery deluge, fed<br />
With ever-burning sulphur unconsumed.</em><br />
John Milton<br />
<strong>Paradise Lost</strong></p>
<p>When Emile Zola published his historic letter, <em><strong>J’Accuse</strong></em>, addressed to the President of France, in <em>L’Aurore</em> newspaper on 13 January 1898, he was rich and famous. But that did not stop his mighty anger. Outraged by the travesty of justice that resulted in the false arrest, conviction, and imprisonment of Alfred Dreyfus, a loyal Jewish army officer, he appealed to the president and the nation for reason and justice to prevail.</p>
<p>Dreyfus was convicted by falsified evidence and forged documents, and was a scapegoat for the thoroughly corrupt French Army general staff. He had been imprisoned at a hell hole called Devil’s Island for three years when Zola wrote his letter. (1)</p>
<p>Zola did so for two reasons. First, to draw the public’s attention to the shameful miscarriage of justice. Second, to provoke his own arrest for libel so that new evidence could be introduced that would prove Dreyfus innocent. He succeeded on both counts. Dreyfus was cleared in 1899 and fully exonerated and reinstated in the French Army in 1906. Zola died under suspicious circumstances on 29 September 1902, “a moment in the history of human conscience,” as eulogized by Anatole France. (2)</p>
<p>On 29 September 2010, 108 years to the day after Zola’s death, the ongoing disaster called Turkey received yet another Pinochet-style shock in its struggle to retain its secularity. Hanefi Avcı, the head of the police department in the city of Eskişehir, was arrested <a href="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/LDP64D1.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-22786" src="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/LDP64D1-300x154.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="154" /></a>for writing a best seller. His book laid bare the widely suspected fact that Turkey’s highest government <span class="removed_link" title="http://cemryan.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/ldp64d1.jpg"></span>institution’s—police, army, and judicial system—had been infiltrated and indeed subverted by a religious <em>cemaat</em>, the Fethullah Gülen movement. (3) Since Avcı himself was once an eager activist for Gülen’s <em>cemaat</em>, the book has a certain whiff of authenticity.</p>
<p>And yesterday, Avcı was arrested. The reason? The usual nonsense of the Ergenekon prosecutor. It seems that suddenly the previously highly esteemed police chief has connections with a terrorist organization. Was the terror organization the Gülen movement?  Ha, ha, ha, no not quite. The Gülenista government of Turkey, also known as the AKP, paid no attention to the compelling information in Avcı’s book about their sugar daddy, Gülen. It decided on some other “terror group,” some socialist or maybe, horror of horrors, some communist operation. Another Alice-in-Wonderland group, cobbled together with false documents and bogus telephone conversations, using the latest listening and stealth technology provided by&#8230;guess who?</p>
<p>Avcı refused to file a petition suggested by his lawyer to demand release from prison pending presentation of formal charges. Like Zola, he wants to experience the whole disgusting mess called Turkish justice. He also refuses to speak to any judicial or prosecutorial officials that he suspects of being members of the Gülen <em>cemaat</em>. But Avcı says that he will talk, at his trial. Like Emile Zola, may he sing long and loud.</p>
<p>Hanefi Avcı, <strong><em>KORKMA!</em></strong></p>
<p>Cem Ryan<br />
Istanbul<br />
<span class="removed_link" title="http://cemryan.wordpress.com/">http://cemryan.wordpress.com/</span></p>
<p><strong>NOTES:<br />
</strong>1. An excellent summary of the Zola/Dreyfus affair by University of Georgia law professor Donald Wilkes can be found at:  <span class="removed_link" title="http://www.law.uga.edu/academics/profiles/dwilkes_more/his9_jaccuse.html">http://www.law.uga.edu/academics/profiles/dwilkes_more/his9_jaccuse.html</span><br />
<a href="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/51bDmejplkL__SL500_AA300_.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-thumbnail wp-image-22787" src="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/51bDmejplkL__SL500_AA300_-150x150.jpg" alt="" width="150" height="150" /></a>For those interested in a dramatic representation of this incident see the stunning classic <span class="removed_link" title="http://cemryan.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/51bdmejplkl__sl500_aa300_.jpg"></span>film (1937) <em>The Life of Emile Zola</em>: <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Life-Emile-Zola-Special/dp/B0006HBV3W/ref=sr_1_1?s=dvd&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1285843535&amp;sr=1-1">http://www.amazon.com/Life-Emile-Zola-Special/dp/B0006HBV3W/ref=sr_1_1?s=dvd&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1285843535&amp;sr=1-1</a></p>
<p>2.  “<em>Il fut un moment de la conscience humaine</em>.” Anatole France, 5 October 1902.<br />
<a href="http://www.assemblee-nationale.fr/histoire/dreyfus/dreyfus-zola-anatole-france.asp">http://www.assemblee-nationale.fr/histoire/dreyfus/dreyfus-zola-anatole-france.asp</a></p>
<p>3. Gülen lives in Saylorsburg, Pennsylvania. It is well and widely known that his activities are aided, abetted, and otherwise supported by the United States government, in particular by the CIA. The latter’s officials were signatories to Gülen’s permanent residency application (“green card”), which he was granted in 2008. For more detailed information see ISLAM, SECULARISM, AND THE BATTLE FOR TURKEY’S FUTURE at: <a href="http://www.brighteningglance.org/on-turkey.html">http://www.brighteningglance.org/on-turkey.html</a></p>
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		<title>One day Turkey will run the EU</title>
		<link>http://www.turkishnews.com/en/content/2010/09/30/one-day-turkey-will-run-the-eu/</link>
		<comments>http://www.turkishnews.com/en/content/2010/09/30/one-day-turkey-will-run-the-eu/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Sep 2010 14:02:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Media Watch</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/?p=22731</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[28 September 2010 Die Presse Vienna Hassan Bleibel, Al Mustaqbal (Beirut) Turkey isn’t even a member yet, but deputy prime minister Ali Babacan is already demanding a leading role in...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h6>28 September 2010 <a title="http://www.presseurop.eu/en/content/source-information/668-die-presse" href="http://www.presseurop.eu/en/content/source-information/668-die-presse" target="_blank">Die Presse</a> Vienna</h6>
<div><a href="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/BLEIBEL_turkey_0.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-22734" title="BLEIBEL_turkey_0" src="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/BLEIBEL_turkey_0.jpg" alt="" width="490" height="225" /></a></p>
<div><strong><a title="http://www.presseurop.eu/fr/node/85111" href="http://www.presseurop.eu/fr/node/85111" target="_blank">Hassan Bleibel, Al  Mustaqbal (Beirut)</a> </strong></div>
</div>
<p>Turkey isn’t even a member yet, but deputy prime minister Ali Babacan is  already demanding a leading role in Europe for his country. All you have to do  is look at Turkey&#8217;s economic and demographic growth to see it&#8217;s likely to get  what it wants, says Die Presse</p>
<div><a title="http://www.presseurop.eu/en/content/author/256741-wolfgang-boehm" href="http://www.presseurop.eu/en/content/author/256741-wolfgang-boehm" target="_blank">Wolfgang Böhm</a></div>
<p>&#8220;When Turkey becomes a member of the EU, it is not going to be in a secondary  position, that&#8217;s one of the reasons why countries like Germany and France are  quite nervous about our membership,&#8221; Turkish vice-premier Ali Babacan declared  at a World Leadership Forum in New York during the recent UN plenary session.</p>
<p>And Turkey’s claim to a leading role in the EU is based on hard facts. With  economic growth set to hit 7% this year, near-inexhaustible human resources, and  mounting clout as a hub of international oil and gas pipelines, Turkey has  recently moved into the European fast lane.</p>
<p>At present, Turkey is the 17th biggest economy in the world. Experts predict  that in 20 years it will make the top ten, outstripping countries like Spain and  Italy. According to forecasts by the IIASA (International Institute for Applied  Systems Analysis) and the <a title="http://www.iiasa.ac.at/docs/HOTP/2010/Jul10/DataSheet.pdf" href="http://www.iiasa.ac.at/docs/HOTP/2010/Jul10/DataSheet.pdf" target="_blank">Vienna Institute of Demography</a>, the Turkish population will be  around 85.5 million by then – surpassing Germany, now the most populous nation  in the EU.</p>
<p>If Turkey were to be admitted into the EU despite resistance from countries  like Austria, Germany and France, it would dominate policy in the EU  institutions. Even as things are today, Turkey would be the second biggest  political force in the European Parliament and on an equal footing with the  heavyweights on the EU Council.</p>
<p>Although the EU power structure will have to be gradually adjusted under the  rules of the Lisbon Treaty, not much would change for Turkey. By dint of its  rapid demographic growth, Ankara’s influence would actually increase, since the  number of seats in Parliament and the new representation ratios in the Council  will essentially be based on population size.</p>
<p>Given its size, Turkey could not only push EU decisions through with ease, it  would also be able to block those that are not to its liking. The Lisbon Treaty  provides that as of 2014, countries whose combined populations exceed 35% of the  EU population may constitute a blocking minority. That means Ankara could join  forces with, say, London, Madrid and Warsaw to thwart any step backed by Paris  and Berlin – which would jam the prevailing German-French axis.</p>
<p>What would change politically in the event of Turkish accession? With Turkey  on board, European diplomats say, EU foreign and security policy would be even  more heavily US-geared. In matters of commerce, Ankara would probably favour  free trade more than the EU members do now. Ankara would, in all likelihood, get  behind efforts to cooperate more closely on internal security – even while  downplaying certain civil rights such as the protection of private data.</p>
<p>Babacan argued in New York that letting Turkey in would boost the EU’s  standing on the world scene. “The weight of the European economy in the world  has shrunk and will continue to shrink. And only with enlargement will the EU be  able to protect its power and influence.&#8221;</p>
<p>An opinion seconded by<a title="http://www.welt.de/debatte/kommentare/article7436815/Ohne-die-Tuerkei-versinkt-die-EU-im-Mittelmass.html" href="http://www.welt.de/debatte/kommentare/article7436815/Ohne-die-Tuerkei-versinkt-die-EU-im-Mittelmass.html" target="_blank"> Gerhard Schröder in Die Welt’s online edition</a>. “Without  Turkey the EU will sink into mediocrity,” writes the Social Democrat  ex-chancellor, pointing to the rapid pace of growth there: this year alone the  Turkish economy will grow four times as much as the French and twice as much as  the German economy. Schröder expects Turkey to be the fourth or fifth biggest  European economy in 20 years. Then there will be no ignoring it.</p>
<p><em>Translated from the German by Eric Rosencrantz</em></p>
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		<title>MONKEYS IN WONDERLAND</title>
		<link>http://www.turkishnews.com/en/content/2010/08/22/monkeys-in-wonderland/</link>
		<comments>http://www.turkishnews.com/en/content/2010/08/22/monkeys-in-wonderland/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Aug 2010 08:35:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cem ryan</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Silivri is sunflower country, vast undulating sun-filled land that rolls down to the Marmara Sea about 72 kilometers west of Istanbul. Silivri Prison squats therein on spoiled high ground 72...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Silivri is sunflower country, vast undulating sun-filled land that rolls down to the Marmara Sea about 72 kilometers west of Istanbul. Silivri Prison squats therein on spoiled high ground 72 million light-years beyond the rule of law. Here, in the best of fascist traditions, the so-called Ergenekon coup case is being tried in a converted gymnasium. Think Stalin. Think Hitler. Think Pinochet. Think Turkey. Think Auschwitz.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/silivri-prison.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-21474" src="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/silivri-prison-300x200.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="200" /></a></p>
<p>The charges are vague. The proof is a hodge-podge of illegal wiretaps, secret witnesses (think Spanish Inquisition), prosecutorial leaks to pro-government newspapers, planted and otherwise tainted evidence illegally obtained. Concern about the provenance of such evidence is ignored by the court. The dossiers against the accused—journalists, labor leaders, lawyers, writers, retired military officers, all defenders of the republic established by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk—number in the hundreds, the pages therein in the hundreds of thousands. Think Charles Dickens’ Bleak House. The defendants on trial still do not know the specific charges against them. Some have been incarcerated for more than two years. There is no notion of habeas corpus. The case reads as if assembled by an infinite number of monkeys banging away on computers while juggling scissors and paste pots. The chief prosecutor, allegedly a lawyer, has the appropriate last name of Öz.</p>
<p>When I attended the session on 13 August the chief prosecutor was somewhere on the yellow brick road and thus absent, as were all his assistants. So the three judges interrogated the accused. This in itself is incredible. These are the same judges that are supposed to render a verdict of guilt or innocence. How can they be impartial if they are also helping the prosecutor make the case? How can they remain open-minded and just if they are emotionally involved in the prosecution? This is wildly prejudicial and trashes any notion regarding the presumption of innocence. More importantly, by directly interrogating the defendants, the judges have already accepted the validity of the evidence. Defense counsels were challenging the legality of the evidence but to no avail. The judges had already de facto accepted it. To whom should evidentiary appeals be made? Zeus? Telephone numbers and snippets of alleged conversation were read into the record. Do you know this man? No? Do you remember this telephone number? No. Amazingly, a listing of the prescription medications taken by an army general not even charged appeared in the dossier. What a fiasco! No corroborating evidence or witnesses were called. The session was just one long boring rendition of irrelevancies, immaterialities, and hearsay. On droned the three judges, See-No-Legal, Hear-No-Legal, Speak-No-Legal. An embarrassing travesty. Think Emile Zola’s J’Accuse.</p>
<p>In Chile, Pinochet executed all opposed to his regime in the football stadium in Santiago. In Turkey, a slower political genocide is unfolding, this one in a prison exercise hall. The victims? The heirs of the Turkish secular republic founded by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. The Turkish army, the supposed defender of Atatürk’s masterpiece has been neutered. It quietly licks its wounds and feathers its nest in incompetent solitude.</p>
<p>Yes, a political genocide of epic dimension is raging throughout the land. It reeks of injustice. But who cares? It is aided and abetted by the west. But who cares? We know where the traitors are. But where are the patriots? It’s the most disgusting of monkey business. Anyone care for a banana?</p>
<p>Cem Ryan<br />
Istanbul</p>
<p>http://cemryan.wordpress.com/2010/08/19/monkeys-in-wonderland/</p>
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		<title>A Heart of Darkness Envelopes Turkey: A Letter to President Obama (20 July 2010) English/Turkish</title>
		<link>http://www.turkishnews.com/en/content/2010/08/09/a-heart-of-darkness-envelopes-turkey-a-letter-to-president-obama-20-july-2010-englishturkish/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Aug 2010 08:34:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>cem ryan</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/?p=21136</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[JAMES C. RYAN, Ph.D. [Letterhead Redacted] 20 July 2010 The Honorable Barack H. Obama  President of the United States The White House  1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW  Washington, DC 20500  USA...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>JAMES C. RYAN, Ph.D.</strong></p>
<p><strong>[Letterhead Redacted]</strong></p>
<p>20 July 2010</p>
<p>The Honorable Barack H. Obama <br />
President of the United States<br />
The White House <br />
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW <br />
Washington, DC 20500 <br />
USA</p>
<p>Dear Mr. President:</p>
<p>Truth is still on the march in Turkey; the lies and treachery of the present government are in plain sight. But justice is dead. You westerners have killed it by your support of the AKP regime of  Recep Tayyip Erdoĝan. Mr. President, you recently referred to so-called democracy in Turkey as a “Muslim Democracy.” Religion and democracy don’t go together, Mr. President. And you, above all people, should know it. You spoke so glowingly about Mustafa Kemal Atatürk in the Turkish Grand National Assembly in May 2009. When you speak of Atatürk and democracy in the same breath, as you did, you must always emphasize three words—SECULAR, SECULAR, SECULAR.   </p>
<p>This is my fourth letter to you since your inauguration, one every six months. I have yet to receive the courtesy of the slightest acknowledgement of their receipt by the White House. I know if the letters had contained threats to you, your secret service agents would have knocked my door down in the middle of the night. I also know that when I sent you campaign contributions in 2008 I received not only e-mail thank-yous, but an international telephone call from your headquarters to verify that I was a valid international contributor. Is this what defines your administration’s standards of courtesy and openness, Mr. President, money? I hope not, but I think so. But perhaps you have read my letters but acknowledging them brings you embarassment because you have so thoroughly embraced the AKP regime. So be it, Mr. President. But what about common courtesy?</p>
<p>So-called “democracy” remains in critical condition in Turkey. Forget Erdoĝan’s pathetic antics about Gaza. Forget about his cozy relations with Iran, Sudan and other gangster “Islamic” regimes. They are of utmost embarrassment to the Turkish people but mean nothing compared to the civilian coup that he has engineered. Like Hitler in the thirties, all was done under the veil of “democracy.” And under that same veil, the jails are bursting with leftists opposed to the brutality of the Erdoĝan regime. Where Hitler used the SA brownshirts to do his dirty work, Erdoĝan hides behind the veils and headscarves of his AKP women. Turkey’s highest court ruled that Erdoĝan and his party are the center of anti-secular activities against the Turkish nation. In America that would be called treason. Like Hitler, Erdoĝan has destroyed the legal system by packing the courts with his own judges and prosecutors.</p>
<p>You should be particularly worried to know that the Turkish army has been completely compromised by a hoax called Ergenekon. Not only does Erdoĝan now have the police force and the gendarmes, he has the army too. And you are now well aware of the trigger-happy, loud-mouthed incompetence of the Turkish prime minister in the foreign affairs arena. Turkey is on the march, BACKWARDS, to the gloriously incompetent days of the Ottomans. This is what your gloriously incompetent CIA along with numerous gloriously treasonous Turks have accomplished. Erdoĝan and his ilk champion this as some Islamic rennaissance. This is utter nonsense.</p>
<p>If you read the books I sent to you with my first letter you know this. The only “enlightenment period” was due entirely to one man, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. Described and defamed as just “another ruthless general” in a recent article in the lamentable <em>Economist</em>, Atatürk used the energy generated by the Turkish War of Independence (1919-1923) to lift Turkey from the Middle Ages mentality of the Ottomans to modern times, and in many ways beyond. For example, he gave women the right to vote in 1930 and to stand for election in 1934, decades before many European countries (France, Italy, Greece, Switzerland). It is this grand achievement, by history’s most remarkable soldier-statesmen-educator, that has been destroyed by Erdoĝan and his fellow Islamo-fascist thugs. And these same thugs, who publicly proclaim women’s inferiority to men, bring their bizarrely dressed wives to receive warm welcomes in the White House.</p>
<p>Oh the horror wrought by American support! A heart of darkness envelopes Turkey, Mr. President: extrajudicial wiretapping and surveilance, unconstitutional imprisonments, the trashing of human rights protections, wanton abuse of press freedom protections, corruption and theft by the ruling AKP of epic proportion, and the destruction of the Turkish army. No wonder the <em>Economist</em> magazine feels free to debase Atatürk. Good job, all you westerners. Bad job, Mr. President.</p>
<p>But there is a force rising, Mr. President. And there are many, many Turks who refuse to take the garbage dealt to them by the AKP over the past seven years. And the force is energized by the words of Kemal Atatürk. You may not know or remember them Mr. President, but you should mark them well. As I told you in my earlier letters, I remind you again. The day of reckoning is coming. The day is near. Read his words, they describe Turkey today:</p>
<p><strong><em>You, the Turkish youth! Your primary duty is to forever protect and defend Turkish independence and the Turkish Republic. This is the mainstay of your existence and of your future.</em></strong></p>
<p><em> </em><strong><em>This foundation is your most precious treasure in the future, as well, there may be malevolence, within and abroad, which will seek to deny your birthright. If one day you are compelled to defend your independence and the republic, you shall not reflect on the conditions and possibilities of the situation in which you find yourself, in order to accomplish your mission. These conditions and possibilities may appear unfavorable. The adversaries who scheme against your independence and your Republic may be the representatives of a victory without precedent in the world. By force or by ruse, all citadels and all arsenals of our dear fatherland may have been taken; all of its armies may have been dispersed and all corners of the country may have been physically occupied. More distressing and more grievous than all these, those who hold and exercise the power within the country may have fallen into gross error, blunder, and even treason. These holders of power may have even united their personal interests with political ambitions of the invaders. The nation itself may have fallen into privation, and may have become exhausted and desolate.</em></strong></p>
<p><em> </em><strong><em>You, the future sons and daughters of Turkey! Even under such circumstances and conditions, your duty is to redeem Turkish independence and the Republic! The strength you shall need exists in the noble blood flowing through your veins.</em></strong></p>
<p>Mustafa Kemal Atatürk<br />
From<strong> <em>The Great Speech</em><br />
</strong>20 October 1927</p>
<p>Mr. President, in the above speech, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk gave his heirs, the Turkish people, the right, indeed the duty, to defend the principles of Atatürkian democracy. Not Moderate Islamic democracy! Not Muslim democracy! Just democracy, Mr. President, the same kind of democracy as yours.</p>
<p>Yes, there is a force rising, Mr. President. There is a new Kemal rising, Mr. President. You should know this, Mr. President. And you should know him. On election day he will throw the treasonous AKP into the Mediterranean as the older Kemal did to the western occupiers. You and America would be wise to abandon your support for the current Islamo-fascist government and, for once, leave Turkey alone. Or you better know how to swim in deep, turbulent waters.</p>
<p>With my deep respect,</p>
<p>James C. Ryan, Ph.D.<br />
Istanbul, Turkey</p>
<p>PS  My previous three letters and a brief bio are attached.</p>
<p><strong>CEM RYAN<br />
<span class="removed_link" title="http://cemryan.wordpress.com/">http://cemryan.wordpress.com/</span><br />
</strong></p>
<p><strong>[Turkish Translation Follows]</strong></p>
<p><strong>TÜRKÇE ÇEVİRİSİ</strong></p>
<p>20 Temmuz 2010<br />
Saygıdeğer Barack H. Obama<br />
Amerika Birleşik Devletleri Başkanı<br />
Beyaz Saray<br />
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW<br />
Washington, DC 20500<br />
ABD</p>
<p>Sayın Cumhurbaşkanı:</p>
<p>Gerçek hala marş halindedir Türkiye’de; şimdiki hükümetin yalan ve ihanetleri açıkça görülmektedir. Fakat adalet öldü. Siz batılılar öldürdünüz onu, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’ın AKP rejimini destekleyerek. Sayın Cumhurbaşkanı, geçenlerde Türkiye’deki sözde demokrasiyi “Müslüman Demokrasi” diye adlandırdınız. Din ve demokrasi beraber olmaz sayın Cumhurbaşkanı. Ve siz, herkesten önce, bunu bilmelisiniz. Mayıs 2009’da Türkiye Büyük Millet Meclisi’nde Mustafa Kemal Atatürk hakkında övgüyle konuştunuz. Yaptığınız gibi, Atatürk ve demokrasiden aynı anda bahsederken, her zaman üç sözcüğü vurgulamanız gerekir: LAİKLİK, LAİKLİK,LAİKLİK</p>
<p>Cumhurbaşkanlığı görevinize başladığınızdan bu yana, her altı ayda bir olmak üzere, bu size yazdığım dördüncü mektubum. Beyaz Saray’dan mektuplarımın alındıklarına dair, nezaketen de olsa, henüz en ufak bir bilgi almış değilim. Biliyorum, eğer mektuplar size yönelik tehdit içerselerdi, sizin gizli ajanlarınız gece yarısı kapımı çalarlardı. Ve gene biliyorum ki, 2008’de size seçim kampanyası için bağış gönderdiğimde, sadece elektronik postayla teşekkürler değil, aynı zamanda sizin merkezlerden uluslararası geçerli bir destekleyici olduğumu kanıtlamak amacıyla uluslar arası telefonlar aldım. Sizin yönetiminizin nezaket ve açıklık standartlarını tanımlayan bu mudur, Sayın Cumhurbaşkanı? Umarım değil, ama ben öyle düşünüyorum. Belki de mektuplarımı okudunuz ama onları aldığınızı kabul etmek size mahcubiyet verecektir çünkü AKP rejimini öyle sıkıca kucaklamışsınız ki! Öyle olsun, Sayın Cumhurbaşkanı! Fakat sıradan nezakete ne oldu?</p>
<p>Sözde “demokrasi” Türkiye’de kritik bir durumdadır. Bırakın Erdoğan’ın Gazze hakkındaki hazin davranışlarını. Bırakın İran, Sudan ve diğer gangster ister “İslamî” rejimlerle samimi ilişkilerini. Bunlar Türkler için son derece utanç verici fakat yapılmakta olan sivil darbeyle mukayese edildiğinde bunların hiç bir anlamı yok. Otuzlardaki Hitler gibi, yapılan her şey “demokrasi” kılıfı altındadır. Ve aynı kılıf altında hapishaneler Erdoğan’ın gaddar rejimine muhalefet eden solcularla dolup taşmaktadır. Hitler kirli işlerini yaptırmak için kahverengi gömlekli SA’larını kullanırken, Erdoğan da kendi AKP’li kadınlarının örtü ve türbanlarının arkasına saklanmaktadır.Türkiye’nin en yüksek [Anayasa] mahkemesi Erdoğan ve partisinin Türk milletine karşı laiklik karşıtı eylemlerin odağı olduğuna hükmetti. Buna Amerika’da vatan hainliği denir. Hitler gibi, Erdoğan da kendi hakim ve savcılarını mahkemelere doldurarak hukuk sistemini çökertti.</p>
<p>Özellikle bilmeniz gerekir ki Türk ordusu Ergenekon denilen bir komplo ile ciddi olarak zayıflatılmıştır. Şimdi Erdoğan sadece polis gücü ve jandarmaya değil, orduya da hakim olmuştur. Ve şimdi Türk başbakanının dışişlerinde her yere şiddetle saldırmak için eli tetikte olan ve ağzı kalabalık beceriksizliğinin de iyice farkındasınızdır. Türkiye marş halindedir, GERİYE DOĞRU, Osmanlı’nın şanlı-şöhretli yetersiz günlerine doğru. Bu sizin şanlı-şöhretli yetersiz CIA’nızın sayısız şanlı-şöhretli hain Türklerle birlikte başardıklarıdır.Erdoğan ve taifesi bunu İslamî Rönesans olarak savunuyorlar. Bu tamamiyle saçmalıktır.</p>
<p>Eğer size ilk mektubumla birlikte gönderdiğim kitapları okuduysanız bunu bilirsiniz. Tek “aydınlanma dönemi” tamamiyle bir Tek Adam, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk’ten sayesindedir. Acınası <em>Ekonomist </em>dergisindeki yeni bir makalede “bir diger insafsız general” diye tanımlanmış ve karalanmış olan Atatürk, Türk Ulusal Bağımsızlık Savaşı’ndan (1919-1923) ortaya çıkmış olan enerjiyi Türkiye’yi Osmanlı’nın Ortaçağ zihniyetinden modern çağlara ve birçok bakımdan daha da ötesine taşımak için kullanmıştır. Mesela, 1930’da kadınlara seçme hakkını ve 1934’te de seçilme hakkını vermiştir, birçok Avrupa ülkesinden (Fransa, İtalya, Yunanistan, İsviçre) on yıllarca önce. İşte, tarihin en olağanüstü asker-devlet adamı-eğitimcisi tarafından gerçekleştirilmiş bu muhteşem  başarı, Erdoğan ve onun İslamo-faşist çete arkadaşları tarafından ortadan kaldırılmaktadır. Ve kadının erkekten aşağıda olduğunu açıkça ilan eden bu aynı çete, garip şekilde giyinmiş eşlerini nezaket ve içtenlikle karşılanmak üzere Beyaz Saray’a getirirler.</p>
<p>Ah, Amerikan desteğiyle gelen dehşet! Karanlığın yüreği Türkiye’yi sarıyor, Sayın Cumhurbaşkanı: mahkeme kararı olmadan yapılan dinlemeler ve takipler, anayasaya aykırı tutuklamalar, insan haklarının tahribi, basın özgürlüğünün ahlaksızca ihlali, iktidardaki AKP’nin büyük miktarlardaki yolsuzluk ve  hırsızlıkları, ve Türk ordusunun yıpratılması. <em>Ekonomist</em> dergisinin Atatürk’ü aşağılamak hakkını kendinde görmesi sürpriz değil. Aferin, siz tüm batılılara. Kötü iş, Sayın Cumhurbaşkanı.</p>
<p>Fakat yükselen bir güç var Sayın Cumhurbaşkanı. Geçen yedi yılda AKP’nin onlara vermeye çalıştığı çöpü almayı reddedecek daha çok, bir çok Türk var. Ve bu güç Kemal Atatürk’ün sözlerinden  enerji alıyor. Onları bilmiyor ya da hatırlamıyor olabilirsiniz, Sayın Cumhurbaşkanı, fakat onlara iyice dikkat etmelisiniz. Daha önceki mektuplarımda  size söylemiş olduğum gibi, size tekrar hatırlatıyorum. Hesap günü geliyor. Gün yakındır. Atatürk’ün sözlerini okuyun, bugünkü Türkiye’yi tanımlıyorlar:</p>
<p><strong><em>Ey Türk Gençliği!</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em>Birinci vazifen, Türk istikllini, Türk Cumhuriyetini, ilelebet, muhafaza ve müdafaa etmektir. Mevcudiyetinin ve istikbalinin yegane temeli budur. </em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em> </em></strong><strong><em>Bu temel, senin, en kıymetli hazinendir. İstikbalde dahi, seni, bu hazineden mahrum etmek isteyecek, dahili ve harici, bedhahların olacaktır. Bir gün, istiklal ve Cumhuriyeti müdafaa mecburiyetine düşersen, vazifeye atılmak için, içinde bulunacağın vaziyetin imkan ve şeraitini düşünmeyeceksin! Bu imkan ve şerait, çok namüsait bir mahiyette tezahür edebilir. İstiklal ve Cumhuriyetine kastedecek düşmanlar, bütün dünyada emsali görülmemiş bir galibiyetin mümessili olabilirler. Cebren ve hile ile aziz vatanın kaleleri zaptedilmiş, bütün tersanelerine girilmiş, bütün orduları dağıtılmış ve memleketin her köşesi bilfiil işgal edilmiş olabilir. Bütün bu şeraitten daha elim ve daha vahim olmak üzere, memleketin dahilinde iktidara sahip olanlar gaflet, dalalet ve hatta hıyanet içinde bulunabilirler. Hatta bu iktidar sahipleri şahsi menfaatlerini, müstevlilerin siyasi emelleriyle tevhit edebilirler. Millet, fakr ü zaruret içinde harap ve bitap düşmüş olabilir. </em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em> </em></strong><strong><em>Ey Türk istikbalinin evladı! İşte, bu ahval ve şerait içinde dahi vazifen, Türk İstiklal ve Cumhuriyetini kurtarmaktır. Muhtaç olduğun kudret, damarlarındaki asil kanda mevcuttur.</em></strong><strong><em> </em></strong></p>
<p>Mustafa Kemal Atatürk<br />
<strong><em>Nutuk</em></strong>’tan<br />
20 Ekim 1927</p>
<p>Sayın Cumhurbaşkanı, yukarıdaki söylevde Mustafa Kemal Atatürk varislerine, Türk Milletine, Atatürk demokrasisinin ilkelerini savunma hakkını, doğrusu görevini vermiştir. Ilımlı İslam demokrasisinin değil! Müslüman demokrasi değil! Sadece demokrasi, Sayın Cumhurbaşkanı, sizin demokrasinizle aynı olan.</p>
<p> Evet, bir güç yükseliyor, Sayın Cumhurbaşkanı. Yeni bir Kemal yükseliyor, Sayın Cumhurbaşkanı. Bunu bilmelisiniz, sayın Cumhurbaşkanı. Ve  O’nu tanımalısınız. Seçim günü hain AKP’yi Akdenize dökecektir, aynı Gazi Mustafa Kemal’in batılı işgalcilere yaptığı gibi. Sizin ve Amerika’nın şimdiki İslamo-faşist hükümeti desteklemeyi bırakmanız akıllıca olur, bir kez olsun, Türkiye’yi rahat bırakın. Ya da derin sularda, çalkantılı sularda yüzmesini bilseniz iyi olur!</p>
<p>Derin saygılarımla,</p>
<p>James C. Ryan, Ph.D.<br />
İstanbul, Türkiye</p>
<p>Not: önceki üç mektubum ve kısa bir öz geçmişim ilişiktedir.</p>
<p>Published in Turkish by Aydınlık Dergisi<br />
1 Ağustos 2010                                                                <br />
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		<title>Iran and Turkey: Friends Today, Rivals Tomorrow?</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 22 Jun 2010 17:22:39 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Monday, 21 June 2010 23:37 Written by RFE/RL 0 Comments By Robert Tait (RFE/RL) &#8212; It is the friendship Western policymakers wish they could have prevented: Turkey &#8212; secular, Western-leaning,...]]></description>
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<div>Monday, 21 June 2010 23:37</div>
<p>Written by <span class="removed_link" title="http://www.eurasiareview.com/rferl.html">RFE/RL</span></p>
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<p><!-- google_ad_section_start -->By Robert  Tait</p>
<p>(<a href="http://www.rferl.org/content/Iran_and_Turkey_Friends_Today_Rivals_Tomorrow/2078363.html">RFE/RL</a>)  &#8212; It is the friendship Western policymakers wish they could have  prevented: Turkey &#8212; secular, Western-leaning, and a key member of NATO  &#8212; drawing close to a resurgent theocratic Iran whose nuclear program  and geopolitical ambitions present a full-frontal challenge to the  established international order.</p>
<p>Suspicions that Turkey is abandoning the Western orbit for a closer  alignment with its Muslim Middle Eastern neighbors were reinforced last  month when the Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, flew to  Tehran to sign a nuclear fuel-swap deal &#8212; brokered along with the  Brazilian president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva &#8212; aimed at blocking  further UN sanctions against Iran&#8217;s uranium enrichment program.</p>
<p>Coming  on the back of flourishing trade ties, the move &#8212; ultimately  unsuccessful &#8212; was seen as a manifestation of Erdogan&#8217;s growing  affinity for Iran and its president, Mahmud Ahmadinejad, whom he had  previously described as &#8220;a very good friend.&#8221; The image of a new  Tehran-Ankara axis was further enhanced by Israel&#8217;s deadly interception  of a Gaza-bound Turkish aid flotilla on May 31, which led to the deaths  of nine Turks and drew international condemnation. The incident created  the impression of a united Turkish-Iranian front against Israel and in  support of Hamas, the Islamist group that runs Gaza.</p>
<p>The growing  warmth is a far cry from the frosty, mutually suspicious relations that  endured for years between the two neighbors following the 1979 Islamic  Revolution which ousted the Western-backed shah from power in Iran.</p>
<p>Yet,  according to some analysts, there may be a sting in the tail.</p>
<p><strong>Trigger  Suspicions</strong></p>
<p>Far from being the gateway to a  long-standing alliance, Turkey&#8217;s new engagement with the Middle East and  vocal support for the Palestinians could trigger Iranian suspicions and  eventually restore the formerly competitive relationship between the  two countries.</p>
<p>Meir Javedanfar, an Iranian-born analyst with the  MEEPAS think tank in Israel, believes Turkey&#8217;s new Middle East-centered  foreign policy &#8212; which includes rapprochement with Iran&#8217;s close ally,  Syria &#8212; is a threat to Tehran&#8217;s desire to be the Islamic world&#8217;s  dominant power.</p>
<p>&#8220;Both countries are rivals for the same title,  which is leader of the Islamic world,&#8221; Javedanfar says. &#8220;And the  Iranians have a set of economic and political advantages to offer any  country who wants to side with them, and the Turks have another set of  advantages which are far more than the Iranian ones.</p>
<p><img style="width: 600px; height: 450px; border: 0pt none; margin: 0pt; padding: 0pt;" src="http://gdb.rferl.org/86FF5EFB-C746-4AF7-BD26-779BD1A441D7_mw800_s.jpg" alt="" />&#8220;I can best  describe it as the Turkish government being able to offer business class  seats to any potential customer who wants to ally itself with Turkey,  and the Iranians can offer a coach or economic class. I think the  majority of people are going to be attracted to the business class  rather than the other one, unless they have to.&#8221;</p>
<p>If that  assessment comes as a relief to Western diplomats fretting over Turkey&#8217;s  supposed defection, there may be a sobering corollary. Javedanfar fears  the results of any renewed Iranian-Turkish rivalry will be greater  efforts by the leadership in Tehran to acquire a nuclear-weapons  capability.</p>
<p>&#8220;When it comes to economic power, when it comes to  military power, when it comes to diplomatic position, Iran is inferior  to Turkey,&#8221; Javedanfar says. &#8220;So they are going to look at areas where  they are superior and the only other one where they can gain an edge  over the Turks, one of the very few areas, is the nuclear program.</p>
<p>&#8220;Turkey  is not a nuclear power. Therefore, Iran would have even more of a  reason and an excuse to become a nuclear power in order to gain an edge  over their Turkish rivals.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Likely Launch Pad</strong></p>
<p><strong>The  prediction may seem far-fetched, yet hardly more so than an article  published earlier this year by the Jahan News website &#8212; believed to be  linked to the Iranian intelligence services &#8212; that identified Turkey as  the likely launch pad for a future war against Iran. Written by Farid  Al Din Hadad Adel, grandson of Iran&#8217;s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali  Khamenei, the article asked: &#8220;Which country can hope for the entry of  its European and American friends into the arena of war, if it enters  into war against us? The answer is clear. Turkey is the only option for  the advancement of the West&#8217;s ambitions.&#8221;</strong></p>
<p>The Islamic regime has a  history of suspiciousness towards Turkey. In 2005, the Revolutionary  Guards closed Tehran&#8217;s newly built Imam Khomeini Airport for &#8220;security  reasons&#8221; because a Turkish company had been awarded the contract to run  it. The airport was only reopened after the contract was canceled and  awarded to an Iranian consortium. In the same year, the Turkish  mobile-phone operator Turkcell was stripped of a $2 billion contract  giving it a stake in a private Iranian mobile network.</p>
<p>Murat  Bilhan, vice chairman of the Istanbul-based think tank TASAM and who  served as a Turkish diplomat in Iran, believes continuing Iranian  disquiet over its Western neighbor has recently surfaced in its  rejection of Ankara&#8217;s offer of mediation in relations with the United  States. Even the recent nuclear swap deal may have been accepted only  because of Brazil&#8217;s role, he suggests.</p>
<p>&#8220;Iran feels itself a  little split off from the Western connections because it&#8217;s in the hands  of Turkey,&#8221; says Bilhan. &#8220;They feel rivalry, as a competitor, and they  would not like Turkey to be stronger than Iran. That&#8217;s the feeling in  Iran, in Iranian statesmen, in Iranian decision makers, policy planners,  and such.</p>
<p>&#8220;So Turkey, for Iran, is, in a way, not a threat but  something to get along [with], to share the same geography, not to  create any problems, but not to be overwhelmed by.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Afraid  Of Iran</strong></p>
<p>A further source of potential friction could be  Turkey&#8217;s increasing closeness to Arab states in the Persian Gulf, most  of which fear Tehran&#8217;s nuclear activities, Bilhan says.</p>
<p>&#8220;There  are some contradictions in the Turkish position in the sense that Turkey  should be aware that the Arab nations in the Persian are too much  afraid of Iran and they just feel threatened by the Iranian existence  and Iranian ambitions in the region, especially their nuclear  ambitions,&#8221; Bilhan says. &#8220;So when Turkey supports the Iranian position,  it might contradict its own Arab policy because the Arabs have enmity  towards Iran.&#8221;</p>
<p>Turkish officials argue that Turkey&#8217;s geography  and shared Muslim heritage make it uniquely qualified in the Western  alliance to win Iran&#8217;s trust. In private, they admit that negotiations  with the Islamic regime can be fraught &#8212; citing the Iranian political  system&#8217;s diverse power centers. They also say the two countries still  have important differences, notably over Iraq.</p>
<p>&#8220;We are not  defending Iran, we are looking after our own interests&#8221; one Turkish  official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told RFERL. &#8220;We don&#8217;t want  to see a nuclear Iran in the military sense at all. Our aim in that is  the same as other countries. It&#8217;s just our approach that&#8217;s different.&#8221;</p>
<p>He  added: &#8220;On Iraq, we don&#8217;t see eye-to-eye with Iran at all. We want an  all-inclusive government in Iraq made up Shi&#8217;ites, Sunnis, and Kurds,  whereas Iran only wants a Shi&#8217;ite government. We are not always in  parallel with Iran on many issues.</p>
<p>&#8220;But I don&#8217;t think they should  see us as a rival. The fact that we can talk to almost everyone, in  contrast to them, means Iran should use us to try and get back into the  international community. That&#8217;s what we are trying to do.&#8221;</p>
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<p>Copyright (c) 2009. RFE/RL, Inc.  Reprinted with the permission of    Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty,  1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington    DC 20036.</p>
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		<title>Wait and See Game for Turkey&#8217;s Enforcement of UN Sanctions on Iran</title>
		<link>http://www.turkishnews.com/en/content/2010/06/22/19990/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 22 Jun 2010 15:16:12 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Dorian Jones &#124; IstanbuL 21 June 2010 Photo: AFP Iran&#8217;s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad flashes the V-sign for victory as Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan looks on after the Islamic...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><!-- Removed the byline section from editorials &#038; rewards articles -->Dorian Jones 										| 			IstanbuL</p>
<p>21 June 2010</p>
<div><a href="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/ahmedinajad_erdogan_17may10-480_eng_300_eng.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-19994" title="ahmedinajad_erdogan_17may10-480_eng_300_eng" src="http://www.turkishforum.com.tr/en/content/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/ahmedinajad_erdogan_17may10-480_eng_300_eng.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="247" /></a></p>
<h6>Photo: AFP</h6>
<p>Iran&#8217;s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad  flashes the V-sign for victory as Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip  Erdogan looks on after the Islamic republic inked a nuclear fuel swap  deal in Tehran (File Photo &#8211; 17 May 2010)</p>
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<p><!--endclickprintexclude-->This month, Turkey voted against the United Nations Security  Council&#8217;s fourth round of sanctions against Iran. With Turkey&#8217;s Islamic  rooted government increasing its economic ties with Iran in the past few  years, fears are arising that the pivotal Western ally is in danger of  swinging eastward because of resistance in Europe to its bid for  membership of the European Union.</p>
<p>Despite growing international tensions over Iran&#8217;s nuclear energy  program, the Turkish government has forged ahead with energy deals with  Iran, expanding its dependency on energy with the nation.</p>
<p>These deals put Turkey in a precarious situation: to enforce or not  to enforce the UN sanctions imposed on its neighbor Iran.</p>
<p>Turkey has long been seen as a bridge between East and West. But its  belief that sanctions are ineffective and that there are dangers in  pushing the Islamic republic into a corner is likely to change its  relationship with Western nations.</p>
<p>Earlier this month Turkish foreign minister Ahmet Davutoglu expressed  concern over the existing sanctions against Iran.</p>
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<h6>AP</h6>
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<p>&#8220;Turkey and Iran&#8217;s trade volume is around $10 billion,&#8221; he says. &#8220;And  it can rise to $30 billion if sanctions are lifted.&#8221;</p>
<p>Iran&#8217;s energy resources are seen as important by Ankara to break its  dependency on Russian energy.</p>
<p>Iran expert Gokhan Cetinsayar of Sehir University says that in  addition to its dependency on gas, there are other trade initiatives  with Iran that are economically key to Turkey.</p>
<p>&#8220;75,000 trucks going on between Turkey and Iran every year,&#8221; said  Cetinsayar. &#8220;Now there are energy deals. You know how important the  Iranian natural gas and all other agreements and initiatives are  economically important for Turkey.</p>
<p>With large families usually depending for their livelihoods on cargo  trucks, its estimated as many a million Turkish people depend on Iranian  trade.</p>
<p>With its increasing economic ties with Iran, there are growing fears  that Turkey will balk at enforcing the UN sanctions against Iran.</p>
<p>Turkish foreign minister spokesman Burak Ozugergin says Turkey has  already paid a heavy economic price for UN policies with another of its  neighbors, Iraq.</p>
<p>&#8220;At the beginning of the 90&#8242;s, the Turkish volume of trade with Iraq  was around the 15 to 20 percent mark of our total volume of trade. The  next year, after the imposition of sanctions, this trickled down to  almost zero,&#8221; said Ozugergin. &#8220;Money is not everything. But at least if  it did work then we might be able to say to our public, &#8216;look it was for  a good a cause.&#8217; But can we really honestly say that looking back? For  Iran again we don&#8217;t think it will help to solve the nuclear issue and  perhaps may work against it.&#8221;</p>
<p>The new sanctions on Iran are expected to cut into the present $10  billion trade volume. It could possibly undermine its energy policy as  well. But political scientist Nuray Mert of Istanbul University say some  western nations may now not be able to depend on Turkey.</p>
<p>&#8220;I was inclined to think that at the end of the day Turkey will join  the club when it comes to realization of these sanctions,&#8221; she said.  &#8220;But nowadays I can see the government is planning to avoid these  sanctions. Because now we have Turkey signing a lot of economic  agreements, against the policy of sanctions.&#8221;</p>
<p>For now Turkey has remained circumspect over enforcing new sanctions.  One foreign ministry official said &#8220;you will have to wait and see.&#8221;  Analysts say Iran would probably reward any breaking of sanctions with  lucrative energy deals. But the political cost could be high because of  Turkey&#8217;s aspirations for joining the EU. The coming weeks will see  Ankara facing a difficult a choice.</p>
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