Month: September 2008

  • Turkey starts to provide electro energy to Georgia

    Turkey starts to provide electro energy to Georgia

    Amount of import is about 1,118 square hours a day.

    Georgia started to import electro energy from Turkey, InterpressNews quoted the statement by press service of ‘Electro energetic system commercial operator’.

    Amount of import is about 1,118 square hours a day.

    Electro energy is imported based on the agreement formed with Turkish side of ‘Energo-Pro Georgia’ and is mainly provided to Ajara and Guria, the report said.

    ‘Energo-Pro Georgia’ exchanges electro energy from Turkey. Ligt to Turkish side was provided by ‘Energo-Pro Georgia’ hydro powers.

    Georgia imports electro energy from Russia apart from Turkey. Electo energy is also exchanged with Azerbaijan.

    Source: www.worldbulletin.net, 24 September 2008

  • EU Schools’ initiative and change grant for Turkish Cypriot community

    EU Schools’ initiative and change grant for Turkish Cypriot community

    The second Call for Proposals under the EU “Schools’ Initiative for Innovation and Change” Grant Scheme will give grants of between EUR10.000 and EUR 50.000 to pre-primary, primary and secondary schools in the northern part of Cyprus. Overall, up to EUR 745.000 will be available. The grants are financed from the EUR 259 mln EU aid programme for the Turkish Cypriot community.

    The grant scheme will offer support to the modernisation of the Turkish Cypriot community’s education sector by funding a range of activities including, amongst others, training courses, study visits, upgrading of materials and equipment. The aim of such activities is to promote the development of modern teaching and learning methods, to raise the capacity of teachers, to improve the overall management of the educational system and to encourage networking between stakeholders.

    The grant scheme consists of two Strands: Strand A covers small-scale upgrading projects, whereas Strand B aims at long-term and capacity raising projects. Pre-primary, primary and secondary schools can jointly apply for activities under Strand A and B, if such partnership is considered as bringing an added value or higher cost-efficiency.

    The deadline for submission of proposals is 20 November 2008, 16:00 Central European Time (17:00 local time). A first round of training courses for interested schools will be organised in the beginning of October 2008. The exact time and location of the training sessions will be forwarded to all pre-, primary and secondary schools through local contact points.

    Source: www.financialmirror.com, September 23, 2008

  • New online dictionary stresses ease of use, pronunciation

    New online dictionary stresses ease of use, pronunciation

    The Turkish Language Society (TDK) is to launch a new online Turkish dictionary at the 76th Language Festival, to be held on Sept. 26, enabling users to search for words by typing in only the first few letters of the word as well as having the ability to hear the correct pronunciation of words.

    According to the Anatolia news agency, the new online dictionary, called “Sesli Türkçe Sözlük” (Turkish Dictionary with Sound), will replace the older version of the TDK online Turkish dictionary, “Güncel Türkçe Sözlük” (Contemporary Turkish Dictionary). The dictionary contains 117,080 entries.

    The older version of the dictionary does not assist users when they misspell a word. This problem has been addressed and users will be presented with a list of alternatives. In fact, the new dictionary is capable of recognizing words if the user types in the first few letters.

    TDK President Şükrü Haluk Akalın told Anatolia that the old dictionary has continuously been updated and that the new dictionary is a continuation of these efforts. Noting that work on this project has stretched over eight to nine months, Akalın said: “This dictionary will include a sound file for each entry to allow users to hear the correct pronunciation. That is why the name of this new dictionary will change to ‘Sesli Türkçe Sözlük’.”

    “Apart from showing how to pronounce a word, it is also important to develop a dictionary to show which syllable is stressed,” he said. This dictionary addresses that issue.

    The president emphasized that some words may be pronounced differently from region to region; however; with the new dictionary, the aim is to show the standard pronunciation of Turkish words.

    “The dictionary will be particularly useful for foreigners who are learning Turkish and Turks who are living abroad and want to use the language properly,” Akalın said. The dictionary was prepared by the TDK’s scientific and artistic terms branch. The database for the dictionary was developed by professors Akalın, Recep Toparlı and Nevzat Gözaydın. Anatolia’s Sefa Tekkeli and Şener Mete of the Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (TRT) contributed. The words were vocalized by Göksel Durna and Rahmi Aygün.

    Source: Today’s Zaman, 23 September 2008

  • TURKEY AND GEORGIA

    TURKEY AND GEORGIA

    Ambassador Ms. Fatma Dicle Kopuz, Director General for Policy Planning Department of the Turkish MFA and former Ambassador to Georgia, on Turkey’s position in Georgia:

    Turkey is situated in a volatile neighbourhood where there [are] many frozen conflicts, open disputes and potential crises. Turkey also is home to a substantial number of people from different parts of the Caucasus. The crisis in Georgia has the potential to spill-over to the region at large. From the outset of the crisis, Turkey has followed a calm approach and brought forward ideas for a realistic solution in the area. Turkey supports the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Georgia and looks forward to a settlement of the current conflict.

    Source: www.agendafin.com, Current issue 4 / 2008

  • Ambassador Brenton: UK expects Russia to reconsider Abkhazia, S. Ossetia recognition

    Ambassador Brenton: UK expects Russia to reconsider Abkhazia, S. Ossetia recognition

    Interfax’s Interview

    British Ambassador to Russia Tony Brenton has said he hopes Russia will reconsider its position on recognizing Abkhazia’s and South Ossetia’s independence and vowed that the United Kingdom would take part in a European Union mission of military monitors in the South Caucasus.

    “I do not know the exact numbers, but I do know that we are looking for twenty, thirty, or forty participants, and I am assuming that they will be on the ground as the European community gets its people onto the ground over the next few days,” Brenton said in an interview with Interfax.

    Times New Roman;”> “I hope that your readers will note that this will be a fantastic operation. The European community, the European Union from a standing start on the 8th of September has put together a big peacekeeping observer operation in the course of three weeks. That is a strong demonstration of the will of the European Union to contribute to getting the tensions down and to getting peace back in the region,” he said.

    Brenton described Russia’s recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia as “a big mistake, because the effect of it is that it makes it much more complicated for us to find a long-term solution to tensions between Georgia and Russia and between Georgia and Abkhazia and Georgia and South Ossetia.”

    “It is a pity that Russia said it is irreversible,” Brenton said.
    “I hope that, on reflection, Russia will think again, because the precedent we have for this is the president of Turkey recognizing North Cyprus, and it has landed Turkey for a period of thirty years with a small enclave unrecognized anywhere else in the world and placing on Turkey an economic and political burden. It would be very sad to see Abkhazia and South Ossetia in the same situation,” he said.

    Commenting on Russia’s proposal that an embargo should be imposed on weapon supplies to Georgia, Brenton said, “I do not think that Russia has formally made a proposal to that effect. I think that we would want to see Georgia having the capacity to defend itself in the future and having normal armed forces. I am sure we would not want to see, on the other hand, a sort of military buildup in the region which led to the problems of the 7th and 8th of August,” he said.

    Brenton urged the beginning of a discussion on launching a peace process “with nobody setting too many preconditions.”

    The immediate issue is the implementation of the 8th of September agreement [reached at negotiations between Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and French President Nicolas Sarkozy]. Once that agreement is fully implemented, then I hope the political tensions will begin to calm down and we will begin to be able to discuss the resumption of contacts of various sorts,” he said.

    “I know that the French presidency of the EU, for example, has made it clear that on the assumption that the 8th of September agreement is implemented, the European Union will then resume the negotiations on the Partnership and Cooperation Agreement with Russia,” he said.

    “NATO has not yet reflected on what the conditions have to be for the resumption of NATO-Russia contacts,” he said.

    Source: www.interfax.com

  • People Hit the Streets to Say “No” to the Bankers’ Coup d’Etat

    People Hit the Streets to Say “No” to the Bankers’ Coup d’Etat

    ** Please forward as widely as possible: to friends, co-workers, classmates and neighbors**

    People Hit the Streets to Say “No” to the Bankers’ Coup d’Etat
    Demonstrations scheduled for 150 cities throughout the United States

     

     

    When more than 1,000 workers
    demonstrated on Wall Street,
    VoteNoBailout.org volunteers
    were there with signs and flyers.
     

    The ANSWER Coalition is organizing, joining and urging all of its members and supporters to participate in demonstrations that are taking place throughout the country.

    Labor unions, community organizations, student groups, peace organizations and thousands of other unaffiliated individuals are taking part in demonstrations all around the country to say “No to the Bailout Legislation.”

    VoteNoBailout.org signs and leaflets were distributed on Wall Street today in a demonstration of more than 1,000 workers organized by the New York Central Labor Council.

    The ANSWER Coalition encourages everyone to tell all of their friends to send a letter to elected officials through VoteNoBailout.org today! Download and print flyers to distribute in your community and at protests in your area opposing the bailout.

    Printing leaflets, flyers, posters and banners on an emergency basis costs money. If you would like to make an urgently needed donation, you can do so by clicking this link.

    The grassroots movement of resistance to the Grand Theft Bailout is sweeping the country. More than 130,000 letters have been sent through the VoteNoBailout.org website to members of Congress telling them to vote “no” to the bailout legislation.

    The bailout package takes our money and gives it to the same bankers and executives who drove the economy into the ground. The pay for chief executives of large U.S. companies is now at 275 times that of the average worker’s salary in 2007. It was 25 times greater in 1965. The same bankers who will be given our hard-earned tax dollars refuse to support even the bailout of their own institutions if their obscene salaries are even slightly compromised.

    Bush and top leaders of the Republican and Democratic Party are poised to sign this legislation. The so-called concessions by Bush and the bankers are basically a fiction. This is the biggest power grab in U.S. history. It is also one of the biggest transfers of wealth from working families to the ultra-rich in the history of the United States.

    If you would like to make an urgently needed donation, you can do so by clicking this link.

    A VoteNoBailout
    To-Do List:

    1) Download and distribute a VoteNoBailout flyer
    2) Send a letter to Congress
    3) Tell a friend about VoteNoBailout
    4) Put this button on your site or blog


    A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition

    [email protected]
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