Month: December 2008

  • Azerbaijani MP: “Turkish government’s recent discussions with Armenia are very doubtful”

    Azerbaijani MP: “Turkish government’s recent discussions with Armenia are very doubtful”

    Baku. Elnur Mammadli – APA. “Turkish government’s recent discussions with Armenian leadership are very doubtful,” MP Elman Mammadov told APA. He said that Turkey had its own interests in the world policy, wants to cooperate with the European Union, Armenia in terms of the relations with the United States.
    “Finally it will turn out that the position of Turkish ruling Justice and Development Party is betrayal. Armenians have never been and will never be friends of Turks. It is impossible to make somebody forget something, or compromise with Armenians. Some men even apologized to Armenians for 1915 events. This is a betrayal,” he said.

  • Genocide becomes topic of study in UMA classroom

    Genocide becomes topic of study in UMA classroom

    BY MATTHEW STONE
    Staff Writer 12/11/2008

    AUGUSTA — Common threads unite each genocidal act, be it the Armenian genocide, the Holocaust or the genocide in Darfur. There are perpetrators, victims and bystanders. And each genocide involves key stages, including classification of people by their differences, dehumanization of the victims, organization of the campaign against the victims, and a denial of wrongdoing.

    Students in Abraham Peck’s “Genocide in Our Time” class at the University of Maine at Augusta have examined genocidal acts throughout the semester, in a first-of-its-kind course offering at the college.

    The course is one of a handful UMA students wishing to study genocide in depth will be able to take as part of a new academic concentration in Holocaust, Genocide and Human Rights Studies at the college. The new concentration is likely to begin next September.

    Students in Peck’s class Wednesday devoted their final session of the semester to discussing the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, in which militia members from the Hutu ethnic group killed 800,000 to 1 million members of the Tutsi ethnic group.

    Approximately 200,000 Hutus took part in the murders, according to Peck, director of the Academic Council for Jewish, Christian and Islamic Studies at the University of Southern Maine.

    By comparison, nearly 1 million Germans took part in the 6 million killings of Jews and others during the Holocaust, according to Peck, the son of Holocaust survivors.

    “It’s a groupthink kind of thing,” Peck said of genocidal acts.

    Peck set a lofty goal for the students in his UMA class.

    “I want to change you. I want to change your life and I want you to go out and change other people’s lives,” he said.

    Janet Martucci said she enrolled in Peck’s class in an attempt to better understand history. “Genocides continue and I keep trying to understand why,” she said.

    After taking the course, Martucci said, she has a better understanding of the syndrome.

    “We’ll now be cognizant of these threats in ourselves so they don’t take advantage of us,” said Martucci, of Washington.

    Karyn Dickey, of Richmond, said the class led her to take a different view of community service, which she said can be a way of preventing oneself from becoming a guilty bystander.

    “I never thought of the fact that being a bystander is actually making you be a guilty part in genocide,” Dickey said.

    Gayle Holden, a pastor at West Cumberland United Methodist Church, said a desire to better understand religion’s role in genocide led her to enroll in Peck’s course.

    Holden said she is now more conscious about American citizens’ part even in faraway conflicts.

    “Now that we know all this information, we can’t be bystanders,” she said.

    Matthew Stone — 623-3811, ext. 435

    [email protected]

  • Greece to appear ‘sick man’ at EU summit

    Greece to appear ‘sick man’ at EU summit

    Outbreaks of street violence in Greece reminiscent of France’s May ’68 events mean the Mediterranean country will appear to be ‘the sick man of Europe’ at an EU summit starting in Brussels today (11 December).

    Greece’s image as a holiday paradise was recently shattered as thousands of mainly young demonstrators marched through the capital Athens and clashed with the police, setting up barricades and leaving behind looted shops and burned cars. Clashes also broke out in Thessaloniki and Kavala, north of Athens. 

    The protests were sparked by what now appears to be the accidental shooting by police on 6 December of 15-year old Alexandros Grigoropoulos, in a Roma suburb of Athens. Lawyers for the police are now saying they can prove that the youngster was killed by a ricochet and not a direct shot. 

    Nevertheless, the riots escalated for five consecutive days as authorities struggled to gain control of the situation. The centre-left opposition and trade unions seized the opportunity to expose corruption scandals and the grim economic situation, which they associated with the conservative government of Prime Minister Kostas Karamanlis (in office since 2004). 

    Moreover, a general strike called by the country’s two largest trade unions yesterday paralysed the country, shutting down schools, businesses and public services and leading to the cancellation of flights. 

    The main opposition leader, George Papandreou (PASOK), called on the ruling conservatives to step down and seek a solution through elections to defuse the violence. 

    But Karamanlis has ignored mounting calls for him to resign and call early elections. In a televised address on Tuesday, he blamed the disturbances on the “enemies of democracy”. The prime minister has just a one-seat majority in parliament. 

    A spokesperson said Karamanlis would attend an EU summit in Brussels, set to begin today, as planned. 

  • The Turkey-IMF Stand-By Accord: a Never-Ending Symphony?

    The Turkey-IMF Stand-By Accord: a Never-Ending Symphony?

    The Turkey-IMF Stand-By Accord: a Never-Ending Symphony?

    Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 5 Issue: 235
    December 10, 2008 03:52 PM
    Category: Eurasia Daily Monitor, Turkey, Economics, Home Page, Featured
    By: Saban Kardas
    The Turkish government’s handling of the economic crisis continues to draw criticism. Business leaders and investors have been insisting that urgent measures are needed to protect the economy. An expert from Moody’s maintained that without a new IMF program, Turkey could face recession in one or two years (Today’s Zaman, December 2). Since the previous stand-by deal ended in May, the Turkish Industrialists’ and Businessmen’s Association (TUSIAD) has repeatedly called on the government to conclude a new accord with the IMF (Radikal, April 26). Referring to the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development’s November report, which noted that Turkish economic growth might decline in 2009 and that Turkey needed an injection of foreign capital to respond to the global crisis, TUSIAD Chairwoman Arzuhan Dogan-Yalcindag stated that Turkey was the only country that had failed to take effective measures against the crisis. She added, “In Turkey we only hear speculation about the repercussions of the global crisis. The inability of the political authorities to offer diagnoses and solutions based on a realistic, timely, and comprehensive approach has shaken confidence in the markets” (www.ntvmsnbc.com, December 1).

    In response, several press reports said that Turkey was close to sealing an agreement, even citing the total amount of IMF assistance. The Under-Secretariat for the Treasury issued a statement on December 5, however, asking people to trust only the information that came from official channels about “the content, timing, format, duration, and amount of the accord being discussed with the IMF” (www.cnnturk.com, December 5).

    The same day, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told journalists that most of the remaining disagreements had been overcome and if the talks with the IMF continued at the same pace, the parties might reach an agreement by the end of the year. In response to mounting criticism, Erdogan said, “Some groups want an accord soon. It is easy for a bachelor to divorce a wife. They never negotiated with the IMF. We are driving a tough bargain with the IMF. We are telling the IMF not to put us in a situation [that would] shut down businesses” (www.ntvmsnbc.com, December 5).

    Minister of the Economy Mehmet Simsek said that Turkey-IMF talks had reached an advanced stage, yet Turkey would not formally apply to the IMF before concluding the discussions about the terms. He did not indicate whether the agreement would be precautionary—which is preferred by the Turkish government because it would give Turkey more flexibility about whether to use the funds—or a regular stand-by agreement, which would allow direct access yet impose more stringent rules on the government. Simsek said that the program should serve Turkey’s best interests, contributing to the solution of structural economic problems. He emphasized that “what is important for us here is for the deal with the IMF to increase confidence in these hard times while offering a chance to find foreign currency liquidity whenever it is needed” (Today’s Zaman, December 6).

    The government’s resistance to pressure and its hard bargaining with the IMF are driven mainly by two domestic political concerns.

    First, since coming to power in 2002 the government has made ending the IMF tutelage over the Turkish economy one of its primary goals. Having insisted that Turkey would not need another stand-by agreement with the IMF, the government is reluctant, for fear of harming its political reputation, to give in to the IMF’s demands (EDM, November 17). Since IMF stand-by arrangements usually impose a heavy burden on various social sectors, democratic governments are averse to structural adjustment programs. Given the approaching municipal elections, the AKP quite understandably is working to obtain an agreement with a minimum number of strings attached to government spending, in order to reduce the negative effects on society and preserve electoral support (EDM, December 3).

    This is where business circles are right to ask the government to sign the stand-by agreement to maintain macroeconomic stability and boost confidence in the markets. They also hope that in this way the government could be subjected to budgetary discipline and held back from excessive election spending. Dogan-Yalcindag is therefore seeking to convince the government that asking for the IMF’s support should not be seen as a sign of weakness (www.worldbulletin.net, October 17; Referans, November 11).

    Second, the AKP government demonstrates a certain degree of self-confidence that it can tackle the global crisis on its own. It views outside help as a last resort, accepting foreign assistance at a minimum level and only as part of its own program. Erdogan has claimed that several mini-projects initiated by the government were part of its economic package to deal with the crisis. Such projects include provision of interest-free loans to small and medium-sized enterprises, encouraging Turkish citizens to return their overseas investments to Turkey, and postponing tax payments (Radikal, December 5). Through these projects, the government is working to alleviate problems in sectors likely to be hit by the crisis, so that massive unemployment can be avoided.

    Commenting on a working meeting he held on December 7 with five ministers responsible for the economy, Erdogan claimed that Turkey would come out of the crisis as the least affected country. If all economic players acted in a spirit of solidarity, he said, they could turn the crisis into an opportunity for Turkey (Radikal, December 8).

    Although the government’s reluctance about the IMF deal and its optimism about Turkey’s potential to overcome the crisis might make sense in terms of boosting confidence in the economy, many analysts have grown extremely skeptical of Turkey’s prospects for escaping the crisis. Responding to Erdogan, a senior columnist, Osman Ulagay, maintained that “since the global crisis was not being taken seriously and it could not be managed correctly, production is falling, domestic and external markets are shrinking, liquidity problems cannot be overcome, and many firms have been pushed to the brink of closure.” Ulagay criticized the government’s horse-trading with the IMF and argued that by the time an agreement was reached, the horse might well be dead (Milliyet, December 7).

    The Erdogan government, rather than tying its hands with tighter fiscal rules set by a hasty IMF program, is seeking to obtain a better arrangement through a well-negotiated agreement and to use an IMF program as a tool to support its own priorities. It remains to be seen whether it will be able to have its cake and eat it too, when Turkish-IMF talks resume after the religious holidays.

    https://jamestown.org/program/the-turkey-imf-stand-by-accord-a-never-ending-symphony/
  • TURKEY’S FALTERING REFORM DRIVE

    TURKEY’S FALTERING REFORM DRIVE

     

    Erdogan Striking Nationalist Tones

    By Daniel Steinvorth in Istanbul

    Amid corruption scandals and stagnating reform, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, praised in Europe as a modernizer, is seeking refuge in nationalist rhetoric, adopting a tougher stance on the Kurds and moving closer to the country’s military leaders.

    The public prosecutor in Adana, a city in southern Turkey, has clear ideas on how the state ought to treat teenagers who protest by throwing stones. In his view, they should be arrested and locked away, preferably for life.

    Last week the prosecutor demanded up to 58 years in prison for six young Kurds between the ages of 13 and 16. During a demonstration in October, the students threw stones at police officers, shouted illegal slogans and unfurled posters touting the banned Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

     

    REUTERS

    Turkey’s Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, seen here chairing the annual meeting of the High Military Council in Ankara on December 2,

    And because such teenagers, in his view, had to be the “children of terrorists,” the provincial governor recommended punishing the families and cancelling their claims for pension and social benefits.For months, trouble has been brewing once again in Turkey’s Kurdish regions, and both sides are reacting in the customary way. Adolescents incited by the PKK are setting car tires on fire and committing acts of violence. In response, the military has brought in tanks and the courts are threatening the demonstrators with increasingly grotesque punishments.

    Turkey, which is seeking entry to the European Union, is having trouble getting its most pressing problem under control. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who only six years ago was still making cocky promises to put an end to the frustrating, drawn-out conflict, and who in 2005 was his country’s first prime minister to speak out about the Kurdish conflict, is as helpless today as his predecessor was.

    Long praised in the West as a peacemaker and reformer, a man who has made great strides in bringing his country closer to Europe, Erdogan is now revealing reactionary tendencies.

    He has recently stopped calling for “cultural rights” for minorities, and is ignoring the human rights abuses being committed by Turkish police. Instead, he now prefers the language of the generals and nationalists. Turkey, Erdogan said excitedly in a recent speech to a Kurdish audience, is “one nation, one flag, one country.” He added: “whoever doesn’t like it can leave.”

    When Dengir Mir Mehmet Firat, the Kurdish-born deputy chairman of Erdogan’s conservative Islamic party, the AKP, resigned from his position, the premier replaced him with a hardliner who prefers military force over dialogue when it comes to the Kurdish question.

    Rapprochement With Military Leaders?

    What is happening with Erdogan? Has the ambitious modernizer had a change of heart? Has he lost his desire to drive his country toward the West? Or has the refined Islamist sought an alliance with the generals after all, after his party barely managed to escape a ban sought by the country’s military leaders this summer?

    Much points to a pact between the very different partners. Erdogan has been all too willing to support a campaign by military officers to curtail freedom of the press and opinion. In a dispute between the new Chief of the Turkish General Staff, Ilker Basbug, and Taraf, a small daily newspaper, the increasingly autocratic Erdogan threw his support behind the commander.

    Taraf, currently Turkey’s most courageous newspaper, had published documents suggesting that the general staff had learned in advance of an attack by the PKK on a military outpost near the Iraqi border. Seventeen soldiers were killed there in the Oct. 4 attack, and it has been suggested that they may have been sacrificed in an effort to spark public outrage.

    Anyone who publishes such reports, General Basbug said irately, is “partly responsible for the bloodshed.” He threatened to shut down the newspaper. “Be careful,” Erdogan said in a warning to the journalists, noting that the “public peace” is a greater good than the freedom of the press. In November, the prime minister himself took action against the press, ordering his press office to cancel the accreditation of seven journalists working for the Dogan media conglomerate.

    Hard Line On Press

    Erdogan had already recommended in September that the newspapers and television channels owned by Aydin Dogan, including such mass-circulation newspapers as Hürriyet, Milliyet and Posta, should be boycotted. By that point the premier and his adversary were already embroiled in a war of words. The powerful media czar had published detailed stories on the AKP’s possible involvement in a scandal over political contributions in faraway Germany.

    A Frankfurt court had convicted members of Deniz Feneri, a religious charity, of embezzling donations from Germans of Turkish descent worth €18 million ($23 million). The money, according to the prosecution, ended up in the “AKP environment.” The extent of Erdogan’s involvement in the case remains unclear, but his party’s reputation is tarnished. Ironically, it was the AKP that has consistently prided itself, as an Islamist party, in being free of corruption and of having distanced itself from the sleaze of former administrations.

    Erdogan, increasingly irritable and thin-skinned, appears to be running out of luck. Even the economy, previously the greatest plus in the AKP government’s six-year tenure, is slowing down. For weeks, cabinet ministers and even President Abdullah Gül had led the world to believe that Turkey would remain largely untouched by the global financial crisis. No one should be alarmed, they said, because the country had gone through its own severe crisis in 2001 and, after that, had taken decisive steps to prevent it from happening again.

    Economic Slowdown Could Hurt Prospects

    But since then Ankara has entered into surprise negotiations with the International Monetary Fund for billions of euros in new loans. Hundreds of thousands of job are in jeopardy, experts warn. Once economic growth declines, the government can expect to lose some of its support next year. Pollsters predict that the AKP will get only 34 percent of the vote in local elections in March, compared to 47 percent in the 2007 parliamentary election.

    “They are being exposed in the current crisis, the so-called reformers,” says Cengiz Aktar, a political scientist and well-known Erdogan critic, who accuses the government of incompetence and mediocrity. “In reality, the groundwork for most of the economic reforms was already laid before the AKP came into power.” And political reforms, says Aktar, were only implemented between 2002 and 2004 — in other words, until Turkey was granted candidate status for EU membership.

    Since then, the only attempts at reform have favored devout wearers of the headscarf. This, says Aktar, is why he is not surprised by Erdogan’s growing emphasis on nationalism and Islam. Instead, Aktar characterizes the changes taking place in Turkey as a “restoration” and, therefore, as a “normalization of Turkish conditions.” There have always been marriages of convenience between the mosque and the barracks in Turkey. This, says Aktar, is why it is all the more important that Europe does not abandon the country now.

    Aktar believes that unless Brussels applies pressure on Turkey to continue with reforms, Erdogan’s chauvinistic tendencies will only increase. And then, he warns, “we will soon be dealing with a Turkish Bonaparte.”

    Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan

    URL:

    • https://www.spiegel.de/international/world/turkey-s-faltering-reform-drive-erdogan-striking-nationalist-tones-a-595430.html

     

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  • US Ambassador to Azerbaijan on promises given to Armenians

    US Ambassador to Azerbaijan on promises given to Armenians

    Baku. Lachin Sultanova–APA. “New Administration will give attention to South Caucasus region. This part of the world is of strategic importance and I think that measures taken by the former administration will be continued”, Anne Derse, the US Ambassador to Azerbaijan said at the meeting of Azerbaijani Women Journalists Union, APA reports.
    The diplomat answering questions on Barack Obama’s promises given to Armenians during pre-election campaign noted that any U.S President investigated the case in terms of national security while considering it.
    “President Obama visited Azerbaijan and this is a remarkable experience. High-ranking representatives of the US visited Azerbaijan in recent years. We remember the visit of Vice-President Dick Cheney very well. Everybody visiting Azerbaijan sees reality and understands difficulties and importance of the region. I want to say on my behalf that I will work with new administration with same loyalty as it was before.