Month: December 2008

  • Turkey and the world

    Turkey and the world

    Letters

    Dec 18th 2008
    From The Economist print edition

    SIR – Your report on Turkey’s prime minister contradicted the real situation (“The worrying Tayyip Erdogan”, November 29th). No one can question the dependability of Turkey as a Western ally. Relations between Turkey and the United States are based on a strategic partnership and for more than half a century Turkey and America have enjoyed ever-strengthening co-operation based on shared values and mutual trust.

    On the Kurdish issue, the government has invested $12 billion in the region, and has announced a major economic package to complete the south-eastern development project (GAP). And having passed laws that for the first time allow the Kurdish language to be spoken on radio and television, the Turkish state broadcaster (TRT) will start airing Kurdish programmes on January 1st. The prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and the Justice and Development (AK) Party have formed the most reformist and liberal government in Turkish history and represent the true face of modern Turkey, where individual freedoms need to be respected for all and where all citizens enjoy an advanced democracy.

    A biased argument based on a rumour about a deal between Mr Erdogan and the chief of staff, Ilker Basbug, does not reflect the truth and misleads your readers. Moreover, labelling the AK Party as “Islamist” is groundless. The AK Party is not Islamist, but a centrist-conservative, democratic political party.

    Egemen Bagis
    AK Party vice-chairman in charge of foreign affairs
    Turkish Parliament
    Ankara

    https://www.economist.com/letters/2008/12/18/on-indigenous-people-turkey-rusal-asteroids-pensions-words-james-bond

  • Nazim Ibrahimov: “Azerbaijani Diaspora organizations in different countries coordinate their actions with the Turkish Diaspora”

    Nazim Ibrahimov: “Azerbaijani Diaspora organizations in different countries coordinate their actions with the Turkish Diaspora”

    Azerbaijani Diaspora intensified its activity in recent years and the process is still underway, said Nazim Ibrahimov, Chairman of the State Committee for Work with Diaspora, APA reports.

     
     

    He said Azerbaijani Diaspora organizations in different countries were already providing activity coordinated with the Turkish Diaspora, preparing plans of joint events and working together.

    “Today the Azerbaijani Diaspora is working in close cooperation with the Turkish, Jewish and other Diasporas abroad. I consider our activity will be extended in the next years and will give its results. The Azerbaijani Diaspora went into the attack already”.

    The committee chairman emphasized that the World Azerbaijanis Solidarity Charter focused at the meeting of the World Azerbaijanis Coordination Council in Baku today will promote the strengthening and uniting of the Diaspora’s activity and forces abroad.

    /APA/

    URL: http://www.today.az/news/society/49677.html

  • Tomris Azeri: “I do not think that Obama will recognize the so-called “Armenian genocide”

    Tomris Azeri: “I do not think that Obama will recognize the so-called “Armenian genocide”

     
    Turkey is an important state for the United States, therefore, I do not think that Washington will take any step against Ankara, said chairman of the American Azerbaijani Society Tomris Azeri, speaking about possible recognition of the so-called “Armenian genocide” by B.Obama.

    She noted that any possible anti-Azerbaijani step of any US president will depend on the effectiveness of the activity of the Azerbaijani diaspora of America. “It is possible to inform them about the Azerbaijani position, in case our diaspora is strong”, said she.

    Speaking about the Baku charter adopted this year, she voiced hope that the charter will make an important contribution to the development of the diaspora movement.

    “I took part in the second session of the World Azerbaijanis in Baku in 2001 and I remember this event well. I also spoke there. I remember well the speech of deceased Heydar Aliyev. He said important words to us: “Unite, be united, be strong and do not separate”. But, after seven years I state with regret that we have not done all things that he told us to do”, noted Tomris Azeri, adding that she has always been pessimistic and hopes that the charter will promote the development of the diaspora movement.

    According to her the Azerbaijani diaspora is closely cooperating with the Turkish and Jewish communities, as there are many Jews, originating from Azerbaijan and Turkey who are devoted to the land where they were born.

    “At the time, it would be better for us to cooperate more a greater number of ethnic groups. We do not contend ourselves only with the said two groups. Why not cooperate with the Georgian community? Georgia is a close friend to Azerbaijan. Or Pakistani community and so on. There are many ethnic groups in the United States and we are open for cooperation with all of them”, noted the head of the Azerbaijani Society in the United States.

    As for the plans to inform the Americans with reliable information about Azerbaijan and its problems, she said a large conference will be held in the Yale University in February when our compatriots commemorate the victims of Khojaly tragedy.

    “It is necessary to stress the important of the constant work wth congressmen. It is necessary to meet each of them, hold talks. The US policy forms not only in Washington. Each member of our community must meet with his congressman and tell him: “I can vote for you but our problems are …” This is done by Armenians. They have two big organizations in New Jersey and they constantly invite congressmen and disinform them/

    For example, New Jersey is a large and important state, where there are many Turks, coming from Turkey, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan and so on. There are all opportunities for this state to become exemplary for Turks.

    Few currently know about Khojaly. Therefore, I try to invite for Americans to each of our event. More Americans should know about it. Therefore, I think that the planned event in Yale University is of great importance in this sense.

    /Day.Az/

    URL: http://www.today.az/news/politics/49695.html

  • Turkish Military Opposes Armenian Apology Campaign

    Turkish Military Opposes Armenian Apology Campaign

     

     

     

     

     

    Reuters

    Turkey’s powerful generals on Friday stepped into a deepening controversy over an apology by Turkish intellectuals for the mass killings of Armenians in World War One, saying the campaign had “harmful consequences”.

    The Internet initiative, which has drawn criticism from Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan and nationalists, coincides with a diplomatic rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia to end almost 100 years of hostility. Nearly 14,000 people have signed the apology.

    “We definitely think that what is done is not right. Apologizing is wrong and can yield harmful consequences,” Brigadier General Metin Gurak, spokesman for the General Staff, told a news conference.

    On Wednesday, Erdogan said the campaign had no other benefit than “stirring up trouble, disturbing our peace and undoing the steps which have been taken”.

    President Abdullah Gul has distanced himself from those comments, hailing the initiative as proof of Turkey’s democratic health. He became the first Turkish leader to visit Armenia in September as Turkey sought to improve ties.

    Turks, including Nobel prize-winning author Orhan Pamuk, have been prosecuted in the European Union candidate country for affirming that the mass killings of Armenians in 1915 amounted to genocide.

    Turkey accepts that many Armenians were killed during the waning years of the Ottoman Empire, but strongly reject Armenian assertions it was genocide, saying that Muslim Turks also died in inter-ethnic conflicts. Western historians have backed Armenian arguments that the killings amounted to genocide.

  • Turkey criticizes apology campaign

    Turkey criticizes apology campaign

    Devlet Bahçeli:”I am ashamed of the persons who initiated the campaign.”

     

    Turkey-A campaign initiated by several intellectuals to apologize for the events of 1915 — which Armenians claim constituted genocide — continued to be discussed very vividly yesterday, with opposing groups issuing strong statements against one another.

    In Parliament, on the street and on TV programs, the subject took center stage, with some critics attacking personalities such as President Abdullah Gül and the intellectuals who initiated the campaign.

    “My conscience does not accept the insensitivity showed to and the denial of the Great Catastrophe that Ottoman Armenians were subjected to in 1915. I reject this injustice and for my part, I empathize with the feelings and pain of my Armenian brothers. I apologize to them,” the campaign statement says.

    Republican People’s Party (CHP) deputy Canan Arıtman called the organizers of the campaign traitors. “The false scientists signing it should apologize to Turkey,” she said, claiming that President Gül — because of his “ethnic origins” — was not reacting to the campaign. “We see that the president supports this campaign. Abdullah Gül should be the president of the entire Turkish nation, not just of those sharing his ethnicity. Investigate the ethnic origin of the president’s mother and you will see,” she said. There have been rumors that Gül’s family has Armenian roots.

    When Gül was asked for his opinion on the campaign, he said the state’s attitude is to improve relations with its neighbors. “We believe dialogue to be the solution for problems we have with our neighbors. Perpetuating problems is not useful to anyone,” he said.

    Arıtman also suggested that that Gül was encouraged by his visit to Armenia. Gül visited Yerevan in September upon the invitation of his Armenian counterpart, Serzh Sarksyan, to watch the World Cup qualifying game between the two countries’ national soccer teams.

    Another attack came from Devlet Bahçeli, leader of the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP). “I want to say that I am ashamed of the persons who initiated the campaign. We as the Turkish nation should be ashamed of them,” he said, adding that the campaign should be stopped.

    At Tuesday’s meeting of the parliamentary Foreign Relations Committee, deputies from opposition parties, including the MHP, offered to make a statement condemning supporters of the campaign. The pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP), however, objected to this. Following discussion, a decision was made for deputies to condemn the apology campaign on an individual basis.

    The MHP initiated this campaign yesterday and Bahçeli is expected to be the first to sign the statement condemning the intellectuals whose campaign, the MHP claims, aims to defame Turkish history. “There is no single crime or anything to be ashamed of in the honorable history of the Turkish nation. It is no one’s right and no one is entitled to demand an apology by distorting history and defaming our ancestors.”

    Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Şahin said civil society organizations can approach the situation differently and that it is up to them, but that he shares the view of the state. “I am in favor of the continuation of the policy, view and the stance of the Turkish Republic regarding Armenian claims of genocide,” Şahin underlined.

    Professor Erol Kürkçüoğlu, manager of the Turkish-Armenian Relations Research Center, part of Erzurum’s Atatürk University, and known for his research into 185 mass graves of Turks allegedly killed by Armenians, also commented on the campaign. He claimed that “Turkish, Russian and French archives show the real victims of those years were Turks.”

    He repeated the official view of the state in his interview with the Anatolia news agency and claimed that the law of forced migration was issued after the uprising of Armenians in Van. “The forced migration law definitely does not amount to genocide or massacre. With this law the state tried to protect the life, property and honor of its citizens,” he suggested.

    He added that during his research into mass graves, he even found the elderly and women holding their babies. “In those days our people were exposed to massacres and we lost thousands. These things happened yesterday while some journalists and academics today organize an apology campaign,” he said.

    He added that the aim of the campaign is to confuse people. “Everyone should take into account what we, historians, are saying. We know best. If anyone defends the opposite, he should come and see the mass graves,” he added.

    Süleyman Çiğdem, a professor at Atatürk University and chairman of the Erzurum branch of the Association Fighting Groundless Claims of Genocide (ASİMED), said the campaign was organized without taking into consideration the facts. “We apologize to our martyrs for not remembering them,” he said.

    Meanwhile, Armenian Assembly of America (AAA) Executive Director Bryan Ardouny defined the campaign as the start of an irreversible trend. “Over 12,000 people in Turkey want history to be recorded truthfully, having already signed the Internet-based petition apologizing for what they call the ‘Great Catastrophe’ that befell the Armenians of Ottoman Turkey in 1915. This public apology is a first step in that direction and will inevitably lead to Turkey coming to grips with its genocidal past.”

  • Turkish General Staff condemns Armenian apology campaign

    Turkish General Staff condemns Armenian apology campaign

     

     
     

    Ankara – APA. Turkish General Staff took a stance on the internet campaign launched for apologizing to Armenians.

    APA reports quoting Turkish news agencies that the army regarded the campaign as an act that may harm the country. Official of the General Staff, General Metin Gurak said at the traditional weekly meeting with media representatives that it was wrong to apologize.
    “We do not consider this campaign right,” he said.