Month: May 2009

  • Fethullah Gulen: Infiltrating the U.S.

    Fethullah Gulen: Infiltrating the U.S.


    fetullah
    An ACT! for America Exclusive
    by Guy Rodgers

    www.actforamerica.org

    Fethullah Gulen: Infiltrating the U.S.  Through Our Charter Schools?
    For some time we have been researching a Turkish-based Islamist movement that has a significant network here in the United States. Given Turkey’s history of secular, democratic government, and some of the remarks made by President Obama in his recent speech there, many of our members and other readers will likely be surprised by what we have found.

    I suspect that even many who are well-read on the issue of Islamism are unfamiliar with the Fethullah Gulen Community (FGC), a movement a February 2009 article in the respected Jane’s Islamic Affairs Analyst labeled “Turkey’s third power.” Indeed, the article noted in its Key Points: “Turkey’s Islamist Gulen movement, while a powerful political force, is largely an unfamiliar entity to the West.”

    The FGC is named after Fethullah Gulen, a Turkish imam who now lives in the United States. He fled Turkey in 1998 to avoid prosecution on charges that he was attempting to undermine Turkey’s secular government with the objective of establish an Islamic government. Since Gulen’s arrival here the Department of Homeland Security tried to deport him, but he successfully fought the effort in federal court because it was ruled he was an individual with “extraordinary ability in the field of education” – although he has no formal education training.

    The FGC emerged in Turkey in the 1970’s. According to the Jane’s Islamic Affairs Analyst piece, Gulen stated that “in order to reach the ideal Muslim society ‘every method and path is acceptable, [including] lying to people.‘” This public acknowledgement of taqiyya (employing deception to advance Islam) is highly pertinent to Gulen’s activities here in the United States.

    A recent article in the Middle East Quarterly by Rachel Sharon-Kreskin titled “Fethullah Gulen’s Grand Ambition” sheds light on Gulen’s background:

    Gülen was a student and follower of Sheikh Sa’id-i Kurdi (1878-1960), also known as Sa’id-i Nursi, the founder of the Islamist Nur (light) movement. After Turkey’s war of independence, Kurdi demanded, in an address to the new parliament, that the new republic be based on Islamic principles. He turned against Atatürk and his reforms and against the new modern, secular, Western republic.

    Sharon-Kreskin documents how the FGC, in league with Turkey’s ruling party, Adalet ve Kalkinma Partisi (AKP), has been successful in gradually moving Turkey away from its secular democratic governance, towards an Islamist state governed by Shariah law, and reorienting itself toward Iran. What’s more, other evidence suggests that Gulen’s ultimate goal may well be the resurrection of the Ottoman Empire so as to reinstate the Islamic Caliph. Clearly this has immensely serious ramifications for geo-political affairs in the Middle East as well as for the continued rise of radical Islam throughout the world.

    What makes Gulen particularly dangerous is his strategic and tactical means to achieving this goal. He oversees a worldwide network of businesses, schools, foundations and media outlets, with an estimated budget of 25 billion dollars. Here’s what Gulen had to say in a sermon in 1999 aired on Turkish television:

    You must move in the arteries of the system without anyone noticing your existence until you reach all the power centers … until the conditions are ripe, they [the followers] must continue like this. If they do something prematurely, the world will crush our heads, and Muslims will suffer everywhere, like in the tragedies in Algeria, like in 1982 [in] Syria … like in the yearly disasters and tragedies in Egypt. The time is not yet right. You must wait for the time when you are complete and conditions are ripe, until we can shoulder the entire world and carry it … You must wait until such time as you have gotten all the state power, until you have brought to your side all the power of the constitutional institutions in Turkey … Until that time, any step taken would be too early-like breaking an egg without waiting the full forty days for it to hatch. It would be like killing the chick inside. The work to be done is [in] confronting the world. Now, I have expressed my feelings and thoughts to you all-in confidence … trusting your loyalty and secrecy. I know that when you leave here-[just] as you discard your empty juice boxes, you must discard the thoughts and the feelings that I expressed here.

    Simply put, he is brilliantly and patiently employing taqiyya on a global scale, because this strategic approach is not confined to Turkey.

    Here in the U.S. the FGC runs over 90 charter public schools in at least 20 states. This was brought to our attention by ACT! for America members who actually have relatives who teach in one of these schools, an illustration of the growing reach of ACT! for America’s “eyes and ears” across our country. For obvious reasons we cannot reveal the identity of our sources.

    Our readers may be familiar with the numerous emails we have released regarding the operation of the Tarek ibn Zayed Academy (TiZA), a publicly funded charter school in Minnesota that is so blatantly Islamic in nature that the Minnesota Department of Education issued two citations against it and the ACLU is suing it. FGC schools appear to be very different, and reflect the Gulen’s exhortation to “move in the arteries of the system without anyone noticing your existence until you reach all the power centers…”

    Indeed, the fact that so little has been written about the FGC schools here in the U.S., as well as the accolades that have been accorded the FGC as a model of “moderation” by some in our government, would appear to confirm that the FGC and its schools are doing an excellent job of heeding Gulen’s exhortation and masking their true intent.

    During several discussions and emails with our sources inside FGC schools, I asked specifically if the schools promote Islam in the way that the TiZA school in Minnesota does. I was told that this was not the case in the schools these sources were familiar with. However, one particular school (and likely numerous others) appears to be in violation of state law because the school’s affidavit for its charter does not acknowledge that it is connected with a religious institution or group. In other words, those who chartered this school practiced taqiyya by hiding this fact. (Enterprising readers may want to research this with respect to FGC schools around the country. For a list of the FGC network in America and its schools, click here).

    What’s more, the schools appear to be a source of recruitment for outside school activities sponsored by the FGC, such as summer camps, which would be in keeping with the pattern of recruitment of members and followers that FGC employs worldwide, according to both the Jane’s and Middle East Quarterly articles.

    As a further example of the use of taqiyya, the Jane’s article gives examples of how FGC’s Turkish language media outlet Zaman runs stories with information and headlines that are missing from the English language media outlet Today’s Zaman. This practice of two different messages, one to the indigenous Islamic population and one to the West, is common in the Islamic world, and has led many in the West, including political leaders and academics, to be misled as to the true intentions of Islamists.

    In building a sophisticated and well-funded worldwide network, including a substantial presence here in the U.S., Fethullah Gulen is following in the footsteps and exhortations of Mohammed, who counseled patience and deception as a means of overcoming the infidel when the power of the infidel was greater than the power of the umma, the Muslim community. In a very real sense this is as or more sinister than the frontal assault strategy of Islamist organizations such as al Qaeda and Hamas, because, like the proverbial “frog in the kettle,” we are incrementally “boiled alive” without realizing it.

    For years American Congress for Truth, and now its “sister” organization ACT! for America, have been ringing the alarm bells about what is variously known as “cultural jihad,” “creeping jihad,” “stealth jihad,” and “creeping shariah.” Much of Europe and Great Britain has been Islamized through this process, a process that invariably does not lead to peaceful coexistence between Muslims and non-Muslims, but leads to Islamic self-segregation, increased Islamist militancy and aggression, and the eventual forced imposition of Islamic shariah law within the society.

    The FGC charter schools in America may outwardly appear innocuous, but they are serving a greater and long-range objective of Fethullah Gulen. We in the West need to be less gullible and more discerning when it comes to the elements of “stealth jihad” within our midst.

    Guy Rodgers is Executive Director of ACT! for America.

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    American Congress for Truth
    P.O. Box 6884
    Virginia Beach, VA 23456
    [email protected]

    Every day, American Congress for Truth (ACT) a 501c3 non-profit organization is on the front lines fighting for you in meeting with politicians, decision makers, speaking on college campuses and planning events to educate and inform the public about the threat of Islamofascism
  • An aspect of the misfortune to which Kerkuk region is exposed

    An aspect of the misfortune to which Kerkuk region is exposed

    An aspect of the misfortune to which Kerkuk region is exposed: Satellite Maps of 2002 is compared with maps of 2007 

    Date: May 05, 2009

    No: Rep.9-E0509

    In the early morning of Thursday 15 April 2009, the inhabitants of the oldest Kerkuk neighborhood, Musalla, were awakened by the sound of bulldozers destroying the wall and graves of the Seyyid Kızı part of the large Musalla Turkmen graveyard.[1] The Musalla graveyard is the oldest graveyard in Kerkuk and comprises thousands of graves including those of many celebrated Turkmen. Inhabitants flocked to the area, stopping the demolition before complaining to the police office. Nevertheless, about 15 graves were destroyed.

    After investigation, it was found that an official contract was given by the chief of the Investment Commission of Endowments directorate of Kerkuk, a Kurd from Kerkuk, for the building of a commercial complex in that part of the graveyard.[2] The Commission director [3] is a Peshmerga Kurd brought from the province of Sulaymaniya during the distribution of senior posts between members of the Kurdish KDP and PUK political parties directly after occupation. The person who was given contract is a Kurd from Sulaymaniya province, too.

    This is part of policy of the Kurdish political parties, who remain alone in administering Kerkuk since the occupation in 2003, to eradicate the Turkmen characteristics of the region in their attempts to Kurdify the province, control the huge oil reserve and annex it to the Kurdish region. The names of streets, bridges, villages and sub-districts were changed to Kurdish. The signboards inside governmental offices and hospitals were changed to Kurdish, even though a large part of the Kerkuk population cannot read it. Sculptures of prominent Kurds, such as, killed-Peshmerga militants, have also been erected on the streets.

    In 2003, the first Kurds-dominated Kerkuk city council has dramatically Kurdified the administration, which was mainly distributed between the two Kurdish parties, KDP and PUK. Approximately 10,000 staff was appointed to Kerkuk governmental offices, of whom almost 80% were Kurds brought from Duhok, Sulaymaniya and Erbil. Security forces have been completely replaced by Kurds. They dominate the police system. Thousands of Peshmergas militants from other Kurdish regions are also distributed in Kerkuk province.

    Kurdish political parties have also settled tens of thousands of Kurdish families in Kerkuk province. Kerkuk’s population, which was 870,000 at the day of occupation, became more than 1,300,000, [4] Moreover, more than 100,000 Arabs have either left Kerkuk or been expelled by the Kurdish Peshmerga militants. About thirty Arab villages in the south and south west Kerkuk was evacuated. The population of some Kurdish villages has been increased several-fold, for example, Kara Injir and Shuwan.

    The incoming families have built on almost every piece of undeveloped land within Kerkuk city. [Table 1] Many large Kurdish neighborhoods and shopping centers have been erected, particularly to the east and north of Kerkuk city. [Map 1 and 2] The Kerkuk city area is increased about 20 km2 [Map 3]. These lands mostly belonged to Turkmen and also to municipality and government. The number of complaint cases which have been presented to the Property Claim Commission (PCC) in Kerkuk is about 40,000, about 80% of which are of Turkmen. The Kurdified administration of Kerkuk has continually hampered the decisions of the PCC. Today, about 20% of the cases are only completed. Many of those who win the decision of the PCC still could not get their lands.

    UNAMI office in Kerkuk

    The degree to which the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) is involved in Kerkuk issues requires close monitoring of the situation in the province. Furthermore, UNAMI is going to make a historical decision on Kerkuk which is going to influence deeply all the Iraqi communities and the future of Iraq. Despite numerous calls for a UNAMI representation in Kerkuk from Arab and Turkmen groups, it was before about a year such a presence was established and it remains under resourced and challenged in meeting the requirements of the multifaceted Kerkuk crisis.

    The UNAMI representative lacks a permanent staff, and staff members are frequently replaced with others and work only two or three days in a week. Rarely can two staff members be found at the same time. There is no bureau assigned for the UNAMI in Kerkuk. A room had been assigned to UNAMI staff during the meetings of the Kerkuk Article 23 Commission in the building of the Kerkuk governorate. At the time Arab and Kurd, but not Turkmen, translators were present – making Turkmen authorities worry about the accuracy of the translation of such historical negotiations.

    Recommendations:

    ü To the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq

    · Complete the institution of UNAMI office in Kerkuk and provide it with sufficient staff.

    · Provide the office with experts in human rights, public relations, minority issues, urbanization engineers and international law.

    · Provide a Turkmen – English translator

    ü The Iraqi government

    · Provide the requirements to the Kerkuk Article 23 Commission to enable the commissioners to realize their mission

    · Realize the decision, which you made, to evacuate the governmental buildings in Kerkuk

    · Replace Peshmerga militants with Iraqi army units throughout Kerkuk province

    ü The Kurdish parties

    · Abandon the inflexible policies to assist the solution of Kerkuk problem and facilitate the reconciliation processes which certainly quicken building of Democratic Iraq and establishment of regional stability.

    ü The international civil society organizations: Human Rights Watch & Amnesty International

    · Open offices in Kerkuk to closely observe the human rights situation and huge demographical changes [Map 1, 2 and 3] and publish regular reports

    ü To the international community and authorities

    · Actively support the decisions of Iraqi government and the Iraqi parliament, particularly, on Kerkuk, and provide or withdraw your support accordingly.

    ü The Turkmen and Arab groups in Kerkuk

    · Institute a well developed press office staffed with English speaking journalists to enlighten the international community about:

    o Developments in Kerkuk issues, particularly, that of the Kerkuk commission

    o The huge human rights violations since occupation, the dramatic demographic changes and the Kurdish domination of almost all power centers in Kerkuk

    ______________________________

    References:

    1. For centuries, Musalla graveyard is visited every Thursday by thousands of females of Kerkuk. Whilst such phenomenon shows the degree of importance which Kerkuk people give to the dead, at the same time, it is considered one of the very few social activities for females in such a conservative community.

    2. Kurdish families had already built tens of houses at the east and north of Musalla graveyard.

    3. It is well known that almost all the finances and lands which the directorate of endowments of Kerkuk province possesses have been donated by Turkmen.

    4. The numbers of both the Kurds and the Turkmen, who had been exiled from Kerkuk province during the Arabification policies of Ba’ath regime, were 100,000 according to the United States Special Committee for Refugees and 120,000 according to the Human Rights Watch and the Kurdish parties. It should be known that a large number of the expelled Kurdish families were not born in Kerkuk, the came to Kerkuk from other Kurdish province.

    Table No. 1. Estimated Turkmen, municipality and government lands which were appropriated by Kurdish militias and families after occupation

    Numbers
    Address

    4.784.200 m2

    Huge lands has been appropriated and built by Kurdish Peshmerga and Kurdish families:

    ü 4.085.000 m2 Second Army Corps Complexes [Map No. 4 and 5]

    ü 237.500 m2 Khalid Army center (Muasker Khalid)

    ü 305.700 m2 East and North of Musalla Graveyard [Map No. 6 and 7]

    ü 156.000 m2 Arasa Region

    1,915 Houses
    Houses of Army Corps opposite al-Hurriyya Airport:

    ü 30 Houses (300m2 each house)

    ü 30 Houses (300m2 each house)

    ü 94 Houses (450m2 each house)

    Officers Houses / opposite Army Corps:

    ü 40 Houses (400m2 each house)

    ü 23 Houses (400m2 each house)

    Officers Houses / Hay al-Wasiti:

    ü 122 Houses (400m2 each house)

    Non commissioned Officer Houses / opposite Army Corps:

    ü 124 Houses (170m2 each house)

    ü 80 Houses (150m2 each house)

    Army Flats / opposite Army Corps:

    ü 48 Houses (170m2 each house)

    The Houses of Military Bases / opposite al-Hurriyya Airport:

    ü 39 Houses (600m2 each house)

    ü 15 Houses (600m2 each house)

    Houses of Store of foodstuffs

    ü 120 houses

    Houses built on 13800 M2 Lands facing Sahat al-Tayaran

    ü 700 houses

    Houses built near al-Shamal Garage in front of Suq al-Hasir

    ü 200 houses

    Houses built at the side of Gas al-Shamal and given to Kurdish families

    ü 250 houses

    21 buildings
    Baath Party team Centers

    ü al-Arapha (Nearby the Arapha market center) – 1 floor

    ü Domiz Quarter / Behind the Dispensary by Kurdish Democratic Shabiba Union – 2 floors

    ü Iskan Quarter by a Kurdish organization – 2 floors.

    ü 7 Nisan by Kurdish families expelled from Kerkuk – 2 floors (300 m2)

    ü Shahit Mahir Center by Kurdish Shabibat Babagurgur Center – 2 floors.

    ü al-Nakhwa by Congress for the Freedom of Kurdistan / 2 floor

    ü al-Hay al-Askeri – 1 floor

    ü al-Qadisiyya al-Ula on the main street – 2 (375 m2)

    ü al-Qadisiyya al-Thaniyya – 1 (348.66 m2)

    ü Martyr Aoda in al-Qadisiyya al-Thaniyya 1 (359.36 m2)

    ü al-Hurriyya al-Ula – 2 floors

    ü al-Hurriyya al-Thaniya – 1 floor

    ü Hay al-Nasr al-Ula (412.5 m2)

    ü Hay al-Nasr al-Thaniyya – 2 floors

    ü Hay al-Hujjaj – 1 floor

    ü al-Uruba Quarter – 1 floor

    ü al-Shorja – 2 floors

    ü Hay Girnata – 1 (800m2)

    ü Sakr al-Arab – 1 floor

    ü 1 Mart – 2 floors

    ü Hay al-Nidaa – 2 floors

    15 buildings
    Government Buildings: (Few of these buildings were evacuated)

    ü General Security Directorate/close to Kerkuk Secondary School–4 floors

    ü Building of store of Ministry of defense – 1 floors

    ü al-Qudus Fidaiyyi Saddam Center in Hay al-Nur al-Thaniyya – 1 floor

    ü al-Mansur Security Directorate – 1 floor

    ü Military Guest Hose / Atlas Street 1 (800m2)

    ü Mandhuma al-Sharqiyya Lial-Istithmarat – 2 floors

    ü Kerkuk Recruitment (Tajnid) Directorate – 1 floor

    ü Arapha Security Office -1 floor

    ü Kerkuk Inspection (Jawazat) Directorate by Kurdish al-Taakhi Association – 1 floor.

    ü Iraqi Women Union by under the same name by the Kurdish authorities – 2 floors.

    ü Security Unit of Kerkuk/close to Directorate of agriculture by Kurdish Islamic Association–2 floors

    ü Center of Jerusalem Army by Center of Kurdistan Democratic Party – 2 floors.

    ü Workers Union Syndicate by Kurdish Workers Union and Faculty of Science – 3 floors.

    ü Northern Center of Ba’ath Party Organizations by Kurdish Democratic Organizations/ Faili Kurds Foundation – 2 floors.

    ü Building of store of foodstuffs

    265 shops
    215 shops were distributed to the Kurds at the Garage al-Hawija

    12 complexes
    Government complexes:

    ü Both Kerkuk Physicians and Engineering clubs were occupied by the Kurdish Parties.

    ü The Officer Housing complexes, which is turned into Kurdish Students Union Center includes:

    · Officer Hosting department

    · Officers Club

    · Officer Market

    ü The historical large Kerkuk Barracks, were taken by the Kurds and used as Kurdish Cultural Center.

    ü Gunpowder Stores – several buildings

    ü Scutcher

    ü Directorate of municipalities

    ü Directorate for social welfare in al-Wasiti neighborhood

    ü The old large prison of Kerkuk,

    ü Military Police complex in the center of the City. ± 0.5 x 0.5 km

    ü The large Olympic Sports Complex in al-Shorja neighborhood.

    ü National Kerkuk al-Sharika Sports Complex which is about 7 x 5 km2

    ü Kerkuk Sports and Youth Complex by the Kurdistan Shabiba Union. ± 0.5 x 0.5 km

    New Neighborhoods
    Neighborhoods built by Kurds

    1. Several Neighborhoods along the eastern border of Kerkuk city, which is about 25 kilometers. [Photo 1, 2 and 8]

    2. Hundreds of houses on both sides of Leylan Road

    3. Northern boundary of the city is extended about 10 km

    4. Baghdad Road neighborhood behind the Festival Stadium, a public land appropriated by Kurdish families where they built ±100 houses.

    5. Houses built in Hay al-Qadisiyya and Hay al-Askeri Neighborhoods.

    6. Along both sides of the road (± 5Km) between Shorja and al-Qadiaiyya neighborhoods

    7. Hundreds houses at the eastern side of the Musalla graveyard [Map 8]

    8. Fifty houses behind the residential apartments on the football stadium Seyyid Kizi in Musalla neighborhoods

    9. Sixty houses behind the old industry school in Musalla neighborhoods

    10. 59 houses were built near the mosque Ashra al-Mubashshara and military account headquarters

    11. 110 houses behind the police houses and in front of al-Amal al-Shaabi distributed to Kurdish families

    12. Twenty Luxury houses of Domis distributed to Kurds – Korya side

    13. Two hundreds Luxury houses of Domis distributed to Kurds – citadel side

    14. Large number sporadic pieces of lands were built by Kurdish families inside the city

    Enlarge the Map

    SOITM
    www.turkmen.nl

  • Son of formula one boss Max Mosley has been found dead

    Son of formula one boss Max Mosley has been found dead

    Drugs overdose suspected in death of Alexander Mosley, whose father is formula one boss

    The eldest son of formula one boss Max Mosley has been found dead in his west London home.

    Alexander Mosley, a 39-year-old economist, is reported to have died after a suspected drugs overdose. His death is not being treated as suspicious.

    Police were called to Mosley’s Notting Hill flat an hour after he was seen returning home with another man.

    Neighbour Steve Abrams, 70, a retired psychologist, told the London Paper: “I saw two men go into the flat and about an hour later there were rows of police outside and an ambulance.”

    Paramedics could not revive Mosley and he was declared dead at the scene.

    A spokeswoman for Scotland Yard said: “We were called at 4.20pm on Tuesday to reports of a man found dead at a property in W11. We believe we know the identity of the deceased. Next of kin are being informed and a postmortem will take place in due course.”

    The former formula one team boss Eddie Jordan said he was “devastated” by the news.

    “Max and Alexander particularly were very close,” he told Sky News. He said the father and son shared “a great intellect” and he described Alexander as a “hugely clever and talented computer expert”.

    “It’s totally tragic, he was such a bright boy. I’m devastated for them.”

    In a statement, the motor racing’s governing body, the FIA, said: “The FIA extends sincere condolences to the Mosley family on the sad news of the death of Alexander Mosley.

    “Our thoughts are with Alexander’s family and friends, and we would request that the media respect the Mosley family’s privacy at this difficult time.”

    Max Mosley, 69, is president of the FIA and the son of the 1930s British fascist leader Sir Oswald Mosley.

    Last year he won a high-profile privacy action against the News of the World over a story the paper ran about his encounter with five prostitutes.

    He married Joan Taylor in 1960. The couple had two sons, Alexander and Patrick, who was born in 1972.

    Guardian

  • Germany meets Turkey – A Forum for Young Leaders

    Germany meets Turkey – A Forum for Young Leaders

    The Institute for Cultural Diplomacy (ICD), the Robert Bosch Foundation, and the Istanbul Policy Center are pleased to announce that they are now taking applications for this year’s round of the Germany Meets Turkey – A Forum for Young Leaders (GMT) program. Six Turkish and six German participants will be selected and together with an already established group of twelve young leaders, they will take part in a week-long exchange to Germany in the beginning of September 2009. In 2010 the twelve new participants will return for a one-week exchange to Turkey and in doing so they will join another newly selected group of twelve young leaders.

    We welcome applications from young leaders between the ages of 28 and 38 from all fields, including business, politics, science, education, culture and media, and who are interested in building a sustainable interdisciplinary network as the basis for a solid, long-term relationship between the two countries.
    Participation in the program is free of charge. Accepted participants, however, will be responsible for travel expenses and travel organization to and from the study tour. Despite this, ICD, IPC, and Robert Bosch Foundation are proud to be able to have a “need-blind” admissions policy, meaning that all applications will be judged equally, independent from the financial situation of the applicant. Upon acceptance to the program, applicants may request financial assistance on an individual basis.

    Applications must be submitted no later than May 31, 2009.

    To retrieve the necessary application documents please visit :

  • Discover the Princes Islands

    Discover the Princes Islands

    Seminar: Discover the Princes Islands
    At Greenhouse

    Mary Ann Whitten, author of  “An Island in İstanbul: at home on Heybeliada”

    Date: Saturday, May 23rd

    Time: 13.30 – 15.00

    Discover the beauty and history of the Princes Islands off the Marmara coast in Istanbul. Hear from resident and author, Mary Ann Whitten about the richness of their past and their rapid modernisation – aspects of their culture which is a reflection, in miniature, of the larger vision of Turkey. Mary Ann Whitten will lead you through the islands’ literary connections and their significance. Find out what motivated the author to set up home there and write her popular book, ‘An Island in Istanbul – at home on Heybeliada’.

    Mary Ann Whitten first came to Turkey in the 1970s as a university lecturer and has maintained her connections to the country ever since. At various times, she has worked in Turkey as a teacher, diplomat, editor, and consultant. She currently divides her time between San Franciso and Istanbul. In 2006, she was named a ‘Daughter of Ataturk Woman of Distinction’. This is her first book. If you’ve already visited the islands or always meant to, this presentation will convince you what a treasures lie in the Marmara Sea.

    Free Seminar/ Reservation needed/ Limit: 20

    Reserve a place by emailing: [email protected]

  • Turkey balances Azeri, Armenian links

    Turkey balances Azeri, Armenian links

    By Orhan Coskun
    ANKARA, May 5 (Reuters) – Turkey’s efforts to normalise relations with Armenia will not harm planned energy projects with Azerbaijan, including the Nabucco gas pipeline, Energy Minister Taner Yildiz said on Tuesday.
    Turkey’s traditional ally Azerbaijan has objected to U.S.-backed talks with Armenia because it wants to first resolve a dispute with Armenia over its occupation of the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave before Turkey opens its borders.
    “Energy will play the role of catalyst in bringing relations between Azerbaijan, Armenia and Turkey to a more positive level,” said Yildiz, who took over the government’s energy portfolio after a cabinet reshuffle at the weekend.
    “There’s no plan to delay the projects with Azerbaijan” because of the Armenian normalisation talks, he said.
    Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan is due to meet President Ilham Aliyev in Baku next week and is expected to try to allay some of Azeribaijan’s concerns over the thaw in Turkish-Armenian ties.
    Partners in the 7.9 billion euro Nabucco project, which has European Union backing, want Azeri gas to fill the pipeline initially when it opens in 2013.
    The 3,300-km-long Nabucco will eventually carry about 30 billion cubic metres of gas from the Caspian and Middle East to meet about 5 percent of European demand.
    Botas the state pipeline operator in Turkey, Germany’s WE, Austria’s OMV, Budapest-based MOL, Bulgaria’s Bulgargaz and Romania’s Transgaz are partners in Nabucco.
    Turkey already buys about 6 billion cubic metres of Caspian natural gas annually after a pipeline from the Azeri Shakh-Deniz field opened in 2007. Some of that gas, which Turkey buys at a discount, is shipped on to Greece.
    Turkey is seeking an additional 8 billion cubic metres of gas from Azerbaijan to meet domestic needs, according to Energy Ministry sources.
    Botas officials are in Baku this seek to discuss the Turkish request for more gas, Yildiz said. (Writing by Ayla Jean Yackley)
    Source: www.guardian.co.uk, May 5 2009