Month: February 2010

  • Ethnic Kurd wins high court release ruling after failed deportation

    Ethnic Kurd wins high court release ruling after failed deportation

    • Test case reveals Iraqi government resistance to repatriations
    • Home Office officials out of control, claims rights group

    • Owen Bowcott

    Home Office attempts to forcibly deport thousands of failed Iraqi asylum seekers suffered a setback today when it emerged that Baghdad has objected to any “increase in returns”.

    The official refusal surfaced in a high court test case , which ruled that an ethnic Kurd should be released after 21 months in immigration detention because there was no likelihood of his being sent back, even in the “medium term”.

    The decision by Mr Justice Langstaff may relate only to a single individual – Soran Ahmed, 22, from Kirkuk – but the judgment has exposed the Iraqi government’s reluctance to receive deportees and the difficulty UK officials have persuading counterparts in Baghdad to cooperate.

    An internal Whitehall document, read out to the court, detailed how the UK Border Agency is proposing to fly Iraqi officials into Britain so that they can understand and “buy-in” to the deportation process. It also suggested arranging a UK ministerial visit to Baghdad to stress “the importance of returns to Iraq“.

    Ahmed, whose case was supported by the Refugee and Migrant Justice (RMJ) civil rights group, was one of 44 failed Iraqi asylum seekers forcibly put on an abortive charter flight to Baghdad last October with private security guards; Ahmed claimed he was assaulted on board.

    In Baghdad, Iraqi interior officials never appeared and the deportees interviewed by an infuriated Iraqi colonel in charge of the airport. “He was antagonistic from the outset,” Mr Justice Langstaff commented.

    The colonel accepted 10 deportees and ordered the rest back to London. They did not have the correct Iraqi documentation, he claimed, or were ethnic Kurds who would be in danger in the predominantly Arab city of Baghdad.

    There are regular UK deportation flights to the relative peace of the Kurdistan Regional Government area in northern Iraq. Other European countries have been sending failed asylum seekers back to central and southern Iraq. The UK is meeting stiffer resistance to this route.

    The United Nations high commissioner for refugees (UNHCR) still opposes repatriations to the central five governorates of Iraq due to the risk of violence. An email from officials in Baghdad to Whitehall last May “disclosed a reluctance to see an increase in the return of Iraqi nationals from the UK to Iraq,” the judge said.

    A Foreign Office official who flew to Iraq several times to prepare the way for the flight explained that he met resistance from Iraqi officials to EU documentation. On receipt of the full list of deportees the Iraqis said: “We will see what we can do”.

    A report from the conference reviewing the failure of the October flight suggested that the UK Borders Agency should learn from more successful EU deportation programmes and the Iraqi prime minister’s office should be written to for help. The high court heard that the letter has still not been despatched.

    It would be unlawful to continue to detain Ahmed, said Langstaff. He was previously imprisoned in Britain for sexual assault and using false documents. There was no prospect of UK flights returning him to Kirkuk via Baghdad this year and the Kurdish Regional Government would not accept him. The judge ordered him to be released under strict bail conditions despite the fact that he posed “some risk” to the public. Bail conditions will be determined at later hearing.

    Caroline Slocock, chief executive of RMJ, welcomed the judgment. “”[The flight] should never have left the UK. Home Office staff widened their own criteria on who could safely be on board, largely to fill empty seats at the last moment.

    “Not only was the destination of the flight kept secret from those being removed, but it is now clear Iraqi authorities were kept in the dark. The alarming picture emerging is of Home Office officials out of control. Officials needs to get a grip of the problem rather than egg officials on by changes of policy which make it easier for the remove people without proper judicial scrutiny.”

    Source:  https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2010/feb/19/kurd-asylum-seeker-repatriation-iraq, 19 February 2010

  • Armeno-Turkish Relations:  Pitfalls and Possibilities

    Armeno-Turkish Relations: Pitfalls and Possibilities

    The Armenian Revolutionary Federation

    NY and NJ Committees

    Present

    Armeno-Turkish Relations:

    Pitfalls and Possibilities

    A public forum

    Featuring

    John Evans

    Former US Ambassador to Armenia

    Ken Hachikian

    Chairman, ANCA

    Richard Hovannisian

    AEF Chair in Modern Armenian History, UCLA

    Dennis Papazian

    Emeritus Professor of History, University of Michigan-Dearborn

    Sunday, March 7

    4:30 pm

    New York Hilton Hotel

    1335 Ave. of the Americas (at 53rd St)

    Admission is Free

    For more information, contact the ARF at (718) 651-1530 or (201) 945-0011

    __._,_.___

  • What’s Really Behind Turkey’s Coup Arrests?

    What’s Really Behind Turkey’s Coup Arrests?

    What’s Really Behind Turkey’s Coup Arrests? | Foreign Policy

    BY SONER CAGAPTAY | FEBRUARY 25, 2010

    FEBRUARY 27, 2010

    What’s Really Behind Turkey’s Coup Arrests?

    All signs point to Fethullah Gülen, whose shadowy Islamist movement is rapidly extending its tentacles into all aspects of Turkish political life.

    BY SONER CAGAPTAY | FEBRUARY 25, 2010

    For the last several decades, the Turkish military was untouchable; no one dared to criticize the military or its top generals, lest they risk getting burned.  The Turkish Armed Forces were the ultimate protectors of founding father Kemal Ataturk’s secular legacy, and no other force in the country could seriously threaten its supremacy. Not anymore.

    On Feb. 22, 49 officers—including active-duty generals, admirals, and former commanders of the Turkish navy and air force—were arrested on allegations of plotting a coup against the government. Specifically, the officers were charged with authoring a 5,000-page memo that was later published in Taraf, a paper whose editorial policy is singularly dedicated to bashing the military. Among other things, the memo stated that the Turkish military was planning to bomb Istanbul’s historic mosques and shoot down its own planes to justify a coup.  When I asked a former U.S. ambassador to Turkey for his views on the news, he thought the scenario was ridiculous. “If the Turkish military was going to do a coup, they would not be writing a 5,000-page memo about it,” he stated.  Three days later, the former commanders of the navy and air force were released — further proof that the government’s intention was to intimidate Turkey’s military, rather than proceed with an indictment against these high-ranking officials. The arrests followed a Feb. 19 incident in which an audio recording of Turkey’s chief of staff was leaked to Vakit, a small jihadi Islamist newspaper that has celebrated the killing of U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan. In Turkey, it is illegal to wiretap individuals without a court order, and it is also illegal to publish such wiretaps. However, no one has been prosecuted for this wiretap against the chief of staff—a sign that the balance of power in Turkey has shifted decisively.

    A mountain has moved in Turkish politics. All shots against the military are now fair game, including those below the belt. The force behind this dramatic change is the Fethullah Gülen Movement (FGH), an ultraconservative political faction that backs the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP). The FGH was founded in the 1970s by Fethullah Gülen, a charismatic preacher who now lives in the United States but remains popular in Turkey. It is a conservative movement aiming to reshape secular Turkey in its own image, by securing the supremacy of Gülen’s version of religion over politics, government, education, media, business, and public and personal life.

    To some, it might appear that the newfound freedom to criticize the military proves that Turkey is becoming a more liberal democracy. But the truth is that Turkey has replaced one “untouchable” organization for another, more dangerous, one. Criticizing the Gülen movement, which controls the national police and its powerful domestic intelligence branch, and which exerts increasing influence in the judiciary, has become as taboo as assailing the military once was. Today, it is those who criticize the Gülen movement who get burned. COMMENTS (87) SHARE: Digg  Facebook  Reddit   More…

    Of course, coup allegations are serious matters that warrant immediate action.  However, these allegations are part of the Ergenekon case—a convoluted investigation that so far has produced nothing in the last three years but a record-setting 5,800-page indictment, hundreds of early-morning house raids, and the detention of many prominent Turks, including university presidents and prominent educators such as Kemal Guruz and Mehmet Haberal. The only quality that ties together all of those arrested is their opposition to the AKP government and the Gülen movement. Zekeriya Oz, the chief prosecutor leading the Ergenekon case, and Ramazan Akyurek, the head of the police’s domestic intelligence branch, as well as other powerful people in the police, are thought by some to be Gülen sympathizers.

    Although some of the people interrogated and arrested might have been involved in criminal wrongdoing, most appear to be innocent. Take, for instance, Turkan Saylan, a 73-year-old grandmother who was undergoing chemotherapy. Saylan ran an NGO providing liberal arts education scholarships to poor girls in eastern Turkey, an area where Gülen’s network runs many competing organizations. She was interrogated by the Turkish police for allegedly plotting a coup from her death bed, and passed away only four weeks later.

    Many others have languished in jail, or even died, without seeing an indictment.  The Gülen-controlled parts of the judiciary and police have also wielded illegal wiretaps against those entangled in the Ergenekon case, leaking intimate details of their private lives, such as marital infidelity, to pro-AKP and pro-Gülen media in order to damage their reputations.

    Illegal wiretaps and arbitrary arrests serve to intimidate the public, not prosecute criminals. Because of Ergenekon, Turks who oppose the AKP and the Gülen movement fear to speak their minds freely. If you have doubts, call a friend in Turkey and ask for an opinion of the case. Your friend will respond with details of the weather.

    The military, which opposes the AKP and the Gülenists because it sees itself as the virtual guardian of Turkey’s secular polity à la Ataturk’s vision, serving as a bulwark against religion’s domination over politics and government, has become the primary target of this round of politically motivated arrests.  Illegally obtained documents, including confidential and sometimes embarrassing medical records of four-star generals, were published openly in Gülenist media.  Although the chief of staff said the documents were doctored, they were recently used as evidence, with the support of anonymous witnesses, to arrest serving generals and admirals.

    The roots of the Gülen movement’s vendetta against the army run deep. Following the pattern of the evangelical movement in the United States, the FGH grew dramatically in the 1980s. Gülen espoused a Machiavellian approach to democracy, saying to his followers in a message broadcast on Turkish TV in 1999 that “every method and path is acceptable [including] lying to people.” In the 1990s, the movement gained political power by throwing its weight behind various governments, which in return appointed FGH members to prominent positions in the bureaucracy, including the police and the intelligence branch.  In the late 1990s, Gülen went head-to-head with Turkey’s military—and lost.  The clash between the Islamist Welfare Party (RP) government, which was supported by the FHG, and the military was at the center of this conflict. In 1997, the Turkish military orchestrated a public campaign against the RP. With pressure mounting against its rule, the RP government stepped down. As a result, members of Islamist movements, including those belonging to the FGH, were purged from their posts in the bureaucracy and the military.  When the Turkish courts charged Gülen with corruption and anti-secular political activities in 1999, he fled to a rural compound in Pennsylvania. Although he was later acquitted, Gülen has never returned to Turkey.  The FGH has returned, however, with a vengeance. When the AKP, which is largely a reincarnation of the banned RP, came to power in 2002, the FGH positioned its media, voter, and business lobby support behind the governing party. In return, the AKP appointed FGH members to prominent positions in the judiciary and the bureaucracy, including the police’s intelligence branch.  With the Gülen movement in control of large portions of the government apparatus and running a political witch hunt against its opponents through the Ergenekon case, Turkey is taking a dangerously authoritarian turn. A personal friend and politician from the former Soviet Union once said, “A police state emerges not when the police listen to all the citizens, but when all the citizens fear that they are being listened to.” Welcome to the new Turkey: If you listen carefully, you can hear the political ground shifting below your feet.

  • Massive earthquake strikes Chile

    Massive earthquake strikes Chile

    Play Slideshow Photo Gallery

    AP

    Sun Feb 28, 6:17 AM ET

    Prev 1 of 132 Next

    A man makes his way along a street flooded with seawater in Kesennuma, northern Japan on Sunday Feb. 28, 2010. Japan, fearing the tsunami could gain force as it moved closer, put all of its eastern coastline on tsunami alert Sunday and ordered hundreds of thousands of residents in low-lying areas to seek higher ground as waves generated by the Chilean earthquake raced across the Pacific at hundreds of miles (kilometers) per hour.

    (AP Photo/Kyodo News)

    First Prev Next Last

    1 – 4 of 132

  • Armenia Again Threatens To Scrap Agreement with Turkey

    Armenia Again Threatens To Scrap Agreement with Turkey


    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)–President Serzh Sarkisian made late on Thursday his most explicit threat yet to annul Armenia’s normalization agreements with Turkey in what appeared to be a tense conversation with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu.
    The two men spoke in Kiev on the sidelines of the swearing-in of Ukraine’s newly elected president, Viktor Yanukovich. Davutoglu told Turkish journalists there that the “meeting” centered on Turkish-Armenian relations and the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
    “We reviewed the Turkish -Armenian normalization relationship in its entirety with open hearts today, including our anxieties and the obstacles we face,” Davutoglu said, according to “Hurriyet Daily News.” “We spoke about Armenian- Azerbaijan relations and the activities of the Minsk Group as related to the Karabakh issue.”
    Sarkisian’s press office clarified that the two held on talks as such, saying that Davutoglu “approached and exchanged views” with the Armenian president during a reception hosted by Yanukovich. It said Sarkisian told him that the ratification of the Turkish-Armenian “protocols” must be completed “within the shortest possible time.”
    “Or else, as was stated before, the Republic of Armenia will withdraw its signatures from the protocols,” the office said in a statement circulated on Friday.
    Sarkisian first publicly warned of such possibility in early December. He instructed the Armenian government to draft legal amendments regulating Yerevan’s possible pullout from international treaties. The Armenian parliament adopted them in the final reading on Thursday.
    Sarkisian was quoted by his office as also telling Davutoglu that Turkey could open its border with Armenia before ratifying the protocols. “A country dreaming about a region without borders should take the first step and end Armenia’s blockade,” he said, scoffing at Ankara’s stated efforts to promote peace and stability in the South Caucasus.
    “If Azerbaijani pressure does not allow Turkey’s parliament to ratify the protocols, then nothing keeps Turkey’s executive authority from opening, even before the protocol ratification, the border between the two states which it itself had closed,” he added.
    Sarkisian also ruled out any Turkish involvement in the Karabakh peace process. He pointed to Turkey’s “unilateral military assistance” to Azerbaijan and “biased statements” on Karabakh made by Turkish leaders.
    In a related development, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton reaffirmed on Thursday Washington’s support for the quick and unconditional ratification of the protocols. “We are working very hard to assist Armenia and Turkey in their efforts and we would like to continue to support that effort and not be diverted in any way at all,” Clinton told U.S. lawmakers.
    “The normalization process, which carries important benefits for both sides, should take place without preconditions and within an obvious, reasonable timeframe,” she said.

    __._,_.___
    Reply to sender | Reply to group

    Messages in this topic (1)

    Recent Activity:

    • New Members 2
    Visit Your Group Start a New Topic
    Yahoo! Groups

    Switch to: Text-Only, Daily Digest • Unsubscribe • Terms of Use

    .

    __,_._,___

  • PROTEST CBS (ALLEGED ARMENIAN GENOCIDE) PROPOGANDA

    PROTEST CBS (ALLEGED ARMENIAN GENOCIDE) PROPOGANDA

    CBS 60 Minutes to Air Segment on Armenian Genocide Sunday
    On Sunday, Feb. 28, 2010 one of the worlds most respected and watched current affairs program, 60 Minutes (CBS TV Network), will air a segment on the Armenian Genocide. Bob Simon and Peter Balakian traveled all the way to Deir Elzor to visit the Armenian Auschwitz and shed light on the untold stories of the victims of the first Genocide of the 20th century.
    —————————————

    CBS’ten ABD Kongresi’ne özel ‘sözde soykırım’ propagandası mı?

    CBS televizyonun ’60 Dakika’ programında bu hafta ”sözde soykırım” ile ilgili bir bölüm yayınlanacak. Tanıtımında her ne kadar objektif bir program olacağı izlenimi verilmeye çalışılsa da tek taraflı bir propaganda olacağını gösteren tanıtım videosu, programın 4 Mart’ta ABD Kongresindeki oylamayı etkilemeye yönelik bir yayın olarak yorumlanmasına sebep oluyor.

    26 Şubat 2010, Cuma
    (Turkish Journal Haber Merkezi)

    Amerikan CBS televizyonunda yayınlanan 60 Dakika programı, 28 Şubat Pazar günü yeni bir ”sözde soykırım” dosyası yayınlayacak. Programın, ABD Temsilciler Meclisi Dış İlişkiler Komitesinde 4 Mart günü sözde Ermeni soykırımı karar tasarısının oylanmasından sadece 4 gün önce yayınlacak olması dikkat çekiyor. ”Battle over History (Tarih hakkında mücadele)” başlıklı dosyanın ön tanıtım filminde toplu mezar olduğu iddia edilen bir tepedeki kemiklerin gösterilmesi, Amerikan Türk toplumunda ”yine tek yanlı bir propaganda ile tartışmanın saptırılacağı” endişesi doğurdu. Programın, 4 Mart’taki oylama için Ermenilere propaganda imkanı sağlamayı amaçlamış olabileceği yorumu yapılıyor.

    CBS, programın tanıtım videosunu, ”Ermeniler, bir milyonu aşkın Ermeninin Türkler tarafından zorla göçettirildiği ve katledildiği bu olayı kendi holokostları olarak nitelendiriyor. Ancak Türkler ve bizim hükümetimiz bu olayı ”soykırım” olarak nitelendirmeyi reddediyor” alt başlığıyla yayınladı. Bob Simo’un sunduğu programın ”tarih hakkında mücadele” adlı bölümünü Michael Gavshon ve Drew Magratten’in hazırladığı öğrenildi.

    60 günde ikinci ”60 Dakika” krizi mi?

    1968 yılından beri yayında olan 60 Dakika programı, Türkiye’ye yönelik ‘özel’ ilgisiyle dikkatleri çekiyor. Programın 20 Aralık 2009 günü yayınlanan bölümünde konuk ettiği Fener Patriği Bartholomeos’un, Türkiye’ye yönelik eleştirileri yayınlanmıştı. Patriğin, ”Kendimi çarmıha gerilmiş gibi hissediyorum” sözleri Türkiye’de her kesimden tepkilerinin hedefinde yer almıştı.


    Watch CBS News Videos Online


    From: ALI CINAR [mailto:[email protected]]
    Sent: Saturday, February 27, 2010 7:47 PM
    Subject: High Officials – CBS Contacts

    Les Moonves, President & CEO, CBS Corp.

    [email protected]

    Nina Tessler, President, CBS Entertainment

    [email protected]

    Kelly Kahl, Senior Executive Vice President, CBS Primetime

    [email protected]

    Melissa Perez

    [email protected]

    David Stapf, President, CBS Paramount Network TV

    [email protected]

    Nancy Tellem, President, CBS Television Studios Entertainment Group

    [email protected]

    Sumner Redstone, Executive Chairman and Founder

    [email protected]

    CBS Audience Services:

    [email protected]

    On Sat, Feb 27, 2010 at 12:26 PM, ALI CINAR <[email protected]> wrote:

    Tulay Hanim

    I also informed ATAA,TADF AND TCA and they are working on it. SINCE THERE IS A LIMITED TIME, WE NEED TO ACT NOW

    Here are the contact information:

    CBS’e Protesto Mektubunuzu posta :
    CBS 60 Minutes

    Jeff Fager,Executive Producer

    Bob Simon, Correspondent
    524 West 57th St.
    New York, NY 10019

    Email ile : [email protected]

    Telefon ile : (212) 975-3247

    Faks ile : 212-975-1893

    BELOW LETTER IS MINE BUT WELCOME TO CUSTOMIZE OR CHANGE IT

    I am a regular CBS  viewer and I have learned that CBS will be broadcasting “Battle over History” documentary  at  60 Minutes Program   on February 28th at 7 pm Eastern time.

    I am very disappointed with CBS that becomes part of a controversial issue without equally giving a chance to Turkey. This Armenian propaganda film promoting a bogus genocide claim and whitewashing Armenian war crimes during WWI, ranging from agitation, terrorism, and raids to rebellions and treason.

    It is most embarrassing to see that CBS, and its prestigious program 60 Minutes  has been sold out to the “repetition” and financial power of the  Armenian diaspora to put together a program on the so called Armenian genocide  story with no official recognition of the story. UN has rejected any such notion time after time, even the French High Court have refused to bend under the most significant political and propaganda pressures!!!

    Shame on CBS  to promoting false stories with absolutely no historical  base!!! Where is your objectivity, where is your non- discriminating values  and principle.  Where is the information published on the history by experts on Ottoman history. Where is your information  about what the Armenians were doing to the Ottoman’s and to the Ottoman  Muslims at the same time?

    CBS  ignores a peculiar fact that while all Turkish archives are open and have hundreds of Armenian researchers in them, the archives in Armenia are sealed off and the only Turk who somehow got permission to do research there a few years ago, was upon completion of his research arrested for two months and all his research and materials confiscated.

    This is insult and a malicious lie unbecoming a friend like the United States to level on a reliable, long time ally like Turkey.

    CBS should immediately correct this issue and not air the program tomorrow night.

    Sincerely

    On Sat, Feb 27, 2010 at 12:07 PM, tulay luciano <[email protected]> wrote:

    Dear Ali: Thanks for alerting us as always. Below is the video clip of the program. Balakian,mentioned in the clip,  is one of the leaders who have been promoting this Armenian propaganda. In the clip, they mention that they do not know whose boes tey are.

    I checked CBS website, I could find only a site that we could send our objections: Watch & Chat. Do you know any direct address that we can send our letters to CBS?

    The other can be done is to buy a ad space in CBS and tell the viewers the truth.

    Best wishes,

    Tulay Luciano
    — On Sat, 2/27/10, tulay luciano <[email protected]> wrote:
    From: tulay luciano <[email protected]>
    Subject:
    To: [email protected]
    Date: Saturday, February 27, 2010, 11:45 AM