Month: January 2011

  • Full: Missing Iranian general may have ‘died in Israeli jail’

    Full: Missing Iranian general may have ‘died in Israeli jail’

    Missing Iranian general may have ‘died in Israeli jail’

    Maryam Sinaiee and Michael Theodoulou

    Last Updated: Jan 2, 2011

    TEHRAN // An Iranian former deputy defence minister, who mysteriously vanished during a trip to Turkey four years ago, may recently have died in an Israeli prison, according to unsubstantiated reports.

    But others insist that Gen Ali-Reza Asgari is alive and living safely in a western country – and argue that Iran is exploiting claims of his death to refute the embarrassing possibility that he defected to West.

    Gen Asgari travelled to Turkey with his family in late 2006 or early 2007 via Syria, where he had private business interests in trading olives or olive oil. After checking into a hotel in Istanbul, Iran claims he was snatched by Israel’s external security service, Mossad, or the US.

    Since then the trail went mostly dead, although there had been unconfirmed reports he had defected and was living in the United States.

    In recent weeks, however, there was a flurry of Israeli press reports that a “Prisoner X” had committed suicide in an Israeli jail.

    These rumours were picked up by an American journalist and blogger, Richard Silverstein, who has followed the case. He speculated that the unidentified prisoner was probably Gen Asgari – and suggested that he may not have killed himself but was murdered.

    Israeli journalists swiftly countered that Prisoner X was not Gen Asgari.

    Nevertheless, Tehran promptly accused Israel of “state-sponsored terrorism” and on Friday urged the United Nations to help clarify Gen Asgari’s fate.

    In a letter to the UN secreatry general, Ban Ki-moon, Iran’s caretaker foreign minister, Ali Akbar Salehi, said: “Without a doubt the release of these reports further strengthens suspicions that Asgari was abducted by the Zionist regime.” Israel, he added, is “directly responsible for his life”.

    Other Iranian officials joined in with cries that “the Zionists have assassinated” Gen Asgari, and dismissed as “totally illogical” any notion that he could have taken his own life.

    Kazem Jalali, the spokesman for the Iranian parliament’s national security and foreign policy committee, said that Gen Asgari must have been tortured and killed.

    Other officials said he had been “martyred”. Gen Asgari’s sister, meanwhile, told Iranian state media that he would never have committed suicide.

    Some analysts suggest the Iranian regime has seized on reports of his death because Gen Asgari was due to testify at the special tribunal investigating the 2005 assassination of Lebanon’s former prime minister, Rafiq Hariri. The tribunal is expected to implicate members of the Iranian-backed Hizbollah movement in that murder, which had far-reaching regional repercussions.

    Iran will now attempt to discredit any such testimony by arguing Gen Asgari is dead and that anyone claiming to be him is an imposter, an Iranian friend of his wrote on his blog.

    Amir Farshad Ebrahimi, who lives in Europe, insists that Gen Asghari is living safely in a western country.

    He claims that the general called him for advice after he arrived with his family in Damascus where he had been either on a pilgrimage or a business trip.

    Mr Ebrahimi claims that Gen Asgari acted on his advice to hire a car and flee to Turkey to defect. Once in Istanbul, he asked the UN and US for asylum and finally left Turkey for the US in February 2007. Gen Asgari, he says, later contacted him from Washington DC and Texas.

    “There is no reason why Asgari should have been kept in jail, because he left Iran on his own free will and defected to the West,” Mr Ebrahimi wrote in his latest blog posting.

    When Gen Asgari disappeared in Istanbul, US media lost no time in claiming that Gen Asgari, who had served under Iran’s reformist president, Mohammad Khatami, had fled Iran of his own volition and was providing sensitive information on Iran’s ties to Hizbollah.

    Gen Asgari is said to have been a commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards’ elite Al Qods force in Lebanon in the mid-1990s.

    The Israeli newspaper, Yedioth Aharonoth, claimed at the time of Gen Asgari’s disappearance that Mossad had orchestrated his defection.

    Politico, a US-based political news website, on Friday quoted an Iranian-American pro-democracy activist knowledgeable about the case insisting that Gen Asgari was never in Israel and the story that he died there – or died at all – is untrue.

    “The news is a complete fabrication and a fantasy,” Pooya Dayanim told Politico.

    Meanwhile, Yossi Melman, an intelligence correspondent for Israel’s daily Haaretz newspaper, wrote this week that Israeli security services should publicly deny the rumours about Gen Ashgari.

    “Anyone who knows something about these subjects, and is familiar with relevant precedents, could conclude that the chances of Asgari finding asylum in Israel, or being forcibly brought here, are negligible,” Melman wrote.

    In March 2007, Britain’s Sunday Times newspaper reported that Gen Asgari, who is in his mid-50s, had been spying on Iran since 2003 when he was recruited on an overseas business trip.

    He fled, it said, with the help of western intelligence agencies when he realised his cover was about to be blown. After being spirited out of Turkey, his first stop was a Nato base in Germany where Gen Asgari, “a very wealthy man”, underwent debriefing, the newspaper said.

    He carried documents disclosing “Iran’s links to terrorists in the Middle East”, but it was not thought he had details of Iran’s nuclear programme, it added.

    via Full: Missing Iranian general may have ‘died in Israeli jail’ – The National.

  • Nurturing Musical Dreams in a Wheelchair

    Nurturing Musical Dreams in a Wheelchair

    By JENNIFER MASCIA

    Published: January 1, 2011

    At the flip of some switches on his computer, Jason Celik’s room fills with a melodic hip-hop beat. After a few bars, his older brother’s sleepy, streetwise rhymes kick in, reminiscent of the young rapper Drake. Their father, Muzzafer, who is from Istanbul, stands in the background and proudly bobs his head, delighted by the strains of traditional Turkish music woven into the track.

    “ ‘Leylim Ley,’ ” Mr. Celik said, identifying the song his son has sampled.

    Jason Celik’s musical talents are all the more impressive given that he is able to move only his right hand and two fingers on his left. Now 21, he is paralyzed as a result of Duchenne muscular dystrophy, characterized by the progressive loss of muscle strength.

    When he was a toddler, his mother, Ann Marie, 48, recalled, “I noticed he had a problem going up the stairs.” By the time he was 7, he was in a wheelchair.

    Respiratory and cardiac problems are common with Duchenne, and when Jason Celik was 18, his respiratory muscles were so weak that he was intubated for six weeks and nearly died.

    “Six weeks of fighting,” Ms. Celik calls it, and during that time she clashed with insurance companies and doctors who wanted her son to have a tracheotomy tube permanently inserted.

    “By the grace of God, he’s been O.K.,” Ms. Celik said.

    His room, littered with medical devices, betrays how completely his life revolves around his illness. A cough-assist machine sucks phlegm from his lungs when his muscles are too weak. Without it, he would be plagued by bronchitis and pneumonia. He wears a brave smile, but he cannot scratch his own itches, use the bathroom without help, roll over in the middle of the night — his mother sleeps next to him so she can help with that — or haul himself into the shower. His musical collaborator and brother, Peter, 24, helps him to do that.

    “But as God as my witness, he never complains,” Ms. Celik said as her husband nuzzled Jason’s cheek.

    She added, however, “Jason is a man, and he wants to retain his dignity and have a shower.” She described plans to install a rolling shower in one of the bathrooms.

    More drastic renovation was required before the Celiks could move into their four-bedroom house in Cedarhurst on Long Island. Doorways were widened for her son’s wheelchair, and a sturdy wooden ramp was installed on one side of the house. It has been a vast improvement over the two-bedroom apartment the family shared in Elmont, which had holes in every wall from being hit by the wheelchair.

    The Celiks needed space, but it was not until they found a program called Partners in Dignity at FEGS Health and Human Services System that they imagined state funds could pay for their relocation and home renovations.

    At the agency, the Celiks learned of the Nursing Home Transition and Diversion Medicaid Waiver Program, which grants money to people with disabilities so they can alter their houses to accommodate their needs.

    Finding the house was difficult because landlords are often unwilling to accept the subsidy or to have their properties modified, especially since the state does not pay to have the work undone if the disabled tenant moves out, said Lori Hardoon, the director of Partners in Dignity.

    “Thank God for this grant, because, quite honestly, we never would have been able to move in here,” said Ms. Celik, a 23-year veteran of the United States Postal Service.

    FEGS is a beneficiary of UJA-Federation of New York, one of the seven organizations supported by The New York Times Neediest Cases Fund. The fund contributed half the broker’s fee, or $1,190.

    Ms. Celik home-schooled her son, who taught himself how to produce music with the help of computer programs.

    “He’s a real go-getter,” she said. More than anything, he wants a music internship. A framed print hanging above the futon in Peter’s room, which doubles as a music studio, reads, “Find your stage door and open it.”

    “People aren’t very receptive,” Ms. Celik said, gesturing to Jason in his wheelchair. “But they don’t know just how much he can really do.”

    Video:

    via Nurturing Musical Dreams in a Wheelchair – Neediest Cases – NYTimes.com.

  • Süreyya Opera House

    Süreyya Opera House

    Nightlife, Romantic, What’s New — By Aysegul Surenkok on January 1, 2011 at 4:13 am

    Süreyya Opera House is a very nostalgic place, a tiny opera house, in Kadıköy. It was founded for the first time in 1927 by politician Süreyya İlmen Pasha (both designed and built). It was intended to be an musical theater when it was initially founded; however lack of proper sound equipments and facilities, operettas could not be staged here. Funny enough, although Süreyya İlmen Pasha intended for a European type modern musical facility, there was no artist room inside the theater. Hence, only theaters were staged for some time.

    In 1930, special sound equipment were brought in and the place was turned into a movie-plex (a cinema). Many of my generation also know Süreyya as the Süreyya Sineması (the Süreyya Movie Center) -as it was kept like that until 2007.

    In 2007 the renovation came underway again and the complex was reverted back into an opera house. In 1950 Süreyya İlmen donated the building to Darüşşafaka Foundation (an NGO seeking after the welfare of orphans). Under the governance of Darüşşafaka Foundation few reconstructive initiatives were undertaken to modernize the place and to attract the proper audience that it deserved. These initiatives were respectively in 1996 and in 2003, focusing on the audience hall and the equipments.

    When none of these prime initiatives gave fruits, the Kadıköy Municipality leased the building from the foundation around 2005 and renovated the entire building as it should have been renovated. Süreyya was reopened in 2007 as the Süreyya Opera House and the oratorio Yunus Emre was performed at the opening. Mr. İlmen’s dream of an opera house had finally come true.

    The opera house is now home to Istanbul State Opera and Ballet and there are performances three days every week. It is still a small stage; but the inside of the building is very magnificent. One shall and should not, never, compare it to La Scala of Milan, but in its own category, Süreyya is a bewildering building.

    [Image from the official website of the Opera House]

    The above image depicts a corner balcony on the upper / second floor of the opera house. From this close-up view one can also easily see the figures and figurines on the ceiling. That you cannot that easily see once you are inside and under the dim light.

    via Süreyya Opera House | Istanbul | NileGuide.

  • Obama to Appoint Six Without Senate Okay

    Obama to Appoint Six Without Senate Okay

    By Dan Weil

    President Barack Obama will use recess appointments to install six executive branch officials, bypassing Senate confirmation. The appointments include James Cole, his controversial choice for deputy attorney general — the No. 2 spot at the Justice Department.

    The six officials will bring Obama’s recess appointment total to 28, eclipsing the 23 made by former President George W. Bush at a similar point in his presidency.

    With Republicans gaining six Senate seats in last month’s elections, confirmation would only grow more difficult for the White House appointees. Obama, who is vacationing in Hawaii with his family, announced the move in a news release, explaining only that the posts have “been left vacant for an extended period of time.”

    But the White House and its allies in Congress are upset by what they see as Republican delays to consider Obama’s nominees, particularly Cole, a close friend of Attorney General Eric Holder. Republicans are concerned that he is soft on terrorism and too closely tied to A.I.G., the insurance giant bailed out by the government.

    Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., incoming chairman of the Homeland Security Committee, blasts Obama’s move, calling the Cole appointment “absolutely shocking.” In a statement, King says, “The appointment indicates that the Obama Administration continues to try to implement its dangerous policies of treating Islamic terrorism as a criminal matter.”

    The appointees have been on hold in the Senate for an average of 114 days, administration officials say. Another 73 candidates for politically-appointed jobs, including many judges, were waiting for confirmation when the Senate adjourned. Obama will have to re-nominate them if he wants them in office.

    The recess appointments permit Cole and the other nominees — four ambassadors and the head of the Government Printing Office – to serve for one year before they must be re-appointed.

    Deputy White House chief of staff, Jim Messina, says Obama felt he had no alternative, especially with Cole. “We’ve been working hard with the Republicans and have seen some movement forward,” Messina told The New York Times.

    “There were some that, for whatever reason, they could not help us with and we felt were mission critical, and clearly the deputy attorney general is a critical position to help enforce the laws of the land.”

    While the White House wants to put all the blame for delays on Republicans, that’s not accurate, experts say. The number of Senate-confirmed positions has jumped, nominees must submit substantial background information that requires extensive investigation, and a single senator can put a hold on any nominee, Paul Light, a New York University expert on the presidential nomination process, tells The Times.

    “Obama has set the record for the slowest process since J.F.K.,” he says, referring to the amount of time it has taken to get his first group of about 550 appointees confirmed. “It’s really a mess.”

    The other five nominees include ambassadors Matthew Bryza, Azerbaijan; Robert Stephen Ford, Syria; Frances Ricciardone Jr., Turkey; Norman Eisen, Czech Republic and William Boarman as public printer.

  • US-Jewish lobby supports Turkey over Armenian Genocide – Abraham Foxman

    US-Jewish lobby supports Turkey over Armenian Genocide – Abraham Foxman



    12:49 • 30.12.10

    The Jewish lobby in US backs Turkey over the Armenian Genocide, Abraham Foxman, the head of the US-based organization Anti-Defamation League, has said in an interview with Turkish daily Sabah.

    Foxman said that the historical dispute between Turkey and Armenia should be left to historians.

    “The Armenian Cause is an issue between Armenia and Turkey, and it should be resolved between those two countries,” said he.

    “The US is wrong when it attempts to meddle in that issue … The history should be left to historians. We back Turkey in that issue,” Foxman said.

  • Turkish politician caught entering Greece illegally

    Turkish politician caught entering Greece illegally

    ATHENS, Greece — Authorities announced on Wednesday (December 29th) that they have detained a pro-Kurdish politician from an outlawed party in Turkey after he entered Greece with fake papers. Mustafa Sarikaya, former deputy leader of the Democratic Society Party (DTP), was stopped last week at the Thessaloniki airport. He had arrived from Cyprus with fake Bulgarian papers and requested political asylum. A court in Thessaloniki cleared him of charges of entering Greece illegally, accepting that he faced political prosecution in Turkey where he spent a total of 20 years in prison. Asylum proceedings are pending. Turkey’s Constitutional Court banned the DTP last year over its alleged ties to the terrorist Kurdistan Workers’ Party. (AP, AFP, Hurriyet – 29/12/10)

    via Turkish politician caught entering Greece illegally (SETimes.com).