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  • Gaddafi imports more fuel, Turkey, Georgia deny role

    Gaddafi imports more fuel, Turkey, Georgia deny role

    * Gasoline vessel due to arrive in Libyan port this weekend

    * Fuel imports vital for Gaddafi’s government

    * Tanker loaded in Turkey, origin of gasoline unclear

    * Turkey and Georgia deny role in sale

    (Adds comment from Georgian official in paras 7 and 8)

    By Emma Farge and Jessica Donati

    LONDON, May 18 (Reuters) – The Libyan government of Muammar Gaddafi will receive fresh fuel supplies by buying a cargo that recently visited Turkish and Georgian ports, but both states denied involvement in the transaction.

    Libya, a member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) is reliant on imports for fuels such as gasoline, even in peacetime, because of insufficient refining capacity. Now civil war has crippled the refining industry, Gaddafi urgently needs fuel imports for military purposes and to keep civilian vehicles running in the areas he controls.

    AIS live ship tracking data showed the Libyan-flagged oil products tanker Cartagena was heading from the Turkish port of Mersin to Zawiyah in west Libya.

    via UPDATE 2-Gaddafi imports more fuel, Turkey, Georgia deny role | Energy & Oil | Reuters.

  • Hawker Beechcraft Adds MNG Jet of Turkey as New Limited Service Center

    Hawker Beechcraft Adds MNG Jet of Turkey as New Limited Service Center

    Hawker Beechcraft Corporation

    GENEVA, Switzerland (May 18, 2011) – Hawker Beechcraft Global Customer Support (GCS) today announced that it has appointed MNG Jet at Ataturk Airport in Istanbul, Turkey, to its worldwide network of limited service centers to support its Hawker 750, 800, 800XP, 850XP and 900XP business jets.

    “MNG Jet can now offer both line and scheduled maintenance service for Hawker 800 and 900 series jets,” said Christi Tannahill, Hawker Beechcraft vice president, GCS. “Further, in cooperation with our company-owned facility in Chester, United Kingdom, MNG Jet is also able to offer AOG services as a part of the Hawker Beechcraft Services Quick Response Team network. Both capabilities will be of great service to our customers in the region.”

    MNG Jet provides EASA Part 145-approved line and base maintenance service on a 24/7 basis. It has a 1,200 square meter business aircraft hangar in Ankara and has begun construction on an additional 5,500 square meters of service facilities at Ataturk.

    Headquartered in Wichita, Kan., Hawker Beechcraft GCS is dedicated to improving the value of Hawker Beechcraft aircraft by employing products and services to simplify aircraft ownership, reduce operating cost and increase resale value. GCS is comprised of four functional groups that include Support Plus (cost predictability/warranty programs), Hawker Beechcraft Parts & Distribution (genuine factory parts), Hawker Beechcraft Services (factory-owned service centers) and Technical Support (Field Support Representatives, Hot Line specialists and Technical Publications).

    Hawker Beechcraft Corporation is a world-leading manufacturer of business, special mission and trainer aircraft – designing, marketing and supporting aviation products and services for businesses, governments and individuals worldwide. The company’s headquarters and major facilities are located in Wichita, Kan., with operations in Salina, Kan.; Little Rock, Ark.; Chester, England, U.K.; and Chihuahua, Mexico. The company leads the industry with a global network of more than 100 factory-owned and authorized service centers. For more information, visit www.hawkerbeechcraft.com.

    via Hawker Beechcraft Adds MNG Jet of Turkey as New Limited Service Center @ AMTOnline.com Top News.

  • Barroso says Turkey not burden for EU

    Barroso says Turkey not burden for EU

    President of the European Commission Jose Manuel Barroso has dismissed claims that Turkey would be a burden for the European Union at a time when the 27-nation bloc’s membership talks with the candidate country are in standstill.

     

    Barroso said, in contrast, Turkey would bring in a significant added value to the bloc during his speech at the European Business Summit on Wednesday, adding that the European Commission extended full support to Turkey’s membership to the EU.

    Barroso recalled the fact that several European Union member states are not ready to accept Turkey as a full member at this point and said he was aware of Turkey’s disappointment with it.

    Recent polls have shown that Turkish public has less incentive to embrace the EU membership than before and anti-EU sentiment among Turkish officials are increasingly growing. Despite sweeping reforms including constitutional amendments last year, the EU has criticized Turkey for lack of press freedom and reluctance in solving Turkey’s decades-old Kurdish problem.

    The president said the EU has a democratic structure and that it has to take opinion of all its members in account.

    “I believe that Turkish economy will bring in an added value to the European Union. Turkey will not be a burden to the union, on the contrary, it will bring in significant added value with its young population and current dynamism,” Barroso added.

    European Commissioner for Enlargement Stefan Füle told at a session on Turkey-European Union relations that annual trade volume between the EU and Turkey exceeded 100 billion euro, and that Turkey received two-third of its direct foreign investments from the European Union member states.

    “All these have proved that Turkey has become a country making key contributions to the European Union’s global competition power,” he said.

    He added that all European Union consulates in Turkey were expected to apply a simplified and harmonized visa regime as of July.

    via Barroso says Turkey not burden for EU.

  • OSCE concerned about internet filters, media restrictions in Turkey

    OSCE concerned about internet filters, media restrictions in Turkey

    VIENNA, Austria — A new law on media and internet censorship that is to be enforced in Turkey soon could limit media freedom and access to information, the OSCE said on Tuesday (May 17th). In a letter to Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media Dunja Mijatovic expressed concern about a recent ruling by the Constitutional Court, allowing prosecutors to file criminal cases against journalists years after material was published. Previously, this term was two months for journalists in daily papers and four months for those in other printed media. The OSCE warned that if these provisions remain, journalists who express critical views will work in constant fear.

    Mijatovic also expressed concern about government plans to introduce mandatory content filtering for all internet users in August. “Internet users must have the freedom to make an independent decision about using content filters. If enforced, this regulation would contravene OSCE and international standards on the free flow of information,” she added. (OSCE website, Hurriyet, Aksam – 17/05/11)

    via OSCE concerned about internet filters, media restrictions in Turkey (SETimes.com).

  • Efforts underway to boost bilateral trade between Turkey, Pakistan: Ambassador

    Efforts underway to boost bilateral trade between Turkey, Pakistan: Ambassador

    ANKARA: Pakistan�s Ambassador to Turkey H.E. Tariq Azizuddin in a meeting with a visiting delegation of the Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FPCCI) said efforts are underway to further boost existing annual bilateral trade between Turkey and Pakistan from the present US$997 million to US $ 2 billion by 2012.

    According to press release issued here on Wednesday, the Ambassador informed that next session of Pakistan Turkey Joint Economic Commission will be held in Turkey that will help identify new projects for investment in Pakistan. Led by Senator Haji Ghulam Ali, President FPCCI, the delegation attended 66th General Assembly of the Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges of Turkey (TOBB) at Ankara besides visiting various industrial facilities and business meetings with their Turkish counterparts.

    To give further momentum to growing economic ties between Pakistan and Turkey, Senator Ghulam Ali in his interaction with the Turkish investors invited them to have joint ventures with Pakistani business houses. He said improved productivity, focus on enhancing the skills of the workforce, value addition, and quality control could boost Pakistan exports.

    via ONLINE – International News Network.

  • Unbeatable Bodrum: Family feasts, banana boats and little emperors in tempting Turkey

    Unbeatable Bodrum: Family feasts, banana boats and little emperors in tempting Turkey

    By Sarah Chalmers

    By the third day of our holiday near Bodrum, on Turkey’s Aegean Coast, our four-year-old son had settled into a routine that would befit a small emperor.

    Wakened by birdsong and the lapping of the turquoise sea against the pearly-white beach, he would help himself from the breakfast buffet, while away the morning building sandcastles and hurtling down the slide in the kids’ pool – before more food, the ice-cream counter (open for two hours from 2pm sharp), then an afternoon of activities laid on by professional children’s entertainers and carers.

    Bodum, TurkeyTurk it easy: Bodrum, with its Fortress St Peter, is one of Turkey’s most elegant resorts

    A tea of nursery favourites and a Disney DVD brought the thoroughly satisfying day to a close.

    With three pre-school children in tow (the four-year-old and twins aged two) we had plumped for a fully-catered Mark Warner holiday and headed to their newest acquisition, the five star all-inclusive Sea Garden Resort, near Bodrum, ‘the pearl of Turkey‘.

    We soon found out why so many families with children opt for the company.

    Everything from the transfer times to the dining options seems to have children in mind. Our flight from Gatwick was at the civilised hour of 1pm (the return an equally manageable-with-small-children 11am).

    More…

    • More on Bodrum in our Turkey section
    • History and hipness in balmy Bodrum
    • More child-friendly breaks in our Family section

    On arrival we were checked into inter-connecting rooms complete with the requested travel cots. When we awoke the following morning any fears we may have still harboured about a jolly holiday camp atmosphere were quickly allayed.

    The site itself is discreet, comprising three-storey blocks dotted throughout a lush, bougainvillea-filled garden, right on the beach. The staff, while friendly and helpful, were thankfully just as low-key.

    But the big pull for us was the children’s facilities. A paddling pool with giant model octopus and three slides formed the focal point of the youngster’s area, set back from the beach and also incorporating a shaded grassy area and sand-filled play-park.

    Turkish foodMake mine a meze: Mark Warner resort guests can sample authentic Turkish food

    We headed there most mornings (along with the beach), as the freshwater outdoor showers, children’s toilets and changing facilities made it such an easy option.

    Part of the Mark Warner package is three hours of childcare per day for the over twos (under twos is available at a supplement), and each afternoon our four-year-old was thrilled to attend Kids Club where activities included swimming pool games, giant tennis and being pulled along on a banana boat (wearing, of course, a child-sized lifejacket).

    In the evenings the indoor rooms of the Kids Club are laid out with camp beds and travel cots for the under 5s to sleep in while their parents have dinner.

    You can drop your children off from 7.30pm where they watch a DVD then lie down if they want to, and you can collect them anytime up until 11.30pm.

    Children can have their own meal earlier when a junior tea (of kid-friendly staples like spaghetti) is served in the main restaurant from 6-6.30pm.

    Breakfast and lunch are served in an open-air buffet (and lunch can also be taken at a hot dog and burger café on site which proved a huge hit with our three).

    If all the sporting activities or the vigorous Turkish bath at the spa leave you peckish the snack bars are open all afternoon and coffee and cake is available in the outdoor restaurant as well as an ice-cream bar between 2-4pm. In fact, I calculated there were only 90 minutes between 7am and midnight (between 11am and noon, and 6.30-7pm) when no food was available.

    A shuttle-bus takes you to the main evening restaurant (if you can’t face the stairs or are using the excuse that ‘the children love it’) and also goes on a further minute to the resort’s shopping street.

    Known as Mini Bodrum the area is modelled on the alleyways of the town itself and includes a paper shop, gift shop, leather and clothes shop as well as tables and chairs where you can dine at the Turkish restaurant Merhaba.

    Most meals are taken at the buffet but twice a week you can choose from the a-la-carte restaurants serving Italian, Seafood, Mexican or Turkish food.

    Banana boatFruitful: The Sea Garden Resort in Bodrum offers child-friendly activities like banana boats

    Bodrum itself is a 25-minute journey from the hotel. Fifteen Turkish Lira, (£6.36 for the five of us) took us to the historic city, once named Halikarnassos and birthplace of Greek philosopher Herodotus, the ‘father of History’ (484-425BC).

    The town’s focal point is the castle but it also boasts an impressive marina filled with state-of-the-art yachts and shopping lanes which saw it dubbed ‘the new St Tropez’ by the New York Times.

    Bodrum is the most popular tourist destination for Turks and the city can become very busy in high season. Other nearby day-trips include Gumusluk, a tiny fishing port, famous for its seafood restaurants, and the ancient city of Ephesus.

    Reached by boat, the port is as restful as Bodrum is bustling. We whiled away an afternoon admiring the view from one of the seaside bars, our peace disturbed only by our four-year-old son asking: ‘Why am I not in Kids Club?’

    We didn’t really have an answer.

    Travel Facts

    A family of four (two adults and two children under 13) can stay for a week at the Sea Garden resort for around £5,000 in August, £3,000 in September. Price includes flights from Gatwick, transfers, and accommodation. All-inclusive dining, childcare for the over-twos, windsurfing, sailing, tennis and aerobics/fitness programme also included (0844 884 3801, www.markwarner.co.uk).

    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/travel/article-1388085/Turkey-breaks-Bodrum-unbeatable-families.html#ixzz1MltU90cv