"I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life"

Father God, thank you for the love of the truth you have given me. Please bless me with the wisdom, knowledge and discernment needed to always present the truth in an attitude of grace and love. Use this blog and Northwoods Ministries for your glory. Help us all to read and to study Your Word without preconceived notions, but rather, let scripture interpret scripture in the presence of the Holy Spirit. All praise to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

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Showing posts with label failed coup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label failed coup. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Turkish Court Acquits 3 Journalists of Supporting Terrorism: 2nd Blow to Erdogan in a Month

Controlling the media is a necessary part of the strategy of any autocrat. Recep Tayyip Erdogan certainly was heading in that direction, but this decision toward free speech in journalism, and the election of a non-Erdogan supporter as mayor of Istanbul, may have thrown a monkey wrench into his plans for a Turkish caliphate.

By Clyde Hughes

Onderoglu and two others were found not guilty in Turkey Wednesday of supporting terrorism.
Photo by Sedat Suna/EPA

(UPI) -- A Turkish court acquitted three journalists Wednesday on charges of producing propaganda for a terrorist organization in connection with a 2016 incident.

Erol Onderoglu, Ahmet Nesin and Sebnem Korur Financi were prosecuted by Turkish officials after they took over the position of guest editors at Ozgur Gundem, a pro-Kurdish newspaper.

The 13th High Criminal Court cleared them of charges that included inciting the committing of crimes, praising crime and criminals, and conducting propaganda for a terrorist organization.

Onderoglu, a member of Reporters Without Borders, said in a statement that the court victory should be a benefit for all journalists prosecuted for doing their jobs.

"I would like to express my deep gratitude to all those who supported us during this trial," Onderoglu said. "This fight for all of our unjustly prosecuted or imprisoned colleagues continues."

RSF secretary-general Christophe Deloire, the secretary-general for Reporters Without Borders, warned that Onderglu will face a second trial in November.

"Erol Onderoglu's acquittal is an exceptional victory for justice and press freedom in a country where both are being trampled on every day," Deloire said. "Our deep relief is tinged with bitterness because our correspondent will be on trial again in four months' time.

"The way this historic press freedom defender is being harassed is a deep injustice. We, therefore, urge the Turkish judicial system to demonstrate the same good sense that it showed today and to quickly abandon this new prosecution," he continued.

Turkey and its Kurdish population, which makes up about 15 to 20 percent of the country's residents, have long been at odds. The Turkish government has labeled some organizations that support the Kurds and Kurdish independence as terrorist organizations.

The crackdown on the journalists came a month after a failed coup against Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his government in July 2016.



Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Turkey Wants to Join BRICS Because it's Disappointed in NATO and EU – Analysts

Russian President Vladimir Putin, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan
at the BRICS summit on July 27, 2018 © Gianluigi Guercia / Reuters

By floating the idea of Turkey joining BRICS, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan seeks to diversify Ankara's foreign policy, with its EU membership bid long stalled and relations with the US on the rocks, analysts told RT.

The Turkish President has suggested that the leaders of the five-member BRICS bloc (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) should add "T" to the acronym. Erdogan was invited to the group's latest forum and told Hurriyet Daily News on its sidelines that current members welcomed the idea of Turkey's accession.

Evgeniy Bakhrevskiy, deputy director of the Russian Research Institute of Cultural and Natural Heritage, explained that this apparent pivot by Erdogan is rooted in Turkey's mounting frustration with the West.

Erdogan "believes there is a need to diversify Turkey's foreign policy, because he is seriously disappointed with western structures, with the EU; he has rather strained relations with the US," Bakhrevskiy noted.

Stevan Gajic, researcher at the Institute for European Studies in Belgrade, argued that it hasn’t been geopolitical considerations, but "something very personal" that has prompted Erdogan to strive for new allegiances.

Gajic believes that the foiled military coup attempt in 2016 and Syrian President Bashar Assad winning in Syria with Russia's help, are two main factors that made Erdogan’s outlook change.

It also comes at a moment when Turkey's long-standing dream of joining the EU is in limbo, with the accession process effectively frozen. Although the EU is Turkey's top trading partner, Turkey is still stuck in the bloc's "waiting room," a situation that in itself is an insult to Ankara, Bakhrevskiy pointed out.

Ankara's relations with Washington are also going through a rough patch, with "anti-American sentiment very strong in almost all layers of Turkish society," Bakhrevskiy said, because of America's support for Kurdish militias fighting Islamic State. Turkey views the backbone of the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), the People's Protection Units (PYD), as an extension of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), recognized as terrorists by Turkey.

By refusing to cut its support for the Kurdish-led forces, the US is seen by many in Turkey as "directly threatening" their country, Bakhrevskiy said. Erdogan doesn't hesitate to capitalize on the sentiment.

"Anti-Americanism is popular, he is a politician, he will do what people like."

At the same time, Turkey's relations with Russia, having hit their lowest point when Turkey downed a Russian attack jet above Syria in November 2015, have recovered swiftly and are gaining momentum. The speed of this rapprochement is evidence that "two parties really need each other," according to Bakhrevskiy.

"The main change from 2015 is that then Turkey and Russia were on the brink of war," Gajic noted. Russia expressed its support for Erdogan following the 2016 coup attempt, which the Turkish authorities blamed on the US-based exiled cleric Fethullah Gülen and his associates in Turkey. The two Turkish pilots accused of downing the Russian plane were later arrested in a post-coup crackdown.

Supposing the pilots were indeed part of Gulen's network, "that was actually a plot to make a conflict between Russia and Turkey," Gajic said.

Or, at least it is a convenient scapegoat!

While Turkey doesn't look likely to ditch NATO for good just yet, Bakhrevskiy points out that BRICS is "a very democratic bloc" which does not require any special "sacrifices" like leaving the EU or NATO in order to join.

Gajic, meanwhile, believes Ankara could leverage the threat of leaving NATO as a "big bargaining chip." Its potential departure would "deal a big blow" to an alliance already shaken by US President Donald Trump's constant demands that European members pay more for the bloc's costly maintenance.

This ambiguous position "is best for Turkey," Gajic believes, as both Russia and the US are eventually interested in winning Ankara over.




Wednesday, July 4, 2018

Ecuadorian Court Orders Arrest of Former President Rafael Correa

Corruption is Everywhere - at the highest level in Ecuador?
By Danielle Haynes

Former Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa dismissed an arrest warrant issued for him, saying prosecutors have no evidence he was involved in a plot to kidnap a political rival. File Photo by Alejandro Ernesto/EPA-EFE

UPI -- An Ecuadorian court ordered the arrest of former President Rafael Correa over his alleged involvement in a failed plot to kidnap a political rival in 2012.

Judge Daniella Camacho of the National Justice Court of Ecuador said she alerted Interpol of a request to extradite Correa, who lives in Belgium with his wife.

Prosecutors accuse the former president of being behind the brief kidnapping of Fernando Balda in Bogota, Colombia, where the former lawmaker fled to avoid tensions with Correa. Balda said five men attempted to kidnap him but Colombian police halted the plot.

Balda traveled to Colombia to avoid charges of being involved in a failed coup against Correa in 2010. Balda was sentenced to one year in prison.

The former president, who led Ecuador from 2007 to 2017, denied the charges and said there was no evidence against him.

"How much success will this farce have at the international level?" Correa said. "Don't worry, everything is a matter of time. We will overcome!"


Sunday, June 24, 2018

Sultan Erdogan One Step Closer to Becoming Caliph of Turkey

Erdogan wins 1st term as president ‘under new system’

As I mentioned yesterday in Nil Köksal's piece, I don't believe Erdogan would leave anything to chance, so this win was to be expected. We can also expect him to use his executive authority to eliminate any meaningful opposition, that would mostly mean non-Muslim hardliners, that might remain after having incarcerated most of them. 

Once he's consolidated himself as de facto Caliph of Turkey, will he turn his attention to reviving the Ottoman Empire?

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan leaves the voting booth at a polling station in Istanbul, Turkey on June 24, 2018.
© Umit Bektas / Reuters

Incumbent Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has won the majority of votes, the head of the electoral board said. This would mark the second consecutive term for Erdogan, but the first one under “a new system.”

With over 97.2 percent of votes counted, the head of Turkey's High Electoral Board (YSK) says Erdogan has secured more than 50 percent of the votes needed for the victory.

In the parliamentary election, his AK Party is also in first place with over 45 percent. The pro-Kurdish People's Democratic Party (HDP) will also enter the parliament after passing the 10 percent threshold, according the board's head, Sadi Guven. Turnout was at 87 percent for both polls, preliminary data shows.

Erdogan’s closest competitor, Muharrem Ince, has secured over 29 percent of the vote. His Republican People’s Party (CHP) placed second with nearly 21 percent.

"The Turkish people have elected Erdogan as Turkey's first president/executive president under the new system,” Turkish government spokesman Bekir Bozdag said.

While delivering a statement on his own, Erdogan also said that the preliminary results clearly indicated his victory, as over 95 percent of votes were counted. He called for leaving aside the “tensions" of the election period and promised there will be no back paddling on the “success” he achieved. The Turkish opposition, meanwhile, claimed that there will likely be a second round of elections.

Today’s polls are the first since Turkey switched to a presidential system of governance after the April 2017 constitutional referendum. The plebiscite effectively split Turkish society in half, as the amendment package passed by a close margin, securing 52 percent of the vote.

The victory allows Erdogan to further consolidate political power and implement the constitutional reforms. The powers in question include the abilities to pick cabinet ministers from outside of the legislature, pass laws by decree, single-handedly declare a state of emergency and launch extraordinary elections. The post of the prime minister is also set to be abolished.

The Turkish opposition, however, sees such changes as a power grab, which effectively destroys the country’s century-old parliamentary democracy. Erdogan’s closest competitor, Ince, vowed that he would lift the state of emergency within 48 hours if elected president and reverse all the constitutional reforms afterward.

Erdogan counters that view, saying “Turkey is staging a democratic revolution.” 

“With the presidential system, Turkey is seriously raising the bar, rising above the level of contemporary civilizations.”

Drastic changes in Turkey’s political system followed a botched coup attempt in July 2016. Erdogan accused his late ally and now nemesis, US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, of masterminding the coup. The cleric has firmly rejected the accusations.

Following the failed coup, Turkey has been under a state of emergency for nearly two years and has seen a widespread crackdown on alleged supporters of Gulen. Around 160,000 people have been detained, and thousands of public servants and soldiers have been fired.




Saturday, June 23, 2018

Could Turkey's Erdogan Era be Ending?

I seriously doubt that Sultan Erdogan has left any possibility to chance.
But I defer to Nil who is very knowledgeable when it comes to Turkey.

Snap election gamble could cost Erdogan, 
as weekend vote expected to be close
Nil Köksal · CBC News 

This weekend's election could lock in a new presidential system for Turkey 
One that President Tayyip Erdogan has pushed for. 

It is a fight for Turkey's future.

So much is at stake in Sunday's presidential election that the country's electoral board reports nearly half of the three million Turks living outside the country have already marked their ballots. It is a record turnout.

In Toronto, lineups snaked around the Turkish consulate for three days of advanced voting. Ekrem Alpaydin had the Turkish flag wrapped around his shoulders. He sees only Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the current president, in Turkey's future.

"He's the best leader in the world — seriously, honestly," Alpaydin said. "My leader is strong."

Others in the voting line rolled their eyes, with one shouting, "He's a f---ing dictator!"

Ezgi Ulkuseven wouldn't reveal who she was choosing, but said, "I'm not supporting Erdogan, I can tell you that."

"I think a lot of people are angry about the way things are in Turkey right now, so [this vote] could change a lot of things."

Much of the anger is tied to Turkey's troubled economy, the country's involvement in the Syrian war and the reality of housing millions of refugees.

The country is also still under a state of emergency nearly two years after the deadly attempt to topple Erdogan's government. In the ensuing crackdown, more than 150,000 people have either lost their jobs or are in prison awaiting trial.

There are still questions about whether the coup was a real attempt to topple Erdogan, or whether it was staged and used as pretext to arrest thousands of his political opponents. 

Whatever the election result, it will be life-altering for the country's nearly 80 million people and have lasting ramifications for Turkey's neighbours and allies.

Canada is already a popular safe harbour for Turks from the recent tumult. The number of Turkish asylum seekers in Canada quintupled in 2017. Thousands of others are coming as students, permanent residents or investors.

What's at stake?

This weekend's vote could lock in a new presidential system for Turkey — one that Erdogan has pushed for.

It has been billed as similar to the U.S. presidency, but critics worry it will have fewer checks and balances than Turkey's parliamentary system, and will write a blank cheque for an already powerful leader. After 15 years leading the country, Erdogan could win at least another decade in power.

But this time, Erdogan is up against some of the strongest opponents he has ever faced.

Meral Aksener, in red, is one of the founding members of Erdogan's Justice and Development Party,
and now leads Turkey's Iyi (Good) Party. (Jeff Mitchell/Getty Images)

Some are emulating his cadence, his shout and populist touch while promising significant change — and at the top of the list is relaxing the grip he's held on freedom of expression.

Erdogan's recent anti-West, anti-EU rhetoric has rattled relationships with the U.S. and Europe, fueling fear that the West could lose a key, calm friend in the region.

Four of the Turkish parties running in the election are willing to cobble together a coalition — despite the political and ideological chasms between them — because they share the singular goal of ending the Erdogan era.

Erdogan's opponents

Muharrem Ince is seeing a remarkable swell of support as head of the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP). Ince's popularity has clearly swayed Turkish media.

Out of fear of or outright support for Erdogan, opposition voices usually get minimal play. Now, media outlets are carrying Ince's events and inviting him into their studios for live interviews — although Erdogan is still getting the bulk of airtime.

Ince is a former teacher, and one of his most colourful proposals is to turn Erdogan's extravagant 1,150-room presidential palace into an education centre.

Muharrem Ince, the leader and presidential candidate of Turkey's main opposition party, the Republican People's Party,
has garnered large crowds for his campaign rallies. (Ali Ege/AFP/Getty Images)

Selahattin Demirtas, the leader of the People's Democratic Party (HDP), is campaigning from his prison cell. He's been there since 2016, accused of supporting terrorism.

Charismatic and, at 44, the youngest of the candidates, Demirtas made big gains in the 2015 election, passing the threshold to enter parliament. Soon after, Erdogan began alleging Demirtas was a supporter of the PKK, the Kurdish militant group behind a deadly insurgency in Turkey since the 1980s. It is an allegation Demirtas and the HDP have always denied, insisting it is politically motivated.

Meral Aksener, a sharp-tongued nationalist and one of the founding members of Erdogan's Justice and Development Party (AKP), is leading a new party, IYI, which promises a new future for Turkey. Savvy social media targeting of young Turks has been a key part of her campaign.

Temel Karamollaoglu is a UK-educated former engineer leading the small Saadet (Felicity) Party, which is attracting more religious voters disillusioned with Erdogan's leadership.

The issues

The economy is one of the issues that initially helped propel Erdogan to power, and now it is what could hurt him most.

After years of economic growth and success under Erdogan, the reality now is a critically low lira, rising inflation and unemployment, particularly among young people. Nearly 11 per cent of people in the country are out of work, and recent numbers show nearly 20 per cent unemployment among people aged 15-24.

Supporters of Selahattin Demirtas watch the presidential candidate of the pro-Kurdish People's Democratic Party speak via video from a prison cell. (Yasin Akgul/AFP/Getty Images)

At a recent election rally, Erdogan said rising refrigerator sales in Turkey were a sign of how well the economy was doing. Opponents seized on the moment — it was clear proof, they shouted, that Erdogan is out of touch.

Turkey's complicated relationship with its Kurdish population is also a defining factor in this vote. While Turkey is still locked in conflict with the PKK — a group internationally recognized as a terror organization — Erdogan enjoys high support among conservative Kurds.

Turkey's role in Syria and the three and a half million Syrian refugees now in Turkey are factors swaying voters, too.

In Toronto, student Yagmur Teze bristled at those issues, even as she talked about freedom for Turkish dissidents and minorities.

"Scholars, doctors, political leaders — everyone who is against [Erdogan] is now in jail," she says. "Those people are now guaranteed rights to vote."

Turkish officials said this week that 30,000 Syrian refugees are eligible to vote.

Pollsters are warning the final tally will likely be close. There are already plans for a potential second round of voting.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Nil Köksal, CBC News

Nil Köksal is the host of World Report, CBC's flagship national radio news show. She begins her mornings with more than a million loyal listeners. She recently returned from her post as CBC’s foreign correspondent in Turkey.

Thursday, April 26, 2018

Turkish Court Sentences 14 Journalists on Terror Charges

It is vital for an autocratic government to get control of news reporting. Turkey has been working for years at shutting down newspapers that dare to tell the truth or reveal secret programs where the government is supporting ISIS, for instance. Erdogan, with his ambition to become Caliph of a new Ottoman Empire, will have his way.
By Daniel Uria 

A Turkish court sentenced 14 journalists from the Cumhuriyet newspaper to prison on charges that they worked to support groups the government considers terrorist organizations. Photo by Erdem Sahin/EPA

UPI -- A Turkish court sentenced 14 staff members from the country's leading independent newspaper to prison Wednesday.

Journalists for the Cumhuriyet newspaper were sentenced to between two to seven years in prison after the Turkish government accused them of supporting what they consider to be terrorist organizations including the Kurdistan Workers' Party and a movement led by cleric Fetullah Gulen, who is believed to have masterminded a failed coup while in exile in the United States.

Akin Atalay, the newspaper's chief executive who had been imprisoned for more than 500 days, denied the paper had aided terrorist organizations.

"The primary role of a newspaper is not to make money, but to present news, truth, criticism and views to the public," he said.

Atalay was sentenced to seven years, three months and 15 days in jail, while editor-in-chief Murat Sabuncu and investigative reporter Ahmet Sik were each sentenced to seven years and six months in prison. All staff members will remain free while their cases are appealed.

Three journalists were acquitted and the court ruled the case against former editor-in-chief Can Dundar, who was originally named prime suspect, would continue separately.

Sabuncu was defiant after the ruling, declaring neither he nor the paper were dissuaded by the case.

"I see this as an attack against us and against all the journalism community, against all our colleagues for us not to practice journalism in Turkey, to be scared while doing it," he said. "We can go to jail one more time if necessary. We will go on doing journalism with courage."

More than 50,000 people, including 160 journalists, were arrested in a government crackdown following the failed coup in 2016 that shut down 170 news outlets in the country.

Turkey's representative of the Committee to Protect Journalists Ozgur Ogret said the verdict sent a desperate message.

"The authorities were unable to prove their claims of malpractice and connections to multiple outlawed organizations at court," Ogret said. "Turkey's political climate demanded a sentencing, so they did with the vague terrorism law clause of 'aiding a terrorist organization.'"

Of course, any criticism of the government, or any revealing of state secrets no matter how illegal or onerous, could be considered aiding terrorist organizations. 





Sunday, July 9, 2017

Turkey Protest: Istanbul Rally Concludes Anti-Erdogan March

From BBC Europe 



Tens of thousands of people have gathered in Istanbul at the end of a 450km (280-mile) protest march against the government of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Huge crowds have joined the "justice" march since it began in the capital Ankara on 15 June.

They are demonstrating against the mass dismissals and imprisonments that followed last year's failed coup.

President Erdogan has accused the marchers of supporting terrorism.

He said the Republican People's Party (CHP) - which has organised the march - had gone beyond political opposition and was "acting with terrorist organisations and the forces inciting them against our country".

Consequently, Erdogan now has justification (in his own mind) to arrest every single one of those in the protest march.

CHP leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu launched the march after one of his MPs, Enis Berberoglu, was arrested for allegedly leaking documents purporting to show that the government was arming jihadists in Syria.

Mr Berberoglu denies the charge. Sunday's rally is taking place in an area close to the jail in which he is being held.

More than 50,000 people have been arrested and 140,000 dismissed or suspended since last year's attempted military takeover.

The detentions of human rights activists and leading journalists have drawn international condemnation.

Mr Kilicdaroglu, who began the march and has walked around 20km a day, says the purges and emergency rule by Mr Erdogan constitute a "second coup".

The failed coup last July saw rogue soldiers bombing government buildings and driving tanks into civilians, killing more than 260.

The BBC's Mark Lowen in Istanbul says the march has become an unprecedented show of defiance against the President Erdogan.

There is a widespread feeling that the government has seized the chance to crush all opponents, not just alleged coup supporters, our correspondent adds.

Erdogan has also used the coup to greatly increase his power and authority - big steps on his way to becoming Caliph.


Sunday, April 16, 2017

Turkey Takes Big Step on Road to Making Erdogan a Caliph

The natural evolution of Islam is toward Sharia

Erdogan tightens grip on Turkey with
narrow referendum win
DOUG SAUNDERS
The Globe and Mail


From the moment he was first elected to Turkish high office as a reformist leader in 2003, Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s opponents have painted him as a Trojan-horse candidate hiding some darker agenda – specifically, a potential Islamic overthrow of Turkey’s nine-decade-old secular democracy.

On Sunday, Mr. Erdogan’s apparent narrow victory in a constitutional-change referendum turned at least some of those fears into reality. In a vote the opposition has vowed to challenge, the result cements Mr. Erdogan’s increasingly authoritarian tendencies into permanent rules that allow the Turkish President to remain in power for another decade, to eliminate key checks and balances, and to wield formidable personal control over legislation and appointments of military and justice officials.

The constitutional changes over which Turks voted on Sunday, if recognized, will make Mr. Erdogan not so much an Ottoman-style sultan or Iranian-style theocrat but more a president-in-perpetuity in the mould of Russia’s Vladimir Putin.

That is, he has become another elected leader of a once-successful democracy who has managed to alter the constitution, eliminate checks and balances, and quash or intimidate opposition forces so as to guarantee himself more or less unchecked power within a nominally democratic system. As Turkish opposition leaders noted Sunday night, Mr. Erdogan has managed to erase much of the democratic infrastructure Mustafa Kemal Ataturk put in place in the 1920s, replacing it not with a return to Islamic rule (or not yet) but with the instruments of pure personal power.

Yes, for now!


Despite having won the referendum by a very narrow margin – 51.3 per cent to 48.7 per cent, according to official results, with 87 per cent of Turkey’s 58 million eligible voters casting a ballot – Mr. Erdogan spoke Sunday night of taking on even greater powers, declaring that he would attempt to reinstate the death penalty, which was abolished in 2002, and push for further changes. “We’ve got a lot to do; we are on this path but it’s time to change gears and go faster,” he declared in his victory speech.

Yet the most visible outcome of Sunday’s referendum may be a Turkey that is violently divided against itself and ostracized by its neighbours in Europe and the Middle East. The referendum marks the culmination of five years during which Mr. Erdogan has burned the bridges he carefully built during his first decade in power with European neighbours, minority groups and political opponents.

His reputation as a uniter has gradually evaporated over the past few years as he has violently crushed democracy protests; waged relentless war against the Kurdish populations he once courted; denounced the European leaders he once hoped to join as “Nazis” and threatened to flood their countries with refugees; alienated his partners in NATO by taking an ambiguous and counterproductive role in the Syrian civil war; and used last year’s bungled military coup attempt as a pretext for arresting or purging more than 175,000 officials and jailing more than 120 journalists.

After all, Sunday’s vote did not reflect a consensus around his rule so much as a deeply divided Turkey. Urbanites and more educated Turks decisively rejected the constitutional changes, with six of Turkey’s eight largest cities, including Istanbul and Ankara, delivering No majorities. Those cities erupted in protest Sunday night, with crowds filling the streets of Istanbul chanting “Thief, murderer Erdogan,” Ankara crowds banging kitchen pots and street battles between Erdogan supporters and opponents raging in Izmir.

Turkey's concentrated bombing of Syrian Kurds

Likewise, it appears that Turkey’s Kurds, Alawites, Armenians and other minorities – who make up more than a fifth of the population – strongly rejected the changes, as regions with large minority populations voted decidedly No. Electoral maps showed a large swath of Yes majorities across the rural and religious centre of the country, with the urban and minority-dominated regions around the periphery rejecting the proposals strongly. The vote is likely to be viewed by those groups as a majority population of Anatolian Turks imposing their political will on the rest of the country.

With Erdogan's support coming from the more devout Muslims, his power will also come from them. He will have no choice, not that he wants one, but to take Turkey in the direction of Sharia. Most Muslim countries will gravitate toward a more and more extreme form of Islam. It's happening in Iran and Pakistan, it happened in Egypt but for a coup, the Taliban made it happen in Afghanistan for a season and many groups are trying to make it happen in many other countries. It is the natural evolution of Islam!

The results were immediately contested by the major opposition parties. The third largest party, the Kurdish-based HDP party, declared that it would appeal a third of the votes.

Yet whatever the official outcome, it is clear that tens of millions of Turks voted willingly and often enthusiastically to turn their controversial President into something more like an authoritarian ruler – despite the fact that Mr. Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP) has never quite won a majority of the popular vote.

What appears to have driven so many voters to his side was the force that has allowed him to keep opposition parties at bay for the past several years: Fear.

If the messages of most of Mr. Erdogan’s first decade – during which he served as Prime Minister – was unity and reconciliation, the message in recent years – especially after he was elected President in 2014 – has been one of fear and isolation.

Turkey’s sizable Kurdish minority, whom Mr. Erdogan courted as Prime Minister by legalizing their language and political parties, ending state persecutions and making gestures toward minority rights and “distinct society” status, has become more or less an official enemy, with Turkey’s Kurdish cities bombed more heavily than many in neighbouring Syria and even moderate Kurdish movements regarded as terrorist threats.

Likewise, last year’s coup attempt allowed Mr. Erdogan to demonize virtually any political moderates or opposition figures as threatening members of the “deep state” linked to the Islamist Gulen movement. His hostility toward opposition was visible in the 2013 Gezi Park democracy protests in Istanbul, which he crushed and denounced, and in his government’s long record of arresting and silencing critical journalists, which reached a peak last year with the takeover or shutdown of major media chains.

And after having spent a decade as a pro-European, free-trade leader dedicated to getting his country into the European Union, Mr. Erdogan has now turned aggressively against European institutions and leaders, taking a politically and increasingly economically isolationist stand.

One plausible reading holds that Mr. Erdogan’s shift to authoritarianism was the fault of European leaders: The moment they began rejecting Turkey’s EU ambitions, he gave up on much of his modernizing agenda and launched his quest for personal power at any cost.

Another theory holds that Mr. Erdogan’s shift is Middle Eastern or Russian in inspiration: He simply joined a bloc of emerging-economy leaders who saw “managed democracy” and authoritarianism as the best way to avoid personal defeat. Whatever the cause, Turkey emerges from Sunday’s referendum a country that has fallen, in a surprisingly short period, off the world’s democratic ledger.



Erdogan says resumption of death penalty could be up for referendum next

If Erdogan gets the death penalty approved, the Dardanelles
will run red with the blood of his political enemies
then there will be nothing stopping him

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan and his wife Emine © Murad Sezer / Reuters

After claiming victory in a referendum that greatly expands his powers, the President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan has strongly hinted that the time has come for Turkey to consider reinstating the death penalty.

Erdogan used his victory speech on Sunday night to reveal that he will “immediately” discuss bringing back the capital punishment with Prime Minister Binali Yildirim and the leader of the nationalist opposition.

“If it [a parliament bill] comes in front of me, I will approve it,” the Turkish leader said as cited by AFP. “But if there is no support [from in parliament]... then what shall we do?”

“Then we could have another referendum for that,” Erdogan added.

The move could bring an ultimate end to Turkey’s long stalled efforts to join European Union. Accession negotiations have been sluggish for decades and were temporarily suspended in November 2016, with the EU citing Ankara's "disproportionate” crackdown following last year’s failed coup.

European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker said a return of the death penalty would be a "red line” in Turkey's EU membership bid. "If the death penalty is reintroduced in Turkey, that would lead to the end of negotiations,” he told Germany's Bild newspaper in March.

Members of the European Parliament has said that the re-introduction of the capital punishment in Turkey would lead to a formal suspension of the accession process.

“The unequivocal rejection of the death penalty is an essential element of the Union acquis,” they said.

In the run up to Sunday's vote, Erdogan suggested that Turkey may reevaluate its relations with the EU if the constitutional amendments passed. He said he would have more leverage when negotiating with Brussels, claiming "it will be a different Turkey” then. He also suggested a “Brexit-like” referendum on whether the country should continue to try and join the union.

With most of the ballots counted, over 51 percent of the electorate have voted in favor of handing Erdogan greater powers. The president called the ‘yes’ vote a historic decision by the Turkish people, expressing hope that it will benefit the country.

During the victory speech he also said everyone should respect the nation's decision, and added Turkey would “shift gears” in the coming period.

Saturday, January 21, 2017

Erdogan Closing in on His Goal - Caliph of Turkey

Turkish MPs back constitutional reform, triggering referendum on sweeping powers for Erdogan

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan © Brendan McDermid / Reuters

Turkish MPs have approved a constitutional reform package that would place remarkable executive powers in President Erdogan’s hands. Critics see the proposal as a power grab, though it is yet to be adopted, with a referendum upcoming.

339 MPs voted in favor of the 18-article law, which would make the president the head of the executive and axe the post of prime minister, state-run Anadolu news agency reported on Saturday.

A second and final round of voting on the constitutional amendments began on Wednesday after almost three weeks of heated debates in the parliament.

The Turkish people will now have the final say in a referendum, expected to take place in early April. Changes to the constitution need to be approved by at least 367 of the 550 members to become law. Proposals that get between 330 and 367 votes should be approved in a referendum.

If the changes are approved by the people, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will become the sole executive head of state, with authority to choose his own cabinet ministers, enact laws, call elections, or declare states of emergency. His term in office would last five years, renewable once.

In turn, the parliament’s oversight over the executive will be limited to a number of functions, including submitting written requests for information, initiating parliamentary inquiries, and holding “general meetings” to discuss issues relating to the government’s actions, according to NTV.

Moreover, Erdogan’s ties to the ruling AK party would be restored, as the amendments allow the president to be a member of a political party. Earlier this week, the AK party secured the majority of votes to proceed with the constitutional changes with the backing of the right-wing Nationalist Movement Party, the fourth largest party in the parliament.

“We have done our job. Now we convey the issue to its real owner, our people,” Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim was quoted as saying by Anadolu.

For now! If the people support Erdogan, Erdogan will own the people. They will be signing their rights and freedoms away.

Earlier in January, he welcomed the idea of abolishing his own post, saying, “we are not crazy for power,” according to AFP. “Two captains sink the boat. There must be one captain,” he stated during the first parliamentary debate on the changes. 

The opposition, however, calls the proposed changes a blueprint for a power grab. On Friday, Bulent Tezcan, deputy chairman of the Republican People’s Party (CHP), maintained the amendments were “creating a one-man regime that will take [Turkey] wherever his appetite desires,” according to AP.

Kemal Kilicdaroglu, head of the CHP, said he regretted the parliament’s decision to “hand over its own authority” and “betray” its history. He also vowed to hold early elections before the constitutional amendments take effect. “We are saying ‘hold an election first,’ as they do not go to an election. They are the ones who are afraid of the nation’s will,” he said, as quoted by Hurriyet. 

The parliamentary vote on the changes has been taking place amid tensions between the ruling party and the opposition. Last Thursday, AK party MPs openly flouted a rule on secret balloting, assaulting an opposition lawmaker who used her phone to film them. One AK member also had a gash on his leg, claiming to have been bitten during the brawl.


The 62-year-old Erdogan came to power in 2002, a year after the AK party was formed. He spent 11 years as Turkey's prime minister before becoming the country's first directly-elected president in 2014.

Once Erdogan has gained the power he seeks, watch to see if Turkey's secular government doesn't become more theocratic. It will be easy enough to do since Erdogan will be the government and parliament will have no power over him. Can Sharia be far behind?

Turkey has been in a state of emergency since a failed coup in July last year. The status was prolonged after a series of terrorist attacks in the country, including a mass shooting in an Istanbul nightclub on New Year's Eve.

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

The Cost of Turkey's Failed Coup: $100 Billion

The Turkish government said estimate could go higher after detailed calculations are made

This is not actually true. The actual cost of the failed coup is not likely more than a few million dollars. But the cost of Erdogan's purging pogrom will run in the 100s of billions.

By Ed Adamczyk  


People wave Turkish flags during a demonstration in support of the Turkish president in Istanbul, Turkey, on July 16, 2016 following an attempted military coup. Turkey's trade minister estimated the cost of the coup to the economy at $100 billion Monday. Photo by Hanna Noori/ UPI | License Photo

ANKARA , Turkey, Aug. 2 (UPI) -- Turkey's trade minister estimated the cost to the national economy of the July 15 failed military coup, and its aftermath, at $100 billion.

Customs and Trade Minister Bulent Tufenkci announced the estimate Monday, adding the figure could increase.

"When we consider all those warplanes, helicopters, weapons, bombs and buildings, the cost is 300 billion liras ($100.1 billion) at minimum, according to our prior calculations," he told journalists in Ankara. "The exact cost may likely increase when the detailed calculations are made. There will also be various costs in the medium-term. For instance, many orders from abroad have been canceled. Many foreigners have halted their Turkey visits. The coup plotters have unfortunately created a Turkey image as if it were a third world country. People who see tanks in the streets and the parliament bombed will not come to Turkey."

Neither will people who see tens of thousands of arrests within hours of the failed coup. It's either indiscriminate incarceration or it's been planned for a long time; either is not very reassuring to tourists.

He added that markets remained stable during the coup attempt, all banks and stock exchanges remained open, there was no evidence of a decline in foreign investment and no growth or export data needed to be revised.

The only sector struggling, Tufenkci said, was the tourism industry, noting it has been hampered for months because of the Russian economy, terrorist attacks earlier in the summer and the cancellation of vacations of civil servants while Turkey is under a state of emergency.

A government promotional campaign to aid the tourism industry will begin soon, he added.

Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim contended Monday the economy may be stronger than before, with the coup attempt acting as a stress test.

"Our economy is still as steady as a rock. There was not even a minor economic shock. But, this situation disturbed some sides. Our democracy and state of law is also stronger than before the attempted coup," he said, the Rudaw news agency reported.

State of law, maybe, but democracy, not likely.

Sunday, July 24, 2016

Failed Turkish Coup Attempt Sympathizers Suffer Torture & Rape – Amnesty

If you feared for the health and well-being of the thousands
of people arrested by Turkey, your fears were justified

A policeman checks a soldier beaten by the mob after troops involved in the coup attempt surrendered on the Bosphorus Bridge in Istanbul, Turkey July 16, 2016. © Murad Sezer
A policeman checks a soldier beaten by the mob after troops involved in the coup attempt surrendered on the Bosphorus Bridge in Istanbul, Turkey July 16, 2016. © Murad Sezer / Reuters

Amnesty International has gathered “credible evidence” that people arrested in relation to the past week’s failed coup attempt have been often arbitrary detained, deprived of contacts with family and lawyers as well as go through “severe” tortures.

The detainees arrested over alleged links to the foiled coup attempt are being arbitrarily held, sometimes in informal detention places such as sports centers and stables. They are also not properly informed about the charges against them, Amnesty International said in a statement, published on its official website.

Some detainees, including at least three judges, were held in the corridors of courthouses.

Amnesty also obtained “extremely alarming accounts of torture and other ill-treatment of detainees” from their lawyers, doctors and a person on duty in a detention facility.

According to these reports, police held detainees in stress positions for up to 48 hours, denied them food, water and medical treatment, verbally abused and threatened them and subjected them to beatings and torture, including rape and sexual assault.

Based on the information given by a person on duty at Ankara Police Headquarters’ sports hall to Amnesty, a detainee suffered severe wounds after apparently being beaten by police. He could not stand up or focus his eyes and he eventually lost consciousness. Police refused to allow this detainee to receive basic medical treatment and a police doctor reportedly said: “Let him die. We will say he came to us dead.”

According to the evidence obtained by Amnesty, 650-800 male soldiers were being held in the Ankara police headquarters sports hall. At least 300 of them had signs proving that they were beaten, with some of them even having broken bones. About 40 were unable to walk because of serious injuries sustained in custody.

Amnesty also collected accounts of police officers saying that the detainees are being beaten so that “they would talk.” Many detainees are also handcuffed behind their backs with plastic zip-ties and forced to kneel for hours or are blindfolded.

At the same time, Amnesty stressed that the worst treatment in detention was reserved for higher-ranking military officers. Two lawyers in Ankara told the NGO they saw senior military officers in detention being raped with a truncheon or finger by police officers.

Amnesty International interviewed more than 10 lawyers in both Ankara and Istanbul who gave information about the conditions of their clients’ confinement. The lawyers represented up to 18 detainees each.

Most of their clients are soldiers but there are also judges, prosecutors, police, and other civil servants among them.

The interviewees also told the human rights organization that based on what detainees told them police deprived them of food for up to three days and water for up to two days. Some detainees are also reportedly in extreme emotional distress and even attempt suicide.

“Reports of abuse including beatings and rape in detention are extremely alarming, especially given the scale of detentions that we have seen in the past week. The grim details that we have documented are just a snapshot of the abuses that might be happening in places of detention,” said Amnesty International’s Europe director John Dalhuisen.

"It is absolutely imperative that the Turkish authorities halt these abhorrent practices and allow international monitors to visit all these detainees in the places they are being held,” he added, stressing that “failing to condemn ill-treatment or torture in these circumstances is tantamount to condoning it.”

Amnesty also stressed that depriving detainees of access to lawyers and family and holding them in unofficial detention facilities as well as arbitrary detentions amount to “enforced disappearance which in itself is a crime under international law.”

This practice places detainees outside the protection of the law and cuts them off from the outside world, putting them at very high risk of torture or even extrajudicial execution, the NGO stressed.

Amnesty also emphasized that independent monitors must be allowed to access detainees amid torture allegations and called on the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture (CPT) to conduct an emergency visit to Turkey to monitor conditions of detention.

As a member of the Council of Europe, the Turkish government has an obligation to cooperate with the CPT, it said.

“Amnesty International urges the Turkish authorities to adhere to their obligations under international human rights law and not to abuse the state of emergency by trampling on the rights of detainees,” said John Dalhuisen.

Following a failed coup attempt on July 15, Turkey launched a massive crackdown on the alleged coup supporters. It also introduced a state of emergency on Wednesday, which, according to the deputy prime minister, means a means temporary suspension of the European Convention on Human Rights.

In total, 13,165 people have been detained for alleged involvement in the foiled coup attempt in Turkey that occurred on Friday July 15, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said.

“Some 8,838 among the detained are soldiers, 2,101 are judges and prosecutors, 1,485 are police officers, 52 are local authorities and 689 are civilians,” he said as quoted by Turkish Hurriyet daily.

In the meantime, 934 schools, 109 dormitories, 15 universities, 104 foundations, 35 health institutions, 1,125 associations and 19 unions were closed over alleged links to what Erdogan described as “the Fethullahist Terrorist Organization.” Their assets were seized by the state.

On Saturday, Turkish authorities arrested a man, whom a presidency official described as the "right hand" of US-based Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen, who President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has accused of masterminding the failed coup attempt.

Earlier Saturday, Muhammet Sait Gulen, Fettulah Gulen’s nephew, was arrested on the orders of the chief prosecutor of Ankara.

Meanwhile, Erdogan told France 24 on Saturday that the arrested coup plotters “are starting to confess.” He also justified the imposition of the state of emergency by saying that it is actually aimed at supporting and strengthening democracy. He also said that it could easily be prolonged if necessary.

"Starting to confess" - out of a guilty conscience, I'm sure....

Saturday, July 23, 2016

Erdogan Shuts Down 1,000+ Private Schools, 1,200+ Charities, 15 Universities

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan © Umit Bektas
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan © Umit Bektas / Reuters

Turkey’s purge of Gulen supporters continued on Saturday with the closure of hundreds of private schools, charities and other institutions suspects of links with the US-based cleric. Ankara declared a state of emergency after a failed military coup.

If you've ever had any doubt that Erdogan is completely insane,
this should end it for you.

The decree issued by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is his first since the state of emergency was declared on Wednesday. He has ordered the closure of 1,043 private schools, 1,229 charities and foundations, 19 trade unions, 15 universities and 35 medical institutions, state news agency Anadolu reported on Saturday.

The organizations slated to be shut down are suspected of links with US-based Muslim cleric, Fethullah Gulen, a former ally of Erdogan, who turned into his fierce opponent. The Turkish government accused Gulen of having a hand behind the last week’s coup attempt as well as earlier attacks on it.

In the wake of the weekend violence, which claimed at least 246 lives, Ankara launched a massive purge of suspected Gulen supporters among the military, police, judges, municipal officials and other branches of the government.

Another such measure ordered by Erdogan on Saturday allows for longer detention of people without charge.

The three-month state of emergency declared on Wednesday gives the Turkish executive authority to pass laws without parliament’s support and limit rights and freedoms as they deem necessary.

Turkey’s foreign allies, the US and the EU, reacted nervously to the crackdown. The EU threatened to suspend accession talks with Ankara, if Erdogan delivered on his threat to lift a moratorium on capital punishment. The US said Turkey should provide convincing proof of Gulen’s guilt, if it wanted the cleric to be extradited. Gulen, a long-time resident of the US, has denied masterminding the coup.

Monday, July 18, 2016

Former Turkish Air Force Chief Confesses to Planning Coup, State-run Media Reports

By Shawn Price and Andrew V. Pestano 


Gen. Akin Ozturk, former chief of the Turkish air force, Photo courtesy of Anadolu Agency
Hmmm, hardly even looks like he's been tortured. What's that right ear thing all about?

ISTANBUL, Turkey, July 18 (UPI) -- Gen. Akin Ozturk, former chief of the Turkish air force, on Monday confessed to planning last week's coup d'etat attempt that left more than 200 people dead, state-run media in Turkey reports.

Anadolu news agency reported Ozturk told interrogators he "acted with intention to stage a coup." Ozturk previously denied involvement.

Ozturk served as commander of the air force until August 2015. Anadolu released an image of him.

Earlier in the day, European Union foreign ministers urged Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to use restraint and respect the constitution over fears he may act unconstitutionally after the recent coup attempt.

The Turkish government had arrested at least 6,000 people by late Sunday after surviving an attempted uprising, even as Erdogan mourned the dead. More than 8,700 people have been suspended form their positions, including 30 governors, 52 civil inspectors and 16 legal advisers

Erdogan broke down in tears and vowed revenge at a funeral for a friend and many of the other 290 Turks killed in the failed coup. About half of the dead, the foreign ministry said, were part of the coup.


Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan attends the funeral of the victims of the coup attempt in Istanbul on Sunday. In a speech, Erdogan vowed to purge the "virus" within state bodies. On Monday, the European Union urged Erdogan to exercise restraint. Photo by CemTurkel/UPI | License Photo

Among those arrested were 29 of the country's top generals, including Erdogan's top military aide, Col. Ali Yazici.

"We will continue to cleanse the virus from all state institutions, because this virus has spread. Unfortunately like a cancer, this virus has enveloped the state," Erdogan told mourners.

Some officials fear Erdogan's hard-line response to the coup will lead him to use the incident to crack down on the opposition. Thousands of judges who may have had no role in the coup have also been dismissed.

"We call for the full observance of Turkey's constitutional order, and we, as the European Union, stress the importance for the rule of law prevailing in the country," Federica Mogherini, the European Union's foreign policy chief, said at a news conference in Brussels. "We share concerns about what is happening in the country in these hours. We need to respect, have Turkey respect, democracy, human rights and fundamental freedoms."

Yeah, good luck with that!

Erdogan on Sunday attended the funeral for Erol Olçak, a friend and longtime political ally who was killed along with Olçak's son.

"We march in our funeral shrouds, and we will deal with these assassins, this cult, these followers of Fethullah," Erdogan said.

The president said the coup was directed by Fethullah Gülen, an Islamic cleric exiled in the United States.

Turkey has seen many failed coup attempts over its modern history, with the most recent in 1997.

"Coup plotters don't care about the citizens -- they just care about their own leaders," said 57-year-old former government worker Mehmet Aydin, who was forced to take part in the 1980 coup attempt.

Friday, July 15, 2016

There Will Be No Stopping the Megalomaniac Now

Turkey's coup appears to be failing

It's still too early to be sure but it looks like the military coup on Turkey has failed. This is very bad news, not just for Turkey but for the whole world.

The military has a constitutional responsibility to see that the government remains secular, but it did not exercise that responsibility soon enough, and now it appears to have failed.

President Erdogan will use this failed coup as justification to purge the military of any senior officers who are not in favour of turning Turkey into a Caliphate, or are opposed to Sharia Law being instituted.

Expect Erdogan to also use this coup attempt as an excuse to ram through his reforms to democracy, which will undoubtedly end up with Erdogan having even more power then he already has, and quite possibly declaring himself President for life. - Who's going to stop him?

A former ambassador quoted Erdogan from when he was a mayor as saying, "democracy is like a streetcar, you ride it until you get to your stop, and then you get off"!

There will be no stopping the megalomaniac now.