Archive for the ‘Erdogan’ Category

Recep Tayyip Erdoan, the slime of Turkey – Cherwell Online

Undoubtedly a cruel authoritarian with a badly trimmed moustache, a forehead wider than all of Anatolia, and a vague resemblance to Gollum from The Lord of the Rings, Erdoan, the President of Turkey, is slowly dragging his own country through the dirt. That is, more acutely worded, Erdoan, a man who will never be the man his mother is, whose status as a lazy canine animal is located somewhere in the middle of his name, is turning the wonderful nation of Turkey inside out, and crushing the ones who are trying to stop him.

Given that I am no Jan Bhmermann, a German satirist whose mocking of the Turkish President faced direct criticism from Chancellor Merkel at the behest of Erdoan, I will move onto discussing exactly why Erdoan is the slime of Turkey. Last week, a video shot in front of the Turkish American embassy showed US police struggling to protect protesters, and two Turkish bodyguards being briefly detained after an incident in which they violently assaulted protesters. A few days later, a much more revealing video showed clearly Erdoan mouthing orders for the assault to one of his henchman out of his car, who then passed it down the line and engaged in the quelling seconds later.

That incident wasnt the first during an Erdoan visit. Last year a fight erupted outside a nuclear security summit in Washington attended by Erdoan. Since then, American senators have threatened lawsuits if the bodyguards responsible were not properly prosecuted. In a nation where as many as 800 families of the deceased from September 11 pursued lawsuits against the entire nation of Saudi Arabia, such a threat should not be taken lightly. In addition, Lindsey Graham threatened potential implications for assistance to Turkey if the bodyguards were not properly prosecuted. In the event, the two detained were set free and returned to Turkey. The behaviour of Erdoans thugs directly, and quite obviously, breach American laws protecting free speech and the right to assemble.

Instead of delivering a rationally formed apology, the Turkish response has been, instead, to employ a strange gaslighting policy, similar to a physically abusive husband accused of domestic violence. Instead of apologising for what even an infant could make out to be an ordered attack, Turkey summoned the American ambassador on Monday to protest what it called aggressive and unprofessional actions by American security personnel. Turkey didnt specify the actions by US security officials it deemed inappropriate. The statement was interpreted as a much needed reaction to the public and national reaction of the videos spreading online, but was horribly done and thus merely resulted in another wave of criticism.

Related Human rights, not financial gain

Turkeys reputation is being destroyed slowly but surely by Erdoan. The country has long been considered by some to be part of Europe, given its geographical location in Eastern Thrace and continental Europe. Formerly known under the auspices of the Ottoman Empire as The Sick Man of Europe, it was a man of Europe none the less. Turkey was one of the fi rst members of the Council of Europe in 1949, and its current position as a member of NATO has marked it as one of the few nations that was at once part of the western and middle eastern international community. Turkeys ability to avoid being partitioned among western powers and to form its own sovereign nation on its own terms, unlike the rest of the Middle East, was not only admirable, but marked a future of social and economic progression. Guided by the policies of Ataturk, Turkey joined the international community gracefully. Now, while the attacks on protesters by Erdogans thugs might seem like an isolated incident, the perception of Turkey in the international community is shifting, to a country that is determined to shut down and eliminate freedom of speech within its borders. Leaders like Erdogan panhandle the idea of an obtusely strong executive, exclaiming admiration for absolutist dictators of the past.

Remember this is a man who, at a televised press conference, stated that he believed a presidential system was possible in a unitary state, and cited Nazi Germany as an empirical example for his proposition. And where are we now? Last month the disastrous constitutional referendum, which faced electoral fraud of astounding proportions, cemented Erdoans iron grip and established the presidential system that he was daydreaming about in the press conference. I often urge people to avoid sliding into marking everything they disagree with as literally Hitler. But one should often how far the comparison is required to go until a logical equivalence is actually reached, as Erdoan continues to actively deny the Armenian genocide, censor and jail journalists en masse, and violently crack down on opposition movements.

Related Should subfusc remain compulsory?

Unfortunately, Erdoans influence in Turkey has its very real effects on the West, not just by nature of geographical proximity, but also by a disturbing cultural effect. There is an increasing fetishisation of autocrats like Erdoan and Putin in the West, which is reflected in a growing support for power consolidating bureaucrats masquerading as benevolent dictators. In Hilary Term, the former 13-year editor of The Economist, Bill Emmott, delivered a speech on his new book, The Fate of the West, in which he discussed a number of issues facing western democracies, and democracy in general. He mused on the toxic combination of self-proclaimed admiration for leaders like Putin by western politicians, and the simultaneous McCarthyist fear mongering of the Russian state. When Erdoan was questioned about the previous comment he made in admiration of the Third Reich, he stated that he was simply admiring the strong executive of the Nazi regime. So, in this country, when the words strong and stable seem to have such great effect, we should only naturally be disturbed.

Erdoan is coming very close to single-handedly destroying the legacy of Ataturk and the status of a secular and democratic Turkey. Sozcu, a Turkish opposition newspaper and staunch supporter of the legacy of Ataturk, published their most recent issue completely blank, citing a mixture of protest and a genuine inability to publish more material following the recent arrest. Various websites continue to face censorship, while according to the highly respected organization Reporters Without Borders it is not China, but Turkey, that is the worlds biggest prison for journalists. To this degree, I stand firmly for the freedom of expression of Turkish journalists, and violently condemn the actions of the slime of Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdoan.

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Recep Tayyip Erdoan, the slime of Turkey - Cherwell Online

Galatasaray to rename stadium after Erdogan call – Vanguard

Turkeys Galatasaray said Saturday it would rename its stadium after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogans call for the removal of the word arena from sports stadia, state media reported.

The board of directors took the decision to change the stadiums name after the president made the call on this issue, club chairman Dursun Ozbek said, quoted by state-run news agency Anadolu.

The Turkish football teams venue will be called Turk Telekom Stadium instead of Turk Telekom Arena from Monday, according to Hurriyet daily.

Erdogan said Friday he was against the use of the word arena and had given instructions for their removal from stadia to Sports Minister Akif Cagatay Kilic.

Of course you know what they used to do in arenas in the past? They would let people be shred to pieces.

He claimed it was a term foreign to Turkish: What does arena mean? We dont have such a thing in our language.

Several stadia in Turkey have the word arena in their title including Istanbul team Fenerbahces basketball venue, home of last weekends EuroLeague champions, called the Ulker Sports Arena.

Meanwhile Istanbul team Besiktas opened its over 40,000 capacity waterfront Vodafone Arena stadium in April last year.

Turk Telekom chief executive Paul Doany welcomed Galatasarays move, saying he supported Erdogans call for the arena names changes.

We are in agreement with Galatasarays name change from Turk Telekom Arena to Turk Telekom Stadium. We have begun work, Doany said.

The sports ministry issued a warning to provincial governors to remove the word arena from stadia across Turkey, Anadolu reported.

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Galatasaray to rename stadium after Erdogan call - Vanguard

Erdogan returns as chief of Turkey’s ruling party – CNN

But the constitutional changes scrapped that rule, and on Sunday, the Justice and Development Party (AKP) returned the reins to Erdogan in a extraordinary Congress in Ankara.

Erdogan could potentially remain president until 2029 under the country's new political structure.

The President appeared to have come to the Congress with the country's next elections in mind, reminding his supporters that "2019 is upon us."

"We will have local elections in March 2019, and general elections and presidential elections in November 2019. We shall not stop. We shall work hard and maintain our humbleness," he said Sunday. Some 80,000 supporters showed up to the Congress, according to media reports.

Erodgan co-founded the AKP in 2001, and the political powerhouse has ruled the country since its 2002 election win. Resuming leadership of the party would put Erdogan in control of both the executive branch of government and the largest party in Parliament.

It will also mean he can appoint his loyalists to more key posts.

Turkey's president denies dictator charges 01:51

The referendum, brought forward by the AKP, was widely condemned by European leaders and rights groups, who saw it as a blatant power grab by a leader showing increasing dictatorial tendencies.

Following an attempted military coup last year, Erodgan has led an ongoing purge that has gutted public institutions and crushed his political opponents. More than 100,000 people have been either jailed, arrested or suspended from their jobs.

He has been able to use heavier-handed tactics under the country's state of emergency, which was declared following the coup attempt and extended several times. On Sunday, Erdogan said that he had no plans to end it.

"We will end it when peace and safety and security is restored. Why should we end it? Schools are open. Factories are running. Everything is going on as normal," he said.

The tentacles of Erdogan's crackdown have also reached the country's universities and media organizations, once bastions of free thought and expression in Turkey. Academics and journalists considered critics of the government have been imprisoned for months without trial.

Erdogan also appears to have taken this brutality to the United States, where men who appeared to be his bodyguards were captured on a video by Voice of America on Tuesday outside the Turkish ambassador's home pushing and repeatedly kicking anti-Erdogan protestors.

Two law enforcement officials confirmed to CNN that Turkish security officials were involved in the bloody brawl.

It is not the first time members of Erdogan's entourage have been filmed fighting in public.

A little more than a year ago in the same city, journalists accused members of Erdogan's security detail of manhandling them and cursing them at a speech the Turkish president gave at the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank.

CNN's Joseph Netto, Elise Labott, Zachary Cohen, Paul P. Murphy and Peter Morris contributed to this report.

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Erdogan returns as chief of Turkey's ruling party - CNN

Enes Kanter reportedly subject of arrest warrant by Turkey – Washington Post

Enes Kanter is reportedly the subject of an arrest warrant issued Friday by Turkey, his home nation. The Oklahoma City Thunder center has been an outspoken critic of Turkish PresidentRecep Tayyip Erdogan, and he recently expressed gratitude at being back in the U.S., after he was detained on an overseas trip when the country revoked his passport.

According to AFP, Sabah Daily, a Turkish newspaper described as pro-government, reported that Kanter is being accused of membership in a terror group. Kanter, 25, has expressed support forFethullah Gulen, a Turkish cleric who is living in exile in Pennsylvania and who Erdogan blamed for a failed coup attempt last year.

In the aftermath of that attempt in July, with which Gulen denied any involvement and condemned, Erdogans regime swiftly carried out a violent crackdown. Hundreds of Turks were killed, and thousands more were rounded up on suspicions of having links to the coup attempt. Kanter, among others, has alleged it was really a plot by Erdogan to enable him to strike at his political enemies and establish a more authoritarian rule over Turkey.

[Turkey condemns U.S. over aggressive acts against Erdogans guards during D.C. visit]

You guys need to know what is going on in Turkey right now. I hope people around the world will open their eyes to the human rights abuses, Kanter wrote this week in an essay for The Players Tribune. Things have gotten very bad over the last year. This is not my opinion. We dont know everything that is happening inside Turkey, but we do know some facts. Newspapers and media have been restricted. Academics have been fired. Peaceful protesting is not allowed. Many people have been imprisoned without any real charges. There are reports of torture and rape and worse.

On Friday, Kanter posted to Twitter an image of the Sabah story, adding a caption in Turkish that said (per AFPs translation), You cannot catch me. Hahaha. Dont waste your energy.

I am already going to come to [Turkey] to spit on all of your ugly, hate-filled faces.

From the AFP report:

A judge issued the arrest warrant after an Istanbul prosecutor opened an investigation into Kanters alleged membership of an armed terrorist organization, Sabah Daily reported.

The arrest warrant refers to Kanters alleged use of an encrypted messaging application called Bylock, Sabah said, which Turkey claims was especially created for Gulen supporters.

It also referred to Kanters praise for a terror organization in messages via his social media accounts, the daily reported.

Sabah also reported that the prosecutor had applied for an Interpol notice, one that would alert the 190 countries with membership in the global policing organization that Turkey was seeking Kanters deportation.

On Saturday, Kanter posted a video from the Romanian airport, claiming he was unable to travel any further becauseof his political views and calling Erdogan the Hitler of our century. With help from the Thunder, the Department of Homeland Security and both Oklahoma senators, he was able to travel to London and then on to New York, where he held a news conference Monday detailing his scary experience.

It was scary because there was a chance they might send me back to Turkey, Kanter told reporters. And if they send me back to Turkey, probably you guys wouldnt hear a word from me the second day. It would have definitely gotten really ugly.

Kanter has a green card for the United States, but he said Monday that he was country-less and open to adoption by the nation where he first arrived in 2009 to play one year at a prep school. Kanter committed to Kentucky but was ruled ineligible by the NCAA because he had previously been paid to play for a top Turkish squad; he was drafted by the Jazz in 2011 and traded to the Thunder in 2015.

[LeBron James passes Michael Jordan as NBAs all-time playoff scoring leader]

I want you guys to think about what the Turkish government means when they say that I am a dangerous man, Kanter said in his essay. Ive never broken any laws. No speeding tickets, nothing. But Im dangerous? Why?

I speak my mind about things that I believe in, he wrote. I always have. I share my thoughts on Twitter and Facebook about the terrible things that are being done to people in Turkey. I want the whole world to know about the human rights abuses that are going on there.

To the Erdogan government, this makes me a dangerous man.

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Enes Kanter reportedly subject of arrest warrant by Turkey - Washington Post

EU stresses human rights in talks with Turkey’s Erdogan – The Straits Times

BRUSSELS European Council president Donald Tusk yesterday stressed the importance of human rights in talks with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, amid tensions over Ankara's long-delayed European Union accession process.

Mr Tusk, who heads the council of 28 EU member state leaders, and European Commission head Jean-Claude Juncker met the Turkish President ahead of a Nato summit in Brussels.

"I put the question of human rights in the centre of our discussions," Mr Tusk tweeted after the talks, which had begun with a brief and cordial handshake for photographers.

A spokesman for Mr Juncker said: "The EU and Turkey must and will continue to cooperate. Major issues of common interest were discussed in detail in a good and constructive atmosphere."

At another meeting on the margins of the Nato summit, Mr Erdogan promised French President Emmanuel Macron that he would "rapidly" look into the case of jailed French photojournalist Mathias Depardon, Mr Macron's office said.

According to press freedom group Reporters Without Borders, the photojournalist, who has been held in Turkey for more than two weeks, has begun a hunger strike.

The Turkish authorities have said he was detained over "propaganda for a terror group" - which is a reference to outlawed Kurdish militants.

Ahead of his trip to Brussels, Mr Erdogan said it was up to Brussels to decide whether it wants Turkey as a member of the bloc.

Speaking to reporters before leaving for Brussels, he said Turkey would not behave like a "beggar" to gain membership.

Speeding up the membership process was a key condition set by Turkey in a landmark agreement with the EU in March last year to reduce migrant flows into Europe from war-torn Syria.

But relations between the bloc and Ankara soured after a failed coup attempt in July last year, and they worsened further during the campaign for last month's referendum on strengthening Mr Erdogan's powers.

The EU has expressed concern over the sacking and jailing of tens of thousands of soldiers, police, teachers and civil servants since the failed coup.

In the run-up to the referendum, which Mr Erdogan narrowly won, he had mooted reimposing the death penalty - a move that would automatically end Turkey's EU bid.

Earlier this month, he told Brussels that it had no other option than to open new "chapters", or policy areas, in Turkey's long- stalled accession talks, which began in 2005.

Most EU states, led by Germany, officially oppose freezing the accession talks, but Austria has repeatedly called for a halt.

This prompted Turkey to veto all Nato cooperation with neutral Austria, although the crisis was partially resolved with a deal on Tuesday.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, REUTERS

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EU stresses human rights in talks with Turkey's Erdogan - The Straits Times