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Posts Tagged ‘turkey’

Domestic peace elusive in Turkey

June 10th, 2010 admin No comments

Turkey’s efforts to resolve conflicts with its neighbors and offer more rights to its Kurdish citizens have failed to make the country a more peaceful place, according to a recent international report.

Despite its much-vaunted “zero problems with neighbors” policy, Turkey’s relations with neighboring countries showed a decrease in 2010 compared to the previous three years, according to the 2010 Global Peace Index released Tuesday by the Institute for Economics and Peace.

The failure of the initiative came as no surprise to Haldun Solmaztürk, the chair of the U.S. desk at the Turkish Center for International Relations and Strategic Analysis, or TÜRKSAM. “It is a good policy in principle, but it is not applied properly,” Solmaztürk said. “This is mainly due to a weak background and lack of vision of the leaders who try to drive such a policy, which creates an open-ended process where everyone is constantly waiting for something to happen.”

The world has become less peaceful in 2010, according to the latest Global Peace Index, which attempts to measure the relative position of nations’ and regions’ peacefulness. The report, released Tuesday, reflects a less peaceful world in 2010, where violence impacts the global economy by $7 trillion annually.

He added that “zero problems with neighbors” would be difficult to successfully attain in any event, as it sometimes – as with closer ties to Syria and Iran – represents interests that conflict with Turkey’s “long history of good relations with Western countries.” Reversing such a long-lasting trend, he said, would confuse the country’s foreign policy even more.

The Australia-based peace institute ranked Turkey 126th out of 149 countries on its 2010 Global Peace Index, which looked at internal and external factors such as conflicts, military capacity, respect for human rights and relations with neighboring countries. It is the fourth year the report has been compiled. Read more…

Turkey and Iran in talks on post-election Iraq

April 22nd, 2010 admin No comments
Davutoglu

Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu (L) met with top Iranian officials in Tehran, including his Iranian counterpart, Manouchehr Mottaki.

Turkey and Iran, two major powerhouses in the region with significant clout over Iraqi domestic politics, have been trying to reconcile their differences to bolster post-election Iraqi unity, diplomatic sources have told Today’s Zaman. It may very well have been overshadowed by Iran’s nuclear program, which has topped the international agenda in recent weeks, but the question of what will happen in Iraq after the general elections was the second most important issue on the Turkish foreign minister’s to-do list when he visited Tehran on Tuesday to have a series of talks with the Iranian leadership, including President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

“Iraq was the second most important item in our conversations with the Iranian leadership,” Ahmet Davutoğlu told Today’s Zaman after wrapping up his talks with Iranian officials.

In the joint press conference with his counterpart, Manouchehr Mottaki, on Tuesday, Davutoglu said, “The most important development in the region has to do with the elections in Iraq, the post-election status and efforts to form a government in Iraq.”

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GYV presents Coexistence Awards to top public figures in Turkey

April 19th, 2010 admin No comments
gyv

The GYV Award for Exemplary Behavior or Initiatives in the Societal Sphere went to Rakel Dink, the wife of Hrant Dink, the murdered editor-in-chief of the Agos newspaper. Two audiovisual and stage arts awards went to Kalan Music and Mahsun Kırmızıgül for his movie “Güneşi Gördüm” (I Saw the Sun).

Messages of brotherhood and tolerance were delivered at the Journalists and Writers Foundation’s (GYV) Coexistence Awards ceremony on Saturday in İstanbul, stressing the importance of mutual understanding.

The ceremony opened with speeches from poet Hilmi Yavuz, who is also the head of the 11-member selection committee, and GYV Chairman Mustafa Yeşil. Parliament Speaker Mehmet Ali Şahin, İstanbul Governor Muammer Güler, State Minister for Family and Women’s Affairs Selma Aliye Kavaf and several deputies also participated in the ceremony. In his opening speech Yeşil said since its inception in 1994, the GYV had advocated plurality, peace and the art of living together through organizing countless conferences and panels.

Noting that prejudice and discrimination are not the teachings of the Islamic faith or Turkish culture, Yeşil said that once the people act with the voice of their conscience, they will always accept others the way they are.

The ceremony was then followed by musicians playing individually and then as an orchestra as a sign of coexistence. The awards are delivered to outstanding individuals and institutions contributing to coexistence and social peace in six categories.

The Literature Award went to Elif Şafak, whose book “Aşk” (The Forty Rules of Love) became a bestseller in Turkey last year. Expressing her gratitude for being selected as a recipient, Şafak said special thanks go to the “invisibles”: her readers. The Scientific Research Award went to the Turkish Economic and Social Studies Foundation (TESEV) for their extraordinary activities to promote coexistence through scientific research. Accepting the award on behalf of the organization, TESEV Chairman Can Paker said everyone at the institution worked round the clock to contribute to Turkey. Read more…

Turkey’s Iran offer a source of curiosity

April 19th, 2010 admin No comments
fuzeAs the nuclear summit in Tehran draws to a close, a vaguely defined Turkish proposal for an alternative solution to the ongoing standoff between Iran and the West prompts debate over its details. Though Iran says it wants any nuclear-materials swaps to take place on its soil under IAEA guarantees, Turkey says its offer of serving as a third-country location is still on the table

Turkey’s “alternative proposal” for the nuclear stand-off between Iran and the Western powers has become a source of curiosity as a senior Iranian official said he was not familiar with the idea.

U.S.-backed-sanctions skeptics Turkey and Brazil, which both hold non-permanent seats on the United Nations Security Council, say they are studying an “alternative proposal” to deal with Iran’s controversial nuclear program, designing a strategy different from sanctions.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu paid a visit to Brazil last week for talks focusing on the Iranian impasse. With his Brazilian counterpart, Foreign Minister Celso Amorim, he reiterated Friday the countries’ opposition to new sanctions against Iran, promoting renewed dialogue instead.

The details of the two nations’ offer are still unknown. Read more…

Turkey is positive shelter from sexual discrimination, academic says

April 18th, 2010 admin No comments
Derin Ural

Derin Ural

After bad experiences of sexism at higher-level education institutions in the United States, Derin Ural now holds the title of vice president for Istanbul Technical University. Her experience suggests that sexist discrimination is not as bad in Turkey as it appears in recent studies

Despite lagging behind the U.N.’s millennium development goals for gender equality, the vice president of Istanbul Technical University, or ITU, has said Turkey provided for her an escape from sexual discrimination in the United States.

Professor Derin Ural said she was subjected to sexual discrimination from the start of her higher education career in the U.S. when a professor refused to share with the class that Ural had received the highest grade of the year. This, she said, merely because he was not expecting a woman to succeed so highly. Read more…

Turkey helps efforts to boost support for Pakistan

August 26th, 2009 admin 1 comment

As Pakistani officials seek support from the international community to rehabilitate the Malakand and Swat regions — which had been used by the Taliban to fight NATO forces in Afghanistan — at the border, Turkey aims to facilitate international aid to Pakistan with the help of an international forum.

“I am hopeful that the İstanbul meetings will help carry the Friends of Democratic Pakistan [FoDP] process forward in a robust, concerted and concrete manner so that tangible results can be achieved to benefit of the people of Pakistan,” said Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu during his opening speech yesterday at the ministerial meeting of the FoDP. Read more…

Turkey in friendly test against Ukraine

August 12th, 2009 admin No comments

Turkish national football team visits Kiev for a friendly match against Ukraine on Wednesday, hoping to find a form on the early stages of the season. With only a few weeks before two crucial World Cup qualifying games, Turkey obviously sees the Ukraine match as a timely preparation game

Fatih Terim

Fatih Terim

Turkish national team coach Fatih Terim will have a chance to take a closer look at his players’ early-season forms at the Ukraine game Wednesday.

The match in Kiev is a friendly one, but it offers a crucial final look at how the team performs at this stage, before rolling on to the final games at the World Cup qualifiers.

With the Turkcell Super League starting last weekend, most of the players are only halfway to their top forms, but Terim does not have much time to wait.

In early September, the Turkish side will play two crucial matches in Group 5 of the World Cup qualifying rounds. It will welcome Estonia on the first of September, and then will take on Bosnia and Herzegovina three days later. Read more…

Turkey’s Supreme Military Board convenes

August 3rd, 2009 admin No comments

YAS

YAS

Turkey’s Supreme Military Board convenes

Turkey’s Supreme Military Board, or YAS, meeting started in Ankara on Saturday when the top level officials will discuss the new promotions or expulsions from the army, the state-run Anatolian Agency reported.

Promotion and retirement of the army personnel will be assessed in the meeting which is headed by Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan. Also the chain of command for the coming years will be shaped in the board’s meeting.
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Former Turkish diplomat picked to shape NATO’s future

July 30th, 2009 admin No comments

Former Turkish diplomat picked to shape NATO’s future

A former Turkish ambassador will be one of the 12 wise men who will help shape NATO’s future role, Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review has learned.

Ümit Pamir, Turkey’s former representative to the military alliance, will work with the group of experts that the secretary-general has tasked with reviewing NATO’s “Strategic Concept,” which is the official document that outlines NATO’s enduring purpose and its fundamental security missions

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Elano heads to Turkey

July 30th, 2009 admin No comments

Elano

Elano

Elano heads to Turkey

Galatasaray announce signing of City schemer..

Galatasaray have announced the signing of Brazilian schemer Elano on a four-year contract from Manchester City.

Elano’s future at the City of Manchester Stadium had been uncertain after he found himself in and out of Mark Hughes’ side last season.

 

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