International Turkey's Lonely Road to Isolation: The World Looks on as Erdogan Jockeys for a Third Decade in Power

Turkey sacks 10,000 more civil servants,
shuts down 15 media outlets in latest crackdown

By Humeyra Pamuk
Oct 30, 2016

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Turkey said it had dismissed a further 10,000 civil servants and closed 15 more media outlets over suspected links with terrorist organizations and U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, blamed by Ankara for orchestrating a failed coup in July.

More than 100,000 people had already been sacked or suspended and 37,000 arrested since the abortive putsch in an unprecedented crackdown President Tayyip Erdogan says is crucial for wiping out the network of Gulen from the state apparatus.

Thousands more academics, teachers, health workers, prison guards and forensics experts were among the latest to be removed from their posts through two new executive decrees published on the Official Gazette late on Saturday.

Opposition parties described the move as a coup in itself. The continued crackdown has also raised concerns over the functioning of the state.

"What the government and Erdogan are doing right now is a direct coup against the rule of law and democracy," Sezgin Tanrikulu, an MP from the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP), said in a Periscope broadcast posted on Twitter.

A Turkish court on Sunday formally arrested Gultan Kisanak and Firat Anli, co-mayors of the largely Kurdish southeastern city of Diyarbakir on charges of membership of a terrorist organization after five days in detention, sources said.

Earlier police used rubber pellets to break up several hundred protesters marching against their arrests. The internet has been largely down in the city for several days, witnesses said.

Turkey's southeast has been rocked by the worst violence in decades since the collapse last year of a ceasefire between the state and the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), designated a terrorist organization by Turkey, the United States and the European Union.

The local prosecutor had said Kisanak, a lawmaker before becoming Diyarbakir's first female mayor in 2014, and Anli had given speeches sympathetic to the PKK, called for greater political autonomy for Turkey's estimated 16 million Kurds and incited violent protests in 2014.

MISUSE

The extent of the crackdown has worried rights groups and many of Turkey's Western allies, who fear Erdogan is using the emergency rule to eradicate dissent. The government says the actions are justified given the threat to the state posed by the coup attempt, in which more than 240 people died.

The executive decrees have ordered the closure of 15 more newspapers, wires and magazines, which report from the largely Kurdish southeast, bringing the total number of media outlets and publishers closed since July to nearly 160.

Universities have also been stripped of their ability to elect their own rectors according to the decrees. Erdogan will from now on directly appoint the rectors from the candidates nominated by the High Educational Board (YOK).

Lale Karabiyik, another CHP lawmaker, said the move was a clear misuse of the emergency rule decrees and described it as a coup d'etat on higher education. Pro-Kurdish opposition said the decrees were used as tools to establish a 'one-man regime'.

The government extended the state of emergency imposed after the coup attempt for three months until mid-January. Erdogan said the authorities needed more time to wipe out the threat posed by Gulen's network as well as Kurdish militants who have waged a 32-year insurgency.

Ankara wants the United States to detain and extradite Gulen so that he can be prosecuted in Turkey on a charge that he masterminded the attempt to overthrow the government. Gulen, who has lived in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania since 1999, denies any involvement.

Speaking to reporters at a reception marking Republic Day on Saturday, Erdogan said the nation wanted the reinstatement of the death penalty, a debate which has emerged following the coup attempt, and added that delaying it would not be right.

"I believe this issue will come to the parliament," he said, and repeated that he would approve it, a move that would sink Turkey's hopes of European Union membership. Erdogan shrugged off such concerns, saying that much of the world had capital punishment.

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-turkey-security-dismissals-idUSKBN12U04L
 
U.S. Order All Families of Istanbul Consulate Staff to Leave Turkey
By CEYLAN YEGINSU
OCT. 30, 2016

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ISTANBUL — The State Department on Sunday ordered all members of the families of its consulate staff in Istanbul to leave Turkey, citing increased security threats from terrorist organizations.

The department said in a statement that the decision was based “on security information indicating extremist groups are continuing aggressive efforts to attack U.S. citizens in areas of Istanbul where they reside or frequent.”

The order was the second warning for United States citizens in Turkey in less than a week. The State Department previously advised Americans to carefully consider the need to travel to Turkey, warning that American tourists had been singled out as targets by international and domestic terrorist organizations.

Turkey has endured numerous terrorist attacks in the past year. The authorities have held the Islamic State or Kurdish militants responsible for the attacks, as the country grapples with both the spillover from the war in Syria and the renewal of a decades-long conflict with Kurdish insurgents in southeastern Turkey.

The State Department, in its travel warning last week, urged United States citizens to avoid Turkey’s southeastern region and to consider carefully the risks of traveling elsewhere in the country.

Turkey remains under a state of emergency in the aftermath of a failed coup in July that tried to topple the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and resulted in the deaths of more than 270 people.

Anti-American sentiment has increased in Turkey in recent months, in part because the Turkish news media accused Washington of harboring Fethullah Gulen, a cleric living in exile in rural Pennsylvania, whom some here have accused of masterminding the coup.

Turkey, which has asked the United States to extradite Mr. Gulen, submitted additional documents last week to back up the request. Mr. Gulen has denied involvement in the coup attempt. United States officials have said Mr. Gulen’s case will be reviewed within the confines of the law.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/31/world/europe/united-states-consulate-istanbul-turkey-security.html
 
well looks like i won't be able to go to Turkey anytime soon.
 
2016 should be named Year of the Rising Dictators

Turkey, Venezuela, Philippines
 
2016 should be named Year of the Rising Dictators

Turkey, Venezuela, Philippines


2016 is so Red so much speculation about us supremacy.

I wonder how the next US administration will handle Turkey the rise of Anti American sentiment is un pressidented
 
2016 is so Red so much speculation about us supremacy.

I wonder how the next US administration will handle Turkey the rise of Anti American sentiment is un pressidented
They'll do fookin' nothing.
 
So you think Turkey will be another Iran 2.0 and they will align with Russia?
The Turks already are aligned with Russia. What were seeing is just the last formal steps of turkey exiting from NATO.

Erdogan thanked Russia's intelligence for giving them information about the coup, so they could squash it.
 
The Turks already are aligned with Russia. What were seeing is just the last formal steps of turkey exiting from NATO.

Erdogan thanked Russia's intelligence for giving them information about the coup, so they could squash it.

Interesting now I wonder when will the USA pull out its bases in Turkey.

That Coup was horrible it is responsible for one of the most horrific videos on the Internet
 
Interesting now I wonder when will the USA pull out its bases in Turkey.

That Coup was horrible it is responsible for one of the most horrific videos on the Internet
Soon I would think, especially after the notice we just gave.
 
Turkey lawmakers brawl in parliament over Constitutional changes
By Onur Cakir and Laura Smith-Spark
January 12, 2017




Istanbul (CNN) Lawmakers in Turkey brawled during a debate over constitutional amendments that would expand presidential powers, according to state news agency Anadolu.

The fight broke out on Wednesday shortly after opposition lawmaker Özgür Özel told ruling party lawmakers "You are trying to destroy yourselves when the TV is off and nobody sees. We won't let it happen," according to Anadolu.

Lawmakers were debating ending "parliament's authorization to inspect ministers and the Cabinet."

Shortly after Özel comments, fellow members of the main opposition Republican People's Party encircled the speaker's rostrum with arms joined, occupying the area in protest.
The fight broke out soon afterward, according to Anadolu.

One senior lawmaker with the ruling Justice and Development (AK) party suffered a broken nose, according to the report.

Tensions run high

Despite the brawl, the measure was passed Thursday in the 550-member assembly, Anadolu said.

Violent outbreaks are uncommon in Turkey's parliament but tensions are high over the 18-article constitutional reform package, which has been put forward by the governing AK party.

The government has said that if the measures are passed by parliament, they will lead to a public referendum on replacing the current parliamentary system with a presidential model, Anadolu said.
Thursday is the fourth day of debate on the package of amendments. Thirteen articles are still to be debated and voted on, according to the news agency.

Coup crackdown

Opponents of the proposed constitutional changes fear the changes will give too much power to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Since an attempted coup in July, Erdogan has led an intense crackdown on government critics and the militant Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, as well as those with alleged ties to US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, whom Turkey blames for the coup attempt.

Hundreds of military officers have been suspended, thousands of teachers have been dismissed, public servants sacked and media organizations shut down.

http://www.cnn.com/2017/01/12/europe/turkey-parliament-brawl/
 
Another step towards totalitarianism. Can't believe that Turks seem to accept this.
 
Another step towards totalitarianism. Can't believe that Turks seem to accept this.
Accept it? It seems clear they want it. Erdogans approval rating was approaching 70% last I looked. That's nearing other such beloved leaders as Duterte and Kim Jong Un. It should be at ~ 99.8% by years end.
 
Accept it? It seems clear they want it. Erdogans approval rating was approaching 70% last I looked. That's nearing other such beloved leaders as Duterte and Kim Jong Un. It should be at ~ 99.8% by years end.
Actually according to the Freedom House ratings Erdogan improved the rights and freedom of Turkish citizens initially. Of course now the trend is downwards but even as late as 1999 the Freedom House rating of Turkey was lower than what it is now. The difference is that Islamists get a lot more scrutiny than the secular Kemalists, though to be fair its also because the region is in the spotlight.
 
Erdogan Says Troops Will Be in Cyprus ‘Forever,’ Complicating Hopes of Reuniting
By NICK CUMMING-BRUCE and ANDREAS RIRIS
JAN. 13, 2017

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GENEVA — Turkey’s president declared on Friday that Turkish troops would remain in Cyprus “forever,” complicating hopes of reuniting the island nation, which has been effectively partitioned since 1974.

“Greece is fleeing again from a solution to the Cyprus problem,” the president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, told reporters in Istanbul on Friday. “Turkey will be in Cyprus forever.”

That said, Mr. Erdogan often takes a firmer line with domestic audiences than with foreign ones, and diplomats said they remained cautiously optimistic.

In 1974, a coup sponsored by the military junta that controlled Greece at the time ousted the government of Cyprus, and Turkey invaded, arguing that the Turkish Cypriots needed its protection. The nation has been largely stable and peaceful for decades, but this is one of the world’s thorniest and longest conflicts.

Since the late 1970s, leaders of both the Greek Cypriots and the Turkish Cypriots have agreed in principle on a “bizonal, bicommunal federation” as the basis for reunification, but have different understandings of that term.

The latest round of negotiations, sponsored by the United Nations, has been promising. On Thursday, the foreign ministers of Britain, Greece and Turkey — the three countries that are designated as “guarantors” of the nation’s sovereignty under a 1959 treaty — met in Geneva, prompting the new United Nations secretary general, António Guterres, to observe that Cyprus could be “a symbol of hope” this year.

Among the key issues in dispute are the return of displaced Cypriots and the handling of their property, repatriation of Turkish settlers, demilitarization of the island, and the future role of Greece, Turkey and Britain.

Mr. Erdogan on Friday said firmly that Turkey would not withdraw from the island as long as Greek troops were also stationed there. “Full withdrawal of Turkish troops from Cyprus is not possible,” he said. “If this is being discussed, then both sides must withdraw.”

The Turkish foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, maintained the Turkish position while also leaving room for negotiation.

“Taking into consideration the current situation in our region, the continuation of the security and guarantees system, which has been the solid basis of the 43-year-long security and stability on the Island, is a necessity,” Mr. Cavusoglu said in the statement, referring to the system of guarantors, which Turkey used as its rationale for the 1974 invasion. “We expect this issue to be discussed in line with the realities on the island.”

Cypriot leaders held out hope for an agreement.

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The Greek Cypriot leader, Nicos Anastasiades, noted that both sides had submitted maps detailing the redrawing of internal boundaries, a promising first; that Turkey had agreed to discuss the issue of the security guarantees, itself a sign of progress; and that both sides had made progress in discussing areas like governance, the economy and Cyprus’s involvement in the European Union, which it joined in 2004, notwithstanding the divisions.

Mr. Anastasiades and the Turkish Cypriot leader, Mustafa Akinci, both said that they had agreed that the security of one community should not be perceived as a threat by the other community.

“The point is, where can you strike a balance: How can you find the ways and means so that both communities of this beautiful island can feel safe and secure?” Mr. Akinci said, adding that the Turkish Cypriot community “feels that they need the continuation of some sort of a guarantee coming from Turkey.”

“This is how they feel,” he said. “All the polls, more or less, say the same thing. How can we deal with this issue so that it’s acceptable by the other party?”

He added: “We are here to discuss all these issues. There are no taboos.”

The last time a peace deal was close at hand, in 2004, it was accepted by the Turkish Cypriots in a referendum but rejected by the Greek Cypriots. All sides are trying to avoid a repeat of that experience.

Mr. Akinci said that reunification would lead to major economic benefits, including the possibility of channeling natural gas deposits through Cyprus to Turkey and Europe, and distributing water that is currently piped to northern Cyprus from Turkey across the whole island.

Turkish Cypriots are estimated to make up about one-fifth of the island’s population, and the Greek side had proposed a rotating presidency, but how it would be carried out remains in dispute.

Asked about Mr. Erdogan’s remarks, Espen Barth Eide, the United Nations secretary general’s special adviser for Cyprus, said he did not think the talks were in trouble.

Negotiations on technical matters have been scheduled for Wednesday, and Mr. Eide said, “We’re close to completion” on five areas of agreement — not including the issue of security and guarantees. “Not easy, but the will is there,” he said, while reminding both sides that “we must not lose any time.”

Mr. Eide added, “It will be hard.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/13/world/europe/turkey-greece-cyprus-reunification.html
 
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Interesting article on a lesser known running conflict but I thought posting entire articles was against the rules? Not that I personally mind since you organize it well and I prefer to read it all here but just curious about that rule.
 
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