Video :Footage shows situation after explosion cause of bomb attack by Pkk to police HQ in #Turkey's Mardin provincepic.twitter.com/H0hhRDsePr
— hONoUR (@Jakoben1789) 8. Juni 2016
Wednesday, June 8, 2016
Terror hits Mardin
Saturday, May 7, 2016
Old New Turkey
Başbakan Davutoğlu'na memleketi Konya'da karşılama https://t.co/gNg66ANZsehttps://t.co/UtJfh2rLhi
— Al Jazeera Türk (@AJTurk) 6. Mai 2016
Friday, May 6, 2016
Assassination attempt on Can Dündar
The very moment gunman shot at #Turkey newspaper editor outside court house. The brave woman is journalist's wife. pic.twitter.com/qYnhnf4Gs8
— IrmakYenisehirlioglu (@Irmak_Ye) 6. Mai 2016
Saturday, March 26, 2016
Assault on CHP politician in Düzce
CHP Düzce İl Başkanı Zekeriya Tozan, otomobiliyle evine giderken önünü kesen bir otomobilden çıkanlarca dövüldü. pic.twitter.com/050bbNZN7F
— 140journos (@140journos) 26. März 2016
Press freedom and other hollow shells
#FreeMediaCannotBeSilenced
"There cannot be limitless media freedom." This may well seem like a statement issued by third-class dictator somewhere in the remotest corner of Africa. However it is not. These are the exact words of Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan. A onetime lapse? No, rather symptomatic for an administration that over the course of the last years has grown increasingly hostile towards dissenting voices in general and opposition press in particular.
In fact, the AK Party government has never been fussy about reining voices critical of its administration. On the contrary. Mr. Erdogan’s record speaks for himself.
In 2009 the editor of Taraf was charged with divulging military secrets.
In 2014 Turkey’s executive forces raided the offices of leading daily Zaman arresting editor in-chief Ekrem Dumanli and Hidayet Karaca, general manager of Samanyolu on the charges of “establishing and managing an armed terrorist organization” to overthrow the government. The same year columnist Önder Aytac was condemned for 10 months in jail for insulting Erdogan.
In November 2015 the newspaper Cumhuriyet was awarded the Reporters Without Borders Prize for its "independent and courageousjournalism" in regard to the 2014 MIT trucks scandal. Shortly thereafter, editor in chief Dündar and Ankara bureau chief Erdem Gül were arrested on charges of being members of a terror organization, espionage and revealing confidential documents, facing sentences up to life imprisonment. They were released in 2016 due to undue deprivation of liberty by ruling of the Supreme Court. Erdogan's comment: "I do not respect nor obey the verdict."
On March 4th 2016 authorities used the same scheme to take control over the country’s largest newspaper Zaman (which already had been raided in 2014) and its English-language affiliate Today’s Zaman.
Whereas Cumhuriyet is close to the main opposition party, the Kemalist Republican People’s Party (CHP), both Zaman and Koza Izpek are believed to be (or have been) close to the Islamist Gülen Movement, sparheaded by Fethullah Gülen, a former ally of Erdogan turned enemy.
It would be too simplistic though to define this is a mundane media crackdown of an increasingly authoritarian president. Erdogan is wary of the activities of the Gülen Movement, which he seems to think is staging a coup d’etats. In 2007 Nokba magazine, exposed the Ergenekon scandal revolving around an alleged nationalist underground network comprising key personnel of the Turkish military and members of the Kemalist elite and planning to carry out terrorist attacks against senior AK members and even Erdogan himself.
This may have been a turning point in Erdogan’s personal history, making him leery and overly distrustful. This may have also been a reason for the breach between the two former friends Erdogan and Gülen. Erdogan frets that the Gülen movement after all might outflank him in power, since both Gülen and Erdogan’s AKP appeal to the same people and the same voters: typically religious social conservatives in or hailing from Anatolia or Eastern Turkey that do not recognize themselves in the secularism promoted by the Kemalist elites and Western bourgeoisie. What Erdogan is most afraid of is what to his mind is bound to happen once the Gülen movement has gained enough power and momentum to pursue its ultimate strategy: a violent takeover of the AK Party.
Tuesday, March 22, 2016
Again terror in Brussels
Several of the injured are being treated outside #Maalbeek metro station following a blast there #Brussels pic.twitter.com/0B6gnB0cFP
— Press TV (@PressTV) 22. März 2016
Monday, March 21, 2016
5 soldiers dead in Nusaybin
Çatışmaların hız kesmediği #Nusaybin'de Türk Ordusu, Teröristlere karşı Vatan Mücadelesine devam ediyor...https://t.co/KUlVJPRPgE
— ✦ T.☪ BAHA T.☪ ✦ (@ELTURC_O) 21. März 2016
Sunday, March 20, 2016
Happy Newroz!
Some fear that the government might use the terrorist threat to crack down on public displays of Kurdish culture and freedom of expression, as it has sometimes in the past. In Istanbul police reportedly detained people wanting to attend Newroz festivities, some were suspended against the wishes of the organizers.
With the beginning of a new (Kurdish) year its nonetheless time for some optimism. Let's hope that the PKK can be successfully eradicated, the rift in the Turkish society overcome and the terrorist threat well managed. Happy Newroz to all of you.
Saturday, March 19, 2016
Istiklal Street bombing linked to ISIS
An itibarıyla İstiklal'de patlama oldu pic.twitter.com/V9RKVm5h00— Patavatsız (@PatavatsizCocuk) 19. März 2016
Panic in Beyoglu as explosion hits Istiklal shooping road
Footage: Suicide bombing in #Beyoğlu (#Istanbul). Reported injuries. #Turkey pic.twitter.com/dhLlVXrIjZ
— Onlinemagazin (@OnlineMagazin) 19. März 2016
Friday, March 18, 2016
Adana shook by explosions
At the moment there is no information about potential perpetrators. It is not inconceivable that the convoy exploded for technical reasons. As Adana based "Adana-da-ne-var" reports, the explosions one camion somehow set ablaze perpetrated the chain reaction leading to the multiple explosions. The reason that led to the fire in the first place are to be investigated. Possible reasons range from deliberate arsony to technica issues.
In the past weeks Adana has experienced rising tensions between its Turkish and Kurdiah population; particularly though between local Kurdish representatives and Turkish executive forces. On March 19th, a demonstration against Russian and Iranian involvement in Syria was scheduled, on March 20th Kurdish People's Democratic Party was to hold Kurdish New Year's celebrations. On March 17th the US had issued a travel warning, specifically disencouraging US citizens to travel to Adana.
BREAKING: Four massive explosions in Adana
VIDEO: #Adana Pınar Mahallesinde Teröristlerin Kundakladığı Bir çok TIR ve Araç yanıyor!#Patlamahttps://t.co/51ezczld2h
— ✦ T.☪ BAHA T.☪ ✦ (@ELTURC_O) 18. März 2016
Salah Abdeslam captured in Brussel's Moleenbeek
Monday, March 14, 2016
Sunday, March 13, 2016
Ankara attack linked to PKK
As a result of the resurgence of the conflict between the stalinist Kurdish PKK group and Turkish executive forces and the further involvement of Turkey in the Syrian civil war Turkey is believed to become more and more vulnerable to terrorist attacks by both Kurdish terrorist groups and factions and terrorist organizations involved in the Syrian civil war.
A photo of a military intelligence document signed March 4th indicates that Turkish intelligence agencies had very specific information about a potential suicide attack to be carried out in Bahcelievler by a "Syrian looking kid" affiliated to or somehow recruited by PKK or one of its sister organisations. Bahcelievler is about 1,5km from the scene of the blast. The US embassy too warned Citizens of an attack to be carried out against government buildings in Ankara. Why no one acted on these suspicions and if these are in fact connected to the Marc 13th attack is unclear at the moment.
As of March 14th raids were carried out in the Cenral Anatolian province of Ekisehir and Adana and Sanliurfa in the Southeast of Turkey. 20 suspects were detained for links to terrorist organizations and spreading terrorist propaganda. Most detainees were linked to PKK.
The vehicle used in the attack was reportedlly a BMW from the Kurdish-inhabited Varansehir. According to Turkish officials the perpetrator of the attack was a female Kurdish student at Balikesir university, who along with fellow students was currently being charged for spreading PKK propaganda. Sabri Ok, member of the KCK Executive Council, a PKK subgroup, issued a statement the act by com calling the act of "comrade Zinar" a "historical act that must be owned up to and felt proud of from every perspective."
If the Ankara bombing has indeed been carried out by PKK or an affiliated group it represents the official end of the group's more peaceful strategy adopted in the past century and the beginning of a new, decisively more violent era. Who is responsible for that, remains to be clarified. Abdülkader Selvi of Yeni Safak, a pro-government newspaper said, "Yes, it hurts, but we have to learn to live with terror for a while." Since the hastily convoked security summit of the AKP government is not expected to produce any effective strategies and only a more effective foreign and a more sensible policy towards peaceful Kurds (not PKK that is a terrorist organization and must be combated) could reach that goal it seems that, for now, he may be right.