Turkish PM: Alevi places of worship to get legal
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Turkish PM: Alevi places of worship to get legal
SULEIMAN THE MAGNIFICENT BURIAL SITE FOUND IN HUNGARY TURKEY RUNS OCTOBER CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT OF $133M FOOTBALL: ISTANBUL SIDES AIM TO ADVANCE IN EUROPA Turkey ran a current account deficit of $133 million in October 2015, down from $2.3 billion in the same month of the previous year, according to a report from the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey released on Thursday. “The current account deficit was at $133 million, indicating a narrowing of $2,176 million from October of the previous year, the report said. This brought the 12-month rolling deficit to $38,109 million,” the report said. The sharp narrowing came after a current account surplus of $95 million was run in September. >>ECONOMY Historians have discovered what they believe to be the shrine and mosque where the internal remains of Suleiman the Magnificent were interred in 1566. A joint Turkish-Hungarian team uncovered structures in southern Hungary where Suleiman’s organs were buried following his death during a Balkans campaign. The site near Szigetvar, which was under siege by Suleiman’s Ottoman army when he died, includes a “sultan-like structure”, researchers said at... >> CULTURE ART Turkish PM: Alevi places of worship to get legal status Friday December 11, 2015 Ahmet Davutoglu also vows to revise legislation left over from coup periods Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu has said that cemevis -- Alevi places of worship -- will be granted legal status. This new status for Alevi religious buildings is just one part of 64th government’s action plan, presented in the Turkish capital Ankara by Davutoglu on Thursday. The exact size of the Alevi population in Turkey is not known, but they constitute the second-largest religious community in the country after Sunni Muslims. Davutoglu said that the legislation remaining form Turkey’s coup periods will be revised and that anti-democratic provisions would be removed. Turkey to raise minimum wage by 30 percent: Turkish PM The action plan also includes a host of economic reforms and measures. Davutoglu revealed that the minimum wage in Turkey is to be increased to 1,300 Turkish liras per month ($446) The government will also provide help to employers who must adopt the wage hike. Davotoglu promised action to keep Turkish firms competitive, with particular help to reduce the burden on small- and medium-sized enterprises. He vowed that the government would implement promises made to citizens ahead of the Nov.1 general election “within three months”. >MORE DETAILS Turkey in Iraq to promote stability, Davutoglu says Prime minister says Turkey does not ‘want to be neighbors with Daesh’ Turkey’s presence in Iraq is to promote stability in the region, Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said late Wednesday. “Our existence in Iraq is to ensure the stability of the region because we do not want to be neighbors with Daesh,” Davutoglu said. “Therefore, we will support both Iraq and the Kurdish region on all terms.” His remarks came as the president of Iraq’s Kurdish region, Massoud Barzani, paid an official visit to Ankara to discuss the fight against terrorism. During a meeting with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the two leaders stressed the significance of cooperation, presidential sources said. Barzani’s visit came amid a diplomatic row with Baghdad over Turkish troops based near Mosul in northern Iraq, where they are training Kurdish peshmerga fighters. Davutoglu announced that the head of the National Intelligence Organization Hakan Fidan and Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Feridun Sinirlioglu would travel to Baghdad on Thursday. >MORE DETAILS US lawsuit filed against Gulen Pennsylvania court receives legal complaints relating to US-based Turkish preacher Fetullah Gulen U.S. lawyers on Wednesday said they have filed a lawsuit against a Turkish cleric for human rights violations. Attorney Robert Amsterdam said the case was filed Dec. 7 in a Pennsylvania district court on behalf of three plaintiffs. The lawsuit requests a jury trial for U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gulen for directing his followers in Turkey “to launch a targeted persecution against a different religious group in Turkey that resulted in the arbitrary and prolonged detention of plaintiffs, along with dozens other members of their religious group”. Another lawyer, Patrick Egan, told reporters that the targeted group is led by Mehmet Dogan and one that disagrees with Gulen’s teachings. The plaintiffs include Bunyamin Ates, Turgut Yildirim and Murat Ozturk and will be represented by the law firms of Amsterdam & Partners and, Fox Rothschild. The suit asks the court to rule for “compensatory damages in an amount to be determined at trial, interest, costs, attorney’s fees, punitive damages”. It was filed against Gulen and 50 unidentified followers of the cleric who Egan said are involved in criminal action but whose true identities are not currently known or sufficient information about exists to include in the complaint. Accusations against Gulen and his network number six counts, including false accusations, detention, false imprisonment, and civil conspiracy in Turkey. The claims are brought under the U.S. Alien Tort Statute that allows foreign citizens to seek remedies in American courts for human-rights violations committed outside the U.S. Egan said his firm obtained evidence for the case through interviews with the plaintiffs and by other probes. The complaint was brought forth in the middle district of Pennsylvania where Gulen currently resides. Egan believes the legal action “will hopefully use the United States courts to have a justice resolution and a civil resolution in this matter”. The Gulen network was designated a terrorist organization by Turkey in 2014 after the organization was found to be spying on classified state data. As Turkish prosecutors completed an indictment against the organization in October, the government hired UK-based law firm Amsterdam & Partners to assist in a global investigation that would be empowered to requested Gulen’s extradition from the U.S. Amsterdam, a co-founder the law firm bearing his name, noted that the suit should “resonate with those in Turkey because this case follows a long line of Turkish cases where Mr. Gulen and his acolytes have allegedly falsely imprisoned individuals in Turkey”. >MORE DETAILS Turkey accuses Russia of Turkey: GDP growth at 4 ‘ethnic cleansing’ in Syria pct in third quarter Turkey’s prime minister on Wednesday accused Russia of attempting “ethnic cleansing” through its air campaign in northwestern Syria. Ahmet Davutoglu told foreign reporters in Istanbul that Russian airstrikes had targeted Turkmen and Sunni Muslim communities around the Latakia region. He said Russia’s action could force “many more millions” of people to flee. “Russia is trying to make ethnic cleansing in northern Latakia,” Davutoglu added before renewing Turkey’s call for the creation of a safe zone in Syria “so that new waves [of refugees] will not come.” The prime minister also defended Turkey’s deployment of additional troops to Iraq last week, saying it was an “act of solidarity” with Iraq in the fight against Daesh. Turkey has a long-standing training mission based near Mosul but the arrival of fresh troops last week sparked uproar in Baghdad, which demanded the additional soldiers leave. On Tuesday, Turkey announced the defense ministers of both countries would discuss the matter. Davutoglu said the additional troops had been sent to protect the trainers amid an increased threat from Daesh. >MORE DETAILS Turkey’s economy grew at the rate of 4 percent in the third quarter from the same period in the previous year, the Turkish Statistical Institute (TurkStat) reported on Thursday. The figure exceeded analyst consensus estimates of 2.7 percent, the report said. “Solid domestic demand continues to fuel growth in Turkey,” Christopher Dembik, an economist with Saxo Bank, told Anadolu Agency on Thursday. Household final consumption expenditure increased by 10.6 in the quarter at current prices, the report said. The Consumer Confidence Index increased to 77.15 in November from 62.78 in October. Readings above 50 indicate a sharp improvement. “Consumers had held back spending when the Turkish lira lost value earlier this year. Now that it has stabilized, confidence in spending has returned,” Dembik added. Growth was up from 3.8 percent in the second quarter. The nine months growth rate of GDP increased by 3.4 percent in the third quarter of 2015, the report said. >MORE DETAILS Last group matches in the Europa League will be played Thursday evening, with Istanbul’s Fenerbahce and Besiktas seeming likely to advance to the last 32. Fenerbahce, who lie second in Group A on eight points, host Scottish side Celtic while Besiktas, who lead Group H on nine points, take on Sporting Lisbon in Portugal. In Fenerbahce’s group, Norwegian club Molde lead with 10 points. They face third-placed Ajax. A draw will be enough to ensure Fenerbahce go to the next round...>>SPORT WEATHER / ANKARA Friday SUNNY 9 °C Saturday PARTLY CLOUDY 9 °C Syria, Russia impediments to establish no-fly zone: US Gen. The question that we need to ask is, do we have the political and policy backdrop with which to do so?’ general says The U.S. is able to impose a no-fly zone in northern Syria, but political and military considerations are preventing it from doing so, a top general said Wednesday. In a fiery exchange with lawmakers, Gen. Paul Selva acknowledged the military’s ability to create a safe zone, but said, “The question that we need to ask is, do we have the political and policy backdrop with which to do so?”. Crucial to the Joint Chiefs Vice chairman was a potential confrontation with Russian forces should they opt to challenge the no-fly zone, or a “direct conflict” with the Syrian army. A visibly perturbed Sen. John McCain, who has long criticized the Obama administration’s strategy, rebutted. “I must say, it’s one of the more embarrassing statements I’ve ever heard from a uniformed military officer, that we are worried about Syria and Russia’s reaction to saving the lives of thousands and thousands of Syrians who are being barrel-bombed and massacred.” The heated crossfire came during a congressional hearing in which Selva and Defense Chief Ashton Carter sought to defend President Barack Obama’s strategy to defeat Daesh in Iraq and Syria. In another terse stand-off with the senior senator, Carter acknowledged that the extremist group has not yet been contained after more than a year of unrelenting airstrikes, but said the U.S.-led coalition is “building momentum against ISIL”. When asked how long it would take to retake Daesh’s de facto capital in Raqqa, and Iraq’s second largest city of Mosul, Carter emphasized that it is up to local forces in Iraq and Syria to take the lead. Later Wednesday, the White House criticized Congress for blocking more than $116 million in funding for operations in Syria. “The Department of Defense has been asking for weeks now for additional funds to Bulk of Daesh arsenal made in former Soviet States The majority of weapons used by Daesh come from supplies plundered from the Iraqi military and mainly consist of stock re-supply that effort and try to continue the progress,” said White House spokesman Josh Earnest. “But Congress inexplicably has not acted. In fact, they have actually tried to block this funding from going through.” Obama has steadfastly resisted calls for another massive U.S. troop buildup in a Middle East country, and has emphasized the importance of developing partner forces in the region to carry out the ground offensive against Daesh. As Iraqi forces continue their offensive to retake the strategic city of Ramadi, Carter said that the U.S. is standing ready to provide additional close air support and troops to advise the offensive. >MORE DETAILS Syrian regime dropped 1,000 barrel bombs in Nov: NGO Daesh’s arsenal was old and dated from the 1980s and 1990s. “The 1980s was a crucial era for arms buildup and that was Most weapons looted from Iraqi military stocks, according to Amnesty International report The regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad last month dropped a total of 1,083 barrel bombs that killed 51 civilians, including 16 children, according to a report issued by the Syrian Network for Human Rights. Eight detained in Istanbul anti-terror raids designed or manufactured in former Soviet bloc states, according to Amnesty International. Advances made across northern Iraq last year, particularly the capture of Mosul, gave Daesh access to a huge stockpile of arms that also included modern U.S.-made weaponry. “We have been able to see what type of weapons they have got but in terms of quantity it’s very difficult to know that,” Patrick Wilcken, an arms control researcher at Amnesty, told Anadolu Agency. “However, what we can say is that the top one is definitely Russian and former Soviet Union weapons. So it’s Russian and Eastern European and it’s their standard equipment that they are using.” Wilcken said the U.S-made and NATO equipment in Daesh’s hands was a result of arms transfers made to Iraq since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion. He added that the bulk of the time of the Iran-Iraq War, when Russia was the principal supplier of Iraq,” Wilcken said. “But I think it’s important to remember that just because the weapons are old does not mean that they were necessarily transferred in the era they were manufactured. “And a lot of old Warsaw Pact stock has been transferred by the U.S., the U.K., other coalition members, during the occupation of Iraq and post2003. And even more recently, supplies to Kurdish forces in post-, mid-2014 were mainly old Warsaw Pact stock.” Daesh also buys weapons from corrupt members of the Syrian military and on the “illicit market that runs across the borders,” Wilcken added. “There does seem to be a lot of reports of illicit traffic. And it would be surprising if there wasn’t illicit traffic given that the whole region is in conflict.” >MORE DETAILS Eight people have been detained in early morning anti-terror operations targeting the PKK’s youth wing in Istanbul on Thursday. Anti-terror squads, backed up by helicopters raided 15 locations in three districts of the city; Eyup, Fatih and Kucukcekmece on the European side, according to police sources. Eight suspects, who are thought to be members of the Patriotic Revolutionary Youth Movement (YDG-H), were held while many organizational documents were seized during the raids. Turkey has been carrying out operations against the PKK ... >
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Anadolu Agency
Ahmet Davutoglu also vows to revise legislation left
over from coup periods
Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu has said that cemevis -- Alevi places of
worship -- will be granted legal status.
...
Anadolu Agency
a set number of candidates elected per
district. In all but three cases a district
corresponds to a province - only in
Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir provinces
are there multiple districts.
Under this ...
Anadolu Agency
This new status for Alevi religious buildings is just one part of 64th government’s
action plan, presented in the Turkish capital Ankara by Davutoglu on Thursday.
The exact size of the Alevi popula...