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Last updated 22:43 |
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Pamuk draws international support
International support for renowned Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk is growing fast. The UK newspaper the Sunday Times has called lawsuits on Pamuk “a disgrace for Turkey” whereas the Booker-prize winning writer Kazuo Ishigura pointed out that “it is shocking and terrifying that such an event takes places in today’s Turkey.” Pamuk has been subject to a string of lawsuits as a result of his announcements on the Armenian genocide. |
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Clash in Sirnak: 4 soldiers killed In a clash with PKK terrorists in southeastern city of Sirnak, one junior officer and three privates were killed today. According to information received by the A.A correspondent, Turkish security forces were attacked by PKK terrorists during a routine field control around Seslice and Alkim regions of Sirnak. |
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Terrorists attack gendarmery station ir Bingöl In an attack on a gendarmery station in Genc town of eastern city of Bingol today, one sergeant was killed and two privates were wounded. According to Bingol Deputy Governor Fikret Zaman, the gendarmery station at Yazkonagi village was attacked by PKK terrorists using long-range rifles.Injured soldiers were sent to military hospital in southeastern city of Diyarbakir with a helicopter, said Zaman. |
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PM Erdoğan subject to egg-throwing again
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has been the target of an egg-throwing protest during the opening ceremony for Orhaneli junction, Bursa. The 57 year-old male protester missed Erdoğan but was arrested nevertheless. Erdoğan has been subject to the same method in the recent past – in Norway by pro-PKK protesters and in Trabzon two months ago. During his opening speech at the ceremony, Erdoğan has warned once again what he sees as “attempts at upsetting Turkey’s peace and stability”. |
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38 members of Hizb ut-Tahrir detained Thirty eight people were arrested outside a mosque where Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan was performing Friday prayers, reported Anatolian news agency. The 38 detained are thought to be supporters of a pan-Islamist party, Hizb ut-Tahrir, which aims to establish a world-wide Islamic state and is banned in Turkey. While, the group threw leaflets into the air at the entrance of a central Ankara mosque, the PM was inside praying. The police quickly over-powered the demonstrators to protect the PM. |
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Turkey to send aid to Tel Afar Turkey is to send humanitarian aid to the northern Iraqi city of Tel Afar, said sources on Friday. In a statement, the Foreign Ministry said that Turkey would send food stuff and medical equipment to meet the urgent needs of people in Tel Afar at the weekend. ''Turkey is also ready to contribute to overcoming the deficiencies in Tel Afar's water network and health services. Turkey plans to send technical teams to Tel Afar to this end,'' Ministry noted. |
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Mobile phones can affect pacemakers says Turkish Research Under certain circumstances, mobile phones can have adverse effects on the function of pacemakers, but the devices usually start working properly again once the phones are moved away, researchers in Turkey reported. "Patients must not get into a panic about this issue (because) modern pacemakers are quite protected devices from interference," Dr. Izzet Tandogan told Reuters Health. |
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PM Erdogan: If it continues like this security forces will respond more strongly
Speaking last night on a television program hosted by reporter Mehmet Ali Birand, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan referred to the recent increase in "street protests" by PKK backed groups, saying "For the past 5 years there has been peace. But things have started to heat up again. If you'll notice, this occurs just as we enter into talks with the EU." PM Erdogan noted that if tension continues on the same note, security forces will be stepped up in concert with the level of threat. |
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Possible visit to Turkey in the cards for Pope Benedict XVI
It has been revealed that Pope Benedict XVI is awaiting permission from Ankara for a proposed trip to Turkey in November. The Vatican has said that Greek Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomeus I had invited Pope Benedict earlier, but that Ankara had still not issued the official invitation expected by the Vatican. Speaking with reporters on the subject of a possible trip to Turkey, Vatican authority Cardinal Walter Kasper said "The Pope wishes to go. We are discussing the matter with Ankara." |
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Straw issues warning on Turkey Greeks are angered
Recent written and spoken comments by British Foreign Minister Jack Straw on the subject of possible Turkish membership in the EU have elicited a strong response from Greek diplomatic authorities. An article by Straw , published in the International Herald Tribune, warned of the crossroads faced by Europe in terms of either choosing to cooperate with Turkey or closing its doors on itself. |
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Operation against group of 30 PKK members continues outside of Tunceli
An operation to capture PKK backed terrorists in the mountains above Tunceli is continuing in Turkey's southeast. A group of 30 PKK fighters who had gone to the top of Munzur Mountain in order to make preparations for the winter fought Turkish security forces who called for the fighters to give themselves up. Gun battles waged between the group and the soldiers, though most of the group has now been surrounded. |
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Germany shuts down PKK linked publications Germany, which shut down PKK-linked newspaper "Ozgur Politika" at the beginning of the week, has now also forbiddden another voice of the PKK, the Mesopotamian News Agency (MHA). Meeting with Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul yesterday in Ankara, Volker Ruhe, the president of Germany's Federal Foreign Ministry Commission, said that the decision to outlaw the publications would go into effect immediately. |
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Independent Commission members in Turkey, activating for EU membership
Two important members of the Independent Commission, created with the support of the Open Society Institute, were in Turkey this week. They were the former Charge d'Affaires from the Austrain Foreign Ministry, Albert Rohan, and the former Spanish Foreign Minister Marcelino Oreja Aguirre. |
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Belgium sees attempt to pass Armenian genocide bill The liberal Belgian MR Party has presented a bill to the Brussels Parliament calling for an official recognition of the so-called Armenian genocide. The bill, put forward by MR Senators Alain Destexhe, Francoise Roelants du Vivier, and Christine Defraigne, demands that all archives and research on the issue be opened up for public consumption, and notes that the relations between Turkey and Armenia are completely blocked due to the disagreement over exactly what happened to ethnic Armenians in Turkey during the WWI period. |
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