Continue reading ""Mutual consent on Turkey's EU bid: the slower the better" »

Hürriyet celebretes the 85th year with typical Republican iconography...
Turkish judiciary proves itself daily as the most backward section of the Establishment and AKP is about to complete its "Ankara-ization". Now relatively accepted by the gatekeepers of the Establishment, the ruling party remains indifferent to web bans.
Global Voices Advocacy » Blogger.com banned in Turkey
Continue reading "Blogger banned in Turkey. Turkey, a country in negotiations with the EU" »
Continue reading ""Turkey: Guest of Honour at the Frankfurt Book Fair 2008.." »
Minister of Justice apologizes because of the death of Engin Ceber. He said investigation continues in Metris Prison and 19 officials temporarily suspended....
Pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP) deputies Emine Ayna (front L) and Ibrahim Binici (front R) hold Azadiya Welat newspapers, which is published in Turkey in Kurdish language, during a meeting at the Turkish parliament in Ankara October 14, 2008, as they are flanked by their colleagues (back). DTP deputies on Tuesday protested against a Turkish court's decision to ban the publication of the Azadiya Welat newspaper for a month.
REUTERS/Umit Bektas (TURKEY)
Turkey probes death of activist
International Herald Tribune, France - Oct 12, 2008
Human rights groups say 29-year-old Engin Ceber was severely beaten by officers while in custody. He died in a hospital from a brain hemorrhage on Saturday
...[Engin] Ceber, an inmate at Istanbul’s Metris Prison, died last week after allegedly being abused and tortured at the hands of police and prison guards. Ceber was reportedly taken into custody along with three friends in Istanbul for selling a leftist magazine. They were later convicted and sent to Metris Prison. The four inmates were allegedly subjected to disproportionate use of force and heavy torture by policemen and prison guards. Ceber was taken to the hospital last week and was pronounced dead there after suffering from a brain hemorrhage as a result of a head injury...
Continue reading ""EU laws being made scapegoat in fight against terror..." »
Continue reading ""Austrian vote sends shockwaves through Brussels: Should Turkey worry?" »
Continue reading ""Neo-Ottomanism and Kemalist foreign policy" »
Continue reading ""Turkey fails to meet EU criteria in critical areas" »
Continue reading ""National program not 'national' enough for opposition..." »
Better luck next time, Ukraine.
One of these days the EU powers that be are going to realise that when you’ve got countries torn between a European and non-European identity, to keep on telling them “sorry, you’re not European enough yet” is just going to drive them into the other camp.
How much longer are the likes of Ukraine and Turkey going to put up with these repeated, very public rejections before heading off to the waiting embrace of Moscow or non-secular Islamism?
Continue reading ""Sorry, you’re just not European enough...." »
When we set off for Yerevan on a scheduled midnight Armavia flight this Thursday, we saw something we had not seen since long ago on a flight between İstanbul and Yerevan. Instead of men and women carrying several bags, probably goods to be sold in Armenia, as is customary on these biweekly scheduled fights, there were a number of journalists from the Turkish press.
Map showing the Turkish areas that were inhabited by Armenians in 1915. Turkey's President Abdullah Gul has made a historic trip to Armenia to watch a football match and try to tackle decades of animosity between the estranged neighbours.
(AFP Graphic)
Though the Third National Program declared last Monday by government spokesperson and State Minister Cemil Cicek raised hopes among the pro-EU intellectuals of Turkey, many are skeptical about the program’s prospects….
Relieved by a Constitutional Court ruling against a ban that helped it avert a political crisis, it was natural for the ruling Justice and Development Party, or AKP, to expect a few days of relaxation.
The Associated Press: Turkey's Gul urges Sudan leader to end suffering
Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (R) smiles while hugging his Turkish counterpart Abdullah Gul at the Ciragan Palace in Istanbul August 14, 2008.
REUTERS/Fatih Saribas (TURKEY)Continue reading "When Erkan was working to re-active the blog, Mr. Ahmadinejad visited Istanbul," »