Is Turkey The New Tuscany?

IS TURKEY THE NEW TUSCANY?

Independent
Friday, 15 August 2008
UK

It straddles Asia and Europe – and is the holiday choice of the
chattering classes. As David Cameron joins them, John Walsh explains
why Turkey is having its moment in the sun

East and West: Istanbul, the Golden Horn, and the Asian part across
the Bosphorus in the distance

Next week, David Cameron is off to Turkey for his summer
holidays. Boris Johnson has just come back from there; he posed
on a boat in fetching red, floral, shorts. Boris, of course, has a
family connection with the place: his ancestor, Ali Kemal, a Turkish
journalist, served in the government of Ahmed Tevfik Pasha, Grand
Vizier of the Ottoman Empire. But Cameron? What is it about the place
that has brought the two most powerful Conservative politicians in
the UK, two Old Etonian members of the Bullingdon Club, to a country
of 70 million Muslim people with a dubious human rights record and
no access to a decent bottle of Château Pétrus 1985?

It could simply be that other places are just less appealing to the
modern politician. Australia is too far away; Africa is too volatile;
and visiting America would seem like sucking up to President Bush when
everyone is the world is preparing to say good riddance. Mauritius
is too keen on the modern slavery of indentured labour. Spain is too
contemptuous about British holidaymakers. Holidaying in France without
a personal invitation from Met Mme Sarkozy seems low-rent. Italy is
too familiar – didn’t MPs stop going to Tuscany, Umbria and Le Marche
at the end of the millennium? The Greek islands have been too overrun
by British students and clubbers since the mid-1970s.

It may, of course, be the heat. Turkey is scorching in August. You can
guarantee that, every single morning, up to 40 degrees of incinerating
rays will attack your flesh like a six-foot steam-iron. Mr Cameron has
been photographed splashing around a Cornwall beach in a black Peak
vest and with a body-board; he’ll need all the covering he can get.

A more sophisticated reason for visiting Turkey is to inspect its
unique status as the hinge between East and West – not just Asia
and Europe, but between Islam and Christianity, fundamentalism and
enlightenment, spiritual zealotry and decadent consumerism. Turkey is,
for a Tory mindset, the nearest bit of Asia you can visit while still
feeling safely in Europe. It’s Asia-lite. It’s a 98-per-cent Muslim
country without the scary bits: the fatwa, the jihad, the suicide
bombers. And within its boundaries, a modern East-West-style struggle
for the upper hand is taking place every day.

It was known to the Romans as Asia Minor, and in its northwest region,
the border of Europe and Asia is a daisy-chain of waterways – the
Dardanelles strait, the Sea of Marmara and the Bosphorus that leads to
the north coast, thereby connecting the pleasure steamers and pedalos
of the Aegean with the scary Russian tankers of the Black Sea. The
western end of the Dardanelles is the location of Troy, which every
schoolboy knows as the setting of Homer’s Iliad. On the north shore
of the Sea of Marmara, the ancient Greeks founded a city called
Byzantium, which, renamed Constantinople, became the centre of the
Greek-speaking Roman Empire. The Ottoman Empire nabbed it in 1453, and
made it Europe’s largest, richest and most glamorous city in the Middle
Ages. Its name changed again to Stamboul, and was finally resolved
into Istanbul in 1930, during the reformsof Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

Ataturk’s name, 70 years after his death in 1938, remains crucial in
the debate about modern Turkey. He was the commander of the Ottoman
forces in the First World War who wiped out the invading British
and Australian forces at Gallipoli, and became the key figure in
the nationalist movement that wrested control of Turkey back from
the French, Italians, Greeks and Russian-supported Armenians who had
controlled its regions for too long.

He was a pragmatic, pro-Western visionary who pulled Turkey out
of its dark ages through a mixture of democratic initiatives and
authoritarian diktats. He insisted Turks spoke Turkish (not Arabic,)
banned the fez (too Ottoman and, as it were, old-hat), he insisted
on the Western Gregorian calendar rather than the Middle Eastern,
he abandoned Arabic script for Roman letters, insisted Turkish
citizens took surnames, banned the old Sultanish harem practice of
polygamy, championed Turkish culture and gave everyone the vote. He
also separated church from state, and banned religion from having
any influence on politics. He gave the country a new sense of its
post-Ottoman identity, as a nation state rather than a mix of random
nationalities. And he insisted that the state should be entirely
Turkish (which meant, shockingly to modern eyes, shipping all Greek
speakers off to Greece and dispossessing the Kurds.)

This did wonders for national pride. Statues of the great man, dressed
in a sensible Western suit or astride a horse, can be found in every
one-mosque town across the nation, while his name or face appears on
stamps, currency notes, airports, and bridges. It gave the Turkish
people a self-consciousness and hostility towards both religion and
non-Turks that sustains to this day.

This may account for the feeling, common to every traveller, that
Turkey is a Janus-faced, mildly schizophrenic land of old and new. In
the west, around Bodrum and Izmir, where tourists flock every summer
to drink raki, hit the beaches and dive off boats, local women go out
to work, live as they please, drink and flirt in a very non-Muslim way;
the girls dress as if they were in Camden Town.

In the less touristy interior – in Kayseri, for instance, the
manufacturing city in the heart of Cappadocia, or further east towards
the Black Sea coast, things are more strait-laced: all the factories
have prayer-rooms for their workers, and the city is dominated by
a huge mosque. Women are required to preserve their modesty on pain
of death by "honour killings" (of which they were 2000 in the first
six years of this century.) Even on the south coast, in the popular
Bay of Antalya, local women still wear slave pants, bake pancakes in
the open air and perform feats of clairvoyance as they did 300 years
ago. The muezzin calling the faithful to prayer from the towers of
mosques may occasionally be drowned out by the throb of Turkish techno,
but he’s still around.

This is a country where, to modern urban voters, "secularism" is
synonymous with democracy. The majority of Turks want another Ataturk
in power – someone who will steer them towards the West than the East,
so there can be more "Anatolian Tigers," benefiting from the economic
freedoms of the 1980s, under Turgut Ozal’s Motherland Party.

"We need to protect our modern lifestyle. We don’t want very religious
or conservative people to govern us," a club owner called Ali Korur
told the BBC last year, "Some people worry that Ataturk’s revolution
is in danger, but I think people who are used to modern life will
never return to the age of ignorance."

The chief emblem of "ignorance" is the turban, or headscarf, worn by
religious women. It has become the centre of a noisy debate. Since
1997, when the army authorities booted out a government for being
too "Islamist," Turkish women have been banned by law from wearing
headscarves in "public offices." This can mean universities and schools
and, as two-thirds of the female population habitually cover their
heads, millions of women missed the chance to attend college. The
wearers were and are seldom dangerous radicals or fundamentalists,
but merely conservative-minded Muslims who take seriously their
religion’s stipulations about modesty.

The issue was tackled this February, when the Turkish parliament passed
an amendment that said: "No-one can be denied his or her right to a
higher education," and grudgingly allowed traditional scarves to be
worn on campus. Hostile voices complained it was the beginning of a
process which would impose religious beliefs on the population.

This is why Turkey is so fascinating to foreign intellectuals: it’s
an upside-down world where left-wingers yell at scarf-wearing girls
in the street, where modern Muslims worship secularism and dread
expressions of piety, and where the libertarian reforms of 80 years
ago are invoked, in the 2000s, to quell free expression.

The spirit of Ataturk lies behind Article 301, in the modern penal
code, which bans people from "insulting Turkishness." When Orhan Pamuk,
the Nobel laureate, talked about the Armenian massacres by Ottoman
Turks in 1915, he was arrested and tried (the charges were dropped,
but the world took notice). A woman journalist called Perihan Magden
wrote in favour of conscientious objection and was tried for "turning
people against military service". The prime minister, Recep Erdogan,
sued caricature artists for painting him as an animal, and won. No
wonder Turkey’s application for full membership of the EU has been
temporarily delayed.

David Cameron would be advised not to mention the Armenian events to
his hosts, or the fate of the Kurds, or the excellence of Midnight
Express, Alan Parker’s movie which offered a rather negative picture
of the Turkish prison system. Cameron should also avoid mentioning
Cyprus, or wearing a fez in public, or asking for tickets to the
camel wrestling (it was all over in January.) But he will surely be
intrigued by a nation on whose vital eight borders, from Iran and
Georgia to Bulgaria and Greece, such tumultuous history was fought
down the centuries, and where a lot more history seems destined
to happen, soon; a country with one foot in Islam and the other in
Western capitalism, stuck in the Ataturk past, puzzled by the changing
present and slightly paranoid about where its cultural future lies.

–Boundary_(ID_RdQ4LZrOTdiMAdP1JpjMvQ)–

CSTO PA: Georgia Committed Genocide Against S. Ossetia

CSTO PA: GEORGIA COMMITTED GENOCIDE AGAINST S. OSSETIA

News Agency "24.kg"
14/08-2008 07:48
Bishkek

"Georgia committed genocide against innocent civilians in S. Ossetia,"
Collective Security Treaty Organization Parliamentary Assembly (CSTO
PA) says.

A special statement unveiling evaluation of Georgia assault on
S. Ossetia was composed at the Council of CSTO PA, Speaker of State
Duma Boris Gryzlov said. The statement is a result of consultations
held with the leadership of CSTO member-state.

"Consultations revealed similarity of our positions with regard to
S. Ossetia," Boris Gryzlov added.

CSTO PA admits horrible consequences of the war: thousands of dead
civilians, destroyed infrastructure, doubtful peaceful settlement of
Georgia- S. Ossetia conflict.

Among SCTO member-states are Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan.

New Party Occurs In Armenia

NEW PARTY OCCURS IN ARMENIA

arminfo
2008-08-13 13:23:00

ArmInfo. A new Liberal Party of Armenia has occurred in Armenia. The
founder and chairman of the party Hovhanness Hovhannisyan told media
Wednesday that the constituent congress of the party is scheduled
for 16 August.

‘At present the party has over 4000 like-minders. Liberal Party
has maintained all our principles including our stance in foreign
policy. The party structure has undergone so significant changes’,
he said.

At the same time, he said, LPA members have always been loyal to the
Armenian National Congress. As soon as the Justice Ministry registers
the party, it will join the ANC.

‘LPA aims to care about ordinary citizens and their welfare. We pay
special importance to state elections as the unique instrument for
achieving this welfare’, he said. Earlier, H. Hovhannisyan headed
Liberal Progressive Party of Armenia that has split-up recently.

‘Dear Leader’ Has Pak Choosing Gold

‘DEAR LEADER’ HAS PAK CHOOSING GOLD

Gulf Times
13 August, 2008, 01:28 AM Doha Time
Qatar

Pak Hyon Suk of DPR Korea holds up 135 kg in the clean and jerk portion
of the women’s 63 kg class in Beijing yesterday. Pak won the gold
medal. (UPI BEIJING: Pak Hyon-Suk overcame certain elimination to win
North Korea’s first weightlifting gold medal at the Beijing Olympics
yesterday, as Liao Hui hoisted China to their fifth lifting title here.

Fearful of losing and driven by a desire to please North Korea’s "Dear
Leader", the 23-year-old Pak delivered the goods in a heart-stopping
finish.

After two missed attempts, she had faced either elimination or victory
as she walked up to the bar for the last time to attempt 135kg in
the clean and jerk.

She needed to get the bar up to overhaul Irina Nekrassova of
Kazakhstan, who had finished with a 240kg total and eventually ended
with the silver.

Taiwan’s Lu Ying-Chi won the bronze. After failing at the same weight
twice, the North Korean was finally successful with her do-or-die
final lift to eclipse Nekrassova by just one kilogram.

"I just kept it in my head that my Dear General’s eyes would be
watching over me, and that encouraged me to lift this weight," she
said, referring to North Korea’s leader Kim Jong-Il who is invariably
called "Dear Leader" or "Dear General" by his people.

The pressure was on her to produce after North Korean lifters had
all failed in the first three days of competition, including world
champion Cha Kum-Chol in the men’s 56kg.

Meanwhile, 20-year-old Liao won China’s fifth weightlifting gold in
an equally dramatic finish that also saw former Chinese world champion
Shi Zhiyong withdraw from the clean and jerk portion of the contest.

Warned by his parents he would become a dwarf if he pursued the sport,
Liao hoisted 158kg in the snatch and 190kg in the clean and jerk for
a total of 348kg and reflected on what could have been had he followed
his parents’ advice instead of that of his coach.

"Because they had traditional ideas that I would not grow tall and
become very short and fat, they tried to discourage me from lifting
weights," Liao said.

In the end the persistent provincial coach prevailed on the parents
and Liao shot from obscurity in Hubei province over three years to
make the national team.

However, he was made to sweat after completing his lifts as Vencelas
Dabaya-Tientcheu of France, who was running in second place with an
interim total of 338kg, made an audacious play for the gold with two
chances for clean and jerk lift of 197kg.

"I saw how he lifted 187kg (the Frenchman’s first clean and jerk
lift) easily and realised that he was a very strong opponent. I was
worried," Liao said. "I was in a bad position because my second lift
was inferior. I was really nervous and was waiting for something
to happen."

The Frenchman failed in the first attempt, however, and decided not
to try again, having already assured himself of the silver medal.

"Today I had no choice but to go for 197kg," Dabaya-Tientcheu said.

"I had never lifted that much but I believe I got closer to that
today."

Junior world champion Tigran Martirosyan of Armenia won the bronze,
also with a total of 338kg but he had a slightly higher body weight
than the Frenchman.

Martirosyan said he was weakened by having to lose 8kg of his body
weight to make the 69kg cut.

Russian Telco Altimo’s Past To Haunt India Plans

RUSSIAN TELCO ALTIMO’S PAST TO HAUNT INDIA PLANS

TMCnet
August 12, 2008

(Ecomonic Times, The (India) (KRT) Via Acquire Media NewsEdge)
Aug. 12–NEW DELHI — In a development that could jeopardise Russian
telco Altimo’s plans of entering India, the home ministry (MHA) has
said the company is embroiled in lawsuits and faces allegations of
fraud, corruption and bribery.

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It has also said its parent company, the Alpha Group, is under
investigation by European anti-money laundering agencies, in
addition to being named in the Volcker Report in connection with the
oil-for-food scandal. These observations were made by the ministry
while rejecting the foreign investment proposal of a company with
which the Alpha Group jointly owns a bank.

Altimo owns a 44 percent stake in VimpelCom and 25 percent in
Megafon, which together control more than 80 percent of the Russian
communications market. It has been looking to establish a toehold
in India for the past two years, and is reported to have been in
talks with realty major Unitech to pick up a 26 percent stake in its
telecom arm.

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Angeles, California.

Find Solutions for Enterprises, SMBs & Service Providers at the
INTERNET TELEPHONY Conference and EXPO West, September 16-18, 2008. Los
Angeles, California.

Find Solutions for Enterprises, SMBs & Service Providers at the
INTERNET TELEPHONY Conference and EXPO West, September 16-18, 2008. Los
Angeles, California.

Find Solutions for Enterprises, SMBs & Service Providers at the
INTERNET TELEPHONY Conference and EXPO West, September 16-18, 2008. Los
Angeles, California.

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INTERNET TELEPHONY Conference and EXPO West, September 16-18, 2008. Los
Angeles, California.

The telecom firm, in the past, has been linked to several other
companies which were awarded telecom licences recently. Last year,
Altimo was among the five bidders to acquire a controlling stake
in Hutchison Essar, but the deal eventually went to British giant
Vodafone. Following its failure, Altimo, in a statement, had said
it had borrowed $1.5 billion from Deutsche Bank to expand in a
fast-growing market like India.

However, the home ministry’s observations that Altimo and its parent
company, Alpha, have a "tainted background" could become a stumbling
block for their India plans.

The Alpha Group, controlled by Russian oligarch Mikhail Friedman,
is one of the largest conglomerates in the world with interests in
oil and gas, commercial and investment banking, asset management,
insurance, retail trade, telecommunications, technology and media.

The consortium has been entangled in a series of controversies, the
latest being the fight with British Petroleum over control of TNK-BP,
one of Russia’s largest oil and gas companies.

Altimo’s valuation is pegged at over $30 billion and has a customer
base, through all its subsidiaries, of over 150 million. For the
past three years, Altimo has been locked in a legal dispute with
Norwegian telecom major Telenor over VimpelCom in which Telenor
has about 30 percent. VimpelCom, through its different arms, has
operations in Russia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan,
Georgia and Armenia.

The government’s strong views on Altimo came to light when Meta
Telecom, which has been issued national and international licences by
the Department of Telecom, sought the Foreign Investment Promotion
Board’s (FIPB) nod to permit Cyprus-based Daltotrade to raise its
foreign holding in the company to 74 percent from the current 40
percent.

The home ministry, in its report to FIPB, pointed out that Daltotrade
owned 42.7 percent in Belarus-based Mezhtorgbank, adding that the
Alpha Group also held a 40 percent stake in the bank. The report
added that according to the US Centre for Public Integrity, Alpha
Group president Mikhail Friedman and his colleague Pyotr Aven were
involved in drug trafficking on a global scale.

Another possible reason for FIPB to reject the proposal could be based
on the department of revenue’s report. It said Meta Telecom has only
provided skeletal information about Daltotrade and key details like
the company’s financial credibility and sources of funds had not
been furnished.

To see more of The Economic Times, or to subscribe to the newspaper,
go to

Copyright (c) 2008, The Economic Times, India Distributed by
McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

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–Boundary_(ID_sIAvTCC42YdFqqUtqUkdfg)–

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com

The Citizens Of Armenia Didn’t Suffer From The Bustle In Georgia

THE CITIZENS OF ARMENIA DIDN’T SUFFER FROM THE BUSTLE IN GEORGIA

armradio.am
12.08.2008 16:47

The RA Embassy in Georgia and the RA General Consulate in Batumy go
on helping the RA citizens to return to their Motherland. About 8, 5
thousand citizens have already been moved. By the support of Armenia
about 850 foreigners (diplomats and their families) have been moved
from Georgia to Yerevan. On the eve early in the morning about 45 buses
left for Ajaria to return Armenians to their Motherland. According
to the Press and Information department of RA FAM, Armenians didn’t
suffer during the events in Georgia. Many citizens phoned to the RA
FAM with the hot lines to be informed about the developing of the
events and about the transportation of Armenian citizens.

Assistance Programme In Progress

ASSISTANCE PROGRAMME IN PROGRESS

NKR Government Information and Public Relations Department
August 11, 2008

According to an agreement concludied between the NKR Government and
"Karabakh Telecom" CJSC, in 2008 "KT" will render 500 mln drams
assistance for realization of different programmes in the health
sphere of the NKR.

On August 9, the NKR Prime Minister Ara Haroutyunyan accompanied by
the General Manager of the "KT" company Ralph Yierikyan has visited
those medical establishments of Stepanakert, where works at the expence
of means rendered by the company are envesiged to be carried out. At
first they have visited the first aid station, where they have got
acquainted with the recently bought reanimation car the first in
Artsakh, which will afford an opportunity to securely transport
patients to Yerevan in case of urgency.

Then they have visited the sanitary epidemiologic station and
dermatovenerologic dispensary and the republican children’s hospital
("Arevik" medical establishment). Repair and overhaul works are
foreseen in the mentioned establishments for which modern equipment
will be obtained.

Water Supply Of Arabkir Community To Be Cut Off On August 13

WATER SUPPLY OF ARABKIR COMMUNITY TO BE CUT OFF ON AUGUST 13

Noyan Tapan

Au g 11, 2008

YEREVAN, AUGUST 11, NOYAN TAPAN. The water supply of the following
streets in Yerevan’s Arabkir community: Papasian, Vagharshian,
Sundukian, Avetisian, Gaydar, Gulakian, Kyulbenkian, Aghbyur Serob,
Sose, Orbeli, Kievian, Proshian, Yerznkian, Baghramian, Hrachia
Kochar, as well as Aygedzor district and the adjacent areas will be
cut off from 10 am to 9 pm on August 13 due to construction work,
NT was informed by Yerevan Water CJSC.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=116366

Iran offers ‘any help’ in S.Ossetia crisis

Agence France Presse
Aug 9 2008

Iran offers ‘any help’ in S.Ossetia crisis

TEHRAN (AFP) ‘ Iran, watching conflict in the Caucasus unfold
virtually on its doorstep, said Saturday it was "ready to offer any
help" to end the crisis in South Ossetia.

"The Islamic republic voices concern over the military conflicts in
South Ossetia that have led to the killing of defenceless people and
calls for an immediate halt to the clashes," foreign ministry
spokesman Hassan Ghashghavi said.

"Iran is ready to offer any help … under its principal policies of
contributing to the establishment of peace and stability in the
region," added Ghashghavi, quoted by the Iranian student news agency
ISNA.

"A worsening of the crisis could affect the whole region with its
negative consequences," he said, urging the two sides to negotiate.

Iran borders on two of Georgia’s neighbours in the Caucasus — Armenia
and Azerbaijan — and historically maintains a close geopolitical
interest in the volatile region.

Its capital Tehran lies 880 kilometres (550 miles), as the crow flies,
from Georgia’s capital Tbilisi — about the same distance as Paris and
Berlin.

Appointment Of Shavarsh Kocharyan As Deputy Foreign Minister Of Arme

APPOINTMENT OF SHAVARSH KOCHARYAN AS DEPUTY FOREIGN MINISTER OF ARMENIA WAS A RIGHT DECISION: ARFD MEMBER

arminfo
2008-08-09 14:43:00

ArmInfo. The appointment of Shavarsh Kocharyan as Deputy Foreign
Minister of Armenia was a right decision, the leader of the
parliamentary group of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
Dashnaktsoutyun Vahan Hovhannissyan said during a press-conference
today. "I am sure that he will work well in his new office. I have
seen his work in the parliament and in PACE and can say that,
irrespective of his political views and preferences, he did all
he could for protecting the interests of Armenia and the Armenian
people," Hovhannissyan said. To remind, on Aug 2 President of Armenia
Serzh Sargsyan appointed the leader of the National Democratic Party
Shavarsh Kocharyan as Deputy Foreign Minister of Armenia.