Military covered up responsibility in deadly blast, probe
Transcription
Military covered up responsibility in deadly blast, probe
Döner kebab becomes Germany's favorite fast food 06 06 Former DEP deputy Leyla Zana handed three-year prison sentence for spreading PKK propaganda 00 UEFA team in stanbul to evaluate Turkey’s Euro 2016 hosting bid. Don’t miss our 16-page supplement Yo u r Wa y o f U n d e r s t a n d n g T u r k e y FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 2010 WWW.TODAYSZAMAN.COM TL 1.50 Obama, Medvedev sign disarmament treaty page11 PHOTO AP, IVAN SEKRETAREV Mltary covered up responsblty n deadly blast, probe shows Land mines that caused deaths of seven soldiers in Çukurca last year were planted by the Turkish military, not by the terrorists of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party, as the General Staff had announced were responsible for soldiers' security. There was also an administrative investigation by the Land Forces Command, which found that the mines were planted on the orders of military commanders. The General Staff, at the time of the explosion, released a statement saying that the mines had been planted by PKK terrorists who crossed into Turkey from northern Iraq. However, after the telephone conversation between the two commanders about the mine blast was made public, the family of Ziya Bener, who was killed in the explosion, filed a criminal complaint with the prosecutor's office. The General Staff's military prosecutor's office can now open a case against the defendants in accordance with Article 85 of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK), which says: “Someone who causes the death of a person due to negligence shall be punished with three to six years' imprisonment. If the act causes the loss of more than one person's life, the punishment can be from three to 15 years.” On the other hand, human rights activists are doubtful that the military prosecutor's office will continue the investigation and punish the parties responsible. Abidin Engin, Van branch head of the Association of Human Rights and Solidarity for Oppressed Peoples (MAZLUM-DER), told Today's Zaman that although the military prosecutor's office should reveal the people responsible for planting the mines and prosecute them accordingly, there are no signs that this will be the case. CONTINUED ON PAGE 17 TOP EU OFFICIAL FINDS SLEDGEHAMMER PLANS WORRISOME Protesters break through a gate of Kyrgyz government headquarters on the central square in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, on Thursday. Kyrgyz opposition seizes power, dissolves parliament 07 by 18.1 percent in Feb. 08 in public spending Continuing its upward trend, industrial production in Turkey increased by an impressive 18.1 percent in February over the same month of the previous year and was up by 0.5 percent from January, official figures showed. NGOs eye transparency monitoring economy Industrial production up A newly exposed document indicates that Chief of General Staff Gen. lker Babu was aware that a 2003 military seminar in which participants allegedly drafted a coup plot against the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government violated regulations, seemingly refuting General Staff arguments that it was a routine meeting. The document features the signature of Gen. Babu, who was the Land Forces commander at the time, according to the Hürriyet daily. It is currently under examination at the stanbul Public Prosecutor's Office, which is conducting an investigation into the suspected plot. In the document, Gen. Babu expresses reservations and criticism that retired Gen. Çetin Doan, the former head of the 1st Army, went beyond the “official and legal framework” when presiding over the seminar. CONTINUED ON PAGE 17 THREE RETIRED GENERALS BEHIND BARS IN SLEDGEHAMMER PROBE PAGE 17 Thirty Turkish civil society organizations have established a new body named the Public Spending Monitoring Platform in a bid to contribute to a more transparent public expenditure mechanism. Kyrgyzstan's opposition said on Thursday it had taken power and dissolved parliament in the poor and strategically important Central Asian state after a bloody uprising forced President Kurmanbek Bakiyev to flee the capital. Roza Otunbayeva, leader of the interim government, demanded the resignation of the president, whom she helped bring to power five years ago. She said Bakiyev was trying to rally supporters in his power base in southern Kyrgyzstan. CONTINUED ON PAGE 10 04 lower defense spending diplomacy The Van Chief Public Prosecutor's office has revealed that a land mine explosion which killed seven soldiers last year was caused by mines planted by the Turkish military, contrary to the earlier widely held belief that they had been planted by outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) terrorists. The incident was revealed with the aid of an ex-officer who claimed the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK) covered up many incidents caused in part by its weaponry and put the blame on the PKK. Following the mine explosion in Çukurca, Hakkari province, on May 27 of last year, Van prosecutors launched an investigation which found that the mines belonged to the Turkish military. The prosecutors, who stated that the mines were planted on the orders of a Turkish commander, demanded that Brig. Gen. Zeki Es, Maj. Gen. Gürbüz Kaya, whose name is also mentioned in relation to the Sledgehammer coup plot, and other people responsible be brought to justice for their role in the deaths of the seven soldiers. Because the civilian court lacks jurisdiction over the matter, the file for the case was sent to the military prosecutor's office. The Van prosecutor's report included evidence that the mines had been manufactured by the Turkish Mechanical and Chemical Industry Corporation (MKE) and had batteries used in the military. The report also mentioned a telephone conversation between Es and Kaya indicating that the mines were planted by people who MILITARY CHIEF KNEW SLEDGEHAMMER MEETING ‘OVERSTEPPED LIMITS,' DOCUMENT SHOWS EU Enlargement Commissioner Stefan Füle said yesterday in Brussels that plans included in a military action plot with the code name Sledgehammer, such as shooting down a Turkish fighter jet, are “worrisome.” According to Sledgehammer documents, the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK) had a systematic plan to create chaos in society by bombing mosques and attacking popular museums with Molotov cocktails. It also aimed to provoke clashes between Turkish and Greek warplanes over the Aegean. If the Greek warplanes had failed to shoot down a Turkish warplane, other Turkish planes would have been ordered to do it. The purpose of the attacks was to increase pressure on the government for failing to provide security to its citizens, eventually leading to a military coup. Füle responded to a written motion from Georgios Koumoutsakos, a Greek member of the Group of the European People's Party (Christian Democrats) regarding allegations that serious incidents including a war would be provoked between Turkey and Greece. CONTINUED ON PAGE 17 Greece, Turkey eye FM Davutolu to avoid Tehran nuke conference amid pressure While reaffirming their mutual will for improving bilateral relations on Thursday, Turkey and Greece expressed the hope that further progress in bilateral ties will eventually lead to a reduction in defense spending in both countries. Amid increasing pressure on Turkey to pursue a policy in line with that of the international community over the Iranian nuclear issue, Ankara is not expected to be represented at the ministerial level in the “Nuclear Energy For All, Nuclear Weapons For None” conference, to be held in Tehran. The meeting is scheduled for April 17-18, just days after US President Barack Obama hosts a nuclear security summit in Washington. By AYE KARABAT SEE STORY ON PAGE 04 Ahmet Davutolu Featuring news and articles from ‘ 02 TODAY’S ZAMAN FOOD FOR THOUGHT ‘ ‘ Q U O T E O F T H E D AY PRESS REVIEW F R I D AY, A P R I L 9 , 2 0 1 0 colu m ns WORDS OF WISDOM He [retired Gen. Çetin Doan] has to answer the questions of the [Sledgehammer] prosecutors. He is not the one who should ask questions now. American politicians are like cowboys. Whenever they have legal shortcomings, their hands go to their guns. Sometimes I give myself admirable advice, but I am incapable of taking it. Army’s prestige can’t be protected this way Former Chief of General Staff Gen. Hilmi Özkök Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Lady Mary Wortley Montagu This is what we understand from the developments in the probe into the Sledgehammer coup plot: 25 serving generals and admirals were to be detained but the prosecutors were not allowed to do so. This is the summary and the essence of the issue, but it is not that simple. stanbul Chief Public Prosecutor Aykut Cengiz Engin, who removed two prosecutors overseeing the probe, is right in saying, “The consequences of such a decision [to detain active duty military personnel] should be assessed thoroughly.” It would be wrong for the judiciary to create a mess while trying to do the correct thing. But doesn’t Engin mean with these remarks that the military ofcers are actually guilty but cannot be treated as guilty due to their positions. In this case, both the independence of the judiciary and the “immunity” issue become the subject of a debate. On the one hand, the members of the judiciary are being asked to take the consequences of their actions into account. One the other, they are expected to be neutral and independent. It is impossible for the judiciary to do both of these things. It needs to make a choice. BRAHM KRAS STAR CROSS READER f.zibak@todayszaman.com pr ess rou n du p AA, AHMET ZG FATMA DL ZIBAK ENJOY TODAY’S ZAMAN AT THESE TOP HOTELS Opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) leader Deniz Baykal, who earlier voiced strong opposition to the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government’s constitutional reform package, has softened his stance and said his party would support the package if President Abdullah Gül removes three articles from it and submits them to a public referendum. The three articles Baykal meant are those regarding judicial reform which foresee changes in the structure of the Constitutional Court and Supreme Board of Judges and Prosecutors (HSYK) and make party closures more difcult. Baykal said if the president listens to his suggestion, he will have done a “historic service” to society. “If the president does so, we, the CHP, would compromise,” he said, adding that this would be the way to easing tension. Baykal’s change of attitude to reach a consensus on the reform package has been found insincere and unpractical as neither the government nor the president are expected to withdraw their support for urgent judicial reform in the country. Yeni afak’s Fehmi Koru, who did not nd Baykal’s suggestion convincing, wonders why Baykal did not push for such an amendment package before if the package includes articles that are acceptable to the CHP. Recalling the CHP’s earlier complaints about the current Constitution, which is a legacy of the Sept. 12, 1980 coup, Koru says the articles that Baykal demands be removed from the package are the ones that are the remnants of the coup. “Only by enacting those particular three amendments can Turkey get rid of the aftereffects of the 1980 coup. By opposing the amendment of these articles, Baykal says he does not have any problems with the legacy of the 1980 coup. Is not this really odd?” asks Koru. Regarding the argument of the CHP and some other circles that the AK Party is trying to take the judiciary under its control through judicial reform, he says the latest developments in the Sledgehammer coup probe, direct interventions of some judiciary members in the ongoing case to protect the suspects, clearly show how Turkey is in desperate need of a reform in the judiciary. “CHP leader Baykal is talking sweetly, but his remarks are far from being credible,” he adds. According to Vatan’s Ruen Çakr, Baykal is abandoning the strategy he has pursued thus far about the package and is lending conditional support to the package in a bid to respond to the demand for change in society. He says this new attitude of the CHP has partially pulled it into the reform process, leaving the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) on its own on the opposing side. Nevertheless, Çakr believes that the CHP’s change in attitude is unlikely to get any results as he does not expect Gül to accept such bargaining. Milliyet’s Asl Aydntaba thinks Baykal’s latest maneuver regarding the constitutional reform package is the kind of one that will place both the president and the government in a difcult position. “We cannot know; perhaps the CHP leader’s suggestion for a compromise will echo somewhere, and Turkish politics, which will have failed to achieve consensus, will decide to give it a try,” she says. RIXOS RI K Phone: +90 242 710 20 00 Belek / Serik / Antalya www.rixos.com RIXOS KRO A Phone: +90 242 821 40 32 Kemer / Antalya www.rixos.com SORGN GRAND HRA HO Phone: +90 354 415 26 26 Sorgun / Yozgat www.sorguntermal.com RIXOS SNGA 242 824 00 00 Beldibi / Kemer / Antalya www.rixos.com SAN ARK O Phone: +90 216-3958840 Tuzla / Istanbul www.tuzlaaparthotel.com.tr AK ROOAN O ANKARA Phone: +90 312 295 45 45 Balgat / Ankara www.metropolitanhotel.com.tr PHOTO Baykal’s unwelcome proposal Wasn’t everyone equal before law? Residents of the village of Güvendik in the Bakale district of Van transport bottles of water filled at a fountain to meet their water needs. Faulty installation of pipelines has left them without running water in their houses. taraf: “AK Party: Reform package indivisible,” the daily said in the headline of its main story yesterday, reporting the reaction of the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) to a proposal by the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP). CHP leader Deniz Baykal on Tuesday said his party would support the reform package if President Abdullah Gül removed three articles regarding judicial reform from it and submitted them to a public referendum. AK Party Deputy Chairman Hüseyin Çelik said: “The president will never consent to this bargaining. Why should we divide a package that is entirely pro-freedom? Baykal, who wants to keep the status quo, is acting shrewdly.” yeni afak: “Biggest obstacle to peace is Israel,” the daily said in the headline of its lead story yesterday, quoting remarks from Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoan, RIXOS RI ODR Phone: +90 252 337 11 22 Bodrum / Muðla www.rixos.com RIXOS KONYA Phone: +90 332 221 50 00 Ýstanbul Yolu Selçuklu / Konya www.rixos.com GODCIY ORIS COX Phone: +90 242 510 02 00 Kargýcak / Alanya www.goldcity.com.tr SHERATON HOTEL ANKARA Phone: +90 312 457 60 00 www.sheraton.com/ankara DDAN ANKARA Phone: +90 312 416 88 00 Ankara www.dedeman.com SANHAN HO Phone: 0212.516.3232 Sultanahmet / Ýstanbul www.hotelsultanhan.com who spoke at a breakfast meeting in Paris on Wednesday. “If a country uses disproportionate force in Palestine, in Gaza -- uses phosphorous shells -- we’re not going to say ‘bravo’,” he declared, referring to Israel’s January 2009 offensive against Gaza. Erdogan said Israel’s justication for the offensive was based on “lies” and cited a report by United Nations investigator Richard Goldstone, a South African judge who accused both Israelis and Palestinians of war crimes. star: “Yerevan move before April 24,” the daily said in the headline of its top story yesterday, reporting that Prime Minister Erdoan sent a letter to Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian via special envoy. In the letter Erdoan asked the Armenian president not to backtrack on the normalization efforts between the two countries. Both leaders will gather in Washington on April 13. Armenians commemorate April 24 to remember the victims of the so-called Armenian genocide. RIXOS GRAND ANKARA Atatürk Bulvarý No:183 Kavaklýdere 06680 ANKARA Tel: 0 312 410 55 00 AAY RSOR HO AANYA Phone: +90 242 517 43 73 Alanya / Antalya www.alaiye.com.tr HO INA Phone: +90 212 458 28 00 Sultanahmet / Ýstanbul www.minahotel.com.tr GRAND HYA SAN Phone: +90 212 368 12 34 www.istanbul.grand.hyatt.com AAY KOARA HO AANYA Phone: + 90 242 513 40 18 Alanya / Antalya www.alaiye.com.tr GN HO Phone: +90 212 483 30 30 Merter / Ýstanbul www.guneshotel.com.tr ERHAN BAYURT BUGÜN stanbul Chief Public Prosecutor Engin, who removed two prosecutors overseeing a probe into the Sledgehammer plot from the case, spoke to the Star daily’s amil Tayyar on Wednesday. Regarding the removed prosecutors’ decision to detain 25 senior members of the military, he said, “The consequences of such a decision should be assessed thoroughly.” What does this mean? If there is an offense in question and if this offense is a coup plot against the government and Parliament, what does the fact that these 25 serving members of the military have the rank of a general or admiral matter? Do 25 generals gain immunity if they are involved in crimes? What is it that renders them superior to dozens of retired generals, admirals, journalists and academics? With his statements, Engin clearly reveals that there is no supremacy of the law or equality before the law in Turkey. Under these circumstances, if the European Union makes an assessment and suspends Turkey’s EU talks on the grounds that Turkey took a step backward regarding the Copenhagen criteria, nobody should be surprised. Turkey’s chance to veto Israel AKF BEK YEN AFAK Israel is getting ready to become a member of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), which is a major international institution. Even under normal circumstances, it would be difcult for Israel, which has been aspiring to become a member of this club for years, to be admitted for membership. It needs to fulll certain criteria to be a member of this organization, most of whose members are from Western Europe. It is a matter of curiosity which criteria Israel will need to fulll to become a member of an organization as prestigious as the OECD. Turkey, which is member of the OECD, has a historic opportunity in this respect. In order to admit a new member to the organization, every OECD member needs to approve it. The rejection of a single member is sufcient to refuse membership. So, Turkey can use its right to veto Israel’s membership to the OECD. O SAN Hotels&Convention Center Phone: 0 212 468 50 00 Yeþilköy / Ýstanbul www.wowhotelsistanbul.com ORYA KONAI HO Phone: 0 212 663 56 49 Florya / www.floryakonagi.com GANC RSOR HO YAO A Phone: 90 (226) 465 66 22 Altýnova / Yalova www.eleganceresort.com.tr RAADA AA SAN Phone: +90 212 315 44 44 www.ramadaplazaistanbul.com IANIC OR HO Phone: +90 212 413 70 00 Bakýrköy / Ýstanbul www.titanic.com.tr HO SYHAN Phone: +90 322 455 30 30 Seyhan / Adana www.otelseyhan.com.tr NATIONAL TODAY’S ZAMAN 03 F R I D A Y, A P R I L 9 , 2 0 1 0 STANBUL ANKARA ZMR ANTALYA ADANA ERZURUM EDRNE TRABZON KAYSER 15° 13° 20° 23° 21° 7° 18° 11° 12° KONYA ÇANAKKALE DYARBAKIR SAMSUN BURSA GAZANTEP ESKEHR MALATYA KOCAEL 13° 16° 18° 11° 18° 18° 13° 16° 16° BÜLENT KENE b.kenes@todayszaman.com The key to all democratc ntatves For the last two years, Turkey has been trying to nd radical solutions to its acute problems, some of which are almost 100 years old and some of which date back centuries. These efforts mainly include the Kurdish initiative, the Alevi initiative, the Armenian initiative and nally the Roma initiative. Unfortunately, these initiatives have not produced tangible results so far, though they have certainly made considerable positive contributions to the psychological and sociological aspects of these problems. It is true that the thick les that were transferred to the dusty shelves of our tragedy-laden history have been reopened, but they cannot be concluded because the decisive and radical steps they entail have not been taken. Perhaps, just at the beginning, one could have predicted that the initiatives were doomed to such a course with our usual tendency to procrastinate. To better explain my case, I will reiterate one of my frequent themes in this column: I personally do not believe that there is really a Kurdish issue or an Alevi issue, or a minorities issue or an Islam issue or a Roma issue. Rather, I think that the real problem Turkey has is its lack of a fulledged democracy, the full-blown rule of law and genuine secularism. So, it is my conviction that when we realize that all social and political problems which we have been trying to solve tirelessly for many years, but all in vain, are nothing but a manifestation of this democracy decit, lack of rule of law and lack of genuine secularism, we will move closer to the nal settlement of these problems. This said, we can safely assert that with the recent package of constitutional amendments that are intended to uproot the militarist mentality as the mother of all these problems, the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) has nally and for the rst time made the right move toward the settlement of this country’s deep-rooted problems. It was really high time that we introduce radical changes to the militarist-spirited Constitution which serves to extensively undermine democracy and the national will and perpetuate the suppressive effects of the military coups as the source of all these fundamental problems we have been suffering from. In the nal analysis, the existing Constitution, which is the work of the military coup of Sept. 12, 1980, is essentially a militarist text that presents as binding norms the diseases of certain groups within the military, such as social and political engineering. The government’s reform package is intended to introduce democratic tailoring of the top judiciary and similar mechanisms designed by the military -- which has made it a tradition to overthrow the democratically elected governments and then inltrate up to the remotest corners of the state apparatus -- in order to sustain its secret power, and if Parliament passes it, we will see how many issues which appear to us as extremely large and complicated are gone without a hitch or any trouble. When this reform package, whose negotiations at the parliamentary Constitution Commission began on Thursday, is implemented with or without a referendum, we will also see that Parliament, whose legislative powers have been stripped by the Constitutional Court on various occasions, will represent the national will in a more appropriate manner. Moreover, this country will eventually see the days when civilian power, which derives its democratic legitimacy from the people and which is responsible or accountable only toward the people, will not have to share its executive mandate with the militarist mentality of the high courts and will truly control the fate of the country. A Turkey that has implemented a reform package, a rst in terms of exhibiting the courage to touch the militarist spirit in the Constitution as the source of the mechanisms for securing the regime of secret powers, will remove all roadblocks to its economic and political progress with full steam. So, when this day comes, we will witness in amazement that the Kurdish issue -- which has resulted in Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) terrorism causing the deaths of more than 40,000 people, the wounding of tens of thousands of people, the displacement of hundreds of thousands of people and material losses amounting to $300 billion -- can be easily solved. When it comes, the Alevi issue, the Roma issue, the Armenian issue and all articial problems devout Muslims are suffering from will head toward eventual settlement. The key to the solution of all of Turkey’s acute problems is nally before us. The constitutional reform package, as a major milestone that will banish the hidden powers and crown the national will as the sole power over the fate of the country, deserves the support of all democrats inside or outside. 04 TODAY’S ZAMAN FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 2 0 1 0 Erdoan sends envoy to Baku after talks in Yerevan SERVET YANATMA ANKARA Ambassador Feridun Sinirliolu, the Turkish Foreign Ministry’s undersecretary, is scheduled to depart for Baku today where he will convey a message and a letter from Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoan to Azerbaijani President lham Aliyev, with whom he will have talks on the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Sinirliolu traveled to Yerevan on Wednesday as Erdoan’s special envoy and met with Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan as a process of rapprochement aimed at restoring relations between the two estranged neighbors is at a stalemate. Erdoan sent a letter to Sarksyan as well, which contained a message that an agreement would better serve the interests of the two countries, especially when compared to the cost of a failure to make peace. Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutolu, speaking at a joint press conference with visiting Greek Alternate Foreign Minister Dimitris Droutsas, announced Sinirliolu’s visit to Baku. Describing Sinirliolu’s meeting in Yerevan as “very positive and constructive,” Davutolu underlined that the difculties concerning the normalization process between Armenia and Turkey should be overcome “all together.” Recalling that he held a meeting with Sarksyan in Kiev in February when the two attended the inauguration of Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, Davutolu said they had agreed on principle with the Armenian president on Sinirliolu’s visit to Yerevan during the Kiev meeting. “Within this vision of peace, we believe that our relations with Armenia will become normalized in compliance with the spirit and wording of the protocols,” Davutolu added, referring to the two protocols signed in October between Armenia and Turkey for establishing diplomatic ties and reopening their border. Following Sinirliolu’s visit to Yerevan, a need for paying a visit to Baku as well has emerged, diplomatic sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Today’s Zaman. Sinirliolu will convey his perceptions in the Armenian capital and the signals he received from the Armenian side to Azerbaijani ofcials, the Feridun same sources said. Sinirliolu At the time, diplomatic sources described the meeting between Davutolu and Sarksyan that took place in Kiev as “an open-minded” meeting during which the Turkish side, for the rst time, had the chance to explain its concerns on the Nagorno-Karabakh process to the Armenian side. In earlier meetings, the Armenian side had refused to talk about the issue with the Turkish side. On Thursday, diplomatic sources said Davutolu’s reference to the Kiev meeting during the press conference with Droutsas should be interpreted by keeping in mind the Armenian side’s openness to talk about the NagornoKarabakh dispute with the Turkish side. On Wednesday, the Foreign Ministry had announced that Erdoan is expected to meet with Sarksyan on the sidelines of a nuclear summit in Washington next week. Erdoan will attend the summit on April 12-13, along with the leaders of 46 other countries. US President Barack Obama, a staunch supporter of Turkish-Armenian efforts to normalize their relations, will have bilateral talks with Sarksyan, but no meeting is currently scheduled with Erdoan, the White House has announced. Turkish ofcials said meetings with Obama or other world leaders could be scheduled in the coming days if necessary. Recalling that Azerbaijan will not be represented at the White House summit, Turkish diplomatic sources said that through Sinirliolu’s visit, Turkey also wanted to pacify possible concerns on the Azerbaijani side. PHOTO While reafrming their mutual will for improving bilateral relations on Thursday, Turkey and Greece, Aegean neighbors who have had a shaky relationship for decades, also expressed the hope that further progress in bilateral ties will eventually lead to a reduction in defense spending in both countries. The NATO allies have been at odds for years over airspace boundaries and ight procedures over the Aegean Sea which divides them, and mock dogghts between ghter jets from each side are common. Speaking at a joint press conference following their meeting in Ankara, Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutolu and Greece’s visiting Alternate Foreign Minister Dimitris Droutsas were reminded of remarks by Turkey’s chief negotiator for European Union talks, Egemen Ba, who recently criticized Germany and France for seeking to sell military equipment to Greece while pressing the government in Athens to make drastic cuts in public spending as a result of its dire nancial crisis. In remarks published in The New York Times late last month, Ba also said that to help Greece escape its “economic disaster” and reduce regional tension, Ankara would reciprocate if Greeks froze or cut defense procurement. “One of the reasons for the economic crisis in Greece is because of their attempt to compete with Turkey in terms of defense expenditures,” Ba said. After recalling Ba’s remarks, which had at the time sparked great interest in the Greek media, a Greek reporter asked whether Greek people living on the Aegean coast would no longer see warships and ghter planes when they look out their windows. “There is a vision which we have drawn, and this [vision] is not based on threat perception, but is based on mutual understanding,” Davutolu said, admitting that they had discussed the issue with Droutsas. “When we build a common future, there will not be something called defense spending. Imagine two neighbors who share the same street; they may have different views,” Davutolu continued. “We should allocate our budget to our joint future generations. These are AA, ECVET ATIK Greece, Turkey eye stronger tes, lower defense spendng While Greek Alternate Foreign Minister Dimitris Droutsas said they want the Aegean to be “a sea of peace,” Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutolu, speaking at a joint news conference in Ankara on Thursday, said Ankara aims to achieve a “brand new paradigm” in bilateral relations with Athens. steps toward throwing owers when we look out of our windows, and we will make it happen.” Responding to the same question, Droutsas said Athens has stated that it wants the Aegean to be “a sea of peace,” adding that such a situation would help to improve bilateral relations between Ankara and Athens. “To make this happen, there is the need for respect for territorial integrity and the international rule of law and [for] discovering a shared peace, which is the goal of our joint vision. To [discover] the shared peace, there is the need to transfer from the defense budget to education and health,” said Droutsas, whose remarks were translated from Greek into Turkish through an interpreter. Greece spends more of its gross domestic product (GDP) on the defense than any other European Union country, largely due to the long-standing tension with its neighbor, historic rival and NATO ally Turkey. Turkey, meanwhile, is included among the top 10 arms buyers in the world despite the global nancial crisis that recently hit the world, according to a report released last month by the Swedish-based Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI). Ankara aims to achieve a “brand new paradigm” in bilateral relations with Athens, Davutolu also said, while announcing that Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoan will pay a long-anticipated ofcial visit to Greece in May. He and Droutsas decided to establish a high-level strategic cooperation council, similar to those Turkey has established with Iraq and Syria, Davutolu announced, noting that the rst meeting of the council will take place during Erdoan’s Athens visit with the participation of 10 members of the Cabinet from either side. In 2002 Greek and Turkish diplomats began exploratory talks on their disputes. Business deals have steadily increased and include a pipeline link that will be used to carry natural gas from the Caspian Sea to Western Europe. But the Aegean has remained a source of tension. On the occasion of Droutsas’ visit, Greece and Turkey on Thursday agreed on ve new condence building measures (CBM) in addition to the 24 CBMs already adopted. The news measures are all aimed at building mutual understanding and more frequent contact between the militaries of the two countries. According to one of those CBMs, “A Greek division/brigade will be assigned to NATO Rapid Deployable Corps-Turkey (NRDC-T) and a Turkish division/brigade will be assigned to NATO Deployable CorpsGreece (NDC-GR) for training purposes.” While in Ankara, Droutsas also had talks with President Abdullah Gül and Prime Minister Erdoan. On Wednesday he met with Greek Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew in stanbul. Ankara Today’s Zaman Davutolu to avoid nuclear conference in Tehran amid pressure AYE KARABAT ANKARA Amid increasing pressure on Turkey to pursue a policy in line with that of the international community over the Iranian nuclear issue, Ankara is not expected to be represented at the ministerial level in the “Nuclear Energy For All, Nuclear Weapons For None” conference, to be held in Tehran. The meeting is scheduled for April 17-18, just days after US President Barack Obama hosts a nuclear security summit of world leaders in Washington in which Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoan is expected to participate. But, regarding the meeting in Tehran, a Turkish diplomatic source told Today’s Zaman that it is unlikely Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutolu will participate. “It is probable that a high-ranking official from the ministry will be there,” the same source indicated. Tehran is hoping to get as many supportive countries as possible to attend its meeting, including China, which has resisted implementing sanctions on Iran over Tehran’s nuclear ambitions. But a recent shift in the Chinese attitude on the issue has started to dominate news headlines, a shift which pundits say may increase even more the pressure Turkey already feels. Ankara frequently underlines that it is against any sanctions being placed on its neighbor Iran, the second-largest gas supplier to Turkey and an important trade partner. Turkey is a nonpermanent member of the United Nations Security Council and together with several other temporary members, namely Brazil and Lebanon, is against any sanctions. In order for a resolution to be passed, at least nine members need to support it and no permanent member of the council -- the US, China, Russia, Britain and France -- must veto it. Once the five permanent members and Germany agree, they will present the proposal to the remaining 10 council members, but neither China nor Russia are expected to agree on tough sanctions. The International Strategic Research Organization’s (USAK) Sedat Laçiner agrees that a possible shift in Chinese policy towards Iran makes the situation a little difcult for Turkey. “It appears that the US administration was able to convince China on the Iranian issue. It will be easier and less costly for Washington to convince Ankara, but instead of doing that, it is simply complaining while demanding that Ankara cooperate,” Laçiner told Today’s Zaman. He added that Turkey’s reluctance is understandable because its trade volume with Iran is around $10 billion and that any sanctions on Tehran will harm Turkey. Laçiner says those demanding Turkish cooperation should offer ways to compensate for Turkey’s losses. Pundits also underline that Turkey’s vote at the UN Security Council will not change the result but that a possible vote against sanctions does have symbolic importance. Bayram Sinkaya, an expert on Iran at the Ankara-based Center for Middle Eastern Strategic Studies (ORSAM), recalled that Turkey abstained during the November 2009 vote of a resolution passed by the International Atomic Agency (IAEA) censuring Iran for its uranium enrichment activities and referring the matter to the UN Security Council. He told Today’s Zaman that it is reasonable to think that Turkey will also abstain from a possible vote in the UN Security Council on a resolution envisaging sanctions against Iran. “The scope of the sanctions will be very important. Russia and China will not be in favor of though sanctions and they will say ‘yes’ only to a limited degree. If they approve sanctions, it will be difcult for Turkey to oppose them,” he said. NATIONAL Erdoan urges Turks in France to integrate, not assimilate Integrate into a society by learning its language and becoming involved in its social life but never assimilate, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoan said while addressing the Turkish community in Paris. The prime minister spoke to an audience of 6,000 ethnic Turks living in France at the Zenith Arena late on Wednesday, the second day of his visit to France. Met with great applause when he stepped onto the stage, Erdoan talked about the rise of Turkey and urged the French Turks to become better represented in the economic, political and social life of the country they are living in. Stressing that assimilation is different from integration, Erdoan said no one can demand that a person assimilate. “The demand to assimilate is a crime against humanity,” he said. “No one can ask you to abandon your values, your culture.” Erdoan said if they want to live in harmony with the society they are living with, they need to integrate into the society in the best way possible. Reminding his audience that France allows dual citizenship, Erdoan criticized those who do not apply for French citizenship. “Apply, my brothers. Apply! Use the right to vote and to get elected that France has granted you. This is a great asset, make use of it,” Erdoan stressed. The prime minister said being a French citizen will not deprive them of their identity. “Why shouldn’t there be some amongst you running for the European Parliament?” Erdoan asked, urging the Turkish community to be better represented and integrate into French society. Speaking about Turkey’s European Union membership bid, Erdoan said Turkey will only strengthen the EU with its young, dynamic and educated population of 73 million. Saying that there are nearly 5.5 million ethnic Turks living in Europe, Erdoan asked his audience not to end the “Turkish Season” both in France and in other parts of the Europe, after reminding them that they marked the end of the Season of Turkey in France on Wednesday. “I ask each of you to make more of an effort as an envoy of your country to better promote Turkey here,” the prime minister said. Saying that they have lifted visas requirements with 23 countries in the past seven-and-a-half years, Erdoan said Turkey’s face is turned toward the West but it has never turned its back on its eastern neighbors. “We cannot be indifferent to the people with whom we have lived for a thousand years,” Erdoan underlined. No deal with France on EU bid During talks with Erdoan in Paris earlier in the day, French President Nicolas Sarkozy reiterated his opposition to Turkey’s membership in the EU, while Erdoan repeated that Turkey remains committed to its goal of EU membership and rejected the French and German proposal for a privileged partnership instead. “We agree to disagree,” French Minister for European Affairs Pierre Lellouche told reporters after Erdoan met with Prime Minister Francois Fillon. “Turkey has its project, that of integrating with the 27 [EU members]. We respect this project but we have our own project, that of a big Europe, the 27 in a partnership with Russia and Turkey,” Lellouche added. But the two leaders agreed to work to expand bilateral ties despite disagreements concerning Ankara’s membership bid. stanbul Today’s Zaman with wires Somali pirates hijack Turkish ship with 25 crew Somali pirates hijacked a Turkish vessel with 25 crew onboard on Wednesday, the EU Naval Force said. The MV Yasin C was taken around midday 400 kilometers off the Kenyan coast, said EU naval spokesman Cmdr. John Harbour, adding that the crew onboard the 36,000-ton bulk carrier are believed to be Turkish. It is the closest successful hijacking to Kenya’s coast, said Karen Jacques of Dryad Maritime Intelligence, but two other attacks on March 31 were much closer -- one a mere 135 kilometers from the bustling southern port of Mombasa. “The attacks were too far apart to be from the same group,” she said, which she said indicates that at least two pirate groups are threatening shipping coming to the Kenyan port. Somali pirate attacks have spiked in recent weeks, and both pirates and navies are becoming more aggressive. At least 16 ships and around 24 crew are believed to be currently held by pirates off the lawless coast of Somalia. Somalia has not had a functioning government since 1991. Multimillion-dollar ransoms have become a way to make money in the impoverished nation. Nairobi AP Gönül: No information on US plans to withdraw atomic bombs Defense Minister Vecdi Gönül has said Turkey has no information about reported US plans to withdraw nuclear weapons deployed in a military base in southern Anatolia. “No information has been ofcially announced,” Gönül told reporters on Wednesday when asked about reports that the US is considering a withdrawal of nuclear weapons from ve European countries, including Turkey. “The issue that has been debated is nothing but newspaper reports,” he said during a visit to the Central Anatolian province of Kayseri. Last week, The Times reported that the US may withdraw its 200 B61 gravity bombs deployed in Turkey, Belgium, France, the Netherlands and Germany during the Cold War years. Turkey is believed to be hosting 90 bombs at ncirlik Air Base in the southern province of Adana. On Tuesday, US President Barack Obama unveiled his administration’s new nuclear strategy, which reduces the role of nuclear arms in US security. Under the new plan, the US promises not to use nuclear weapons against countries that do not have them. Obama’s plan would lessen the role nuclear weapons play in US defense planning. An international nuclear security summit will take place in Washington on April 12-13. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoan is scheduled to attend the summit. stanbul Today’s Zaman NATIONAL TODAY’S ZAMAN 05 F R I D AY, A P R I L 9 , 2 0 1 0 CHP pins hopes on SP to challenge ruling AK Party YUSUF BULUT ANKARA Since the possibility of early elections has come to the agenda, the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) has been in discussions with the Felicity Party (SP) to challenge the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) if the ruling party’s plans to pass a constitutional reform package through a public referendum fail. Late last month, while commenting on the AK Party’s plans to make changes to the Constitution, which he strongly opposes, as well as the possibility of a coalition government following next year’s parliamentary elections, CHP head Deniz Baykal signaled a rapprochement between the two parties. “It would not be appropriate to comment on a coalition model at the time being. Our aim is to be a single-party government. However, I would prefer to establish a coalition with the SP rather than the AK Party. The AK Party has experienced a major spiritual failure. Although they had set sail as if they were representing Islamic and spiritual values and the mentality of humbleness, protecting the rights of orphans [an important value in Islam] and not having an eye on the state’s properties, is it possible that those people are still pursuing these values? The SP’s cadres and administrators don’t seem to be a part of this corrupt mentality. I don’t see this when I look at [SP leader] Numan Kurtulmu. He is an upright man,” Baykal had said. Seeing that the polls conducted following the announcement of the AK Party’s plans to amend the Constitution have shown that the ruling party is likely to garner a high percentage of votes in the next elections, the CHP has devised a new strategy. Baykal and his team also think that the Turkey Change Movement, led by ili Mayor Mustafa Sargül, which has not yet formally organized as a political party but which is expected to be a major rival of the CHP, is also secretly supported by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoan, who they think is attempting to divide the CHP’s voter base. In response to this perceived move, the CHP is moving closer to the SP. The SP and the AK Party were both established after the closure of the Virtue Party (FP) in 2001 by the Constitutional Court. While the SP more strictly follows the line of the FP, a party which was close to Islam, the AK Party became more moderate and democratic than both the FP and its current incarnation, the SP. Upon the olive branch offered by the CHP leader to the SP, SP leader Kurtulmu thanked Baykal but underlined that his party keeps an equal distance from every party. The CHP is also currently concerned that the SP is likely to support the government’s planned constitutional changes if they are taken to a public vote. Kurtulmu has recently stated that they are supportive of current efforts to amend the Constitution, though they still point to deciencies contained within. Noting that their stance toward the Constitution is open and clear, he stressed that they have never said they would not lend support to it through any specic measure. The CHP is also reportedly seeking election cooperation with the Democratic Left People’s Party (DSHP), which was established by the widow of the late prominent left-wing politician and former Prime Minister Bülent Ecevit in November of last year after an intraparty row in the Democratic Left Party (DSP) following a party congress in May of that year. TODAY’S ZAMAN, AL ÜNAL AK Party fine-tunes reform package to prevent annulment In a move to prevent the opposition from taking the government’s constitutional amendment package to the Constitutional Court for annulment, the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) has made some changes to articles that would create grounds for its abrogation. After the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) announced that they are determined to take the changes to the Constitutional Court, AK Party jurists identied the deciencies in the package that would pave the way for an annulment. In light of this, the ruling party withdrew the 29-article constitutional amendment package it submitted to Parliament last week to prevent recent debates over the list of signatures attached to the bill from casting a shadow over the future of the package. Soon after the government presented the rst proposal to Parliament, the CHP started a debate alleging that Parliament Speaker Mehmet Ali ahin’s signature was among the signatures on the package sponsored by the AK Party, which is against parliamentary bylaws since the speaker should be impartial. Although both ahin and AK Party ofcials denied the claims, uneasy with the ongoing debates on the issue, the AK Party withdrew the proposal to present it once again after changing the signature list. The package with the new signatures, including that of the prime minister, was submitted to Parliament again on Monday. Parliament’s Constitutional Commission began reviewing the package yesterday. The AK Party also removed the articles that are directly related to elections, taking into consideration the fact that according to the Constitution changes made to the Election Law cannot be implemented for elections to be held within the next year. The government was planning to introduce the “Turkey deputy” system in response to criticism of Turkey’s current 10 percent election threshold. The government suggested that 100 deputies in the 550-seat Turkish Parliament be elected as “Turkey deputies” to provide fair representation for parties. However, taking into consideration that the inclusion of this system to the package would be delayed if the CHP initiated a debate, the AK Party removed it from the package. PHOTO ERCAN YAVUZ ANKARA Commission discussion on reform package begins with quarrel Parliament’s Constitutional Commission began reviewing the government’s 29-article constitutional reform package yesterday amid bickering between deputies. The Constitutional Commission gathered at 2 p.m. under the chairmanship of Burhan Kuzu, the head of the commission. The government was represented by Deputy Prime CHP playing nal trump card The AK Party’s moves to foil the CHP’s plans for an annulment seem to have made it harder for the CHP to appeal to the Constitutional Court. Another development that disappointed the main opposition party was the recent remarks of former President Ahmet Necdet Sezer, who said the CHP cannot appeal the package before a referendum is held on it. “This change cannot be enacted without being accepted in a referendum. For this reason, it cannot be led at this time,” he said. The CHP, which currently has 97 deputies in Parliament, needs 13 more deputies to appeal Minister Cemil Çiçek while the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) was represented by the party’s parliamentary group deputy chairman Bekir Bozda. Republican People’s Party (CHP) and Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) parliamentary group deputy chairmen were also present at the meeting. Kuzu delivered an opening speech at the beginning of the meet- to the top court. Failing to get the support of 13 deputies, the CHP’s latest move has been to ask President Abdullah Gül for help. Speaking at his party’s parliamentary group meeting on Tuesday, CHP leader Deniz Baykal called on Gül to remove three articles included in the package regarding judicial reform and submit them to a public referendum. Baykal said that if the president listens to his suggestion, he will have done a “historic service” to the society. “If the president does so, we, the CHP, would compromise,” Baykal said, adding that this would be the way to ease tension. Baykal then said his party would work ing in which he underlined the need to amend the current Constitution. When Kuzu requested members of the press leave the meeting after his speech since dozens of deputies were also there to observe the meeting, a squabble erupted over finding a seat for Tunceli independent deputy Kamer Genç. A seat was later found for Genç. Hamza Erdoan Ankara in Parliament to approve the other suggestions in the constitutional amendment package. The articles Baykal wants removed from the package are those on the structure of the Constitutional Court and the Supreme Board of Judges and Prosecutors (HSYK) as well as a change regarding party closures. However, these articles are the raison d’être of the package. The AK Party’s jurists are also planning to lower the 10 percent election threshold after the enactment of the constitutional changes, which was a demand of the smaller parties in Parliament during their meetings with the AK Party to discuss the package. DP looking for new leader following merger SA YAZAR ANKARA The Democrat Party (DP) recently stepped up efforts to nd a new leader, a move it embarked upon after merging with the Motherland Party (ANAVATAN) last year. Although Hüsamettin Cindoruk, the party’s current chairman, is resisting stepping down, the party is preparing for a congress on May 27 that will mark the 50th anniversary of a military coup that took place in 1960 and resulted in the execution of the then DP leader and Prime Minister Adnan Menderes. Senior members of the DP discussed cooperating in the 2011 general elections with Abdullatif ener, who established the Turkey Party last year after parting ways with the Justice and Development Party (AK Party), and are trying to have Turkish Union of Chambers and Commodities Exchanges (TOBB) President Rfat Hisarcklolu elected as the new leader. Hisarcklolu, who will step down as TOBB president in May, will decide whether he will enter politics in late April. DP members are also in contact with Democratic Left Party (DSP) Eskiehir Mayor Ylmaz Büyükeren. Professor Büyükeren attended the DP-ANAVATAN merger assembly but did not decide on whether to enter the party. DP ofcials are also working on having CHP stanbul deputy lhan Kesici, Professor Süheyl Batum and Coca-Cola CEO Muhtar Kent join the ranks of their party. Proposal made to Çiller The DP administration also approached former Prime Minister Tansu Çiller, a former leader of the True Path Party (DYP), to ask her to re-enter politics. Senior DP ofcials believe a DP with Çiller and former ANAVATAN leader Mesut Ylmaz would comfortably pass the 10 percent threshold in the next general elections. Nevertheless, Çiller said she is not considering joining the ranks of the DP un- der the leadership of Cindoruk. During the Feb. 28, 1997 postmodern coup, Cindoruk parted ways with Çiller’s DYP and established the Democratic Turkey Party (DTP). The DP’s former ANAVATAN members are reportedly disturbed with the course of developments in the party, in particular by the indifference shown by Cindoruk to problems faced by the party’s organizational structure. A ght is taking place between the ANAVATAN and DP members of the party and the structure of the General Executive Board (GK) is leading to debates. GK was formed after the merger of the parties to serve as the highest decision-making mechanism. It has 50 members from the DP and 50 members from ANAVATAN. The dominant DP gures in the GK complain that the board has an excess of members, preventing it from working efciently. They suggest that the number of GK members be lowered to 75 or 50. If such a change takes place, the number of ANAVATAN members on the board will be cut. ANAVATAN members oppose this suggestion because their delegates will not be able to vote in the general assembly. The Supreme Court of Appeals’ Chief Prosecutor’s Ofce cancelled the mass registry of ANAVATAN members with the DP after ANAVATAN was dissolved. This decision invalidated the merger of the parties on the grassroots level, leaving party organs to only have members from the DP. The DP and ANAVATAN decided to unite ahead of the May 2007 presidential election, but the move turned into a asco. During the presidential election, former DP leader Mehmet Aar dissuaded the Erkan Mumcu-led ANAVATAN from attending the parliamentary sessions to elect the president, thereby creating a crisis. The ruling AK Party decided to hold early elections, giving the two parties an overwhelming defeat in the parliamentary elections of July 22, 2007. HÜSEYN GÜLERCE h.gulerce@todayszaman.com Pashas n play, everythng comng to a head Let’s start with the most recent development. According to reports in the Hürriyet daily yesterday, a most crucial document is in the prosecutor’s ofce heading the Sledgehammer investigation. The document is signed by Chief of General Staff Gen. lker Babu. In the document Babu prepared as the land forces commander in light of the investigation and information obtained, he makes serious criticisms of Gen. Çetin Doan overstepping the formal and legal framework while chairing a special session at an ofcial seminar. Towards noontime yesterday, the General Staff issued a statement saying, “This news does not reect the truth.” This issue is becoming increasingly more complicated. Hürriyet is a daily the General Staff trusts. Just last month, its executive editor was hosted at the headquarters. Besides, even if Hürriyet has a bad reputation on other topics it wouldn’t lie about this kind of issue. Let’s wait and see how Hürriyet’s publication management will back up their news. The Hürriyet daily has been doing something different for the past two days. Or has Erturul Özkök really gone? Is Doan media saying, “We can’t continue like this?” Hürriyet and the Doan group are trying to dilute, twist and obscure the Ergenekon case process with its publications and broadcasts. The Sledgehammer coup plan case is triggering groundshaking developments. Even if the General Staff belies Hürriyet, the debate sparked between the then-1st Army Commander Doan and then-Chief of General Staff Hilmi Özkök point to the truth. Three days ago retired Gen. Doan, who quickly admitted himself to the Gülhane Military Academy of Medicine (GATA) after another arrest warrant was issued for him and is referred to as the “Sledgehammer Commander” in the documents, sent a letter to the media. He claimed that Özkök had leaked the documents that were discovered during the Sledgehammer operation. The other day Hürriyet printed Özkök’s response to the statement. In brief Özkök said: “Instead of explaining the truth about these matters, there is a tendency to leave it to other people and take the easy way out. It saddens us all to see a general who has served the army to be in this kind of a situation. It is unfortunate that he tries to refer the issue to others instead of answering the questions directed at him. Didn’t Doan Pasha go on television and in reference to a voice recording say ‘Yes I said this.’ How can a person who delivered such a speech not think that the personnel under his command would be motivated by this speech and that this would result in unwanted negative incidents?” These are statements that declare the existence of Sledgehammer. Now the situation has reached a crucial point. Those who in the Sledgehammer plan advocated “crushing, unleashing forces, and doing as Israel did” need to go through a fair trial. But what’s happening instead? stanbul Chief Public Prosecutor Aykut Cengiz Engin is stopping arrests. He’s changing the duties of prosecutors. And when speaking to Star’s amil Tayyar he says: “Of the military ofcers that are wanted for detention, 79 are on active duty. ... Of this 24 are admirals and generals. ... The consequences of these kinds of arrests and detentions need to be assessed very carefully.” In other words the law applies to retired ofcers but not to active ones. So does that mean blindfolded justice removes its blindfold once in a while and sees who it is going to try and treats it accordingly? Well then what happens to the rule of law? If some people in this country are still unaccountable, then why are we even talking about law or judicial impartiality? There is something else. When speaking to Milliyet’s Fikret Bila last month, Babu persistently said he was actually bothered by the current generals on duty. How will prosecutors and judges be able to fulll their duties in a trial process when there’s the impression that prosecutors are being fooled at the request of the chief of general staff. We are talking about a judiciary that has been taken over by the forces of tutelage. The mentality that chooses the tutelage regime and not justice needs to end. The judiciary, the army and politics are all suffering from this. Don’t you still get it? Everything is coming to a head. Ba defines ErdoanSarkozy meeting as constructive Turkey’s EU negotiator has called the meeting between Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoan and French President Nicolas Sarkozy one of the most fruitful and constructive meetings ever. Turkish-French relations and Turkey’s EU membership negotiations as well as important global issues were discussed during the meeting, noted State Minister and chief negotiator for EU talks Egemen Ba, who spoke to reporters in the Central Anatolian province of Eskiehir on Thursday. Ba said Erdoan and Sarkozy assessed the common vision of Turkey and France as well as what could be done to bring peace to global problems. Erdoan was received by Sarkozy in Paris on Wednesday. During the meeting, Sarkozy accepted an invitation by Erdoan to visit Turkey and said he would come after November 2010. Erdoan visited France to attend the closing ceremony of “Season of Turkey in France” activities. Turkish culture was in the spotlight in France with more than 600 activities in 120 cities throughout the nine-month-long “Season of Turkey in France.” stanbul Today’s Zaman with wires 06 TODAY’S ZAMAN F R I D AY, A P R I L 9 , 2 0 1 0 Constitutional Court head Klç sues Kanadolu for insult Constitutional Court President Haim Klç led a criminal complaint against former Supreme Court of Appeals Chief Prosecutor Sabih Kanadolu, alleging that he insulted him during a speech he made in the eastern province of Van late in last month. Klç’s lawyer, Ali Özkaya, submitted the case against Kanadolu, based on Article 125 of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK), to the Van Chief Public Prosecutor’s Ofce soon after Kanadolu called Klç a “goat” during a speech he made at a conference titled “Today and Tomorrow of the State of Law in Turkey,” which was organized by the Atatürkist Thought Association (ADD) in Van on March 29. Article 125 stipulates that those who insult civil servants because of their duties shall be punished with a prison term of one to three years or with a judicial ne. In reference to government-proposed changes to the Constitution, which include increasing the number of members of the Constitutional Court and boosting democratic representation there, Kanadolu discussed how already problematic Klç’s presence in the top court was and how the proposed changes would make things even harder for them. “There is only one non-jurist member in the Constitutional Court, and it is its president. If the proposed changes are enacted, then 13 non-jurists could become members. We cannot even tackle one goat. We will face 13 non-jurist members then,” he said, speaking at the ADD-organized conference. ADD became the focus of attention when its former chairman, retired Gen. ener Eruygur, former commander of the gendarmerie forces, was arrested as part of the Ergenekon investigation, an alleged terrorist organization whose suspected members are accused of various offenses including plotting to overthrow the government. Kanadolu, however, has long been a controversial gure in the eyes of the public since he has sided with the suspects of the Ergenekon case, expressing support for them numerous times at different platforms. Kanadolu was also the mastermind behind the controversial 367-deputy quorum in Parliament, an effort to prevent the election of former Foreign Minister Abdullah Gül as the next president. Turkey was trapped in a political stalemate for four months, from late April to late August 2007, because of the Constitutional Court’s quorum decision, which was seen by many as an unconstitutional and fabricated reason to prevent Gül’s presidency. stanbul Today’s Zaman with wires TODAY’S ZAMAN, HAM SÖYLEMEZ PHOTO Forget about bratwurst, currywurst and other kinds of sausages -- döner kebab, or shawarma, has overtaken traditional German fast food as the country’s favorite snack on the go. First brought to Berlin by Turkish immigrants in the 1970s, the grilled meat snack that comes wrapped in a pita bread with shredded lettuce, tomatoes, onions and different dressings, is now being sold everywhere in Germany from the Baltic Sea to the Bavarian Alps. Students and late night revelers relish it as much as construction workers, children and foreign backpackers on a tight budget. “We assume that döner kebab is the Germans’ favorite fast food by now,” said Yunus Ulusoy, an expert from the Center for Turkish Studies in Essen, who has done extensive research on how the ethnic specialty conquered Germany’s culinary mainstream. The secret behind the döner’s success story is not only its satisfying grilled taste, Ulusoy said, but also the big portions and its affordability -- a regular döner in a pita costs only between 2.50 euros and 5 euros ($3.30 to $6.70). The veal and chicken sandwiches are more popular than pizza, hamburgers, French fries and even classic German sausages, according to a poll by German Men’s Health magazine from 2008. “We can actually no longer speak of Turkish food, because the Germans like it even better than the Turks,” said Ulusoy. Some 15,500 döner places in Germany sell about 400 tons of döner meat every day, according to ATDID, the Association of Turkish Döner Producers AP, GERO BRELOER Döner kebab becomes Germany’s favorte fast food Restaurant owner smet Dönmez (C) and his employees prepare döner kebab in a Turkish restaurant in Berlin. in Europe. About 60,000 workers produce, cut and process the hearty delicacy with annual sales of 2.5 billion euros ($3.3 billion). The word döner comes from the Turkish verb “dönmek,” or to turn, because it is grilled for hours on a spit and cut off in razor-thin slices when the meat is crisp and brown. In Turkey, the dish was originally made of lamb and sold only on a plate. According to the legend, it was Mahmut Aygün, a Turkish guest worker, who invented the rst döner sandwich in 1971, when he sold the meat in a piece of pita bread with yoghurt dressing at City-Imbiss PHOTO Leyla Zana Leyla Zana sentenced to 3 years in prison MEHMET GÖKÇE DYARBAKIR Former Democracy Party (DEP) deputy Leyla Zana was handed a three-year prison sentence onThursday for spreading propaganda for the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in two speeches she made in 2008. She was also banned from politics for those three years. The Diyarbakr 5th High Criminal Court ruled yesterday on two speeches that Zana made in September and November of 2008 at a pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP) congress and a demonstration. Zana and her lawyer did not appear in court at the session. The court ruled that Zana had spread propaganda and convicted her in accordance with Article 7/2 of the Prevention of Terrorism Act. The court also ruled that the defendant intentionally committed the crime and therefore she should be banned from politics until she completes her sentence. Zana had read the nal statement of the DTP congress in Diyarbakr on Sept. 20-22, 2008, leading to her conviction: “Our congress condemns the policies of suppression, torture and isolation of the Kurdish public leader Abdullah Öcalan and adopts a policy of continued struggle against it.” She was referring to the jailed leader of the PKK, Öcalan, who is currently imprisoned on mral Island. She made another speech at the DTP’s Nov. 1-3, 2008, demonstrations in Diyarbakr where she called on the Prime Minister Recep Erdoan to go to mrali and “shake hands with peace.” Zana gained prominence in 1991 for taking part of her oath of ofce in Parliament in Kurdish, a language not recognized as an ofcial language in Turkey. She was convicted in 1994 by the State Security Court (DGM) of links to the PKK, which is considered a terrorist group by Turkey, the US and the EU. In 2004, she was released after an appeals court overturned her conviction. stand near West Berlin’s main Zoo train station. Since then, the snack has been exported around the globe and even countries as far away as Vietnam now sell döner pita as “typical German students’ food,” as papers in Germany have repeatedly reported. Germany is home to 2.7 million people of Turkish origin; an estimated 500,000 are German citizens. While the dish was rst mainly sold in Berlin, outlets sprang up across the nation in the 1990s, when the second generation of immigrants came of age and set up their own family-run döner shops. Wholesale dealers who are offering meat already on the spit -- between 22 to 175 pounds (10 to 80 kilograms) -- have also mushroomed. In the last 40 years, döner vendors have rened the taste and assimilated it to the gusto of German palates. Razor-thin slices of crispy chicken or veal are usually accompanied by chopped lettuce, tomatoes, cucumbers, cabbage and red onions. Customers can choose between garlic, yoghurt and spicy dressing. “In Turkey, the dish is served without dressing, but Germans just can’t eat any meat without sauce,” said Ulusoy, adding that the meat itself is also much more seasoned in Germany than in its country of origin. The recipes for the seasoning vary and are a well-kept secret. Often the meat is marinated in yogurt and avored with bell pepper akes, salt and black pepper, cumin and pimento. Arabic shops who sell the so-called shawarma variety, sometimes add cinnamon, coriander seeds and pomegranate juice. Different from gyros, the Greek pork spit that contains a lot of oregano and is served in bigger chunks, döner has to be cut very thinly. “You need to have a real feel for the meat when you slice it,” said smet Dönmez, who runs Rosenthaler Grill- und Schlemmerbuffet in Berlin. “The art is to cut thinly, but to avoid pressing the knife against the spit, otherwise all the fat will run out and the meat becomes dry.” Dönmez, who emigrated from Turkey 20 years ago, sells chicken and veal döner 24 hours a day on a busy square in the city’s Mitte neighborhood. “I’ve come here every day for lunch since I arrived in Berlin,” said Or Steinberg, an Israeli tourist, who was visiting the city for a week. “It’s the best I’ve ever had. It tastes even better than at home.” Berlin AP NATIONAL Big Three’s fans issue joint call for peace on the pitch Prominent members of the supporters groups of Turkey’s “Big Three” soccer teams -- Galatasaray, Fenerbahçe and Beikta -- have come together demanding an end to soccer hooliganism. The calls came during a meeting held in stanbul’s Maltepe district on Wednesday as part of the National Reconciliation Olympiads, organized by Cokun Schools with the aim of reducing tension in all aspects of life, from families, schools and culture to trafc and sports. Beikta supporters group head Alen Markaryan and his Fenerbahçe and Galatasaray counterparts, Sefa Kalyan and Sebahattin irin, were among those in attendance. The meeting comes at an especially tense time in Turkish soccer. One month ago, a Diyarbakr-Bursaspor game was canceled in the 17th minute when Diyarbakrspor fans started throwing projectiles onto the eld. In an earlier Bursaspor-Diyarbakrspor match held in Bursa in November, things turned ugly as a result of insulting slogans chanted by Bursaspor fans, causing the Diyarbakrspor club to consider withdrawing from the Super League. At all Diyarbakrspor matches, the slogan most frequently shouted by supporters of the rival team has been “PKK [Kurdistan Workers’ Party] out,” linking Diyarbakrspor with the terrorist PKK. In response to these recent events, supporters of the Big Three have appealed to Turkish soccer fanatics to maintain peace. Mehmet Kcrolu, the general manager of Cokun Schools, said their aim is to spread peace all over Turkey. “We are planning to draft a roadmap to solve Turkey’s problems. We believe that as soon as all people reconcile with others, there will be no problems in Turkey,” noted Kcrolu. stanbul Today’s Zaman Ten more detained as part of match fixing probe In simultaneous police raids carried out in various provinces on Thursday, 10 people, including soccer player Celil Sar, were taken into custody on match-xing charges. The investigation, undertaken by the Saryer Chief Public Prosecutor’s Ofce, has widened with this second wave of detentions. The 10 suspects were sent to the stanbul Police Department nancial crimes unit after initial processing was completed locally. Sar was picked up by police in the northern province of Samsun. The detainees also included former referee Uur Demirhan, who was also taken into custody in Samsun, and former owner of third-division Hatayspor Mehmet amaz. The police initiated a mass match-xing raid on March 24 as a result of which 27 suspects including former soccer players and administrators have been arrested while around 50 others have been detained. Former international defender Fatih Akyel, part of the Turkish national team that came third in the 2002 World Cup, was arrested after the rst wave of detentions and remanded in custody on charges of fraud and gang membership. State Minister for Sports Faruk Özak said after the initial detentions that the investigation into the issue of match-xing had been going on since August. Sar was transferred to Çaykur Rizespor from Malatyaspor during this season’s recess. Following his detention, Çaykur Rizespor made a statement saying that he had already been sidelined because of problems in his personal life and because he had missed training sessions without the club’s permission. stanbul Today’s Zaman with wires Group stages anti-nuke protest at US Embassy A group of ve people who called themselves the “Peace Movement” carried out a demonstration in front of the US Embassy in Ankara yesterday to protest the US policy on nuclear weapons. The group unfurled banners reading “No for nuclear, now or never” and held missile models in their hands, which they managed to leave in front of the embassy despite police efforts to prevent them from depositing anything on the premises. Kclcm lhan, the spokesperson of the group, made a statement to the press, saying if countries with nuclear power do not abide by the rules of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), the validity of the treaty is in danger. He also called on the government to take action to return US tactical nuclear weapons deployed in Turkey. Turkey is estimated to be hosting 40 to 90 atomic weapons at its ncirlik Air Base. Ebubekir Atmaca Ankara BUSINESS TODAY’S ZAMAN 07 F R I D AY, A P R I L 9 , 2 0 1 0 highlighted that Turkey would be putting more responsibility, time and resources into their trade representation abroad to increase the country’s exports. He added that all the country’s trade representatives will be required to meet for a few days in Ankara to discuss strategies and methods for increasing Turkish exports. Çalayan also set forth goals for 2023, the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Turkish Republic, saying that Turkey would be exporting $500 billion by that time, several times the current exports of $102.2 billion. He added that global exports are currently $11.6 trillion, and Turkey makes up less than 1 percent of this figure. He noted that they hope to increase this share to 1.5 percent by 2023. He stated that achieving this could only be done if Turkish trade representatives abroad assisted in doing so, and added that the current 115 trade representatives would be more than doubled, to 250, by 2023. Çalayan also noted that Foreign Trade Centers would be built throughout the world to assist Turkish businessmen in doing business in other countries. The centers would allow those doing business in the country to enter and exit freely, and would have translators on-site. He added that the taxes that are collected from exporters would be used to build these centers. He said that 96 trade representatives currently work with exporters in various regions but stressed that it was not enough. “We need to increase this to 1,096 or 2,096, and are making the necessary adjustments to achieve this. stanbul Today’s Zaman PHOTO The private sector is achieving new heights with its exports and production, setting newer and higher goals for Turkish exports, Foreign Trade Minister Zafer Çalayan has said. The minister, speaking to Turkish trade representatives from the Americas and Africa on Thursday, stated that the recent surprisingly high export figures were led by the private sector, especially the automotive, textile, furniture and mining sectors. He added that these figures, along with the industrial production index figures released yesterday, meant that “more investment and production along with increased employment” would be seen in Turkey in the near future. Çalayan also stated that he sees the Undersecretariat of Foreign Trade as a private firm and AA, RIZA ÖZEL Çalayan: Private sector is reaching new heights Foreign Trade Minister Zafer Çalayan PHOTO The government is introducing a stimulus package to support craftsmen and artisans in the face of changing economic conditions, bringing numerous benefits such as tax reductions, education programs and easier access to loans. Industry and Trade Minister Nihat Ergün, who was on an official visit to Syria, said yesterday in an interview with the Anatolia news agency that the package is a transition and stimulus program to ensure the “survival of craftsmen and artisans in the wake of recent global economic developments and to adapt them to the current system.” The program foresees tax reductions for craftsmen and artisans, for which work is under way in cooperation with the Finance Ministry, Ergün stated. Under the new package access to loans will be made easier, he said, explaining that both the volume and sources of loans will be expanded. Craftsmen and artisans will also be provided with education programs in a bid to pave the way towards innovation and technological development, the minister stated. Ergün said small businesses would have more power if they acted together. Under the new package they will be working to create awareness among craftsmen and small and medium-sized establishments (SMEs), and then extending the necessary support to enable them to establish organized structures through cooperation. “The current organizational structure lacks order. There are about 3,200 chambers of craftsman, along with 83 unions. This haphazard structure causes the loss of TL 400 million to the sector annually,” he said, stressing the need to change the current system to benefit craftsmen and small businesses. The package also includes possible amendments to the Craftsmen and Artisans Law, the minister said. The program has been prepared as one of the four “strategic targets” of the Industry and Trade Ministry’s “2004-2010 Strategic Plan,” the details of which are scheduled to be announced to the public on Saturday by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoan and Ergün. stanbul Today’s Zaman Industry and Trade Minister Nihat Ergün visited the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus during his visit to Syria. He stressed on the need of boosting cooperation between Turkish and Syrian companies, while also encouraging investors of the two countries establishing partnership. Yldz Holding’s Godiva halts production in Belgium due to strike Turkish conglomerate Yldz Holding’s chocolate producer Godiva halted production in Belgium on Wednesday due to protests by workers, a company statement said on Thursday. The company statement said the safety of workers could not be guaranteed and production could not be maintained due to workers’ violent protests, supported by union representatives. Godiva accused union representatives of violating an agreement they signed on March 10 to continue production. Nicolas Bouve, managing director of Godiva Europe, said they had no other alternative than suspending production in the Brussels factory due to increasing violent protests of workers. We will not resume production unless workers assure us that they will fulfill all their obligations under their contracts, particularly security rules, Bouve stated. However, representatives of labor unions rejected the company’s accusations, arguing that Godiva, which had decided to dismiss 90 workers from the Brussels factory last month, failed to establish any dialogue with workers. The Godiva factory in Brussels Koekelberg employs 360 people. On March 2, Godiva said its hand package unit would be closed and that this unit would be transferred to another company, which would jeopardize the jobs of 90 workers. Workers protested the decision and went on a strike on March 16. stanbul Today’s Zaman Ergün: Syrian, Turkish industrialists should further develop cooperation Industry and Trade Minister Nihat Ergün has said that Turkish and Syrian companies should cooperate and establish partnerships both in Turkey and Syria along with third countries. Ergün, who was on an official visit to Syria, toured an organized industrial zone in the capital of Damascus with Syrian Deputy Prime Minister for Economic Affairs Abdullah al-Dardari. Speaking during his visit, Ergün pointed out the importance of establishing cooperation between Turkish and Syrian industrialists. “We want Turkish and Syrian companies to make investments in each other’s countries and even to cooperate in third countries. From now on, we will carry out activities to strengthen the relevant infrastructures and to provide partnership between them,” said the minister, also commenting on the improvement in Turkish industry. “Turkey used to export agricultural products in the past, but now 90 percent of its exports comprise industrial products that are mainly sent to EU countries,” he said, stressing the importance of establishing cooperation between the industrial sector and universities. Al-Dardari also stated that scientific research and dialogue between industrialists were essential elements in Turkey and Syria’s cooperation in the industrial sector. stanbul Today’s Zaman February industrial production signals recovery, growth Continuing its upward trend, industrial production in Turkey increased by an impressive 18.1 percent in February over the same month of the previous year and was up by 0.5 percent from January, official figures released on Friday showed, indicating a strong recovery from the recession and raising hopes for a double-digit growth rate for the first quarter of the year. According to data released by the Turkish Statistics Institute (TurkStat) yesterday, the industrial production index, an indicator of manufacturing performance, rose 18.1 percent in the second month of the year over February 2009. Though the current rise is mainly attributable to a base effect, it was above expectations. Analysts had expected the index to be up by 17.1-17.5 percent. Turkey’s industrial index increased by a record 25.2 percent in December last year over the same month of 2008, before rising by 12.1 percent in January on a year-on-year basis. The year-on-year increase in the index was 18.2 Volkan imek, the chairman of the Professional Hotel Managers Association of Turkey (POYD), said on Thursday in Antalya that the government should allow hoteliers to start the import of red meat following a recent “meat crisis” in the market. A growing shortage of red meat has led to extraordinary increases in prices in the market. Some parties have suggested that the government lift a ban on red meat imports, while others say the best solution to address the current shortage would be an increase in stockbreeding. imek said most hotels faced difficulty in compensating for the red meat shortage, as red meat is among the top products consumed at hotels. “A kilo of red meat is around six or seven euros in the EU but we pay 15 to 20 euros here in Turkey. … This puts an extra burden on our tourism facilities,” he explained. Noting that hotels in Turkey consume 60,000 tons of read meat on average per year, he said the government should come up with a solution to ease the problem in the sector. This solution could be permission for red meat imports for example, he continued, adding that further price hikes could hit the sector even more. Regarding recent reports that said some dealers sold horsemeat and pork to the market, the POYD head said such claims would do nothing but harm Turkey’s tourism industry. stanbul Today’s Zaman CHAN, BOSTAN CEMLOLU Craftsmen and artsans to be supported wth new package Hoteliers demand red meat imports at lower prices percent on a calendar-adjusted base. The index was up by 1.6 percent from the month before when both calendar and seasonally adjusted. Industry and Trade Minister Nihat Ergün, speaking during a visit to Syria yesterday, expressed satisfaction with the figures, which are a continuation of an upward trend that started in March of last year. “When seasonally and calendar adjusted, the index is seen to still be picking up, indicating a strong recovery from the recession in the space of a year. The same trend is seen also in exports and capacity utilization rates. The possibility of achieving a double-digit growth rate for the first quarter of 2010 is continuously increasing,” Ergün said. “The Turkish economy has nearly overcome the global financial crisis and returned to producing, exporting and creating employment,” he highlighted. Foreign Trade Minister Zafer Çalayan, speaking to Turkish commercial counselors and attachés based in the Americas and Africa in Ankara on Thursday, commented on the industrial production figures released yesterday, repeating that the economic crisis “just touched” Turkey. Çalayan highlighted that with the fourth quarter gross domestic product (GDP) growth numbers Turkey was one of the first countries to exit the crisis and the only country in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) to not intervene in its financial sector. Noting that Turkey’s goal for GDP growth is 3.5 percent for 2010, Çalayan stated that organizations such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and OECD pointed to higher growth figures, and that the World Bank’s president expects 6 percent growth for Turkey for 2010, high above Turkey’s own expectations. The increased industrial production figures were an expected development, said Çalayan, pointing to increased export figures released recently. Turkish Exporters Assembly (TM) President Mehmet Büyükeki, in a written statement issued yesterday, said that “all early indicators are signs of a double-digit growth rate for the first quarter of 2010.” Turkey should re-adopt an export-oriented growth strategy, he said. The subgroup that enjoyed the greatest yearon-year increase was the manufacturing sector at 20.5 percent. The sector saw a 1.7 percent rise in its industrial production index over the previous month when the index removed seasonal and calendar effects, such as weather conditions or social, cultural or religious traditions falling in specific seasons. The index for the mining sector was up by 12.2 percent in February over the same month of the previous year, while the rise was 2.8 percent from January to February when calendar and seasonally adjusted. Among the main industrial subgroups, the biggest rise was seen in the manufacture of capital goods, with a 32.9 percent increase on a year-on-year basis. The production of intermediary goods also rose by 23.2 percent during the same period. Ankara Today’s Zaman Aydn Doan takes title of top taxpayer for 2009 Media tycoon Aydn Doan was the Revenue Administration’s (GB) go-to individual for taxes in 2009, coming first with the highest amount of taxes paid by an individual with TL 19.1 million in funds being transferred to the government. According to figures released by GB yesterday for annual income tax, paid in March, the top three individual taxpayers were Aydn Doan with TL 19.1 million, Kurtlu Factoring Chairman Salvo Taragano with TL 15.6 million and Koç Holding Chairman Rahmi Koç with TL 11.2 million. In 2008, Rahmi Koç was the record holder, with Aydn Doan second. Hüsnü Özyein, who was third in 2008, dropped down to 10th place, paying TL 6.5 million in taxes. According to the figures, out of the top 100 taxpayers, 86 were located in stanbul, eight in Ankara, three in zmir and one each from the provinces of Bursa, Isparta and Kocaeli. The list also included famous individuals from cinema and television, with Acun Ilcal 45th with TL 2.3 million, Mehmet Ali Erbil 53rd with TL 1.7 million and comedian Cem Ylmaz in 86th place. According to the figures, 61 of the top 100 taxpayers had stock holdings that they paid income tax on. Ankara Today’s Zaman 08 TODAY’S ZAMAN F R I D AY, A P R I L 9 , 2 0 1 0 BUSINESS stop a bigger crisis from occurring. PwC Turkey Banking and Capital Markets Manager and Partner Zeynep Uras said that with these results and this overwhelming fear of politics in the banking sector, it appears that the future of banks lies in exogenous factors that can affect the sector. She added that although government funding for banks to pull them out of the depths of the nancial crisis did temporarily help them, overly politicizing banks may lead to negative effects on the nancial crisis. stanbul Today’s Zaman icized” and that this could be a large threat to nancial stability. Bankers and non-bankers had differing reasons for this opinion, with bankers stating that politics could negatively affect the way banks give loans while non-bankers said political and monetary help to banks could lead to banks acting carelessly. CSFI Research Editor David Lascelles, discussing the report ndings, said he found it ironic that banks were citing political intervention as the biggest risk at a time when governments need to support the banking sector to AP, NG HAN GUAN Turkcell officials allegedly involved in wiretapping ERGN HAVA STANBUL PHOTO Turkey’s largest GSM rm, Turkcell, could face serious problems -- possibly even cancellation of their operating license -- following recent allegations that a group of employees from the company formed a wiretapping gang and tapped lines for $30,000 apiece for anyone who could pay. According to various news Web sites, the stanbul Chief Prosecutor’s Ofce has been collecting evidence of the alleged wiretapping for a long time. The reports claimed that the market leader could face the cancellation of its license. Timothy Geithner Evaluating the allegations in Ankara on Wednesday, Transportation Minister Binali Yldrm said the government “would do whatever is necessary should the GSM rm be found guilty of engaging in any illegal action.” Emphasizing that the issue is “a serious one,” the minister said his ministry would follow the developments closely. “Legal proceedings on the issue have begun. We have very limited details on the issue; however, it should be known that we will pursue the case if the company has actually been involved in illegal actions,” Yldrm explained. Speaking to Today’s Zaman in a phone interview, Tayfun Acarer, chairman of Turkey’s Information Technologies and Communications Authority (BTK), stated that the allegations are serious, but said he could not make any comment on the issue. “We have not received any ofcial statement as regards the allegations. … It is hard to say anything as of yet,” he noted. The BTK head said they could commence an investigation into the allegations “once the issue is claried following the legal proceedings.” A visitor walks past the art work by American artist Tony Oursler entitled “100 yuan (People’s Republic of China)” US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is expected to press Beijing over its currency controls in a sign the two sides are stepping up efforts to narrow their differences in the dispute. Gethner to vst Bejng amd currency dspute trade surplus. Some American lawmakers want punitive tariffs on Chinese imports if Beijing fails to act. “Every administration has thought it could get something done by talking to China. But years of experience have shown that the Chinese will not be moved by words; they only respond to tough action,” US Senator Charles Schumer said in a statement. Schumer is co-author of proposed legislation that seeks to increase pressure on China to let its currency rise in value against the dollar, saying Chinese “currency manipulation” is hurting the US economy. While a step forward, Chinese analysts weren’t expecting any signicant new agreement to come out of the visit. “We’d better not be too hopeful for any breakthroughs,” said Niu Jun, professor at Peking University’s School of International Studies. “Economic and trade issues are not like political issues, which can sometimes see sudden progress.” Niu said the currency dispute was a “longterm issue that requires long-term work.” US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is expected to press Beijing over its currency controls when he meets a Chinese vice premier in a sign the two sides are stepping up efforts to narrow their differences in the dispute. Geithner was due to meet Vice Premier Wang Qishan on Thursday evening en route home from a two-day visit to India, the Treasury Department said. The surprise visit was announced just a day in advance. The decision to hold such a high-level encounter suggested Washington and Beijing are trying to narrow their differences over currency, which threaten to overshadow cooperation on the global economy, Iran’s nuclear program and other issues. Washington and other Chinese trading partners are pressing Beijing to ease exchange rate controls that they say keep its yuan undervalued, giving its exporters an unfair price advantage and swelling its multibillion-dollar Turkcell remains silent A Turkcell ofcial who spoke on condition of anonymity told Today’s Zaman that Ula Öztürk, a director at Turkcell, had been taken into custody to testify to police. The ofcial said the company would wait until the legal proceedings were completed and declined to make any further comments. As part of the investigation, police detained Öztürk along with Fatih Bilir, an information processing ofcer at Turkcell, both of whom allegedly cooperated with the gang’s alleged leader, Mehmet Yank. Close Daily Monthly Change (%) Change (%) Yearly Change (%) YTD Change (%) MCAP (million TL) 1-Y Av.Volum Country Change (%) Level H.Kong 1,82 21.928,8 Nikkei 225 Japan 0,09 11.292,8 Cac 40 France -0,77 4.022,9 Germany -0,59 İMKB-100 58.646 0,4% 3,7% 122,3% 11,0% 333.556 1.925 Hang Seng İMKB-30 73.760 0,5% 4,0% 119,5% 10,1% 263.825 1.312 İMKB-IND 43.107 0,1% 1,8% 115,2% 13,7% 95.620 752 İMKB-BANK 135.261 0,8% 5,3% 144,8% 13,2% 162.928 738 DAX DJIMT 11,85 0,9% 1,7% 72,2% 7,2% - 0,51 FTSE 100 TurkDEX US$/JP¥ ANCE EU€/JP¥ Ticker Australian former Rio Tinto executive Stern Hu Lawyer: Rio Tinto exec not to appeal sentence A jailed Australian former Rio Tinto executive has opted not to appeal his 10-year sentence for bribery and commercial spying, his lawyer said Thursday, in a case that rattled foreign businesses and prompted Australia to criticize secrecy surrounding the trial. In a brief text message, lawyer Jin Chunqing said Stern Hu told him of his decision in a meeting at the Shanghai detention house. He did not comment further. Hu, the manager in charge of Rio Tinto’s China iron ore business, and three Chinese coworkers were detained in July during contentious price negotiations with Chinese steel mills. They pleaded guilty but observers said their sentences were unusually severe, especially for a case involving civilian business dealings. Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith called Hu’s penalty “very harsh.” The case was closely watched abroad and some questioned whether it signaled a worsening environment for foreign businesses in China. Shanghai AP Platform to keep eye on public spending ‘Gov’t will deal with those who are responsible’ AT A GL CALENDAR pected No data ex PHOTO in 15 years that the CSFI’s results have shown political intervention as a threat to the sector. “Heavy regulation” came in third place, demonstrating that the fear of government is ever present in the global banking sector -which played a major role in the events that unfolded during the global nancial crisis. The managers and experts surveyed stated that the large sums of taxpayer money that propped banks up and the nationalization of failing banks meant that banks were becoming increasingly “polit- According to the “Banking Banana Skins 2010” report released by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) and the Center for the Study of Financial Innovation (CSFI), the threat bankers are most worried about is political intervention into the sector. The report, which included results from a survey of 443 “bankers, banking regulators and close observers of the banking scene” in 49 countries, outlined 30 risks, with political intervention topping the list. This is the rst time REUTERS Banks fear political intervention most, survey shows 58,525 1,5005 66.29 53.72 57.7 46.28 5.763,5 -0,59 10.904,9 NASDAQ USA 0,01 1.982,1 USA -0,46 1.183,9 Brasil -0,31 70.877,2 33.71 29,3 Native Foreign Number of Shares Native M.cap Daily Change (%) Foreign Number of Shares Monthly Change (%) Yearly Change (%) M.cap Ticker Price Daily Change (%) Ticker US$/JP¥ 93,61 GRUND 0,52 -7,14% GARAN 93,1 7,4 15,75 TL / € 1,996 -1,0% EU/JP¥ 124,92 9,45 3,28% DOAS -3,91% ISCTR 48,3 5,0 18,66 TL / $ 1,493 -0,7% EU/US$ 1,3349 1,33 3,10% VESBE 4,34 -2,69% EREGL 39,3 4,7 4,00 5,60 2,75% FROTO 10,00 -1,96% AKGRT 33,7 2,2 68,10 32,75 2,34% EREGL 4,68 -1,68% YKBNK 33,3 4,0 21,95 12,30 CIMSA ISFIN ADANA TUPRS ÝMKB 100 -- ÝMKB 30 6,15 ÝMKB IND Volumes Price (TL) Yearly Change (%) RETAILER BIMAS CARFA BOYNR -- -- 9.209,5 6.527 1.484 209 KIPA 990 P/E 2006/12 P/E 2007/06t 17,7x 16,8x 15,0x 335,3x 90,7x -109,8x 33,1x -26,5x P/E 2007/09t 12,7x 12,0x 11,3x 415,3x 80,9x -625,3x 12,9x -13,7x EV/EBITDA 2006/12* EV/EBITDA 2007/03t* 12,1x 7,4x 11,7x 5,8x 11,3x 9,5x 453,5x 40,4x 72,1x 60,7x -238,2x 18,4x 10,9x 9,9x -11,9x 53,0x EV/EBITDA 2007/06t* 8,2x 6,5x 9,4x 42,4x 56,5x 22,1x 9,1x 95,3x -1,6x 6,3x -0,8x 38,8x 53,5x 22,9x 7,9x 45,5x Close Price ($) Light C. Oil Gold Copper Turkey, Iran to jointly establish zone Technical delegations from Ankara and Tehran are expected to commence studies for the establishment of a free industrial zone between Turkey and Iran in the eastern province of Idr, the city governor announced on Thursday. Idr Governor Saffet Karahisarl, officials from the Ministry of Industry and Trade along with experts from Iran met on Thursday in Idr to discuss the establishment of a free industrial zone. Speaking to reporters, Karahisarl said technical delegations from Turkey and Iran would shortly come together to discuss the necessary preparations for the zone, which will be situated along the border connecting Turkey, Iran and Nakhchivan. Following talks in Idr, the technical delegations will proceed to the Turkish provinces of Ar, Van and Hakkari, the governor said. An eastern Anatolia province, Idr borders Armenia, Nakhchivan and Iran. stanbul Today’s Zaman 10.0 8,6 3,36% Price (TL) Daily Change (%) YKSGR Mcap TL -0,29 USA BOVESPA China is very close to announcing a shift in its currency policy, the New York Times reported on Thursday. The change would involve a “small but immediate” revaluation of the yuan and would permit the yuan to uctuate more widely, the paper said. The Hong Kong dispatch quoted people with knowledge of the policy consensus emerging in Beijing. It said the model for the upcoming shift was China’s 2.1 percent revaluation of the yuan, also known as the renminbi, against the dollar in July 2005. After that, the yuan was allowed to trade in a wider daily range, but with a trend toward further strengthening. “For the upcoming announcement, however, China is likely to emphasize that the value of the renminbi can fall as well as rise on any given day, so as to discourage a ood of speculative investment into China betting on rapid further appreciation, they said,” according to the New York Times. Beijing Reuters 6.215,2 UK Dow S&P 0,04% -0,99% ‘China close to currency shift’ Thirty Turkish civil society organizations have established a new body named the Public Spending Monitoring Platform in a bid to contribute to a more transparent public expenditure mechanism. The platform will follow expenditure closely and periodically share the gures with both Parliament and the public. Speaking to the Anatolia news agency on Thursday in stanbul, platform spokesman Nurhan Yentürk said there are currently separate bodies which monitor public spending, but the data provided by these groups can be incoherent and lack such important details as the amounts allocated to each public institution. Yentürk said their studies could help open up the state’s expenditures to public debate and that it is critical that such monetary transfers are monitored by an impartial body. “We want to see exactly how much of our money is spent where. It is also the people’s right to see how effective this expenditure proves to be in any eld,” she explained. They expected to meet with deputies from Parliament’s Planning and Budget Commission, but did not expect their reports to provoke immediate action from the government; however, this was still an important step for the sake of transparency, Yentürk said. “We do not expect that the government will cut military expenditure or allocate more money to any other eld right after we release our reports, but this is a beginning, and we should know how much money we have in the budget,” she asserted. stanbul Today’s Zaman 85,68 1133,25 360,70 Way Change (%) -0,6% 0,8% -0,3% High 86,38 1133,25 363,50 Low 85,31 1133,25 359,50 P/E: Share price divided by earnings per share is a measure of the price paid for a share relative to the income or profit earned by the firm per share. EV/EBITDA: Enterprise value divided by earnings before interest, tax and amortization; “t” stands for trailer and means the data over the last four quarters. (*) Yesterday's closing(**) Updated at 6 p.m. by GMT+2 Disclaimer: The information in this report has been prepared by BMD, Bizim Securities from sources believed to be reliable. All the information, interpretations and recommendations covered herein relating to investment actions are not within the scope of investment consultancy. Therefore investment decisions based only on the information covered herein may not bring expected results. Russia: Austria joins South Stream in April Russia’s energy minister says Austria will join the Russian-backed South Stream pipeline project in April.Russian news agencies are quoting Sergei Shmatko as saying Thursday that this would be the final deal before construction begins later this year. South Stream is a joint venture of Russia’s Gazprom and Italy’s Eni. The pipeline will exit Russia under the Black Sea and enter the European Union via Bulgaria to carry some 63 billion cubic meters of gas a year when it comes online in 2015.Serbia, Hungary, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Greece, Italy and Croatia are also signed onto the deal. Austria has backed the rival Nabucco pipeline project, which is supported by the EU and the United States and would bypass Russia in supplying gas from the Caspian Sea region. Moscow AP NATIONAL TODAY’S ZAMAN 09 FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 2010 First hearing on Poyrazköy arsenal begins today BÜRA ERDAL ÝSTANBUL The rst hearing of a trial regarding a large cache of munitions discovered almost a year ago in stanbul’s Poyrazköy area as part of the Ergenekon investigation begins today. Arrested defendants retired Maj. Levent Bekta, Lt. Col. Ercan Kireçtepe, Maj. Emre Onat, Maj. Eren Günay and Ergin Geldikaya, a retired ranger from the navy’s Underwater Assault Teams (SAT), were summoned to the stanbul 12th High Criminal Court, where they are scheduled to testify about their suspected links to the unearthed cache of 21 light anti-tank weapons (LAW), 14 grenades, 24 explosive fuses and 450 grams of C3 explosives. Tight security is expected to be in place around the courthouse. Police discovered the arsenal in Poyrazköy on April 21, 2009. The 297-page indictment against the 17 defendants in the case alleges that they formed a gang and were planning to take action to create chaos in the country and to wipe out the government and Parliament. Five of the defendants, including Bekta, Kireçtepe, Onat and Günay, are charged with “attempting to destroy the government and Parliament using coercion and violence” and “being members of the Ergenekon armed terrorist orga- nization.” Prosecutors demand two life sentences for each defendant for the rst charge and a prison term from seven-and-a-half years to 15 years for each of them for the second charge. Other defendants, Geldikaya, Ali Türken, Halil Cura, Ferudun Arslan, Sadettin Doan, Levent Görgeç, brahim Koray Özyurt, Muharrem Nuri Alacal, afak Yürekli, Dora Sungunay, Tayfun Duman and Mert Yank, are charged with “being a member of the Ergenekon armed terrorist organization.” Rear Adm. Görgeç is the one that attracts the most attention since he will be the rst active duty general to be tried on charges of membership in a terrorist organization. A CD that was in Bekta’s possession which is also in the indictment contains a detailed plan codenamed “Cage” and mentions assassinating leaders of non-Muslim communities in Turkey. The Cage plan was allegedly prepared to undermine the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) by assassinating prominent non-Muslim gures in the country and putting the blame for the killings on the party. The plot aimed to intimidate the country’s non-Muslim groups, which would hopefully increase internal and external pressure on the ruling party, diminishing public support for the party that would eventually lead to a military takeover, according to the plan. Cemil Çiçek Deputy PM Çiçek vents frustration with EU, Cyprus Turkey's deputy prime minister vented his frustration with the European Union and Greek Cypriots before an election on the Turkish side of Cyprus on April 18 that could impact his country's bid for EU membership. In an interview with Reuters on Wednesday, Cemil Çiçek, a heavyweight in the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party), decried the European Union's attitude to Turkey, saying other EU candidates received more favorable treatment. "It's time the Europeans also began behaving ethically," he said. "When it concerns others one kilogram equals 1,000 grams, when it concerns Turkey one kilogram equals 800 grams," said the 64-year-old, who is known for speaking his mind. The biggest obstacle Turkey faces to gaining admission relates to the dispute over Cyprus. Cyprus was divided in 1974 after Turkey sent troops to the island in reaction to a coup engineered by a military junta ruling Athens against the Cypriot government made up of Greeks. Turkey was the only country to recognize the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (KKTC) when it was declared a separate state in 1983 and still has troops there. Now, Turkey hopes reunication talks between the Turkish and Greek sides will unblock its negotiations with the EU on several policy fronts. Çiçek said Turkey is committed to nding a peaceful resolution for Cyprus, regardless of who wins the election on April 18 when Turkish Cypriots vote for a president. But ofcials privately fear incumbent Mehmet Ali Talat, who has been at the forefront of the reunication process, could lose because of a lack of progress so far. If that happens, and progress on reunication stalls, so could Turkey's EU bid. Turkey has opened 12 out of 35 negotiating chapters, covering different policy areas since starting formal EU entry talks in 2005. But 18 are blocked, most because of Cyprus. Turkey's EU negotiations could hit a wall by the end of the year if it completes the remaining chapters and 18 are still frozen. One Turkish ofcial described it like "seeing a train coming down a tunnel." Using Cyprus Turkish membership is a divisive issue in the EU. Critics say cultural differences with the predominantly Muslim state will hamper integration. This negativity towards Turkey was behind Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoan's comment during a visit to Bosnia and Herzegovina earlier this week when he said, "The EU will only be a Christian club without Turkey." Some European leaders, notably Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy, have suggested Turkey opt for a "privileged partnership." But Turkey wants nothing less than full membership. Çiçek gave assurances that should the AK Party win a third term in elections due by mid2011, it would stay true to a goal of meeting EU norms across political, social and economic spheres. "Turkey has a vision for 2023, which is a centennial of the republic. We would like to see Turkey as a full EU member by that date," said Çiçek, referring to the founding of the modern Turkish republic out of the ashes of the Ottoman Empire. But he said some EU states were using Turkey's support for the KKTC to block the EU bid. "We are aware that there are certain countries which want to obstruct Turkey's EU membership by using this Cyprus issue," he said. "This attitude of the EU is primarily unethical and immoral because EU membership is conditional on Copenhagen political criteria and the implementation of those criteria," he said, adding that Turkey had met those requirements. Çiçek also denounced the EU for isolating Turkish Cypriots living in the north of the divided island, describing it as being like "an open prison" and said the Greek Cypriots were spoiling chances of a political solution. Turkey would honor a pledge to open its ports and airports to Cypriot trafc, Çiçek said, so long as the EU simultaneously ended its embargo of northern Cyprus. He went on to voice concern that the Greek Cypriot side could use the outcome of the vote to further delay a solution. "This situation is not going to last forever, another ve to 10 years, because we are now fed up with the ploys of the Greek Cypriots," Çiçek said. Ankara Reuters 10 TODAY’S ZAMAN *Jamie F. Metzl, who served on US President Bill Clinton’s National Security Council, is executive vice president of the Asia Society. © Project Syndicate, 2010. REUTERS Sri Lanka’s President Mahinda Rajapaksa casts his vote at a polling station for the parliamentary elections, in the southern district of Hambantota, south of capital Colombo. PHOTO re is under the ashes? We need to unite the broken hearts of this country through development,” he told reporters. “That can be done only through a stronger parliament. We’ve already shown in this short time what we are able with economic and other developments.” The war deeply divided the Tamil minority and the Sinhalese majority from which Rajapaksa hails, like all of the country’s leaders since independence from Britain in 1948. He says reconciliation can only come from democracy and development. Rajapaksa’s alliance has positioned itself as the shepherd of island-wide development and an economic revival, propelled by the stock market and sizeable foreign investment in high-yield government securities. Colombo Reuters PIROGOV REUTERS, VLADIMIR TODAY’S ZAMAN NEW YORK -- China’s willingness to join negotiations on potential sanctions against Iran and to send President Hu Jintao to a nuclear security summit in Washington this month are important preliminary steps towards taking more responsibility in managing international affairs. But merely joining conversations or showing up for meetings is not enough. Given its growing prole, China must do far more to demonstrate its bona des as a responsible global leader or risk undermining the system that has enabled its own miraculous rise. China has emerged as a world power far more quickly than most observers -- and China’s own leaders -- might have predicted as little as a decade ago. China’s rapid economic growth, juxtaposed against America’s problems in Iraq and Afghanistan, monumental debt, and role in sparking the global nancial crisis, have changed global power realities -- and global perceptions of those realities even more. China’s current international inuence likely outstrips its desire or capacity. This puts China in a difcult position in relation to the so-called international system -- the structures and rules created by the United States and others after the Second World War to check national sovereignty through a system of overlapping jurisdictions, transnational obligations, and fundamental rights. China has been an enormous beneciary of this system, and its rise would have been unthinkable without the US-led free-trade system and globalization process, access to US markets, and global shipping lanes secured by the US Navy. But China’s history of humiliation at the hands of European colonial powers has made its leaders ardent supporters of inviolable national rights and suspicious of any sacrice of sovereignty. Because China’s leaders are not popularly elected, their legitimacy stems largely from two sources -- their connection to the Chinese revolution and their ability to deliver national security and economic growth. Although Mao Zedong is widely implicated in the unnecessary death of millions and is ofcially designated by the current regime as having been 30 percent wrong, his photograph still adorns Tiananmen Square, because the regime’s legitimacy depends in part on its connection to the restoration of national sovereignty that Mao represents. The economic foundation of the Chinese government’s legitimacy also places an enormous burden on China’s leaders to make decisions that foster domestic economic growth at the expense of virtually everything else -- including, some say, the viability of the international currency regime, nuclear non-proliferation, and basic rights in resource-rich countries. This dichotomy creates a difcult situation as China emerges as the world’s second largest economy. If China, in the name of national sovereignty, does not buy into the international system, it becomes hard to argue that this system exists. China’s unwillingness, for example, to join other members of the international community in pressuring Iran and North Korea to abandon nuclear weapons programs foreshadows the potential collapse of the nuclear non-proliferation regime. China’s active courtship of countries that violate human rights on a massive scale, such as Sudan, North Korea, and Burma, similarly represents a preliminary decapitation of the international human rights regime. Given its size and importance, and regardless of its intentions, China will, perhaps inadvertently, destroy the international system if it does not either actively endorse and work to maintain it, or reframe it for the greater common good. If it does neither, the world is in trouble. If China sees itself as the heir and beneciary of the USled post-war international system, it must do much more to prevent and roll back nuclear proliferation in Iran and North Korea, pay a much greater percentage of costs for the United Nations, and curtail its mercantilist policies. It must also end its alleged corrupt practices in resource-rich parts of the developing world, align its currency policy with global norms, lead efforts to curb greenhouse-gas emissions, and, more generally, take into more account the fate of people outside of China in its decision-making. If, on the other hand, as is its right, Chinese leaders have an alternative vision of what an improved international system might look like, the onus is on them to articulate that vision and outline what they are willing to do to realize it. There may be a better international model than the current one, but it will not emerge by default. As US Presidents Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman demonstrated in the 1940s, such a system must be articulated and then forged through decisive action and global leadership. If China sees inviolable state sovereignty as the foundation of 21st century international affairs, as now appears to be the case, then it must explain why this principle will not lead to the same disastrous consequences as it did in the 19th and early 20th centuries. The US and the international community must acknowledge that today’s fast-rising China has earned the right to play an important role in shaping how the 21st century unfolds. But if China’s leaders will neither do more to support the current international system, nor articulate an alternative, and instead continue to hark back to 19th century models of inviolable sovereignty, they will destroy a global order that, warts and all, has served the world exceedingly well. Those countries that value the current system will increasingly feel the urge to close ranks to defend it. The end of the electoral uncertainty is expected to bring some stability to Sri Lanka’s postwar landscape, and give way to a clearer picture of what Rajapaksa plans to do with a $42 billion economy billed as an upcoming frontier market. The Colombo Stock Exchange on Thursday kept climbing higher into record territory. It has gained 165 percent since 2009, spurred by the end of the war and lately has risen on hopes of political stability and macroeconomic reform after the polls. Rajapaksa cast his ballot early at a school named after his politician father in Medamulana, in the southern Hambantota district where his eldest son, brother and niece were all contesting seats as part of a growing Rajapaksa dynasty. “We’ve ended terrorism now. What PHOTO Jamie F. Metzl Sri Lankans voted on Thursday in an election likely to further entrench President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s political dominance, the rst parliamentary poll since last year’s end of a quarter-century of war. Nearly 80,000 police and soldiers guarded polling stations across the Indian Ocean island, where voters were deciding among 7,620 candidates for the 225-member parliament. Election monitors reported turnout of about 30 percent, and a handful of minor incidents of violence. Rajapaksa has already parlayed last May’s victory over the Tamil Tiger separatists into a new six-year term. Now he is banking on a resurgent economy and political momentum to give his United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA) a legislative majority. ntial administration vernment protesters near the preside clashes between riot police and anti-go Kyrgyzstan this week. A demonstrator sets fire to a car during injured in clashes in the capital of 1,000 over and killed been have 75 people in Bishkek on Wednesday. At least KYRGYZ OPPOSITION SEIZES POWER, DISSOLVES NATIONAL PARLIAMENT contýnued from page 1 “People in Kyrgyzstan want to build democracy. What we did yesterday was our answer to the repression and tyranny against the people by the Bakiyev regime,” Otunbayeva, who once served as foreign minister under Bakiyev, told reporters. “You can call this revolution. You can call this a people’s revolt. Either way, it is our way of saying that we want justice and democracy.” Bishkek awoke to blazing cars and burned-out shops on Thursday after a day in which at least 75 people were killed in clashes between protesters and security forces. Plumes of smoke billowed from the White House, or the main seat of government, as crowds rampaged through the seven-story building setting several rooms on re. Looting was widespread. The uprising, which began on Tuesday in a provincial town, was sparked by discontent over corruption, nepotism and rising utility prices in a nation where a third of the 5.3 million population live below the poverty line. The United States has a military air base supporting troops in Afghanistan in the Kyrgyz city of Manas and is a major donor to Kyrgyzstan, along with China and Russia, which also has a military base in the former Soviet state. Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s spokesman said Otunbayeva had told him by telephone she was in full control of the country and he saw her as “the new head of government.” Putin earlier denied Moscow had played a hand in the clashes and Otunbayeva said the new government would preserve an agreement allowing the US AP, IVAN SEKRETAREV OPINION WORLD Sri Lanka holds first post-war parliamentary poll PHOTO Wll Chna lead? F R I D A Y, APRIL 9, 2010 Kyrgyz protesters carry a wounded colleague during clashes with riot police in Bishkek. Police in Kyrgyzstan opened fire on thousands of angry protesters who tried to seize the main government building amid rioting in the capital as protests spread across the Central Asian nation. base to operate. “Its status quo will remain in place. We still have some questions on it. Give us time and we will listen to all the sides and solve everything,” she said. Bakiyev announced the base would close during a visit to Moscow last year at which he also secured $2 billion in crisis aid, only to agree later to keep the base open at a higher rent. NATO said on Thursday that ights from the US base in support of NATO military operations in Afghanistan remained suspended following the unrest. The US embassy in Bishkek had earlier said the base was operating normally. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called for calm and said a special UN envoy would arrive in Kyrgyzstan on Friday. The White House said US President Barack Obama and Russian President Dimitry Medvedev were likely to discuss Kyrgyzstan when they sign an arms control treaty in Prague on Thursday. Bakiyev ed Bishkek to southern Kyrgyzstan, his traditional power base in a nation split by clan rivalries. A witness said he arrived late on Wednesday at the airport in Osh, and Otunbayeva said later he was in his home region of Jalalabad. Bishkek Reuters Turkey pledges to support stability in Kyrgyzstan The Turkish Foreign Ministry has released a statement in light of the unrest in Kyrgyzstan, noting that no Turkish citizens have been killed in the incidents which have so far led to 75 deaths and hundreds of injuries. Turkish Ambassador to Bishkek Nejat Akçal also released a statement yesterday regarding ongoing events in Kyrgyzstan, emphasizing that the embassy had sprung into action and was monitoring developments as they occurred. The Foreign Ministry called the incidents “a cause of great concern for Turkey” and said: “We regret to have received news of the loss of lives during these incidents. Emergency desks have already been activated at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Ankara as well as at the Turkish Embassy in Bishkek. Hereafter, further incidents and any ensuing developments will be monitored at the highest level.” “Turkey attaches the utmost importance to the stability, peace and welfare of brotherly Kyrgyzstan. We are ready to take every possible step for sustaining the stability and security of Kyrgyzstan; Kyrgyzstan’s stability bears importance for the whole region. We expect Kyrgyzstan to overcome the current tense situation through dialogue and peaceful means and internal stability of the country soon be maintained,” the statement read. Akçal noted in his remarks that there had been no reported injuries or threats to Turkish nationals, but added that Turks should nonetheless exercise caution. He remarked that some workplaces owned by Turks had sustained damage during the rioting. The crisis centers established at the Turkish Foreign Ministry can be reached at +90-312292-2579, +90-530-515-6491 (including SMS), or kriz-kg@mfa.gov.tr; the Turkish Embassy in Bishkek can be reached at +996-312-62-2354 or +996-312-62-0378. stanbul Today’s Zaman Sudanese man sues after release from Guantanamo A Sudanese aid worker freed from Guantanamo Bay in 2007 sued US government ofcials Wednesday over what he called his forced disappearance and torture. Lawyers for Adel Hassan Hamad, 52, led the lawsuit in US District Court in Seattle seeking damages for ongoing physical and emotional problems and compensation for lost wages and loss of reputation. It names as defendants nearly two dozen current and former US ofcials, including Defense Secretary Robert Gates, former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and former Navy Secretary Gordon England. Similar cases have been led -and dismissed -- in federal court in Washington, D.C., where judges have ruled that such claims are barred by the Military Commissions Act. Lawyers for Hamad said his case was the rst brought outside of Washington, D.C. Gwynne Skinner, a member of Hamad’s legal team and a professor in the International Human Rights Clinic at Willamette University College of Law in Oregon, said the case was led in Seattle because Gates owns property in Washington state. She also hopes the more liberal-leaning judges in the 9th US Circuit will rule such lawsuits can proceed. Hamad alleges he was a humanitarian worker based in Pakistan in 2002 when he was seized from his apartment, tortured and eventually shipped to Guantanamo. He was detained for more than ve years. Before he was returned to his native Sudan in 2007, his lawyers learned he had actually been cleared to return home two years earlier, the lawsuit said. The Defense Department did not immediately return a call seeking comment on behalf of Gates. Hamad’s case drew a well-organized campaign for his release -- including a YouTube video featuring Martin Sheen. “He’s struggling,” Skinner said of Hamad. “He’s struggling to nd work and support his family.” Seattle AP TODAY’S ZAMAN 11 F R I D A Y, A P R I L 9 , 2 0 1 0 SENTENCING Chinese man gets death for slaying 8 children A court in southeastern China sentenced a former doctor to death on Thursday for murdering eight children who were on their way to school, state news agency Xinhua reported. Zheng Minsheng, 41, attacked the children last month just before school began in Nanping in Fujian province. He admitted to “intentionally killing” the children, at a trial which lasted for four hours, Xinhua said. “I’m willing to shoulder responsibility for what I’ve done,” the report quoted him as saying. Prosecutors played 15 video clips of Zheng stabbing children with a knife, it added. “Zheng, appearing agitated, repeatedly told the court he had been turned down by a girl and suffered unfair treatment from the girl’s wealthy family, which prompted him to carry out the attack,” Xinhua said. “Prosecutors said Zheng, who is not married, had been unsuccessful in relations with women, his family and in his career, so he felt life was meaningless,” it added. “Zheng had no history of mental illness, according to police.” Five children survived the attack, one of whom is still in intensive care, Xinhua said. There have been a series of stabbings at Chinese schools and universities in recent years. In 2008, a student stabbed to death a law professor in class at an elite Beijing law school after he suspected the professor of having an affair with his girlfriend. Beijing Reuters ALARM Jet restroom smoker causes bomb scare A Mideast diplomat who grabbed a surreptitious smoke in a jetliner’s bathroom sparked a bomb scare and widespread alert that sent jet ghters scrambling to intercept the Denver-bound ight, ofcials said. But no explosives were found and authorities speaking on condition of anonymity said they don’t think he was trying to hurt anyone and he will not be criminally charged. Qatar’s US ambassador, Ali Bin Fahad Al-Hajri, defended the envoy in a statement on his Washington embassy’s Web site. “This diplomat was traveling to Denver on ofcial embassy business on my instructions, and he was certainly not engaged in any threatening activity. The facts will reveal that this was a mistake,” the ambassador said, without identifying the envoy by name. An Arab envoy briefed on the matter identied the diplomat as Mohammed AlMadadi of Qatar, an oil-rich Middle East nation and close US ally. Wednesday’s scare came three months after the attempted terror attack on Christmas Day when a Nigerian man tried to blow up a Detroitbound airliner. Since then, law enforcement, ight crews and passengers have been on high alert for suspicious activity on airplanes. Denver AP GATHERING ASEAN summit convenes amidst unrest Southeast Asian leaders began talks yesterday about building a strong economic and political community at an annual summit clouded by unrest in Thailand and Myanmar’s widely derided election plans. Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva cancelled his trip to Hanoi for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations’ summit after declaring a state of emergency on Wednesday to control a month-long anti-government protest aimed at forcing an election. “The situation in Bangkok is worrying,” Singapore Foreign Minister George Yeo said. “It is a somber backdrop to our discussions. It was the second straight year anti-government protests have disrupted an ASEAN summit. Last year ASEAN leaders meeting in a Thai Beach resort had to be evacuated by helicopters when protesters stormed into the venue. The 10-member ASEAN has been largely focused on economic and diplomatic issues since it was founded in 1967 at the height of the Vietnam War. But in 2008, it adopted a charter that turned the region of 580 million people with a combined GDP of $2.7 trillion into a rules-based bloc that aims to become a political, economic and security community over the next ve years. Hanoi Reuters After months of diplomatic dancing, China has agreed to sit down with ve major powers Thursday to discuss possible new sanctions against Iran for refusing to suspend uranium enrichment and start talks on its suspect nuclear program. French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner told a French parliamentary hearing on Wednesday that China would join the United States, Britain, Russia, France -- all veto-wielding members of the UN Security Council -- and Germany for talks on a fourth UN sanctions resolution. China agreed to discuss possible new sanctions during a phone conversation in late March with senior diplomats from the ve other countries but no date had been set for the start of the discussions. Kouchner said the Chinese participation on Thursday is a “positive factor,” according to the ministry. He did not give any details and China’s Foreign Ministry had no immediate comment. In Washington, US State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley would not conrm Thursday’s meeting, saying there will be discussions in coming days in several locations and “I’m not going to sit here and advertise every single meeting that takes place.” US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in January that the Obama administration has concluded that the best way to pressure Iran to come clean on its nuclear ambitions is to impose new sanctions aimed at the country’s ruling elite. Ambassadors from the six countries will be discussing elements for a possible UN resolution circulated by the United States which well-informed diplomats said will target Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guard, which has major interests in nuclear proliferation activities. The proposed new sanctions would also toughen existing measures against Iran’s shipping, banking and insurance sectors and target additional companies and individuals connected to its nuclear program, the diplomats said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the US proposal has not been released publicly. United Nations AP AP, VIRGINIA MAYO A key opposition party in northern Sudan is boycotting this week’s local and parliamentary elections, a senior party ofcial said Thursday, in another blow to the country’s rst multiparty balloting in more than two decades. Separately, election observers from the European Union said Thursday their monitors would not observe the vote in volatile Darfur, apparently because of the situation in the troubled western region. The pullout by the Umma Party comes just days after the main southern party, the Sudanese People’s Liberation Movement, announced it would boycott the poll in the northern states. Senior Umma party ofcial Mariam Sadiq told reporters her party’s move comes after the government and the national election commission failed to respond to key reform conditions. Sudanese opposition parties accuse the ruling National Congress Party of using state resources, limiting their access to the media and controlling the election commission. The elections start April 13, and will include local as well as parliamentary and presidential polls in a three-day balloting. Khartoum AP First talks on new, fourth Iran sanctions resolution PHOTO Key opposition party boycotts Sudan vote French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner announced that China would join in on talks over a fourth UN sanctions resolution. OBAMA AND MEDVEDEV SIGN LANDMARK DISARMAMENT TREATY The United States and Russia signed a landmark disarmament treaty on Thursday they hope will herald better bilateral ties and raise pressure on countries seeking nuclear weapons to renounce such ambitions. Presidents Barack Obama and Dmitry Medvedev signed the pact at a ceremony in the medieval Prague Castle after talks that covered nuclear security, Iran’s atomic program and an uprising in the strategic Central Asian state of Kyrgyzstan. The agreement will cut strategic nuclear arsenals deployed by the former Cold War foes by 30 percent within seven years but leave each with enough to destroy the other. White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said Obama hoped and expected the US Senate would ratify the treaty this year, before mid-term elections may change the composition of the upper house of Congress, controlled by the Democrats. Both major nuclear powers needed to show they were serious about reducing their vast stockpiles to lend weight to efforts to curb the atomic ambitions of countries such as Iran and North Korea, and avoid accusations of hypocrisy. White House ofcials told reporters on Obama’s ight to Prague that tougher UN sanctions against Iran’s disputed nuclear program would be prominent in his talks with Medvedev, although no specic announcements were expected. “The Russians are already committed to holding Iran accountable through the multilateral sanctions regime,” deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes said. The situation in Kyrgyzstan, where opposition protesters forced out President Kurmanbek Bakiyev on Wednesday, thrust its way on to the agenda as both Washington and Moscow have military bases in the poor Central Asian state. The US base at Manas is vital for supplying NATO forces in Afghanistan. Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin effectively recognized the interim Kyrgyz government formed by opposition leader Roza Otunbayeva on Thursday, speaking to her by telephone, his spokesman said. There was no immediate word on whether Washington would follow suit. Obama this week announced a shift in US nuclear doctrine, pledging never to use atomic weapons against non-nuclear states, as he sought to build momentum for an April 12-13 nuclear security summit in Washington. The US president set out his long-term goal to work towards a world without nuclear weapons in a speech at the same Prague Castle a year ago. Medvedev said on arrival on Wednesday that the treaty could play a considerable role in shaping disarmament in the future. Analysts expected Obama to use the signing to build pressure on Tehran, along with the nuclear summit in Washington and a meeting with Chinese President Hu Jintao next week. Steven Pifer, an arms control expert at the Brookings Institution, said the pact with Russia would give the US delegation more credibility at the non-proliferation conference. “If the United States and Russia were to show up with no agreement and between the two of them controlling 95 percent of the weapons, it’s pretty easy for the non-nuclear states to say, ‘well you’re not doing your part, why should we?’,” Pifer said. Obama’s new nuclear strategy document broke with former President George W. Bush’s threat of nuclear retaliation in the event of a biological or chemical attack. The assurance applies only to countries in compliance with the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, so Iran and North Korea would not receive that commitment. Washington and Moscow have plenty of differences on issues ranging from Iran to missile defense. On Tuesday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov repeated Moscow’s threat to withdraw from the START II treaty if U.S. plans for missile defense threatened Russia. Prague Reuters The presidents of the United States and Russia signed a landmark disarmament treaty yesterday that they hope will raise pressure on countries seeking nuclear weapons to renounce such ambitions. AP, PETR DAVID JOSEK BOYCOTT PHOTO WORLD Thai protesters scuffle with riot police outside broadcaster Thai protesters scufed with riot police outside a satellite broadcaster on Thursday after the government blocked opposition websites and TV channels on the second day of a state of emergency to quell mass protests. Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva called off a oneday trip to Vietnam for a Southeast Asian leaders summit as tension remained high, with tens of thousands of protesters defying orders to end a six-day siege of Bangkok’s main shopping district. Despite the decree, the red-shirted supporters of ousted former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra promised their biggest rally yet on Friday after briey storming parliament this week. Nearly 1,000 protesters tried to push through antiriot forces guarding Thaicom Pcl’s satellite earth station in northern Pathum Thani Province. The company, formerly owned by Thaksin, was used by the red shirts to broadcast programmes before it was taken off air on Thursday. The red shirts were demanding that it be back in operation by the end of the day. The risk of a confrontation subdued Thailand’s recently hot stock market, which fell more than three percent in its biggest fall in more than two months, and brought a warning from the central bank over possible fallout on the economy. “We have to admit that the political factor has affected consumers and business,” Bank of Thailand Chief Economist Suchart Sakkankosone told reporters, adding unrest could inuence the timing of an interest-rate rise most economists expect in June. Abhisit faces a difcult choice: compromise and call an election he could easily lose, or launch a crackdown on tens of thousands of protesters that could stir up even more trouble. Most analysts doubt the authorities will use force to remove the mostly rural and working class protesters who have been camped in Bangkok’s upmarket shopping district since Saturday -- a politically risky decision for Abhisit as his 16-month-old coalition government struggles to build support outside Bangkok. But there were scattered reports of violence. Overnight, two men on a motorbike red into ofces of the nationalist monarchist “yellow shirts,” arch rivals of Thaksin and his allies, wounding two security guards. A grenade lobbed at a yellow shirt radio station failed to explode. The number of protesters in the district of malls and luxury hotels was growing steadily. Numbers typically swell into the tens of thousands in the cooler evenings in a carnival-like atmosphere. Pressure is growing on Abhisit from residents in Bangkok, a stronghold of his Democrat Party, to take decisive action to end the rolling protests, which began on March 14 when up to 150,000 massed in the city’s old quarter. Bangkok Reuters 12 TODAY’S ZAMAN F R I D AY, A P R I L 9 , 2 0 1 0 EXPAT ZONE Any brght deas? Only more recently -- and particularly in private primary schools and kindergartens in urban areas around Turkey -- will you witness children being encouraged to stand out and express themselves. The educational system is gradually changing. While auditing graduate-level work at a Turkish university in the department of history in the 1980s and later teaching anthropology and other subjects at a Turkish university, I observed that the Turkish school system did not encourage creative thinking. Just under half a century ago, I attended a public elementary school in the United States where it was common for your teacher to encourage you to be yourself and think for yourself. The teacher created an atmosphere of free thinking. You’d be given something to make you smile and want to think -- even at an early age. Maybe it was just a gold star sticker then, but later in life, rewards would be greater. Every American child who grew up with Dr. Seuss books is familiar with this one: It’s amazing what you can do with just a sticker or two A sticker can make smiles grow quicker for me and you There’s a sticker for a job well done, And even a sticker for a job just begun, A sticker for my very own book, Or a sticker my just my very own book nook, CULTURAL CORNER CHARLOTTE McPHERSON There’s a sticker for this, And a sticker for that, And a very special sticker For that cat in the hat! As Western-style management in non-Western nations increases through globalization, a number of adults who were solely taught by the rote system are learning to feel free to express their own opinions. Don’t misunderstand me! For older adults, even in the West, one of the lasting memories from elementary school is of our teacher using ash cards to teach us some important facts. Whether we were learning to read or remember our basic math facts, ash cards were often the tool to help us remember the information our teacher deemed important and, later, to test our recall of those facts. With the fast development of technology and the Internet, young Turkish students have easy access to Google, Wikipedia and online libraries and do not need to memorize every fact and gure. Teaching children to think creatively so they can learn to interpret and apply the knowledge available online is essential. Certainly in major urban areas in Turkey, educationalist are moving in this direction. The only hindrance may be the lack of computers in schools. One major UK-based insurance company, Commercial Union, which has grown rapidly in Turkey in the past decade, has been contributing to its creative and energetic team. The company has strongly encouraged all their Turkish staff to think outside the box. I was told that the company created an atmosphere for bright ideas to be shared, calling it “Cin Fikirler.” Such an approach goes against the old popular notion where it was believed that teachers (or managers) were the fountain of knowledge. Don Tapscott, author of “Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything,” is convinced that the ability to learn new things is more important than ever as it is crucial for everyone to process new information at lightning speed. Anyone who has the chance to express himself freely enjoys the opportunity. Others who have not had the opportunity will continue to say what they think you -- the boss or teacher -- wants to hear. It dates back to trying to guess what the teacher wanted them to say, not saying what they actually thought. You will nd that your Turkish staff will begin to think for themselves with a manager who encourages open and frank communication. This enables you to tackle issues well before they become problems and also take advantage of the creative ideas of your employees. After all, don’t we all like to believe that others are interested in what we have to say? The attempts that companies such as Commercial Union and others have made to provide the opportunity to communicate directly with the top managers enhances the sense of self-esteem of workers and helps create in them a sense of belonging, a feeling that what they think and feel is important to their organization. “I think it’s the biggest change in a century in the ways that companies build relationships and interact with other entities, institutions in the economy and in society and arguably, the nature of the corporation itself.” -- Don Tapscott Note: Charlotte McPherson is the author of “Culture Smart: Turkey, 2005.” Please keep your questions and observations coming: I want to ensure this column is a help to you, Today’s Zaman’s readers. Email: c.mcpherson@todayszaman.com Protecting the culture Gaziantep Mayor Asm Güzelbey, who sponsored the establishment of numerous museums in the city, says their management approach pays special attention to culture. “As is known, Gaziantep is a major industrial city. The city’s investors have taken advantage of investment PHOTOS Once a city famous for its baklava and pistachios, Gaziantep, or Antep in popular parlance, has now become a popular destination for tourists because of its museums. There is a host of museums with a variety of themes, so the people visiting this city should allocate ample time to explore these museums. In the past, the baths in Gaziantep were the subject of a number of folksongs, but today, the city has become a popular spot because of its museums. A multitude of museums with different content and concepts are scattered around the city: the Panorama Museum, the War Museum, the City Museum, etc. Regardless of why you come to the city, your road ends at a museum. There are so many of them that you have to set aside one full day if you want to see them all. The artifacts removed from the excavation of the ancient city of Zeugma, the weapons used in the defense of the city, ethnographic objects and kitchen utensils are on display at these museums. Each day, the city discovers one of its hidden treasures. This is also what city ofcials say. Famous for its industrial facilities and cuisine, Gaziantep now seeks to host visitors who want to view its museums as well. Before you enter the Panorama Museum located within the Gaziantep Castle, you encounter the statues of three local heroes Karaylan, ehitkamil and ahinbey at the entrance. As you enter the museum, you hear the echoes: “I am from Antep. I am a hawk (ahin). I don’t carry any gun as I will ght with my sts.” In an atmosphere that is cool in summer and warm in winter, you experience the unforgettable days of the defense of Gaziantep. As you leave, you commemorate all the heroic souls who protected this city and step into another museum. There are two museums in the vicinity of the castle: the Glassware Museum and the Emine Göü Cuisine Museum. In the Glassware Museum, beautiful objects are on display. The Emine Göü Cuisine Museum showcases Gaziantep’s cuisine. As you tour around this museum, you can get the recipes of dishes you like. You drop by the Gaziantep Mosaic Museum before you visit the Bayazhan City Museum. The museum that has the artifacts from the Zeugma excavation site has been visited by many statesmen. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoan, President Abdullah Gül and former International Monetary Fund (IMF) Mission Chief for Turkey Lorenzo Giorgianni are among the recent visitors to the museum. After learning about the Zeugma mosaics, visitors tend to go to the Bayazhan City Museum. Here, the traditions, customs and handicrafts of the city are depicted. Then, you can visit the Hasan Süzer Ethnography Museum. The Gaziantep War Museum, opened two years ago after a 45-year wait, is about life in the city during the occupation. Every visitor is shown “taktaks,” which defeated the French army. This tool is a product of the city’s intelligence. The inhabitants of Antep could not nd weapons to use against the strong French army, which occupied the city, so they developed a wooden tool that produces a sound similar to a machine gun and called it “taktak.” The enemy soldiers were perplexed when they heard the machine gun sounds produced by these wooden tools. In addition to the museums in the city center, there are also the Yesemek Open-Air Museum and the Zeugma excavation site, which are popular destinations. TODAY’S ZAMAN ADEM YILMAZ GAZANTEP Gaziantep’s Panorama Museum, War Museum and the City Museum feature artifacts removed from the excavation of the ancient city of Zeugma, the weapons used in the defense of the city, ethnographic objects and kitchen utensils. Antep’s museums emerge to replace its baths as popular destinations A multitude of museums with different content and concepts are scattered around Gaziantep: the Panorama Museum, the War Museum, the City Museum, etc. Regardless of why you come to the city, famous for its baklava and pistachios, your road ends at a museum. There are so many of them that you have to set aside one full day if you want to see them all opportunities and built four organized industrial zones without government support. The city earns $3 billion from exports and employs 65,000 people,” he says. Güzelbey also underlines that Gaziantep had seen a number of civilizations in the past. “After it was conquered by Caliph Umar, Gaziantep became the cradle of Turkish-Islamic civilizations. It has always been a city of industry, commerce, peace, culture and tourism. Industry has gained an upper hand with the introduction of industrial culture. Until recently, no one has concentrated on the cultural values of the city. Now, it is an important city of culture and arts,” he says. Mayor Güzelbey stresses that they protect the cultural heritage of the city and at the same time have the mission of looking forward. “Recently, ve big museums have been established in the city. The Gaziantep Castle has been made a center, and the historic relics near the castle have been renovated. Currently, there are not many foreign tourists visiting the city. But, for the last two years, the city has had many domestic tourists. Museums, the castle, historic relics and the city’s cuisine attract people to this city,” he explains. Noting that they expect a second mosaic museum to be completed soon, Güzelbey said: “With this museum, we expect an increase in the number of foreign visitors. In the past, many foreign tourists visited Gaziantep. It was a major destination for foreign tourists. They would rst visit this city and then cities nearby. However, the problems the country has suffered and terror have prevented them from visiting the region. Our plan is to ensure that Gaziantep is known for its museums.” NOTE: Today’s Zaman intends to provide a lively forum for expatriates living in Turkey. We encourage you to contact us at voice@todayszaman.com and share your experiences, questions and problems in all walks of life for publication in Today’s Zaman. TODAY’S ZAMAN 13 FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 2010 TWO RIVAL PERFORMANCES OF RACH 3: AND THE WINNER IS... MEHMET YAMAN CULTURE&ARTS Since the stanbul State Symphony Orchestra (DSO) was playing Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 3 with two different pianists, Leonel Morales and David Helfgott, within ve days of each other, I decided I would attend both concerts, compare them and select which pianist I liked better. I have to admit I already had in mind a slight favoritism toward one of them, but I strove to be as open-minded as possible. With a concerto of that magnitude (one of the most challenging in the repertoire) and renown, it could turn into an amusing little competition. One of these two pianists would just have to drop a few notes or worse: bore me, and I’d have an instant winner -the other one. Well, the results surprised me. Australian pianist David Helfgott PHOTO ALEXANDRA IVANOFF STANBUL TODAY’S ZAMAN First contender: Leonel Morales On April 2, Leonel Morales made his second appearance in stanbul; this time, playing this work with DSO at the Caddebostan Cultural Center (CKM). Morales is a Cuban-born pianist who now lives in Spain, where he is the founder and artistic director of several piano festivals and competitions. He has recorded, in addition to some of the standard piano repertoire, several albums of Spanish composers’ works. His tall and handsome appearance and his dignied manner took me back to another era: a suave, old-fashioned formality reminiscent of lms of the 1940s. As his large hands did a lmic sweep over the keyboard, his cool demeanor never broke a sweat, remaining always elegant. The “Rach 3,” as it is known, is a more diffuse work than Concerto No. 2, which is chock full of romantic and memorable melodies. No. 3 begins with a quiet three-note theme that gets developed over and over, with many permutations. Morales began it imperceptibly, almost out of nowhere, then leaned into the musical line with grace, letting the sonorities bloom in their own time, never pushing them into each other. Conductor Emin Güven Yalçam’s swift and accurate cueing of the orchestra and Morales’ precision and power built an enormously exciting climax in the middle of the rst movement. The second movement’s breathtakingly beautiful muted violins’ purring of the trademark Rachmaninoff melodic and rhythmic styling was just like a lm score; Yalçam couldn’t quite get the horns to deliver the passion, but the strings got the message. The third movement brings a chilling march-like theme, followed by a second theme that gives the pianist a knuckle-busting marathon with a multitude of cascading gures. The nale is one of music’s all-time thrills. Morales delivered every note on time, with a bit less bravura than most but with ample fortitude. A clean, somewhat objective performance -- beautiful, but not extraordinary. Second contender: David Helfgott On April 6 at the Hagia Eirene Museum, again with DSO, Australian pianist David Helfgott performed the concerto that was in the movie that made him famous. Helfgott is the subject of the 1996 Oscar-winning lm, “Shine,” about a mentally troubled pianist who manages to overcome his illness enough to triumph in concert with “Rach 3.” Because of the celebrity status the lm gives him, his concert tours around the world are sold out and the media eats him up. Audiences respond to him via his story and the result is a night of adulation and support for his struggle and for his musicianship -which is considerable, despite a few bizarrities I’m still scratching my head about. There are plenty of lesser-known genius-level pianists who would love to have a crack at this concerto on a world tour and have the media shower them with the kind of attention Helfgott gets. And how does Helfgott get attention? He’s got an act on the stage that rivals Harpo Marx’s shenanigans. He’s a hyperactive child who is in constant motion, he uses a thumbs-up hand motion at every opportunity (even in the middle of a piece), and audibly talks, growls and sings his way through the concerto. If he’s not playing for a minute or two (even though the orchestra is), he turns to the audience and gives them the thumbs-up routine as if to say “Isn’t this great?” His playing at times reminded me of an over-eager freshman conservatory student who typically takes everything at breakneck speed because he hasn’t learned about subtlety and nesse yet. While Helfgott is a master at speed (in fact, that’s re- Cuban pianist Leonel Morales The stanbul State Symphony Orchestra hosted two pianists of worldwide fame, Leonel Morales and David Helfgott, within ve days of each other in early April, both presenting Rachmaninoff’s ‘Piano Concerto No. 3’ ally where he excels -- his extraordinarily nimble ngers toss off the famous “Flight of the Bumblebee” like it’s a simple warmup exercise), the other elements in the performance are suspect in two ways, in my opinion. Firstly, he uses the damper pedal so much that it makes the music bleed all over itself; secondly, he doesn’t know how to build a climax. Everything in Helfgott’s book is a climax. After a while, it starts to sound like so much hammering; if everything is loud, where can you go from there? Were there some good things? Denitely. Helfgott’s ability to punch out the structural points in this concerto, which often tends to ramble and wander, worked beautifully in the swimmy acoustics of Hagia Eirene. He does render a remarkably vivid performance, even if troublingly self-indulgent at times. Helfgott has enough substantial musical chops and even more oddball charisma to bring new people into the concert hall. In the rst half of the concert he played three solos including Franz Liszt’s dark and demonic “Dante” Sonata -- not exactly easy listening -- and there wasn’t a peep in the house as everyone gave him full attention. The team of student ushers who crammed themselves onto the balcony staircase turned off their cell phones, stopped talking and listened to Liszt and Rachmaninoff; that’s got to be better brain food than the latest hip-hop DJ’s hits. And the winner? Rachmaninoff. His glorious music reached new ears this week, and that’s the most important thing of all. CONFERENCE CONCERT Shahira Fahmy to speak at 25th ARKIMEET conference Ian Hobson to pay homage to Chopin with MKM program International award-winning young Egyptian architect Shahira Fahmy will be in stanbul next week, speaking at the 25th edition of the ARKIMEET conference series, which has been running since 2003. Fahmy, who also teaches at Cairo University, will speak about her designs and her outlook on architecture during the conference, organized by the Arkitera Architecture Center and scheduled for April 13 at Bahçeehir University’s Beikta campus. US-based English pianist, conductor and teacher Ian Hobson will be this month’s guest at the stanbul Recitals concert series, performing next week at the Mustafa Kemal Center (MKM). Hobson will present a program titled “Pure Chopin,” made in its entirety of pieces by Frédéric Chopin, marking the 200th anniversary of the Polish composer’s birth, in what will be his rst-ever appearance in stanbul. Hobson’s concert is scheduled for April 14 at 8 p.m. FILM SCREENING Turkish climbers’ Everest expedition on big screen “Hazr msn Everest?” (Everest, Are You Ready?), a 2008 documentary that chronicles the 2006 scaling of Mount Everest by a team of Turkish climbers, will be screened on Saturday at the Association of Documentary Filmmakers in Turkey’s (BSB) weekly program at the BSB center in stanbul’s Beyolu. The 65-minute lm, directed by Mustafa Temizta, will be shown at 2 p.m., followed by a panel discussion with the director. For reservations: (212) 245 9096 PHOTO Two rival performances of Rachmaninoff’s Balama player Cem Yldz ‘Folk 2.0’ from singerbalama player Cem Yldz and friends RUMEYSA KIGER STANBUL Turkish balama player and vocalist Cem Yldz, who is known for his many collaborations with Turkish artists such as Zülfü Livaneli, ükriye Tutkun and Yldz Tilbe, will be giving a concert tonight at stanbul’s French Cultural Center in Taksim together with French oud player Jean-Pierre Smadj and Uzbek musician Rustem Mahmoudov in support of their newly released album, “Hü.” “‘Hü’ is a kind of greeting in the Alevi and Mevlevi traditions, and some of the songs on the album include it in the lyrics,” Yldz explains in an interview with Today’s Zaman. “The album consists of Alevi folk songs and sayings. I rearranged these songs from Anatolia with my own interpretations. Unlike the widespread interpretations featuring a single balama and vocals, this album features an electronic sound that doesn’t damage the authentic structure of the original songs. We think everyone will like it,” he says, adding that they will perform on stage with the same team and instruments that they had in the studio in order to make sure the audience gets to hear the same sound as on the album. Featuring many well-known Turkish folk songs from Anatolia, the album consists of 12 songs, all of which are performed with the balama and a sprinkling of electronic music. “I picked the songs on the album, and following a year-long process we released the album. I aimed to create a unity among the songs and since I have been familiar with them for such a long time, I tried to nd compatible ones in terms of rhythm and melody,” he notes. Yldz, a graduate of the Turkish State Music Conservatory at stanbul Technical University (TÜ), also says that this was a project he wanted to do for a long time, since his university years. “While I was making the soundtrack to the Turkish movie ‘Baka Semtin Çocuklar’ [Children of the Other Side], I sang ‘Ötme Bülbül’ [Don’t Sing], and through this song this album concept was shaped. We did the soundtrack of the movie ‘Muro’ together with Smadj. We were very good friends and musically compatible. He was a musician whose music I already appreciated. I also performed in his projects before. I asked if he would like to join me in such a project, and he accepted,” he explained. Later on, Uzbek musician Mahmoudov, who has released seven albums in his home country, was also included in the project. “We were performing in various musical collaborations with Rustem for almost one-and-a-half years. He is very much familiar with the music of this region,” Yldz noted, adding that this collaboration is an outcome of friendship. “If we weren’t friends, we may not have been able to create this synergy even if we are all talented musicians. We have a lot of fun together while playing, recording at the studio and performing on the stage,” he added. Like Yldz’s band Orient Expressions, which brings together musicians from a wide range of musical genres, this project also gathers musicians with different artistic backgrounds. Asked whether it is hard to keep a balanced musical approach between so many different perspectives, Yldz says that both in the case of Orient Expressions and for the “Hü” album project, they started with recording and having fun during the process. “We were not concerned with founding a band or making an album, but in the end we achieved very good results. Both in the work of Orient Expressions and the album ‘Hü,’ all of us contributed with our voices and various colors. [Our differences] did not turn into a disadvantage, but an advantage. We improved a lot together,” he says. Bezar’s ‘Min Dît’ wins Grand Prix in Prague Groove Armada FESTIVAL Ting Tings, Groove Armada headline June’s One Love fest Indie pop duo The Ting Tings, electronic music duo Groove Armada and the hip-hop group De La Soul will headline this summer’s Efes Pilsen One Love Festival in stanbul, the organizers announced this week. German indie band The Whitest Boy Alive and British rockers Wild Beasts are also on the lineup of the festival’s ninth edition, slated for June 19-20 at Santralstanbul. Tickets for the festival went on sale on Thursday at Biletix sales points. “Min Dît/Ben Gördüm” (The Children of Diyarbakr), Kurdish-born lmmaker Miraz Bezar’s debut feature, won the Grand Prix at this year’s Febiofest International Film Festival Prague. “The Children of Diyarbakr,” which opened last week in several Turkish cities in limited release and which is vying for the Golden Tulip in the 29th stanbul Film Festival’s national competition, won rave reviews from critics and the festival jury in Prague, who praised the drama for its “strong story, surprising plot, wonderful cast … deep message,” according to the festival Web site. The lm beat 12 other European entrants in Febiofest’s New Europe Cinema competition, which also included the UK’s “The Scouting Book for Boys,” which grabbed second place, and the Bulgarian lm “Eastern Plays,” which won third place. The 17th Febiofest ran March 25-April 2. Set in the ’90s, “The Children of Diyarbakr” tells the story of two Kurdish siblings in Diyarbakr, who, after witnessing their parents’ murder, are forced to live on the streets of the city. stanbul Today’s Zaman 14 TODAY’S ZAMAN Have you seen that photo in which Nazi ofcials appear to be having a lot of fun? They’re standing on a wooden bridge, all posed in their own way; one man carries an accordion. They are so cheerful, you would even want to share their enjoyment. But it is a photo taken in a Nazi concentration camp. In that very particular moment, these “cheerful ofcials” may even be smelling the stench of burning human esh coming from the crematorium right in front of them. Who are these people? Are they monsters? I think they were the “normal,” “ordinary” men and women of their own time. If we could go back in time and interview each of them, we could get responses such as “We were following orders. We thought we were serving the best interests of our country,” and, “On that particular day, we thought we deserved to have a damned good open door party, we had so much fun.” If there was any person in that group who could not manage to entertain himself or failed to share in his friends’ “joy,” he would probably be labeled as “weird,” the “strange guy,” the “neurotic one.” In times of crisis, our “normal” man just follows orders without feeling any discomfort, whereas some men and women, and they always constitute a minority in any given society, disobey the orders and follow what their personal conscience dictates to them. The majority bend everything -- their religious beliefs, their ideologies, personal beliefs -- to follow “orders.” Only a small minority go in a different direction. Milgram experiment In 1961, psychologist Stanley Milgram performed an extremely interesting study at Yale University. The purpose of this test was to measure the willingness of study participants to obey an authority gure who instructed them to perform to acts that conicted with their personal conscience. Milgram invited experimenters from all walks of life. The real purpose of the experiment was disguised very cleverly. The experimenters were told that the university was doing a study to examine the effects of punishment on learning abilities. There were three people in the test room: Milgram (the authority gure), the “student” (his assistant) and a “teacher” (experimenter). The experimenters were told that they had an equal chance of playing the role of a student or a teacher, but the process was rigged so that all experimenters ended up playing the role of the “teacher.” PHOTO COULD YOU BE A GENOCIDE PERPETRATOR? AP PHOTO AP, MICHEL SPINGLER F R I D AY, A P R I L 9 , 2 0 1 0 A study conducted by psychologist Stanley Milgram in 1961 demostrated that the majority bend everything - -their religious beliefs, ideologies and personal beliefs - - to follow “orders.” ORHAN KEMAL CENGZ o.cengiz@todayszaman.com In times of crisis, our ‘normal’ man just follows orders without feeling any discomfort, whereas some men and women, and they always constitute a minority in any given society, disobey orders and follow what their personal conscience dictates to them. The majority bend their religious beliefs and personal beliefs to follow ‘orders’ “Teachers” were asked to administer increasingly severe electric shocks to the “learners” when they failed to answer questions correctly. At the beginning of the test, the “teachers” were given a low-dosage electric shock to show them that the shocks they would give the students were “real.” In fact, the cable attached to the “student” was not connected to anything. The “teacher” was not in a position to give any actual electricity, but the “student” was able to see how much “voltage” the teacher was giving him on a panel in front of him. The “student” started to grunt with feigned pain when he saw the teacher attempt to give him a 74-volt shock. He yelled, moaned, begged, cried and screamed as the test continued and the voltage increased. It is quite an interesting test, but I am not able to go into all the details of it due to my column’s space limitations. What happened at the end? Of course the “teachers” hesitated at some points, but with the approval of the “authority” gure they gave “deadly” electric volts (450) to the “student,” who was “begging” them to stop the “experiment.” During this trial, only a minority of “teachers” questioned the authority, while 65 percent of the “teach- ers” were willing to progress to the maximum voltage level. If the electricity they thought they were giving had been real, they would have killed innocent people. Obedient or disobedient Do you think this experiment would produce any different result in the community that you belong to? I do not think so. We all like to think of ourselves as “normal” people, but normal people can do terrible things when circumstances allow. In this Milgram test 65 percent of the experimenters lost their humanity in a couple of hours. Try to imagine what they could be capable of doing under “harsh” conditions and as a result of being subjected to long-term agitation and brainwashing. All these memories and thoughts came to my mind when I read Clive Owen’s article in The Times daily this Wednesday. Owen is an extremely talented movie star, but with this article of his, titled “In Rwanda, it’s as if genocide is still going on,” he also proved a gifted writer. Owen visited Rwanda very recently and in this article he shared his observations about the situation in Rwanda. Towards the end of his article he made some comments I found quite thought provoking. He said: “The overriding feeling I came away with was not that there was a group of awful people doing terrible things during that time, it’s that we, as human beings, have the potential to do it. You don’t have to have an evil disposition to get involved in the horrors of something like this. “People there were swept up into doing such things that, years later, they are still asking themselves why. To try to have a level of understanding of that is hugely important. It’s not about them and us. We have the potential to be those people. It’s a situation that develops that you have to be incredibly careful about.” Owen is right. We all should be very careful about what we are getting ourselves into at all times. But if we start to question how a human being can do such terrible things to another human being, we should start from the very beginning, from our families, from school. And we should question everything, starting with being a “normal” person. After all this deep questioning and after transforming our cultural codes accordingly, we may create a culture in which the majority would refuse to take part in this cheerful Nazi picnic. We should question the Nazi within. What do you think? Thýnk tank cafe´ Established on January 16, 2007 NO: 1030 Friday, April 9, 2010 Owner on Behalf of Feza Gazetecilik A.Þ ALÝ AKBULUT Chief Executive Officer EKREM DUMANLI Editor-in-Chief BÜLENT KENEÞ Managing Editors Ankara Representative Business News Editor Culture & Arts Editor Features Editor Chief Copy Editor General Manager Chief Marketing Officer Brand Marketing Responsible Manager and Representative of the Owner OKAN UDO BASSEY FATMA DEMÝRELLÝ EMRAH ÜLKER ABDULLAH BOZKURT ÝBRAHÝM TÜRKMEN YASEMÝN GÜRKAN PINAR VURUCU HELEN P. BETTS FARUK KARDIÇ MEHMET BURAK KÜRÜN HAYDAR DURUSOY ALÝ ODABAÞI Public Relations Contact Information: Publication Type: Periodical, Daily Headquarters: Today’s Zaman, 34194 Yenibosna, ÝSTANBUL. Phone Number: +90 212 454 1 444 Fax: 0212 454 14 97, Web Address: http://www.todayszaman.com, Printed at: Feza Gazetecilik A.Þ. Tesisleri. Advertisement Phone: +90 212 454 82 47, Fax: +90 212 454 86 33. Ankara Bureau Phone: +90 312 207 42 02 Today's Zaman abides by the rules of press ethics. OPINION HUGH POPE h.pope@todayszaman.com Turkey’s new ambton to stablze the Mddle East Turkey’s negotiations to join the European Union may have faltered of late, but, in a little-noticed turnaround, it is now using the same ideas that brought stability to post-World War II Europe in an effort to calm the bitter divisions of the Middle East. Syria, Jordan, Libya and Lebanon have recently joined Iran and other regional countries enjoying visa-free business and tourism with Turkey. Ankara, also doing all it can to champion the integration of regional infrastructure, has successfully boosted trade with its neighbors, and is now even bringing governments together for joint meetings of senior Cabinet ministers. This conversion to the basic EU idea of progress through interdependence is still in its infancy, partly because Middle Eastern regimes can fear that regional integration is a political threat. Turkey long shared this tendency too, until the end of the Cold War allowed its sense of security and commercial opportunity to rise. The centre-right Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government, in power since 2002, has developed even further the country’s growing ties with Russia, Africa and particularly Muslim neighbors in the Middle East. Early in this period, Turkey’s relationship with the European Union sped ahead. Despite many obstacles after 2005 -- including Europe’s Turkey-skeptics, the slow pace of Turkish domestic reform and the stand-off over Cyprus -- Turkey remains in a full negotiating process that could still lead to membership of the club in a decade or two. Already Europe’s biggest city according to Eurostat, Europeans have begun to see stanbul as a culturally European city in recent years due to its newly sophisticated shopping, nightlife and festivals. These apparently contradictory dynamics have reopened debate on the question of whether Turkey is becoming “European,” “Eurasian,” “neo-Ottoman” or even “Islamic.” Few take into account the limitations of Ottoman Empire analogies and the relatively predictable modern Turkish context. This debate is also too often a proxy for domestic political concerns -be it Europeans fearful about jobs, immigration and Islam, Arab commentators seeking sticks with which to beat their own governments, or pro-Israel activists seeking to bring US pressure to bear on Turkey. In fact, the EU and the West in general, contrary to what some Europeans think, need Turkey partly for the stabilizing impact that it wants to have among its eastern neighbors. Ankara’s priority is not a reborn caliphate, but the expansion of an economy that is already more than half the size of the whole of the Middle East and North African region. When Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoan makes over-enthusiastic statements on visiting Khartoum, Tehran or Damascus, he is partly thinking of the contracts to be signed by the hundreds of business supporters who accompany him. Similarly, when Erdoan visited the United States last December, the main public result was a joint committee to boost trade. AK Party leaders, even if they have left behind the Islamism of their youth, certainly feel a special warmth for fellow Muslim leaders. Some AK Party ofcials even talk of Erdoan as the “representative of 1.5 billion Muslims.” But Turkey as a whole is more interested in Europe and visitors to Turkish bookshops will search in vain for much about the Middle East. Turkey actually sells proportionally less to the Middle East than it did two decades ago, a gure that represents less than a quarter of its total exports. The EU has long accounted for half of Turkish trade and for nearly 90 percent of foreign investment in 2008. Some 4 million Turks live in Europe, vastly outnumbering the couple of hundred thousand in the Middle East. Turkish airline companies y frequently to a dense web of European cities, but serve more destinations inside Turkey than in Iran and Arab states. While two Turkish Airlines (THY) planes a day connect stanbul and Damascus, four go to Tel Aviv. Extraordinary praise in Arab newspapers for Erdoan when he confronts Israel should also not be mistaken for Arab endorsement of Turkish regional hegemony. Arab envoys to Turkey say they are happy to see a fellow Sunni Muslim state act as spokesperson for their concerns and as a counter-balance to the rejectionist deance of Shia Muslim Iran. But they say their governments can feel uneasy at Erdoan’s outbursts of anti-Israel populism and that they would reject any Turkish effort to do more than offer its good ofces in regional disputes. Turkey’s rising interest in its neighbors persuaded its leading think tank, the Turkish Economic and Social Studies Foundation (TESEV), to ask 2,000 people in seven Arab countries what they thought. In November it published results that found that threequarters of respondents were in favor of a high-prole role for Turkey in IsraeliPalestinian and other Middle Eastern issues. But 57 percent said they wanted to see “a Muslim country” in the EU, and 64 percent believed that Turkey’s EU negotiation process had a positive impact on its role in the Arab world -including 62 percent in Saudi Arabia. Turkey also believes EU ideas can help heal the divisions of the region. The recent popularity of Turkish sitcoms and singers in the Arab world is not just because the two have grown closer once again. In a Turkey in which EU-inspired reforms and competition have helped open up society, the economy and culture, Turkish music and lms are now simply much better made -- and win more prizes in Europe too. *This article is adapted from one rst published in al-Majalla. Daðýstan Çetinkaya dagistancetinkaya@todayszaman.com.tr COLUMNS TODAY’S ZAMAN 15 FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 2010 Into the storm Many readers complain that they are now beginning to lose track of what is happening around the wave of arrests and investigations in the military and the developing ght within the judiciary about their proceedings. I do not blame them. At this stage it has become difcult even for we experienced journalists to keep track of who is who and what is what. But, paradoxically, the more mesmerizing and complicated it becomes, the clearer the picture. We are getting closer, day by day, to the quiet after the storm. The fate of such times is that it may, for some outsiders and foreigners, hold traps and temptations in falling prey to manipulations. The blaming of journalists in Turkey for acting as a ock for manipulation may be justied if one is talking about colleagues who have been conducting their duties with organic or ideological links to the corporatist state structures, but not for others. Those others have spent their lives refusing to play such games of “make believe” at the cost of being marginalized or unemployed, or, at worst, in a prison or a graveyard. This reached its peak in the late ’80s and remained for the entire ’90s. So, if many of them pay extra attention and are fully engaged in the burning issues and unfolding stories surrounding the once-monolithic structures of a sort of loose Soviet-style state, it is simply because their ETYEN MAHÇUPYAN YAVUZ BAYDAR y.baydar@todayszaman.com memory is very good and their experience of the past is very valuable. For decades, this type of reporter or editor, who worked in a non-transparent environment, developed greater skills than their colleagues in Western democracies by meticulously putting bits and pieces together, in unnamed solidarity with other decent colleagues, to understand and tell the truth. Once they were called “Marxists,” “traitors” or “separatists,” and are now being accused of being “liberals” or “Islamists” or what not, but to most of them none of it matters; they know that they have been acting as journalists in good faith to the profession. “There is only one motto for us journalists in these times,” I told a colleague (who despite his sincere search for truth himself has been labeled as a “staunch secularist”) in a candid discussion recently, “to proceed with conscience and fairness, but also with cold-blooded ra- No Comment tionality.” Winds will blow from every direction and only an honest effort to complete the picture of this puzzle called Turkey can be the powerful response to all suspicion, labeling and propaganda. As the Turkish media is divided between honesty and dishonesty, what seems to have made our readers and the general audience of Turkey confused in the recent twists and turns about the military and the judiciary need to be claried. The details are in the reporting of, for example, this paper. The high military command and the high judiciary, disguised parallel structures of the “state within,” are crumbling, together and internally. These two “inner state” structures, as opposed to a single party, have brought about the major cracks and rifts. Two major stories are unfolding. One of them is the row between a former top commander, Hilmi Özkök, and a former army commander, Çetin Doan, who is suspected of planning to stage a coup some seven years ago. Özkök, who has known of coup plans and averted them, knows a lot. Doan, regardless of being involved in clandestine activity, represents a powerful, continuous clique within the army, which want to keep it as a dominant player in politics. Putting everything in the context of an “institutional watershed” may be quite helpful, to avoid being lured into details. Then, one will also be SEOUL, REUTERS e.mahcupyan@todayszaman.com AL BULAÇ a.bulac@todayszaman.com The regme’s character The republican administration had a unique “character” to begin with. The rst Chamber of Deputies (Parliament), which reected Turkey’s pluralistic structure, was dissolved, and Mustafa Kemal Atatürk set up the Second Chamber of Deputies with men he personally chose. But that was not enough. He also developed a small parliamentary group that was loyal to him and authorized them to make the most important decisions. In 1925, in other words less than two years after the new regime was founded, freedom of speech was severely restricted by the Takrir-i Sükun (Law on the Reinstatement of Public Order) for good. The opposition was silenced, and the people were oppressed. They all stepped aside from politics. The opposition that had been oppressed was not made up of religious people. On the contrary, they were people who had been raised in a Western culture, had liberal ideas and defended the existence of legitimate politics. This led to the emergence of a “republic” that made an authoritarian mentality commonplace, limited the public sphere by way of nationalism and secularism and created a new privileged class around the leader. After a while, advancing and getting rich through benets became a normal part of the system. Instead of protesting it, society tried to get a share of the prots. So “democracy” in Turkey meant sharing the privileges in the monopolistic structure with the people. People entered politics for this purpose, and deputies turned into businessmen who were only concerned with the returns on their investments. On the other hand, the administrative staff around the statist elite was concerned that the administrative privilege they possessed would become systematic. With the global conjuncture appropriate, the regime was predicated on the “domestic threat” concept. Using the threat of communism as a pretext, a left-wing opposition was not allowed to exist. Due to its secular and “pro-change” nature, Kemalism was presented as the “real” left politics. In this way, all parties except the Republican People’s Party (CHP) were declared either separatist and illegitimate or rightist and non-modern. As a result, Kurds and religious people, in other words, the majority of the people, lost the opportunity to conduct politics with their own identities. All other parties either became like the CHP over time or they were closed down. While the political spectrum looked like it represented the nation because people voted in the elections, it actually was never representative of social demands and choices. Political parties became eager to defend the limitation of rights and powers and statism in order to stay alive. To avoid risks, political parties had to stay out of important national matters and consider them issues that were “above politics.” In brief, the “character” of the republican regime in Turkey mandated a dual structure. The responsibility of politics, as it was known, was to improve economic and social conditions. Foreign policy, security, secularism, personal rights and freedoms were issues that were “above politics” and so had to be entrusted to an authority “above politics.” But all these issues implied hard-to-change strategies that made the state’s continuity a fundamental factor. Furthermore, all of these were areas that required expertise beyond social knowledge and opinions and had aspects that were state secrets. During the period of a single-party government, the dual structure did not pose a problem because the “above politics” area was left to Atatürk. Then there was a transitional period between 1938 and 1946, when the CHP and its new leader, smet nönü, became authorized. But the world was pushing Turkey to adopt a more pluralistic system, and there was a risk that the CHP would not remain in power. There was a need to institutionalize the Atatürk-nönü line and make its above politics status permanent. The army, which was already very interested in assuming this kind of position, was the only institution that could manage and carry out this function. In this way, Turkey switched to a military tutelage regime. The multi-party “democracy” was just a facade of the regime. The regime was under the military tutelage’s domination with respect to all important issues. Therefore, unlike Latin American countries, Turkey hinted at a politics/military relationship. The army staged a coup not to establish a new order but to prevent the current order from changing. It is for this reason that as soon as the situation returned to “normal,” they withdrew from power on their own. That is because the “normal” order was a tutelage system that rendered them “above politics” and that put them in charge of the country anyway. The ideal was to have a civil government that wouldn’t make a coup necessary, but if civilians overstepped their area of freedom, a coup would be essential. This structure was maintained until the 1980 coup. The 1982 Constitution was written under the assessment that staging coups was no longer easy, so the aim was to make military tutelage “legal.” In this way, there would be no need to stage a coup because the higher judiciary would protect the regime anyway. Nowadays, that period is coming to an end as well. Turkey is slowly getting rid of its tutelage system. The “character” of the republic is changing. able to understand a high number of judges’ (many more than prosecutors) efforts to shed light on how much of the country’s powerful institution of the army is (ideologically) corrupt. The recent attempt to arrest some 25 generals and admirals on active duty raised the concern that the percentage might be higher than suspected. The second story involves the judiciary. Increasingly divided and under threat of becoming dysfunctional, part of the judiciary is now positioning itself against the executive and legislative powers and seeks to create a new alliance with its traditional co-traveller: the high command. The rift that widened after the emdinli and Erzincan incidents and grew with the recent obstruction of many high-rank ofcers being arrested and the removal of three “special” prosecutors from the Sledgehammer case by the stanbul Chief Public Prosecutor tells us about the state of the rule of law and equality before justice too. None of this is unusual. The privileged will resist or seek consensus. Cases such as the resistance in the Deep South of the US in the early ’60s or the changes during the transition from apartheid in South Africa come to mind as similar situations. But, here the fronts are sharper, the trenches deeper and the imposed state ideology much stiffer. We will have to expect more storms and hope that they will clear the air. Mardin fatwa Not t to prnt NICOLE POPE n.pope@todayszaman.com A leaked classied US military video, published on the Internet by the whistleblowing organization Wikileaks, is causing a buzz in cyberspace. It shows a shooting incident that took place in a suburb of Baghdad in 2007 and involves the crew of a US Apache helicopter apparently shooting at armed insurgents. In fact, two Reuters reporters were among the dozen people killed in the shooting, which also wounded two children. The excitement of the crew is obvious in the sound recording that accompanies the images. Unless you have a particularly thick skin, you will inevitably be affected, and horried, by the soldiers’ apparent enthusiasm for their job: “Light’em all up,” followed by a congratulatory “Nice!” when the target is hit. “Look at those dead bastards.” Sadly, these exchanges are not out of the ordinary. Anyone who has ever been near a conict zone knows that this detached and casual tone in the face of death is fairly characteristic of war speak the world over. A potent mix of fear and adrenaline causes a high, and military training ensures a level of dehumanization needed to ensure that soldiers can shoot at fellow human beings without hesitation or delay. Civilians often get caught up in the crossre, but war also has a lasting impact on the combatants who have their ngers on the trigger. Governments are usually quite successful at keeping a tight lid on the realities of the front, and veterans, scarred by their experiences, are often reluctant to talk about life on the front line. The 17-minute recording recently released by Wikileaks gives the general public a glimpse of the reality of war, which differs from the carefully worded rules of engagement published by military authorities. Nor does it resemble the sterilized accounts reected in the media, particularly the images shown on television, edited to remove gory aspects that might upset viewers watching the news during their evening meal. Incidentally, war correspondents too can become addicted to the buzz of war. In Turkey, too, over the years, reporting on the conict in the Southeast was carefully managed. The Turkish media still devote plenty of air time and column inches to soldiers’ funerals, but I can remember few in-depth accounts of the long-term physical and psychological impact of the conict on the soldiers themselves in the media. Nadire Mater’s excellent book “Mehmet’in Kitab” (Voices from the Front), based on interviews with veterans, revealed some unsavory truths about the ghting but also about the veterans’ difcult reinsertion in society after they returned. Mater was prosecuted, but eventually acquitted, for lifting a veil on a reality the authorities didn’t want the public to see. That this visual evidence of the Iraq incident is, of course, another interesting aspect of this story. When Reuters news agency tried to obtain footage of the incident that resulted in the death of two of its employees, the Pentagon refused to comply. But in the Internet era, preventing leaks has become much harder. The US National Security Council may have branded Wikileaks a threat to national security, but the whistleblowers found out about this, too. If mainstream media outlets have lost some of the muscle needed to challenge governments and special interests, the Internet is offering new opportunities, although sifting solid information from tainted noise can be a challenge in itself. In Turkey, it is the Taraf newspaper, rather than the Internet, that has channeled most of the revelations that have dominated the news in recent months. Little is known about the award-winning Wikileaks except for the identity of its founder, Julian Assange. Anonymity is perhaps what makes the organization so inuential, as well as obvious care that its editors take in ensuring the veracity of the news they release. So far, the organization has been involved in major scoops ranging from toxic dumps in Africa to e-mail correspondence between climate change scientists and nancial scandals. But squeezed nancially, Wikileaks temporarily suspended publication late last year, although it is said to have hundreds of thousands of controversial documents in its possession. The release of the Baghdad air strike video will, hopefully, convince potential funders that the services it offers are of crucial interest to the public at large. The England-based Global Center for Renewal and Guidance (GCRG) and Canopus Consulting organized a symposium in Mardin on March 27-28. The topic of the symposium was the fatwa delivered by Ibn Taymiyya to the Muslims in Mardin. The fatwa is allegedly used by al-Qaeda to justify “terrorist activities.” The fatwa was delivered in 1302 in response to a question from someone in Mardin, which at the time was under Mongolian invasion. The factor that played the main role in the fatwa was “military occupation.” The nal declaration of the symposium stated that the actions of terror groups are not jihad, but arbitrary murder and announced that “Ibn Taymiyya’s fatwa concerning Mardin can under no circumstances be appropriated and used as evidence for leveling the charge of kufr [unbelief] against fellow Muslims, waging revolt against rulers, deeming their lives and property freely accessible to Muslims, terrorizing those who enjoy safety and security, acting treacherously towards those who live [in harmony] with fellow Muslims or with whom fellow Muslims live [in harmony] via the bond of citizenship and peace.” According to reports in the media, this joint declaration by the scholars who convened in Mardin abrogates Ibn Taymiyya’s fatwa. There is nothing in the declaration that suggests this. What it says is that it is incorrect to use the text of the fatwa to justify the actions of some groups. According to other comments in the media, various political groups and organizations engaged in armed revolt against the administrations of their respective countries due to their whimsical attitude and actions. This is not mentioned in the fatwa, either. As for the concepts of Dar al-Islam (house of Islam) and Dar al-Harb (house of war), they point to completely different historical and social contexts. It is difcult to create a fatwa on revolting against administrations using Ibn Taymiyya’s fatwa because he did not accept kufr (unbelief) as a reason to wage war (see “Bat’nn bn Teymiyye Yanlgs” [The West’s Misconception of Ibn Taymiyya] by Ahmet Kurucan, Zaman, April 3, 2010.) The fatwa only concerns the liberation of Muslim territories under military occupation. The nal declaration undersigned by those who participated in the symposium does not mention this issue at all. Yet this was exactly what the people of Mardin wanted Ibn Taymiyya to give a fatwa on. The question was this: Should the people of an occupied nation resist or surrender? Of course, Ibn Taymiyya would and ultimately did say, “Those who have the strength should show resistance.” According to Islamic jurisprudence, one fatwa does not repeal another fatwa. According to prominent Islamic scholar Hayrettin Karaman, who has expressed his view on the matter, only ijma (consensus) can make a fatwa or ijtihad invalid: “If an enemy occupies a Muslim country or part of a Muslim country, attempts to occupy or attacks a Muslim country, there is no question that all Muslims who can re a gun have an obligation to ght back. Of course, they will need to show resistance and repel the attack.” (“Fetva Kaldrlamaz” (A fatwa cannot be abrogated), Yeni afak April 1, 2010). There is no fatwa or ijma that prohibits resistance against occupation or war against occupying forces. Ibn Taymiyya insists on showing resistance to occupation. He also fought against the Mongols like a solider. Since the war took place during the month of Ramadan, he also issued a fatwa that people could break their fast due to the war. So then the question is, are there similarities between the people of Mardin during that time and Muslims living in Palestine, Iraq and Afghanistan today? If we take “military occupation” as the common ground, then yes there are similarities. If Ibn Taymiyya was alive today, he would have delivered the same fatwa to the Palestinians, Iraqis and Afghans on showing resistance as well. “Resistance” against occupation is one thing, “terror” is another. Terror is the “killing of innocent civilians.” Whoever kills a civilian, for whatever reason, has committed a crime of terror. It doesn’t matter if this crime is committed by individuals, organizations or states, it is still a crime. In this case, if the actions of some organization against innocent civilians are a “crime of terror,” then the crime against civilians committed by the Israeli state in Palestine, American soldiers in Iraq and NATO forces in Afghanistan is an act of terror. Terror feeds on terror. Terrorists do not have difculty in nding “legitimacy” for their actions from one source or another. What we need to do is end all terror and occupations and establish a more peaceful world. 16 TODAY’S ZAMAN LEISURE F RI DAY, APRI L 9 , 2 0 1 0 tv gude Gregorian Calendar: 09 April 2010 C.E. Hijri Calendar: 24 Rabi al-Thani 1431 A.H. Hebrew Calendar: 25 Nisan 5770 calendar@todayszaman.com move gude “Clash of the Titans” THE IMAGINARIUM OF DOCTOR PARNASSUS ANKARA: Kzlay Büyülüfener 12:15 14:30 16:45 19:00 21:15 HERKES M ALDATIR? STANBUL: Bakrköy Cinebonus Capacity 11:00 13:00 15:15 17:30 19:45 22:00 23:00 00:15 Beyolu AFM Fita 10:30 12:40 15:00 17:20 19:40 22:00 00:20 Caddebostan AFM 11:00 13:25 15:50 18:30 21:15 23:40 Kadköy Rexx 11:30 13:45 16:15 18:45 21:15 ANKARA: Bilkent Cinebonus 10:45 13:00 15:15 17:30 19:45 22:00 00:15 Cinebonus Panora 11:55 14:15 16:40 18:55 21:20 00:00 ZMR: Cinebonus Konak Pier 10:30 12:45 15:00 17:15 19:30 21:45 00:00 ANTALYA: Cinebonus Migros 11:45 14:00 16:15 18:30 21:30 00:00 Crossword REUTERS Movemax MGM Moves “Survivor,” a palm-sized 1938 painting by Frida Kahlo. The long-unseen painting of a pre-Hispanic idol goes on sale in May at Christie’s when it will reappear in public for the first time in 72 years. Cem Kzltu Mr. DploMAT! 22 26 28 30 31 34 36 38 39 40 41 43 47 48 50 52 53 54 56 58 61 62 63 64 PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER 1075 c.kzltug@todayszaman.com 06:30 Dead Man's Gun Season 1/11: Next Of Kin 07:20 Dead Man's Gun Season 1/12: Death Warrant 08:05 Cycles South 09:35 Love Field 11:20 Rosmunda E Alboino (Sword Of The Conqueror) 13:00 Bound For Glory 15:30 Annie Hall 17:05 Louis Armstrong: Chicago Style 18:20 The Hallelujah Trail 20:45 Valley Girl 22:25 American Friends 00:00 Sitting Bull 01:45 Love Field 03:30 Annie Hall 05:05 Valley Girl Actonmax 06:30 Night Moves 08:15 New Tales Of The Flying Fox 09:55 Memphis Belle 11:45 Secret Service Of The Imperial Court 13:20 Checkered Flag Or Crash 15:00 Seduced 16:45 Mayday - 40, 000 Ft! 18:25 Mad City 20:25 Fair Game (1995) 22:00 Highlander II: The Quickening 23:45 Angels Of The City 01:20 Year Of The Gun 03:15 Striking Distance rado gude Sudoku TRT Toursm Rado HARD EASY 3 1 9 6 6 5 4 5 4 5 6 2 3 1 6 8 1 4 7 9 4 1 2 6 9 2 9 1 7 2 3 6 EASY 21 42 steakhouse patron Part of many hotel names “Imperial” follower Slender dagger Skirt’s edge Big name in small swimsuits South American fleece source Less of an illusion Hens, but not roosters Ledger entry “Poly” attachment Bit of pocket change One-eyed god of myth “All ___ Jazz” “Desperate Housewives” network © 2010 Universal Uclick www.upuzzles.com 1 2 2 3 6 9 5 7 4 2 4 5 3 4 8 5 6 HOW TO PLAY? : The objective of the game is to fill all the blank squares in a game with the correct numbers. There are three very simple constraints to follow. In a 9 by 9 square Sudoku game: travelers’ s.o.s 13 instrument Acknowledge applause Haggard woman Open, as a bolted door Reagan or Christian Variety of whale Extinct kiwi relative They make things happen Like many a home improvement project, for short Govt. product-tester Emulated Rudolph Priest’s assistant Talks foolishly Hot tub Unlikely 08:05 Das Boot 11:30 Kuffs 13:15 Pretty In Pink 14:55 The Cable Guy 16:35 Michael 18:20 Blood Work 20:15 Dave 22:05 A Crime 23:50 Salir Pitando 01:25 Bright Lights, Big City 03:15 Blood Work 05:05 The Closer You Get 07:35 Doubting Thomas: Lies And Spies 09:05 Felicity: An American Girl Adventure 10:35 The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button 13:25 Without A Paddle 15:15 Growing Pains 2: Return Of The Seavers 16:55 To Be Fat Like Me 18:40 Times Talks: Christian Bale, Christopher Nolan 20:00 The Dark Knight 22:45 A Home At The End Of The World 00:35 Arachnia 02:05 The Strangers 03:30 Growing Pains 2: Return Of The Seavers 05:55 To Be Fat Like Me 7 3 HARD MIN DIT/BEN GÖRDÜM Goldmax PHOTO been granted that had allowed her to survive the volatility of her personal existence,” Grimberg wrote in an essay in the art auction catalog. In recent years, Frida Kahlo has grown to be a prominent woman artist, with retrospectives at London’s Tate Gallery, Minneapolis’ Walker Art Center and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. A major Kahlo show opens on April 30 at Berlin’s Martin-Gropius-Bau museum. Her paintings infrequently come to market since many Kahlo works are in Mexico and by law, can’t be exported, Garza said. The last Kahlos sold at auction were two drawings in 2007. He said the highest ever prize paid for Kahlo was $5.6 million in May 2006. Christie’s estimates the price for “Survivor” is between $100,000 and $150,000. “We are delighted to add to the scholarship of the artist by locating a long lost work,” said Garza, who said he learned of it when its owner contacted him to sell it in January. “Survivor” was acquired in 1938 by Walter Pach, an influential critic famed in art history as a key organizer of New York’s 1913 Armory Show, considered a watershed by introducing Americans to the work of many avant-garde artists. “Pach was a close friend of the Riveras,” Garza said. “Pach’s family offered us ‘Survivor’ as well as a group of Rivera sketches which we’re also selling at the auction.” New York Reuters A long-unseen Frida Kahlo painting of a pre-Hispanic idol goes on sale next month at Christie’s when it will reappear in public for the first time in 72 years, the auction house said. “Survivor,” which sold in 1938 at a New York gallery, has since remained out of sight, its image unpublished, before submission this year for auction at Christie’s Latin American art sale on May 26. “Just when you think everything has been said and done on Kahlo, you come upon this treasure, which really has never changed hands, staying with the same family,” said Christie’s Latin American art chief Virgilio Garza. “Survivor” is one of the few Kahlo paintings to focus on a pre-Columbian idol, he said. It shows a standing warrior figure, mottled brown, with a white headdress. The idol stands on a field with an abandoned house on a ridge, set against a sky churning with blacks, blues, grays and yellows. Art historian Salomon Grimberg says the warrior symbolizes Kahlo’s resilience for surviving a tumultuous personal life. At the time, Kahlo was separated from Diego Rivera, another top Mexican painter and waiting for a divorce, according to Christie’s. She had discovered his affair with her sister. A palm-sized painting, “Survivor” is set in ornate tin frame typical of religious votive paintings in Oaxaca, a southern state which is predominantly Indian. “Survivor is an ex-voto, done to express her gratitude for the miracle that had STANBUL: Beyolu AFM Fita 11:30 14:00 16:30 19:05 21:35 00:05 AFM stinye Park 11:10 13:45 16:20 19:00 21:40 00:15 Caddebostan AFM 11:10 13:45 16:10 18:40 21:10 23:30 Kadköy Rexx 11:00 12:15 13:30 14:45 16:00 17:15 18:30 19:45 21:00 ANKARA: Ata On Tower 12:00 14:00 15:15 16:15 17:30 18:30 19:45 20:45 22:00 23:00 00:00 Bilkent Cinebonus 14:00 16:30 19:00 21:30 00:00 ZMR: AFM Forum Bornova 16:15 21:15 23:50 13:45 18:45 Cinebonus Konak Pier 11:30 14:00 16:30 18:55 21:30 00:00 ANTALYA: AFM Laura 11:00 12:00 13:15 14:30 15:45 17:00 18:15 19:30 20:45 21:45 23:15 Cinebonus Migros 16:45 19:15 21:45 00:15 14:15 12 18:10 The Tonight Show With Jay Leno 19:20 The Big Bang Theory 20:00 Smallville 21:00 ER 22:00 The Host 00:30 The Tonight Show With Jay Leno 01:30 Smallville 02:30 ER 03:15 The Host 05:15 ER Rare Frda Kahlo pantng of dol to reappear at aucton CLASH OF THE TITANS 51 Twist into a knot 55 Thickly tangled, as hair 57 Split ___ soup 59 Place to gambol 60 Crooked poet’s conclusion? 64 Biblical murder victim 65 Fancy bathroom fixture 66 Feeling fit 67 Make a tunnel 68 Ammonia compound 69 Skillful server on the court 70 Dermatologist’s diagnosis 71 Top man in the choir? 72 Sea salts DOWN 1 Severe sore throat 2 Gateway 3 Chinese martial art 4 Yiddish jerk (Var.) 5 Spat locale 6 It may involve dolls and pins 7 Omani, e.g. 8 Land in the water 9 Demand at a breakup 10 Foul-smelling 11 Ear examination E2 08:00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show 09:00 The Rachael Ray Show 10:00 The Martha Stewart Show 11:00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show 12:00 The Rachael Ray Show 14:00 The Martha Stewart Show 15:00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show 16:00 The Rachael Ray Show 17:00 The Martha Stewart Show 19:00 The Ellen DeGeneres Show 20:00 Two and a Half Men 21:00 Without a Trace 22:15 Later With Jools Holland 23:00 The Tonight Show with Jay Leno 00:00 South Park 01:00 Five Days 02:00 Without a Trace 03:00 Later With Jools Holland 04:00 Two and a Half Men 05:00 The Tonight Show with Jay Leno on May 5, 1945. Contrary to the situation in other countries under German occupation during the war, most Danish institutions continued to function relatively unaffected until 1943. The Danish government remained in the country in an uneasy relationship between a democratic and a totalitarian system until German authorities dissolved the government following a wave of strikes and sabotage. Today is a national day in Iraq that commemorates the fall of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein from power in 2003. The Iraqi government and military collapsed within three weeks of the beginning of the US-led 2003 invasion of Iraq on March 20. Baghdad fell to US-led forces on April 9, thus sealing the fate of the three-decade-old Saddam regime. Saddam was tried and found guilty by the Iraqi Special Tribunal and was hanged on Dec. 30, 2006. CNBC-E STANBUL: Bakrköy Cinebonus Capacity 11:30 14:00 16:30 19:00 21:30 AFM stinye Park 10:50 13:30 16:20 19:10 22:00 Maçka Cinebonus 11:30 14:00 16:30 19:00 21:30 00:00 Kozyata Cinebonus Palladium 11:00 13:30 16:15 19:00 21:45 ANKARA: AFM Ankamall 11:05 13:50 16:45 19:30 22:10 Cinebonus Panora 11:00 13:45 15:45 16:30 19:15 21:00 22:00 00:00 ZMR: AFM Passtel 10:45 13:30 16:15 19:00 21:45 23:00 ANTALYA: Özdilek Cinetime 11:15 13:45 16:15 18:45 21:15 23:45 ACROSS 1 Places for rent (Abbr.) 5 Prove useful 10 Kitchen utensils 14 Master of the double take? 15 Like Hagar 16 Sundance home 17 Like the Reaper 18 Australian eucalyptus eater 19 Puff on a cigarette 20 Words from an optimistic poet? 23 “Um, no thanks” 24 Friend of Morpheus and Trinity 25 Author Jong and others 27 Out on ___ (in a fix) 29 Eyebrowraising 32 Mud brick 33 No exemplar of grace 35 Texas strike 37 Hawaiian food 38 What a poet gets from a plane? 43 In need of a doctor 44 Mo. for fools 45 Group of scouts 46 Hide, as loot 49 Balaam’s mount On this day in 1963, Winston Churchill became the very first person to become an honorary citizen of the United States. A ceremony was held in his honor at the White House, where US President John F. Kennedy proclaimed him an honorary citizen, but Churchill was unable to attend. To become an honorary US citizen, one must have done things of exceptional merit and then a resolution must be drafted and voted upon by the US Congress. Today is Martyrs’ Day in Tunisia. This day honors and commemorates those who fought for freedom against French rule, which resulted in Tunisian independence in 1956. On this day in 1940, Nazi German troops began their occupation of Denmark under Operation Weserübung. The occupation lasted until German forces withdrew at the end of World War II, following their surrender to Allied Forces Today Georgia celebrates the anniversary of its declaration of independence. On this day in 1991, shortly before the collapse of the USSR, Georgia held a referendum on independence and the Georgian nation decided to become an independent country. Its independence was finalized on Dec. 25, 1991. Today is Araw ng Kagitingan (Day of Valor), also known as “Bataan Day,” a national holiday in the Philippines. On April 9, 1942, 12,000 American soldiers surrendered to the Japanese at the tip of the Bataan Peninsula, which juts into Manila Bay in the Philippines. For nearly five months, the troops fought ferociously against overwhelming odds until they ran out of food, medical supplies and ammunition. As prisoners of war, they and thousands of Filipinos were taken to a camp run by the Japanese army. This grueling series of marches is now known as the Bataan Death March. The captured soldiers are honored on this day every year. 9 6 1 7 4 5 1 8 7 3 2 9 6 6 2 7 9 5 1 4 8 3 3 8 9 4 2 6 1 7 5 9 3 5 1 6 7 8 4 2 7 4 6 2 9 8 3 5 1 2 1 8 3 4 5 7 6 9 8 9 4 5 3 2 6 1 7 1 7 2 6 8 9 5 3 4 5 6 3 7 1 4 9 2 8 3 7 6 8 9 4 5 1 2 5 1 4 7 3 2 6 9 8 9 2 8 5 1 6 7 4 3 4 8 1 6 5 7 2 3 9 2 3 7 4 8 9 1 5 6 6 9 5 3 2 1 4 8 7 1 4 9 2 6 8 3 7 5 8 6 3 1 7 5 9 2 4 7 5 2 9 4 3 8 6 1 Every row of 9 numbers must include all digits 1 through 9 in any order Every column of 9 numbers must include all digits 1 through 9 in any order Every 3 by 3 subsection of the 9 by 9 square must include all digits 1 through 9 Ambulance: 112 Fire: 110 171 Police: 155156 Maritime: 158 Unknown numbers: 118 80 Turkish Airlines: 444 0 849 U.S. Embassy: 0312 455 5555 U.S. Consulate: 0212 2513602-3-4 Russian Embassy: 0312 439 2122 Russian Consulate: 0212 244 1693-2610 British Embassy: 0312 455 3344 British Consulate: 0212 293 7540 German Embassy: 0312 455 5100 German Consulate: 0212 334 61 00 French Embassy: 0312 455 4545 French Consulate: 0212 292 4810-11 Indian Embassy: 0312 438 2195 Pakistani Embassy: 0312 427 1410 Austrian Embassy: 0312 419 0431-33 Austrian Consulate: 0212 262 9315 Belgian Embassy: 0312 446 8247 Belgian Consulate: 0212 243 3300 Egyptian Embassy: 0312 426 1026 Egyptian Consulate: 0212 263 6038 Israeli Embassy: 0312 446 3605 00:00 Identification and Programming 00:25 Music 07:25 Identification and Programming 07:30 Music 08:30 News (English, French, German) 08:40 Live Broadcast (English, German, Russian) 10:30 News (English, French, German, Greek, Russian) 10:45 Live Broadcast (English, German, Russian) 12:30 News (English, French, German, Greek, Russian) 12.45 Live Broadcast (English, German, Russian) 15:00 News (English, French, German, Greek, Russian) 15:15 Live Broadcast (English, German, Russian) 18:30 News (English, French, German, Greek, Russian) 18:45 Live Broadcast (English, French) 21:30 News (English, French, German, Greek, Russian) 21:45 Live Broadcast (English, Greek) 23:58 Identification Broadcast Areas: Alanya FM 94.4 Ankara FM 100.3 Antalya FM 92.1 Ayvalik FM 101.1 Bodrum FM 97.4 Fethiye FM 103.1 Istanbul FM 101.6 Izmir FM 101.6 Kalkan FM 105.9 Kapadokya FM 103.0 Kuadasi FM 101.9 Marmaris FM 101.0 Pamukkale FM 101.0 Trabzon FM 101.5 CONTINUATION TODAY’S ZAMAN 17 FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 2010 Babu certified Sledgehammer meeting as ‘non-routine’ tely hospitalized at the Gülhane Military Academy Hospital (GATA). A panel of judges at the stanbul 12th High Criminal Court has, however, ordered his rearrest. He remains at the hospital. The document shows that Gen. Babu was disturbed by the course of the Selimiye seminar. According to a note the military chief wrote on the document, Gen. Doan chose to mention the real names of individuals and institutions during the seminar. However, the seminar was supposed to be an exercise during which members of the military were to prepare a “scenario” of an external threat against Turkey and the TSK’s response in the face of such a threat. The scenario was supposed to involve pretend individuals and institutions rather than real ones. The Sledgehammer plan was prepared under the Protocol on Cooperation for Security and Public Order (EMASYA), which allowed military operations to be carried out for inter- contnued from page 1 The seminar was held at the General Staff’s Selimiye barracks in March 2003. The General Staff denied the existence of the document on Thursday. The Sledgehammer Security Operation Plan was drafted shortly after the AK Party came to power. The mastermind of the plan was apparently retired Gen. Doan. According to the plan, the military intended to systematically cause chaos in society through violent events that would lead to a military takeover. Among the planned incidents were bombings at the Fatih and Beyazt mosques in stanbul and crashing a Turkish jet after a dogght with Greek jets. The discovery of the plot led to the arrests of dozens of active duty and retired members of the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK) on charges of attempting to destroy the government. Gen. Doan was arrested in late February, but was released last week in a controversial ruling. He was immedia- the possibility of an external threat. In late January the General Staff posted a statement on its Web site that said: “The plan seminar in question was part of the General Staff’s operations program for the years 2003-2006. The aim of the seminar is to develop operation plans and train TSK staff against an external threat to Turkey. The seminar concerned a scenario that addressed a period of increasing tension in the country.” The statement also accused the media of polluting information through groundless allegations against the armed forces. The General Staff, however, failed to explain why the suspected coup plan mentioned bombings at the Beyazt and Fatih mosques in stanbul. The statement also failed to explain why the coup document aimed to create tension between Turkish and Greek military aircraft, culminating in a Turkish jet crashing after a skirmish with Greek jets. stanbul Today’s Zaman nal security matters under certain conditions without authorization from civilian authorities. The protocol was abolished in February. In the document, Gen. Babu complains that Gen. Doan insisted on setting up the Sledgehammer scenario using real names and institutions although it ran contrary to seminar regulations. The military chief also points to potential problems that could arise from such a practice. The military chief notes that some participants at the seminar backed Gen. Doan’s decision to use real names and institutions in the scenario. “Gen. Doan said he would remove this mayor and that state ofcer from his position [in the event of a military takeover]. Such remarks overstepped his limits,” Gen. Babu says in the document. The document seems to refute a previous statement by the General Staff, which claimed that the Sledgehammer plan was part of a series of “imagined” scenarios drafted by the armed forces against TODAY’S ZAMAN, MEHMET YAMAN Military covered up responsibility in deadly blast, probe shows “We know from too many other examples, like the Ergenekon investigation and the emdinli case, that the military prosecutor’s ofce doesn’t do what is necessary. There is no supremacy of the law or of justice,” he said and added that if the military prosecutor acted in line with the requirements of the rule of law, then the conscience of the public would calm down. “That’s why the punishment of wrongdoers is important. We should listen to our conscience, if nothing else,” Engin said. The deaths of the soldiers and the supposition that the PKK might be responsible for planting the mines also have prevented efforts for Turkey to nd solutions to some of its problems. Because of the indignation in society over the deaths of the soldiers, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoan cancelled an appointment with the now defunct pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party’s (DTP) President Ahmet Türk on possible solutions to the Kurdish problem on May 29, two days after the mine blast. The DTP was believed to have had ties with the PKK. Also in May of last year, there was an ongoing debate in the country about clearing mines on the Turkey-Syria border. The Hürriyet daily’s May 29 edition had a headline story about the issue indicating that a bill on clearing and destroying mines along the border with Syria had come to Parliament on the night that “mines were detonated by remote control by the PKK in Çukurca.” The debate was marked by disagreements between the government and the opposition. In addition, the military said it would assume responsibility for de-mining the region along the Syrian border, but then said it did not have enough funding, tossing the ball back to the government, which favors hiring a private contractor to carry out the task in exchange for land usage rights. Opposition parties have expressed dissent, asserting that subcontracting the deal could harm Turkey’s national security, in the case of foreign companies, especially Israeli rms, being involved in the project. Previously, a mine-clearing tender was canceled by the Council of State over such objections. PHOTO contnued from page 1 A number of politicians and statesmen attended the funeral of Pvt. Deniz Demirci, who was killed in a land mine blast in Çukurca in May 2009. ‘Some military forces do not desire an end to terrorism’ Meanwhile, a former gendarmerie ofcer who lives in zmir has repeated his claims that no blast scene investigation was carried out after the deaths of the seven soldiers in the land mine blast. “If we had carried out a blast scene investigation, it would have been revealed that the land mines were planted by the TSK; however, we were ordered to attribute them to the PKK,” stated brahim Klnç, who was discharged from the military due to alleged anti-secular activities. Klnç said he was dismissed from the military because his girlfriend wore the Islamic headscarf. Klnç also claimed that some forces in the military do not desire an end to terrorism. The ex-ofcer also accused top army brass of being unwilling to end terror in Turkey. Giving examples of incidents that he witnessed in Çukurca, he said gendarmerie intelligence services sometimes planted mines at specic locations and then reported the sites as news to television stations as if they had received intelligence regarding the locations of mines planted by the PKK. Another example Klnç gave is in regards to a gendarme’s death. Klnç claimed that Pvt. Lokman Tekin, 21, died when he stepped on a land mine previously planted by the TSK. “A report was prepared without even going to the scene of the blast,” he noted. The blast was also attributed to the terrorist organization. “We should attach more importan- ce to statements by soldiers who escaped the armed attack in Tokat’s Readiye district. It is not the work of a terrorist organization to attack a military vehicle from four directions. The aim of the attack was to kill all of the soldiers on the vehicle. The fact that not all of the soldiers were killed may spoil the game. The soldiers who escaped the attack may be able to shed light on the mystery. They may have seen those who attacked them,” he said, referencing an attack in December of last year. Seven soldiers were killed in Readiye when unidentied armed assailants attacked a military vehicle. Three others were wounded in the assault. The attack came shortly before the Constitutional Court was set to deliberate a closure case against the DTP. Three retired generals behind bars in Sledgehammer probe Three more retired generals were sent to jail on Wednesday as part of a probe into an alleged military plot to overthrow the government. Retired generals Tuncay Çakan, Behzat Balta and Halil Kalkanl, all detained on Monday as part of the investigation into the Sledgehammer (Balyoz) coup plot, which allegedly sought to undermine the government to prepare the groundwork for a military takeover, were arrested on charges of “attempting to overthrow the government of the Turkish Republic using force and violence” by the stanbul 10th Criminal Court. Retired Col. Erdla Akyazan, who was also referred to court on Wednesday, was released pending trial. Retired Gen. Çakan, who served at the stanbul Gülhane Military Academy of Medicine (GATA), was detained in stanbul. Çakan was the commander of GATA in 2007 when Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoan’s spouse, Emine Erdoan, was denied entry to a GATA hospital due to her headscarf when visiting an ailing thespian. The suspects were sent to the Metris Military Prison. Defense lawyers told reporters that they would appeal the ruling. Retired Gen. ükrü Sark, a former secretary-general of the National Security Council (MGK), retired Gen. Nuri Ali Karababa and retired Col. Mümtaz Can, who were also among those detained on Monday, were arrested on Tuesday as part of the same probe. Other detainees -- retired generals Mustafa Kemal Tutku, Oktay Faruk Memiolu and Ünal Akbulut as well as retired Col. Stk Özbek -- were previously released after their testimony to prosecutors conducting the probe into the Sledgehammer plot. According to the Sledgehammer plot, made public by a newspaper in January, the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK) had a systematic plan to create chaos in society by bombing mosques and attacking popular museums with Molotov cocktails. The attacks’ desired result was to increase pressure on the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government for failing to provide security to its citizens. The Sledgehammer plan was included in the third indictment prepared in the investigation into Ergenekon, a clandestine network charged with plotting to overthrow the government. The prosecutors are now questioning the 24 generals who attended the seminar. Dozens of retired and active duty military ofcers have been detained in the probe. Twenty-two of them were released last week in a controversial ruling, but the release ruling was rescinded on Sunday by a panel of judges from the stanbul 12th High Criminal Court. Fifteen of the 21 suspects for whom arrest warrants were issued by the court have so far been rearrested. The number of those arrested as part of the probe has increased to 27 with the recent arrests. There are still six who have yet to surrender. The number of Sledgehammer arrests will increase to 33 with these arrests. Retired Gen. Çetin Doan, the former head of the 1st Army, is among a group that is waiting to be rearrested. He is undergoing treatment at GATA. In the meantime, stanbul Deputy Chief Public Prosecutor Turan Çolakkad signaled yesterday that they would detain the 25 generals and admirals who were to be detained during Monday’s operations if necessary. The suspects were not detained since operations were suspended by stanbul Chief Prosecutor Aykut Cengiz Engin, who reassigned the prosecutors covering the Sledgehammer case. stanbul Today’s Zaman Top EU official finds Sledgehammer plans worrisome contnued from page 1 Füle said the EU Commission stays informed about allegations that resulted in the arrest of senior military members in Turkey and nds the allegations “worrisome.” Twenty-seven active and retired military members have been arrested in Turkey so far as part of the investigation into the Sledgehammer plot. Füle also noted that the EU would continue to closely follow the developments regarding the coup probe while demanding that the investigation into the probe is carried out by respecting the rights of the suspects and paying full respect to compliance with the principles and standards of a fair trial. The plan was drawn up in 2003 and discussed in a seminar held at the General Staff’s Selimiye barracks in March of that year. The General Staff has denied that the Sledgehammer plot was the subject of a seminar, saying it had no record of such an event. It defended itself by claiming that the Sledgehammer plan was merely a war game. stanbul Today’s Zaman Metin Arslan Ankara / Yonca Poyraz Doan, Melik Duvakl stanbul / Mustafa Yüksel zmir TODAY’S ZAMAN GATA doctors uncomfortable with suspicious hospitalizations PHOTO EMRE SONCAN ANKARA Retired Col. Ahmet Alper said doctors working at GATA are worried that suspects in ongoing coup probes have been hospitalized there to escape justice. Doctors working at the Gülhane Military Academy Hospital (GATA) are worried that suspects of the ongoing investigations into alleged coup plots have been hospitalized there to escape justice, said retired Col. Professor Ahmet Alper, former head of the hospital’s gastroenterology department. Speaking to Today’s Zaman, Alper discussed the issue of controversial hospitalizations at GATA and how discomforted the doctors working there were as a result. “GATA has unfortunately become a way out of being arrested. If there is an Ergenekon organization trying to topple the government and take over the administration in Turkey as has been alleged, the fact that they can escape punishment that way will motivate them. They will be more enthusiastic. The suspects in question should preferably be transferred to a civilian hospital capable of providing the required medical care. That would make GATA doctors feel happier because they are not so at all, at the moment,” he said. Professor Alper also said, although they dislike the fact that high-ranking military ofcers, most of whom are retired, are controversially hospitalized at GATA, those doctors still see the suspects not as their patients but as their commanders and are left in a dilemma. “Doctors cannot consider people like [retired generals] Çetin Doan and Engin Alan as their patients. These men are commanders for them. That privilege is not welcomed by people. Retired generals should be treated the same way as other defendants,” he stated. Doan and Alan were the last two members of the army’s top brass to check in to GATA. Both of them were arrested by prosecutors in the investi- gation into the alleged Sledgehammer (Balyoz) coup plot, containing plans to bomb stanbul’s historic mosques and to down a Turkish ghter jet to discredit the government and prepare the ground for a military takeover to be carried out soon after. “Doctors who had said to Doan ‘Aye, Commander’ while he was in ofce in the past will continue to do the same today, too,” added Alper, who served as the head of the gastroenterology department for seven years. Retired generals ener Eruygur, Hurit Tolon and Levent Ersöz, three main suspects of the alleged coup-making plans, had previously avoided imprisonment through hospitalization at GATA. Ersöz had even refused to be admitted to a civilian hospital three times before he was taken to GATA. Eruygur and Tolon were later released for health reasons, and Ersöz is still under care at the military hospital. Muslims demand apology over shooting range mosques A group of British Muslims demanded an apology from the Ministry of Defense on Thursday after it said replica mosques were being used on a military ring range in northern England. The Bradford Council for Mosques (BCM), an umbrella organization for faith schools and mosques in the area, called for the green-domed structures to be taken down and wanted assurance they would not be used again. “The structures do symbolize mosques,” BCM spokesman Ishtiaq Ahmed told Reuters. “Mosques are our places of worship, they are places of peace, and for anyone to suggest that they are potential zones of danger and should be shot at is really not acceptable.” The one-dimensional hardboard structures in Catterick, North Yorkshire, are not used as direct targets, but are intended to provide a more “realistic” background for soldiers training ahead of deployment in Afghanistan, a military source said. Other “generic eastern silhouettes” used include palm trees and irrigation ditches. But the BCM’s Ahmed said the site did not bear any resemblance to what British forces were experiencing in Afghanistan. London Reuters 18 TODAY’S ZAMAN F R I D A Y, A P R I L 9 , 2 0 1 0 TODAY’S LEARNING 10th & 11th GRADERS PHOTO AP, SHIHO FUKADA BLACK CULTURE In 1619, 20 Africans landed at Jamestown, Virginia and were sold into slavery. The history of Africans in America is deeply rooted in African culture whose own rich heritage ourished under its own kings. The early European colonies in America looked for a supply of cheap labor to use on their plantations and found it in West Africa. By the 19th century millions of Africans were involved in the slave trade to work in the elds, plantations and mines of the Americas. They worked to harvest rice, tobacco and cotton and by the end of the 18th century they could be found throughout Maryland, Virginia, the Carolinas and Georgia. Many in America did not feel comfortable about slavery and the idea of man’s natural rights was expressed in the Declaration of Independence which stated that “all men are created equal.” The idea of being free was the ideal behind the American Revolution. The life of the African slave was not an easy one. He was forced to work long hours and lived under harsh colonial laws. Some obeyed their masters out of fear, others who were bolder tried to revolt. But most slaves were not hard to control and their lives became easier if they remained submissive. They found comfort in Christianity and from this evolved their own songs known as Spirituals. There were some people known as Abolitionists who wanted to do away with slavery and a growing debate developed between those who favored slavery and those who were opposed. It became a moral issue which almost divided the country and culminated in the Civil War (1861-1865). After the war slaves numbering close to 4 million were freed but their life was not easy. They were not prepared for their new independence. They needed to be assimilated into the culture of white society and this was not always successful. The 20th century saw a rise in prejudice against blacks as they were free in name only and were denied most of the rights and benets of American life. Many blacks left the south and moved north which seemed to promise a better life, but in the north their living conditions grew worse and opportunities for them diminished. They lived in poor neighborhoods called ghettoes and faced bitter prejudice. It was not until the 1960s that civil rights organizations won important victories for black people and a charismatic leader, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. became a symbol of the black people’s quest for equality and true freedom. His tragic death in 1968 led to the passage of the Civil Rights Bill which has created many opportunities for black people with the hope of living in a truly integrated society. PART 5: TEACHING AS A PROFESSION 1. Where were the first 20 Africans sold into slavery in 1619? A. In Jamesville, W. Va. B. In Africa before boarding ship C. In Jamestown, Va D. In Jameson, Va 2. What was one of the main reasons for bringing slaves from Africa? A. They were a source of cheap property B. They were a source of servants and householders C. They were a source of cheap labor D. They were a source of personal income 3. By the 19th century how many African people were involved in the slave trade? A. Hundreds B. Millions C. Thousands D. 10,000 4. Where were most of the slaves concentrated in America in the 18th century? A. The northeastern coast of America B. In the north C. In Maryland, Virginia, Georgia and the Carolinas D. In New Jersey and New York 5. What was the motivating idea behind the American Revolution? A. Truth B. Human dignity C. Unity D. Freedom 6. Which religion became a source of comfort for the slaves? A. Islam B. Christianity C. Judaism D. Animism 7. What were the songs sung in slavery called? A. Country and Western B. Renewal songs C. Jazz D. Spirituals 8. What was the group called who wanted to abolish slavery? A. Abolitionists B. Abolishers C. The Abolising Ones D. Christian Separatists 9. How many slaves were there in America after the Civil War? A. 4 million B. 2 million C. 3 million D. 6 million 10. What event led to the passage of the Civil Rights Bill in America? A. The death of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. B. The death of President John F. Kennedy C. The people’s quest for happiness D. Peaceful demonstrations during wars THIS WEEK’S TOPIC Do you think that what we wear is a reection of who and what we are? Give your opinion using examples to support your view. The profession of teaching is one of sorry for their mistakes and pleased the oldest in the world. And it is cer- with their successes. The main task tainly one of the noblest. The art of of the teacher isn’t in imparting teaching has suffered a revolutio- knowledge but in stimulating the nary change. It has become highly pupils’ minds. The teacher mustn’t specialized; its mystery is to be mas- only install his own opinions into Must be submitted by Friday of each week’s English Corner tered. It is based not only on scho- these receptive minds but he must Must have student’s full name, school and city larship, but also on the right met- also teach them to think, to form. hods of teaching. Every good te- One of the most important qu- acher should learn more about his alities of a good teacher is humor. subject every year, every week, every The real purpose of humor in teac- month if possible. He must avoid hing is to link the teacher and the the sort of feeling that there is not- pupils through enjoyment. A good hing more for him to learn. There is teacher is a creator of people. The always room for self-improvement. teacher must treat different pupils A teacher should be kind and understanding but at the same Requirements of essays time he should be rm. Pupils sho- To do this he must be a good uld feel that their teacher wants to psychologist. If he knows his pupils’ help them, wants to improve, is in- character he will be able to adapt his terested in their growth, and is teaching to their differences. Mark the statements A if it is correct and B if it is incorrect 1. Teaching is not a new profession 2. Teaching has changed 3. Scholarship is enough for teaching 4. A teacher doesn’t need to improve himself 5. Students ought to know that teachers are very happy with their success 6. Stimulating teaching is very important 7. Humorous teachers can easily reach their students 8. The basic aim of humor is to make the students smile Example 1: A school administrator should give new students a complete orientation to their school. She or he should take them on a tour of the school, showing them the classrooms, gym, computer lab, music room and cafeteria. She or he should tell them about the history of the school, its academic achievements and its athletic and debating teams. The administrator can talk to the students about what’s expected of them in the classroom and what rules the school has. Topic sentence A school administrator should give new students a complete orientation to their school. Supporting details take students on tour of school talk about history of school talk to them about what’s expected In the above paragraph the topic sentence is about the school administrator’s job of giving new students an orientation.. The orientation includes a tour of the school, its history and a discussion of what is expected of students. Example 2 Everyone, children as well as senior citizens, can have important relationships with pets. Children who have dogs have the opportunity to learn responsibility while caring for them. The elderly, who often feel lonely as they get older, are able to feel needed because they are caring for a dog that needs them. Topic sentence Everyone, children as well as senior citizens, can have important relationships with pets. Supporting details teaches children responsibility elderly take care of dogs who, in turn, need them Practice Read the following paragraphs for the topic sentence and the supporting details for each paragraph. You may have more or fewer than three supporting details. 1. Paragraph Playing games also teaches us how to deal with other people. We learn about teamwork if the game involves being on a team. We learn how to divide and assign tasks according to each person’s skills. We learn how to get people to do what we want and we learn that sometimes we have to do what other people want. Topic sentence Supporting details Maximum number of words: 250 Essay format and use of formal written English is necessary 1.4 Do you think that people are capable of nding happiness or are they always searching for something beyond what they have? Give examples to show your views on the topic. 2. Paragraph Cooking takes a lot of time. While the food might not actually be on the stove for very long, you also have to consider the time that is spent shopping for the food, cleaning and chopping it, and cleaning up the kitchen after it is cooked. Topic sentence Supporting details The world is a guesthouse to begin with. As we don’t own it, we don’t have any right to complain. We will talk about happiness, but which happiness? This world consists of different kinds of people and several types of families. All of them form our society. Inside this society, there are poor ones and also rich ones. The rich ones mostly don’t want to share their money with the poor ones. So, in our world, the poor ones are always at the bottom and the rich ones are at the top. In order to prevent this, our religion rules that Muslims give their alms to the poor. If everybody does their job, we can stay in line without getting into trouble about it. As for stratied societies, I call them greedy ones. Unless they know 1.2 1.5 THIS WEEK’S SUCCESSFUL ESSAY SUBMISSION “No one is contented in this world, I believe. There is always something left to desire, and the last thing longed for always seems the most necessary to happiness.” -Marie Corelli, a Romance of Two Worlds 1.1 1.3 differently. He must have a way with them. Dear readers, This week we will try to help you in essay writing by giving you some practice in preparing topic sentences and supporting ideas in paragraph writing. Look at the following two examples and then try and complete the exercise. the value of their wealth, they will lose everything they have owned in their life so far. Of course, that would be a total failure. Who wants to lose ever? I should state that happiness goes up as long as we share it with those close to us. I also suppose that if we manage to do with less, we will become more contented than ever because, doing with less is a great superiority. Always looking for more stuff does not lead us to a pleasing result. Also, I’d love to put into words that someone may be delighted with having been given a little candy and someone may not be with owning a luxurious car. Everything is all about our own line of sight towards life. 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 3. Paragraph Watching movies and television can be good for us. One thing they do is help us understand the world more. For example, seeing movies can expose us to people of different races and cultures that we don’t often see. We can then overcome prejudices more easily. Recently there have been more handicapped people in lms, and this also helps to prevent prejudice. Topic sentence Supporting details Ahmet KURNAZ School: Siirt Anatolian Teacher Training High School, Siirt Last week’s answers: Rock music :1- of 2-around 3-as 4-was 5-number 6-that 7-called 8-lead 9- to 10-even / A. 1-B, 2-B, 3-B, 4-A, 5-A B. 1-b, 2-a, 3-d, 4-c 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 SPORTS Rangers move closer to Scottish title Rangers beat Aberdeen 3-1 to go 13 points clear of Celtic and move ccloser to defending its Scottish Premier League title. Kyle Lafferty scored his third goal of the season between goals from Steven Davis and Kenny h Miller. Darren Mackie scored a consolation goal for eighth-place Aberdeen. Mil The win means Rangers can potentially win a 53rd league title. Glasgow AP FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 2010 BASEBALL Raptors miss Bosh in loss to Celtics, Hedo injured in collision ATHLETICS ‘Allow Semenya to return immediately’ Caster Semenya, the world 800-meter champion at the center of a gender verication row, should be allowed to compete immediately in female events, her lawyers have said. on Wednesday. South African Semenya has not competed since last August when she won the world title in Berlin. Athletics South Africa (ASA) has made clear Semenya is not banned from competition but said she must wait for the results of her gender tests from the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) which are not expected until June. Her lawyers from Dewey and Leboeuf’s South Africa ofce told television channel eNews that test results obtained in February showed Semenya can compete as a woman. “Caster’s medical team have looked at the results from Berlin and South Africa,” Benedict Phiri said. “And have also conducted their own tests and there was a point in time, I think midFebruary, where we got the go-ahead to say we’ve looked at everything now and based on what we’ve seen, we believe Caster is entitled to participate in female athletics competitions.” Johannesburg Reuters Bayern Munich’s players celebrate following their Champions League quarter-final second leg match against Manchester United at Old Trafford on Wednesday. Bayern trailed 3-0 before losing 3-2 at United to draw 4-4 on aggregate and advance on away goals, becoming the rst German team to make the nal four since 2002. Lyon also lost the return leg, going down 1-0 at Bordeaux but heading through 3-2 winners overall The nal four of the Champions League won’t feature an English team for the rst time since 2003 after Bayern Munich ousted Manchester United on Wednesday, while Lyon reached its rst seminal by eliminating Bordeaux. Bayern trailed 3-0 before losing 3-2 at United to draw 4-4 on aggregate and advance on away goals, becoming the rst German team to make the nal four since 2002. Lyon also lost the return leg, going down 1-0 at Bordeaux but heading through 3-2 winners overall. “It was an incredible comeback from three goals down,” Bayern coach Louis van Gaal said. “In the rst 20 minutes, Manchester United played us off the park, then we got back into the game with a great goal from Ivica Olic. “At halftime, I was condent we could get back into the game and get the result.” Four-time champion Bayern hosts Lyon in the rst leg of the seminals on April 21, with the return six days later in France. The winner will play either holder Barcelona or Inter Milan in the May 22 nal at Madrid. Inter Milan, which is in the seminals for the rst time in seven years, hosts Barcelona on April 20 and plays in Spain eight days later. At Old Trafford, Wayne Rooney made a TENNIS Schwank fined after erratic play Eduardo Schwank was ned $1,000 for his erratic and unusual play after losing 6-1, 6-7 (5), 6-1 to fellow Argentine Juan Ignacio Chela in the second round of the US Men’s Clay Court Championships. Schwank, the seventh seed, says a back problem caused him to use numerous drop shots and lobs in his Tuesday match. The crowd booed him after he foot-faulted on match point. Rain forced the postponement of defending champion Lleyton Hewitt’s match against lucky loser Somdev Devvarman of India until Thursday. Hewitt has not played since having hip surgery on Jan. 29. Third-seeded Sam Querrey of the United States against Blaz Kavcic of Slovania also was rescheduled for later Thursday. Nicolas Massu of Chile had to played the longest match on tour this year (three hours, 25 minutes) before nally beating qualier Ryan Sweeting of the United States, 6-7, 7-6, 6-4. Houston AP AA,KENAN ÇMEN Much at stake for Manisa as it takes on Gaziantep away OKAN UDO BASSEY STANBUL PHOTO Port of San Diego ofcials want to host a Louis Vuitton Trophy regatta that could be part of the buildup to the next America’s Cup. Port commissioners plan to contact the World Sailing Teams Association and Louis Vuitton about starting negotiations as soon as possible, with the hope of hosting a regatta next March. If the sides can agree to terms, a San Diego regatta would follow racing scheduled for La Maddalena, Italy, in May, Dubai in November and Hong Kong in January. Two more regattas could be held in 2011, on the Black Sea in Russia and in Greece. A Louis Vuitton Trophy regatta was held recently in Auckland, New Zealand, with former America’s Cup champion Team New Zealand beating Italy’s Mascalzone, the new Challenger of Record, in the nal. San Diego hosted the America’s Cup in 1988, 1992 and 1995. San Diego AP Bordeaux striker Marouane Chamakh scored right on halftime, sliding home a cross from Benoit Tremoulinas that was diverted by teammate Jaroslav Plasil. But despite ending a three-game losing run in all competitions, Bordeaux was out of the competition. “It was a match that was not easy,” Lyon coach Claude Puel said. “Even though we told ourselves that we should play as it was 0-0 in the rst leg, we felt a bit of pressure. We were too much on the back foot in the rst half. We handled better the second half because Bordeaux played at a slower tempo.” There have been three English teams in the seminals of the competition for the past three seasons. Liverpool was the rst team to be eliminated this year, bowing out in the group stage, while Chelsea was knocked out by Inter Milan in the round-of-16 and Arsenal was beaten by Barcelona on Tuesday in the quarternals. “All the English teams were expected to get to the seminals as we have been doing in the last ve years,” United manager Alex Ferguson said. “But I don’t think it has cast a shadow over the game -- I still think it’s the best league in Europe and the most competitive league. You don’t always get what you want and we’re all suffering.” Manchester AP Toronto Raptors’ Chris Bosh (4) is tended to by team doctors after being hit in the face. SAILING San Diego seeks pre-Cup regatta surprise return for United after injuring his ankle in last week’s rst leg, and was involved in both goals as the hosts wiped out Bayern’s 2-1 advantage inside seven minutes after goals from Darron Gibson and Nani. Nani gave United -- last season’s beaten nalists -- a 3-0 lead when he scored in the 41st. But Ivica Olic began Bayern’s comeback two minutes later when he left Michael Carrick at-footed and slid a low, angled shot past goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar. Three-time champion United played with 10 men after Rafael da Silva was sent off in the 50th for fouling Franck Ribery to receive a second yellow card. The Brazilian defender had already been booked for a petulant kick after being fouled by Mark Van Bommel. With Rooney replaced after bursting a blood vessel below his right ankle, Bayern took control and Arjen Robben scored from a volley in the 74th to send the German team through. Lyon had goalkeeper Hugo Lloris to thank after he leaped high to palm away a powerful header from Bordeaux midelder Geraldo Wendel in the 87th minute that could have taken the hosts through on away goals. When the referee blew for the nal whistle, Lyon’s players jumped on Lloris in jubilation, forming a mass scrum on the eld. The Toronto Raptors lost 115-104 to the Boston Celtics in their rst game without injured All-Star Chris Bosh on Wednesday, loosening their grip on the eighth and nal Eastern Conference playoff spot. In the absence of big man Bosh, who suffered a face injury against the Cleveland Cavaliers on Tuesday, the Raptors (38-40) faded late in the game to see their lead over the Chicago Bulls cut to half a game with four to play. “I think this is the moment we need everybody together,” Toronto guard Jose Calderon told reporters. Rajon Rondo scored 21 and Paul Pierce added 20 to lead the Celtics (49-29), who moved into a tie with the Atlanta Hawks for third place in the East. The game was tied at 76-76 in the third quarter but Boston ended the period with six straight points and took that momentum into the fourth, where they clinched what was just a second win in six contests. In the nal quarter, the Celtics’ sharpshooters came up big. Ray Allen tallied 10 of his 18 points while Michael Finley put up 11 of his 14 off the bench to seal the win. “Our shooting won the game for us tonight,” said Boston coach Doc Rivers. “When Ray and Michael get it going at the same time and they’re both on the oor, that makes us really good because we can still pound the ball down low and affect the other team’s ability to take the low-post game away.” Sonny Weems scored a career-high 21 points for the Raptors to combine with Andrea Bargnani, Antoine Wright and Jarrett Jack who all nished with 17. Toronto stayed close for most of the night but missed Bosh’s presence inside. Bosh leads Toronto with 24 points per game and 10.8 rebounds. Raptors Turkish forward Hedo Türkolu was also injured on Wednesday, leaving the game in the rst quarter after hurting his nose in a collision with Tony Allen. Other NBA results: Indiana 113, New York 105; Orlando 121, Washington 94; Detroit 90, Atlanta 88; Miami 99, Philadelphia 95; Houston 113, Utah 96; Milwaukee 108, New Jersey 89; Golden State 116, Minnesota 107; Charlotte 104, New Orleans 103; Denver 98, Oklahoma City 94; Dallas 110, Memphis 84; Portland 93, LA Clippers 85; Phoenix 112, San Antonio 101. Toronto Reuters REUTERS, AARON JOSEFCZYK PHOTO REUTERS, MICHAEL DALDER New York newcomer Curtis Granderson hit a game winning home run in the 10th inning to spoil the debut of pitcher John Lackey and lead the Yankees to a 3-1 victory over the Boston Red Sox on Wednesday. Granderson’s blast to right eld, his second homer of the season, broke a 1-1 tie in the 10th, before Mark Teixeira’s RBI groundout sealed the decider in the Yankees three-game opening series with arch rivals Boston. “What better way to start off with a new team?” Granderson told reporters. “Of all the teams, to play Boston in the rst series and come out with the victory is great. All I want to do is just be another small piece of the puzzle.” Other AL results: Tampa Bay 4, Baltimore 3; NY Yankees 3, Boston 1, 10 innings; Toronto 7, Texas 4; Cleveland 5, Chicago White Sox 3; Kansas City 3, Detroit 2, 11 innings; Minnesota 4, LA Angels 2; and Oakland 6, Seattle 5. In the National League it was: Milwaukee 5, Colorado 4; San Francisco 10, Houston 4; Pittsburgh 4, LA Dodgers 3, 10 innings; Philadelphia 8, Washington 4; Atlanta 3, Chicago Cubs 2; Florida 7, NY Mets 6, 10 innings; St. Louis 6, Cincinnati 3; Arizona 5, San Diego 3. Boston Reuters PHOTO Bayern to face Lyon in Champions League semis Granderson’s homer in 10th sinks Red Sox Gaziantepspor Guinea defender Oumar Kalabane. The Gaziantepspor Falcons host the Manisaspor Tarzans at the Antep Kamil Ocak Stadium in week 29 of the Turkcell Super League with much at stake for the struggling Tarzans. Mid-table Gaziantepspor is in safe territory with 37 points from 28 outings. Not so with Manisaspor, which currently has one foot in the Super League and the other in the Bank Asya League 1 (division two). Ankaraspor was relegated to division two earlier this season by the Turkish Soccer Federation (TFF) over shady deals, and it is almost a foregone conclusion that the cellar-dwelling Denizlispor Roosters will join them at the end of the season in mid-May. Three teams are doomed to drop, and so the big question now is, “Which team will complete the relegation list?” And the three candidates are: Diyarbakirspor (24 points), Sivasspor (26) and Manisaspor (29). Of the three, Manisaspor currently has a better chance of surviving. But the fact of the matter is that the Tarzans are still in the relegation bracket and anything can still happen with six weeks to go. Hence desperate Manisaspor will be all out to win at Antep this evening and move out of the danger zone, because failure to do so would mean falling further into the league abyss if its doomed relegation rivals win their matches later this weekend. However Antep’s no-nonsense Portuguese coach Jose Couceiro is not concerned one bit about Manisaspor’s demotion worries and has instructed his boys to go for the kill right after referee Bar imek blows the whistle for kickoff. “Six weeks to go, and every match is very impor- tant for us,” he said this week. “The Manisa match is one of them, and we are treating it with all seriousness,” he further stated. But the Manisa cause will not be helped by the absence of Guinea defender Oumar Kalabane, who had a near-fatal car accident in Buca on Wednesday. Kalabane’s car hit the wall of a gendarmerie building in zmir’s Konak district, but the Guinean was lucky to survive with slight head injuries. Manisaspor club doctor Cengizhan Özgürbüz said Kalabane received several stitches and therefore “will not be available for the Gaziantep match [today].” Kickoff is at 8 p.m. Kalabane’s accident comes on the heels of Konyaspor player Branimir Poljac’s car accident on his way back from training on Saturday, which may have left him paralyzed for life. It appears the “trafc monster” is now targeting soccer players. Jim Carrey, Jenny McCarthy reveal split on Twitter Actors Jim Carrey and Jenny McCarthy ended their five-year relationship by announcing the split on their Twitter pages on Tuesday. The announcement surprised Hollywood insiders as the low-profile couple appeared to have a durable union, and Carrey passionately advocated a link between vaccines and autism, a neurological disease suffered by McCarthy’s 7-year-old son. Los Angeles Reuters WWW.TODAYSZAMAN.COM FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 2010 Rare blue damond auctoned for $6.4 mllon A rare, awless blue diamond that was once part of the legendary De Beers Millennium Collection sold for $6.4 million at auction, exceeding the top price estimate but falling short of the 2009 record. The 5.16 carat pear-shaped diamond was the rst gem of its kind to appear in an auction from the collection that De Beers, the world’s largest diamond producer, presented in 2000 to celebrate the millennium. Auctioneers Sotheby’s had priced the diamond at between $4.6 million and $5.8 million and it was sold in Hong Kong to London-based gem merchant Alisa Moussaieff who said she was satised with the price. “It’s an individual thing and people have got to like it and people have got to see the value in it, but we do see the value and I hope our clients will see the value as well,” she said. The De Beers Millennium Collection comprised 12 rare gems and took decades to assemble. Blue diamonds are among the rarest of all gems and owe their natural color to the presence of boron during the stone’s formation. Hong Kong Reuters Academics aim to bring vampires back home - - to Britain A British university is to hold a conference on vampires in an effort to counterbalance the “Americanisation” of the ctional genre. Delegates to the University of Hertfordshire’s “Open Graves, Open Minds: Vampires and the Undead in Modern Culture” conference to be held on April 16-17 will have their food served to them out of cofns as part of a mission to encourage students of all ages to study literature. English lecturer Sam George, who has just launched a Master of Arts degree in vampire ction at Hertfordshire, said the most famous vampire narrative of all, Dracula, was written by Irishman Bram Stoker and set in London and Whitby in Yorkshire, but that now with the “Twilight” saga and “True Blood,” modern vampires have become Americanized. “It’s amazing how many British actors have played Dracula on screen,” George said in a statement on the university’s Web site. “I aim to put the British vampire back on the map.” George said she is particularly interested in the new teen vampire narratives which act as a useful metaphor for wider teen anxieties about their bodies and the rst stirrings of desire. “The new breed of vampires are far from monstrous, they are glamorous and sexy and have an emotional side,” she said. “Their [teenagers’] attraction to vampire gures provides a safe way for them to acknowledge these desires.” Conference lectures will be delivered by academics and author Marcus Sedgwick, who writes young adult ction with a vampire twist. Panel topics during the two-day event will include “Dracula Lives,” “Appetites of the Undead,” “Undead Victorians,” “Undead Teens,” “Politics of the Undead,” “Undead Romance,” “The Gay Undead,” “Undead TV,” “Undead in the New Media,” “Identity, Legality and the Undead” and “Gendering the Undead.” London Reuters They walk among us: 1 in 5 believe in aliens, survey says Aliens exist and they live in our midst disguised as humans -- at least, that’s what 20 percent of people polled in a global survey believe. The Reuters Ipsos poll of 23,000 adults in 22 countries showed that more than 40 percent of people from India and China believe that aliens walk among us disguised as humans, while those least likely to believe in this are from Belgium, Sweden and the Netherlands (8 percent each). However, the majority of people polled, or 80 percent, don’t believe aliens are in our midst. “It would appear that that there’s a modest correlation between the most populated countries and those more likely to indicate there may be aliens disguised amongst them compared with those countries with the smaller populations,” said John Wright, senior vice president of market research rm Ipsos. “Maybe the it’s a simple case that in a less populated country you are more likely to know your next door neighbor better,” he said. More men than women -- 22 percent versus 17 percent -- believe that alien beings are on earth. Most of those believers are under the age of 35, and across all income classes, the survey showed. Of those who do not believe, most are women. Singapore Reuters Women try to smuggle corpse onto plane in Britain Two women were arrested at a British airport on suspicion of trying to smuggle a dead relative onto a ight bound for Germany, police said early this week.The 91-year-old deceased man was pushed in a wheelchair through Liverpool’s John Lennon airport wearing sunglasses before check-in staff became suspicious and he was prevented from boarding the plane. He was believed to have been driven about 35 miles (60 km) to the airport by taxi from Oldham, Greater Manchester, police added. The women were arrested on suspicion of failing to give notication of a death and were released on bail. “At 11 a.m. on Saturday 3 April 2010, police at Liverpool John Lennon airport were alerted to the death of a 91-year-old man in the terminal building,” police said in a statement. “Two women aged 41 and 66 were arrested on suspicion of failing to give notication of death.” London Reuters