Sunday, April 30, 2017

Trump should withhold embrace from Turkey's ruler

Early in his career, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan made a remark that sums up the tragedy of modern Turkey. "Democracy is like a train," the then-Istanbul mayor said. "You get off once you have reached your destination."

Erdogan's train seems to have arrived. In last Sunday's referendum, a razor-thin majority granted him massive new powers in a vote rife with irregularities. As Erdogan cements his rule in his 1,150-room palace, he's dashed the dream that he'd create the first modern democracy in a mainly Muslim country. (This vote, which could keep him in office until 2034, also kills any miniscule hope that Turkey might enter the European Union in my lifetime.)

President Donald Trump quickly called to congratulate Erdogan on his questionable win and may soon invite him to the White House. Yet Turkey's reliability as a NATO ally is under severe question and Ankara has become a liability in fighting the Islamic State in Syria. Washington has leverage to use on Erdogan in these matters, but only if someone finally manages to fully brief Trump.

The hopes that Erdogan's AK Party would morph into a Muslim version of Europe's conservative Christian Democratic parties was always unrealistic. His early prime ministerial achievements were impressive, however, boosting the economy and starting peace talks with Kurdish rebels. Turkey now has a 95 percent literacy rate, the highest in the Muslim world.

But, having moved from prime minister to president - until now, a largely symbolic post - Erdogan's megalomania took over. He set out to emulate Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey, whose authoritarian rule built a secular state from the ruins of the Ottoman Empire.

"Erdogan is following the Ataturk model, using state power to shape country and society in his own image," says Soner Cagaptay, author of "The New Sultan: Erdogan and the Crisis of Modern Turkey." "He doesn't share Ataturk's (secular) values, just his methods. He wants to use state power and education to make the country religious, conservative and Middle Eastern."

But the country is far more complex than that: It is a mix of seculars, moderate and pious Muslims, Kurds, Alavis (a Shiite sect), Christians, and Europe-oriented businessmen. That's why he only won 51 percent of the ballots.

All the major cities voted no on the referendum, which created a powerful presidency with broad control over the judiciary and the ability to make laws by decree.

"Half the country loves him and half loathes him," Cagaptay said at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy in Washington. "He exacerbates the divide."

And that divide was growing long before the election. In recent years, the Turkish president had been cracking down on peaceful demonstrators and jailing journalists. But, with an eye on the votes of nationalist Turks, he restarted a brutal war with Kurdish rebels (who also made big errors).

He also used a mysterious coup attempt last year to conduct massive purges at home, not just of the alleged plotters, but of civil society and the peaceful HDP Kurdish opposition party. (He blames the coup on Fetullah Gulen, a Turkish cleric living in exile in Pennsylvania, whose extradition he demands.)

As many as 71,000 people have reportedly been detained and 41,000 formally arrested, while tens of thousands of academics, judges, and police have been fired and many universities, schools, and media outlets shuttered. With 81 journalists jailed as of December, Turkey's record is worse than China's or Iran's.

Experts debate whether Erdogan is an authoritarian or an Islamist. Cagaptay told me he's both. "Of course he will try to Islamicize politics and society," the author said. But, he adds, moving in that direction would require Erdogan to keep repressing Turkey's democracy, which would undermine its stability and economy. An advanced economy requires an open society with ethnic and religious tolerance, says the author.

In Turkey, Cagaptay says, that means "freedom for religion for the religious half - and freedom from religion for the secular half." But Erdogan seems wholly oriented toward his pious followers.

However, the news is not all bad. The fact that nearly half of Turkey's voters rejected the referendum, despite severe repression, shows that the country's civil society remains vibrant. This puts some restraints on Erdogan.

Moreover, he has created huge problems with his neighbors. His help to Sunni Islamists fighting the Syrian regime has boomeranged, creating a terrorist problem at home and annoying Moscow. Cagaptay says Erdogan needs help from NATO to offset pressures from Russia, which is still an enemy despite surface reconciliation.

So, rather than flatter the Turkish sultan (or bow to demands for Gulen's swift extradition), Trump should insist that the Turkish leader stop undermining the Syrian Kurds, who are America's best allies against the Islamic State. He should also urge Erdogan to restart peace talks with Turkey's Kurds and avoid civil war with his political opposition.

"The time for the Ataturk model has passed," says Cagaptay. "It won't work."

That may be too much to discuss over chocolate cake at Mar-a-Lago, but Trump's affinity for dictators should be put on hold if he invites Erdogan to his home.


Source: Trump should withhold embrace from Turkey's ruler

Saturday, April 29, 2017

Bombs and political upheaval take their toll on Turkey tourism

London - Bomb attacks, a failed coup, political upheaval and the war in next-door Syria have all hurt Turkey's eco­nomically important tour­ism sector. Ankara is hoping that renewed stability and rock-bottom prices will tempt holidaymakers back and fill empty resorts and ho­tels.

Tourism makes up 13% of Turkey's economy and helps support 8% of jobs, according to official statistics. The sector played a large part in Tur­key's economic surge following a financial crash in 2001 that saw the currency dip to 1.5 million lira to the dollar.

The number of tourists visiting Turkey in 2002 was 13 million and rose to 40 million in 2015 while earn­ings from tourism went from $12.5 billion to $31.5 billion in the same pe­riod, Culture and Tourism Minister Nabi Avci said.

However, the fallout from the war in neighbouring Syria began to hurt tourism in the second half of 2015 with the first of a string of major suicide bombings, the resumption of the conflict with Kurdish rebels and a diplomatic dispute with Moscow over the downing of a Russian war­plane.

Moscow responded in November 2015 by cancelling charter flights to Turkey, a favourite destination for sun-seeking Russians. The number of Russians visiting Turkey dropped to 866,000 in 2016 from 3.65 million in 2015 and 4.5 million in 2014.

A failed coup attempt in July 2016, blamed by Turkey on followers of US-based Muslim preacher Fethul­lah Gulen, also had a large effect on tourist arrivals with numbers declin­ing sharply in the aftermath.

The 2017 World Economic Forum "Travel and Tourism Competitive­ness Report" ranked Turkey 116th out of 136 countries for safety and security, just above the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Overall, the number of tourists visiting Turkey fell 24% in 2016 com­pared to 2015, a drop of about 10 mil­lion visitors. Revenues in the same period fell 29% to $22 billion, the Turkey Statistics Foundation said.

The tourism slump has weighed heavily on the Turkish economy. Economic growth in 2016 stood at 2.9%, a figure hailed by ministers but questioned by many economists due to a new method of calculation that revised the number upward dramati­cally.

Government critics point to an unemployment rate that rose 10% in 2016 to 12.7% by the end of the year.

The number of empty shops has risen in Istanbul's Grand Bazaar, one of the world's most visited tourist attractions.

Carpet seller Erol Avci has worked in the bazaar for 39 years. "I started working here aged 18 and this is the worst it's ever been," the BBC quot­ed him as saying. "We're down by 80% and are not making any profit, so I'm not drawing a salary."

While Turkey and Russia back op­posing sides in Syria's civil war, the two countries have repaired their diplomatic relations and Russian charter flights to Turkey resumed in August 2016. Arrivals from Rus­sia were 95% higher in February this year compared to the same month in 2016.

There have been recent indica­tions of an upturn in visitors from Europe, traditionally one of Tur­key's biggest markets, with opera­tors cutting prices to remain com­petitive.

"After a slow start to the sea­son and a tough year in 2016, we're seeing early signs that customers are beginning to go back to Turkey," Peter Fankhauser, chief executive of Thomas Cook, one of Europe's big­gest travel companies, was quoted as saying by the Daily Telegraph newspaper.

TUI, Europe's largest travel com­pany, said its business to Turkey dropped 50% in 2016 but the decline appeared to have stopped.

"In normal years we had 2 million visitors to Turkey," German public broadcaster Deutsche Welle quoted company spokesman Kuzey Alexan­der Esener as saying. "We still have a million customers for Turkey. It re­mains one of our top destinations."

Turkey is also seeking to diversify its tourism sector away from the traditional "sun, sea and sand" holi­days and encourage travel for sport, the outdoors and health.

Some 750,000 health tourists vis­ited Turkey in 2016, the Hurriyet newspaper quoted Turkey Health Tourism Development Council Chairman Emin Cakmak as saying. About 60,000 of those, he said, come for hair transplants, a field in which Turkey has become a leading destination with cut-prices and all-inclusive package deals.

A government employment cam­paign begun in February offers incentives to tourism sector em­ployers that could help half of the 300,000 employees who would be laid off at the end of the summer season stay in their jobs, Hurriyet said.

"Unfortunately, the problems in tourism have mostly hit employ­ment in the sector," the newspaper quoted Turkey Hoteliers' Union Chairman Timur Bayindir as saying. "Since 2015 there has been a 40% loss of personnel…"


Source: Bombs and political upheaval take their toll on Turkey tourism

Friday, April 28, 2017

Russian navy ship sinks off Turkey`s Black Sea coast after collision with cargo vessel – media

Russian navy ship crashed with a freighter carrying livestock off Turkey`s Black Sea coast near the Bosporus on Thursday, April 27, according to Daily Sabah Turkey.

The Togo-flagged cargo ship Youzarsif H. collided with the Russian intelligence vessel "Liman" some 18 miles north of the town of Kilyos in Istanbul`s Sar?yer district due to heavy fog, causing significant damage under the water line, Daily Sabah Turkey wrote.

The crew could not succeed to keep the ship afloat but all 78 crew members were successfully rescued. Turkish coast guard rescued 63 crew members, whereas 15 others were rescued by the crew of the cargo vessel. None of the crew members suffered any critical injuries.

The cargo vessel was traveling from Romania to Jordan according to Turkish media, while the destination of Liman was not known.

Search and rescue crews and ambulances were dispatched to the coast for the Russian crew, which were expected to be transported to a nearby Russian cargo ship according to a Russian Defense Ministry statement quoted by the Associated Press (AP). The statement said the rescued sailors would be delivered to the home base of the Black Sea Fleet in Crimea.

The Defense Ministry said a hole was punched in the starboard side of the Liman during the collision.

Russia`s defense ministry said in a statement, saying that the research ship Liman "sustained a hull breach due to a collision" with the ship Ashot-7, 40 kilometres (25 miles) northwest of the Bosporus. Other Russian navy ships and a plane have also been dispatched to the scene. The Russian military said it is trying to identify the owner of the Ashot-7 ship.

The Liman was part of the Black Sea Fleet. It was a former research vessel that the Russian navy has retrofitted into a reconnaissance ship.

Turkey is the transit point for the Russian navy in the Black Sea. Russia`s naval traffic increased as the conflict in its ally Syria escalated. Russia occasionally dispatches military vessels to the eastern "Mediterranean coast of war-torn Syria to back the Assad forces. Just a few hours after Liman sank, the Caesar Kunikov warship of Russia crossed the Dardanelles (Canakkale) Strait, heading to the Bosporus," Daily Sabah Turkey wrote.


Source: Russian navy ship sinks off Turkey`s Black Sea coast after collision with cargo vessel – media

Thursday, April 27, 2017

All 78 saved as Russian spy ship sinks off Turkey

Istanbul, Apr 28 (AFP) A Russian naval spy ship sank in the Black Sea off Turkey's coast after hitting a Togo-flagged vessel packed with livestock but all of its 78 crew were rescued by Turkish coastguards.

The Russian military yesterday said the Liman — a former research ship re-fitted as an intelligence vessel — had a hole ripped out of its hull in the collision with the Youzarsif H.

The collision, whose precise circumstances remain to be explained, took place in fog outside the northwestern entrance to the Bosphorus Strait, one of the world's biggest shipping thoroughfares that passes through Istanbul into the Sea of Marmara.

The Liman was struck at 11.53 local time (0853 GMT) with the ship sinking three hours later at 2.48 PM (1148 GMT), Turkish and Russian sources said.

The Turkish coastguard said in a statement that the Togo-flagged vessel Youzarsif H was carrying a cargo of livestock.

It said that of 78 Russian personnel on board the ship, 63 were rescued by the Turkish coastguard and the other 15 by the Youzarsif H itself.

They were then transferred to a Turkish military ship, it said, without giving further details. "All the personnel were evacuated," it said.

Turkish media said the Youzarsif suffered minor damage and went on its way after the incident.

The Russian defence ministry confirmed the ship had gone down and said the crew were safe and would be taken from a Turkish vessel back onto a Russian ship.

Turkish news agency Dogan said the area where the ships collided was shrouded in thick fog at the time, suggesting that the incident was accidental.

Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim spoke to his Russian counterpart Dmitry Medvedev by phone over the incident, describing it as an accident and expressing his sadness, the state-run Anadolu news agency said.

It was not known where the Liman was sailing from or its destination.

The ship was built as a hydrography research vessel in 1970 but turned into a spy ship in 1989 and armed with an Igla missile launcher, according to public records.

Russian warships have travelled frequently through the Bosphorus Strait to and from the Syrian coast, where a navy presence has been deployed to bolster Russia's air campaign in support of President Bashar al-Assad.

In February, military sources told Russian media that Liman would be observing NATO's Sea Shield exercise in the Black Sea.

Cem Devrim Yaylali, an Istanbul-based Turkish naval expert and editor of the Bosphorus Naval News website, said the Liman had previously been to the Syrian coast but it was not clear where it was headed on this occasion.

"A collision is not something that happens very frequently," he told AFP.

He said the incident was an embarrassment for the Russian authorities as the Liman was likely carrying sensitive surveillance equipment that Moscow would want returned.

"I imagine there will be a salvage effort to raise the ship before anyone else sees it," he said.

"If the ship cannot be salvaged then Russia surely will try to take away the sensitive equipment from on board by divers."

Relations between Russia and Turkey hit their worst state since the Cold War in November 2015 when Turkish war planes shot down a Russian jet over the Syrian border.

But there has since been a dramatic reconciliation, with Moscow and Ankara now engaged in a joint effort to bring peace to Syria despite standing on opposing sides of the conflict.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is due to hold his latest talks with Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in Russia on May 3.

As a Black Sea littoral state, Russia is allowed to have its military ships pass through the Bosphorus under the 1936 Montreux Convention on the Straits.

The intense traffic of Russian vessels to and from Syria — known as the Syrian Express — has caused immense curiosity in Istanbul where the warships pass through the heart of the city in full view of ship-spotters.

"There have been collisions but I cannot recall once that a military ship has sunk afterwards," Russia's former navy chief of staff admiral Viktor Kravchenko told the Interfax news agency.

"This is an event that is out of the ordinary," he said.

(AFP)

This is published unedited from the PTI feed.


Source: All 78 saved as Russian spy ship sinks off Turkey

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Sneak Peek into El Five, the Newest LoHi Tapas Destination

El Five, the much anticipated Mediterranean tapas restaurant from Justin Cucci, revealed itself in all its shiny glory yesterday to a handful of previewers. The doors to the colorful fifth story space, covered in vintage Turkish cinema posters depicting beautiful women, lovers kissing and fighting, and quotes you will most likely not understand, will open to the public next Wednesday, May 3.

The glowing dark space is anchored by a show kitchen in the middle, flanked by two stunning patios, and dotted with cozy black booths and chairs lined with gold accents. The view is second to none in the the Mile High City. On one side there is the downtown skyline unencumbered and on the other side are the mountains. Side windows give a peek to the bustling Linger patio, the never-ending line at Little Man Ice Cream, and the broader LoHi area.

This fifth restaurant by Cucci (after Root Down, Linger, Root Down DIA, and Vital Root) focuses on the flavors that surround the Mediterranean, from the intuitive Spain, Italy, France, and Greece to the less intuitive Israel, Morocco, Turkey, or Lebanon. Cucci, not a rule follower or one to take subtle approaches, celebrates those cuisines through the use of bold spices, through fusion dishes, and through creations so unique they would make your Spanish or Jewish grandma shout "blasphemy!" "One such creation is the vegetarian paella, a dish that ditches the rice in favor of a lentil and grain blend. Another one is the matzo ball dumplings. "We play with our food" is the motto of Cucci's Edible Beats group and play they do particularly on this menu.

Well-curated Spanish and beyond wines and creative cocktails not only complement the food but offer an extra reason to visit. Bartender Ky Belk adds herbs and fruit to his bright creations and he's committed to drop the overuse of ice that comes from shaking drinks with it then discarding it.

If the photos aren't enough, check out our Facebook Live with Justin Cucci for all the details on this exciting place.


Source: Sneak Peek into El Five, the Newest LoHi Tapas Destination

Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Air Astana to Increase Flights to Key Destinations in Summer Schedule

Air Astana has increased flights to a number of key destinations in its summer schedule.

 The new schedule sees service frequencies from Astana increase to Beijing (4) and Urumqi (6), China, Istanbul, Turkey (4), London, UK (5), Novosibirsk, Russia (7), Omsk, Russia (5), Tashkent, Uzbekistan (3), St Petersburg, Russia (7), Tbilisi, Georgia (4), and Yekaterinburg, Russia (7).

In addition, Air Astana will be resuming a service from Astana to Kiev, Ukraine on 2nd June 2017.

Transfer traffic currently accounts for 10% of Air Astana's business, but this is forecast to double in the next few years. Strong focus is now being placed on transfer traffic growth at Astana Airport, which will officially open a new terminal in summer 2017 and more than doubles existing capacity to eight million passengers per year.

Air Astana Airbus A320 at Astana Airport in Kazakhstan

 The opening of the new terminal will strengthen Astana Airport's position as a leading hub for Central Asia, with its catchment area covering 250 million people in Central Asia, CIS and southern Russia. Air Astana currently offers around 400 flights per week from and to Astana.

"Air Astana is delighted to announce a major expansion of services from Astana this summer, with much improved network connectivity between destinations in Asia, Central Asia, Caucasus, China, Europe and Russia," said Peter Foster, President and CEO of Air Astana. "Our passengers will travel smoothly through the new international terminal at Astana Airport, which is opening in time for the influx of visitors to Astana EXPO 2017."

See also: Kazakhstan Tourism Update - HD Video Interview from JATA Tourism Expo 2016 and Pictures from Almaty and Astana in Kazakhstan as well as other HD Videos and Podcasts.

See other recent news regarding: Air Astana, Kazakhstan, Astana, Almaty.


Source: Air Astana to Increase Flights to Key Destinations in Summer Schedule

Monday, April 24, 2017

Turkey’s Erdogan consolidates power

Trudy Rubin is an op-ed columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer.(Photo: File Photo)

Early in his career, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan made a remark that sums up the tragedy of modern Turkey. "Democracy is like a train," the then-Istanbul mayor said. "You get off once you have reached your destination."

Erdogan's train seems to have arrived. In last Sunday's (April 16) referendum, a razor-thin majority granted him massive new powers in a vote rife with irregularities. As Erdogan cements his rule in his 1,150-room palace, he's dashed the dream that he'd create the first modern democracy in a mainly Muslim country. (This vote, which could keep him in office until 2034, also kills any miniscule hope that Turkey might enter the European Union in my lifetime.)

President Donald Trump quickly called to congratulate Erdogan on his questionable win and may soon invite him to the White House. Yet Turkey's reliability as a NATO ally is under severe question and Ankara has become a liability in fighting the Islamic State in Syria. Washington has leverage to use on Erdogan in these matters, but only if someone finally manages to fully brief Trump.

The hopes that Erdogan's AK Party would morph into a Muslim version of Europe's conservative Christian Democratic parties was always unrealistic. His early prime ministerial achievements were impressive, however, boosting the economy and starting peace talks with Kurdish rebels. Turkey now has a 95 percent literacy rate, the highest in the Muslim world.

But, having moved from prime minister to president — until now, a largely symbolic post — Erdogan's megalomania took over. He set out to emulate Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey, whose authoritarian rule built a secular state from the ruins of the Ottoman Empire.

"Erdogan is following the Ataturk model, using state power to shape country and society in his own image," says Soner Cagaptay, author of "The New Sultan: Erdogan and the Crisis of Modern Turkey." "He doesn't share Ataturk's (secular) values, just his methods. He wants to use state power and education to make the country religious, conservative and Middle Eastern."

But the country is far more complex than that: It is a mix of seculars, moderate and pious Muslims, Kurds, Alavis (a Shiite sect), Christians, and Europe-oriented businessmen. That's why he only won 51 percent of the ballots.

All the major cities voted no on the referendum, which created a powerful presidency with broad control over the judiciary and the ability to make laws by decree.

"Half the country loves him and half loathes him," Cagaptay said at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy in Washington. "He exacerbates the divide."

And that divide was growing long before the election. In recent years, the Turkish president had been cracking down on peaceful demonstrators and jailing journalists. But, with an eye on the votes of nationalist Turks, he restarted a brutal war with Kurdish rebels (who also made big errors).

He also used a mysterious coup attempt last year to conduct massive purges at home, not just of the alleged plotters, but of civil society and the peaceful HDP Kurdish opposition party. (He blames the coup on Fetullah Gulen, a Turkish cleric living in exile in Pennsylvania, whose extradition he demands.)

As many as 71,000 people have reportedly been detained and 41,000 formally arrested, while tens of thousands of academics, judges, and police have been fired and many universities, schools, and media outlets shuttered. With 81 journalists jailed as of December, Turkey's record is worse than China's or Iran's.

Experts debate whether Erdogan is an authoritarian or an Islamist. Cagaptay told me he's both. "Of course he will try to Islamicize politics and society," the author said. But, he adds, moving in that direction would require Erdogan to keep repressing Turkey's democracy, which would undermine its stability and economy. An advanced economy requires an open society with ethnic and religious tolerance, says the author.

In Turkey, Cagaptay says, that means "freedom for religion for the religious half — and freedom from religion for the secular half." But Erdogan seems wholly oriented toward his pious followers.

However, the news is not all bad. The fact that nearly half of Turkey's voters rejected the referendum, despite severe repression, shows that the country's civil society remains vibrant. This puts some restraints on Erdogan.

Moreover, he has created huge problems with his neighbors. His help to Sunni Islamists fighting the Syrian regime has boomeranged, creating a terrorist problem at home and annoying Moscow. Cagaptay says Erdogan needs help from NATO to offset pressures from Russia, which is still an enemy despite surface reconciliation.

So, rather than flatter the Turkish sultan (or bow to demands for Gulen's swift extradition), Trump should insist that the Turkish leader stop undermining the Syrian Kurds, who are America's best allies against the Islamic State. He should also urge Erdogan to restart peace talks with Turkey's Kurds and avoid civil war with his political opposition.

"The time for the Ataturk model has passed," says Cagaptay. "It won't work."

That may be too much to discuss over chocolate cake at Mar-a-Lago, but Trump's affinity for dictators should be put on hold if he invites Erdogan to his home.

Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial-board member for the Philadelphia Inquirer. Readers may write to her at: Philadelphia Inquirer, P.O. Box 8263, Philadelphia, Pa. 19101, or by email at trubin@phillynews.com.

Read or Share this story: http://gftrib.com/2pYfYNc


Source: Turkey's Erdogan consolidates power

Sunday, April 23, 2017

Turkey's Erdogan consolidates power

Early in his career, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan made a remark that sums up the tragedy of modern Turkey. "Democracy is like a train," the then-Istanbul mayor said. "You get off once you have reached your destination."

Erdogan's train seems to have arrived. In last Sunday's referendum, a razor-thin majority granted him massive new powers in a vote rife with irregularities. As Erdogan cements his rule in his 1,150-room palace, he's dashed the dream that he'd create the first modern democracy in a mainly Muslim country. (This vote, which could keep him in office until 2034, also kills any minuscule hope that Turkey might enter the European Union in my lifetime.)

President Donald Trump quickly called to congratulate Erdogan on his questionable win and may soon invite him to the White House. Yet Turkey's reliability as a NATO ally is under severe question and Ankara has become a liability in fighting the Islamic State in Syria. Washington has leverage to use on Erdogan in these matters, but only if someone finally manages to fully brief Trump.

The hopes that Erdogan's AK Party would morph into a Muslim version of Europe's conservative Christian Democratic parties was always unrealistic. His early prime ministerial achievements were impressive, however, boosting the economy and starting peace talks with Kurdish rebels. Turkey now has a 95 percent literacy rate, the highest in the Muslim world.

But, having moved from prime minister to president -- until now, a largely symbolic post -- Erdogan's megalomania took over. He set out to emulate Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey, whose authoritarian rule built a secular state from the ruins of the Ottoman Empire.

"Erdogan is following the Ataturk model, using state power to shape country and society in his own image," says Soner Cagaptay, author of "The New Sultan: Erdogan and the Crisis of Modern Turkey." "He doesn't share Ataturk's (secular) values, just his methods. He wants to use state power and education to make the country religious, conservative and Middle Eastern."

But the country is far more complex than that: It is a mix of seculars, moderate and pious Muslims, Kurds, Alavis (a Shiite sect), Christians, and Europe-oriented businessmen. That's why he only won 51 percent of the ballots.

All the major cities voted no on the referendum, which created a powerful presidency with broad control over the judiciary and the ability to make laws by decree.

"Half the country loves him and half loathes him," Cagaptay said at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy in Washington. "He exacerbates the divide."

And that divide was growing long before the election. In recent years, the Turkish president had been cracking down on peaceful demonstrators and jailing journalists. But, with an eye on the votes of nationalist Turks, he restarted a brutal war with Kurdish rebels (who also made big errors).

He also used a mysterious coup attempt last year to conduct massive purges at home, not just of the alleged plotters, but of civil society and the peaceful HDP Kurdish opposition party. (He blames the coup on Fetullah Gulen, a Turkish cleric living in exile in Pennsylvania, whose extradition he demands.)

As many as 71,000 people have reportedly been detained and 41,000 formally arrested, while tens of thousands of academics, judges, and police have been fired and many universities, schools, and media outlets shuttered. With 81 journalists jailed as of December, Turkey's record is worse than China's or Iran's.

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Experts debate whether Erdogan is an authoritarian or an Islamist. Cagaptay told me he's both. "Of course he will try to Islamicize politics and society," the author said. But, he adds, moving in that direction would require Erdogan to keep repressing Turkey's democracy, which would undermine its stability and economy. An advanced economy requires an open society with ethnic and religious tolerance, says the author.

In Turkey, Cagaptay says, that means "freedom for religion for the religious half -- and freedom from religion for the secular half." But Erdogan seems wholly oriented toward his pious followers.

However, the news is not all bad. The fact that nearly half of Turkey's voters rejected the referendum, despite severe repression, shows that the country's civil society remains vibrant. This puts some restraints on Erdogan.

Moreover, he has created huge problems with his neighbors. His help to Sunni Islamists fighting the Syrian regime has boomeranged, creating a terrorist problem at home and annoying Moscow. Cagaptay says Erdogan needs help from NATO to offset pressures from Russia, which is still an enemy despite surface reconciliation.

So, rather than flatter the Turkish sultan (or bow to demands for Gulen's swift extradition), Trump should insist that the Turkish leader stop undermining the Syrian Kurds, who are America's best allies against the Islamic State. He should also urge Erdogan to restart peace talks with Turkey's Kurds and avoid civil war with his political opposition.

"The time for the Ataturk model has passed," says Cagaptay. "It won't work."

That may be too much to discuss over chocolate cake at Mar-a-Lago, but Trump's affinity for dictators should be put on hold if he invites Erdogan to his home.

Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial-board member for the Philadelphia Inquirer.


Source: Turkey's Erdogan consolidates power

Saturday, April 22, 2017

This Is The Least Expensive Beach Holiday Destination In Europe

It's that time of year when the weather's getting a bit less dreary and our heads are onto lighter and brighter things — swimwear, sunglasses, holidays.

With Coachella comes the start of official un-official summer but, though Airbnb always does that freaky thing of telling you there's only 2% of properties available for any given time or location, it's quite normal not to have booked your summer vacay yet.

If you're on the perusal for a beach holiday that doesn't totally wipe out your summer budget or a hen do destination that won't make the whole group hate you, then the Post Office's new study will be of interest.

It's ranked European beach destinations in order of cost, taking into account travel 'essentials' like 'coffee, beer, a can of Coke, wine, water, suncream, insect repellent, UK newspapers, dinners and lunches'. We're not sure where calamari and Aperol Spritzes get factored in, but suppose we can tot that ourselves.

Of all the resorts, Sunny Beach in Bulgaria topped the list, with all 10 essentials adding up to a very reasonable £37.33! Unsurprising, when a bottle of beer or cup of coffee costs only 70p — almost unthinkable compared to London, where a soy flat white can quite feasibly set you back £2.85 and a craft beer around £6.

Most expensive was Ibiza where the 10 items totted up to £131, but the prices vary so it's worth checking out the full Post Office breakdown if, say, you're a coffee enthusiast. With cups at only 61p, the Algarve in Portugal should be your go-to.

Here's the list in order of expense…

Sunny Beach, Bulgaria Algarve, Portugal Costa Del Sol Spain Marmaris, Turkey Paphos, Cyprus Costa Blanca, Spain Porec, Croatia Limassol, Cyprus Crete, Greece Zante, Greece Kefalonia, Greece Majorca, Spain Corfu, Greece Sliema, Malta Lisbon Coast, Portugal Zadar, Croatia Nice, France Sorrento, Italy Ibiza, Spain

See you in Sunny Beach!

Read More: The Foolproof Way To Pack A Suitcase

Read More: What's Your Travel Personality?


Source: This Is The Least Expensive Beach Holiday Destination In Europe

Friday, April 21, 2017

Is Turkey Still a Bridge to the West?

Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan put his power and prestige on the line this month, pushing a constitutional referendum to create a Putinesque, all-powerful executive. He purged and arrested tens of thousands of Turks, closed or cowed the opposition press, made criticism a treasonable offense, manipulated electoral rules, and committed vote fraud. Yet the measure still barely passed, 51.4 percent to 48.6 percent.

Erdogan originally was a figure of hope, lionized by some in the West. His Justice and Development Party (AKP) took power in 2002, pushing aside a weak nationalist coalition. He spent several years liberalizing the economy, addressing Kurdish grievances, and dismantling the repressive, militaristic "deep state." Even liberal secularists and feminists backed him. Turkey prospered economically and Turks enjoyed greater freedom. Erdogan knocked on Europe's door and his government adopted legal reforms to prepare for negotiations to join the European Union.

There always were doubters. Erdogan once said "Democracy is like a streetcar. You ride it until you arrive at your destination and then you step off." But the AKP won a succession of electoral victories and appeared to be turning Turkey into a modern and moderate Islamic democracy. The West was pleased to find such a model and many of us, present writer included, let our hopes outrun reality.

Around 2010 or so, Erdogan changed direction, harnessing state power to punish critics in academia, journalism, and business, as well as enrich his cronies. Tax investigations became just one tool of repression. Erdogan concocted fantastic conspiracy charges to destroy the old military leadership. Critics, even children, were prosecuted for insulting his majestic person on social media.

He used greater political brutality to surmount every political obstacle. After spending years cooperating with Muslim teacher and cleric Fethullah Gulen and the latter's Hizmat (or "Service") movement, differences emerged in 2012 and the two allies dramatically turned on each other the following year. After so-called Gulenists were involved in charging leading AKP officials and family members with corruption, Erdogan purged the police, prosecutors' offices, and judiciary.

In June 2015 Erdogan's AKP lost its parliamentary majority. Rather than accept coalition rule, Erdogan reignited the conflict with Kurdish separatists and called another election five months later; his emphasis on security issues yielded victory. Even AKP officials were not above Erdogan's suspicions: he sidelined a former president/prime minister/foreign minister, Abdullah Gul, and ousted Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, preferring men he could better control.

Erdogan blamed last July's coup attempt on Gulen even before the putsch had failed and anyone had been arrested. Although some Gulenists appeared to be involved, the movement never had much success in penetrating the military, especially its top ranks. Western intelligence agencies discounted the claim that Gulen organized the plot.

Nevertheless, Erdogan used the failed putsch, which some believed he orchestrated or at least tolerated, to his advantage, rather like Adolf Hitler used the infamous Reichstag fire. Erdogan outlawed the opposition and seized extraordinary power. To be sure, Erdogan is more Putin than Hitler, but that is of little comfort for those who languish in jail on dubious charges, with little chance of a fair trial and even less hope to make a living if released.

Parliament granted him emergency powers, which he used against opponents and critics. Opposition leaders and lawmakers were arrested. Academics were dismissed. Schools were closed. Civic organizations were disbanded. Judges were ousted. Businesses were seized. Employees were fired. Bank accounts were frozen. Freedom of assembly was restricted. Publications were shuttered. Journalists were jailed, more than in any other nation, including China.

Even the most modest criticism of Erdogan, reasoned sympathy for the Kurds, or limited connection to Gulen—for instance, having an account in Bank Asya, founded by Gulenists—resulted in ostracism, detention, and prosecution. Some people were arrested for possessing a dollar bill, supposedly a signal of the Gulenist conspiracy. Those acquitted were rearrested and charged with new offenses. Judges who acquitted defendants were dismissed. Many spared jail were barred from leaving the country. Those able to flee Turkey had their passports canceled and, unlike other expatriates, were barred from voting.

The latest count is 47,000 arrested and 130,000 purged from civic life, including those forced from their jobs. Most are social pariahs, shunned by fearful friends and surviving on handouts from relatives. Some Americans have been caught up in the purge, including a Christian missionary, Pastor Andrew Brunson, bizarrely charged with being a member of an "armed terrorist organization."

Thus, even before the referendum, democracy in any meaningful sense already was dead, with no rule of law, checks and balances, or any other restraint on government—especially executive power. Freedom House rates Turkey as only "partly free," poor on political rights, worse on civil liberties, and unfree when it comes to the press. Unfortunately, the situation continues to deteriorate. The latest State Department human-rights report on Turkey runs 75 pages, and what it details is not pretty.

Erdogan called the referendum to ratify reality and satisfy his craving for affirmation. After years of trying to transform Turkey into a strong presidential system, Erdogan succeeded in placing 18 amendments on the ballot to make the president all-powerful and unaccountable. Despite the political Sturm und Drang, however, the campaign was largely Kabuki Theater. Erdogan already exercised dictatorial control, having gotten special "emergency" powers from parliament after last year's attempted coup. Had he lost, his opponents figured he would create an incident to further hype fears and raise tensions, justifying another vote backed by even more brutal repression.

But he never intended there to be any doubt as to the result. European poll watchers politely said the election "fell short" of international standards. The surprise is the small size of his victory margin, even after intimidating opponents, guaranteeing positive press coverage, barring election monitors, rigging the electorate, preventing displaced Kurds from voting, banning public criticism, committing vote fraud, and counting uncertified ballots.

Optimists hoped that having legally secured his dominant position, he might now turn to uniting the country and pursuing the people's business—for instance, restarting peace talks with the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK. However, the Erdogan who became prime minister in 2003 is gone. The close vote appeared to anger rather than humble him. The ruthless yet petty nature of his purge of even the harmless and innocent suggests that politics has become very personal to him. Pervasive repression has little to do with stability and security and much to do with ego and revenge.

Indeed, Prime Minister Binali Yildirim pledged: "Our struggle with internal and external enemies will be intensified." Hundreds of Turks protesting the referendum results were arrested, many in dawn raids the morning after. A leading activist who filed an appeal against the result was detained and charged with "inciting hatred" for questioning the vote's legitimacy.

Of course, Turkey's descent into authoritarianism, whatever Erdogan's motivation, does not set it apart. Other U.S. allies, such as Egypt and Saudi Arabia, are worse; the latter is a totalitarian state waging war on a weak neighbor. However, Erdogan is doing more than defenestrating democracy as part of the Turkish political system. He has destroyed founder Ataturk's secular heritage and shoved his nation down an Islamist path and toward an unknown destination.

Moreover, Ankara's foreign policy has become overtly hostile to the West. Turkey is drifting away from Europe, tolerating the Islamic State, supporting Islamist politics, reigniting war with Turkish Kurds, battling Syrian Kurds rather than ISIS, getting friendly with Russia, and treating the U.S. as a frenemy at best. Washington and Brussels must ask: how long can NATO tolerate a member at odds with the alliance's democratic values and strategic objectives?

Unfortunately, President Donald Trump doesn't seem to have noticed. He's shown a strange affinity for foreign strongmen, including Egypt's Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and the Saudi royals. Erdogan also appears to be on Trump's "friend" list, originally put there, perhaps, by Michael Flynn, briefly Trump's national security advisor, who represented Turkish concerns as a consultant.

However, the president appears to be a true believer, having been the first foreign leader to make a congratulatory phone call to Erdogan after the vote. Ankara claims that Erdogan has been invited for formal talks, though the administration has yet to confirm the visit. After the ballot the State Department noted its usual support for Turkey's "democratic development," but no one was fooled.

After all, the message the president sent, whatever his intentions, was an endorsement of the destruction of what little remained of Turkish democracy. Ironically, in doing so he, and by extension the U.S., rejected Turks who are the most secular, liberal, and pro-American and embraced those most hostile to Western values and objectives. Worse, the president's call ratified a geopolitical relationship that no longer exists. In practice, Turkey is no longer an ally. If President Trump wants to lead the fight against Islamic radicalism, he needs to look elsewhere than Ankara.

Washington sometimes has made ugly bargains in a dangerous world. But only when viewed as necessary to advance America's strategic objectives. The Ottoman Empire long was considered the sick man of Europe. The Republic of Turkey is headed for a different kind of decline today. The U.S. no longer should ignore that government's sustained assault on liberal democracy and other Western values.

Doug Bandow is a Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute.  A former Special Assistant to Ronald Reagan, he is the author and editor of several books, including Foreign Follies: America's New Global Empire.


Source: Is Turkey Still a Bridge to the West?

Thursday, April 20, 2017

Worldview: Turkey's Erdogan consolidates power

Early in his career, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan made a remark that sums up the tragedy of modern Turkey. "Democracy is like a train," the then-Istanbul mayor said. "You get off once you have reached your destination."

Erdogan's train seems to have arrived. In last Sunday's referendum a razor-thin majority granted him massive new powers in a vote rife with irregularities. As Erdogan cements his rule in his 1,150-room palace, he's dashed the dream that he'd create the first modern democracy in a mainly Muslim country. (This vote, which could keep him in office until 2034, also kills any miniscule hope that Turkey might enter the European Union in my lifetime.)

President Trump (too) quickly called to congratulate Erdogan on his questionable win and may soon invite him to the White House. Yet Turkey's reliability as a NATO ally is under severe question and Ankara has become a liability in fighting ISIS in Syria. Washington has leverage to use on Erdogan in these matters, but only if someone finally manages to fully brief Trump.

The hopes that Erdogan's AK Party would morph into a Muslim version of Europe's conservative Christian Democratic parties was always unrealistic. His early prime ministerial achievements were impressive, however, boosting the economy and starting peace talks with Kurdish rebels. Turkey now has a 95 percent literacy rate, the highest in the Muslim world.

But, having moved from prime minister to president - until now, a largely symbolic post - Erdogan's megalomania took over. He set out to emulate Attaturk, the founder of modern Turkey, whose authoritarian rule built a secular state from the ruins of the Ottoman Empire.

"Erdogan is following the Attaturk model, using state power to shape country and society in his own image," says Soner Cagaptay, author of The New Sultan: Erdogan and the Crisis of Modern Turkey. "He doesn't share Attaturk's [secular] values, just his methods. He wants to use state power and education to make the country religious, conservative, and Middle Eastern."

But the country is far more complex than that: It is a mix of seculars, moderate and pious Muslims, Kurds, Alavis (a Shiite sect), Christians, and Europe-oriented businessmen. That's why he only won 51 percent of the ballots.

All the major cities voted no on the referendum, which created a powerful presidency with broad control over the judiciary and the ability to make laws by decree.

"Half the country loves him and half loathes him," Cagaptay said at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy in Washington. "He exacerbates the divide."

And that divide was growing long before the election. In recent years, the Turkish president had been cracking down on peaceful demonstrators and jailing journalists. But, with an eye on the votes of nationalist Turks, he restarted a brutal war with Kurdish rebels (who also made big errors).

He also used a mysterious coup attempt last year to conduct massive purges at home, not just of the alleged plotters, but of civil society and the peaceful, HDP Kurdish opposition party. (He blames the coup on Fetullah Gulen, a Turkish cleric living in exile in Pennsylvania, whose extradition he demands.)

As many as 71,000 people have reportedly been detained and 41,000 formally arrested, while tens of thousands of academics, judges, and police have been fired and many universities, schools, and media outlets shuttered. With 81 journalists jailed as of December, Turkey's record is worse than China's or Iran's.

Experts debate whether Erdogan is an authoritarian or an Islamist. Cagaptay told me he's both. "Of course he will try to Islamicize politics and society," the author said. But, he adds, moving in that direction would require Erdogan to keep repressing Turkey's democracy, which would undermine its stability and economy. An advanced economy requires an open society with ethnic and religious tolerance, says the author.

In Turkey, Cagaptay says, that means "freedom for religion for the religious half - and freedom from religion for the secular half." But Erdogan seems wholly oriented toward his pious followers.

However, the news is not all bad. The fact that nearly half of Turkey's voters rejected the referendum, despite severe repression, shows that the country's civil society remains vibrant. This puts some restraints on Erdogan.

Moreover, he has created huge problems with his neighbors. His help to Sunni Islamists fighting the Syrian regime has boomeranged, creating a terrorist problem at home and annoying Moscow. Cagaptay says Erdogan needs help from NATO to offset pressures from Russia, which is still an enemy despite surface reconciliation.

So, rather than flatter the Turkish sultan (or bow to demands for Gulen's swift extradition), Trump should insist that the Turkish leader stop undermining the Syrian Kurds, who are America's best allies against ISIS. He should also urge Erdogan to restart peace talks with Turkey's Kurds and avoid civil war with his political opposition.

"The time for the Attaturk model has passed," says Cagaptay. "It won't work."

That may be too much to discuss over chocolate cake at Mar-a-Lago, but Trump's affinity for dictators should be put on hold if he invites Erdogan to his home.

trubin@phillynews.com

Published: April 21, 2017 — 3:01 AM EDTThe Philadelphia Inquirer

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Source: Worldview: Turkey's Erdogan consolidates power

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Turkey remains a fundamentally strong long-term growth story

By Dr Abdulaziz A al-Ghorairi

Turkey is in the global spotlight once again this week with its referendum on constitutional reform. Closer to home, it is Turkey's economy and bilateral trade with Qatar that is the main subject of interest at the Turkey-Qatar Expo, currently taking place at the QNCC. Turkey is a natural trading partner for Qatar, as it is one of the major global economies, ranking 18th in terms of nominal GDP size standing at $857bn in 2016, and ranks 17th in terms of GDP by Purchasing Power Parity (PPP). Turkey has the most advanced industrial economy in the Islamic world, a favourable geographical location at the intersection of trade routes, a rapidly progressing investment environment, a long multicultural history, and a young, highly skilled workforce. Turkey's economy managed to expand at the rate of 2.9% in 2016, higher than economists' forecast of 2.2%. Nevertheless, this compares with 6.1% growth during 2015, indicating the current economic slowdown. As a result of the government's measures to increase domestic and foreign demand, and to prevent liquidity problems in the markets, the country's annual GDP expanded by 3.5% in Q4-16, rebounding from 1.8% slump in Q3-16.Trade between Turkey and Qatar is strong, increasing 20-fold in the last decade, with current bilateral trade volumes around $700mn. In 2016, Turkey exported $495mn worth of ships, food, electrical and electronic devices, machines and furniture to Qatar, and Turkey imported $271mn worth of oil, petroleum products, aluminium, and plastic products from Qatari manufacturers during the same year.Qatari companies are increasingly investing in Turkey, mainly in the energy, banking, tourism and real estate sectors. Qatar's investment in Turkey (both public and private sector investments) crossed over $20bn (QR72.8bn) in 2015, the second highest value of investments by any country in Turkey and Turkey ranks fourth in Qatar's preferred investment destinations by country. The number of investment projects currently being undertaken by Turkish contractors in Qatar stands at over 120, with a combined value of $16bn, and Turkish companies are playing a significant role in Qatar's infrastructure development, securing infrastructure-related contracts worth $2.5bn in 2015 alone.The outlook for Turkey remains positive both for the economy in general and for Qatari investors, with the IMF projecting Turkey's medium-term growth at around 3.5% in 2018 and 2019. The Turkish government has announced a series of measures to revive growth and support the currency such as state guarantees through a Credit Guarantee Fund for a proportion of corporate loans, with preferential terms for exporters and SMEs, capping interest rates on public sector deposits at public banks below current market rates for longer maturities, easing the conditions for banks to restructure non-performing loans, and temporary cuts in taxes to support employment and promote industrial investment.Turkey w ants to be in the world's top ten economies by 2023 and I see no reason why this cannot happen. Turkey's economic outlook has given my company, Commercial Bank, confidence in its decision to make a long-term investment in that country through its 100% acquisition of Alternatifbank (ABank) last year. We expect to make good returns on our investment because of Turkey's long-term prospects. Despite current challenges, Turkey remains fundamentally a long-term growth story.* Dr Abdulaziz A al-Ghorairi issenior vice-president & Group chief economist, and head of Asset Management, Commercial Bank.


Source: Turkey remains a fundamentally strong long-term growth story

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Cooking Turkey’s goose

ANALYSIS/OPINION:

Turkey has been bumping along on the ragged margins of democracy for years. With this week's slim approval of a governmental reform referendum, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has proclaimed that the nation can "change gears and continue along our course more quickly."

Endorsement of his amendments to the Turkish constitution are likely to steer the nation into a spider web of harsh and unforgiving authoritarianism. With Turkey's application for European Union membership all but dead now, and its continued role in NATO a dubious proposition, the West is entitled to shudder.

The Erdogan-backed campaign for radical change prevailed by the narrowest of margins — 51.4 percent to 48.6 percent — and grants the president far-reaching new powers, foremost among them the way to complete the Islamization that will eliminate Turkey as the continental link between east and west that was established by Mustafa Kamal Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey. The constitutional amendments that bolster the president's executive powers eliminates the office of prime minister, enables the president to hold office for two five-year terms and a third one with approval of the Parliament, grants the president the freedom to lead a political party, and awards him a leading role in appointing judges.

The razor-thin winning margin has prompted charges of ballot fraud from opposition political leaders, who say the government "assisted" the Erdogan-backed "yes" vote. Indeed, Mr. Erdogan told the international monitors who support claims of ballot fraud, "Know your place." President Trump, perhaps forgetting his place, couldn't resist calling Mr. Erdogan with congratulations he might want to recall in the coming months.

The vote was surprisingly close, considering that Mr. Erdogan put his heavy thumb on the scale, ordering a crackdown on independent newspapers and the men and women who write for them, and the arrest of tens of thousands of "suspects" in the army in the wake of the attempted coup last July.

Mr. Erdogan tried to export his influence to expatriate Turkish communities in the West. This resulted in a bit of backlash in the Netherlands, where the government denied the Turkish foreign minister entry to campaign for the referendum among Turkish expats. Mr. Erdogan for his part called unfriendly Europeans "Nazis," and among other things hinted that he would restore the death penalty for certain crimes, which would make Turkey ineligible for membership in the European Union.

Mr. Erdogan is clearly no democrat. He once compared the pursuit of democracy to a journey by train: "You ride it until you arrive at your destination, then you step off." The president may have decided that this is where he and Turkey step off the train. The loss of Turkey as its eastern buffer would be a particular blow to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. When Turkey joined NATO in 1952 many thought this would lead Turkey into full integration with the West. Now Mr. Erdogan's growing hostility to Western values, his purging of his military to rid it of the remnants of democratic impulse, and a tilt toward a harsh version of Islam puts integration into the West in grave doubt.

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Source: Cooking Turkey's goose

Monday, April 17, 2017

President Erdogan has killed off democracy in Turkey, and it’s a tragedy for Turks, Britain and Europe

RECEP TAYYIP ERDOGAN, the President of Turkey, once said that democracy was like a bus. He would ride it to the destination he wanted. Once there he would get off.

On Sunday Erdogan got off the bus. Taking his country with him. This is a tragedy for Turkey. But it is a deep problem for Britain and Europe too.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been revealed as a Turkish tragedy as the Islamist takes total power

Reuters

Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been revealed as a Turkish tragedy as the Islamist takes total power

Erdogan's direction of travel has been clear ever since the start of his dramatic political ascent more than two decades ago, when he was Mayor of Istanbul.

In public as well as private it was clear he had an Islamist view of the world.

For decades he remorselessly rolled back the secular advances his country made almost a century ago.

As he became Prime Minister, journalists and other critics were thrown in prison. The role of religion in politics grew.

Supporters of Turkish President Erdogan celebrated the referendum in Istanbul on Sunday

AP:Associated Press

Supporters of Turkish President Erdogan celebrated the referendum in Istanbul on Sunday

Then Erdogan moved from Prime Minister to President. And Turkey — which had once seemed a beacon of potential progress in the Islamic world — began to roll backwards.

Last summer a coup was staged. And "staged" may be the right word. Within hours, lists were produced of thousands of judges and others allegedly involved.

It was the perfect pretext for Erdogan to tighten his grip on the army, the judiciary and every other wing of state that had avoided his grasp.

The referendum result has set the leader on course to continue ruling Turkey with a stronger grip for years to come

Rex Features

The referendum result has set the leader on course to continue ruling Turkey with a stronger grip for years to come

Sunday's referendum on increasing the President's powers may have been a "vote" only in the way last year's events were a "coup".

But in any case, the public were said to have voted for what Erdogan wanted, effectively making him sovereign over Parliament and every other part of the state.

His progress from democrat to sultan is complete.

Among those who should feel shame for this are all those who spent the years of Erdogan's rise arguing for his country's entry into the EU.

President Erdogan was accompanied by his wife Emine as he addressed his supporters in Istanbul

Reuters

President Erdogan was accompanied by his wife Emine as he addressed his supporters in Istanbul

On a visit to Turkey in 2010 our then Prime Minister, David Cameron, told Erdogan: "Turkey deserves its place at the top table of European ­politics — and that is what I will fight for."

As late as last year Cameron restated that it was UK government policy to lobby for Turkey to join the EU.

The present Government's crazy policy is that although Britain is leaving the EU we will continue to argue for Turkey to join.

We may all have our criticisms of the EU, but this stance is not only unusual, but cruel.

A supporter of the 'yes' vote brandishes a picture of Erdogan while other supporters wave the Turkish national flag

Getty Images

A supporter of the 'yes' vote brandishes a picture of Erdogan while other supporters wave the Turkish national flag

Other governments across Europe have argued for Turkish membership. Only in recent months have they taken anything like a realistic stance on what Erdogan has actually been doing.

This was partly because of Turkey's role in improving — or worsening — the migration crisis.

In 2015 hundreds of thousands of people entered Europe by travelling through Turkey and on into Europe.

In 2016 the EU — which had encouraged the flow — did a deal with Turkey.

Supporters against giving the Turkish President expanding powers lost the referendum on Sunday

Getty Images

Supporters against giving the Turkish President expanding powers lost the referendum on Sunday

It offered a cash bribe worth billions of Euros and narrowly averted a deal which would have flung the doors of Europe wide to any and all citizens of Turkey.

In return, Erdogan demonstrated he could turn off the flood of migrants into Europe.

But he also saw his opportunity. For ever since the EU-Turkey deal Erdogan has regularly threatened our continent.

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He has repeatedly shown that the hose that can be turned off can also be turned on again.

Politicians from all political sides in Britain argued for Turkey to join the EU.

Many of them — along with some newspapers — claimed there was something not just unjust but "racist" about not wanting Turkey inside the EU.

They claimed it made the EU into a "Christian club" and sent the wrong message to Turkey.

President Erdogan addresses supporters after the results of a nationwide referendum determine the future of Turkey

Getty Images

President Erdogan addresses supporters after the results of a nationwide referendum determine the future of Turkey

Some of these people will now claim that had we only been nicer, Turkey may have gone in a different direction.

This is nonsense. The people who objected to Turkish integration into Europe did so because we saw the direction in which the country was going.

Not just that a dictator-in-waiting was growing his power inside the country, but that Turkish society was tragically too weak to withstand him.

Now he has got where he wanted in a direction of travel which he kept saying but which too few people believed.

The public vote has effectively made Erdogan sovereign over Parliament and every other part of the state

Reuters

The public vote has effectively made Erdogan sovereign over Parliament and every other part of the state

But thank goodness we never listened to the people who tried to bully us into accepting Erdogan's Turkey.

If they had their way then the actual coup which has just taken place would not have occurred outside our borders, but within them.

In a speech last month he urged Turks living in Europe to have five children each, telling them: "You are the future of Europe."

Turkish President Erdogan addresses Istanbul supporters after claimed referendum victory

As a fellow member of Nato, Turkey's reliability as a military ally will have to be re-thought.

Our cooperation with the country's military will increasingly constitute cooperation with an ever more autocratic and Islamist ally.

We will have to deal with the fallout of this for years to come. But at least our boundaries will be clear, and a terrible day for Turkey will be less likely to spell catastrophe for Europe.

Erdogan was elected mayor of Istanbul in 1994

Getty Images

Erdogan was elected mayor of Istanbul in 1994

1954: Born on European side of Istanbul, but grew up in the city of Rize.

1967: Aged 13 he returned to Istanbul, where he sold lemonade on streets to help his family.

1969-1982: Played semi-professional football, including at Istanbul side Kasımpasa Spor.

1978: Married Emine Gulbaran. They have two daughters and two sons.

1984: Made a district chairman of the newly founded Islamist Welfare Party.

1994: Elected mayor of Istanbul.

1999: Sentenced to ten months in prison for inciting religious hatred.

2001: Erdogan founded the Justice and Development Party (AKP).

2003: Elected Prime Minister after constitution changed to allow the move.

2014: Became Turkey's president.

2016: Survived a failed military coup.


Source: President Erdogan has killed off democracy in Turkey, and it's a tragedy for Turks, Britain and Europe

Sunday, April 16, 2017

Turkey rivals make last push before tense poll

Istanbul (AFP) – Turkey's top politicians made a final effort on Saturday to sway undecided voters in a frenetic end to campaigning a day ahead of the closely-contested referendum on expanding President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's powers.

With election rules banning all campaigning after 1500 GMT, both the 'Yes' and 'No' camps squeezed in a flurry of rallies as the clock ticked down to Sunday's landmark poll.

Analysts see the poll as a historic choice on the direction of the NATO member which will shape its future political system and determine relations with the West.

If passed, the new presidential system will implement the most radical political shake-up in Turkey's recent history, dispensing with the office of the prime minister and centralising the entire executive bureaucracy under the presidency.

"Turkey will tomorrow make one of the most important decisions in its history," said Erdogan as he wrapped up an exhausting nationwide campaign with a rally in the Istanbul district of Sariyer.

Confidently predicting victory, he declared: "The polls look really good." But he urged people not to succumb to "lethargy" in voting, saying "the stronger result the better".

"A 'Yes' that emerges from the ballot box with the highest margin will be a lesson to the West," added the president, who has frequently railed against the European Union in the campaign.

– 'Last messages' –

Erdogan, who has dominated the airwaves in recent weeks with multiple daily rallies and interviews, gave no less than four rallies in Istanbul districts.

The standard-bearer of the 'No' camp, Republican People's Party (CHP) leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu, warned at a meeting in the Ankara region that Turkey was deciding if "we want to continue with the democratic parliamentary system or one-man rule".

He described the new system as "a bus with no brakes and whose destination is unknown."

The opposition has cried foul that the referendum has been conducted on unfair terms, with 'Yes' posters ubiquitous on the streets and opposition voices squeezed from the media.

The two co-leaders of the second opposition party the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), Figen Yuksekdag and Selahattin Demirtas, have been jailed on charges of backing Kurdish militants in what supporters say was a deliberate move to eliminate them from the campaign.

The poll is also taking place under a state of emergency that has seen 47,000 arrested in an unprecedented crackdown after the July 15 failed coup.

"The last messages," headlined the Hurriyet daily. "With one day remaining to the historic referendum the leaders are making the final calls to influence undecided voters."

Despite the clear advantages enjoyed by the 'Yes' campaign, opinion polls have predicted drastically different outcomes and analysts are expecting a close result.

– Security an issue –

The campaign has not been plain sailing for Erdogan, and some heavyweight figures within the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) have been conspicuously silent on the new system.

Former prime minister Ahmet Davutoglu spoke before Erdogan at a 'Yes' rally in the Anatolian city of Konya on Friday but, to the amusement of opposition commentators, failed once to endorse the presidential system.

The 'Yes' campaign also hit a last-minute hitch when the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), the AKP's partner in promoting the changes, reacted angrily to comments by a presidential adviser suggesting a federal system could be imposed in Turkey.

Such a system is an anathema to nationalists who believe in the indivisible unity of Turkey and particularly fear the creation of any Kurdish region in the southeast.

Erdogan moved rapidly to say that no such plan was on the agenda and MHP leader Devlet Bahceli said the issue was now closed.

Turkish media said all AKP advisers and ministers had been told to cancel TV interviews scheduled for the last hours of the campaign to prevent further slip-ups.

After a slew of attacks over the last year blamed on Kurdish militants and jihadists, security is set to be a major issue on polling day.

Authorities in Istanbul on Friday detained five people suspected of planning an attack on polling day, following the arrest of 19 alleged Islamist extremists in the Aegean city of Izmir earlier in the week.

The Dogan news agency said a total of 49 IS suspects had been detained in Istanbul alone over the last week.

More than 33,500 police officers will be on duty in Istanbul alone on referendum day, according to Turkish media.


Source: Turkey rivals make last push before tense poll

Saturday, April 15, 2017

Turkey's Yes and No camps target undecided in referendum sprint

Turkey is set to vote in a referendum on Sunday which proposes a major transformation to the country's system of government.

15 Apr 2017 - 8:45 PM  UPDATED 2 HOURS AGO

Turkey's top politicians made a final effort on Saturday to sway undecided voters in a frenetic end to a bitterly-contested campaign in the referendum on expanding President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's powers.

Campaigning ends at 3pm GMT but both the 'Yes' and 'No' camps were squeezing in a flurry of rallies as the clock ticked down to Sunday's landmark poll.

Analysts see the poll as a historic choice on the direction of the NATO member which will shape its future political system and determine relations with the West.

RELATED:

The referendum that could transform Turkey, what you need to know

This Sunday Turkish voters will make a major decision on the future of the country.

If passed, the new presidential system will implement the most radical political shake-up since the fall of the Ottoman Empire, dispensing with the office of the prime minister and centralising the entire executive bureaucracy under the presidency.

Erdogan in a late night interview with TRT state television confidently predicted victory, saying surveys showed a 'Yes' vote of 55-60 percent.

"On Sunday I think that could be a very clear outcome in favour of 'Yes'" he said.

Opinion polls have predicted drastically different outcomes and victories for both sides. But the ruling party and presidency are widely believed to conduct their own confidential polling.

'Last messages'

Erdogan, who has dominated the airwaves in recent weeks with multiple daily rallies and interviews, was due to give four more speeches in Istanbul.

"God willing, this nation will celebrate tomorrow evening," he said in the first of the rallies. "Tomorrow is very important, you will definitely go to ballot box and cast your vote," he told supporters.

The standard-bearer of the 'No' camp, Republican People's Party (CHP) leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu, warned at a meeting in the Ankara region that Turkey was deciding if "we want to continue with the democratic parliamentary system or one man rule".

Watch: Campaigning ahead of the election

He described the new system as "a bus with no brakes and whose destination is unknown."

The opposition has cried foul that the referendum has been conducted on unfair terms, with 'Yes' posters ubiquitous on the streets and opposition voices squeezed from the media.

The two co-leaders of the second opposition party the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), Figen Yuksekdag and Selahattin Demirtas, have been jailed on charges of backing Kurdish militants in what supporters say was a deliberate move to eliminate them from the campaign.

The HDP was due later Saturday to hold a final mass rally in its stronghold of Diyarbakir in southeast Turkey.

"The last messages," headlined the Hurriyet daily. "With one day remaining to the historic referendum the leaders are making the final calls to influence undecided voters."

Security an issue

The campaign, however, has not been plain sailing for Erdogan, and some heavyweight figures within the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) have been conspicuously silent on the new system.

Former prime minister Ahmet Davutoglu spoke before Erdogan at a 'Yes' rally in the Anatolian city of Konya on Friday but, to the amusement of opposition commentators, failed once to endorse the presidential system.

Watch: Turkey, voices of protest

The 'Yes' campaign also hit a last minute hitch when the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), the AKP's partner in promoting the changes, reacted angrily to comments by a presidential adviser suggesting a federal system could be imposed in Turkey.

Such a system is an anathema to nationalists who believe in the indivisible unity of Turkey and particularly fear the creation of any Kurdish region in the southeast.

Erdogan moved rapidly to say that no such plan was on the agenda and MHP leader Devlet Bahceli said the issue was now closed.

Turkish media said all AKP advisers and ministers had been told to cancel TV interviews scheduled for the last hours of the campaign to prevent further slip-ups.

After a slew of attacks over the last year blamed on Kurdish militants and jihadists, security is set to be a major issue on polling day.

Authorities in Istanbul on Friday detained five people suspected of planning an attack on polling day, following the arrest of 19 alleged Islamist extremists in the Aegean city of Izmir earlier in the week.

More than 33,500 police officers will be on duty in Istanbul alone on referendum day, according to Turkish media.

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Source: Turkey's Yes and No camps target undecided in referendum sprint

Friday, April 14, 2017

Mexico among top 10 friendliest destinations for families living abroad: survey

The InterNations organization, which represents expats throughout the world, has released results of its recent survey of perceptions of the countries most welcoming to expats with children. Mexico placed number 8 out of the top 10 nations for friendliness toward expats with kids.

Here is a summary of the the survey results.

1. UgandaEast African country Uganda tops the list as the friendliest destination for expat families. Every single parent rates the friendliness of the local population towards children positively, and seven out of ten (68 percent) are even completely satisfied with the warm attitude towards families, whereas the global average is only 39 percent. Expat parents do not only perceive this country as a friendly place to raise kids, but also as a fairly safe environment: 81 percent rate their children's safety positively — more than, for example, in the US (75 percent). Additionally, more than nine out of ten parents (93 percent) rate their children's general well-being positively. An expat parent from UK currently living in Uganda mentions "safety, friendliness, warmth, fun camping trips and nice food" among some of the best aspects of living in this country.

2. IsraelIsrael is not only one of the most welcoming destinations for families, where 69 percent of all expat parents consider the local population to be extremely friendly towards children. It also ranks high with regard to education and health: overall, Israel places third among the most popular countries for expat families in general. Indeed, 84 percent of respondents with children feel positive about the quality of education, compared to fewer than two-thirds of expat parents worldwide (64 percent). When it comes to children's health, Israel has an excellent evaluation, with 92 percent of parents rating this factor positively, compared to a global average of 74 percent. A US American expat parent living in Israel specifically praises "the weather, living close to the beach, affordable schools and the medical care that is available for children".

(PHOTO: Expat Child)

(PHOTO: Expat Child)

3. TaiwanIn Taiwan, 97 percent of parents rate the general friendliness of local residents towards families with children positively. What is more, the country is also the most popular destination among expats around the world and has outstanding rankings for working abroad, quality of life, and personal finances. An impressive 85 percent of expats in Taiwan are satisfied with their financial situation, and 83 percent judge the local cost of living favorably, which expats who raise children in Taiwan can also benefit from. 

4. Costa RicaSunny Costa Rica has many perks besides its delightful weather. Apart from winning the gold medal as the country with the happiest expat population, it is also rated positively by a remarkable 91 percent of expat parents for a friendly attitude towards families. Additionally, seven out of ten parents (74 percent) are satisfied with the local leisure activities for their kids. Families will benefit from the great climate, too: 96 percent of all expats consider this to be an advantage of life abroad in Costa Rica.

5. ThailandThe Land of Smiles makes the top five of the most welcoming destinations for families, where 85 percent of respondents rate this factor positively. Moreover, expat parents will surely be happy to hear that the quality of medical care receives excellent ratings as well. Thus, it is no wonder that 76 percent of expat residents with kids feel positively about their children's health. An even higher percentage of them (81 percent) rate their children's general well-being positively.

6. GreeceWhile Greece secures the 6th position out of 45 countries worldwide for its friendliness towards families, it does not perform well in many other aspects. This destination ranks particularly low when it comes to the availability of education options, with 59 percent of parents rating this factor negatively. Half of the parents (49 percent) feel negatively about the cost of education too. As a result, Greece is one of the least popular countries for expat families overall, ranking 43rd out of 45 in the Family Life Index.

7. AustraliaIn addition to ranking among the ten most welcoming destinations for expat families, Australia has above-average results for work-life balance: seven out of ten expat residents (71 percent) appreciate this about life in Australia, and parents in particular will be glad to hear it. And their free time is well spent, as Down Under also offers a great variety of leisure activities for kids, with 94 percent of expat parents rating this factor positively.

8. MexicoMexicans do not only welcome families with a friendly attitude, but expats in general: The country ranks first worldwide for finding new friends abroad, second for making expats feel welcome and fourth for friendliness. This puts Mexico first in the global Ease of Settling In Index. As for the friendliness towards families in particular, an impressive 87 percent rate this factor positively, while only four percent give it a negative rating.

9. TurkeyCurrently, Turkey ranks 60th for safety and security, partly due to its poor ratings for political stability: 62 percent of expats feel negatively about the latter — more than three times the global average of 18 percent. What is more, the country is rather unpopular among expat families specifically: owing to a poor performance with regard to key factors such as childcare or education, it merely places 41st out of 45 countries. Nonetheless, Turkey is considered one of the friendliest and most welcoming countries for expat families. Nine out of ten parents (89 percent) rate this factor positively and a mere four percent give it a negative rating.

10. PhilippinesThe Philippines just about make the top ten list, with 86 percent of respondents rating the friendliness of the population towards expat families positively — which is still slightly higher than the global average of 80 percent. Expat families with younger children might also be interested in the fact that the Philippines does very well when it comes to childcare costs: 39 percent of expat parents give this factor an excellent rating, as opposed to 14 percent worldwide.

Source: InterNations

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Source: Mexico among top 10 friendliest destinations for families living abroad: survey

Thursday, April 13, 2017

Turkey Preferred Travel Destination for Ukrainians

Some 1.5 million Ukrainians traveled abroad in 2016, and an impressive 75% chose Turkey as their destination of choice, according to the Hotels Association of Turkey (Türkiye Otelciler Birliği – TÜROB).

Turkey is now the most preferred foreign destination in Ukraine and TÜROB is expecting the trend to continue in 2017. The association prepared a detailed report of expectations and forecasts for this market after the Ukraine International Travel & Tourism (UITT), held in Kiev at the end of March. TÜROB also reported a 48% year-on-year (YoY) growth in 2016 as compared to 2015.

This positive report contrasts with earlier statements by TÜROB President Timur Bayındır who noted that this year, hotels in Istanbul alone recorded decline in revenue per available room (RevPAR) and average daily rate (ADR). For instance, in February 2017, the city's ADR and RevPAR decreased by 19.3% and 19.9% as compared to the same timeframe in 2016.

"For Istanbul's tourism to recover, some measures are needed urgently," Bayındır said in a press statement.

From all Ukrainian tourists visiting Turkey in 2016, more than half preferred Antalya as their favorite destination, while some 270000 Ukrainian tourists chose Istanbul. An agreement signed mid-March in Ankara by Ukrainian Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman and Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yıldırım will allow citizens of the two countries visa-free travel and entry.

"We have signed an agreement that will allow citizens of the two countries to be able to travel only with their identity card. This agreement can be regarded as a visa exemption," said Prime Minister Binali Yıldırım in a joint press conference on March 14.

"This visit takes place on the 25th anniversary of the beginning of Turkish-Ukrainian relations. The agreements we have made in this visit are intended to facilitate the mutual travel of our citizens. There will be mutual flights at regional airports, and the free trade agreement will increase trade," added Ukrainian Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman.


Source: Turkey Preferred Travel Destination for Ukrainians

Wednesday, April 12, 2017

Erdogan's Turkey

Government supporters remain convinced that anti-Erdogan bias in the West is misconceived and point out that Turkey is - among other things - the world's largest host of refugees.

It became the main route for those crossing to Europe, with thousands boarding dinghies every night from the Turkish coast to the Greek islands, and many drowning en route.

Turkey struck a deal with the EU to stem the flow - sending failed asylum seekers back. It's widely believed that European leaders have tempered their criticism of Erdogan because they needed his co-operation on migrants.

But in some Western capitals, anger at Turkey's unpredictable leader is growing. The European Parliament called for a suspension of EU membership negotiations.

In Turkey, this referendum will be a turning point. A "yes" would greatly strengthen Erdogan's hand, giving him unprecedented power and possibly allowing him to remain in office until 2029, as well as virtually guaranteeing him and his family immunity from any attempts at prosecution.

A "no" would not spell the end for him - but would embolden the Turkish opposition and provide a chance for a political challenge.

Whichever way it goes, the chasm between Turkey and the West has grown dramatically.

Some blame Erdogan for that but others see the fault with the EU - that it had a window of opportunity after opening negotiations in 2005 to coax Erdogan into long-lasting reforms.

Instead, the argument goes, the EU gave way to the rhetoric of the likes of France's Nicolas Sarkozy, who called Turkish membership "unthinkable".

Turkey sensed it would continue to be held in the EU's waiting room.

"Sadly, Europe sees President Erdogan and Turkey as an 'other' through which to deflect their internal problems onto a distant and imaginary enemy," wrote Ibrahim Kalin, the president's spokesman.

"It only deepens the sense of mistrust that is already poisoning relations between Turkey and Europe on the one hand and Islamic and Western societies on the other."

Turkey matters. It remains a vital Western ally in the region, Nato's eastern flank and a big trading partner. It is a crucial player in attempts to bring peace to Syria and the war against so-called Islamic State.

As it tries, with faltering success, to pivot more towards Russia and Gulf States, that could have a considerable geopolitical impact. The West cannot afford to lose this country.

"Democracy is like a train, Erdogan once famously said. "You get off once you have reached your destination."

Some believe he has many stations left to pass, others that this country is in the midst of a slow-motion train crash. This could be the crowning moment or the undoing of Erdogan's Turkey.


Source: Erdogan's Turkey