Dass Sebastian Kurz angefangen hat und er nicht der einzige ist, der seine Gedanken undiplomatisch äußern kann. Ansonsten zurücklehnen und das Theater genießen.Kardux hat geschrieben:(10 Aug 2016, 20:16)
Ja, und der türkische Außenminister bezeichnete Wien als die „Hauptstadt des radikalen Rassismus“.
Ich meine was soll man dazu genau sagen?
Rassismus, Fremdenfeindlichkeit & Verschwörungsmentalität in der Türkei
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Re: Rassismus, Fremdenfeindlichkeit & Verschwörungsmentalität in der Türkei
Re: Rassismus, Fremdenfeindlichkeit & Verschwörungsmentalität in der Türkei
Lernen müsst ihr alle, das Strangthema zu beachten. Auch hier muss ich themenfremdes wegräumen.
Re: Rassismus, Fremdenfeindlichkeit & Verschwörungsmentalität in der Türkei
Nachdem die türkische Armee, das besetzte Nordkurdistan (Südostanatolien) vor drei Jahren mit Krieg und Zerstörung überzog, zeigten einige türkische Akademiker Zivilcourage und starteten eine Petition die sich gegen den Krieg richtet. Viele dieser Akademiker wurden daraufhin wegen "Terrorunterstützung" (weil man gegen Krieg ist) angeklagt. Nun wurde das Urteil für drei dieser Akademiker bekannt:
Diese Akademiker haben bewiesen, dass es in der Türkei auch noch Menschen gibt, die sich diesem kurdophoben Rassismus nicht anschliessen möchten.
https://www.usnews.com/news/world/artic ... er-lawyersTurkey Hands Suspended Jail Sentences to Three Academics Over Kurdish Letter: Lawyers
A Turkish court sentenced three academics on Friday to suspended prison terms on terrorism charges for signing a 2016 petition calling for an end to state violence against Turkey's Kurds, two lawyers in the case said.
The three from Istanbul University, who each received suspended jail sentences of 15 months, were the first to be convicted of 148 academics now being prosecuted for signing the open letter to the Turkish government.
The three were found guilty of using the media to spread terrorist propaganda.
The letter, entitled "We will not be a party to this crime!", was published in January 2016 in reaction to months of fighting between the state and the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), after a 2-1/2-year ceasefire broke down in 2015.
The government put large parts of the southeast under curfew and some largely Kurdish areas were bombarded by heavy weapons.
Calling themselves "Academics for Peace", the 1,128 signatories included Turkish scholars and prominent overseas academics such as American linguist Noam Chomsky.
They said Turkey was condemning residents of towns in the southeast to hunger through the use of curfews and also called for a solution to the conflict that included talks with the Kurdish political movement.
The government says its measures were necessary to root out Kurdish militants who had dug trenches and laid explosives. The United Nations has estimated the security operations left 2,000 people dead and up to half a million displaced.
NO APPEAL PLANNED
"I do not think the verdict is lawful," said one of the lawyers who declined to be named due to the sensitivity of the issue. "What they did does not constitute a crime under terror laws. There needs to be a call to violence for it to be a crime."
The lawyer said there would not be an appeal, citing a lack of trust in the Turkish judicial system.
The trials of seven other academics who also appeared before a court on Friday were adjourned until April, the lawyers said.
The PKK, considered a terrorist organization by Turkey, the United States and the European Union, has waged a three-decade insurgency against the state that has killed more than 40,000 people.
Since a failed coup in July 2016, Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has embarked on a large-scale crackdown that has seen more than 50,000 people arrested and some 150,000, including many academics, sacked or suspended from their jobs.
The government says its clampdown is necessary given the security threats that Turkey faces.
Diese Akademiker haben bewiesen, dass es in der Türkei auch noch Menschen gibt, die sich diesem kurdophoben Rassismus nicht anschliessen möchten.
Make Kurdistan Free Again...
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Re: Rassismus, Fremdenfeindlichkeit & Verschwörungsmentalität in der Türkei
Daran hätte ich auch ohne diese Akademiker nicht gezweifelt. Und auch nicht daran dass dieser Teil der Türkei unter der Entwicklung der letzten 10 Jahre am meisten leidet.Kardux hat geschrieben:(24 Feb 2018, 09:36) Diese Akademiker haben bewiesen, dass es in der Türkei auch noch Menschen gibt, die sich diesem kurdophoben Rassismus nicht anschliessen möchten.
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Re: Rassismus, Fremdenfeindlichkeit & Verschwörungsmentalität in der Türkei
und wieder wird ein land in der vergangenheit gestürzt. 15-20 jahre brauchte china um das ungetan zu machen.tabernakel hat geschrieben:(25 Feb 2018, 05:41)
Daran hätte ich auch ohne diese Akademiker nicht gezweifelt. Und auch nicht daran dass dieser Teil der Türkei unter der Entwicklung der letzten 10 Jahre am meisten leidet.
nathan über mich: »er ist der unlinkste Nicht-Rechte den ich je kennengelernt habe. Ein Phänomen!«
blues über mich: »du bist ein klassischer Liberaler und das ist auch gut so.«
blues über mich: »du bist ein klassischer Liberaler und das ist auch gut so.«
Re: Rassismus, Fremdenfeindlichkeit & Verschwörungsmentalität in der Türkei
http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/tur ... 34346.htmlErdogan has released the genealogy of thousands of Turks – but what is his motive?
In 2003, the Armenian newspaper Agos, whose editor Hrant Dink was assassinated outside his office in 2007, reported that the Turkish government was secretly coding minorities in registers.
Only in Turkey is the identity of a citizen a matter of national security. That’s why the population registry in Ankara was until now a closed book, its details a state secret. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk’s definition of “Turkishness” was “anyone who is attached to the Turkish state as a citizen”. Turks came from a clear ethnic identity, untainted by racial minorities or doubtful lineage. That’s one reason why the Nazis lavished praise on Ataturk’s republic, their newspapers mourning his death in black-bordered front pages.
After all, as Hitler was to ask in several newspaper interviews – and to his generals before he invaded Poland – who now remembers the Armenians? Ataturk had supposedly inherited an Armenian-free Turkey, just as Hitler intended to present his followers with a Jew-free Europe. The Armenian genocide of 1915 – denied by the Turkish government today – destroyed a million and a half Christian Ottoman citizens in the first industrial holocaust of the 20th century. Almost the entire Armenian community had been liquidated. Or had it?
For the stunned reaction of Turks to the sudden and unexpected opening of population registers on an online genealogy database three weeks ago was so immediate and so vast that the system crashed within hours. Rather a lot of Turks, it turned out, were actually Armenians – or part-Armenians – or even partly Greek or Jewish. And across the mountains of eastern Anatolia – and around the cities of Istanbul, Izmir, Erzurum, Van and Gaziantep and along the haunted death convoy routes to Syria, ancient ghosts climbed out of century-old graves to reassert their Armenian presence in Turkish history. For the registry proved that many of them – through their families – were still alive.
Until now, for at least two decades – at least before Sultan Erdogan’s post-coup autocracy – thousands of Turks spoke freely, albeit in private, about their ancestry. They knew that amid the mass slaughter and rape of the Armenians, many Christian families sought sanctuary in conversion to Islam, while tens of thousands of young Armenian women were given in marriage to Turkish or Kurdish Muslim men. Their children grew up as Muslims and regarded themselves as Turks but often knew that they were half-Armenian. Tens of thousands of Armenian orphans were placed in Muslim schools, forced to speak Turkish and change their names. One of the largest schools was in Beirut, organised for a time by one of Turkey’s leading feminists who wrote of her experience and was later to die in America.
The Armenian diaspora – the 11 million Armenians living outside Turkey or Armenia itself, and who trace their ancestry back to the survivors of the 1915 genocide – were the first to understand the significance of the newly-opened population registers, noting that some information dated back to the early 1800s. Up to four million Turkish citizens were reported to have sought access to their family tree within 48 hours – which is why the system crashed – and in the days since it was re-established, according to retired statistician and Armenian demographer George Aghjayan, eight million Turks have requested their pedigrees. That’s 10 per cent of the entire Turkish population.
The documents can be vague. And they are not complete. There are examples of known Armenian ancestors listed as Muslim without reference to their origin. The names shown for those known to have converted during the 1915 genocide are Muslim names – but the Christian names of their parents are also shown. There will always be discrepancies and unknown details. Many Ottoman registrars did not give accurate details of birthdays: Turkish officials might travel to a village once a month and simply list its newborn under the date of their visit. There are still centenarians alive in Lebanon and Syria, for example, who all possess the same birth date, whatever their origin.
So why has Turkey released these files now? Erdogan is quoted to have once complained that Turks were “accused of being Jews, Armenians or Greeks”. Tayfun Atay, a columnist for the Turkish newspaper Cumhuriyet, wrote that he was “advised in a friendly matter not to admit that I am a Georgian…What about those who risk learning that they are of Armenian ancestry or a convert? Just think: you think you are a red-blooded Turk but turn out to be a pure-blood Armenian.”
Journalist Serdar Korucu told Al-Monitor that “if they had done this a few years ago when we were [becoming more tolerant], conspiracy theories would not have been as strong as today, when the state believes we are in a struggle for existence. This is how Turkey reinvigorates the spirit of the Independence War” – to inspire patriotism and pro-government thinking.
In 2003, the Armenian newspaper Agos, whose editor Hrant Dink was assassinated outside his office in 2007, reported that the Turkish government was secretly coding minorities in registers: Greeks were one, according to the paper. Armenians were two. Jews were three. Korucu recalled how the director of the Turkish Historical Society threatened minorities in 2007. “Don’t make me angry. I have a list of converts I can reveal down to their streets and homes.” The director later became a politician in the rightist Nationalist Action Party.
Ethnic Armenian columnist Hayko Bagdat placed this in a story he told the Al-Monitor website – including an individual family tale which might be humorous if it was not so charged with tragedy. “During the 1915 genocide, along with mass conversions, there were also thousands of children in exile…The society is not yet ready to deal with this reality.” Imagine, Bagdat said, that Lutfi Dogan, who had served as Turkey’s director of religious affairs, was the brother of someone who was the Armenian patriarch, Sinozk Kalustyan.
“Kalustyan, who returned to Turkey from Beirut in 1961, was remembered as a saint in the Turkish Armenian Patriarchate and as someone who had served in the most difficult times after 1915. During the genocide, his mother sent the children away and converted to Islam. Later she married [a man called] Dogan, who was of high social standing, and had two girls and a boy. The boy was Lutfi Dogan. When the mother, who was then with the Nationalist Action Party…died, his uncle came in priest garb from Beirut to attend the funeral. Nobody could say anything.”
This predicament was eloquently conveyed in Fethiye Cetin’s memoir of her grandmother, a respected Muslim housewife in the small Turkish town of Maden, who revealed to her granddaughter that she was Armenian. Most of the men in her village were slaughtered, Seher (her real Armenian name was Heranus) said. A Turkish gendarme had adopted her. Fethiye Cetin, a human rights lawyer who acted for the soon-to-be-murdered Hrant Dink, posted her grandmother’s death announcement in Dink’s paper, Argos: “Heranus lost her entire family and never saw them again,” she wrote. “She was given a new name, to live in a new family. She forgot her mother tongue and her religion…she never ever forgot her name, her village, her mother, her father…She lived until the age of 95.” Relatives in America read the death notice and Heranus’ sister – still alive – called Cetin in Istanbul. A family reunited.
Perhaps two million Turks have Armenian grandmothers. But they are supposed to believe that the genocide never happened.
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Re: Rassismus, Fremdenfeindlichkeit & Verschwörungsmentalität in der Türkei
Jetzt schaltet sich Trump ein um einen inhaftierten Priester aus den USA freizubekommen. Selbstverständlich kommt von ihm gleich eine ordentliche Breitseite.
"The United States will impose large sanctions on Turkey for their long time detainment of Pastor Andrew Brunson, a great Christian, family man and wonderful human being. He is suffering greatly. This innocent man of faith should be released immediately!" Quelle: Guidants News https://news.guidants.com
Bin schon gespannt wie lange es dauert bis er frei kommt. Ich tippe mal auf max 48 Stunden.
"The United States will impose large sanctions on Turkey for their long time detainment of Pastor Andrew Brunson, a great Christian, family man and wonderful human being. He is suffering greatly. This innocent man of faith should be released immediately!" Quelle: Guidants News https://news.guidants.com
Bin schon gespannt wie lange es dauert bis er frei kommt. Ich tippe mal auf max 48 Stunden.
- Tom Bombadil
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Re: Rassismus, Fremdenfeindlichkeit & Verschwörungsmentalität in der Türkei
Die Zelle wird nicht leer bleiben: https://www.tagesschau.de/ausland/tuerk ... n-101.html
The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants. It is its natural manure.
Thomas Jefferson
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Diffamierer der Linken.
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Trolle bitte nicht füttern!
Thomas Jefferson
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Diffamierer der Linken.
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Trolle bitte nicht füttern!
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Re: Rassismus, Fremdenfeindlichkeit & Verschwörungsmentalität in der Türkei
Der Faschismus in der Türkei bezeichnet Individuen bereits als Besitz der Nation. Es wird Zeit in der NATO den Status der Türkei als Mitglied der Wertegemeinschaft infragezustellen.
http://www.faz.net/aktuell/politik/ausl ... 19457.htmlSoylu schrieb am Donnerstagmorgen auf Twitter, dass man sich in Amerika holen werde, was der Türkei gehöre. „Wir haben in Amerika einen Besitz: Fetö. Den werden wir nicht dort lassen. Wir werden ihn holen!“ Als „Fetö“ bezeichnet die Türkei die Gülen-Bewegung. Staatspräsident Recep Tayyip Erdogan wirft Gülen vor, hinter dem Putschversuch von 2016 zu stecken, und verlangt seine Auslieferung.
"Die Erde ist ein Irrenhaus. Dabei könnte das bis heute erreichte Wissen der Menschheit aus ihr ein Paradies machen." Joseph Weizenbaum
- Tom Bombadil
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Re: Rassismus, Fremdenfeindlichkeit & Verschwörungsmentalität in der Türkei
Ein hochrangiges Opfer packt aus:
Den türkischen Behörden gilt er als "Terrorist". Nach dem Putsch wurde er inhaftiert, dann gelang ihm die Flucht. Teri Schultz berichtet, was er zu erzählen hat, und warum er nicht länger über das Erlebte schweigen will.
https://www.msn.com/de-de/nachrichten/p ... ntp#page=1
Den türkischen Behörden gilt er als "Terrorist". Nach dem Putsch wurde er inhaftiert, dann gelang ihm die Flucht. Teri Schultz berichtet, was er zu erzählen hat, und warum er nicht länger über das Erlebte schweigen will.
https://www.msn.com/de-de/nachrichten/p ... ntp#page=1
The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants. It is its natural manure.
Thomas Jefferson
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Diffamierer der Linken.
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Trolle bitte nicht füttern!
Thomas Jefferson
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Diffamierer der Linken.
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Trolle bitte nicht füttern!
Re: Rassismus, Fremdenfeindlichkeit & Verschwörungsmentalität in der Türkei
In der Türkei häufen sich Angriffe auf Kurden durch organisierten Lynchmord.
Jetzt fielen dem sieben Mitglieder einer Familie in Konya zum Opfer:
Jetzt fielen dem sieben Mitglieder einer Familie in Konya zum Opfer:
Unter Erdogan werden Kurden zum Freiwild, und die EU schaut zu.Bewaffnete Angreifer haben in der Türkei sieben Mitglieder einer kurdischen Familie getötet. Die Angreifer drangen nach türkischen Medienberichten am Freitag in das Haus der Familie in Konya im Zentrum des Landes ein, töteten die Bewohner und versuchten, das Haus in Brand zu setzen. Menschenrechtler sprachen von einem rassistischen Verbrechen.
Die Mitglieder der Familie waren bereits im Mai angegriffen und schwer verletzt worden. Ein jetzt getötetes Familienmitglied hatte der Nachrichtenwebsite „Gazete Duvar“ vor wenigen Tagen gesagt, Nachbarn hätten die Familie bedroht und gesagt, sie würden „hier keine Kurden wohnen lassen“. Die gesamte Familie fürchtete demnach um ihr Leben, zumal Polizei und Justiz nicht gegen die damaligen Angreifer vorgegangen seien.
https://www.welt.de/vermischtes/article ... oetet.html
https://www.rudaw.net/english/middleeas ... /300720212
Am Yisrael Chai
"It's God's job to judge the terrorists, it's our duty to arrange that meeting." (IDF)
"It's God's job to judge the terrorists, it's our duty to arrange that meeting." (IDF)