Thursday, February 24, 2005

Turkey Parliament Approves Amnesty For University Students

DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
February 23, 2005 4:59 p.m.

ANKARA (AP)--Turkey 's parliament on Wednesday approved legislation that would allow thousands of students thrown out of universities to return, including women who violated this staunchly secular but Muslim country's ban on Islamic-style head scarves.

The amnesty allows former university students who were dismissed from universities on academic or disciplinary grounds after June 29, 2000, to return to school.

But secular critics have said the measure is an attempt by the governing party, which has roots in political Islam, to appease conservative constituents because it will largely benefit female students dismissed from schools for breaching a strict ban on headscarves.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government points out that nine similar amnesties, which have proven very popular here, were passed by previous governments and a range of former students now stand to benefit.

Officials also point out that women who continue to wear head scarves will be banned from returning to universities.

Eyup Fatsa, a top government lawmaker, added Wednesday that the legislation would also allow students who left during a severe 2001 economic crisis to return.

Erdogan's Justice and Development Party was founded by former members of a pro-Islamic party closed by the courts.

Erdogan's party denies any Islamic agenda and has made Turkey 's bid to join the European Union its top priority since sweeping to power in 2002.

Wednesday, February 23, 2005

Attempted School Shooting - Thwarted!

This is exactly why we will never send our children to public school - they are just too dangerous!

Sunday, February 13, 2005

Sick of Microsoft?

Free Turkish Operating System Rivals Windows

Published: Sunday 13, 2005
zaman.com


The head of Microsoft Bill Gates, who visited Turkey recently, has a rival living in Turkey. Emre Sokullu a resident of Istanbul, has developed open coded Linux and adapted it to Turkish and named it Turkix.

One of the most important advantages of Turkix, which can be downloaded from www.turkix.org, is that you can use it without installing it on your computer. Turkix, which is Turkey's first Linux based integral Turkish operating system, has also attracted the attention of the Europeans. European companies have contacted Sokullu in order to install Turkix to their computers. The tenth generation descendent of Sokullu Mehmet Pasha, Emre Sokullu said that there are no security problems for computers with Turkix and that it is highly secure against viruses. Sokullu said he prefers to be called "Microsoft's rival" than "Bill Gates' rival".

The first version of Turkix was released in January 2004 and was prepared by a team led by Sokullu. As open source software based on the Linux operating system, Turkix is free of charge and does not require a license. It is also compatible with other software from Linux's rich software archive. Turkix is different from other similar operating systems with features including ability to use it from CD without installing it to your hard disc, folders and operating style similar to Windows, ease of access from the web, Turkish-language compatibility, ease of installation, and the possibility to be installed in the same computer as a Microsoft Windows operating system. Sokullu says that the latest version, Turkix 3.1, will be available by next month and adds that Turkix exceeds boundaries of Turkey. Interest in Turkix on the net has attracted the attention of European companies and some computer companies from France and Germany have contacted Sokullu saying they want to sell computers with Turkix operating systems.

Saturday, February 12, 2005

70 % Against Headscarf Ban in Turkey

70 % Against Headscarf Ban in Turkey
By Political News Services
Published: Thursday 10, 2005
zaman.com

An overwhelming majority of people in Turkey find the headscarf ban unfair as it obstructs the educational rights of students who wear headscarves. A survey by Pollmark conducted on January 31st and February 1st revealed striking figures on the issue. Seventy percent of the respondents in the survey are against the headscarf ban in universities. According to the survey which also questioned political tendencies, the Justice and Development Party (AKP) is leading with a large margin.

According to the survey, the Turkish people also show a libertarian attitude to female civil servants. Sixty-three percent of the people interviewed indicated that female state officers should be free to choose to wear headscarves if they wanted.

Conducted in Istanbul, Tekirdag, Izmir, Bursa, Adana, Kayseri, Samsun, Trabzon, Erzurum, Malatya, and Gaziantep, the survey was prepared based on interviews with 3,062 people. According to the resulting figures, no serious changes have occurred in political preferences of people since the November 3rd 2002 general elections. Vote percentage of the AKP is still 37 percent while it is 14 percent for the Republican People's Party (CHP) and six percent for the True Path Party (DYP) and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP). When adjusted for floating voters and abstentions, the AKP's share of the vote reaches 50 percent, the CHP, 19 percent, the DYP, 8.3 percent, and the MHP, 8.5 percent.

The survey results also show that there is a strong support for the current economic policies. 62 percent find the government successful, which include 87 percent of the AKP supporters and 42 percent of the CHP supporters.

Tuesday, February 08, 2005

Iraq Still Clouds Turkey Ties Despite Rice Trip

By Gareth Jones

ANKARA (Reuters) - Tensions between the United States and Muslim ally Turkey persist, especially over Iraq's future, despite Turks' delight that Condoleezza Rice included Ankara on her first foreign trip as the new Secretary of State.

Turks also welcomed Rice's message the United States, like Turkey, was opposed to any breakup of Iraq, where Turks fear the emergence of an independent Kurdish state on their border.

"It was very candid, very positive," a Turkish diplomat said of Sunday's talks between Rice and Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul. "There was good personal chemistry."

But political analysts said the old problems remain.

"It is pure wishful thinking to say things have been patched up with Rice's visit. It will take more than a few visits to get this relationship back on track," said Suat Kinikligolu of the Ankara Center for Turkish Policy Studies.

Washington was outraged in 2003 when Turkey's parliament refused to let U.S. troops invade north Iraq from Turkish soil.

For Turkey, the heart of the problem is its conviction the Americans are ignoring efforts by Kurds in northern Iraq to take control of the oil-rich city of Kirkuk as part of a wider drive to carve out an independent Kurdish state.

Ankara fears this would reignite separatism among the Kurds of southeast Turkey and destabilize the wider region.

Both before and after Iraq's Jan. 30 elections, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan criticized the United States for failing to rein in the Iraqi Kurds. He said Washington had also failed to clamp down on Turkish Kurdish guerrillas in northern Iraq, despite promises to do so.

Gul, usually restrained in his public comments, said Ankara could not stand by if Kurds seized Kirkuk, raising the prospect of a Turkish military intervention. Few take such a threat literally, but the rhetoric jacked up tensions further.

Putting a brave face on things, Rice said after meeting Gul that Washington and Ankara were old friends and allies whose strong relationship allowed them sometimes to disagree.

Turkish diplomats said they believed the second Bush administration would be more sensitive to Turkish concerns. But they conceded that nothing has changed on the ground.

CONTESTED KIRKUK

Kirkuk looks set to remain a flashpoint, with Iraq's Kurds saying it is historically theirs, a view contested by both the Arabs and by the Turkic-speaking Turkmen minority whom Turkey feels it has a special duty to protect.

Rice effectively sidestepped the issue of Kirkuk, saying it was for all Iraqis to agree on the city's final status.

Equally discouraging for Turkey, U.S. forces, stretched by the insurgency in central Iraq, are no more likely to march into the relatively peaceful Kurdish north to hunt down an estimated 5,000 Turkish Kurdish rebels than they were before Rice's visit.

Turkish nationalists believe it is time for Ankara to get tough with Washington over what they see as its "bad faith."

"As long as this situation continues, with the Kurds winning the upper hand in Kirkuk and pushing for an independent Kurdistan, it will hurt Turkey more and more ... We cannot go on like this," said Hasan Unal of Ankara's Bilkent University.

He said Turkey should consider suspending all logistical support for the Americans in Iraq and threaten to pull its peacekeeping troops out of Afghanistan. It should also deny U.S. forces use of Turkey's Incirlik airbase, he said.

The nationalists point to opinion polls which show Turkey has become one of the most anti-American countries, saying no democratic government can ignore such trends.

The key to the situation remains Erdogan himself.

Many analysts say Erdogan's anti-American outbursts are not just cheap populism calculated to curry favor with his Islamist voters. He actually means it, they say, but stress he is also too pragmatic to turn his back completely on Washington.

"Turkey cannot afford to alienate too much the United States because they are too active in this region," said Kiniklioglu.

Rice Assures Turkey US Opposes PKK Terrorism from Iraq

Rice Assures Turkey US Opposes PKK Terrorism from Iraq


06 February 2005


Condoleezza Rice, with a portrait of Turkey's founder Ataturk in the background, talks at Ankara Esenboga Airport, Turkey
Condoleezza Rice, with a portrait of Turkey's founder Ataturk in the background, talks at Ankara Esenboga Airport, Turkey

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told Turkish leaders in Ankara the United States is committed to Iraq's unity, and to fighting the Turkish-Kurdish extremist group PKK that has operated from northern Iraq.

Ms. Rice's talks in Turkey, spanning two days, focused on Iraq and, in particular, Turkish concerns about Kurdish separatism there, and a possible renewal of terrorism against Turkey by the PKK, the Kurdistan Workers Party.

Some Turkish officials have accused the United States of being indifferent to Kurdish moves in northern Iraq they see as laying groundwork for a Kurdish state, which could fuel separatism among Turkey's Kurdish minority.

Turkish anxiety has only increased since Iraqi elections a week ago, in which Kurds turned out in large numbers, especially in the ethnically-mixed northern oil center of Kirkuk, seen as the potential capital of a Kurdish state.

At a closing news conference with Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, Ms. Rice reiterated the U.S. commitment to the unity and territorial integrity of Iraq, an implicit rejection of Kurdish statehood, and to an Iraq, in which all its religious and ethnic factions are welcome and respected.

She also said she told her Turkish hosts that Iraq's territory should never be a place from which terrorism can be committed against its neighbors.

"Indeed, from the American point of view, whatever terrorist organizations wish to perpetrate crimes against populations have to be treated the same," she said. "Whether it is the al-Qaida, the PKK, or the Palestinian rejectionists, terrorism is simply not an acceptable tool in the modern world, and I wanted to be certain that the minister and his colleagues knew of America's commitment to rid the region of terrorism, including terrorism that might take place from the territory of Iraq."

Ms. Rice noted that the State Department has long listed the PKK as a terrorist organization.

Members of the group found refuge in northern Iraq before the U.S.-led invasion, and have declared an end to a five-year-old unilateral cease-fire with Turkey.

In an interview with Turkey's NTV news channel, the secretary of state stopped short of pledging U.S. military action against the PKK, citing a difficult security situation in the north and the Iraqi insurgency.

But she said the United States is determined to work with the Iraqis and with Turkey to make sure that the PKK cannot act, and said Turkey should understand what she termed the United States' absolute commitment on this.

Ms. Rice said Iraqis in their new democracy will have to ultimately decide the status of Kirkuk. But she said the city, home to large numbers of Kurds, ethnic-Turkish Turkmen and Iraqi Sunnis, must be a city in which all Iraqis are welcome, and can live without fear.

Sunday, February 06, 2005

Good Game

Well, I kind of expected it to happen. Don't get me wrong, I really wanted the Eagles to win and rooted for them the entire game, but lets face it the Patriots are a good team. Nonetheless, I am not too discouraged at the Eagles Superbowl loss. Why not? They played a great game. Their defense in the first half shut down the Pats. Their offense minus a few turnovers was solid. None of the turnovers really mattered in the game. The thing that did seem to kill them was Corey Dillion and Deion Branch. And this was only in the second half. The Patriots were shut down in the first half, but they were rather alive in the second. The good thing is that next season the Patriots will be the team to beat. It should be a great season next year.

Well - good game Eagles. Until next year...

Saturday, February 05, 2005

Religious Education to Counter Proselytizing in Turkey

Religious Education to Counter Proselytizing in Turkey

Shenar said he had been ordered as a proselytizer to intensify missionary work targeting members of the sects of Alawiyyin, in addition to Kurds.

By Sa’ad Abdul Majid, IOL Correspondent

ISTANBUL, February 4 (IslamOnline.net) – A Turkish academician urged boosting religious education and launching an effective awareness campaign to counter Christian mission work in the predominantly-Muslim country.

The appeal followed revelations by a proselytizer who reverted back to Islam that missionaries attempt to sow a sectarian strife in Turkey by Christianizing a large number of its citizens.

Turks have to build on more proposals for combating Christianization in the country, Hedayet Aydar, a professor of religious studies at Istanbul University, told IslamOInline.net Friday, February 4.

Aydar proposed earmarking more teaching hours to religion lessons in primary schools, and encouraging students to join imam and preacher schools or universities of religious studies along with upgrading their standards.

Awareness Campaign

Aydar also pressed the need for an awareness campaign to raise alarm bells on the wide Christian missionary activities in the country and ways they use to lure more converts in.

He underlined the media has to join the fray by dedicating programs and articles to missionary activities and how best to combat them.

There is a need to give the true image of Islam and change misconceptions on the religion, often touted by those calling themselves secularists in Turkey, the prominent academician said.

“People under that category are most vulnerable to proselytizing since they either have no religious culture or share mistaken concepts on Islam.”

The Turkish army has said in a recent report that protestant missions plan to proselytize some 10 per cent of Turkey's 70 million population by 2020.

The report, titled “Proselytizing Activities in Turkey and the World”, said missionaries are trying to fill the “spiritual void” left by the youths' ignorance about the basic tenets and rituals of Islam.

Political Targets

Meanwhile, a former 37-year-old proselytizer, who reverted back to Islam two weeks ago after converting 20 years ago, warned against politically-motivated plans by proselytizers.

Elgar Shenar said he had been ordered as a proselytizer to intensify missionary work targeting members of the sects of Alawiyyin and Kurds.

Alawiyyin are originally a sect of the Shi`ah called ‘Nusayriyyah’. The Nusayriyyah is a movement that emerged in the third century after Hijrah. They claim that Ali (may Allah be pleased with him) is God-incarnated.

Shenar said he was dumfounded to find the Christianization in Turkey is no more than a political work meant to sow unrest and divisions in the community, citing that as the main reason for his return to Islam.

The revelation echoed the Turkish army’s report that said the proselytizers are seeking to pit the Sunnis against the Alawiyyin or the opposite to preach about the Christian faith.

Commanding a wide media attention, the former proselytizer regretted that thousands of Muslims, especially young men, had been Christianized by missionaries in areas densely populated by Turks of Arab or Kurdish descent.

He accused the US Defense Department of standing behind the missionary work in Turkey. He further claimed that he “knew his reverting back to Islam was reported to the Pentagon”.

Long-run Style

Shenar said International Protest Church, for which he was appointed as a priest and proselytizer, exploit huge financial, social, economic and psychological potentials to draw green youths to Christianity.

Proselytizing mainly focuses on poor areas in central and eastern Turkey, also exploiting the country’s keen interest to be a member of the 25-member predominantly-Christian European Union.

A report presented to the Turkish government in 2004 said Christian missionaries were sent to areas hit by the 1999 shuddering earthquake that left hundreds dead and many others displaced.

Shenar is a member of a Turkish Muslim family before converting while he was 17 years old at the hands of a teacher also working as proselytizer.

He remembered how the teacher approached him for conversion. The teacher helped Shenar in his studies before his Christianization in 1987.

After the conversion, Shenar was taken for studying theology for nine years in the Bible Academy.

The Turkish army report said that 15,000 Turks have been converted to Christianity, and other sects like Baha’iyyah over the past few years.

No law explicitly prohibits proselytizing or religious conversions in Turkey. But many officials regard proselytizing and religious activism with suspicion, especially when such activities are deemed to have political overtones.

Approximately 99 percent of Turkey's population is Muslim, the majority of whom is Sunni.

In addition to the country's Sunni Muslim majority, there are an estimated 5 to 12 million Alawiyyin, according to the US State Department.

There are several other religious groups, mostly concentrated in Istanbul and other large cities, including an estimated 65,000 Armenian Orthodox Christians, 25,000 Jews, and 3,000 to 5,000 Greek Orthodox Christians.

The army report put at 69 the number of unofficial churches and places of worship related to other communities, including 47 churches for the Protestants, nine for the Baha'is and 13 for Jehovah's Witnesses sect.

Turkish fears are echoed by many in neighboring Iraq and Turkoman-populated areas on the joint borders.

British reports revealed in December 2003 that US missionaries, mainly evangelicals, were pouring into the predominantly Muslim Iraq , shrouded in secrecy and under the cover of humanitarian aid.

Friday, February 04, 2005

Gimme a Break!

You try to do something nice and you end up getting sued. Unbelievable!!!

Eagles Faith

The Superbowl is only a few days away and some of the Eagles coaches are preparing for the game through the reading of Scripture. It is always cool to learn about Christians who are associated with your favorite football team. There are also at least two players who are Christians on the team: Corey Simon and Paul Grasmanis.

Freedom of Preaching!?!

Randy Steele, the senior pastor of Southwest Christian Church, had the FBI after him because of a sermon he preached on abortion. It amazes me that Christian sermons which proclaim the Word of God against our cultural travesty are viewed as suspect when thousands of Muslim imams proclaim anti-American and Anti-Christian agendas from their pulpits without complaint. Is there no longer any freedom of the church from the state?