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Coup d'etat in Turkey…

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« on: July 16, 2016, 11:28:04 am »


from The Washington Post....

Turkish president calls on supporters to oppose military coup

By ERIN CUNNINGHAM and ZEYNEP KARATAS | 5:55PM EDT - Friday, July 15, 2016

Turkish soldiers block Istanbul's Bosphorus Bridge. — Photograph: Gokhan Tan/Getty Images.
Turkish soldiers block Istanbul's Bosphorus Bridge. — Photograph: Gokhan Tan/Getty Images.

ISTANBUL — Turkey's military launched a coup Friday against the elected government of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkish officials and the country's armed forces said, in a stunning move that will likely plunge the country into further turmoil and reverberate across an already bloodstained and chaotic region.

The military declared martial law and announced a curfew late Friday night, citing the government's “autocratic rule” and a deterioration in security, the armed forces said in statements carried by Turkey's state broadcaster.

Armored vehicles and military personnel were deployed across key areas of the capital, Ankara, and the largest city, Istanbul, and military aircraft flew low over both cities as the embattled government struggled to maintain control.

“The Turkish Armed Forces, in accordance with the constitution, have seized management of the country to reinstate democracy, human rights, and freedom, and to ensure public order, which has deteriorated,” the General Staff of the Armed Forces said in a statement on Friday.

Erdogan, who has consolidated power for himself and his ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), spoke to the nation via FaceTime and called on his supporters to take to the streets to oppose the intervention.

“This is an attack against Turkish democracy. A group within the armed forces has made an attempt to overthrow the democratically elected government outside the chain of command,” a senior Turkish official said, adding that Erdogan had spoken from a “secure location.”

The official Anadolu Agency reported late Friday that General Hulusi Akar, the chief of the general staff, had been taken hostage in Ankara. That report could not be confirmed. Reporters at TRT, the state-run broadcaster, said their offices had been taken over by the military.

“Turkey's democratically elected president and government are in power,” the senior official said. “We will not tolerate attempts to undermine our democracy.”

The statements from the armed forces were not “authorized by the military command,” the official said, suggesting that rogue officers within the military had staged the putsch.

Binali Yildirim, who leads Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), said Friday that those behind the attempted coup “will pay a heavy price.”

“We will never let this go,” he said. “We will take all measures necessary, even if it means death.”

Turkey is a NATO member and part of the U.S.-led coalition fighting the Islamic State, which has lost much of its territory in Iraq and Syria but needs Syria's border with Turkey to funnel weapons and fighters. Turkey also allows U.S. aircraft to use Incirlik Air Base to fly bombing raids on the jihadists in Syria.

In Moscow, U.S. Secretary of State John F. Kerry said that he and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had been engaged in discussions all day and did not hear about “what may or may not be happening” in Turkey.

“We've heard the reports that others have heard. I don't have any details at this time. But I hope there will be stability, peace and continuity in Turkey.”

The country has a long history of military coups. Meddling officers unseated governments in 1960, 1971, and 1980. In 1997, the stern “recommendations” of the military initiated what was called a soft coup, forcing a somewhat Islamist party out of power.

Yet for a long time, it has seemed the age of the coup was over in Turkey. Since 2002, the country has had steady, stable civilian rule. Elections have been held and proceeded, more or less, without too much of a fuss.

In recent years, the dominant political Justice and Development Party, led by Erdogan, has had what seemed like an ironclad grip on the levers of power: A majoritarian electoral mandate aided by a dysfunctional opposition; a judiciary largely bent in its favor; and a military brass cowed into submission after a series of trials against alleged conspirators.


Ishaan Tharoor in Washington and Carol Morello in Moscow contributed to this report.

• Erin Cunningham is an Egypt-based correspondent for The Washington Post. She previously covered conflicts in the Middle East and Afghanistan for the Christian Science Monitor, GlobalPost and The National.

__________________________________________________________________________

Read more on this topic:

 • PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY: Coup attempt under way in Turkey, prime minister says

 • Turkey's most-read newspaper begins publishing pro-Erdogan articles after government seizure

 • Turkey's cat-and-mouse game with the Islamic State


https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/turkeys-prime-minister-says-military-attempted-coup-against-government/2016/07/15/1709b04a-4ac6-11e6-8dac-0c6e4accc5b1_story.html
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« Reply #1 on: July 16, 2016, 02:43:20 pm »

Boris Johnson wins 'most offensive Erdoğan poem' competition
Ex-London mayor wins £1,000 prize for limerick about Turkish president in contest challenging crackdown on free speech


Boris Johnson has won a £1,000 prize for a rude poem about the Turkish president having sex with a goat.

The former mayor of London’s limerick, published by the Spectator as a rebuff to Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s efforts to prosecute a German comedian’s offensive poem, also calls the president a “wankerer”.

Johnson, a former editor of the magazine, won the Spectator’s “President Erdoğan offensive poetry competition”, despite judge Douglas Murray saying the contest had received thousands of entries. The prize money has been donated by a reader.
The limerick was written off-the-cuff by the Conservative MP during an interview with the Swiss weekly magazine Die Weltwoche.

Johnson – whose great-grandfather was Turkish – called it “a scandal” that a German court had granted an injunction to prevent comedian Jan Böhmermann repeating his offensive skit about the Turkish president.

“If somebody wants to make a joke about the love that flowers between the Turkish president and a goat, he should be able to do so, in any European country, including Turkey,” Johnson told interviewer Nicholas Farrell, who then challenged him to enter the Spectator’s poetry prize.

Johnson then offered the limerick:

“There was a young fellow from Ankara, Who was a terrific wankerer.

“Till he sowed his wild oats, With the help of a goat, But he didn’t even stop to thankera.”


The former mayor is reported to be surprised that his efforts were officially entered into the competition.

In awarding Johnson the prize, Murray appeared to contradict his own rule that “wankerer” was not a word, despite rhyming with the Turkish capital, but defended his choice in a blogpost, saying the prize was “entirely anti-meritocratic”.
“Certainly there were better poems,” he wrote on the Spectator website. “For sure there were filthier ones … For myself, I think it a wonderful thing that a British political leader has shown that Britain will not bow before the putative caliph in Ankara.
“Erdoğan may imprison his opponents in Turkey. Chancellor Merkel may imprison Erdoğan’s critics in Germany. But in Britain we still live and breathe free. We need no foreign potentate to tell us what we may think or say. And we need no judge, especially no German judge, to instruct us over what we may find funny.”

Murray said he would encourage Johnson to donate the £1,000 prize money to a relevant charity.

On Tuesday, a Hamburg court issued a preliminary injunction banning republication of sections of a satirical poem by Böhmermann, saying they amounted to libel of Erdoğan. The poem, which was first recited on German TV, used coarse language to describe the president.

Erdoğan filed two complaints, one with German prosecutors and an application for an injunction to stop the republication of the poem.

Merkel has previously also granted permission for prosecutors to investigate. Under Germany’s criminal code, insults against foreign leaders are not banned but the government can decide whether to authorise prosecutors to proceed.

An MP from Merkel’s conservative party read the poem out in parliament last week, amid widespread criticism of the chancellor’s decision to allow the prosecution to go ahead.

Prosecutors in the western German city of Mainz who are dealing with the Böhmermann case said it was unclear on Tuesday when a decision would be made to pursue prosecution.

At the time Merkel said she would allow prosecutors to investigate, Johnson said she had “numbly decided to kowtow to the demands of Erdoğan, a man who is engaged in a chilling suppression of Turkish freedom of expression”.

http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/may/19/boris-johnson-wins-most-offensive-erdogan-poem-competition
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