Ulusal
Pub
Head
dimanche 19 février 2012
samedi 18 février 2012
Abdullah Çatli était un membre de l'organisation ultranationaliste turque des Loups gris.
Il était lié à Mehmet Ali Agca, le membre des Loups gris qui a tenté d'assassiner le pape Jean-Paul II en mai 1981. Abdullah Çatlı a été un de ceux qui ont détruit l' Armée secrète arménienne de libération de l'Arménie (ASALA). Il aurait rencontré le terroriste italien Stefano Delle Chiaie à Miami en septembre 1982. Recherché pour trafic de drogue et de meurtre , il est mort le 3 novembre 1996 dans un accident de voiture, accompagné de sa compagne , Gonca Us, une ancienne reine de beauté devenue femme à tout faire de la Mafian et de Huseyin Kocadag, un haut responsable de la police qui commandait des unités antiguérilla. Le quatrième , Sedat Bucak, un chef de guerre kurde, dont la milice était financée par le gouvernement turc pour lutter contre la guérilla du PKK, a survécu. Çatlı avait sur lui des papiers diplomatiques spéciaux et des permis de port d' armes , ainsi que plusieurs cartes d' identité . Suite à l'accident, le ministre de l' intérieur et plusieurs hauts responsables, dont le chef de la police d' Istanbul durent démissionner. Çatlı était aussi très lié avec la mafia turque dans un trafic d'héroïne. A Rome , il affirma au juge en 1985 "qu’il avait été contacté par le service de renseignement ouest- allemand (BND), lequel lui aurait promis une somme d’ argent rondelette s’il impliquait les services russes et bulgares dans l’attentat contre le pape." Selon le colonel Alparslan Türkeş, fondateur des Loups gris, "Catli a coopéré dans le cadre d’un service secret travaillant pour le bien de l’ État"[1].
Rejection of UN Resolution on Syria will not Prevent Turkey’s Sanctions, Turkish PM
05 Ekim, 2011 | 16:07
Full Name: Recep Tayyip Erduğan, also spelled Erdogan
Born: February 26, 1954
Significance: One of Turkey’s most popular and charismatic leaders, he led the resurgence of Islamic-oriented politics in the Muslim world’s most secular democracy.
Current Status: Prime Minister of Turkey (since March 14, 2003)
Notable Life-Markers: Was mayor of Istanbul, was imprisoned for 10 months on subversion charges related to his pro-Islamic stances, was banned from politics, returned as leader of the Justice and Development Party in 2002.
Early Life:
Erdogan was born on February
26, 1954, in Rize, a small city on Turkey's Black Sea coast, in a poor
family. He was one of five children. His father worked for Turkey’s
coast guard. When Erdogan was 13, the family moved to Istanbul, hoping
for better opportunities. Erdogan went to an Islamic school then studied
business management at Istanbul’s Marmara University. While there, he
joined the country’s growing political Islamist movement. He played
soccer professionally and worked for Istanbul’s transportation authority
until he was fired for refusing, on religious grounds, to shave his
mustache.
Mayor of Istanbul:
After he was
fired, Erdogan entered politics full time. In 1994, partly on the
strength of his charisma and oratorical skills, partly on account of the
deterioration of social services and the city’s exploding population,
Erdogan was elected mayor of Istanbul, Turkey’s largest city. He
promised better services and better jobs for the huge influx of rural
immigrants into the city. He delivered on most of his promises.
Imprisoned for Subversion:
In
1997, Erdogan said in a speech: “The mosques are our barracks, the
domes are our helmets, the minarets are our swords, and the faithful are
our army.” He was the leader the Islamic-oriented Welfare Party at the
time. In January 1998, Turkey’s highest court closed the Welfare Party
and banned its members from politics, saying the party sought to
undermine Turkey’s secular basis. Weeks later, Erdogan was indicted on
subversion charges, including inciting “an army of jihad” and “using
democracy to establish an evil order.” A military court sentenced him to
10 months in jail, which he started serving in March 1999.
2002 Parliamentary Victory:
Upon
his release from prison, and facing the court’s ban on the activities
of the Islamist Virtue Party and Welfare Party, Erdogan helped found
the Justice and Development Party, known in Turkey as Adalet ve Kalkinma
Partisi, or AK, in August 2001. It was the 281st political party
created in Turkey since the first party was set up in 1859. Erdogan was
elected its leader. Two months later, the AK swept to power in
parliamentary elections with 34.2 percent of the vote, winning 363 of
550 seats.
Prime Minister:
Because of his previous
conviction, Erdogan was banned from serving as prime minister or holding
any government post. His party’s parliamentary majority quickly changed
that by passing a constitutional amendment effectively revoking the
ban. Erdogan ran for office in a by-election and became prime minister
on March 14, 2003. He replaced Abdullah Gül, who resigned to make room
for Erdogan. Gul served as foreign minister until 2007.
Continued Rise of Turkey’s Islamists:
In
July 2007, the Islamist Justice and Development Party won 46.6 percent
of the popular vote in nationwide parliamentary elections, solidifying
Erdogan’s position. Erdogan backed Abdullah Gul’s bid for the
presidency, which Gul won on Aug. 28, 2007, becoming Turkey’s 14th
president.
Head-Scarf Controversy:
In early 2008,
Erdogan led the parliamentary charge to repeal Turkey's ban on wearing
the Islamic head scarf on private or public university campuses, in
government buildings or in schools. Parliament voted in February 2008 to
repeal the ban, handing Erdogan a major victory. But the changes must
first be approved by the president and pass constitutional muster
through the nation's Constitutional Court, a secular institution.
A More Moderate Erdogan?:
Erdogan
has moderated his positions the stronger his party’s hold on Turkish
politics has become. Even though he once called the European Union a
“Christian club,” he supports Turkey’s bid to join the Union. He
supported the Bush administration’s request in 2003 to use Turkey as a
staging ground for the invasion of Iraq, but Erdogan and Bush were
rebuffed by the Turkish Parliament. Erdogan has overseen the moderation
and reform of many Turkeish policies, including, in 2001, the abolition
of the death penalty (except in times of war and for acts of terrorism),
the abolition of torture in Turkish prisons, and allowing the use of
the Kurdish language in broadcasting and education. But Erdogan has
maintained a hard line against Kurdish separatists in eastern Turkey and
has led the charge to pursue and bomb Kurdish militants in Iraq, or
invade northern Iraq if necessary. The European Union is resisting
Turkey’s bid to join, saying Turkey’s human rights violations and its
uneven economy remain a major concern.
Inscription à :
Articles (Atom)