Archive for the ‘Erdogan’ Category

Turkey’s Erdogan slams Venezuela sanctions, Maduro defends …

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan and Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro attend a news conference after an agreement-signing ceremony between Turkey and Venezuela at Miraflores Palace in Caracas, Venezuela December 3, 2018. REUTERS/Manaure Quintero

CARACAS (Reuters) - Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan on Monday criticized sanctions on Venezuela during a visit to Caracas, while President Nicolas Maduro defended the countrys right to export gold after U.S. sanctions last month targeted its shipments of the metal.

Washington has imposed sanctions on Venezuelan officials it accuses of corruption, and on certain financial transactions with the Maduro government, which it accuses of violating human rights and triggering an economic meltdown. Ties between Turkey and the United States, two NATO allies, have also been strained.

U.S. President Donald Trump last month signed an executive order banning anyone in the United States from dealing with entities and people involved in corrupt or deceptive gold sales from the South American country. Turkey this year has become the largest importer of non-monetary gold from Venezuela.

Political problems cannot be resolved by punishing an entire nation, Erdogan said, with Maduro by his side at a forum attended by business people from both countries. We do not approve of these measures that ignore the rules of global trade.

Venezuela is suffering a bout of hyperinflation and a fifth year of recession that has led to shortages of food and medicine. Maduro frequently blames a U.S. economic war for the countrys woes, but critics say the crisis is proof socialist policies started under his predecessor Hugo Chavez have failed.

While Erdogan did not directly mention the United States or Trump, he said his friend Maduro was facing manipulative attacks from certain countries and acts of sabotage from economic assassins. In response, Erdogan said he was willing to strengthen trade ties.

Trade between the two countries have been growing, with Turkish data showing the country imported $900 million in gold from Venezuela in the first nine months of the year. Without naming the United States, Maduro decried sanctions and said Venezuela had the right to sell gold.

It is very petty to try to use an illegal sanction to prevent Venezuela from selling its gold to the world, Maduro said during a joint press conference later on Monday with Erdogan, who also visited Paraguay after attending the Group of 20 summit in Argentina last weekend.

Reporting by Corina Pons; Writing by Luc Cohen; Editing by Chris Reese and Richard Chang

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Turkey's Erdogan slams Venezuela sanctions, Maduro defends ...

Erdogan says not aiming to harm Saudi royals in Khashoggi …

BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - President Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday that Turkeys insistence on finding the truth behind the recent killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi was not aimed at damaging the

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan holds a news conference on the final day of the G20 leaders summit in Buenos Aires, Argentina December 1, 2018. REUTERS/Andres Stapff

Saudi royal family.

Speaking to reporters at the G20 summit in Buenos Aires, Erdogan said that solving the Khashoggi killing would also be in the interest of the Saudi monarchy.

We have never seen this as a political issue, Erdogan said. We want to make sure that the murder is revealed in all aspects and that the perpetrators are tried.

Khashoggis killing at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul has strained Saudi Arabias ties with the West and battered the image overseas of its de facto leader, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Saudi Arabia has said the prince had no prior knowledge of the murder. After offering numerous contradictory explanations, Riyadh later said Khashoggi had been killed and his body dismembered when negotiations to persuade him to return to Saudi Arabia failed.

Erdogan has said the killing was ordered by the highest level of Saudi leadership but probably not by King Salman, putting the spotlight instead on the 33-year-old crown prince.

We have no interest in harming the Saudi Arabian state or the Saudi royal family. We believe bringing to light all aspects of the murder and prosecution of all perpetrators will be in the interest of Saudi Arabia, he said.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he brought up the Khashoggi issue while at the summit.

At a news conference in Buenos Aires, Trudeau said he had a frank conversation with the Saudi crown prince at the leaders dinner on Friday.

I spoke to the crown prince to highlight our concerns and the need for better answers on the killing of Khashoggi and the need for cease fire in Yemen, Trudeau said.

Western nations are calling for an end to the Saudi-led military campaign in neighboring Yemen, which was launched by Prince Mohammed, as a humanitarian crisis there worsens.

Erdogan also said Prince Mohammed had sent his chief prosecutor to Turkey to investigate the Khashoggi killing, but the prosecutor failed to share information with Turkey.

Turkey has evidence documenting that Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist and a critic of the crown prince, was killed in 7-1/2 minutes, Erdogan said. He said Ankara has shared this evidence with all countries who requested it, including the United States, Britain, Germany and Saudi Arabia.

Additional reporting by Ece Toksabay in Ankara; Writing by Scott Squires and Humeyra Pamuk; Editing by Will Dunham and Alistair Bell

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Erdogan says not aiming to harm Saudi royals in Khashoggi ...

Erdogan, Trump Discuss Syria, Khashoggi Murder in Phone Talks …

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23:13 16.11.2018Get short URL

ANKARA (Sputnik) - Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and US President Donald Trump discussed in phone talks on Friday the conflict in Syria, the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi and bilateral relations, the press service of the Turkish leader reported.

Our president held phone talks withUS President Donald Trump this evening. In addition tobilateral relations, they discussed the murder ofJamal Khashoggi, the investigation intoFETO [the organization ofTurkish opposition preacher Fethullah Gulen] and the situation inSyria, inparticular, the fight againstterrorism there," the press service said ina statement.

REUTERS / Charles Mostoller

Previously, US Department ofState said that the United States is not ready todraw conclusions onwhat exactly happened atthe Saudi Consulate inIstanbul afterjournalist Jamal Khashoggi entered it onOctober 2.

READ MORE: Erdogan Blames Washington forUS-Turkey Visa Dispute, Hints atFETO Trace

The United States however earlier imposed sanctions against17 Saudi nationals related tothe murder ofthe Washington Post columnist.

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Erdogan, Trump Discuss Syria, Khashoggi Murder in Phone Talks ...

Erdogan Champions Khashoggi While Trampling Journalists …

ISTANBUL President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey has kept the case of Jamal Khashoggi alive through a steady drip of leaks, forcing the Saudis to admit that the columnist and dissident was killed more than a month ago in their consulate in Istanbul.

But for Mr. Erdogan, the case has always been broader than journalistic freedom or human rights abuses. And, in fact, Mr. Erdogans use of the case in the name of justice has left many deeply conflicted in Turkey, a country where tens of thousands of citizens have been caught up in a government crackdown since a coup attempt in 2016.

The tactics Mr. Erdogan has used against the Saudis are much the same ones he has perfected against political enemies at home leaks planted by government sources and reported by friendly news outlets, which he then cites to destroy his opponents.

That approach has become a staple of the presidents arsenal to spread intimidation and to crack down on dissent. He has been able to employ it so effectively, including against the Saudis, partly because of a compliant news media that he has fashioned over 16 years in power.

But the same pro-government media outlets that have been a useful tool in the Khashoggi case have also published virulent content against many of those detained under the state of emergency. They include a well-known philanthropist and civil society activist, Osman Kavala, whom Mr. Erdogan described as the Soros of Turkey, referring to the billionaire George Soros.

Recently, finally despairing of Turkeys judicial process, Mr. Kavala issued a public statement through his lawyers for the first time since his detention in October last year. He has spent a year in solitary confinement at a maximum-security prison without trial.

I just hope that my situation will contribute to understanding of the harm caused to the citizens and to the judiciary of the Republic of Turkey by this ill-fated custodial regime, he wrote.

Like Mr. Kavala, more than 100,000 people have been imprisoned during the two-year state of emergency, including academics, lawyers, journalists and opposition politicians who had no obvious link to the coup attempt.

About 50,000 people remain imprisoned two and a half years after the coup, according to figures published by Amnesty International. An additional 100,000 have been purged from their public-sector jobs.

The human rights landscape in Turkey is desolate, Amnesty said recently, one characterized by mass detentions, prosecutions, intimidation and the silencing of independent civil society.

That is especially so for journalists. Amnesty reported that 180 news outlets had been closed down since 2016, and 120 journalists detained.

Turkey remains the worlds worst jailer for the second consecutive year, with 73 journalists behind bars, compared with 81 last year, the Committee to Protect Journalists wrote in its annual report in December. Dozens more still face trial, and fresh arrests take place regularly.

International press freedom organizations used the Khashoggi case to highlight their concerns. Gruesome nature of #Khashoggi murder should not distract from #Turkeys own persecution of journalists, the Vienna-based International Press Institute posted on Twitter.

But within Turkey, many remain fearful of voicing any criticism of Mr. Erdogan publicly, especially journalists, for whom his trumpeting of the Khashoggi case has presented a special quandary.

None of the Turkish journalists unions issued statements of support when Mr. Khashoggi disappeared, and they are notably absent from the vigils held outside the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul.

There was no political agenda in not making a statement, said Mustafa Kuleli, general secretary of the Journalists Union of Turkey. Journalist organizations in Turkey are trying to cope with colossal problems with very few professionals: thousands of trials against members, news organizations shut down, unemployment, poor working conditions.

We are every day in the courts supporting journalists, he added. I understand why time could not be devoted to the Khashoggi case.

Many of the journalists are ethnic Kurds and leftists accused of supporting outlawed organizations or the movement of an Islamist preacher, Fethullah Gulen, who is suspected of having instigated the coup attempt.

Mr. Erdogan has branded them as terrorists, including a German-Turkish correspondent of Die Welt and board members of, Cumhurriyet, one of Turkeys oldest and most prestigious newspapers.

Yasin Aktay, an adviser to Mr. Erdogan and a close friend of Mr. Khashoggis, made a separation between the imprisonment of Turkish journalists and the killing of the Saudi dissident commentator, who wrote for The Washington Post. Many of the journalists in Turkish jails were tied ideologically or were used by terrorist groups, in particular the pro-Kurdish journalists, he said.

These radical ideas are being sponsored, he said. It is not because they believe, but because they are tools.

Mr. Kavalas case is one of the most emblematic illustrations of the increasing authoritarianism of Mr. Erdogans government. He has been held on preliminary charges of having links to the instigators of the coup attempt and of using force to overthrow the government by supporting the Taksim Square protests of 2013 charges he denies. A year after his detention, he still has not been indicted.

A wealthy businessman who ran arts and cultural initiatives for minorities in Turkey, often in partnership with European organizations, Mr. Kavala set out to fight his case through the judicial process.

With each passing day, people who accuse me of attempting to abolish the constitutional order and the government come to realize more and more that I have nothing to do with these accusations, Mr. Kavala wrote.

His lawyers said that after a year of trying to fight his case within the parameters of the law, they were compelled to publicize what they called the injustice of the process and the flagrant violations of Mr. Kavalas constitutional rights.

His arrest on charges of overthrowing the state and the constitutional order through force were completely without evidence, one of his lawyers, Ilkan Koyuncu, said.

Before anything else, he is a man of dialogue, a man of reconciliation, a man of consensus, the lawyer said. In any period of his life, he was not a man to be associated with coercion and violence.

Three lawyers described a litany of legal violations, including duress used in interrogation and the failure to bring Mr. Kavala before the appropriate criminal judge. They said they had filed 20 petitions in complaint.

Mr. Kavalas detention without trial amounts to arbitrary detention, Mr. Koyuncu said.

For many, the detention appeared to be a warning to others across civil society. In his drive for almost sultan-like powers in a new presidential system formed this summer, Mr. Erdogan has frequently lashed out at liberals, leftists and anyone with a connection to the West.

Mr. Erdogan has treated those detained as personal enemies. When Mr. Kavala was detained, the president denounced him in an address to his parliamentary group the same before which he recently spoke on the Khashoggi case.

There, he gave credence to newspapers smears that Mr. Kavala had funded the Taksim Square protests and had other nefarious ties hostile to Turkey.

Some say he is civil society; he is a nice person, a good citizen, Mr. Erdogan said of Mr. Kavala. When you look, the same person is behind the Taksim events. You see them in the allocation of considerable funds to certain places. All the connections are revealed one by one.

He ended with his signature nationalist jibe: As a nation, we will not bow down and we will ask them to pay for it.

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Erdogan Champions Khashoggi While Trampling Journalists ...

Turkey’s Erdogan to Saudis: Who gave order to kill Khashoggi?

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan speaks during a meeting of his ruling AK Party in Ankara, Turkey October 26, 2018. Murat Cetinmuhurdar/Presidential Press Office/Handout via REUTERS

ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan urged Saudi Arabia on Friday to disclose who gave the order to kill journalist Jamal Khashoggi, as well the location of his body, saying Turkey had more information about the case than it has shared so far.

Erdogan also said Riyadh needed to reveal the identity of the local cooperator who Saudi officials earlier said had taken Khashoggis body from Saudi agents after the journalist was killed inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on Oct. 2.

Saudi Arabia said on Thursday the killing of Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist and a critic of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, was premeditated, reversing previous statements that it was unintended.

Khashoggis murder has sparked global outrage and mushroomed into a crisis for the worlds top oil exporting country and Prince Mohammed, the kingdoms de facto ruler.

Who gave this order? Erdogan said in a speech to members of his AK Party in Ankara. Who gave the order for 15 people to come to Turkey? he said, referring to a 15-man Saudi security team Turkey has said flew into Istanbul hours before the killing. Erdogan also said Saudis public prosecutor was due to meet the Istanbul prosecutor in Istanbul on Sunday.

Saudi officials initially denied having anything to do with Khashoggis disappearance after he entered the consulate, before changing the official account to say an internal investigation suggested he was accidentally killed in a botched operation to return him to the kingdom.

On Thursday, Saudi state TV quoted the Saudi public prosecutor as saying the killing had been planned, and that prosecutors were interrogating suspects on the basis of information provided by a joint Saudi-Turkish task force.

Reporting by Ezgi Erkoyun and Ali Kucukgocmen; Writing by David Dolan; Editing by Mark Heinrich

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Turkey's Erdogan to Saudis: Who gave order to kill Khashoggi?