Showing posts with label Turkey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Turkey. Show all posts

Monday, 19 December 2016

Russian ambassador shot dead in Ankara, truck driven into Christmas market in Berlin

The Russian ambassador to Turkey was shot dead earlier this evening in an Ankara art gallery by a gunman shouting Allahu Akbar.

Warning: video shows Andrey Karlov being shot.


A short while ago, Belgian police put the Schaerbeek district of Brussels into lockdown while they carried out a security operation.


At around the same time, a lorry was driven into a Christmas market in Breitscheidplatz in Berlin killing at least 9 people and injuring at least 50 more according to social media reports.


On Friday 200 SAS troops carried out undercover public protection operations in key cities in the UK in response to intelligence from MI5 suggesting an attack was imminent.

Saturday, 16 July 2016

Turkey coup is over, Erdogan back in control

The coup in Turkey has failed overnight despite a section of the military taking control of Ankara and Istanbul.

Troops controlling the bridges across the Bosphorus in Istanbul surrendered and President Erdogan flew into the city to appear on TV.

The coup leaders underestimated the support for Erdogan who used an independent TV station to call for his supporters to take to the streets and defy the curfew. Thousands of people climbed on tanks and faced down troops, undermining the authority of the troops.

For now at least Erdogan is back in control but it remains to be seen how long the military top brass will stand by while he eats away at Turkey's secular state.

Friday, 15 July 2016

[UPDATED 22:19] Military coup in Turkey

The Turkish military have announced that they have deposed President Erdogan and are running the country.

People started reporting a military presence in Ankara about an hour ago and the closure of bridges across the Bosphorus. Tanks are on the streets and helicopters and jets are patrolling the airspace above the city. Skirmishes between the police and army have been reported whilst the police guarding the presidential palace are said to have been disarmed. Facebook, Twitter and YouTube have been blocked in the country.

The Turkish Prime Minister denied there had been a coup shortly before the military's announcement.

*UPDATE*
The coup appears to have been successful and Erdogan is reported to have left the country in his private jet. Major airports are closed, TRT (the Turkish equivalent of the BBC) has been taken over by the military and a curfew has been imposed.

Wednesday, 22 June 2016

EU accelerating Turkey's EU membership application next Thursday

The EU is opening a new chapter in Turkey's membership application next week.

A UK spokesman in Brussels told Associated Free Press:
In March, all member states agreed to open Chapter 33, during the Netherlands (six-month EU) presidency. This is a technical step to implement that agreement.
David Cameron has been one of the most vocal supporters of Turkey's EU membership application and there is even a dedicated team at the British embassy in Ankara to help Turkey join the EU.

Wednesday, 15 June 2016

New chapter in Turkey's EU membership application will be opened the day after the referendum

The British government have dropped opposition to opening a new chapter in Turkey's EU membership application the day after our referendum.

Fifteen of the 35 accession chapters have already been opened and one has been closed. Accelerating Turkey's membership application, a £2.2bn bung and granting Turkey visa-free travel were conditions of the EU's deal with Turkey that should have resulted in a crackdown on illegal immigration into Europe from Turkey. They have missed all the targets that were agreed but in the face of threats to stop what controls they have put in place the EU has rolled over and agreed to comply with the Turkish blackmail.

The UK's opposition to opening this new chapter in Turkey's EU membership application lasted for mere hours before they caved in.

David Cameron has been one of the most vocal supporters of Turkey's membership of the EU and leaked papers have shown that despite his recent volte face in public on the issue there is a team of British diplomats in Ankara dedicated to helping Turkey meet the requirements for EU membership.

Once voting is over next week, 75m Turks will be given visa-free travel in the EU despite an EU Commission report admitting that it will result in Turkish-based terrorists and organised crime gangs expanding into Europe.

Tuesday, 8 March 2016

77m Turks will be given the right to visa free travel in the EU 7 days after our referendum

Monday, 7 March 2016

Turkey demands €6bn and fast-tracked EU membership to tackle immigration

The Turkish Prime Minister has demanded €6bn from the EU and a one for one exchange of illegal immigrants for legal ones in exchange for making some efforts to stop the mass invasion of Europe from Africa, the Middle East and beyond.

Turkey has already had €3bn from the EU in exchange for cracking down on illegal immigration but they've done pretty much nothing in return. What are they going to do with €6bn? Well, they say they'll take back unregistered illegal immigrants who've made it to Greece and replace them with registered illegal immigrants.

In addition to the €6bn bung, Turkey also wants fast-tracked EU membership, giving it access to eye-watering sums of money and allowing 77m Turks to live and work in EU countries including the UK.

Thursday, 4 February 2016

UKIP Party Political Broadcast February 2016

Friday, 16 October 2015

EU promises €3bn and visa free travel to Turkey

The EU has agreed to accelerate the accession process for Turkey and relax visa restrictions as well as giving them a £2.2bn bung to get them to make an effort to stop illegal immigrants travelling through the country to Europe.

Under the deal around 77m Turks will get the right to visa free travel throughout the Schengen zone as early as the first half of next year.

The UK's contribution to the £2.2bn bill is expected to be around £260m, or the wages of 9,880 nurses.

The 2008 eurobarometer gauged support for Turkey joining the EU and found that a majority of people in almost every EU member state were opposed and quite comprehensively so in France and Germany.


Monday, 22 December 2014

EU court rules that Turkish workers must get the same UK benefits as EU citizens

The British government has lost another court case aimed at preventing EU rights being extended to people who aren't EU citizens.

Last week the EU Court of Injustice ruled that it was against EU law to impose immigration controls on the partners of EU citizens even if they aren't EU citizens themselves. It transpires that they also ruled that every Turkish worker in the UK is entitled to the same benefits as EU citizens, including the right to transfer their state pension benefits back to Turkey.

Earlier this month, David Cameron pledged to fight for Turkey to join the EU and give 75m Turks the right to live and work in the UK.


Wednesday, 10 December 2014

Cameron pledges to fight for EU membership for Turkey

David Cameron says that he very much supports Turkey joining the EU and has pledged to fight for their membership.

Turkey shares a border with Syria which Islamic State terrorists are currently rampaging through. It is a country of 75m people with a GDP of just £7k per person, compared to the UK's £25k. The European part of Turkey is relatively wealthy but the Asian part of the country suffers from high levels of unemployment and poverty.

If Turkey joins the EU and our borders are opened to 75m Turkish citizens, it is the impoverished and increasingly radicalised Anatolians who will be migrating across the continent. Of the 3.77m strong Turkish global diaspora, over 3.1m are living in Europe.

Every time he opens his mouth Cameron shows how incredibly out of touch he is with public opinion both at home and abroad. Turkey in the EU would be a square peg in a round hole and nobody in their right mind believes that extending the EU's borders into Asia would provide prosperity or security for the nations Europe.

Tuesday, 2 August 2011

Turkey joining the EU would be a disaster

The British government's Home Affairs Select Committee has expressed concerns about extending EU membership to Turkey.

Turkey has a population of 75 million and a per capita GDP of £7,500.  With EU membership comes the right to live and work in any EU member state.  When Poland joined the EU in 2004 they had a per capita GDP of almost £8,000 and around 455,000 Poles came to the UK and registered for National Insurance numbers in the first three years of EU membership according to a joint report by the Home Office, DWP, HMRC and DCLG which has mysteriously disappeared from the Home Office website but lives on at Scribd.

That figure doesn't include those who came to work here "under the radar" (ie. not registering for tax) or the spouses, children and other dependants of those that did register.  The real figure is almost certainly in excess of half a million, or around 1% of the UK's population at the time.  Of those 455,000 Polish immigrants, 7,680 claimed benefits in the first three years despite having contributed nothing or next to nothing to the social security system.

And that's just Polish immigrants, there were 9 other poor eastern European countries who joined in 2004 and the figures for Poland are less than 70% of the total number of immigrants from the 2004 ascension countries.  It was unsustainable mass immigration which we have yet to recover from but it will pale in comparison to Turkey.  Poland had a population of 38m in 2004, Turkey has a population of 75m and it's growing at about 1.16m per year whilst the entire EU is only seeing around 1.3m growth per year.  You don't have to be Carol Vorderman to work out that Turkey would have the fastest growing population in the EU and in a few decades would be outbreeding the non-Turkish population of the EU.

Now let's talk about the elephants in the room: Islam and the Kurds.  Turkey is a secular country (it has no state religion) and it jealously guards that status.  The burka is banned in public places and religious political parties are banned.  But 96% of the population are practising muslims and there is a lot more freedom for pro-Sharia muslims to preach their medieval ways in the EU than there is in Turkey.  Logistically we can't cope with an influx of Turkish migrants because we don't have enough money, jobs or houses for them.  Socially we can't cope with an influx of Turkish migrants because 96% of them are muslims.

Before you start righteously hammering away on your keyboard, I will openly admit to being an Islamophobe ...
Phobia
A persistent, irrational fear of a specific object, activity, or situation (from the Greek Φόβος/Phóbos, the personification of terror in Greek mythology).
Actually, I'm not a true Islamophobe because it's not an irrational fear, it's entirely rational. My grandchildren will see an Islamic caliphate in Europe unless something changes drastically.  The persistent use of Islamophobia as a derogatory term for anyone even vaguely critical of Islam is incorrect. What the intolerant anti-anti-Islamists mean when they call someone an Islamophobe is that they are a Misislamist which is the correct term for someone with a hatred of Islam.

Enough of the lesson in linguistics (actually, isn't there a certain irony in debating the use of Greek words when talking about Turkey? Sorry, my inner geek is taking over again).  What about the Kurds?  The big black mark on Turkey's human rights and democracy record is their treatment of Turkish Kurds.  Yes, I know the PKK is listed as a terrorist organisation but the response to the PKK's fight for Kurdish independence in Turkey has been a collective punishment against all Kurds by way of ethnically cleansing some areas of Kurds and the persecution of public figures who speak Kurdish or promote Kurdish culture.

So where will Turkish Kurds go if they want to escape oppression in Turkey?  Iraq has an even worse reputation when it comes to Kurds and half the country is still a war zone.  Syria is on the brink of civil war and Iran is run by Islamic fundamentalists.  They won't get a very warm reception in Armenia because they're Turkish and Georgia is under constant threat of attack by Russia.  So where are they going to go when Turkey joins the EU?  Straight over Turkey's western frontier and on to countries with an existing Turkish population and a social security system to support them.  Countries such as the UK, the Netherlands and Germany.

It doesn't take a genius to know that Turkey joining the EU while we are still members would be an absolute disaster which is presumably why the Home Affairs Select Committee has decided that on balance it would be a good thing if Turkey joined, a view shared by Cast Iron Dave.

Wednesday, 18 May 2011

Turks, Turkey and the EU

As a Turkish born English citizen the issue of the EU and Turkey is one that interests me to a certain degree (though not to the extent that some people may think).

A question I often get is, how do I feel being in UKIP, a party stringently against Turkey joining the EU. The answer is simple, I'm perfectly happy with it. The reasoning is also simple. I do not want Turkey to join the EU. It will be detrimental to Turkey, it will be detrimental to Britain.

What does irritate me though is the belief some people have that Turkey is desperate to join the EU. It isn't. The attitude ranges from unintentionally misinformed to outright ignorant and enters the cesspit world of prejudice. Take for example Abhijit Pandya's piss poor article (so much for 'head of research' for UKIP and 'head of social cohesion' for UKIP). That however is another issue, for another day.

The fact is the people of Turkey do not want to join the EU. Turkey, also, does not need to join the EU. Whilst the EU 27's GDP rose by a measly 1.8% in 2010, Turkey's grew by 8.2% by the same period. Since 2003 Turkey's GDP rose by a massive 150%. Economically, Turkey does not need the EU. In fact, it would be economic suicide for Turkey to join the EU.

Polls in Turkey have shown that less than 36% of Turks would consider voting YES if a referendum on joining the EU was given. Just like in Britain, the people do not want the EU. Just like Britain, it is only the political elite who have tried to bulldoze through despite lack of support.

Turkey can not win with regards to the EU. If they express keen interest people accuse Turkey of wanting to exploit the EU (what there is to exploit is beyond me) and while they are currently cooling off any interest they are accused of shifting to the middle East.

The people of Turkey do not want to join the EU. The people of Europe do not want Turkey to join the EU. Both sides have their resolute reasons for this and both sides have their own prejudiced reasons for this. Just as we have nutters who think Turkey is an Islamist Islamic State full of terrorists, wife beaters and camel riders Turkey has nutters who believe that Europe is full of degenerate hedonistic moraless westerners. Thankfully, both sides of fringe nutters are a minority barely worth passing wind over.

Do I believe Turkey will join the EU? Yes. The EU elite want it to happen as soon as possible and Turkish political elite want it to happen. Whilst Erdogan is in power in Turkey, EU accession will not happen. Which is worrying, since we all know what happens to opponents of the great EU project.

The best thing we can do as Eurosceptics is stay clear of nonsense nutty fringe views that just muddy the waters. That is precisely what the political elite like Cameron want, to dismiss us all us fruitcakes and loons.

Monday, 25 October 2010

Greece can't cope with Turkish immigration

The European Empire has despatched Rapid Border Intervention Teams to try and seal the Greece-Turkey border because Greece can no longer cope with the number of illegal immigrants making their way in from Turkey.

According to the EU's own border control quango, Frontex, 90% of illegal immigrants caught trying to get into the European Empire were coming over the Greece-Turkey border.  The Greek government has asked the EU to send in Rapid Border Invention Teams because they can no longer deal with the influx of asylum seekers.  There is a backlog of 52,000 asylum claims in Greece that have yet to be dealt with.

If the European Empire can't cope with the 350 illegal immigrants who enter Greece every day, how are they going to cope with the 74 million Turks who will have the right to live and work anywhere in the European Empire if and when Turkey eventually joins the EU gravy train?  Millions of Turks will make their way into the EU via Greece, putting an intolerable strain on every member state but particularly Greece and Bulgaria as the gateway to the Ægean.