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For Slovenia Erdogan Is "Man Of The Year", For Germany - No Longer

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  • For Slovenia Erdogan Is "Man Of The Year", For Germany - No Longer

    FOR SLOVENIA ERDOGAN IS "MAN OF THE YEAR", FOR GERMANY - NO LONGER
    Karine Ter-Sahakyan

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    March 27, 2012

    Turkey vainly hopes that resolutions in the U.S. Congress won't be
    adopted every year.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is still considered
    politician number one in some countries of Eastern Europe, and not
    only. Erdogan is awarded prizes for peace, is named man of the year,
    of the decade, and almost of the century. It's difficult to find
    an explanation for this phenomenon. But if you look at the list of
    countries that award Erdogan, everything becomes more or less clear.

    PanARMENIAN.Net - International Institute for Middle East and Balkan
    Studies in Slovenia presented the award "World personality of the
    decade" to Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The award was given on the occasion
    of the 10th anniversary of the Institute and for a balanced policy in
    the Middle East and the Balkans. But they say the award will be handed
    to the Turkish Prime Minister later. The logic of the above-mentioned
    actions of this Institute does not fit in the real situation in
    the Middle East - hardly can Turkey be counted among the countries
    that really seek peace in the Middle East and the Balkans. Recent
    developments related to Syria tell of the opposite. Creation of a
    buffer zone, calling for al-Assad to "leave in a friendly way" and
    the â~@~Kâ~@~Knever-ending war with the Kurds have little to speak
    of the peacefulness of Ankara. Not to mention Israel against which
    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu is ready to wage war, should
    Jerusalem start bombing Iran. "We will not accept a military strike
    against Tehran, with whom we have some disagreements over Syria. If
    Iran is bombed, Turkey will not remain indifferent," Davutoglu said.

    In his turn, Turkish President Erdogan said that in case of
    necessity, Turkey could resume military operation in northern Iraq
    to kill terrorists. "Earlier, Turkey already conducted an operation
    in northern Iraq. At present, we are monitoring the situation and if
    necessary we may resume the operation in northern Iraq," Erdogan said.

    Currently the Turkish army is fighting on its own territory: more than
    two dozen Kurdish rebels were killed in Sirnak and Bitlis last week.

    Moreover, 15 militants killed in Bitlis were women.

    As for the other prize intended for Erdogan - German Steiger Awards
    awarded for tolerance - a decision was finally made not to award it.

    Wording of the refusal was quite evasive and consistent with the best
    European traditions: the Prime Minister did not attend the ceremony,
    and therefore he was refused the award. But in fact, the refusal
    of the organizing committee was conditioned by protests. Armenians,
    Kurds, Assyrians and Alawites staged a protest in Bochum against this
    decision of the organizing committee. And a day before the ceremony
    of awards the Steiger Awards changed the nomination. In accordance
    with the change, Erdogan was to be presented an award on the occasion
    of the 50th anniversary of Turkish-German friendship, but in the end
    he lost it, too.

    As for tolerance, no one in Turkey has ever "suffered" of it,
    especially in regard to minorities, Armenians and Greeks in
    particular. At a meeting with the U.S. President in Seoul, at the
    summit on nuclear security, Erdogan could not resist and chided Obama
    for the activities of the OSCE Minsk Group and the Armenian Genocide
    resolution introduced into the U.S. Senate. "I reminded Obama that
    during the past two decades the OSCE Minsk Group has not succeeded in
    settling the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. And since the
    issue has reached a deadlock, I suggested that we talk to Azeris and
    Minsk Group co-chairing France, Russia and the United States to try to
    persuade Armenia, so that they can solve the issue," Erdogan was quoted
    as saying in the Turkish Sabah newspaper. The trouble with Ankara
    is that she has not yet realized that nothing on the Karabakh issue
    depends on her, and the best thing she can do is just not to interfere.

    However, the Turkish premier called on Obama "not to mistake U.S.

    senators, lawmakers and politicians for historians." "I told Obama
    that we are tired. Every year in April we face the same problem,
    whether Republicans come [to power] or Democrats, the issue remains
    the same. Bills should not appear in Congress every year," Erdogan
    said. He apparently forgot for a moment that the U.S. president
    cannot sign a decree on preventing the legislature from introducing
    or not introducing this or that resolution into the Congress. But
    Erdogan is confident that he warned Obama about the Armenian issue
    and the president of the United States in his April 24 address to the
    Armenian community will say "Metz Yeghern". However, in vain Turkey
    hopes that resolutions in the U.S. Congress won't be adopted every
    year. All in vain...

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