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ANKARA: Armenian As An 'Insult'

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  • ANKARA: Armenian As An 'Insult'

    ARMENIAN AS AN 'INSULT'

    Hurriyet Daily News, turkey
    March 26 2015

    Ankara Mayor Melih Gökcek has sued writer Hayko Bagdat on the grounds
    the writer insulted him in Twitter. In the tweet which was considered
    insulting, Bagdat wrote, "They have given Ankara to an Armenian,
    what a shame."

    Gökcek's lawyers, in the petition they submitted to court, said,
    "For a person who is so much loved and respected by the people, this
    word which was used with a disgusting meaning was a heavy violation
    of the personal rights of our client as well as hugely disrespectful
    toward all those who support, love and respect our client."

    It is impossible for me to understand why the word "Armenian" is
    "disgusting."

    The words Turkish, Kurdish, Armenian, Greek, British, German, Italian,
    etc. refer to an "ethnic" belonging. They cannot be considered
    insulting; those who use it as an insulting word and who perceive it
    as insulting word are committing a racist hate crime, let's be clear
    of that fact first.

    On the other hand, who would believe an Armenian would use this word
    as an insult?

    Obviously, in those days when the "I'm sorry but Armenian" matter
    was debated, Bagdat would have been making a joke.

    However, in this country, for a long time, instead of laughing at
    jokes we have been stuck in a situation where we draw an insult out
    of them. Nobody is laughing; nobody makes fun of themselves. "Grave
    seriousness" has become stuck on people.

    Bagdat's last book, "Gollik," was published by İnkılap Publishing
    House. In it, Bagdat wisely and light-heartedly makes fun of himself,
    his identity, his immediate environment and everybody else; I recommend
    you read it. I wish Gökcek's lawyers had also read this book; there
    would have been no need for them to open this case...

    The PM should name this situation

    Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu is an interesting person. When I listen
    to his speeches, the rhetoric he uses gives me the impression we live
    on a different meridian.

    For instance, he spoke like this the other day: "We did not have any
    communication problem with our president on any matter in the past
    seven months. If there is a flaw in the information flow, this could
    be eliminated. If there are differences in evaluation, this may be
    discussed. Nobody should be expecting chaos over a scenario that there
    is a difference of opinion between the government and the president."

    We know the difference of opinion is not a "scenario" because the
    president himself declared this difference of opinion. It was nobody
    else but the president who said, "There is a communication problem.

    Let's bring the presidential system and leave this behind."

    If there is a "scenario," then the scriptwriter is sitting in BeÅ~_tepe
    Palace. The prime minister had declared the "transparency package" as
    his first major move; when the president said, "You will not be able
    to find a district head of the organization for the party or a mayor,"
    the prime minister had to give up the package he had announced with
    a press conference.

    Do I need to recall the Hakan Fidan incident? Or the "security
    package," which was to be revised through talks with the opposition,
    but was hastily brought to parliament? Or the Dolmabahce declaration
    and the monitoring committee?

    Nobody has an "expectation of chaos." The thing we are living through
    can only be called this, nothing else. The question is: who is running
    this government?

    If we need to name it, then let's not name it "chaos." Let's be polite
    to the prime minister.

    Well, then, what do we call it?

    Back two rows

    Davutoglu said Istanbul would make it to 25th place in the 2018 list of
    "World Finance Centers." Not a lot of time has passed since he said
    this, since it was only the last week of 2014.

    A new list has been issued and Istanbul fell two places from the
    previous list. While it had been in the 42nd spot previously, it lost
    its place to Casablanca and fell to 44th.

    In order to find the answer to why Istanbul is going backwards, let us
    look at what kind of criteria is sought to determine the ranking. The
    first is corruption and the rule of law. If you cannot curb corruption
    and cannot apply the laws equally, then you lose points. Second are
    tax laws. They need to be simple, just, predictable and transparent.

    Third is the human resources issue. Knowledgeable, well-educated and
    talented human resources are needed, but our education system is not
    even able to teach Turkish decently.

    As a result, this is a country where politicians are trying to bankrupt
    a bank... What is going on here never escapes the attention of those
    who monitor these kinds of developments in the world...

    March/26/2015

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/armenian-as-an-insult.aspx?PageID=238&NID=80177&NewsCatID=503

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