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ANKARA: Turkish PM's advisor denies corruption claims

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  • ANKARA: Turkish PM's advisor denies corruption claims

    Journal of Turkish Weekly
    March 28 2015

    Turkish PM's advisor denies corruption claims

    AA
    28 March 2015


    Turkish PM's chief advisor Etyen Mahcupyan tells MPs at House of
    Commons meeting that the AK Party's 'good actions are more than its
    mistakes.'

    Allegations of corruption and interference into the judiciary against
    Turkey's ruling Justice and Development (AK) Party are not true, the
    Turkish prime minister's chief advisor has told British members of
    parliament in the U.K.

    Etyen Mahcupyan told a roundtable meeting at the UK's House of Commons
    on Friday that it would not have been possible for the AK Party to
    have repeatedly won elections in the country if allegations against it
    were true.

    At the meeting entitled; "Understanding Change: The AK Party Period in
    Turkey," he said: "We live in a very unstable region, but the AK Party
    has managed to keep Turkey in a stable position. Despite all the
    accusations the government has been very successful.

    "If such allegations were true, we would see the results -- however,
    the government has repeatedly won elections."

    - 'Beneficial practices'

    Mahcupyan said only the AK Party had transformed Turkey.

    He said: "I am not saying that AK Party has not been making any
    mistakes; in fact, they have made mistakes, but they still get votes
    from citizens.

    "The result shows that something is very solid, politically."

    "The AK Party does good things and bad things but, when we count AK
    Party actions, its beneficial practices are more than its bad
    actions."



    - Armenian allegations

    Referring to the 1915 Armenian incidents in the Ottoman Empire, he
    said: "I feel myself Ottoman rather than Armenian. I'm not a
    nationalist."

    During the First World War, the Ottoman Empire approved a deportation
    law for Armenians amid their uprising, with the help of the invading
    Russian army.

    As a result, an unknown number of people died in civil strife.

    Turkey's official position against allegations of "genocide" is that
    it acknowledges past experiences were a great tragedy and that both
    parties suffered heavy casualties, including hundreds of Muslim Turks.

    Turkey agrees that there were Armenian casualties during World War I,
    but that it is impossible to define these incidents as "genocide."


    http://www.turkishweekly.net/news/182493/uk-turkish-pm-39-s-advisor-denies-corruption-claims.html

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