Showing posts with label Interfaith dialogue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interfaith dialogue. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 8, 2017

Turkey's Erdogan Slams Merkel: "Germany Is Abetting Terrorists"

Turkish-German relations were already at a breaking point before Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan accused Germany on Monday of assisting terrorists by not responding to thousands of files sent to Berlin or handing over suspects wanted by Turkish authorities.



Already tense relations deteriorated further last month after Turkey arrested 10 rights activists, including a German, as part of a wider security crackdown. A Turkish prosecutor has accused them of links to the network of Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, whom Ankara blames for a failed coup in July 2016. The U.S.-based Gulen denies any involvement. Turkey accuses Germany of sheltering Kurdish and far-leftist militants as well as military officers and other people linked to the abortive coup. Berlin denies the accusations. Tensions between Berlin and Ankara were already running high after the arrest of a Turkish-German journalist and Turkey"s refusal to allow German lawmakers to visit troops at a Turkish air base.


And now, as Reuters reports, Erdogan told a conference in the Black Sea province of Rize, in comments likely to further escalate tensions between the two countries.





"Germany is abetting terrorists,"



"We gave (German Chancellor Angela) Merkel 4,500 dossiers, but have not received an answer on a single one of them," he told members of his ruling AK Party.



"When there is a terrorist, they can tell us to give that person back. You won"t send the ones you have to us, but can ask us for yours. So you have a judiciary, but we don"t in Turkey?" he said.



In Berlin, a German government source rejected Erdogan"s latest remarks.





"Everything has really been said about this," said the source.  



"Repeating the same accusations over and over again does not make them any more true."



Perhaps it is this constant tirade by Erdogan that prompted Turks to import the most gold ever in July... as insurance against the idiocy of politicians...



As Bloomberg reports, Turkey purchased 62,848 kilograms of gold from abroad in July, according to the Borsa Istanbul precious metals exchange, a 13-fold increase compared to the same period last year. That’s equivalent to about $2.5 billion, according to Bloomberg calculations using the average gold price in July. Year-to-date gold imports rose to 237 tons, a seven-fold increase over last year.

Friday, May 26, 2017

Censoring You To "Protect" You

Authored by Douglas Murray via The Strategic Culture Foundation,


  • The editor of The Vanguard at Portland State University decided that it was more important to cover up a story than to break it, more important to evade truths than to expose them, and more important to treat students -- and the wider world -- as children rather than thinking sentient adults able to make up their own minds.

  • That students such as Andy Ngo exist is reason for considerable optimism. So long as there are even a few people left who are willing to ask the questions that need asking and willing to tell people about the answers they hear -- however uncomfortable they may seem right now -- all cannot possibly be lost.

  • Indeed, it is imaginable, that with examples such as this, students in America could be reminded not only that truth will always triumph over lies, but that the current trend of ignorance and censorship might one day soon begin to be turned around.

In the culture-wars currently rocking US campuses, the enemies of free speech have plenty of tools on their side. Many of these would appear to be advantages. For instance the employment of violence, thuggery and intimidation against those who disagree are generally effective ways to prevent people hearing things you do not want them to hear. As are the subtler but more regularly employed tactics for shutting people down, such a "no-platforming" people or getting them disinvited after they have been invited, should the speaker"s views not accord 100% with those of their would-be censors. As also noted in this space before, many of the people who campaign to limit what American students can learn also have the short-term advantage of being willing to lie without compunction and cover over facts whenever they emerge.


The important point here, however, is that word "short-term". In the long run, those who wish to cover over a contrary opinion, or even inconvenient facts, are unlikely to succeed. Adults tend to be capable of more discernment and initiative than the aspirant-nannies believe them to be, and the effects will always tend to show. Take, for example, events in Portland, Oregon, last month.


In April, a gathering took place at the Portland State University. The occasion was billed as an interfaith panel and was given the title, "Challenging Misperceptions." As this is an era when perceptions, as well as misperceptions, of religion are perhaps unusually common, there might be some sense in holding such a discussion, even in the knowledge that it is likely to be hampered -- as interfaith get-togethers usually are -- by the necessity of dwelling on things that do not matter and focussing attention away from all things that do. Thus, by the end of an average interfaith event, it can generally be agreed upon that there are certain dietary laws that certain religions have in common, some agreement on the existence of historical figures and an insistence that religion is the answer to most problems of our world. Fortunately, at Portland, there were some people in the audience who appear to have been happy to avoid this sort of boilerplate.


A young woman raised her hand and asked the Muslim student on the panel about a specific verse in the Koran which would appear to approve killing non-Muslims (Possible verses might have included Qur"an: 8:12; 22:19-22; 2:191-193; 9.5; 9:29). The Muslim student replied:





"I can confidently tell you, when the Koran says an innocent life, it means an innocent life, regardless of the faith, the race, like, whatever you can think about as a characteristic."



This had the potential to develop into an interesting, or at the very least, an interestingly evasive answer. And so a young student there, named Andy Ngo, who also worked for the university"s student newspaper, The Vanguard, got out his phone and began recording. The Muslim student on the panel went on to say:





"And some, this, that you"re referring to, killing non-Muslims, that [to be a non-believer] is only considered a crime when the country"s law, the country is based on Koranic law – that means there is no other law than the Koran. In that case, you"re given the liberty to leave the country, you can go in a different country, I"m not gonna sugarcoat it. So you can go in a different country, but in a Muslim country, in a country based on the Koranic laws, disbelieving, or being an infidel, is not allowed so you will be given the choice [to leave]."



All of this is an admirably more complete answer than tends to be given at such affairs. All of this is also theologically strong. Speaking about the attitudes of the Islamic faith towards apostasy a few years ago, no less an authority than Yusuf al-Qaradawi said that if Muslims had got rid of the punishments for apostasy, "Islam would not exist today". It is a striking admission, and one which would appear to suggest an awareness that the religion"s innate appeal is not as great as is often alleged.


The young reporter who captured this segment of video proceeded to share it on his Twitter account. This is the sort of thing journalists often do if they are at a public event and someone says something of interest. The alternatives (that journalists hope never to attend anything interesting, or attend events that are interesting but choose to keep their discoveries private) are not models for success in the profession.


In the days immediately following the event, a couple of websites picked up the story. Shortly afterwards, Andy Ngo was called in for a meeting at his student newspaper and told by the editor-in-chief that his behaviour was "predatory" and "reckless" and that he had put the life of the Muslim student and that student"s family at risk. So far as anyone knows, nothing has happened to either the Muslim student or his family. Despite much flame-fanning by "Defenders of Minorities", America does not seem to be in the middle of a lynching season for religious minorities, even though these moralists often appear to wish it otherwise. Nevertheless, "health and safety" and "minimising harm" are, as Mark Steyn has observed, the new "shut up". Where once someone would invite you just to "shut up", today they can appeal to the possibility that a non-existent lynch-mob might show up to murder anyone whose cause the censor of the day happens to be trying to protect.


At any rate, while the Muslim student and his family are, of course, fine, the young journalist who reported his words was fired. The editor of The Vanguard at Portland State University decided that it was more important to cover up a story than to break it, more important to evade truths than to expose them, and more important to treat Portland students -- and the wider world -- as children rather than thinking adults able to make up their own minds.


The account of The Vanguard is a typical display of student cowardice and American academic dishonour. The report, nevertheless, should also stand as a demonstration of American hope. That students such as Andy Ngo exist is reason for considerable optimism. So long as there are even a few people left who are willing to ask the questions that need asking and willing to tell people about the answers they hear -- however uncomfortable they may seem right now -- all cannot possibly be lost. Indeed, it is imaginable, that with examples such as his, students in America could be reminded not only that truth will always triumph over lies, but that the current trend of ignorance and censorship might one day soon begin to be turned around.

Tuesday, May 23, 2017

Turkey Summons US Ambassador To Protest Brawl In Which Erdogan's Bodyguards Beat Up Protesters

Tensions stemming from last week"s massive brawl, caught on video, between pro-Kurdish protesters and Turkish President Recep Erdogan"s security detail, escalated on Monday after, paradoxically, Turkey lodged a formal complaint with John Bass, the U.S. ambassador in Ankara, over purportedly "aggressive" actions taken by American security personnel. The complaint accused U.S. law enforcement of failing to quell an "unpermitted" and "provocative" demonstration, and demanded a "full investigation of this diplomatic incident," according to WaPo. It failed to mention that Erdogan"s entourage was more than fully equipped to deal with this "demonstration", by attacking and beating random protesters, sending a dozen of them in the hospital.


Reuters added that the Turkish government summoned the U.S. ambassador on Monday to discuss the treatment of Erdogan’s bodyguards following Tuesday"s incident outside the Turkish ambassador"s residence in the Washington, D.C. suburbs. It appears that in the span of just five days, the two sides developed drastically different accounts of what happened, with U.S. police accusing Erdogan"s bodyguards of viciously attacking the allegedly peaceful protesters. The State Department called the conduct of Erdogan"s body guards "deeply disturbing" and has "raised concerns about those events at the highest levels," according to a spokeswoman who spoke with WaPo.


Meanwhile, the Turkish Embassy said last week that Erdogan"s bodyguards had acted in self-defense, and that the protesters were affiliated with the Kurdish terrorist group PKK. Some of the protesters were waving the flag of the YPG, the Kurdish militia organization, that the U.S. recently pledged to arm and which Turkey accuses of being terrorist.


The exact nature of the "mistreatment" to which Turkey is objecting remains unclear. Two people were arrested during the brawl, which Reuters is now reporting left 11 people injured, including a Washington police officer. It"s been confirmed that one of those arrested was a protester. However, it"s unclear if the second was a member of Erdogan’s entourage.



Since the incident, nothing but outrage has been building up at both the State Department and Capitol Hill. John McCain angrily (of course) accused Erdogan’s entourage of disrespecting their hosts, fuming to the press that the U.S. isn’t “a third world country” and that the Turkish ambassador should “get the hell out” of the U.S. And at least one Democratic Congressman asked President Donald Trump to officially expel the foreign minister.


Footage of what the Washington police chief described as “a vicious attack” shows security guards dressed in suits viciously kicking and punching protesters. In one particularly grisly scene, a security official repeatedly kicks an injured protester in the face.


The brawl occurred just hours after Erdogan and Trump had wrapped up a historic meeting at the White House where both Trump and the Turkish leader, fresh from his power-enhancing referendum victory, smiled during a press conference and pledged to renew frayed relations between the two countries.  Erdogan arrived in Washington with misgivings about the U.S.’s decision to arm the YPG, as well as the Trump administration’s refusal to hand over Fetullah Gulen, a cleric living in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania. Erdogan has accused Gulen, a former ally, or orchestrating the July coup attempt that left more than 200 Turks dead.


While it remains unclear what triggered the melee, it no longer appears relevant: the ensuing diplomatic fallout has overshadowed talks that both Turkey and the U.S. had described as constructive.