TRKNWS-L Turkish Press Review (May 17, 1995)
Subject: TRKNWS-L Turkish Press Review (May 17, 1995)
CONTENTS
[01] UN RESUMES CYPRUS UNIFICATION EFFORTS
[02] EURO-PARLIAMENTARIANS TO VISIT TURKEY
[03] GREEK OFFICIALS PROTECT FAIKOGLU'S ATTACKER
[04] BOUTROS-GHALI WANTS TURKISH CONTINGENT TO STAY IN BOSNIA
[05] GERMANY CONSIDERS LIFTING ARMS EMBARGO AGAINST TURKEY
[06] TURKEY DEMURS OVER TWO WEU STATEMENTS
[07] "BLACK VOICE" KAPLAN DEAD
[08] "ATATURK PEACE AWARD" CEREMONY
[09] TERRORIST LEADER CAUGHT
[10] NATO EASING AEGEAN TENSION
[11] EBOLA BORDER CONTROLS
WITH THE COMPLIMENT OF
DIRECTORATE GENERAL OF PRESS AND INFORMATION
TURKISH PRESS REVIEW
MAY 17, 1995
Summary of the political news in the Turkish press this
morning.
[01] UN RESUMES CYPRUS UNIFICATION EFFORTS
UN Special Envoy to Cyprus Joe Clark yesterday met with
senior Turkish officials as part of a UN initiative for
intensified efforts for the unification of the east
Mediterranean island following last month's presidential
election in Turkish Cyprus. Clark said after a meeting with
Foreign Ministry Deputy Undersecretary Tugay Ulucevik that
he was trying to find out if conditions were suitable for
the UN to call for face-to-face meetings between Turkish
Cypriot President Rauf Denktas and Greek Cypriot leader
Glafkos Klerides. "I wanted to discuss with Turkish
officials Ankara's assessment of the situation in Cyprus and
hear their advice" Clark told reporters. Ulucevik said
Turkey backed the holding of direct talks between the two
Cypriot leaders. Turkey appreciates and supports UN efforts
for a just and permanent settlement to the Cyprus issue on
the basis of the equality of the Turkish and Greek Cypriot
communities, Ulucevik added. But he warned that a solution
should not bring the Turkish Cypriots to the conditions of
the period before 1974. Clark, accompanied by his deputy
Gustave Feissel, also met with Foreign Minister Erdal Inonu
and Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Ambassador Ozdem Sanberk
later on Tuesday. The UN envoy, who met with Greek
officials in Athens on Monday before travelling to Ankara,
is due to meet with Denktas and Klerides in Cyprus.
Meanwhile, the US and British Ambassadors to Nicosia met
with Rauf Denktas yesterday. US Ambassador Richard Boucher
said that they wanted a comprehensive and quick solution to
the Cyprus problem adding that his country would do its best
on this issue. British High Commissioner David Madden
pointed out that efforts had intensified for a solution and
said: "We have a good opportunity before us".
/Cumhuriyet-Hurriyet/
[02] EURO-PARLIAMENTARIANS TO VISIT TURKEY
Two chairmen of the Socialist group, the Green group and the
Radical group in the European Parliament will visit Turkey
between May 23-26, the Anatolia news agency reported. They
will meet with Parliament Speaker Husamettin Cindoruk, Prime
Minister Tansu Ciller, Deputy Prime Minister Hikmet Cetin,
Foreign Minister Erdal Inonu and ex-parliamentarians from
the DEP who are now in prison. The visit is deemed
important in Turkish circles because the European Parliament
is due to vote on the customs union in October.
[03] GREEK OFFICIALS PROTECT FAIKOGLU'S ATTACKER
Greek officials are protecting Nikos Haciprokopiu, who
attacked Ahmet Faikoglu, a former deputy in Western Thrace,
the Anatolia news agency reported in Xanti on Tuesday.
Greek officials claim that Haciprokopiu is mentally ill, and
that he has previously received medical treatment. The
Turkish Foreign Ministry has condemned in a written
statement the attack against the former Xanti independent
deputy Ahmet Faikoglu. In the statement, it is stressed
that attacks against the Turkish minority in Western Thrace
have increased, and that Turkey is closely following
developments. It is also stated that Greek officials should
take the necessary measures to stop the violence in the
shortest possible. /Hurriyet/
[04] BOUTROS-GHALI WANTS TURKISH CONTINGENT TO STAY IN BOSNIA
UN Secretary-General Boutros Ghali suggested in a letter to
the UN Security Council that Turkey should stay in Bosnia.
Ghali, preparing a report on the peacekeepers in Bosnia,
Croatia and Macedonia, wrote to Jean-Bernard Merimee, the
Security Council Chairman and French Permanent
Representative, that changing the make-up of the force at
this stage would not be useful. Ghali, who originally
opposed sending Turkish forces to the region for "historical
reasons", later praised what he said was excellent work.
The UN Secretary-General is expected to brief the Security
Council today about the latest situation on the ground in
the former-Yugoslavia. Merimee stated in his response
letter to Ghali that the suggestions had been accepted by
the Council members. /Milliyet/
[05] GERMANY CONSIDERS LIFTING ARMS EMBARGO AGAINST TURKEY
German Foreign Ministry is preparing to lift the arms
embargo it imposed on Turkey in protest of Turkey's military
operation inside Iraq, a Berlin-based newspaper said
yesterday. The Berliner Zeitung quoted German Foreign
Ministry officials as saying that the ministry would soon
submit a report to the Federal Parliament recommending the
lifting of the embargo. Bonn suspended a military loan to
Turkey for two German-built frigates and halted other arms
shipments after Ankara sent 35,000 troops into northern Iraq
to destroy separatist Kurdish camps. The Turkish military
operation in Iraq ended on May 2. /Cumhuriyet/
[06] TURKEY DEMURS OVER TWO WEU STATEMENTS
Turkey, an associate member of the Western European Union
(WEU), has inserted two reservations into the WEU
communique. The Turkish reservations, noted as footnotes in
the text, were about Cyprus and the former-Yugoslavia. The
39th article of the communique said that WEU ministers
"welcomed" the declaration of Cyprus and Malta to enter into
dialogue with the WEU, a move which paralleled their closer
ties with the EU. Another objection came from Rauf Denktas,
President of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC),
who said that the WEU could not ignore Turkish Cypriots and
take the Greek administration as the sole representative of
the island. Turkey also objected to the passage on
former-Yugoslavia, in which the WEU said the lifting of the
arms embargo would cause further violence and force the
peacekeepers to withdraw from the region. /Cumhuriyet/
[07] "BLACK VOICE" KAPLAN DEAD
Cemalettin Kaplan known as "Black Voice", died in Germany
yesterday. Metin Muftuoglu (Kaplan), son of Cemalettin
Kaplan has been appointed to the leadership of the pseudo
"Anatolian Islam Federal Republic" established by Cemalettin
Kaplan, but a group within the religious community has not
accepted the caliphate of Metin Muftuoglu. Establishing
bases in Germany, Cemalettin Kaplan proclaimed himself
Caliph of the Anatolian Islam Federal Republic in order to
establish a system based on the Shari'a in Turkey.
/Hurriyet/
[08] "ATATURK PEACE AWARD" CEREMONY
A presentation ceremony will be held on May 19, when the
Ataturk Peace Award will be given to the Turkish Red
Crescent Association. According to, the Chairman of the
Ataturk High Institute of Culture, Language and History,
President Demirel will participate in the ceremony in the
State Opera and Ballet. /Cumhuriyet/
[09] TERRORIST LEADER CAUGHT
A terrorist organization leader, suspected of violence
against Turkish institutions in Germany during 1993, has
been caught. According to a statement by the Karlsruhe
Federal Attorney, the terrorist, whose name has been given
as "Aziz Y." is thirty-six years old. He was caught during
secret meeting of the terrorists on Sunday in Mainz.
/Cumhuriyet/
[10] NATO EASING AEGEAN TENSION
After stopping off in Greece, NATO Secretary- General Willy
Claes will arrive in Turkey today to have talks with
government officials about the in- creasing tension in the
Aegean.
Both Greece and Turkey have been cautioned by the US about
increasing tension in the Aegean Sea, where both sides seem
determined to hold naval and military ex- ercises despite
the warnings to avoid provocatory act- ion.
Willy Claes wants to redefine the roles of Turkish and
Greece forces and present a new package acceptable to both
sides. Ankara merely says that Greek proposals are being
"considered." /Cumhuriyet/
[11] EBOLA BORDER CONTROLS
The Health Ministry has announced that border controls to
prevent Ebola virus carriers from getting into Turkey have
been brought into effect.
Travellers arriving from Zaire will be subject to tight
controls before they are allowed into Turkey. Officials
stress however, that there is no serious threat that the
virus will get into Turkey. /Cumhuriyet/
END
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