TRKNWS-L Turkish Press Review (April 20, 1995)

From: [email protected] (Dimitrios Hristu)

Subject: TRKNWS-L  Turkish Press Review (April 20, 1995)


CONTENTS

  • [01] CILLER MEETS CLINTON

  • [02] CILLER OPENS AIR CORRIDOR TO ARMENIA

  • [03] NATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY WEEK

  • [04] ANKARA WARNS INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY ABOUT TERRORISM

  • [05] MENZIR LEAVES FOR US VISIT

  • [06] DEMIREL TO GO TO CANAKKALE

  • [07] US AND TURKEY CONTINUE TO COMBAT DRUG TRAFFIC

  • [08] TURKEY-NATO

  • [09] TALKS BETWEEN DENKTAS AND KARAYALCIN

  • [10] STRAINED RELATIONS WITH HOLLAND

  • [11] SUPPORT FOR CILLER FROM JEWISH LOBBY

  • [12] ARMED FORCES DISCOVER HUGE PKK DRUGS CACHE

  • [13] FIRST CONTACT WITH KURDISH LEADER TALABANI


  • WITH THE COMPLIMENT OF

    DIRECTORATE GENERAL OF PRESS AND INFORMATION

    TURKISH PRESS REVIEW

    APRIL 20, 1995

    Summary of the political and economic news in the Turkish

    press this morning

    [01] CILLER MEETS CLINTON

    US President Bill Clinton and Turkish Prime Minister Tansu Ciller yesterday came together for the third time since

    Clinton took office. During a 50-minute meeting, Clinton said that the US considered the PKK a terrorist organization

    and supported Turkey's struggle against it. American officials briefing the press after the meeting between

    President Bill Clinton and Prime Minister Tansu Ciller, said that both sides had confirmed the growing importance of

    Turkish-American relations. Ciller, talking to reporters in Turkish, after her meeting with Clinton said she would do

    her best to push the democratic reforms through Parliament. Ciller reportedly said democratization and the so-called

    "political solution" to the Kurdish issue should not be mixed-up. Ciller also said she discussed "help given to

    Turkey's Kurdish separatists by some neighbouring countries" with Clinton. Ciller also stated that she had asked for US

    support for Azerbaijan and the flow of Azeri oil through a proposed pipeline over Turkey. Clinton called Turkey a

    "valuable and important ally" and added "our relations will become even more important in the years ahead". Clinton

    also said his country understood why Turkey had to launch a military operation into northern Iraq but added "we hope

    civilian casualties will be limited. We also hope the operation will be limited in duration and scope". Ciller in

    return said most of the operation in northern Iraq had been completed but added she could not give a date when the

    withdrawal of the Turkish forces would be completed "because this would not be fair to those who are now involved in the

    operation in the mountains seeking weapons and terrorists". Clinton noted that the US would support Turkey's customs

    union with Europe and entry into the EU. Turkish officials held meetings with the US Treasury officials yesterday for

    new credit possibilities and support for privatization. Ciller said that Turkey was the only democratic-secular

    state among 52 Moslem countries and added that the West should know that Turkey was a model country. President

    Clinton told Ciller of his personal commitment to a bicommunal and federal solution to the Cyprus problem in the

    next few years. Ciller said that President of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) Rauf Denktas, had stated

    that he accepted the Confidence-Building Measures. Ciller was accompanied in her meeting with Clinton by Foreign

    Ministry Undersecretary Ozdem Sanberk, her aides Prof.Emre Gonensay, Volkan Vural and Yalim Eralp, and Turkish

    Ambassador Nuzhet Kandemir. Clinton had eight aides at the meeting including Secretary of State Warren Christopher,

    White House Secretary-General Leon Panetta, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers Laura D'Andrea Tyson, Under

    Secretary for International Affairs Lawrence Summers, Assistant Secretary of State Richard Holbrooke, and US

    Ambassador to Ankara Marc Grossman, as well as his national security and economic advisors. After the meeting with

    Clinton, Ciller went to the Pentagon and participated in a banquet which Defence Secretary William Perry gave in her

    honour. Ciller was welcomed with a military ceremony the first for a Turkish leader.

    [02] CILLER OPENS AIR CORRIDOR TO ARMENIA

    Just prior to her meeting with President Clinton yesterday, Prime Minister Ciller instructed the Transport Ministry to

    open up the air corridor with Armenia. With this gesture, Ciller opened the way to persuading the Clinton administrat-

    ion to exert pressure against the Armenians and make them pull out of occupied Azeri territories. As promised, Ciller

    also conveyed a message from Azeri Head of State Haydar Aliyev to Clinton about the Armenian-Azeri issue. Another

    related matter, the overland petrol pipeline project to carry petrol from Azeri refineries to port out- lets in

    Turkey was also taken up. /All papers/

    [03] NATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY WEEK

    National Sovereignty Week will begin with Turkish Grand National Assembly Speaker Husamettin Cindoruk placing a

    wreath in a ceremony at the Ataturk Monument at the Assembly. President Demirel will also address the National

    Assembly during Sovereignty Week. President Demirel will be welcomed with a military ceremony. President Demirel,

    President of the Constitutional Court Yekta Gungor Ozden, Motherland Party Chairman Mesut Yilmaz and Press Council

    Chairman Oktay Eksi will give opening speeches at the "National Sovereignty and Democracy Congress" being held

    today in the Turkish Grand National Assembly. /Cumhuriyet/

    [04] ANKARA WARNS INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY ABOUT TERRORISM

    Foreign Ministry Spokesman Ferhat Ataman said that the PKK terrorist organization was aiming to make propaganda out of

    issues like the "Kurdish Parliament and government". Ataman called upon international community to not fall into the

    trap of supporting PKK propaganda initiatives. Ataman said in his weekly press conference yesterday that "these

    initiatives are only propaganda devices that the PKK uses to mislead the international community". Ataman reported that

    in accordance with international agreements, no one should ignore the terrorist organization's initiatives.

    /Cumhuriyet/

    [05] MENZIR LEAVES FOR US VISIT

    Necdet Menzir, the director of the Istanbul police force, left for a visit to Houston as the guest of the Mayor of

    Houston, the Anatolia news agency reported yesterday. Before leaving, Menzir said at Istanbul-Ataturk Airport that

    he would participate in the Houston Festival to be held on April 29. Prime Minister Tansu Ciller will also attend the

    festival. Menzir added that he would visit the Chief of the Houston police force.

    [06] DEMIREL TO GO TO CANAKKALE

    President Suleyman Demirel is to go to Canakkale on April 25 to mark the 80th anniversary of the Battle of Gallipoli, the

    Anatolia news agency reported. He will participate in a ceremony at the Monument of Martyrs, which many foreign

    statesmen will also attend. After visiting the Gallipoli Museum, Demirel will go to the recently burned forests of

    Kabatepe, where he will receive a briefing on the reparation works which he believes "will be an example to the whole

    world".

    [07] US AND TURKEY CONTINUE TO COMBAT DRUG TRAFFIC

    Dr.Lee Brown, the Director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, and advisor to the US

    President on drug policy, warned Turkey against becoming a consumer country itself after it becoming a main transit

    route for illicit drug traffic to Europe. Thirty-five years of fruitful and mutually benefical cooperation in narcotics

    interdiction between the US Drug Enforcement Administration and the Turkish government were highlighted yesterday at a

    press conference given by Dr.Brown. On his first visit to Turkey as director, Brown stated that he was impressed by

    meetings with Turkish law enforcement officials who saw the necessity of actively and aggressively combatting narcotics

    trafficking. Brown stated that the US Office of Drug Control Policy had views that the PKK had connections with

    drug trafficking. Brown also met with Istanbul Governor Hayri Kozakcioglu and Chief of Police Necdet Menzir. Brown

    said that he had come to Turkey for a four-day visit and that he would make contacts with top level officials in

    Ankara tomorrow.

    [08] TURKEY-NATO

    Turkey has called upon the NATO Council consisting of the permanent representatives from 16 NATO-member countries for

    an extra-ordinary meeting today. According to details from NATO representatives and new agencies, Turkish Permanent

    Representative to NATO, Tugay Ozceri will condemn the attitude of the Netherlands at the meeting. /Cumhuriyet/

    [09] TALKS BETWEEN DENKTAS AND KARAYALCIN

    In the wake of Prime Minister Ciller's comment that the US should intervene in the Cyprus problem and negotiate a

    settlement, former Foreign Minister Murat Karayalcin has gone to the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) for

    talks with President Rauf Denktas. In the capacity of special envoy, Karayalcin has con- veyed Prime Minister

    Ciller's views to Denktas who agrees that it would be hopeless to try and get into Europe without the support of

    Turkey. Denktas told Karayalcin that the TRNC was prepared to wait for a move coming from the US. Denktas told the

    press that much depended on the Greek side, and that if the Greek community went its own way, then the only alternative

    for the TRNC was union with Turkey. /Hurriyet/

    [10] STRAINED RELATIONS WITH HOLLAND

    Hard words are flying between Turkish and Dutch officials about the Kurdish parliament-in-exile now set up in The

    Hague with Dutch government permission. During a meeting in New York, Turkish Foreign Ministry Undersecretary Ozdem

    Sanberk had some tough words for Dutch Foreign Minister Van Mierlo. According to some reports, the meeting was not a

    happy one, with Sanberk reminding the Dutch minister that as Holland was a signatory to the international anti-terrorism

    agree- ment it should hold to the principles outlined therein. /Hurriyet/

    [11] SUPPORT FOR CILLER FROM JEWISH LOBBY

    The powerful US Jewish lobby has indicated its support for Turkey's foreign policy and sympathy for its security

    problems as detailed by Prime Minister Ciller during her current visit to the US. Issues of vital interest to Israel

    have been taken up at high levels and these include regional security developments and the sale of fresh water supplies

    to Israel from Turkey. The influ- ential Jewish lobby, represented by ten officials met with Ciller in New York

    just before she left for talks with President Clinton in Washington, and conveyed its support for Turkey. /Milliyet/

    [12] ARMED FORCES DISCOVER HUGE PKK DRUGS CACHE

    In what has been described as a "severe blow" to PKK terror operations, Turkish military forces in northern Iraq have

    found and seized a huge 4.5 ton cache of drugs in a cave hidden away in the mountains. Military representatives

    assessing the Turkish military in- cursion into northern Iraq said yesterday that this and other military successes

    have all contributed to the reduction of the PKK terrorist organization. /Sabah/

    [13] FIRST CONTACT WITH KURDISH LEADER TALABANI

    While Prime Minister Ciller makes her political and economic contacts in the States, contacts of another kind have been

    finalizing in northern Iraq where a Foreign Ministry dele- gation has been setting up a meeting with Kurdish leader

    Celal Talabani. Talabani and other political leaders will figure in plans for securing peace in the region once the

    Turkish military operation is over and troops have been pulled out. Reports say that a meeting with Talabani could

    take place fairly soon. /All papers/

    END


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