We are expected, no matter what, to not make them happy. We are expected to not give them the reaction they want.
Finally, the loud voice I was hoping to hear has come from Turkey’s Humanitarian Relief Foundation (İHH). If it had not, the cries for help from the 7-year-old girl in Aleppo may have continued to echo in the void. Finally, people have heard young Bana’s voice calling for protection.
This looks very familiar to me. These are signs of instrumentalization in the fight against the Fethullahist Terror Organization (FETÖ), particularly in the “FETÖ operation against the Doğan Group.”
He is showing the performance of a political personality that those who underestimated him by labelling him “a technocrat” cannot ignore.
For the last six to seven years, I have developed a particular habit. I take a look at the “richest 100 people in Turkey” lists to see whether there is a pro-government wealthy person on the list.
The ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) wants a unitary presidential system. President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has emphasized this numerous times. Parliamentary Constitution Committee head Mustafa Şentop said it one more time the other day. The proposal will be for the unitary, not a federal, presidential system.
The leader of the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), Devlet Bahçeli, voiced the most crucial sentence at the end of a speech that he delivered on the party’s parliamentary group meeting on Oct. 18.
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan uttered a historic sentence during the latest cabinet meeting held at the Beştepe Palace in Ankara.
Mehmet Kuzgun, the muezzin of İzmir’s Narlıdere Yalvaç Mosque was assaulted after he recited the “sala” (a special call to prayer) on the night of July 15.