It is difficult to understand to what limits Turkey’s government of the AKP will carry its “advanced democracy” or effort to gather legislative, executive and judiciary powers in its leader and government
The continued deadlock in the Cyprus peacemaking process and uncompromising preconditions of the Greek Cypriots to kick off what they already claim to be doomed to fail the new round of inter-communal talks point at one highly probable culmination:
After the Feb. 7, 2012, “MİT crisis,” the government not only saved its top spy with a midnight amendment to the law covering the National Intelligence Agency (MİT) and its operations
Photographs of what is alleged to be Bilal Erdoğan are floating around on the net.
Pope Francis has sent “World Day of Peace” messages to the heads of state and government, as well as heads of religious institutions of many countries to celebrate the Roman Catholic Church’s feast day dedicated to peace.
The Turkish Cypriot left-right coalition government is cracking these days
Three ministers became mayoral candidates; four others were shot down by a web of graft and irregularity scandals; two were sacked and one minister shifted from one position to another.
Except for the timing, this latest crisis between the Islamist Fethullah Gülen fraternity and the Islamist government
Unable to save the sons of the ministers and scores of associates sent behind bars by a prosecutor not yet taken under control the government and the police