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Forum Messages Posted by Roswitha

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Thread: Domestic violence in Turkey

231.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 27 Jan 2009 Tue 09:42 pm

For more than 20 years, Mor Çatý (the Purple Roof Foundation) has been at the forefront of the fight against domestic violence in Turkey.

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Since 2005, Mor Çatý had run a shelter in Beyoðlu -- the only one operated by a civil society organization -- where women who had fled abusive homes could settle with their children and get the legal, psychological and medical support they needed to rebuild their shattered lives. The foundation had signed a protocol with the Beyoðlu District Administration (kaymakamlýk), which provided financial support for salaries and utilities using money from the World Bank Social Risk Mitigation Project.

Psychologists, doctors and lawyers -- some of them volunteers -- were involved in the residents’ care, while pedagogues helped children overcome the trauma they had experienced. The women’s three-month stay could be extended if they needed more time to gather strength and learn to survive independently.

Sadly, when World Bank funding came to an end, local authorities refused to provide further financial backing, thus making it impossible for Mor Çatý to continue running the shelter. The decision caused an outcry among women’s rights activists, who demonstrated in front of Parliament, but their entreaties fell on deaf ears.

As of Dec. 31, management of the shelter was transferred to the Social Services and Child Protection Agency (SHÇEK), but Mor Çatý activists fear that it could eventually be closed down.

In 2006, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan issued a wide-ranging directive mobilizing all state institutions to combat family violence and honor killings. One important item was, however, missing from the prime ministerial order: an adequate budget.

According to a law adopted in 2004, municipalities with a population over 50,000 are required to open a shelter, but many local authorities invoke money constraints to wiggle out of their obligations. It is somewhat ironic that in a country so focused on defense, protecting women from an enemy within their own families is simply not seen as a priority. Is it because politicians, deep down, still believe that a woman’s place is in her home, irrespective of the living conditions she faces there?

There has of course been improvement, and awareness of the problem has increased. According to the State Ministry for Women and Family Affairs, there were 44 shelters across Turkey in March 2008, 23 of them run by the SHÇEK, which only operated eight shelters five years earlier. But when you know that most shelters have less than 20 beds, it is evident that supply does not meet demand.

Former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, in a global report on violence against women released in October 2006, estimated there should be a minimum of one shelter bed per 10,000 residents, and one per 7,500 for optimum protection. Ýstanbul should therefore have somewhere between 1,200 and 1,500 beds, and Turkey a minimum of 7,100.

Women’s rights activists also point out that opening shelters is one thing; providing the necessary services to empower women, with personnel trained to deal sensitively with victims of abuse, is quite another.

The battle against domestic violence will not be won overnight, nor is it one that the government is expected to fight on its own. Social issues such as domestic abuse can only be addressed through a multipronged approach that requires the cooperation of authorities, of civil society activists and even of the private sector.

Establishing fruitful dialogue with civil society organizations should be one of the main planks of the authorities’ efforts to curb violence. Yet they often fail to do so. Mor Çatý has, for years, been making a crucial contribution to the fight against domestic violence. Pushing it aside, instead of making use of its extensive experience in this field, therefore seems particularly counterproductive.

 

http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/yazarDetay.do?haberno=165216



Thread: Who has seen this movie? Pls. comment

232.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 27 Jan 2009 Tue 07:02 pm

American East

http://www.americaneastmovie.com/



Thread: Turkey - Israel - Gaza

233.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 26 Jan 2009 Mon 05:55 am

Symbolic

 

 



Thread: Ten killed in Turkish avalanche

234.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 26 Jan 2009 Mon 12:33 am

Today´s news

 

http://news.bbc.co.uk/nolpda/ifs_news/hi/newsid_7849000/7849962.stm



Thread: Turkey - Israel - Gaza

235.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 25 Jan 2009 Sun 09:04 pm

by Juan Cole

 

Gaza War! Hunh! What was it Good For?

 

According to UNICEF, their preliminary estimate of the damage done by the Israeli military to Gaza infrastructure is $1.9 billion. Note that this is Gaza infrastructure, not Hamas infrastructure.

So at least the war weakened Hamas´s political control of Gaza, right? Not so much.

So then, the Israeli military boasted that it destroyed 60% of the tunnels whereby Gazans smuggle food, medicine and other goods into Gaza (the Israelis say they bring in explosives for rocket-making as well; but since rockets can be made from simple materials and petroleum products, and since the rockets are so primitive, they can´t be bringing in very good explosives). So at least, the Israeli war on the people of Gaza permanently reduced the capacity of those tunnels, right? Naw, the Gazans are working Caterpillar backhoes to rebuild the tunnels, already!

If the goal was to stop the rockets, so the ceasefire last June stopped the rockets from Hamas for 4 months until Israel broke the truce. Negotiation had been proven to work. Henry Siegman has decided that the Israeli narrative of the lead-up to the Gaza War was just lies, which American media largely bought, hook, line and sinker. He outlines what really happened.

How unpopular Israel made itself in Europe with this war was still visible nearly a week after it ended, when 20,000 protesters marched in Paris on Saturday, still protesting the war.

On the other hand, if the ceasefire holds, I suppose that this weekend will witness the last big demonstrations. And then the US Congress will go back to giving the Israeli military $30 billion in arms, and Israeli colonization of the West Bank will proceed apace, and the statelessness and expropriation of the Palestinians will worsen. And those quotidian processes won´t generate any headlines or massive protests, and they will proceed inexorably because no one is pressuring the US congress day to day except the Israel lobbies.

For Democratic congressional representatives, at least, there is now a web site where American voters can give campaign support to those who declined to jump through AIPAC´s hoops and did not assent to a resolution, the purpose of which was to garner support for this dirty war.

A CNN poll found that 63% of Americans felt that Israel´s war on Gaza was right. They say only 17% of Americans supported the Palestinians.

An earlier Rasmussen poll found that 44% of Americans supported the war and 41% opposed it. That may be an artifact of the way the question was asked. Americans like Israelis (and I am among them), so if you ask them if they support the Israelis or the Palestinians, you get a skewed answer. The question is whether this war was a good idea, or was prosecuted honorably. Moreover, there was a big difference among political parties, with only 45% of Democrats supporting the Gaza War. (I´ll bet you a lot of the opposition to the war within the party came from Jewish American liberals).

CNN has a lot of gall, since their coverage was completely one-sided and helped produce the results found in the poll. I can remember that they had Michael Oren on in uniform, speaking for the Israeli army, a Sunday afternoon. But they had no Palestinian policeman from Gaza. And then Oren dishonestly published an op-ed in the LA Times without identifying himself as being active duty Israeli military. This is a guy who claims to tell us the balanced historical narrative of the 1967 war or of American-Muslim relations? CNN never agressively challenged the lies of Israeli spokesmen the way British journalists did. And, of course, American channels seldom interviewed journalists based inside Gaza.

No wonder millions of Americans went to Aljazeera English on the Web for the other side of the story. By the way, the argument that Aljazeera English is not carried by the satellite television companies in the US because of lack of interest is ridiculous. They carry stations in obscure languages for which the audience must be tiny. I get Aljazeera Arabic; would the English really be less watched? Aljazeera English was most likely kept off because the Bushies made threats behind the scenes. The Obama administration should open up the airwaves.

But anyway, even a 60-30 split in the US for Israel in a war strikes me as not such great news for Tel Aviv. Surely in 1967 it was almost 100 percent in favor. And Rasmussen was probably closer to the truth with 44/41, which is in American terms an absolute disaster for Israeli public relations.

I fear the Israeli public is going to elect that maniac Binyamin Netanyahu on Feb. 10, and that will be the complete end of any 2-state solution, and we just have to live with a horrific Apartheid for decades, which will cause more conflict and further poison much of the world against the United States. (The Right-Zionists have been complaining about me wanting to put America first. For that I don´t apologize.)



Thread: the killing continues, GAZA

236.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 25 Jan 2009 Sun 09:03 pm

Gaza War! Hunh! What was it Good For?

 

According to UNICEF, their preliminary estimate of the damage done by the Israeli military to Gaza infrastructure is $1.9 billion. Note that this is Gaza infrastructure, not Hamas infrastructure.

So at least the war weakened Hamas´s political control of Gaza, right? Not so much.

So then, the Israeli military boasted that it destroyed 60% of the tunnels whereby Gazans smuggle food, medicine and other goods into Gaza (the Israelis say they bring in explosives for rocket-making as well; but since rockets can be made from simple materials and petroleum products, and since the rockets are so primitive, they can´t be bringing in very good explosives). So at least, the Israeli war on the people of Gaza permanently reduced the capacity of those tunnels, right? Naw, the Gazans are working Caterpillar backhoes to rebuild the tunnels, already!

If the goal was to stop the rockets, so the ceasefire last June stopped the rockets from Hamas for 4 months until Israel broke the truce. Negotiation had been proven to work. Henry Siegman has decided that the Israeli narrative of the lead-up to the Gaza War was just lies, which American media largely bought, hook, line and sinker. He outlines what really happened.

How unpopular Israel made itself in Europe with this war was still visible nearly a week after it ended, when 20,000 protesters marched in Paris on Saturday, still protesting the war.

On the other hand, if the ceasefire holds, I suppose that this weekend will witness the last big demonstrations. And then the US Congress will go back to giving the Israeli military $30 billion in arms, and Israeli colonization of the West Bank will proceed apace, and the statelessness and expropriation of the Palestinians will worsen. And those quotidian processes won´t generate any headlines or massive protests, and they will proceed inexorably because no one is pressuring the US congress day to day except the Israel lobbies.

For Democratic congressional representatives, at least, there is now a web site where American voters can give campaign support to those who declined to jump through AIPAC´s hoops and did not assent to a resolution, the purpose of which was to garner support for this dirty war.

A CNN poll found that 63% of Americans felt that Israel´s war on Gaza was right. They say only 17% of Americans supported the Palestinians.

An earlier Rasmussen poll found that 44% of Americans supported the war and 41% opposed it. That may be an artifact of the way the question was asked. Americans like Israelis (and I am among them), so if you ask them if they support the Israelis or the Palestinians, you get a skewed answer. The question is whether this war was a good idea, or was prosecuted honorably. Moreover, there was a big difference among political parties, with only 45% of Democrats supporting the Gaza War. (I´ll bet you a lot of the opposition to the war within the party came from Jewish American liberals).

CNN has a lot of gall, since their coverage was completely one-sided and helped produce the results found in the poll. I can remember that they had Michael Oren on in uniform, speaking for the Israeli army, a Sunday afternoon. But they had no Palestinian policeman from Gaza. And then Oren dishonestly published an op-ed in the LA Times without identifying himself as being active duty Israeli military. This is a guy who claims to tell us the balanced historical narrative of the 1967 war or of American-Muslim relations? CNN never agressively challenged the lies of Israeli spokesmen the way British journalists did. And, of course, American channels seldom interviewed journalists based inside Gaza.

No wonder millions of Americans went to Aljazeera English on the Web for the other side of the story. By the way, the argument that Aljazeera English is not carried by the satellite television companies in the US because of lack of interest is ridiculous. They carry stations in obscure languages for which the audience must be tiny. I get Aljazeera Arabic; would the English really be less watched? Aljazeera English was most likely kept off because the Bushies made threats behind the scenes. The Obama administration should open up the airwaves.

But anyway, even a 60-30 split in the US for Israel in a war strikes me as not such great news for Tel Aviv. Surely in 1967 it was almost 100 percent in favor. And Rasmussen was probably closer to the truth with 44/41, which is in American terms an absolute disaster for Israeli public relations.

I fear the Israeli public is going to elect that maniac Binyamin Netanyahu on Feb. 10, and that will be the complete end of any 2-state solution, and we just have to live with a horrific Apartheid for decades, which will cause more conflict and further poison much of the world against the United States. (The Right-Zionists have been complaining about me wanting to put America first. For that I don´t apologize.)


by Juan Cole, today´s news



Thread: what caught my eye today

237.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 25 Jan 2009 Sun 08:46 pm

Getting Rid of the "War on Terror" Mindset

 

http://www.prospect.org/cs/articles?article=getting_rid_of_the_war_on_terror_mindset



Thread: Buying a Turkish Carpet

238.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 25 Jan 2009 Sun 03:15 pm

The lady is from the Herald Tribune

 

http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid959009704?bclid=979509466&bctid=5086574001



Thread: the killing continues, GAZA

239.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 25 Jan 2009 Sun 04:03 am

 

 Demonstration: End the siege on Gaza!

 

http://www.tadamon.ca/post/category/palestine



Thread: Good-Bye Mr.President

240.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 25 Jan 2009 Sun 01:11 am

Bush and Company

 



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