View allAll Photos Tagged RecepTayyipErdogan,
Rund 50 Kurden demonstrieren auf dem Breitscheidplatz am Fuße der Gedächtniskirche gegen die anhaltende Aggression der türkischen Regierung gegen Kurden, die zu bürgerkriegsähnlichen Zuständen in Städten wie Cizre und Diyarbakır geführt haben.
Rund 350 Kurden und Anhänger linker Gruppen ziehen in Berlin vom Brandenburger Tor zum Bundeskanzleramt und dann weiter zur türkischen Botschaft.
Hintergrund ist die Tötung von 60 Menschen in der türkisch-kurdischen Stadt Cizre (kurdisch: Cizir) am Vortag. Seit Monaten beschießt die türkische Armee und Polizei vorwiegend kurdisch bewohnte Städte als Reaktion auf den Verlust der absoluten Mehrheit bei der letzten Parlamentwahl durch den Einzug der pro-kurdischen HDP und einiger Angriffe der PKK.
Die Situation in den betroffenen Gegenden kommt inzwischen einem Bürgerkrieg gleich.
In Reden wird die gleichzeitig stattfindene, wiederholte Reise der Bundeskanzlerin Angela Merkel in die Türkei scharf kritisiert. Die Aktivisten werfen Merkel vor, zu den anhaltenden Menschenrechtsverletzungen auf Geheiß von Präsident Recep Tayyip Erdogan und seiner AKP-Regierung zu schweigen.
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G-20 major economies: 2012 G-20 Mexico summitt will be the seventh meeting of the G-20 heads of government in a series of on-going discussions about financial markets and the world economy..
The G20 countries and heads of government include:
Saudi Arabia - King Abdullah
Italy - Prime Minister Mario Monti
Mexico - President Felipe Calderón
United Kingdom - Prime Minister David Cameron
Turkey - Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Australia - Prime Minister Julia Gillard
Canada - Prime Minister Stephen Harper
China - President Hu Jintao
Japan - Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda
Argentina - President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Russia - President Vladimir Putin
Germany - Chancellor Angela Merkel
Republic of Korea - President Lee Myung-bak
United States - President Barack Obama
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission President José Manuel Durão Barroso
Brazil - President Dilma Rousseff
France - President Co-Prince of Andorra François Hollande
India - Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
Indonesia - President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
South Africa - President Jacob Zuma
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, TOBB Twin Towers "TOBB 72 General Assembly Service Honor Certificate and Plaque Ceremony" joined. Erdogan, here in his speech, "Praise the economy is currently not facing a crisis. But the day trying to rescue, to say the current state of the snow, an understanding never can doors as to settle the supplier. Day, a new and much larger goals in all areas as trade in infrastructure investment It is time to start working, "he said. Turkey's striking doing all kinds of assistance to refugees Erdogan said, "We we're set up container town, we've set up tent cities. They still let us 'project send you the money we send' they say. Are you kidding me? Could such a thing? This is a nation is to pass mockery of nobility. We are the dignities our you wave to Give will not. before us on Visa oaths of them, in October is the month of the year. Signatures have been taken in this way Ankara Palas. the current 'We shot in June, is suffering', it's a four-month event or, all of them are just a way to search the project for their new and clogging. keeps their promise they could wish for I the earlier and later in October they finish the job. Now, if they finish 'Good luck' we say, "he said.
New York, 23 settembre 2014 - Partecipazione al Vertice ONU dei Capi di Stato e di Governo sul clima. Nel corso del vertice il Presidente del Consiglio, Matteo Renzi, presiede la sessione tematica "Cities". Nell'immagine, il premier a colloquio con il Presidente della Turchia, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
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G-20 major economies 2011 Cannes Summit will be the sixth meeting of the G-20 heads of government in a series of on-going discussions about financial markets and the world economy.. The G20 countries and heads of government include:
Saudi Arabia - King Abdullah
Italy - Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi
Mexico - President Felipe Calderón
United Kingdom - Prime Minister David Cameron
Turkey - Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Australia - Prime Minister Julia Gillard
Canada - Prime Minister Stephen Harper
China - President Hu Jintao
Japan - Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda
Argentina - President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Russia - President Dmitry Medvedev
Germany - Chancellor Angela Merkel
Republic of Korea - President Lee Myung-bak
United States - President Barack Obama
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission President José Manuel Durão Barroso
Brazil - President Dilma Rousseff
France - President Co-Prince of Andorra Nicolas Sarkozy
India - Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
Indonesia - President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
South Africa - President Jacob Zuma
Source images for caricatures:
- King Abdullah, an image in the public domain for the U.S. Defense Department website.
- Silvio Berlusconi, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Silvio_Berlusconi_(2010).jpg. The copyright holder of the original image allows anyone to use it for any purpose including unrestricted redistribution, commercial use, and modification.
- Felipe Calderón, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- David Cameron, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the ukhomeoffice's Flickr Photostream.
- Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a Creative Commons photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Julia Gillard, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Πρωθυπουργός της Ελλάδας' (Prime Minister of Greece) Flickr Photostream.
- Stephen Harper, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the World Economic Forum taken by Remy Steinegger and available via Wikimedia.
- Hu Jintao, a photo found on the Defense Department website.
- Cristina Kirchner, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Embajada de EEUU, Buenos Aires's Flickr Photostream.
- Dmitry Medvedev, a Creative Commons license photo en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Dmitry_Medvedev_official_large....
- Angela Merkel, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Ricardo Stuckert/PR from Agência Brasil, a public Brazilian news agency, via Wikimedia.
Lee Myung-bak, a Creative Commons license image from hojusaram's Flickr Photostream.
- Yoshihiko Noda, a photo in the public domain available via Wikimedia.
Barack Obama, an image in the public domain taken by U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Kevin S. O'Brien and available via WikiMedia.
- Dilma Rousseff, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Dr. Rosinha' s Flickr photostream.
- Nicolas Sarkozy, a Creative Commons licensed photo taken by Moritz Hager from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Dr. Manmohan Singh, a Creative Commons licensed photo taken by Eric Miller from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- José Manuel Barroso, a Creative Commons photo from the Baltic Development Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Herman Van Rompuy, a Creative Commons license photo from europeanpeoplesparty's Flickr Photostream.
- Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, a photo taken by by Sebastian Derungs from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Jacob Zuma, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Zahur Ramji /Mediapix via the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
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Heads of government for the G-20 major economies as of September 2013.
The G20 countries and heads of government include:
Saudi Arabia - King Abdullah
Italy - Prime Minister Enrico Letta
Mexico - President Enrique Nieto
United Kingdom - Prime Minister David Cameron
Turkey - Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Australia - Prime Minister Tony Abbott
Canada - Prime Minister Stephen Harper
China - President Xi Jinping
Japan - Prime Minister Shinzo Abe
Argentina - President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Russia - President Vladimir Putin
Germany - Chancellor Angela Merkel
Republic of Korea - President Park Geun-hye
United States - President Barack Obama
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission President José Manuel Durão Barroso
Brazil - President Dilma Rousseff
France - President Co-Prince of Andorra François Hollande
India - Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
Indonesia - President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
South Africa - President Jacob Zuma
Source images for caricatures:
- King Abdullah, an image in the public domain for the U.S. Defense Department website.
- Enrico Letta, a Creative Commons photo from Enrico Letta's Flickr photostream. Body, a public domain photo from Department of Commerce.
- Enrique Nieto, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Eneas' Flickr photostream.
- David Cameron, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the ukhomeoffice's Flickr Photostream.
- Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a Creative Commons photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Tony Abbott, a Creative Commons photo from the Wikimedia.
- Stephen Harper, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the World Economic Forum taken by Remy Steinegger and available via Wikimedia.
- Xi Jinping, a public domain photo from via Wikimedia.
- Cristina Kirchner, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Embajada de EEUU, Buenos Aires's Flickr
Photostream.
- Vladimir Putin, a Creative Commons license photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Angela Merkel, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Ricardo Stuckert/PR from Agência Brasil, a public Brazilian news agency, via Wikimedia.
- Park Geun-hye, a Creative Commons photo from Antonis Samaras' Flickr photostream
- Shinzo Abe, a photo in the public domain availble via Wikimedia.
Barack Obama, a photo in the public domain from The White House's Flickr photostream.
- Dilma Rousseff, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Dr. Rosinha' s Flickr photostream.
- François Hollande, a Creative Commons licensed photo available via Wikimedia.
- Dr. Manmohan Singh, a Creative Commons licensed photo taken by Eric Miller from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- José Manuel Barroso, a Creative Commons photo from the Baltic Development Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Herman Van Rompuy, a Creative Commons license photo from europeanpeoplesparty's Flickr Photostream.
- Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, a photo taken by by Sebastian Derungs from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Jacob Zuma, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Zahur Ramji /Mediapix via the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
This image is out of date:
Click here to view the updated image that reflects changes in membership.
G-20 major economies 2011 Cannes Summit will be the sixth meeting of the G-20 heads of government in a series of on-going discussions about financial markets and the world economy.. The G20 countries and heads of government include:
Saudi Arabia - King Abdullah
Italy - Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi
Mexico - President Felipe Calderón
United Kingdom - Prime Minister David Cameron
Turkey - Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Australia - Prime Minister Julia Gillard
Canada - Prime Minister Stephen Harper
China - President Hu Jintao
Japan - Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda
Argentina - President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Russia - President Dmitry Medvedev
Germany - Chancellor Angela Merkel
Republic of Korea - President Lee Myung-bak
United States - President Barack Obama
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission President José Manuel Durão Barroso
Brazil - President Dilma Rousseff
France - President Co-Prince of Andorra Nicolas Sarkozy
India - Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
Indonesia - President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
South Africa - President Jacob Zuma
Source images for caricatures:
- King Abdullah, an image in the public domain for the U.S. Defense Department website.
- Silvio Berlusconi, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Silvio_Berlusconi_(2010).jpg. The copyright holder of the original image allows anyone to use it for any purpose including unrestricted redistribution, commercial use, and modification.
- Felipe Calderón, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- David Cameron, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the ukhomeoffice's Flickr Photostream.
- Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a Creative Commons photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Julia Gillard, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Πρωθυπουργός της Ελλάδας' (Prime Minister of Greece) Flickr Photostream.
- Stephen Harper, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the World Economic Forum taken by Remy Steinegger and available via Wikimedia.
- Hu Jintao, a photo found on the Defense Department website.
- Cristina Kirchner, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Embajada de EEUU, Buenos Aires's Flickr Photostream.
- Dmitry Medvedev, a Creative Commons license photo en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Dmitry_Medvedev_official_large....
- Angela Merkel, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Ricardo Stuckert/PR from Agência Brasil, a public Brazilian news agency, via Wikimedia.
Lee Myung-bak, a Creative Commons license image from hojusaram's Flickr Photostream.
- Yoshihiko Noda, a photo in the public domain available via Wikimedia.
Barack Obama, an image in the public domain taken by U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Kevin S. O'Brien and available via WikiMedia.
- Dilma Rousseff, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Dr. Rosinha' s Flickr photostream.
- Nicolas Sarkozy, a Creative Commons licensed photo taken by Moritz Hager from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Dr. Manmohan Singh, a Creative Commons licensed photo taken by Eric Miller from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- José Manuel Barroso, a Creative Commons photo from the Baltic Development Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Herman Van Rompuy, a Creative Commons license photo from europeanpeoplesparty's Flickr Photostream.
- Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, a photo taken by by Sebastian Derungs from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Jacob Zuma, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Zahur Ramji /Mediapix via the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
This image is out of date:
Click here to view the updated image.
G-20 major economies: 2012 G-20 Mexico summitt will be the seventh meeting of the G-20 heads of government in a series of on-going discussions about financial markets and the world economy..
The G20 countries and heads of government include:
Saudi Arabia - King Abdullah
Italy - Prime Minister Mario Monti
Mexico - President Felipe Calderón
United Kingdom - Prime Minister David Cameron
Turkey - Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Australia - Prime Minister Julia Gillard
Canada - Prime Minister Stephen Harper
China - President Hu Jintao
Japan - Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda
Argentina - President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Russia - President Vladimir Putin
Germany - Chancellor Angela Merkel
Republic of Korea - President Lee Myung-bak
United States - President Barack Obama
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission President José Manuel Durão Barroso
Brazil - President Dilma Rousseff
France - President Co-Prince of Andorra François Hollande
India - Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
Indonesia - President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
South Africa - President Jacob Zuma
This image is out of date:
Click here to view the updated image.
G-20 major economies: 2012 G-20 Mexico summitt will be the seventh meeting of the G-20 heads of government in a series of on-going discussions about financial markets and the world economy..
The G20 countries and heads of government include:
Saudi Arabia - King Abdullah
Italy - Prime Minister Mario Monti
Mexico - President Felipe Calderón
United Kingdom - Prime Minister David Cameron
Turkey - Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Australia - Prime Minister Julia Gillard
Canada - Prime Minister Stephen Harper
China - President Hu Jintao
Japan - Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda
Argentina - President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Russia - President Vladimir Putin
Germany - Chancellor Angela Merkel
Republic of Korea - President Lee Myung-bak
United States - President Barack Obama
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission President José Manuel Durão Barroso
Brazil - President Dilma Rousseff
France - President Co-Prince of Andorra François Hollande
India - Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
Indonesia - President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
South Africa - President Jacob Zuma
G-20 major economies: 2012 G-20 Mexico summitt will be the seventh meeting of the G-20 heads of government in a series of on-going discussions about financial markets and the world economy..
The G20 countries and heads of government include:
Saudi Arabia - King Abdullah
Italy - Prime Minister Mario Monti
Mexico - President Felipe Calderón
United Kingdom - Prime Minister David Cameron
Turkey - Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Australia - Prime Minister Julia Gillard
Canada - Prime Minister Stephen Harper
China - President Hu Jintao
Japan - Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda
Argentina - President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Russia - President Vladimir Putin
Germany - Chancellor Angela Merkel
Republic of Korea - President Lee Myung-bak
United States - President Barack Obama
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission President José Manuel Durão Barroso
Brazil - President Dilma Rousseff
France - President Co-Prince of Andorra François Hollande
India - Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
Indonesia - President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
South Africa - President Jacob Zuma
Source images for caricatures:
- King Abdullah, an image in the public domain for the U.S. Defense Department website.
- Mario Monti, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Friends of Europe's Flickr photostream.
- Felipe Calderón, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- David Cameron, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the ukhomeoffice's Flickr Photostream.
- Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a Creative Commons photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Julia Gillard, a Creative Commons licensed photo from (Prime Minister of Greece) Flickr Photostream.
- Stephen Harper, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the World Economic Forum taken by Remy Steinegger and available via Wikimedia.
- Hu Jintao, a photo found on the Defense Department website.
- Cristina Kirchner, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Embajada de EEUU, Buenos Aires's Flickr Photostream.
- Vladimir Putin, a Creative Commons license photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Angela Merkel, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Ricardo Stuckert/PR from Agência Brasil, a public Brazilian news agency, via Wikimedia.
- Lee Myung-bak, a Creative Commons license image from hojusaram's Flickr Photostream.
- Yoshihiko Noda, a photo in the public domain available via Wikimedia.
Barack Obama, an image in the public domain taken by U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Kevin S. O'Brien and available via WikiMedia.
- Dilma Rousseff, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Dr. Rosinha' s Flickr photostream.
- François Hollande, a Creative Commons licensed photo available via Wikimedia.
- Dr. Manmohan Singh, a Creative Commons licensed photo taken by Eric Miller from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- José Manuel Barroso, a Creative Commons photo from the Baltic Development Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Herman Van Rompuy, a Creative Commons license photo from europeanpeoplesparty's Flickr Photostream.
- Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, a photo taken by by Sebastian Derungs from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Jacob Zuma, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Zahur Ramji /Mediapix via the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
This image is out of date:
Click here to view the updated image that reflects changes in membership.
The G20 countries and heads of government include:
Saudi Arabia - King Abdullah
Italy - Prime Minister Mario Monti
Mexico - President Enrique Nieto
United Kingdom - Prime Minister David Cameron
Turkey - Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Australia - Prime Minister Julia Gillard
Canada - Prime Minister Stephen Harper
China - President Hu Jintao
Japan - Prime Minister Shinzō Abe
Argentina - President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Russia - President Vladimir Putin
Germany - Chancellor Angela Merkel
Republic of Korea - President Lee Myung-bak
United States - President Barack Obama
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission President José Manuel Durão Barroso
Brazil - President Dilma Rousseff
France - President Co-Prince of Andorra François Hollande
India - Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
Indonesia - President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
South Africa - President Jacob Zuma
South Korean - Lee Myung-bak
Source images for caricatures:
- King Abdullah, an image in the public domain for the U.S. Defense Department website.
- Mario Monti, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Friends of Europe's Flickr photostream.
- Enrique Nieto, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Eneas' Flickr photostream.
- David Cameron, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the ukhomeoffice's Flickr Photostream.
- Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a Creative Commons photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Julia Gillard, a Creative Commons licensed photo from (Prime Minister of Greece) Flickr Photostream.
- Stephen Harper, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the World Economic Forum taken by Remy Steinegger and available via Wikimedia.
- Hu Jintao, a photo found on the Defense Department website.
- Cristina Kirchner, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Embajada de EEUU, Buenos Aires's Flickr Photostream.
- Vladimir Putin, a Creative Commons license photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Angela Merkel, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Ricardo Stuckert/PR from Agência Brasil, a public Brazilian news agency, via Wikimedia.
Lee Myung-bak, a Creative Commons license image from hojusaram's Flickr Photostream.
- Shinzō Abe, a photo in the public domain availble via Wikimedia.
Barack Obama, a photo in the public domain from The White House's Flickr photostream.
- Dilma Rousseff, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Dr. Rosinha' s Flickr photostream.
- François Hollande, a Creative Commons licensed photo available via Wikimedia.
- Dr. Manmohan Singh, a Creative Commons licensed photo taken by Eric Miller from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- José Manuel Barroso, a Creative Commons photo from the Baltic Development Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Herman Van Rompuy, a Creative Commons license photo from europeanpeoplesparty's Flickr Photostream.
- Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, a photo taken by by Sebastian Derungs from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Jacob Zuma, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Zahur Ramji /Mediapix via the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
This image is out of date:
Click here to view the updated image that reflects changes in membership.
G-20 major economies 2011 Cannes Summit was the sixth meeting of the G-20 heads of government in a series of on-going discussions about financial markets and the world economy.. The G20 countries and heads of government include:
Saudi Arabia - King Abdullah
Italy - Prime Minister Mario Monti
Mexico - President Felipe Calderón
United Kingdom - Prime Minister David Cameron
Turkey - Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Australia - Prime Minister Julia Gillard
Canada - Prime Minister Stephen Harper
China - President Hu Jintao
Japan - Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda
Argentina - President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Russia - President Dmitry Medvedev
Germany - Chancellor Angela Merkel
Republic of Korea - President Lee Myung-bak
United States - President Barack Obama
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission President José Manuel Durão Barroso
Brazil - President Dilma Rousseff
France - President Co-Prince of Andorra Nicolas Sarkozy
India - Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
Indonesia - President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
South Africa - President Jacob Zuma
Source images for caricatures:
- King Abdullah, an image in the public domain for the U.S. Defense Department website.
- Mario Monti, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Friends of Europe's Flickr photostream.
- Felipe Calderón, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- David Cameron, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the ukhomeoffice's Flickr Photostream.
- Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a Creative Commons photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Julia Gillard, a Creative Commons licensed photo from ?????p?????? t?? ????da?' (Prime Minister of Greece) Flickr Photostream.
- Stephen Harper, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the World Economic Forum taken by Remy Steinegger and available via Wikimedia.
- Hu Jintao, a photo found on the Defense Department website.
- Cristina Kirchner, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Embajada de EEUU, Buenos Aires's Flickr Photostream.
- Dmitry Medvedev, a Creative Commons license photo en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Dmitry_Medvedev_official_large....
- Angela Merkel, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Ricardo Stuckert/PR from Agência Brasil, a public Brazilian news agency, via Wikimedia.
Lee Myung-bak, a Creative Commons license image from hojusaram's Flickr Photostream.
- Yoshihiko Noda, a photo in the public domain available via Wikimedia.
Barack Obama, an image in the public domain taken by U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Kevin S. O'Brien and available via WikiMedia.
- Dilma Rousseff, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Dr. Rosinha' s Flickr photostream.
- Nicolas Sarkozy, a Creative Commons licensed photo taken by Moritz Hager from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Dr. Manmohan Singh, a Creative Commons licensed photo taken by Eric Miller from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- José Manuel Barroso, a Creative Commons photo from the Baltic Development Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Herman Van Rompuy, a Creative Commons license photo from europeanpeoplesparty's Flickr Photostream.
- Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, a photo taken by by Sebastian Derungs from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Jacob Zuma, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Zahur Ramji /Mediapix via the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
This image is out of date:
Click here to view the updated image that reflects changes in membership.
G-20 major economies 2011 Cannes Summit was the sixth meeting of the G-20 heads of government in a series of on-going discussions about financial markets and the world economy.. The G20 countries and heads of government include:
Saudi Arabia - King Abdullah
Italy - Prime Minister Mario Monti
Mexico - President Felipe Calderón
United Kingdom - Prime Minister David Cameron
Turkey - Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Australia - Prime Minister Julia Gillard
Canada - Prime Minister Stephen Harper
China - President Hu Jintao
Japan - Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda
Argentina - President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Russia - President Dmitry Medvedev
Germany - Chancellor Angela Merkel
Republic of Korea - President Lee Myung-bak
United States - President Barack Obama
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission President José Manuel Durão Barroso
Brazil - President Dilma Rousseff
France - President Co-Prince of Andorra Nicolas Sarkozy
India - Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
Indonesia - President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
South Africa - President Jacob Zuma
Source images for caricatures:
- King Abdullah, an image in the public domain for the U.S. Defense Department website.
- Mario Monti, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Friends of Europe's Flickr photostream.
- Felipe Calderón, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- David Cameron, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the ukhomeoffice's Flickr Photostream.
- Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a Creative Commons photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Julia Gillard, a Creative Commons licensed photo from ?????p?????? t?? ????da?' (Prime Minister of Greece) Flickr Photostream.
- Stephen Harper, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the World Economic Forum taken by Remy Steinegger and available via Wikimedia.
- Hu Jintao, a photo found on the Defense Department website.
- Cristina Kirchner, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Embajada de EEUU, Buenos Aires's Flickr Photostream.
- Dmitry Medvedev, a Creative Commons license photo en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Dmitry_Medvedev_official_large....
- Angela Merkel, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Ricardo Stuckert/PR from Agência Brasil, a public Brazilian news agency, via Wikimedia.
Lee Myung-bak, a Creative Commons license image from hojusaram's Flickr Photostream.
- Yoshihiko Noda, a photo in the public domain available via Wikimedia.
Barack Obama, an image in the public domain taken by U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Kevin S. O'Brien and available via WikiMedia.
- Dilma Rousseff, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Dr. Rosinha' s Flickr photostream.
- Nicolas Sarkozy, a Creative Commons licensed photo taken by Moritz Hager from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Dr. Manmohan Singh, a Creative Commons licensed photo taken by Eric Miller from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- José Manuel Barroso, a Creative Commons photo from the Baltic Development Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Herman Van Rompuy, a Creative Commons license photo from europeanpeoplesparty's Flickr Photostream.
- Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, a photo taken by by Sebastian Derungs from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Jacob Zuma, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Zahur Ramji /Mediapix via the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
This image is out of date:
Click here to view the updated image that reflects changes in membership.
G-20 major economies 2011 Cannes Summit will be the sixth meeting of the G-20 heads of government in a series of on-going discussions about financial markets and the world economy.. The G20 countries and heads of government include:
Saudi Arabia - King Abdullah
Italy - Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi
Mexico - President Felipe Calderón
United Kingdom - Prime Minister David Cameron
Turkey - Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Australia - Prime Minister Julia Gillard
Canada - Prime Minister Stephen Harper
China - President Hu Jintao
Japan - Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda
Argentina - President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Russia - President Dmitry Medvedev
Germany - Chancellor Angela Merkel
Republic of Korea - President Lee Myung-bak
United States - President Barack Obama
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission President José Manuel Durão Barroso
Brazil - President Dilma Rousseff
France - President Co-Prince of Andorra Nicolas Sarkozy
India - Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
Indonesia - President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
South Africa - President Jacob Zuma
Source images for caricatures:
- King Abdullah, an image in the public domain for the U.S. Defense Department website.
- Silvio Berlusconi, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Silvio_Berlusconi_(2010).jpg. The copyright holder of the original image allows anyone to use it for any purpose including unrestricted redistribution, commercial use, and modification.
- Felipe Calderón, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- David Cameron, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the ukhomeoffice's Flickr Photostream.
- Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a Creative Commons photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Julia Gillard, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Πρωθυπουργός της Ελλάδας' (Prime Minister of Greece) Flickr Photostream.
- Stephen Harper, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the World Economic Forum taken by Remy Steinegger and available via Wikimedia.
- Hu Jintao, a photo found on the Defense Department website.
- Cristina Kirchner, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Embajada de EEUU, Buenos Aires's Flickr Photostream.
- Dmitry Medvedev, a Creative Commons license photo en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Dmitry_Medvedev_official_large....
- Angela Merkel, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Ricardo Stuckert/PR from Agência Brasil, a public Brazilian news agency, via Wikimedia.
Lee Myung-bak, a Creative Commons license image from hojusaram's Flickr Photostream.
- Yoshihiko Noda, a photo in the public domain available via Wikimedia.
Barack Obama, an image in the public domain taken by U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Kevin S. O'Brien and available via WikiMedia.
- Dilma Rousseff, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Dr. Rosinha' s Flickr photostream.
- Nicolas Sarkozy, a Creative Commons licensed photo taken by Moritz Hager from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Dr. Manmohan Singh, a Creative Commons licensed photo taken by Eric Miller from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- José Manuel Barroso, a Creative Commons photo from the Baltic Development Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Herman Van Rompuy, a Creative Commons license photo from europeanpeoplesparty's Flickr Photostream.
- Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, a photo taken by by Sebastian Derungs from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Jacob Zuma, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Zahur Ramji /Mediapix via the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
This image is out of date:
Click here to view the updated image that reflects changes in membership.
G-20 major economies 2011 Cannes Summit was the sixth meeting of the G-20 heads of government in a series of on-going discussions about financial markets and the world economy.. The G20 countries and heads of government include:
Saudi Arabia - King Abdullah
Italy - Prime Minister Mario Monti
Mexico - President Felipe Calderón
United Kingdom - Prime Minister David Cameron
Turkey - Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Australia - Prime Minister Julia Gillard
Canada - Prime Minister Stephen Harper
China - President Hu Jintao
Japan - Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda
Argentina - President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Russia - President Dmitry Medvedev
Germany - Chancellor Angela Merkel
Republic of Korea - President Lee Myung-bak
United States - President Barack Obama
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, European Commission President José Manuel Durão Barroso
Brazil - President Dilma Rousseff
France - President Co-Prince of Andorra Nicolas Sarkozy
India - Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
Indonesia - President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
South Africa - President Jacob Zuma
Source images for caricatures:
- King Abdullah, an image in the public domain for the U.S. Defense Department website.
- Mario Monti, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Friends of Europe's Flickr photostream.
- Felipe Calderón, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- David Cameron, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the ukhomeoffice's Flickr Photostream.
- Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a Creative Commons photo from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Julia Gillard, a Creative Commons licensed photo from ?????p?????? t?? ????da?' (Prime Minister of Greece) Flickr Photostream.
- Stephen Harper, a Creative Commons licensed photo from the World Economic Forum taken by Remy Steinegger and available via Wikimedia.
- Hu Jintao, a photo found on the Defense Department website.
- Cristina Kirchner, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Embajada de EEUU, Buenos Aires's Flickr Photostream.
- Dmitry Medvedev, a Creative Commons license photo en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Dmitry_Medvedev_official_large....
- Angela Merkel, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Ricardo Stuckert/PR from Agência Brasil, a public Brazilian news agency, via Wikimedia.
Lee Myung-bak, a Creative Commons license image from hojusaram's Flickr Photostream.
- Yoshihiko Noda, a photo in the public domain available via Wikimedia.
Barack Obama, an image in the public domain taken by U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Kevin S. O'Brien and available via WikiMedia.
- Dilma Rousseff, a Creative Commons licensed photo from Dr. Rosinha' s Flickr photostream.
- Nicolas Sarkozy, a Creative Commons licensed photo taken by Moritz Hager from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Dr. Manmohan Singh, a Creative Commons licensed photo taken by Eric Miller from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- José Manuel Barroso, a Creative Commons photo from the Baltic Development Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Herman Van Rompuy, a Creative Commons license photo from europeanpeoplesparty's Flickr Photostream.
- Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, a photo taken by by Sebastian Derungs from the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
- Jacob Zuma, a Creative Commons licensed photo by Zahur Ramji /Mediapix via the World Economic Forum's Flickr Photostream.
Rund 800 Türken versammeln sich am Brandenburger Tor in Berlin, um gegen Terror zu protestieren. Gemeint sind dabei Gruppen wie die PKK, die syrisch-kurdische PYD und Daesh. Die Teilnehmer waren überwiegend glühende Anhänger des türkischen Präsidenten Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Dieser wurde auch in den Redebeiträgen gelobt. Vereinzelt wurde von Teilnehmern der Wolfsgruß der ultra-nationalistischen, rechtsradikalen Grauen Wölfe gezeigt.
Die Polizei sperrte den Bereich ab, um ein Aufeinandertreffen mit einer zeitgleich stattfindenden kurdischen Gegenkundgebung zu verhindern.
Rund 100 Kurden und Anhänger der türkischen HDP protestieren unweit des Brandenburger Tores gegen eine zeitgleich stattfindenden Kundgebung mit mehreren hundert türkischen Nationalisten. Vereinzelt wurde sich zur PKK bekannt. Auf Transparenten und in Redebeiträgen wird der Türkei und insbesondere deren Präsidenten Recep Tayyip Erdogan diktatorische Bestrebungen und Verbrechen gegen die kurdische Bevölkerung vorgeworfen.
Rund 100 Kurden haben in Berlin gegen die anhaltenden Angriffe des türkischen Militärs auf kurdische Städte in der Türkei protestiert. Die türkische Regierung unter Präsident Recep Tayyip Erdogan begründet das bürgerkriegsähnliche Szenario mit einem vorgeblichen Kampf gegen die PKK. Die Angriffe begannen, nachdem die pro-kurdische HDP in das türkische Parlament eingezogen ist und damit Erdogans AKP-Regierung die absolute Mehrheit verlor.
In Städten wie Cizre starben in den vergangenen Wochen dutzende Menschen, darunter viele Zivilisten.
Die Demonstration schloss sich an einen dreitägigen Hungerstreik von kurdischen Aktivisten vor dem Brandenburger Tor an und führte vom Brandenburger Tor zum Auswärtigen Amt. Auf der Auftaktkundgebung sprach Hakan Tas, MdA (Die Linke).
Recep Tayyip Erdogan is the President of the Republic of Turkey.
This caricature of Recep Tayyip Erdogan was adapted from a Creative Commons photo from the Presidencia de la Republica's Flickr Photostream.
Am Tag nach dem Putschversuch in der Türkei protestieren rund 350 Türken vor der türkischen Botschaft in Berlin Tiergarten für Recep Tayyip Erdogan. In Sprechchören schworen sie im Treue. Vereinzelt outeten sich Anhänger der MHP durch Fahnen.
Am Tag nach dem Putschversuch in der Türkei protestieren rund 350 Türken vor der türkischen Botschaft in Berlin Tiergarten für Recep Tayyip Erdogan. In Sprechchören schworen sie im Treue. Vereinzelt outeten sich Anhänger der MHP durch Fahnen.
MEETING OF FAVELA 6 - UM MOMENTO MÁGICO SERÁ REALIZADO NO DIA 27 DE NOVEMBRO, QUEM ESTEVE NAS EDIÇÕES ANTERIORES SABE O QUE ESTAMOS DIZENDO, O FLYER DESSE ANO RENDE UMA HOMENAGEM AO GRANDE ARTISTA MINEIRO "AMIGO" QUE ESTEVE PRESENTE EM GRANDE PARTE DAS EDIÇÕES, O MEETING OF FAVELA É INEXPLICÁVEL , SÓ ESTANDO PRESENTE PARA SENTIR A EMOÇÃO DESSE EVENTO MAGNIFICO!!! SEJAM BEM VINDOs AO MOF6
Rund 350 Kurden und Anhänger linker Gruppen ziehen in Berlin vom Brandenburger Tor zum Bundeskanzleramt und dann weiter zur türkischen Botschaft.
Hintergrund ist die Tötung von 60 Menschen in der türkisch-kurdischen Stadt Cizre (kurdisch: Cizir) am Vortag. Seit Monaten beschießt die türkische Armee und Polizei vorwiegend kurdisch bewohnte Städte als Reaktion auf den Verlust der absoluten Mehrheit bei der letzten Parlamentwahl durch den Einzug der pro-kurdischen HDP und einiger Angriffe der PKK.
Die Situation in den betroffenen Gegenden kommt inzwischen einem Bürgerkrieg gleich.
In Reden wird die gleichzeitig stattfindene, wiederholte Reise der Bundeskanzlerin Angela Merkel in die Türkei scharf kritisiert. Die Aktivisten werfen Merkel vor, zu den anhaltenden Menschenrechtsverletzungen auf Geheiß von Präsident Recep Tayyip Erdogan und seiner AKP-Regierung zu schweigen.
Protest gegen Untersuchungshaft für Deniz Yücel und alle anderen inhaftierten Journalisten in der Türkei
Nach 13 Tagen Polizeigewahrsam in der Türkei hat ein Haftrichter in Istanbul am Montagabend Untersuchungshaft gegen den deutschen Journalisten Deniz Yücel erlassen. Das berichtete die „Welt“, für die Yücel als Türkei-Korrespondent arbeitet.
Die gegen den Journalisten in der Türkei verhängte Untersuchungshaft hat in Deutschland große Empörung ausgelöst. Für Dienstagnachmittag (28. Februar 2017) waren daher zahlreiche Protestveranstaltungen angekündigt.
Der Grüne-Bundestagsabgeordnete Özcan Mutlu hatte zu einem Protest um 17 Uhr vor der Türkischen Botschaft in Berlin-Tiergarten aufgerufen. Mutlu sagte: „Wenn die Türkei zeigen will, dass sie eine Demokratie ist, dann muss diese Farce endlich beendet und die Presse- und Meinungsfreiheit geschützt werden.“
Der Deutsche Journalisten-Verband (DJV) nannte den Haftantrag des Staatsanwalts für Yücel einen „entsetzlichen Verstoß gegen die Pressefreiheit“.
Die Route des Autokorsos in Berlin führte durch den Bezirk Mitte-Tiergarten. Die Polizei sorgte jedoch dafür, dass der Demonstrationszug die türkische Botschaft in der Tiergartenstraße 19-21 nicht passieren konnte.
Bei der Protestveranstaltung vor der Türkischen Botschaft haben unter anderem Christian Miehr von Reporter ohne Grenzen, der Bundesvorsitzende der Grünen: Cem Özdemir und auch die Maxim-Gorki-Intendantin: Shermin Langhoff gesprochen.
Weiter anwesend waren auch Hakan Tas und kurzzeitig Dietmar Bartsch von DIE LINKE sowie Renate Künast und Katrin Göring-Eckhardt von B90/DIE GRÜNEN.
Die Initiatoren der Proteste fordern generell nicht nur die Freilassung Yücels sondern auch die Freilassung der „anderen 153 inhaftierten Journalisten in der Türkei“, wie es im Aufruf der Initiative #FreeDeniz heißt.
hinzugezogene Quellen:
web.archive.org/web/20170423181847/https://www.fluxfm.de/...
www.rbb24.de/politik/beitrag/2017/02/demonstrationen-fuer...
www.spiegel.de/politik/ausland/deniz-yuecel-so-reagiert-d...
www.morgenpost.de/bezirke/mitte/article209784091/300-Demo...
www.berliner-zeitung.de/berlin/-freedeniz-demo-autokorso-...
-------------------------------------------------
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Stand: Februar 2017
21/09/2022. New York, United States. Prime Minister Liz Truss attends UNGA. The Prime Minister Liz Truss attends Business Roundtable on Economic Recovery and Growth at the CG Residence during the United Nations General Assembly Picture by Andrew Parsons / No 10 Downing Street
Rund 150 Menschen, hauptsächlich Kurden, protestieren in Berlin auf dem Pariser Platz nahe des Brandenburger Tores gegen das harte und brutale Vorgehen des türkischen Staates in kurdisch dominierten Städten in der Türkei. Sie machten Recep Tayyip Erdogan und seine AKP für die Ermordung u.a. von Rechtsanwalt Tahir Elci verantwortlich. Zudem beschworen sie den Kampf der syrisch-kurdischen Volksverteidigungseinheiten YPG und YPJ gegen Daesh und klagten den türkischen Staat der Unterstützung des sogenannten ISlamischen Staates (IS) an.
Zum dritten Mal protestiert der Berliner Landesverband der Piraten vor der Botschaft der Türkei in Berlin für Presse- und Meinungsfreiheit. Anlass sind die Diskussionen um den satirischen Beitrag des ARD-Magazins "extra3", welches zur Einbestellung des deutschen Botschafters in der Türkei geführt hat, sowie die Anzeige von Recep Tayyip Erdogan gegen den deutschen TV-Moderator Jan Böhmermann. Mit letzterem solidarisieren sich die Berliner Piraten ausdrücklich. Überschattet wird die Kundgebung von der erst Stunden zuvor bekannt gegebenen Entscheidung der Bundesregierung ein Verfahren wegen "Beleidigung eines Staatsoberhauptes" zuzulassen.
Unter den Rednern sind der Berliner Landesvorsitzende Bruno Kramm, die ehem. Mitarbeiterin von RT Deutsch und jetzige Piraten-Kandidatin Lea Frinds und ihr Lebensgefährte Marsili Cronberg. Außerdem das Mitglied des Abeordnetenhauses Simon Kowalewski.
Teilgenommen haben ebenfalls Kurden und Jesiden. Im Bild: Bruno Kramm, Landesvorsitzender der Piraten in Berlin.
Mehrere hundert Kuren protestieren in Berlin gegen die anhaltenden Angriffe des türkischen Militärs und der Polizei gegen kurdische Städte. Die Demonstration führt vom Potsdamer Platz zum Brandenburger Tor.
Die Teilnehmer und Redner verurteilen die Politik und das Vorgehen des türkischen Präsidenten Recep Tayyip Erdogan und seiner AKP-Regierung als terroristisch.
Vereinzelt gibt es Sympathie-Bekundungen für die kurdische Arbeiterpartei PKK. Am Ende gab es mindestens eine Festnahme, offensichtlich wegen einer Fahne mit dem Porträt des Führers der PKK, Abdullah Öcalan.
Mehrere hundert Kuren protestieren in Berlin gegen die anhaltenden Angriffe des türkischen Militärs und der Polizei gegen kurdische Städte. Die Demonstration führt vom Potsdamer Platz zum Brandenburger Tor.
Die Teilnehmer und Redner verurteilen die Politik und das Vorgehen des türkischen Präsidenten Recep Tayyip Erdogan und seiner AKP-Regierung als terroristisch.
Vereinzelt gibt es Sympathie-Bekundungen für die kurdische Arbeiterpartei PKK. Am Ende gab es mindestens eine Festnahme, offensichtlich wegen einer Fahne mit dem Porträt des Führers der PKK, Abdullah Öcalan.
New York, 23 settembre 2014 - Partecipazione al Vertice ONU dei Capi di Stato e di Governo sul clima. Nel corso del vertice il Presidente del Consiglio, Matteo Renzi, presiede la sessione tematica "Cities". Nell'immagine, il premier a colloquio con il Presidente della Turchia, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
Rund 50 Kurden demonstrieren auf dem Breitscheidplatz am Fuße der Gedächtniskirche gegen die anhaltende Aggression der türkischen Regierung gegen Kurden, die zu bürgerkriegsähnlichen Zuständen in Städten wie Cizre und Diyarbakır geführt haben.
Kurdish emigres protest Paris murders at Turkish & French embassies : London 11.01.2013
On 11.01.2013 Kurdish emigres in London protested at the Turkish embassy and then marched to the nearby French embassy to protest about the shocking mass murder on 09.01.2013 in Paris of three female Kurdish political activists including PKK co-founder Sakine Cansiz in what French police believe to be an execution a targeted assassination. The bodies of the three women - Brussels-based Kurdistan National Congress’ (KNK) Paris representative Fidan Doan, political activist Leyla Söylemez and Kurdish Worker's Party (PKK) co-founder and Women's Movement organiser Sakine Cansız - were discovered behind several combination-locked doors in the Information Center of Kurdistan in Paris on Wednesday by friends who had been trying since the previous evening to contact the women and who had broken into the centre after discovering bloodstains on the outer doors.
Very shortly after French police were called to the scene (and with what many claim to be suspicious haste), Huseyin Celik, the deputy chairman of Turkey’s ruling party claimed that the murders were the result of “an internal feud” within the PKK. Celik did not offer any evidence to substantiate his assertion, yet also went on to suggest that the slayings were an attempt to derail the peace talks which have been taking place in the notorious high security prison on mralı Island between PKK founder Abdullah Öcalan - sentenced to death for treason against the Turkish state in 1999 but whose sentence was commuted to life imprisonment when Turkey was forced to abolish the death sentence as part of it's application to join the EU - and the Turkish government.
The PKK have waged an often violent war against the Turkish government for the last 34 years as part of their campaign to establish an autonomous Kurdish enclave in South-East Turkey. Kurds make up almost 20% of the Turkish population, yet are forbidden by law to even speak their own language and have suffered greatly under Turkish suppression. Since the insurrection began in 1978 it is estimated that over 40,000 people on both sides have lost their lives in violent actions perpetrated in this conflict, and even though the PKK has been proscribed as a terrorist organisation by the USA, the EU, NATO, Syria and others, the cause of Kurdish nationalism enjoys a huge level of support in the region. Turkish authorities have been concerned about PKK fighters entering Turkey from the autonomous Kurdish enclave in Northern Syria.
Kurdish populations are present in Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran, and have experienced many decades of suppression by their respective states as the Kurds attempt to loosely re-establish their traditional Kurdistan, eradicated during the Ottoman reign, and it is against this long background of armed struggle that has seen large numbers of ethnic Kurds fleeing to Europe to find sanctuary. The Kurdish people I spoke to in Haringey last night said that they no longer feel safe anywhere in Europe after this execution which they lay firmly at the door of what they describe as the "dark, ultra-nationalistic shadow government" operating behind the scenes in Turkey who are violently opposed to any form of settlement or discussion with the Kurds.
Huddled around tables in the large hall adorned with photographs of fallen comrades and a large centrepiece display of their political figurehead, Abdullah Öcalan, the Kurds were subdued and in a measured, reflective mood. During the day it had been established by French police that the women had all been shot in the head through the throat using weapons with suppressors (silncers), and it is initially thought that there was possibly more than one gunman. There was no sign of forced entry to the building, so it seems that they were known to at least one of the women - two of whom were slaughtered as they were organising suitcases for their journeys back to Belgium and Germany.
All photos © 2013 Pete Riches
Do not reproduce, alter, re-transmit or blog my images without my written permission. I remain at all times the copyright owner of this image.
Hi-Res, un-watermarked versions of these files are available on application solely at my discretion
If you want to license an image, please Email me directly.
Standard industry rates apply.
Kurdish emigres protest Paris murders at Turkish & French embassies : London 11.01.2013
On 11.01.2013 Kurdish emigres in London protested at the Turkish embassy and then marched to the nearby French embassy to protest about the shocking mass murder on 09.01.2013 in Paris of three female Kurdish political activists including PKK co-founder Sakine Cansiz in what French police believe to be an execution a targeted assassination. The bodies of the three women - Brussels-based Kurdistan National Congress’ (KNK) Paris representative Fidan Doan, political activist Leyla Söylemez and Kurdish Worker's Party (PKK) co-founder and Women's Movement organiser Sakine Cansız - were discovered behind several combination-locked doors in the Information Center of Kurdistan in Paris on Wednesday by friends who had been trying since the previous evening to contact the women and who had broken into the centre after discovering bloodstains on the outer doors.
Very shortly after French police were called to the scene (and with what many claim to be suspicious haste), Huseyin Celik, the deputy chairman of Turkey’s ruling party claimed that the murders were the result of “an internal feud” within the PKK. Celik did not offer any evidence to substantiate his assertion, yet also went on to suggest that the slayings were an attempt to derail the peace talks which have been taking place in the notorious high security prison on mralı Island between PKK founder Abdullah Öcalan - sentenced to death for treason against the Turkish state in 1999 but whose sentence was commuted to life imprisonment when Turkey was forced to abolish the death sentence as part of it's application to join the EU - and the Turkish government.
The PKK have waged an often violent war against the Turkish government for the last 34 years as part of their campaign to establish an autonomous Kurdish enclave in South-East Turkey. Kurds make up almost 20% of the Turkish population, yet are forbidden by law to even speak their own language and have suffered greatly under Turkish suppression. Since the insurrection began in 1978 it is estimated that over 40,000 people on both sides have lost their lives in violent actions perpetrated in this conflict, and even though the PKK has been proscribed as a terrorist organisation by the USA, the EU, NATO, Syria and others, the cause of Kurdish nationalism enjoys a huge level of support in the region. Turkish authorities have been concerned about PKK fighters entering Turkey from the autonomous Kurdish enclave in Northern Syria.
Kurdish populations are present in Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran, and have experienced many decades of suppression by their respective states as the Kurds attempt to loosely re-establish their traditional Kurdistan, eradicated during the Ottoman reign, and it is against this long background of armed struggle that has seen large numbers of ethnic Kurds fleeing to Europe to find sanctuary. The Kurdish people I spoke to in Haringey last night said that they no longer feel safe anywhere in Europe after this execution which they lay firmly at the door of what they describe as the "dark, ultra-nationalistic shadow government" operating behind the scenes in Turkey who are violently opposed to any form of settlement or discussion with the Kurds.
Huddled around tables in the large hall adorned with photographs of fallen comrades and a large centrepiece display of their political figurehead, Abdullah Öcalan, the Kurds were subdued and in a measured, reflective mood. During the day it had been established by French police that the women had all been shot in the head through the throat using weapons with suppressors (silncers), and it is initially thought that there was possibly more than one gunman. There was no sign of forced entry to the building, so it seems that they were known to at least one of the women - two of whom were slaughtered as they were organising suitcases for their journeys back to Belgium and Germany.
All photos © 2013 Pete Riches
Do not reproduce, alter, re-transmit or blog my images without my written permission. I remain at all times the copyright owner of this image.
Hi-Res, un-watermarked versions of these files are available on application solely at my discretion
If you want to license an image, please Email me directly.
Standard industry rates apply.
Rund 100 Kurden haben in Berlin gegen die anhaltenden Angriffe des türkischen Militärs auf kurdische Städte in der Türkei protestiert. Die türkische Regierung unter Präsident Recep Tayyip Erdogan begründet das bürgerkriegsähnliche Szenario mit einem vorgeblichen Kampf gegen die PKK. Die Angriffe begannen, nachdem die pro-kurdische HDP in das türkische Parlament eingezogen ist und damit Erdogans AKP-Regierung die absolute Mehrheit verlor.
In Städten wie Cizre starben in den vergangenen Wochen dutzende Menschen, darunter viele Zivilisten.
Die Demonstration schloss sich an einen dreitägigen Hungerstreik von kurdischen Aktivisten vor dem Brandenburger Tor an und führte vom Brandenburger Tor zum Auswärtigen Amt. Auf der Auftaktkundgebung sprach Hakan Tas, MdA (Die Linke).
Rund 50 Kurden demonstrieren auf dem Breitscheidplatz am Fuße der Gedächtniskirche gegen die anhaltende Aggression der türkischen Regierung gegen Kurden, die zu bürgerkriegsähnlichen Zuständen in Städten wie Cizre und Diyarbakır geführt haben.
21/09/2022. New York, United States. Prime Minister Liz Truss attends UNGA. The Prime Minister Liz Truss meets with President of Turkey Erdoğan at the United Nations General Assembly Picture by Andrew Parsons / No 10 Downing Street
Mehrere hundert Kuren protestieren in Berlin gegen die anhaltenden Angriffe des türkischen Militärs und der Polizei gegen kurdische Städte. Die Demonstration führt vom Potsdamer Platz zum Brandenburger Tor.
Die Teilnehmer und Redner verurteilen die Politik und das Vorgehen des türkischen Präsidenten Recep Tayyip Erdogan und seiner AKP-Regierung als terroristisch.
Vereinzelt gibt es Sympathie-Bekundungen für die kurdische Arbeiterpartei PKK. Am Ende gab es mindestens eine Festnahme, offensichtlich wegen einer Fahne mit dem Porträt des Führers der PKK, Abdullah Öcalan.
www.faz.net/aktuell/politik/ausland/europa/tuerkei-kontro...
www.zeit.de/politik/ausland/2014-05/erdogan-kritik-rede-a... hey, what i forgot. get the guy a job and of the street before some turkish democrats have him disappeared in some democratic dungeon.
Rund 800 Türken versammeln sich am Brandenburger Tor in Berlin, um gegen Terror zu protestieren. Gemeint sind dabei Gruppen wie die PKK, die syrisch-kurdische PYD und Daesh. Die Teilnehmer waren überwiegend glühende Anhänger des türkischen Präsidenten Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Dieser wurde auch in den Redebeiträgen gelobt. Vereinzelt wurde von Teilnehmern der Wolfsgruß der ultra-nationalistischen, rechtsradikalen Grauen Wölfe gezeigt.
Die Polizei sperrte den Bereich ab, um ein Aufeinandertreffen mit einer zeitgleich stattfindenden kurdischen Gegenkundgebung zu verhindern.
Rund 100 Kurden haben in Berlin gegen die anhaltenden Angriffe des türkischen Militärs auf kurdische Städte in der Türkei protestiert. Die türkische Regierung unter Präsident Recep Tayyip Erdogan begründet das bürgerkriegsähnliche Szenario mit einem vorgeblichen Kampf gegen die PKK. Die Angriffe begannen, nachdem die pro-kurdische HDP in das türkische Parlament eingezogen ist und damit Erdogans AKP-Regierung die absolute Mehrheit verlor.
In Städten wie Cizre starben in den vergangenen Wochen dutzende Menschen, darunter viele Zivilisten.
Die Demonstration schloss sich an einen dreitägigen Hungerstreik von kurdischen Aktivisten vor dem Brandenburger Tor an und führte vom Brandenburger Tor zum Auswärtigen Amt. Auf der Auftaktkundgebung sprach Hakan Tas, MdA (Die Linke).
Kurdish emigres protest Paris murders at Turkish & French embassies : London 11.01.2013
On 11.01.2013 Kurdish emigres in London protested at the Turkish embassy and then marched to the nearby French embassy to protest about the shocking mass murder on 09.01.2013 in Paris of three female Kurdish political activists including PKK co-founder Sakine Cansiz in what French police believe to be an execution a targeted assassination. The bodies of the three women - Brussels-based Kurdistan National Congress’ (KNK) Paris representative Fidan Doan, political activist Leyla Söylemez and Kurdish Worker's Party (PKK) co-founder and Women's Movement organiser Sakine Cansız - were discovered behind several combination-locked doors in the Information Center of Kurdistan in Paris on Wednesday by friends who had been trying since the previous evening to contact the women and who had broken into the centre after discovering bloodstains on the outer doors.
Very shortly after French police were called to the scene (and with what many claim to be suspicious haste), Huseyin Celik, the deputy chairman of Turkey’s ruling party claimed that the murders were the result of “an internal feud” within the PKK. Celik did not offer any evidence to substantiate his assertion, yet also went on to suggest that the slayings were an attempt to derail the peace talks which have been taking place in the notorious high security prison on mralı Island between PKK founder Abdullah Öcalan - sentenced to death for treason against the Turkish state in 1999 but whose sentence was commuted to life imprisonment when Turkey was forced to abolish the death sentence as part of it's application to join the EU - and the Turkish government.
The PKK have waged an often violent war against the Turkish government for the last 34 years as part of their campaign to establish an autonomous Kurdish enclave in South-East Turkey. Kurds make up almost 20% of the Turkish population, yet are forbidden by law to even speak their own language and have suffered greatly under Turkish suppression. Since the insurrection began in 1978 it is estimated that over 40,000 people on both sides have lost their lives in violent actions perpetrated in this conflict, and even though the PKK has been proscribed as a terrorist organisation by the USA, the EU, NATO, Syria and others, the cause of Kurdish nationalism enjoys a huge level of support in the region. Turkish authorities have been concerned about PKK fighters entering Turkey from the autonomous Kurdish enclave in Northern Syria.
Kurdish populations are present in Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran, and have experienced many decades of suppression by their respective states as the Kurds attempt to loosely re-establish their traditional Kurdistan, eradicated during the Ottoman reign, and it is against this long background of armed struggle that has seen large numbers of ethnic Kurds fleeing to Europe to find sanctuary. The Kurdish people I spoke to in Haringey last night said that they no longer feel safe anywhere in Europe after this execution which they lay firmly at the door of what they describe as the "dark, ultra-nationalistic shadow government" operating behind the scenes in Turkey who are violently opposed to any form of settlement or discussion with the Kurds.
Huddled around tables in the large hall adorned with photographs of fallen comrades and a large centrepiece display of their political figurehead, Abdullah Öcalan, the Kurds were subdued and in a measured, reflective mood. During the day it had been established by French police that the women had all been shot in the head through the throat using weapons with suppressors (silncers), and it is initially thought that there was possibly more than one gunman. There was no sign of forced entry to the building, so it seems that they were known to at least one of the women - two of whom were slaughtered as they were organising suitcases for their journeys back to Belgium and Germany.
All photos © 2013 Pete Riches
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Rund 100 Menschen nehmen an einer Kundgebung in Berlin Kreuzberg zur Erinnerung an die 33 Opfer des Anschlags in Suruç vor zwei Jahren statt. Die Teilnehmer, hauptsächlich Kurden und Anhänger linker Gruppen, verlesen die Namen der Opfer und solidarisieren sich mit dem Kampf der Kurden in Rojava. Zudem wurde sowohl der versuchte Militärputsch in der Türkei, als auch die Herrschaft der AKP kritisiert. Ebenfalls das Schweigen der Bundesregierung zu den anhaltenden Angriffen auf Demokratie und Bürgerrechte in der Türkei.
ANTALYA, TURKEY - NOVEMBER 15: (Front row L-R) Senegalese President Macky Sall, Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe, Indonesian President Joko Widodo, Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, South African President Jacob Zuma, Saudi King Salman bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud, Chinese President Xi Jinping, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, US President Barack Obama, Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, Russian President Vladimir Putin, South Korean President Park Geun-hye, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, European Council President Donald Tusk, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, (2nd Row L-R) Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, British Prime Minister David Cameron, Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, Argentina's Economy Minister Axel Kicillof, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius (3rd row L-R) World Trade Organization (WTO) Director-General Roberto Azevedo , International Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director Christine Lagarde, Guy Ryder, Director General of International Labour Organisation (ILO), UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, World Bank President Jim Yong Kim, Angel Gurria (L), Secretary-General of Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Bank of England Governor and Financial Stability Board (FSB) Chairman Mark Carney pose for a family photo during the G20 Turkey Leaders Summit on November 15, 2015 in Antalya, Turkey. Volkan Furuncu / Anadolu Agency
ANTALYA, TURKEY - NOVEMBER 16: President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan (2nd L) and his wife Emine Erdogan (R) gesture as they prepare to depart Antalya with the private plane "ANA" following the G20 Leaders Summit on November 16, 2015 in Antalya, Turkey. Ali Atmaca / Anadolu Agency
Kurdish emigres protest Paris murders at Turkish & French embassies : London 11.01.2013
On 11.01.2013 Kurdish emigres in London protested at the Turkish embassy and then marched to the nearby French embassy to protest about the shocking mass murder on 09.01.2013 in Paris of three female Kurdish political activists including PKK co-founder Sakine Cansiz in what French police believe to be an execution a targeted assassination. The bodies of the three women - Brussels-based Kurdistan National Congress’ (KNK) Paris representative Fidan Doan, political activist Leyla Söylemez and Kurdish Worker's Party (PKK) co-founder and Women's Movement organiser Sakine Cansız - were discovered behind several combination-locked doors in the Information Center of Kurdistan in Paris on Wednesday by friends who had been trying since the previous evening to contact the women and who had broken into the centre after discovering bloodstains on the outer doors.
Very shortly after French police were called to the scene (and with what many claim to be suspicious haste), Huseyin Celik, the deputy chairman of Turkey’s ruling party claimed that the murders were the result of “an internal feud” within the PKK. Celik did not offer any evidence to substantiate his assertion, yet also went on to suggest that the slayings were an attempt to derail the peace talks which have been taking place in the notorious high security prison on mralı Island between PKK founder Abdullah Öcalan - sentenced to death for treason against the Turkish state in 1999 but whose sentence was commuted to life imprisonment when Turkey was forced to abolish the death sentence as part of it's application to join the EU - and the Turkish government.
The PKK have waged an often violent war against the Turkish government for the last 34 years as part of their campaign to establish an autonomous Kurdish enclave in South-East Turkey. Kurds make up almost 20% of the Turkish population, yet are forbidden by law to even speak their own language and have suffered greatly under Turkish suppression. Since the insurrection began in 1978 it is estimated that over 40,000 people on both sides have lost their lives in violent actions perpetrated in this conflict, and even though the PKK has been proscribed as a terrorist organisation by the USA, the EU, NATO, Syria and others, the cause of Kurdish nationalism enjoys a huge level of support in the region. Turkish authorities have been concerned about PKK fighters entering Turkey from the autonomous Kurdish enclave in Northern Syria.
Kurdish populations are present in Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran, and have experienced many decades of suppression by their respective states as the Kurds attempt to loosely re-establish their traditional Kurdistan, eradicated during the Ottoman reign, and it is against this long background of armed struggle that has seen large numbers of ethnic Kurds fleeing to Europe to find sanctuary. The Kurdish people I spoke to in Haringey last night said that they no longer feel safe anywhere in Europe after this execution which they lay firmly at the door of what they describe as the "dark, ultra-nationalistic shadow government" operating behind the scenes in Turkey who are violently opposed to any form of settlement or discussion with the Kurds.
Huddled around tables in the large hall adorned with photographs of fallen comrades and a large centrepiece display of their political figurehead, Abdullah Öcalan, the Kurds were subdued and in a measured, reflective mood. During the day it had been established by French police that the women had all been shot in the head through the throat using weapons with suppressors (silncers), and it is initially thought that there was possibly more than one gunman. There was no sign of forced entry to the building, so it seems that they were known to at least one of the women - two of whom were slaughtered as they were organising suitcases for their journeys back to Belgium and Germany.
All photos © 2013 Pete Riches
Do not reproduce, alter, re-transmit or blog my images without my written permission. I remain at all times the copyright owner of this image.
Hi-Res, un-watermarked versions of these files are available on application solely at my discretion
If you want to license an image, please Email me directly.
Standard industry rates apply.