Tag: Turkey

  • NDSF selects 85 for Deaflympics, West Africa Deaf soccer tourney

    No fewer than 85 athletes in athletics, football, badminton and table tennis have been selected by the Nigeria Deaf Sports Federation (NDSF) from the just-concluded Deaflympic Games trial in Ilorin.

    The federation’s Secretary, Lukman Agbabiaka, made disclosure on Sunday in Ilorin while speaking with the newsmen.

    He said the athletes were selected for the forthcoming Deaflympics in Samsun, Turkey in July and the West Africa Deaf Football Championship scheduled for Bamako, Mali next month.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the trials began on April 18 and ended on Saturday, April 22, with all events decided at the Kwara Stadium Complex.

    Agbabiaka, who praised the standard of the trials, said that the selected footballers would report for a 10-day camping in Lagos from Monday, in preparation for the Mali championship.

    According to him, all the selected athletes will also be camped in preparation for the Deaflympic Games.

    He added that the aim was for the federation to surpass its previous achievements recorded in the Deaflympics.

    NAN reports that 23 players were selected for football after round robin matches among the participating states, while six players were selected in badminton.

    Forty-four athletes, both male and female, have been penciled down and are expected to compete in 100m, 200m, 400m, long jump, triple jump, discus, javelin, shot put, 1500m, 800m, 5000m and relays in the Deaflympics.

    The West Africa Deaf Football tournament will come up in Bamako, Mali in May, while the Deaflympics holds in Samsun, Turkey between July 18 and July 30.

  • Italy calls for release of journalist held in Turkey

    Italy has called for the release of an Italian journalist who has been held in custody in Turkey for more than a week since he was detained while doing research for a book.

    Gabriele Del Grande was arrested on April 9 close to Turkey’s border with Syria and transferred to a migrants centre in the city of Mugla.

    The Italian foreign ministry said it was working to ensure that Del Grande, who has not been charged with any crime, can receive legal assistance, a visit from the Italian consulate, and be allowed to communicate with his family.

    “But obviously this is not enough, because the foreign ministry requests that Del Grande be released, in full respect of the law,” it said in a statement late on Tuesday.

    There was no one immediately available for comment from Turkey’s foreign ministry on Wednesday.

    Amnesty International has said it is concerned by Del Grande’s situation and that Italy has not done enough to get him freed.

     

  • Buhari hails Turkey over successful referendum

    Buhari hails Turkey over successful referendum

    President Muhammadu Buhari has felicitated with the people and government of Turkey on the successful conclusion of the country’s referendum on Monday.

    Buhari, in a statement by the Special Adviser on media and publicity, Femi Adesina, congratulated Turkish President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, for the foresight and maturity of leading his people to the polls to decide on the future of leadership for the country that will further deepen peace and stability.

    He believed the referendum showcased the democratic credentials of the country and reflected a willingness of the Turkish people to live together and jointly pursue a better future.

  • Turkey’s coup: death of extradition request 

    SIR: Since the July 15, 2016,  failed coup in Turkey, politics in that country has assumed a  chilling dimension, with the President Recep Tayyip Erdogan-led  Justice and Development Party (AK Party), capitalising on every possible opportunity to nail perceived enemies and trample on the rights of a significant number of Turks, in more than a warlike, menacing manner.

    But the move by Erdogan, and his co-travellers in the ruling AK Party, to further take this persecution to foreign lands without minding international borders, and the sovereignty of other countries, appears to have hit a unshakeable brick wall. This is not unconnected with the Turkish government’s recent quest to willy-nilly extradite, from the United States, the highly respected Turkish cleric, Fethullah Gulen.

    That move has apparently now fallen like a pack of cards and literally suffered its well-deserved death as the Intelligence Committee of the United States (US) Congress has dismissed the claims upon which the extradition is being sourced.

    Gulen is the Pennsylvania-based moderate Sunni cleric the Turkish government accuses of masterminding the failed July 15 coup, despite having no concrete evidence linking him to the aborted coup.

    Over the past few months, Turkey has been mounting pointless pressures on the US authorities to extradite Gulen, even as it continued to clamp down on members of the Gulen-inspired Hizmet Movement, which the Turkish government now brands as Fethullah Gulen Terror Organisation. Thousands of perceived sympathisers of Hizmet Movement, and other right activists, now languish in various prisons cells without trial, while many more have been forced out of government jobs.

    Erdogan has not stopped there.  Scores of charity organisations, universities, businesses, media organisations, among others, linked to Gulen or Hizmet Movement, have been shut down by the authoritarian Turkish leader, who is now seeking more dictatorial powers, in the executive presidency referendum scheduled for April this year.  Despite the condemnations that continue to trail his undemocratic actions from far and near, especially the European Union (EU) into which the country seeks membership, the Turkish president appears to be more ruthless and highly obsessed by his ill-conceived quest to humiliate and extradite Gulen, by using the failed coup as a smokescreen.

    But Devin Nunes, chairman of the powerful Intelligence Committee of the US Congress, in an interview on Chris Wallace’s “Fox News Sunday”, aired on FOXTV recently, made some important remarks about Gulen’s extradition quest and his alleged involvement in the failed coup.

    Nunes, a member of the Republican Party and a close ally of President Donald Trump, did not mince any words in the interview when he made it clear that there was no evidence linking Gulen to the failed coup. “I haven’t seen evidence that Gulen was involved in the failed coup,” he said.

    The Head of German Intelligence Agency (BND), Bruno Kahl, in an interview published recently, also believes that there is no serious evidence linking Gulen to the failed coup.

    Despite these near foolproof views from Germany and US, Erdogan, in a clear case of a man afraid of his own shadow, is bent on using underhand tactics to get Gulen extradited. The Turkish government was allegedly said to have recently   engaged some individuals and firms using third party in US to help in lobbying for the extradition of Gulen and also spy on businesses associated with the cleric. Though it is hardly surprising that the Turkish government would engage Washington DC lobbyists to help out in its case to extradite Gulen, in order to score cheap political point, what is clear is that the United States will not stoop so low to allow for the unwarranted extradition of Gulen under any guise, knowing full well the present nauseating human rights abuses and authoritarian credentials of Erdogan.

     

    • Abdulraman Sadik,

    Kaduna

  • Security agencies probe alleged espionage by Turkey

    Security agencies are probing alleged espionage on Nigeria by Turkey, The Nation learnt yesterday.

    Diyanet, Turkey’s Directorate of Religious Affairs, has been implicated in the alleged espionage.

    Maarif Foundation, set up by the Turkish government, has been placed under watch.

    The probe followed a petition to the National Security Adviser( NSA), Gen. Babagana Monguno.

    The Turkish government has been uncomfortable with the refusal of the Federal Government to clampdown on the followers of United States-based Islamic cleric, Fethullah Gulen.

    His Hismet Movement established the Nile University and some colleges in the country.

    The “espionage” have been targeted at the Movement.

    A security source said: “Security agencies have been grappling with the after effects of the internal politics in Turkey. This involves counter-claims on alleged sabotage and the Hismet Movement.

    “We are now in receipt of a petition on alleged espionage activities in Nigeria by the Turkish government. We are investigating this allegation which may be true or not.”

    But the petitioner asked the Federal Government to take action urgently to avoid any breach of security.

    The petition reads: “Turkey has also been undermining Nigeria’s sovereignty by engaging in acts of espionage through Diyanet, the country’s Directorate of Religious Affairs. On the directives of the Turkish government, Diyanet has been engaging in spying activities through some Imams in Nigeria, Germany and 36 other countries.

    “Whereas this criminal activity is purportedly aimed at tracking the activities of the followers of US-based Islamic cleric, Fethullah Gulen, chances are that Turkey could well be leveraging on that fact to partake in other acts of espionage that may undermine or threaten our national interest.

    “Hurriyet Daily News, a major newspaper that fully supports the policies and actions of Turkish President Erdogan, published this disturbing news on its website: www.hurriyet dailynews.com.

    “Though the publication is now almost a month old, the Turkish government has not issued a rebuttal, which means the story is true.

    “Germany, being one of the countries spied on, is not taking the matter lightly. It has since commissioned an investigation into the matter.

    “Nigeria and other African countries mentioned in the report should waste no time in doing same.”

    In the petition, Turkey is also accused of setting up Maarif Foundation for covert religious activities.

    The petition said: “ In 2015, the government of Turkey set up the Maarif Foundation with the dubious objective of taking over foreign investments of Turkish nationals that the government of Turkey disagrees with.

    “On the surface, Maarif has deliberately been made to look inviting and noble, with the stated intention of granting scholarships to Muslims from poor homes.

    “But our investigation has shown that that is only a bait. In a recent partnership Turkey struck with Saudi Arabia, the funding of Maarif Foundation is going to be taken over by the Islamic Development Bank and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, in an unholy alliance that is bound to negatively affect the new world order.

    “In exchange for the funding it is going to provide, Saudi Arabia is going to latch on the opportunity to introduce to unsuspecting Nigerians, the extreme concepts of Wahabism and Salafism, with all the dire implication of that.

    “We wonder how a leader that styles himself as a Caliph will order for the detention of an innocent Nigerian young Muslim woman, Miss Rukayya Usman, in a cell with men, for the ridiculous offence of attending a school belonging to his political opponents.

    “This was on September 26, last year at 8am, when Miss Usman, a student of political science and international relations of Malikseh University, arrived at Istanbul Airport as a student.”

  • NTIC: OPC arrest suspected informant

    Members of the Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) on Monday at Isheri arrested a suspected informant to the kidnappers of three pupils and five employees of the Nigerian Tulip International Colleges (NTIC).

    The suspect identified as Turkey was apprehended at Riverview Estate, Isheri and handed over to operatives of the Inspector-General of Police’ (IGP) Intelligence Response Team (IRT).

    The Nation gathered that his arrest was sequel to conversations between him and the kidnappers allegedly traced by security forces.

    His arrest was said to have been made possible by the clamp down on his kinsmen at Ijaw Village by security forces, which allegedly forced him out of his hiding place.

    Confirming his arrest, the OPC Co-ordinator at Isheri, said: “It was his people that lured him back to the community and called us to come and arrest him, before the arrival of policemen.

    “There is a place called Ijaw Village in this area. There are many people from Ijaw in the area. We never knew that Turkey was an informant. He escaped initially but when police arrested some of his kinsmen, he resurfaced and we caught him.”

    However, the spokesman for the Ogun State Police Command, Abimbola Oyeyemi, an Assistant Superintendent (ASP), denied such arrest was made.

    He said: “At the appropriate time, we would give you information. For now, I can tell you nothing like that happened. We would release information when the time is right.”

     

     

     

  • Obaje heads for Turkey

    Obaje heads for Turkey

    The search for a club overseas for Nigeria league hotshot Godwin Obaje will continue after he did not bag a contract at Club Africain of Tunisia and there are now strong indications he will explore possibilities in Turkey.
    Last month, a reported deal to Tunisian club Etoile du Sahel for the Wikki Tourists striker first came to nought.
    A high-profile move to top Russian club Spartak Moscow had also crashed.
    “Godwin is now looking at considering some offers he has in Turkey,” a source informed AfricanFootball.com.
    “He’s now back in Nigeria from Tunisia.”
    Last NPFL season, Obaje fired 18 goals to help Wikki finish third in the championship.
    Over the years, NPFL hotshots have cashed in on their goals to move overseas – Gbolahan Salami moved to Finland and Emem Eduok transferred to Esperance of Tunisia.

  • MUSIC SENSATION, ANU REPS NIGERIA IN TURKEY

    THE new year looks promising for Nigerian female percussionist, Anu, who has been invited by the Turkey government as the only Nigerian to participate at the first ever Africa – Turkey Economic and Cultural Amalgamation show.

    The event which began on Friday, January 13 in Konya, is an activation of Motherland Beckons, headed by Otunba Wanle Akinboboye in partnership with MUSAID.

    The event is being attended by top African diplomats in Turkey, African Heads of State and Prime Ministers as well as governors and mayors of major cities and states in the continent.

    Anu, otherwise called Lady Ekwe, is known for her velvety voice and sonorous renditions as well as an energetic percussionist deft on Ekwe, a male dominated African musical instrument from the Eastern extraction of Nigeria but which she has made her musical signature.

    The entertainer is showcasing her talent in the global event which is focusing on exploring the business aspects of tourism, culture and entertainment between African countries and Turkey.

    Motherland Beckons comprises 11, 000 members and 50, 000 companies, spread across 175 countries and is one of the biggest business umbrella body in the world.

    It is against this setting that Anu is entertaining guests with her scintillating performances alongside a mix of artistes from other African countries and Turkey. This is just the beginning for the Atunda Entertainment groomed musical exponent who, in the last four years has honed her skill under the tutelage of the founder of Atunda Entertainment, Akinboboye, and had been taught to  showcase the best of African music in a highly cosmopolitan manner.

  • Music sensation, Anu reps Nigeria in Turkey

    Music sensation, Anu reps Nigeria in Turkey

    The new year looks promising for Nigerian female percussionist, Anu, who has been invited by the Turkey government as the only Nigerian to participate at the first ever Africa – Turkey Economic and Cultural Amalgamation show.

    The event which begins this Friday, January 13 in Konya, is an activation of Motherland Beckons, headed by Otunba Wanle Akinboboye in partnership with MUSAID.

    The event is expected to be attended by top African diplomats in Turkey, African Heads of State and Prime Ministers as well as governors and mayors of major cities and states in the continent.

    Anu, otherwise called Lady Ekwe, is known for her velvety voice and sonorous renditions as well as an energetic percussionist deft on Ekwe, a male dominated African musical instrument from the Eastern extraction of Nigeria but which she has made her musical signature.

    The entertainer will showcase her talent in the global event which is focusing on exploring the business aspects of tourism, culture and entertainment between African countries and Turkey.

    Motherland Beckons comprises 11, 000 members and 50, 000 companies, spread across 175 countries and is one of the biggest business umbrella body in the world.

    It is against this setting that Anu is to entertain guests with her scintillating performances alongside a mix of artistes from other African countries and Turkey. This is just the beginning for the Atunda Entertainment groomed musical exponent who, in the last four years has honed her skill under the tutelage of the founder of Atunda Entertainment, Akinboboye, and had been taught to  showcase the best of African music in a highly cosmopolitan manner.

  • Terrorism: Nine pro-Kurdish politicians arrested in Turkey

    Terrorism: Nine pro-Kurdish politicians arrested in Turkey

    Nine more pro-Kurdish politicians from Turkey’s Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) were arrested on suspicion of membership in a terrorist organisation, Turkish media reported on Thursday.

    The local party leader in Istanbul was among those arrested, according to an agency report.

    The deputy head of the party, Aysel Tugluk, was arrested a week ago on terrorism charges.

    Tugluk is the lawyer for two co-chairs of the party who have been detained along with 10 other lawmakers since November.

    President Reccep Tayyip Erdogan accused the HDP, which is still legal although under increasing pressure, of links to the banned Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK.

    The HDP members deny the charges against them.