Tuesday, 8 April 2014

Turkey’s main opposition party CHP lose ruling on Ankara recount

Turkey’s main opposition party CHP lose ruling on Ankara recount
The Ankara Electoral Board on Friday rejected an appeal by Turkey's secular opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) for a vote recount in contested local elections in the capital.
The CHP claimed Sunday's vote was rigged, with widespread allegations of voting irregularities spreading on social media. A party source said the CHP would appeal Friday's court decision.
Prime Minister RecepTayyip Erdogan's AKP (Justice and Development Party) increased its share on the national vote during the March 31 elections, retaining control of the financial hub, Istanbul, and the capital, Ankara.
Erdogan's party gained the support despite battling allegations of corruption and accusations of an increasingly authoritarian ruling style.
With no official results yet released, informal tallies show the AKP at 45 percent nationwide, compared to 28 percent for the CHP.
In Ankara, the AKP candidate and incumbent Mayor Melih Gokcek narrowly beat CHP nominee Mansur Yavas with less than a one percent margin, according to provisional electoral board results.
Social media bans lifted
A lower court in Ankara on Friday ruled that a blanket ban on the video-sharing site YouTube violated human rights and ordered the restrictions be lifted.
It followed a similar ruling Wednesday that said a ban on the micro-blogging site, Twitter, violated freedom of expression and individual rights. On Thursday, the country's TIB telecommunications authority removed the block.
The government sought the Twitter and YouTube bans ahead of the key local elections, as both sites were used to leak wiretapped recordings of senior officials. One of the recordings leaked on Twitter appeared to implicate Erdogan and his son in a corruption scandal. He maintains the recordings were fabricated.
On Friday shortly before the YouTube ban verdict was announced, Erdogan said of the court\'s decision on the Twitter ban, 'We are of course bound by the Constitutional Court verdict, but I don't have to respect it,' he told reporters before departing on a trip to Azerbaijan. 'I don't respect this ruling

Toyota to settle with US Justice Department over car safety problems

Toyota to settle with US Justice Department over car safety problems
Toyota Motor Company and the US Justice Department had reached a settlement worth $1 billion (720 million euros) over the Japanese company's handling of consumer complaints about the safety of its cars, US television news channel CNN reported Wednesday.
In a similar report on Wednesday, the US business daily Wall Street Journal also said a settlement to this amount was discussed, but according to unnamed sources was still likely to fall apart.
A spokeswoman for Toyota told CNN that the Japanese carmaker had cooperated with the US Attorney's Office in this matter for four years.
'During that time, we have made fundamental changes to become a more responsive and customer-focused organization, and we are committed to continued improvements,' the spokeswoman said. Both CNN and Wall Street Journal said the US Justice Department was not available for comment.
In 2009, Toyota started a series of massive recalls involving more than 10 million cars, mostly in the United States. The problems involved faulty brakes, gas pedals and floor mats that had led to unintended acceleration of its cars.
The US Attorney's Office has been investigating allegations Toyota had misled US authorities after the complaints. Between 2010 and 2012, the company already paid $66 million in fines for delays in reporting its safety problems.
Just recently, the Justice Department has started a probe into whether US automaker General Motors was slow in recalling cars with a defect linked to 13 deaths

Masked gunman slays Dutch priest in Homs

Masked gunman slays Dutch priest in Homs
Father Frans van der Lugt (pictured) was slain on Monday, the Dutch Jesuit order to which he belonged confirmed. A masked gunman reportedly took the 75-year-old priest from his monastery and shot him twice in the head. The motive behind the fatal attack has not been identified.
News of the Jesuit clergyman's sudden death prompted an outpouring of grief from those who knew of his work in embattled Syria.
'This is the death of a man of peace, who showed great courage in remaining loyal to the Syrian people despite an extremely risky and difficult situation,' Vatican spokesperson Federico Lombardi said.
'In this moment of great pain, we also express our great pride and gratitude at having had a brother who was so close to the suffering,' the Vatican spokesperson added.
Dutch Foreign Minister Frans Timmersmans praised his countryman's contributions to the people of Homs.
'[Father Frans] only brought good to Homs, was a Syrian among Syrian, [who] refused to abandon them even when it meant risking his own life,' Timmermans wrote on van der Lugt's Facebook page.
In February, a United Nations-supervised evacuation led to the safe removal of nearly 1,500 Syrians trapped in Homs\' Old City, which has been under siege for roughly two years. The Dutch priest qualified for evacuation; however he opted to stay behind.
Van der Lugt described the immense suffering in Homs when he spoke to news agency AFP earlier this year. In an interview given at the time of the evacuation, he explained he would not abandon the people of Homs, haggard from war and in dire need of provisions.
'The Syrian people have given me so much, so much kindness, inspiration and everything they have. If the Syrian people are suffering now, I want to share their pain and their difficulties,' he told AFP in February. 'I don't see people as Muslims or Christian, I see a human being first and foremost.'
Christians compromise roughly 10 percent of Syria's population. In the mid-1960s, Father Frans moved to Syria, where he earned a reputation for ministering to both religious groups.

Turkey arrests police over YouTube postings

Turkey arrests police over YouTube postings
Turkish authorities arrested eight police officers and searched their homes in the southeastern province of Adana on Tuesday as Erdogan's government continued its pursuit of persons who allegedly posted leaked recordings online.
The arrests reported by the Dogan news agency and the television chancel CNN Turk followed Erdogan's warning during a municipal election victory speech last week that he would hunt down his opponents 'in their lair' and make them 'pay the price.'
The phone leaks - although not independently verified - painted an image of corruption and power abuses within the government of Erdogan's Justice and Development Party (AKP).
Erdogan's party in turn accused a one-time ally, US-based Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen, of trying to install a 'parallel state' in Turkey.
Ban lifting 'wrong'
Reuters on Tuesday quoted Erdogan as telling his AKP that a recent Turkish constitutional court ruling that lifted a ban on the social network Twitter was wrong.
The court decision should be 'corrected,' said Erdogan who has been sharply critical of the constitutional court's ruling on Twitter.
YouTube, which remains blocked by telecommunications authorities who cited a court order, on Monday filed an appeal to the constitutional court.
The global provider Google, which owns YouTube, said it was 'actively challenging' the ban.
YouTube was blocked by Turkey after the posting of a leaked recording in which top officials appeared to discuss a possible military intervention in northern Syria.
The EU last week warned Turkey that its media crackdown put on hold long-running plans for EU accession

German cabinet adopts reform of renewable energy law

German cabinet adopts reform of renewable energy law
German Chancellor Angela Merkel's cabinet on Tuesday adopted a reform of the country's renewable energy law with a view to slowing down the rise in electricity costs for both corporate players and households in the years ahead.
Germany's shift to renewable energy and away from nuclear power and fossil fuels had been a cornerstone of the government's policies, but ballooning subsidy-related costs had threatened to undermine the large-scale energy transition scheme.
Cabinet ministers backed amendments envisaging cuts in green subsidies and whittling down support for industries struggling with rising electricity bills. However, a decent share of the perks for energy-intensive industries was set to stay in place after Berlin reached a deal during negotiations with the European Commission.
Impossible to please all
Under the adopted reform - which will become law in August - new upper limits would be placed on onshore wind power expansion (at 2.5 gigawatts in annual capacity), photovoltaic energy generation (at 2.5 gigawatts per year) and offshore wind farms (at 6.5 gigawatts to 2020), the government said.
It confirmed it planned to increase the share of renewable sources to 40-45 percent of total electricity production by 2025 and to 55-60 percent by 2035, with a view to offsetting the elimination of nuclear power by 2022.
The draft reform was widely seen as a victory for Social Democrat Economy and Energy Minister Sigmar Gabriel who had intended to balance further growth in renewables with the requirement to keep heavy industry happy with affordable electricity costs.
But the deal comes at the cost of private households who will have to pay for the subsidies still in place.
'Merkel and Gabriel are handing out gifts to companies at the cost of ordinary citizens', environmental activist group BUND (Friends of the Earth Germany) commented on the reform.

Germany’s non-judgmental relationship with Rwanda

Germany’s non-judgmental relationship with Rwanda
Rwanda's Minister of State for Primary and Secondary Education Mathias Harebamungu has only good words for Germany. Relations are excellent and characterized by mutual respect, he says. Particularly in the education sector, his country benefits from Germany's long experience. 'We want to become a knowledge-based society. In this, we receive support from Germany,' Harebamungu told DW. Although Rwanda has made enormous progress in the 20 years since the genocide of April 1994 and the economy is now 60 percent self-reliant, help from abroad is still necessary, he added. The Federal Republic of Germany is an important partner, occupying fifth position in the list of donor countries.
Some of the German support comes from the federal state of Rhineland-Palatinate whose partnership with Rwanda goes back more than 30 years. For Richard Auernheimer, president of the partnership association 'Verein Partnerschaft Rheinland-Pfalz Ruanda', this is a special form of cooperation, largely based on personal ties. 'Many citizens of Rhineland-Palatinate run projects independently and do not always rely on us to coordinate them,' Auernheimer told DW. A large part of the financial aid comes from state and local community coffers, while donations make up 30 percent. Over the years, the state has financed the construction of a large number of schools, enabling more than 360,000 Rwandan children to benefit from an education.
Rwanda as a beacon
Internationally, Rwanda is a favorite target country for development cooperation projects. The US and Canada have close ties to the country. France, Belgium, Great Britain and China are also important partners. Gerd Hankel from the Hamburg Institute for Social Research has this explanation, 'Rwanda is seen as a beacon in development cooperation, as a country in which financial aid is put to good use.' It is a beacon that shines all the more brightly against the bleak background in Kenya, Uganda, Burundi and Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), he says.
That is not to say there are no shadows over Rwanda's international relations. There is, for example, the ongoing conflict in eastern DRC. After United Nations' experts presented evidence of Rwandan support for rebels in Congo in 2012, many countries suspended their financial aid. Germany was among them. Just a few months later it was Germany that first lifted the sanctions. According to the Ministry for Economic Development and Cooperation, this was because of the positive role played by Rwanda in regional negotiations in the Congolese peace process. However Germany's development minister at the time, Dirk Niebel, took steps to ensure that from then on German financial aid would be channeled directly to individual projects and no longer into the Rwandan budget.
Democratic shortcomings
For researcher Gerd Hankel this was the wrong decision.'It demonstrates a very broad, but partly inaccurate understanding of Rwandan politics,' he said. Under Nazi rule between 1933 and 1945, Germany was also guilty of mass murder and, says Hankel, now feels it bears a moral responsibility to show understanding for the government of President Paul Kagame, the man who put an end to the genocide in Rwanda. 'It is right to feel understanding but there should be clear lines drawn and one should not allow oneself to be blackmailed,' Hankel said.
Today, as the German financial aid flows again, the points of criticism have not been addressed, Hankel told DW. For example, in addition to Rwanda's violation of international law, the Kagame government still does not tolerate any real political opposition. In the parliamentary elections of September 2013, a number of groups critical of the government failed to clear the bureaucratic hurdles to genuine participation that had been put in their way. In January 2013 the murder of Kagame's former security chief Patrick Karegeya in a hotel room in Johannesburg caused an uproar. A number of Rwandan diplomats were suspected of involvement in his death and South Africa expelled them. Germany's response to such events is to step up the political dialogue. A spokesperson at the German foreign ministry told DW the good bilateral relationship made it possible for Germany to express criticism in sensitive areas.
Should the economy take priority?
While Germany's foreign minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier takes the line that economic development and democracy cannot be separated, Rwanda's President Kagame gives priority to the economy alone. For him, democratic development takes second place. This is understandable, says Richard Auernheimer from Rheinland-Palatinate. 'Europe should be encouraged to follow this line of thinking because otherwise many developments would not be possible.' Rwanda must be allowed to plot its own course to enable it to move forward. 'Kagame has succeeded in bringing his country to a point that no one would have thought possible,' said Aurernheimer. He has made it possible for many Rwandans to receive an education, and now an economy-based future can take shape.
Rwandan Education Minister Harebamungu does not reject all criticism. This can also be constructive, he says, giving the example of family members sitting down together to discuss points on which they differ. 'But it is not good to base criticism on information that does not come from reliable sources.' It is important to travel to Rwanda for face to face talks with officials and ordinary Rwandans. 'This is the only way to get a picture of the reality in Rwanda,' Harebamungu said. Gerd Hankel agrees that the focus on education in development work is important. ' If we invest in education, in teaching people to see things differently and be willing to discuss matters, that will lead to Rwandans asking more questions of their politicians,' he said

Germany outlaws support group with Hezbollah ties, raids offices nationwide

Germany outlaws support group with Hezbollah ties, raids offices nationwide
German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere announced on Tuesday that the organization Waisenkinderprojekts Libanon e.V. (Lebanon Orphan Children Project) was outlawed with immediate effect, following an investigation dating back to 2009.
'Organizations which directly or indirectly work against Israel's right to exist from German soil cannot rely on the guaranteed right to freely organize,' de Maiziere said.
The military wing of the Hezbollah organization in Lebanon disputes Israel's right to exist and is listed as a terrorist organization by the EU.
Around 150 police officers took part in early-morning raids on properties belonging to the Essen-based group, with raids conducted in six German states in total. Police said that the employees reacted 'with great surprise.' Nobody was arrested, but cash and files were seized from the offices, while authorities also froze two bank accounts containing around 60,000 euros in total.
Years of monitoring
De Maiziere said German investigators first started monitoring the charitable organization's activities in 2009. The interior ministry said that the group had raised almost 3.3 million euros ($4.54 million) between 2007 and 2013, sending the funds to the so-called Shahid (Martyrs) Foundation in Lebanon.
That foundation is blacklisted by Germany for actively recruiting fighters for Hezbollah; investigators said that the orphans and widows they support were often relatives of suicide bombers. The foundation is also accused of seeking new recruits among the bereaved children.
'The name of this organization masks its real purpose,' undersecretary for the interior, Emily Haber, said in Berlin. 'The group is not a humanitarian organization.'
The interior ministry said it had taken so long to complete its investigations in a bid to make its case 'watertight.' Otherwise, the ministry said it would have expected an appeal from the group.
Article 9 of the German Constitution states that all citizens 'have the right to set up clubs and organizations.' However, the article's second paragraph stipulates that any such groups can be banned if they breach German laws, threaten constitutional order or actively work to harm understanding among peoples