turkey gets tough

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Syria crisis: Erdogan steps up Turkey pressure on Assad
Mr Erdogan has become increasingly critical of Syria in recent months Continue reading the main story
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In pictures: Pressure on Syria
Turkey has stepped up its pressure on neighbouring Syria over the crackdown on protests by the Damascus government.

Turkish PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the future could not be built on "the blood of the oppressed", and condemned attacks on Turkish missions in Syria.

Meanwhile, Turkey's energy minister announced that joint oil exploration projects with Syria had been halted.

Damascus is also facing increasing pressure from the Arab League, which has suspended its membership.

On Monday, King Abdullah of Jordan became the first Arab leader to openly urge Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to stand down.

The UN says more than 3,500 people have died since the start of the protests against President Assad in March.

The Syrian authorities blame the violence on armed gangs and militants.

In an apparent show of goodwill on Tuesday, the authorities freed 1,180 people who had been arrested during protests, Syrian state media reported. The state news agency said those released had no "blood on their hands".

The release of prisoners is among the demands of the Arab League, which is due to meet again on Wednesday.

Tragedy foretold
Continue reading the main story
Analysis
Jonathan Head

BBC News, Istanbul

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President Assad's government is now on the verge of being an international pariah. Russia - until now one of his staunchest allies - has started talking to the opposition.

The Arab League and Turkey have been doing so for weeks and are now openly discussing the transition to a post-Assad era - although no-one can say yet when or how that will happen.

The body they're talking to is the Syrian National Council, which was formed two months ago in Istanbul. It's led by Syrian exiles, but also includes the strongest opposition networks working inside the country - the Muslim Brotherhood and the Local Co-ordinating Committees.

Then there are the soldiers who have defected form the Syrian army. It's still far form clear how those different groups can work together - which is one reason no country has yet given recognition to any of them.
On Monday, Mr Erdogan - who once cultivated close ties with Syria - said Ankara had abandoned hope that Bashar al-Assad would respond to international demands to stop using violence.

"Bashar Assad should see the tragic ends of the ones who declared war against their own people," Mr Erdogan told MPs of his AK Party. "I want to remind him that future cannot be built on the blood of the oppressed."

History, Mr Erdogan added, would "will mark these leaders as the leaders who feed on blood".

Turkish Energy Minister Taner Yildiz announced that Ankara had shelved plans for Turkey's TPAO petroleum company to explore oil with Syria's state oil company.

Mr Yildiz also threatened to stop Turkey's electricity exports to Syria.

"Right now, we are providing electricity" to Syria, Mr Yildiz said. "If [Syria] continues on this course, then we might have to reconsider these decisions."

The moves follow attacks on Turkish diplomatic missions in Damascus and the Syrian cities of Aleppo and Latakia by supporters of Mr Assad at the weekend.

The attackers expressed anger at Turkey's decision to support the Arab League's decision to suspend Syria.

Turkey is not a member of the league, but its foreign minister is to meet his Arab League counterparts during Wednesday's meeting in Morocco.

AdvertisementThe meeting is due to discuss a common stand on Syria.

The Syrian government condemned its suspension as "shameful and malicious", and accused other Arab countries of conspiring with the West to undermine the regime.

In his interview with the BBC on Monday, King Abdullah said that if he were in Mr Assad's position, he would make sure that "whoever comes behind me has the ability to change the status quo".

He urged President Assad to begin talks on an orderly transfer of power.

The call came on one of the bloodiest days since the unrest began. Activists said at least 70 people were killed in fighting that reportedly included a gun battle between security forces and army defectors in the restive southern province of Deraa.

Many Western powers have urged President Assad to stand down. However Russia has so far refused to do so.

On Tuesday, Syrian opposition leader Burhan Ghalioun had talks with officials in Moscow but said he had failed to convince them to change their position.
 

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Turkish Foreign Minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, said Syria’s leadership was offered a last chance to stop its violent repression of anti-government protests but rejected it. (Reuters)
inShare.1By Al Arabiya And Agencies

Turkey said on Tuesday it was halting joint oil exploration with Syria and would consider cutting energy supplies to its one-time ally following attacks on Turkish diplomatic missions in three Syrian cities.

“Right now we are supplying electricity there (Syria). If this course continues, we may have to review all of these decisions,” Energy Minister Taner Yildiz told reporters.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Syria’s leadership was offered a last chance to stop its violent repression of anti-government protests but rejected it.

“We have given a last opportunity to the Syrian regime but they didn’t want to seize it,” Davutoglu said in the Moroccan capital. Turkey wants “sanctions with an impact that spares harm to the Syrian people,” he said through an interpreter.

The White House, meanwhile, said that Turkish criticism of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad had deepened the isolation of his regime.

“We very much welcome the strong stance Turkey has taken,” White House deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes told reporters traveling with President Barack Obama to Asia. “Turkey's comments today further point to the fact that President Assad is isolated,” he said.

Turkey, once a close ally of Damascus, has been exporting electricity to Syria since 2006.

Yildiz also said that Turkey’s Petroleum Corporation (TPAO) has stopped exploration with the Syrian national oil company in six wells, according to the Anatolia news agency.

The minister’s remarks come in the wake of weekend attacks on Turkish diplomatic missions in three Syrian cities.

Thousands of pro-regime protestors armed with knives and batons attacked the missions in Damascus as well as the cities of Aleppo and Latakia on Saturday over Turkey’s support for an Arab League decision to suspend Syria.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said earlier Tuesday that Ankara had abandoned hope that Syria would respond to international demands to halt violence and initiate democratic reforms.

Erdogan, once a close political ally and a personal friend of Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad, has for months expressed frustration at Assad’s failure to listen to his people as the death toll in Syrian mounts.
 

Aapa

Mirajmom
Assalaam walaikum,

Would you be kind enough to tell me something about the link. It was a lot of information. I could not comprehend what they were trying to say. All I got out of it was that everyone is on the Israeli/Jewish payroll. I was surprised that they did not mention Liberation Theologians in Iran during the revolution.

The question is what has changed in the past fifty years. Little or nothing. There was more hope in the past. But, nothing has changed. It is one big mess.
The one constant is that there is upheaval and corruption and pure simple evil. But, the political world has not changed.
 
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