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Turkey etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
Turkey etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster

25 Aralık 2013 Çarşamba

Made in Turkey in Oil Exploration encountered up to now the Top Quality Oil Found ,

Made in Turkey in Oil Exploration encountered up to now the Top Quality Oil Found ,

Bayıryüz Sadak of Siirt near the village of East - 1 well drilling a dedicated team who work , two thousand four hundred meters of oil found on 40 of gravity .

In Turkey, the high gravity oil in Siirt stating that the AK Party Siirt deputy Afif Demirkıran UAV correspondent, said in a statement last year, started drilling work in a well drilled 150 daily barrels of oil to produce a reserve reached said.


RESERVE A VERY GOOD

Siirt in a serious oil reserves stating Demirkıran " Eruh about 7 kilometers away Bayıryüz village near the mountainous area of ​​Southern Star 's company , together with TPAO East Sadak -1 well in the 2 thousand 400 meters very well in a reserve has discovered .


" AVERAGE OBTAINED FROM AN OIL WELL 3 SOLID "

150 barrels of daily oil production in Turkey , TPAO has achieved an average oil wells is approximately 3 times . At the same time Turkey's top quality oil gravity is 40 . Garza studies in the formation of stable over time with the arrival of more oil production is expected to be provided . In Siirt, and it's a very serious oil reserves . TPAO need in our country as well as other private firms in oil field found in his search for oil Eruh'ta have much better quality is gratifying for our country .

" As Turkey's economy will contribute to the VERY SERIOUS "

The oil found in Siirt in Turkey will contribute to the economy seriously . Our country 60 billion dollar oil and energy raw materials are imported. Our province, our country's oil reserves are located in a similar amount of imported oil will be relatively reduced . From this point on behalf of Siirt very happy, " he said.

Siirt at other points in the oil exploration that has continued to the Regional Directorate of TPAO officials, Eruh'ta drilling the first well by stating that oil out , take this oil analysis and laboratory investigations , he said .

Turkey ministers Caglayan and Guler resign amid scandal



Turkish Economy Minister Zafer Caglayan and Interior Minister Muammer Guler have resigned after their sons were charged amid a corruption inquiry that has hit the government.




Twenty-four people have been charged as part of the investigation, including the head of state-owned Halkbank.




In a statement, Mr Caglayan condemned the inquiry as an "ignoble operation".




PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan has threatened to "break the hands" of rivals who used the inquiry to undermine his rule.




Mr Caglayan's son Kaan and Baris Guler, the interior minister's son, have both denied accusations of involvement in bribery relating to urban development projects and the allocation of construction permits.




In response to the police crackdown, a number of police commissioners have been removed from their posts, including the head of police in Istanbul.




The economy minister, in his statement, said he was stepping down "so that all the light may be laid on this ignoble operation that targets our government". It was obvious the police raids had been a "set-up", he added.

The prime minister (R) addressed supporters at Ankara airport hours before Mr Caglayan (L) resigned




Muammer Guler had earlier argued there were no legal grounds for his son's arrest for bribery as he was not a public official.




He said on Wednesday he had originally offered his resignation to the prime minister on 17 December, the day of his son's arrest. "Today I have submitted it in written form."




Mr Caglayan had just returned to the capital, Ankara, on Tuesday night at the end of a trip to Pakistan with the prime minister. He appeared with Mr Erdogan in front of a crowd of supporters at Esenboga airport hours before his resignation was announced.




The opposition had demanded that both ministers step down and on Sunday anti-government protesters took to the streets of Istanbul demonstrating against the scandal.




The prime minister came to power in 2002 as head of the Islamist-rooted AK Party and commentators say the arrest of figures linked to the government and the subsequent police dismissals are part of an internal party feud.




Islamic scholar Fethullah Gulen, in exile in the US, is seen as a rival to Mr Erdogan, and his Hizmet movement has supporters in the police and judiciary.




Mr Erdogan himself has referred to a "dark plot" by forces outside Turkey.




Addressing supporters at the airport late on Tuesday, he said the 17 December arrests had targeted "the national will, the people", the Hurriyet newspaper reported.




"I believe those who say the people will win and those who aspire to humiliate will lose again."

Hundreds of people turned out at the airport to welcome the prime minister on his return




'Shoe boxes'




Among those arrested by investigators were the son of Environment Minister Erdogan Bayraktar, the chief executive of state-run Halkbank, Suleyman Aslan, and a mayor of a conservative area of Istanbul.




The head of Halkbank has been charged with receiving bribes. Turkish media report that $4.5m (£2.7m; 3.2m euros) in cash was found in shoe boxes at his home.




His bank, one of Turkey's biggest, has drawn criticism in the US for enabling the purchase of Iranian natural gas in return for Turkish gold. An Iranian-Azerbaijani businessman was one of those detained, on suspicion of involvement in irregular financial transactions.




Halkbank has insisted the practice was lawful before it was stopped in June as a result of EU and US sanctions on Tehran.




The Turkish government says the corruption scandal has wiped more than $1bn from the bank's market value.

24 Aralık 2013 Salı

President for boosting Pakistan-Turkey strategic economic partnership



ISLAMABAD: President Mamnoon Hussain Tuesday called for translating the positive momentum between Pakistan and Turkey into a strategic economic partnership for mutual benefit of people of the two countries and the region.

The President during a meeting with Prime Minister of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan here at the President House said Pakistan attaches great significance to its fraternal and multifaceted ties with Turkey and desires to further enhance these in all fields. “Friendship with the Turkish people was part of our legacy inherited from forefathers that we greatly cherish and preserve,” he said.

The President said Pakistan and Turkey enjoy a unique relationship which was unparalleled in the world.
During the meeting the two leaders exchanged views on Pakistan-Turkey bilateral relations and regional and international issues of mutual of interest.

The President invited Turkish investors and businessmen to avail the investment opportunities and incentive packages, the present government offers for investment in various areas including trade, energy, infrastructure, communication and others.

He said the impressive business delegation, accompanying the Prime Minister, was a strong endorsement on the investment friendly business policies of the government.

He expressed confidence that the well-attended Business Forum that was addressed by the Prime Ministers of the two countries in Lahore, would go a long way in further strengthening economic and business ties.

He said that the visit of the Turkish Prime Minister, accompanied by a huge business delegation, would prove to be landmark in the strategic economic partnership between two brotherly countries besides providing great impetus to further boost trade, economic and investment ties.

Highlighting the investment-friendly policies of the government, the President said that present government has embarked on an ambitious socio-economic development agenda and various steps were being taken to attract both domestic and foreign investment in Pakistan.

The President expressed hope that the various MoUs and agreements signed during the visit of the Prime Minister would explore new avenues of mutual cooperation and would help boost Pak-Turkey trade and economic ties to new heights, thus ushering in a new era of progress and prosperity for the people of the two countries.

Discussing regional situation, the President said Pakistan was committed to peace and stability of the region and would welcome all efforts aimed at restoring peace and stability in the region.
The President said that Pakistan and Turkey as two pillars of strength, stand united in their joint endeavour to promote peace and stability in the region.

The President later also hosted lunch for the Prime Minister, his family and the accompanying delegation.

The Turkish Prime Minister was accompanied by Minister of Economy Zafer Caglayan, Minister of Transport Binali Yildirim and Turkish Ambassador to Pakistan Babur Girgin.

From Pakistan side the meeting was attended by Finance Minister Ishaq Dar, Minister for Science and Technology Zahid Hamid, Adviser to Prime Minister on National Security and Foreign Affairs Sartaj Aziz, and Acting Foreign Secretary Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry.

28 Kasım 2013 Perşembe

Turkeys' lives spared: Obama pardons Thanksgiving birds

President Obama continued the annual tradition of pardoning the official White House Thanksgiving turkey at a windy and chilly ceremony in the Rose Garden Wednesday, thanking Popcorn – the National Thanksgiving Turkey winner, chosen by voters on Facebook and Twitter - and Caramel, the runner-up, for their service."Generally, Thanksgiving is a bad day to be a turkey, especially at a house with two dogs," Mr. Obama said, flanked by his daughters Malia and Sasha.
He announced Popcorn as the winner of a competition - "quite literally, the 'Hunger Games,'" as he described it - to be the lucky pardoned turkey.  Popcorn's victory proved "that a turkey with a funny name can have a future in politics," Mr. Obama added, poking fun at the "skinny kid with a funny name" line he regularly used to describe himself during his 2008 run for the White House.
"As for Caramel, he is sticking around and he's already busy raising money for his next campaign," he joked.
Mr. Obama’s quips continued another recent tradition: presidential turkey jokes.During the 1993 turkey pardon ceremony, President Bill Clinton said the pardon was easy for him "because I've been around turkeys all my life." Upon realizing the double meaning of his statement, Mr. Clinton was quick to add: "I didn't mean it like that." 
At the turkey pardon in 2001, President George W. Bush observed that "our guest of honor looks a little nervous. Nobody's told him yet that I'm going to give him a pardon." 
In 1990, then-President George H. W. Bush sought to allay the fears of his audience that a "terrible fate" awaited the turkey presented him. "We've decided to spare him. He will not be subjected to questions from the Washington press corps after this ceremony."
On a more serious note, Mr. Obama said he and his family on Wednesday will deliver two donated turkeys to a local "organization that works to help out our neighbors here in D.C. who need it most."
He also took the opportunity to thank U.S. servicemembers for their "service and sacrifice."
"You keep us safe, you make us proud, and you remind us of our own obligations to build on the work of our predecessors and leave something better for our own kids," Mr. Obama said.According to the White House's history of turkey pardons, Americans have been giving the president holiday turkeys since 1873, during Ulysses S. Grant’s presidency. In 1947, the White House started celebrating these gifts in the Rose Garden. Not every president has been in the habit of sparing the turkey's life, however: Presidents Eisenhower and Johnson ate the turkeys presented to them.
Mr. Obama alluded to the history of presidents consuming the Thanksgiving honorees in 2009saying that he came close to inviting that year’s pardoned turkey - Courage - to dinner. 
“Thanks to the intervention of Malia and Sasha, because I was ready to eat this sucker, Courage will also be spared this terrible and delicious fate," he said.
"I'm told Presidents Eisenhower and Johnson actually ate their turkeys," Obama said. "You can't fault them for that; that's a good-looking bird."
The first “pardon” was bestowed by President George H.W. Bush in 1989, according to the White House. In a Rose Garden ceremony, Mr. Bush said that year’s turkey had “been granted a presidential pardon as of right now” and it was sent to live out its life at a farm in the D.C. suburbs.
This year’s birds, Popcorn and Caramel, were raised by turkey farmer John Burkel in Badger, Minn. Burkel is the chairman of the National Turkey Federation, and in that role, he was asked to provide the birds for the ceremony. The second bird is sent along in case the first gets stage fright.
Both turkeys are 20 weeks old and approximately 38 pounds and their names were chosen from submissions from elementary schools in Roseau County, Minn., according to the White House.
Following Wednesday’s pardon, the turkeys will live at George Washington’s historic Mount Vernon estate until January before moving to Morven Park’s Turkey Hill farm in Leesburg, Va.  However, if recent history is any indication, their days are numbered.
Sadly, all but one of the turkeys pardoned by Mr. Obama during his presidency have lived to see a second Thanksgiving, National Journal reports
The turkeys tend to only live a few more months post-pardon – last year’s pardonee, Cobbler, was euthanized on Aug. 22, 2013, nine months after its time on the national stage. Gobbler, its backup, died in February. 
As these turkeys were bred for consumption, they’re usually beset with health problems related to obesity – most significantly, heart failure – which tends to do them in at a young age, according to a 2010 report for the Humane Society

24 Kasım 2013 Pazar

Egypt asks Turkish ambassador to leave over support for Muslim Brotherhood

Military government accuses Turkey of seeking to create instability by backing party of ousted president Mohamed MorsiTurkish prime minister Recep Tayyip ErdoganTurkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has criticised the trial of ousted Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi. Photograph: Itar-Tass/Barcroft Media
The Egyptian government has asked Turkey's ambassador to leave in protest for its support of the Muslim Brotherhood, the party of the deposed president Mohamed Morsi.
Egypt's military government accused Turkey of supporting organisations bent on spreading instability. Turkey has denounced removal of the elected Morsi as an "unacceptable coup".
Since the coup in July, thousands of the new government's opponents have been detained and hundreds killed by security forces.
Turkey was "attempting to influence public opinion against Egyptian interests, supported meetings of organisations that seek to create instability in the country," said a foreign ministry spokesman, Badr Abdelatty, on Saturday.
Turkey's ruling AK party has a similar background to the Muslim Brotherhood and both have endured a rivalry with their national armies.
Turkey and Egypt recalled their ambassadors in August after Turkey criticised Egypt's new leaders over the overthrow of Morsi. Turkey's ambassador returned weeks later, but Egypt had declined to return its envoy to Ankara.
Saturday's decision comes after the Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, renewed his criticism of Egypt's new leaders. He dismissed the trial of Morsi on charges of inciting murder of his opponents while in office, which opened this month, and on Thursday described the situation in Egypt as a "humanitarian drama".
The Egyptian foreign ministry said Turkey "has persisted in its unacceptable and unjustified positions by trying to turn the international community against Egyptian interests and by supporting meetings for groups that seek to create instability in the country and by making statements that can only be described as an offense to the popular will".
Egyptian officials and media have repeatedly accused Muslim Brotherhood leaders of meeting in Turkey to plan protests and other ways to undermine the new government in Cairo.
In response to Egypt's decision, the Turkish president, Abdullah Gul, said: "I hope our relations will again get back to its track."
But a Turkish foreign ministry spokesman said Ankara was in touch with the ambassador "and we will respond with reciprocal steps in coming hours".

7 Kasım 2013 Perşembe

İstanbul- Türkiye

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