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To a Turk, the inside of a town is a prison.
Osmanli saying
They gave a beyship to the Turk; and he first
killed
his father.
Osmanli saying
WolfWolf wrote:
> "Mitsos" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> >
> > WolfWolf wrote:
> > > "Mitsos" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > >
> > >>So long it comes in the TV and a news paper is writing about it you know
> > >>that democracy is working but when people get arrested fore writing
> > >>something against the government and/or get sentenced to prison ...
> > >
> > >
> > > Like the cases below, you mean?
> > Compare your beloved country with Greece.
>
> What a moronic statement!
> How can you compare a fresh, juicy orange with a squeezed, dry lemon?
>
> > How many houses did the Turkish army steal in Cyprus?
>
> There is a nice Regulatory Commission in Turkish Cyprus where claims of alleged
> illegal appropriation can be (and are) brought forward.
> Do you have any title issued by this Commission recognizing that a certain house was
> "stolen"?
> Moreover, can you give us any explanation about how to manage it to "steal" a house?
> The legal definition of "stealing" implies to take away an object from one place
> which
> is under your control in order to bring it away, at another place, which is under the
> thief's control.
> Since houses are considered fixed assets, not mobile, it would be really difficult to
> steal them, don't you agree?
>
> > How many Greeks did they kill?
>
> There was a certain number of Greeks victims of the clashes during the Peace
> Operation
> in 1974.
> They were neither Cypriots nor officially combattants, since Greece wasn't a
> belligerant party.
> But it is known that they actively participated in hostilities against Turkish
> Cypriots and Turkey, the guarantor power.
> Since 1974 mass killings have stopped.
>
> > What about the 1000 Kurdish villages cleared of it's inhabitants by the
> > Turkish army?
>
> The inhabitants of these villages were chased away by PKK terrorists (with the
> support - even military - by Greece).
> There are lots of U.N. documents which confimred it.
> In the meantime, the Turkish authorities are doing their utmost efforts to restablish
> again the infrastructure and deserving conditions in these villages.
>
> > One million Kurds made homeless.
>
> Where? In Northern Iraq??
> That's beyond Turkey's responsibility.
> Nevertheless, during the last 12 years, Turkey hsn't stopped to help in Northern Iraq
> with building roads, schools and other infrastructural equipment which were readily
> accepted by the Kurds (despite of the propaganda of certain Kurdish tribal leaders).
>
> > Shit happens in Greece and shit happens in Turkey.
> > The difference is in the zero.
> > Add 4 zero's fore Turkey.
>
> Zero plus zero makes zero.
> Zero plus zero plus zero plus zero still makes zero.
> Stay down and repeat your maths, Mitsos.
>
> WolfWolf
> The European
>
> >
> > >
> > > 20 Nov 2003 16:43:28 GMT
> > > Hunger strikers held in Greece 'close to death'
> > > --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> > > By Karolos Grohmann
> > >
> > > ATHENS, Nov 20 (Reuters) - Five jailed anti-globalisation demonstrators on hunger
> > > strike since late September are edging closer to death, one of their lawyers told
> > > Reuters on Thursday.
> > >
> > > The five -- two Spaniards, a Briton, a Syrian and a Greek -- were among seven
> > > protestors arrested in riots on the sidelines of an EU summit in northern Greece
> in
> > > June and charged with crimes including possession of explosives and weapons.
> > >
> > > The group were jailed pending a trial but a court date has yet to be set and the
> > > group's lawyers have appealed to the Greek minister of justice for their release
> on
> > > bail until trial.
> > >
> > > The hunger strikers, protesting their innocence, were transferred last week to
> Athens
> > > Korydallos top security prison from northern Greece after their condition
> deteriorated
> > > and they needed of medical care, officials said.
> > >
> > > "Doctors visited them in jail today and their condition is right at the point of
> no
> > > return," said lawyer Vasso Karaindrou.
> > >
> > > "Some of them have been on hunger strike for more than 60 days and problems have
> > > started with their livers and their eyesight," she said. "Several have been
> spitting
> > > blood."
> > >
> > > Karaindrou said the Athens' Bar constitutional rights committee, of which she is
> > > a
> > > member, had filed a second release application. Officials said this week they
> > > were
> > > reviewing their case and a decision on the release request would be taken soon.
> > >
> > > Their detention since June has sparked protests by anarchists and leftist across
> > > Greece and a series of minor bombing attacks in the capital in the past weeks.
> > >
> > > Remarking on the swift release on bail of former Russian media mogul Vladimir
> Gusinsky
> > > after just four days following his arrest in the summer, Karaindrou said: "It is
> > > strange to see that the system in Greece has different standards."
> > >
> > > "None of them have a record nor any other outstanding warrants," she added.
> > >
> > > Earlier on Thursday a group of students took over the dean's office at Athens
> > > University to protest at the imprisonment while a march in central Athens was
> > > scheduled for later in the day.
> > >
> > > http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L20404408.htm
> > >
> > >
> >
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