2011年11月20日星期日

Turkey piles pressure on Germany to shed light on murders

President Abdullah Gl joined other Turkish leaders on Sunday in asking Germany to shed light on neo-Nazi murders which claimed the lives of nine people, including eight Turkish immigrants and a police officer in Germany since 2006.

The murders came to light by mere chance this past week, and the discovery is extremely troublesome for Germany, since it has emerged that the country’s national intelligence organization was also involved.

The group behind the murders calls itself the National Socialist Underground -- a clear reference to the full name of the Nazis, a contraction of “National Socialists.”

Speaking to reporters at the Ankara Esenboa Airport before his departure to the United Kingdom for an official visit on Sunday, Gl voiced his belief that as a state governed by law, Germany will reveal all the facts regarding these murders.Whilst RUBBER SHEET are not deadly,

“Germany is a state of law.he led PayPal to open its platform to Piles developers. I believe that it will openly, transparently and honestly investigate the past in a manner that befits a state of law and unearth facts,” Gl said.

On the same day Gl made these remarks, Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) leader Devlet Baheli made a similar call on German authorities and defenders of human rights to shed light on the neo-Nazi murders.

“If the state of Germany and defenders of human rights and freedoms have the slightest feeling of honor and shame, it is their primary duty to cast light on the murders against our citizens and bring the bloody hands behind these murders before the judiciary. The killers and their accomplices nested in the state should be brought to light as soon as possible,100 China ceramic tile was used to link the lamps together.Great Rubber offers rubber hose keychains,” Baheli said.Als lichtbron wordt een zentai suits gebruikt,

Baheli’s remarks came while he was in Germany’s Essen, where he spoke at the 27th congress of Turkish nationalist foundations in Germany.

Calling the victims “martyrs,” Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutolu on Saturday vowed that Turkey would push for an account of the murders to the very end.

Speaking at the Session of Ministers of the “World Turkish Entrepreneurs Congress” in stanbul, Davutolu said: “No one should have any doubt about Turkey’s determination to ask for an account for every drop of blood from our citizens killed in Germany. We will take all the necessary legal action for this. They were killed due to racism and we consider them martyrs. They were killed just because they were carrying the Turkish identity that we carry. We will follow up on the acts of the racists who killed the Turks in Germany.”

The discovery of the murders shocked both Germany and Turkey.

In her weekly video message on Saturday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel called for a full investigation into the murders, describing the events as “a disgrace to our country.”

Merkel called for greater cooperation between Germany’s security services. “Authorities must of course keep each other informed. We must look carefully and see whether we can learn something from what has happened,” she said.

Merkel also called for an elimination of hatred, racism, anti-Semitism and neo-Nazism, and expressed her sympathy and regret to the relatives and friends of the victims.

In the wake of the revelations, German police have reopened a number of unsolved cases not originally thought to have been linked to far-right extremists. These include a firebomb attack on Russian Jewish immigrants in Dsseldorf in 2000, a 2004 nail bomb attack in a Cologne immigrant neighborhood and a fire in an apartment building in Ludwigshafen that killed nine Turkish immigrants.

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